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This study compared fertile and infertile women’s gut microbiota and assessed PHGG’s effects on dysbiosis and pregnancy during ART, highlighting key microbial predictors of conception.
Lactoferrin is a key immunomodulatory glycoprotein that bridges innate and adaptive immunity. It regulates oxidative stress, curbs inflammation, and supports mucosal immune integrity, showing promise for microbiome-focused interventions in infections, SIRS, and immune dysfunction.
What was reviewed?
This review comprehensively examined lactoferrin, a multifunctional iron-binding glycoprotein, highlighting its capacity as a natural immunomodulator that bridges innate and adaptive immunity. The paper assessed lactoferrin’s roles in infection, inflammation, oxidative stress, and immune system regulation, including its therapeutic potential in systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS), sepsis, and bacterial infections, including methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA).
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesized findings from preclinical in vivo and in vitro studies, particularly in murine models, along with limited human data, to explore the immune mechanisms regulated by lactoferrin. It included evidence across diverse immune cell types, including macrophages, neutrophils, dendritic cells, and T and B lymphocytes.
What were the most important findings?
Lactoferrin significantly modulates immune function through both direct and indirect pathways. It acts as an antimicrobial by binding iron, limiting pathogen proliferation, and neutralizing lipopolysaccharides (LPS). In the microbiome context, this review emphasizes that lactoferrin plays a regulatory role by reducing oxidative stress through iron sequestration and decreasing reactive oxygen species (ROS), which often rise during inflammatory and infectious states.
Lactoferrin dampens excessive immune responses during sepsis and endotoxemia by suppressing mitochondrial ROS and pro-inflammatory cytokines such as IL-6 and TNF-α. It also protects mucosal integrity by reducing bacterial translocation, especially in gut-associated lymphoid tissue. Notably, in both Gram-negative (E. coli) and Gram-positive (MRSA) infection models, lactoferrin improved survival and reduced inflammatory biomarkers. Regarding adaptive immunity, lactoferrin promotes Th1 responses, enhances antigen presentation via dendritic cells and macrophages, and drives T-cell maturation and B-cell isotype switching—thereby reinforcing host microbial surveillance and immunological memory.
Microbiome relevance lies in lactoferrin’s ability to preserve mucosal immunity, reduce gut inflammation, and prevent dysbiosis-linked bacterial dissemination, especially under systemic infectious stress. These actions suggest lactoferrin supports a microbiome-resilient host immune state.
What are the implications of this review?
This review highlights lactoferrin’s potential as a natural immunomodulatory intervention. Its ability to simultaneously enhance protective immunity while dampening harmful inflammation makes it a promising candidate for clinical use in sepsis, autoimmune diseases, infections, and potentially microbiome-targeted therapies. Its role in bridging innate and adaptive immunity also supports its use as a vaccine adjuvant, especially for pathogens requiring strong Th1-type responses. For microbiome-focused clinicians, lactoferrin’s action on mucosal immunity and bacterial translocation pathways suggests a powerful tool for managing dysbiosis-linked systemic inflammation.
Metallomic signatures of brain tissues distinguishes between cases of dementia with Lewy bodies, Alzheimer’s disease, and Parkinson’s disease dementia
February 12, 2026
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Parkinson’s Disease
Parkinson’s Disease
Parkinson’s disease is increasingly recognized as a systemic disorder involving coordinated disturbances across the gut–brain axis, rather than a condition confined to dopaminergic neurodegeneration alone. Converging evidence implicates gut dysbiosis, altered microbial metabolites, impaired intestinal barrier integrity, and metal dyshomeostasis as upstream drivers of neuroinflammation and alpha-synuclein pathology. These interconnected microbiome, metabolomic, and metallomic signals provide a mechanistic framework for understanding disease initiation, progression, and therapeutic targeting beyond the central nervous system.
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Alzheimer’s Dementia
Alzheimer’s Dementia
OverviewAlzheimer’s disease (AD) is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder characterized by amyloid-beta (Aβ) plaques, neurofibrillary tangles, neuroinflammation, and metabolic dysfunction, ultimately leading to cognitive decline and dementia. Emerging research highlights the microbiota-gut-brain axis as a crucial factor in AD pathogenesis, with gut dysbiosis contributing to neuroinflammation, immune dysregulation, and blood-brain barrier permeability. Microbial metabolites, such as […]
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Metallomic Signatures
Metallomic Signatures
A metallomic signature is the condition-specific profile of trace metals and metal-binding molecules that reflects disrupted metal homeostasis.
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Dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) brains show widespread copper depletion and region-specific sodium, manganese, iron, and selenium alterations. While copper loss is common to AD and PDD, DLB presents a distinct metallomic fingerprint, enabling disease differentiation via PCA. Metallomic profiling may aid in diagnosing overlapping dementias and reveals unique pathophysiological signatures.
What was studied?
This original research study investigated whether the metallomic signature of dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) differs from Alzheimer’s disease (AD) and Parkinson’s disease dementia (PDD). The study sought to determine if post-mortem changes in elemental concentrations—particularly in essential metals—could help differentiate these often-overlapping neurodegenerative conditions. Using Inductively Coupled Plasma–Mass Spectrometry (ICP-MS), the authors quantified concentrations of nine elements (Na, Mg, K, Ca, Mn, Fe, Cu, Zn, and Se) across 10 brain regions from DLB patients and age-/sex-matched controls. These findings were directly compared to previously published metallomic profiles for AD and PDD, produced using identical methodologies. Multivariate analyses (PCA and PLS-DA) were employed to assess the potential for disease discrimination based on metal signatures.
Who was studied?
The study analyzed post-mortem brain tissue from 23 DLB patients and 20 controls, collected across ten distinct brain regions. Comparative analyses included prior datasets from similarly matched AD and PDD patient cohorts.
What were the most important findings?
In this study, region-specific metallomic signatures profiling revealed distinct trace element alterations in Dementia with Lewy Bodies (DLB). Copper (Cu) levels were consistently decreased in five of ten DLB brain regions, including the cingulate gyrus (CG), middle temporal gyrus (MTG), primary visual cortex (PVC), substantia nigra (SN), and putamen (PUT), suggesting a widespread Cu deficiency. Sodium (Na) was elevated in four regions—medulla (MED), cerebellum (CB), MTG, and CG—while more localized changes were observed for other metals. Iron (Fe) levels were increased in the motor cortex (MCX) and CG, whereas manganese (Mn) was decreased in both the PVC and MED. Calcium (Ca) was specifically reduced in the hippocampus, and selenium (Se) was also decreased in the PVC.
No significant differences in magnesium, potassium, or zinc levels were observed between DLB and control brains. Multivariate analyses, including Principal Component Analysis (PCA) and Partial Least Squares-Discriminant Analysis (PLS-DA), demonstrated that DLB could be distinctly separated from Alzheimer’s disease (AD) and Parkinson’s disease dementia (PDD) based on metallomic signatures. Specifically, CG, MTG, and PVC profiles enabled discrimination between DLB and AD, while the PVC alone differentiated DLB from PDD. Notably, copper depletion emerged as the only common alteration across DLB, AD, and PDD, underscoring its potential central role in the pathogenesis of neurodegenerative diseases. The authors propose that these metallomic signatures in dementia may reflect disease-specific mechanisms, including variations in oxidative stress, protein aggregation, and mitochondrial dysfunction.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study provides compelling evidence that distinct metallomic signatures exist across DLB, AD, and PDD, despite shared pathology such as copper depletion. It strengthens the emerging concept that trace metal dysregulation is disease-specific, rather than a general byproduct of neurodegeneration. The findings support the idea that metallomic signatures profiling—potentially via cerebrospinal fluid or advanced imaging in living patients—could improve differential diagnosis of dementia with overlapping clinical features. Furthermore, the study reinforces the hypothesis that metal dyshomeostasis, particularly copper depletion, may be a contributing pathogenic mechanism, impairing antioxidant defenses and mitochondrial function. These findings could inform new diagnostic tools and therapeutic targets.
Citation
Scholefield M, Church SJ, Xu J, Cooper GJS. Metallomic analysis of brain tissues distinguishes between cases of dementia with Lewy bodies, Alzheimer's disease, and Parkinson's disease dementia. Front Neurosci. 2024 Jun 26;18:1412356. doi: 10.3389/fnins.2024.1412356.
Nickel chelator dimethylglyoxime inhibits amyloid beta aggregation in vitro and targets nickel-driven Alzheimer’s mechanisms
February 12, 2026
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Alzheimer’s Dementia
Alzheimer’s Dementia
OverviewAlzheimer’s disease (AD) is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder characterized by amyloid-beta (Aβ) plaques, neurofibrillary tangles, neuroinflammation, and metabolic dysfunction, ultimately leading to cognitive decline and dementia. Emerging research highlights the microbiota-gut-brain axis as a crucial factor in AD pathogenesis, with gut dysbiosis contributing to neuroinflammation, immune dysregulation, and blood-brain barrier permeability. Microbial metabolites, such as […]
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Dimethylglyoxime (DMG)
Dimethylglyoxime (DMG)
Dimethylglyoxime represents a novel therapeutic paradigm that exploits a fundamental metabolic difference between pathogenic bacteria and their mammalian hosts. By selectively depleting bacterial access to nickel, a cofactor essential for multiple pathogenic enzymes but unnecessary for human physiology, DMG offers a theoretically host-sparing antimicrobial approach.
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Nickel
Nickel
Bacteria regulate transition metal levels through complex mechanisms to ensure survival and adaptability, influencing both their physiology and the development of antimicrobial strategies.
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This study shows that nickel strongly enhances Aβ40 aggregation, while the nickel chelator dimethylglyoxime inhibits amyloid beta aggregation by sequestering nickel in vitro. It also links nickel to both metal-driven and infection-related Alzheimer’s mechanisms, positioning nickel chelation at the intersection of these pathogenic pathways.
What was studied?
In this experimental study, the authors investigated how the nickel chelator dimethylglyoxime inhibits amyloid beta aggregation, focusing specifically on the recombinant human Aβ40 peptide and its interaction with transition metals, particularly nickel. Using inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS), thioflavin T (ThT) aggregation assays, isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC), and high-resolution mass spectrometry, they quantified the metal content of a commercial recombinant Aβ40 preparation, characterized the impact of Cu²⁺, Zn²⁺, and Ni²⁺ on in vitro aggregation kinetics, and tested whether the nickel chelator dimethylglyoxime (DMG) inhibits amyloid beta aggregation under different metal and pH conditions. They further evaluated whether dimethylglyoxime forms stable complexes with various metals and explored the capacity of orally administered dimethylglyoxime to reach the brain in a murine model, situating these findings within the broader “metal hypothesis” and “infection hypothesis” of Alzheimer’s disease.
Who was studied?
This is an in vitro biochemical and biophysical study using commercially available recombinant human Aβ40 peptide expressed in Escherichia coli, not a clinical or animal efficacy trial. The peptide preparation was analyzed for multi-element metal content and then subjected to aggregation and binding assays in buffered solutions. For the pharmacokinetic aspect, C57BL mice received repeated oral doses of dimethylglyoxime, after which brain tissue was harvested to detect dimethylglyoxime or dimethylglyoxime–metal complexes by FTICR-MS and NMR, although this arm was limited to detection rather than evaluation of behavioral or neuropathological outcomes. No human subjects or clinical Alzheimer’s disease populations were included; the work is best interpreted as mechanistic preclinical data that inform future translational strategies for metal-targeted interventions in Alzheimer’s disease.
Most important findings
ICP-MS of the recombinant Aβ40 peptide revealed substantial metal contamination intrinsic to the preparation, with selenium and nickel being most abundant and appreciable levels of aluminum, copper, manganese, zinc, barium, and strontium also detected, whereas iron was below detection limits. The table on page 3 (Table 1) quantifies a metal: peptide ratio of approximately 0.073 mol Ni per mol Aβ40, indicating that the peptide is already nickel-bound before any experimental supplementation. Functionally, ThT aggregation assays showed that exogenous Ni²⁺ significantly accelerated Aβ40 aggregation in a concentration-dependent manner, with a 2.5-fold increase in aggregation rate at 10 µM Ni²⁺ and 5.7-fold at 100 µM compared with metal-free control, while Zn²⁺ produced even larger enhancements and Cu²⁺ had minimal effect at neutral pH. pH modulation demonstrated that Ni-induced aggregation was facilitated under mildly acidic conditions (pH 6.5) and abolished at alkaline pH 8.5, reinforcing pH-sensitive nickel–peptide interactions. ITC confirmed direct nickel binding to Aβ40 with an apparent Kd of ~4.2 µM and a stoichiometry of ~0.7 Ni per peptide, and thermodynamic parameters (ΔH −5 kJ/mol, positive ΔS) consistent with an exothermic, spontaneous binding reaction.
Dimethylglyoxime robustly inhibited Aβ40 aggregation when added to metal-containing peptide preparations. In the absence of added metal, 100 µM dimethylglyoxime reduced aggregation by 40–85 %, and 500–1000 µM essentially abolished ThT signal, implying that chelation of intrinsic metals within the recombinant peptide (notably Ni²⁺) is sufficient to block β-sheet–rich fibril formation. In the presence of 100 µM Ni²⁺, dimethylglyoxime produced complete inhibition of aggregation at higher chelator concentrations, whereas inhibition in the presence of Cu²⁺ was partial and Zn²⁺-driven aggregation remained only partially suppressible even at 1 mM dimethylglyoxime, mirroring its weaker coordination with zinc. FTICR-MS confirmed stable [DMG]₂–Ni and [DMG]₂–Cu complexes and an absence of similar complexes with Fe, Zn, or Se, explaining the metal-selective chelation pattern. The schematic model on page 8 (Figure 4) integrates these findings into a dual mechanism in which nickel contributes to Alzheimer’s disease both by directly enhancing Aβ aggregation and by supporting nickel-dependent bacterial enzymes in pathogens implicated in Alzheimer’s pathology; dimethylglyoxime occupies an intersection point by depleting nickel for both Aβ and microbial systems. Attempts to detect dimethylglyoxime or its complexes in mouse brain after repeated oral dosing were unsuccessful, suggesting poor blood-brain barrier penetration or rapid metabolism under the tested conditions.
Key implications
The study provides strong mechanistic support for considering nickel as an under-recognized contributor to Aβ40 aggregation and, by extension, to the metal-driven component of Alzheimer’s disease pathogenesis. For clinicians and translational researchers, the data highlight that not all metal chelation strategies are equivalent: a nickel-selective agent such as dimethylglyoxime can inhibit amyloid aggregation driven by nickel while sparing essential metal pools for zinc and iron, at least at the level of direct coordination chemistry.
From a microbiome and microbial metallomics perspective, the work is particularly relevant because many candidate Alzheimer’s-associated pathogens, including Helicobacter pylori, Escherichia coli, and Salmonella Typhimurium, rely on nickel-dependent enzymes such as urease and NiFe hydrogenases; systemic nickel chelation might therefore modulate both host amyloidogenic processes and the viability or virulence of nickel-requiring pathobionts that could participate in brain infection or peripheral immune priming. In the microbiome signatures framework, these nickel-dependent taxa could be considered major microbial associations in an Alzheimer’s disease metallomic-microbiomic axis. However, the inability to demonstrate brain penetration of orally administered dimethylglyoxime underscores a key translational barrier: any clinical strategy based on nickel chelation will require optimization of pharmacokinetics, delivery route, and tissue targeting to influence central nervous system amyloid dynamics. Overall, the findings justify further preclinical work combining nickel chelation, microbiome-targeted interventions, and in vivo Alzheimer's models.
Maternal Iron Deficiency Anemia Affects Postpartum Emotions and Cognition
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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Anemia
Anemia
Anemia is a reduction in red blood cells or hemoglobin, often influenced by the gut microbiome's impact on nutrient absorption.
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The study explored the impact of iron deficiency anemia on postpartum cognitive and emotional health. Iron supplementation significantly improved depression, stress, and cognitive performance in anemic mothers, with potential implications for maternal and infant health.
What was studied?
The study investigated the impact of iron deficiency anemia (IDA) on maternal cognition, behavioral performance, mother-infant interaction, and infant development during the postpartum period. The focus was on how iron status, particularly in anemic mothers, affected their emotional well-being and cognitive function post-childbirth.
Who was studied?
The study focused on a cohort of 81 South African mothers who had normal birth weight, full-term babies. These mothers were divided into three groups: non-anemic controls, anemic mothers receiving a placebo, and anemic mothers receiving daily iron supplementation. The mothers were followed for 9 months postpartum.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed that iron-deficient anemic mothers exhibited cognitive and emotional deficits compared to their non-anemic counterparts. Specifically, mothers receiving iron supplementation showed a 25% improvement in depression, stress, and cognitive function (measured through Raven’s Progressive Matrices and Digit Symbol tests). In contrast, the placebo group did not show any significant improvement. Furthermore, the study identified strong associations between maternal iron status (hemoglobin, mean corpuscular volume, and transferrin saturation) and behavioral variables such as anxiety, stress, and depression. These findings suggest a direct relationship between maternal iron deficiency and impaired cognitive and emotional functioning.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study highlights the critical role of iron in maternal mental health and cognitive function during the postpartum period. The findings suggest that correcting iron deficiency through supplementation can significantly improve mood, stress, and cognitive functioning in postpartum mothers. This has profound implications for public health strategies, particularly in resource-poor settings where iron deficiency is prevalent. It also underscores the importance of early screening and treatment of IDA to prevent long-term negative effects on both maternal well-being and infant development. The potential for iron supplementation to improve mother-infant interactions and promote healthier developmental outcomes for infants is a key area for future research.
How Severe Anemia Might Influence the Risk of Invasive Bacterial Infections in African Children
February 12, 2026
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Anemia
Anemia
Anemia is a reduction in red blood cells or hemoglobin, often influenced by the gut microbiome's impact on nutrient absorption.
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The hypothesis presented in the study is that severe anemia may contribute to the risk of invasive bacterial infections in African children through dysregulation of iron homeostasis and/or iron-regulatory proteins, particularly by affecting the regulation of the hepatic hormone hepcidin and subsequent iron availability for bacterial growth. This hypothesis, therefore, not only opens new avenues for research into the pathophysiology of anemia and bacterial infections but also for developing better therapeutic interventions that could reduce morbidity and mortality in those affected by these conditions.
What Was Reviewed?
This review investigates the hypothesis that severe anemia contributes to the elevated risk of invasive bacterial infections in African children through dysregulation of iron homeostasis, including the disruption of hepcidin—a hepatic hormone that governs iron availability in the body. The authors synthesize evidence from epidemiological, mechanistic, and experimental studies, proposing that the interplay between anemia, haemolysis, immune dysfunction, and gut permeability collectively facilitates systemic infections. The paper places particular emphasis on how bacterial pathogens exploit iron and haem to thrive under conditions of anemia-induced iron dysregulation, especially in regions with high burdens of infectious disease and malnutrition.
Who Was Reviewed?
The review draws on research concerning sub-Saharan African children who commonly experience severe anemia due to malaria, nutritional deficiencies, sickle cell disease, and HIV. It includes human observational data, animal model findings, and in vitro studies related to bacterial infections, immune response, and iron regulation pathways.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
Severe anemia in African children correlates strongly with an increased risk of invasive bacterial infections, particularly with Gram-negative organisms such as non-typhoidal Salmonella (NTS), E. coli, and Haemophilus influenzae, as well as Gram-positive organisms including Staphylococcus aureus and Streptococcus pneumoniae. This elevated susceptibility is mechanistically linked to increased erythropoietic drive and haemolysis, both of which suppress hepcidin via the erythroid hormone erythroferrone (ERFE). Reduced hepcidin enhances plasma iron levels and promotes the release of iron from macrophage stores, thereby removing the “nutritional immunity” that would otherwise limit iron availability to pathogens. Simultaneously, haemolysis releases non-transferrin-bound iron (NTBI) and free haem, which are more readily exploited by pathogens through siderophore-mediated and haem-binding iron acquisition systems.
Of particular relevance to microbiome researchers, the review notes that severe anemia can disrupt gut barrier integrity and provoke dysbiosis. The increased gut permeability facilitates the translocation of enteric pathogens, notably NTS and E. coli, into systemic circulation. This breach is exacerbated by inflammation, destabilization of tight junction proteins like ZO-1, and macrophage-mediated changes to mucosal immunity. The review references mouse models where anemia-induced epithelial dysfunction was dependent on macrophage-driven cytokine signaling, especially IFN-γ, as well as bacterial studies showing enhanced virulence and iron uptake capacity in haem-rich or iron-rich conditions. Importantly, these microbial strategies overlap with the exact niches disrupted in severe anemia, such as haem overload, NTBI availability, and compromised mucosal defenses.
Major microbial associations (MMAs) include:
Pathogen
Key Iron Acquisition Strategies
Non-typhoidal Salmonella
Siderophores (salmochelin, enterobactin), Fe2+ uptake via ferroportin Strong association with anemia.
Enterobactin, salmochelin, aerobactin, haem receptors. Strong association with anemia.
Haemophilus influenzae
Haem- and haemoglobin-binding proteins (HgpA/B/C, HxuA). Moderate association with anemia.
Staphylococcus aureus
Isd system, staphyloferrin siderophores, transferrin binding. Moderate association with anemia.
Streptococcus pneumoniae
ABC transporters (piu, pia, pit), haemoglobin-binding proteins. Moderate association with anemia.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Review?
The review suggests that treating severe anemia in high-infection-burden areas like sub-Saharan Africa should involve caution, particularly regarding iron supplementation. While iron repletion is essential, excessive or unregulated iron can exacerbate infection risk, especially in the presence of low hepcidin levels. This carries profound public health implications, as many iron supplementation programs do not account for concurrent infectious burdens or the child's hepcidin status. Clinically, these insights demand a reevaluation of iron therapy protocols, particularly in settings where malaria, HIV, or bacterial sepsis are endemic. The review also encourages further exploration of therapies that modulate iron availability (e.g., hepcidin agonists or iron chelators) and highlights the need for comprehensive microbiome assessments in anaemic populations. The tight interconnection between gut microbiota, intestinal permeability, and systemic iron overload represents a mechanistic intersection worth pursuing in microbiome-targeted interventions.
The Possible Effects of Zinc Supplementation on Postpartum Depression and Anemia
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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Anemia
Anemia
Anemia is a reduction in red blood cells or hemoglobin, often influenced by the gut microbiome's impact on nutrient absorption.
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Postpartum zinc supplementation shows promise in reducing postpartum depression risk and improving maternal zinc levels, though it may cause transient hematological changes when combined with iron.
What was studied?
This study focused on the effects of zinc supplementation on postpartum depression and anemia in women who had undergone cesarean sections. Specifically, it aimed to investigate the relationship between zinc supplementation and the reduction of postpartum depression symptoms (as assessed by the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale or EPDS) and its effect on the hematological status, including hemoglobin and hematocrit levels, of postpartum women.
Who was studied?
The study enrolled 197 postpartum women who had undergone cesarean sections and had postpartum anemia. These women were monitored for their zinc and hematological levels, and a subset of 148 women was included in the analysis concerning the relationship between zinc supplementation and postpartum depression.
What were the most important findings?
The study found that postpartum zinc supplementation significantly improved maternal zinc levels and reduced the risk of developing postpartum depression. In contrast, the combination of oral zinc and iron supplementation showed a transient negative effect on hemoglobin and hematocrit levels, though this effect was not clinically significant and resolved within a month postpartum. Zinc supplementation did not cause any severe adverse effects but did temporarily affect hematological parameters when combined with oral iron supplementation.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings suggest that postpartum zinc supplementation could be a beneficial intervention for preventing or alleviating postpartum depression, which is a major public health concern affecting a significant proportion of new mothers. This intervention appears to be relatively safe and could be considered as part of postpartum care, especially for women experiencing depression. However, clinicians should be cautious when combining zinc with iron supplementation, as this may cause short-term hematological disturbances. The study's limitations include its retrospective design and small sample size, which suggest that further research, particularly prospective studies, is necessary to confirm these findings and explore the optimal dosages and combination treatments for postpartum depression and anemia.
Reversal of Autism Symptoms among Dizygotic Twins through a Personalized Lifestyle and Environmental Modification Approach: A Case Report and Review of the Literature
February 12, 2026
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Autism spectrum disorder (ASD)
Autism spectrum disorder (ASD)
Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) is a neurodevelopmental condition characterized by social, communication, and behavioral challenges. It involves genetic and environmental factors, including microbiome imbalances which influence symptom severity and overall health.
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The study showed dramatic, sustained improvements in ASD symptoms in dizygotic female twins through a personalized, multidisciplinary approach targeting modifiable lifestyle and environmental factors, including microbiome-targeted interventions. These included dietary changes, gluten-free and casein-free diets, and supplements like omega-3 fatty acids and probiotics to support gut health and overall wellbeing.
What was studied?
The study focused on the reversal of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) symptoms among dizygotic female twins through a personalized, multidisciplinary therapeutic approach, including microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs). The approach primarily targeted modifiable lifestyle and environmental factors believed to contribute to the condition. Following the reversal of autism symptoms in twins, the case report aimed to document the twins' improvements and review the related literature on environmental and lifestyle influences on ASD.
Who was studied?
The subjects of the study were dizygotic (fraternal) female twin toddlers who were diagnosed with Level 3 severity ASD, which requires very substantial support. The diagnosis was made when the twins were approximately 20 months old. The case report included detailed documentation of the twins' medical history, diagnostic evaluations, and therapeutic interventions over a two-year period.
What were the most important findings of this case study?
Reversal of Autism Symptoms: Both twins exhibited dramatic improvements in their ASD symptoms, as evidenced by significant reductions in their Autism Treatment Evaluation Checklist (ATEC) scores. One twin's ATEC score decreased from 76 to 32, while the other's decreased from 43 to 4.
Sustained Improvement: The improvements in the twins' symptoms remained relatively stable for six months following the last assessment.
Multidisciplinary Approach: The therapeutic interventions involved a variety of licensed clinicians and focused on environmental and lifestyle modifications tailored to each twin's symptoms, lab results, and other outcome measures. Interventions included dietary changes, nutritional supplements, physical therapies, and environmental modifications.
Parental Involvement: The parents played a crucial role in implementing and achieving the interventions, demonstrating exceptional motivation, compliance, and communication with practitioners.
What are the greatest implications of this case study?
Potential for ASD Reversal: The case report provides encouraging evidence that ASD symptoms can be significantly improved and potentially reversed through a comprehensive, personalized approach that targets modifiable environmental and lifestyle factors.
Role of Environmental and Lifestyle Factors: The findings highlight the significant impact that environmental and lifestyle factors can have on ASD, suggesting that these factors may play a more substantial role than genetic factors in some cases.
Need for Personalized Medicine: The success of the personalized, multidisciplinary approach underscores the importance of individualized treatment plans that consider the unique needs and risk factors of each patient.
Challenges: While the results are promising, the comprehensive and resource-intensive nature of the interventions may not be easily generalizable to all families due to financial and accessibility constraints. This highlights the need for more accessible and cost-effective treatment options.
Future Research: The study calls for prospective studies to further investigate the effectiveness of personalized, multi-modality treatment approaches in reversing ASD symptoms and to establish more precise estimates of the contributions of genetic versus environmental factors in ASD etiology.
The role of zinc and nutritional immunity in Clostridium difficile infection
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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This review examines the impact of dietary zinc on gut microbiota and its role in Clostridium difficile infection. Excess zinc is shown to alter microbiota composition and increase disease severity, underscoring the importance of regulating zinc intake in high-risk populations.
What was studied?
This review investigates the role of zinc in Clostridium difficile infection (CDI), particularly focusing on how zinc influences pathogen colonization, host immune responses, and disease severity. The study explores the concept of nutritional immunity, wherein the host restricts metal availability to combat pathogen invasion. It highlights the potential negative effects of excess dietary zinc on the gut microbiota and its relationship with increased susceptibility to CDI. Through a mouse model of infection, the review examines how high levels of zinc impact the gut's microbial composition and promote CDI, even in the absence of major pathogen colonization.
Who was studied?
The study primarily focuses on animal models, particularly mice, to explore the relationship between dietary zinc levels, microbiota composition, and CDI susceptibility. Mice were divided into different groups based on their zinc intake, ranging from low to excessive levels. The review also discusses the potential implications of these findings for humans, particularly patients with conditions such as inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), who may have altered zinc absorption and are at a higher risk for CDI.
Most important findings
The study reveals that excess dietary zinc significantly alters the structure of the gut microbiota, leading to a reduction in microbial diversity. In particular, the Enterococcus genus showed a significant bloom in response to high zinc levels, while other microbial populations were diminished. The zinc-induced alterations in the microbiota were associated with increased susceptibility to CDI, especially when antibiotics were introduced. Interestingly, although high zinc did not significantly increase C. difficile colonization, it exacerbated disease severity, causing more significant epithelial damage, inflammation, and increased toxin production. These findings underscore the importance of zinc in modulating gut microbial ecology and its potential to influence the severity of CDI.
Key implications
The review highlights the need for careful management of zinc intake, particularly in populations at risk for CDI, such as those receiving antibiotics or suffering from conditions like IBD. Excessive zinc intake may exacerbate disease severity by promoting dysbiosis and reducing colonization resistance, thus enhancing susceptibility to pathogens like Clostridium difficile. This understanding suggests that controlling dietary zinc, particularly in high-risk patients, could serve as a potential strategy for preventing or managing CDI. Further research is necessary to explore the mechanisms by which zinc influences microbial community dynamics and pathogen virulence, potentially leading to novel therapeutic approaches.
Epithelial barrier dysfunction and microbial dysbiosis in Crohn’s disease
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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This review explores the role of epithelial barrier dysfunction and microbial dysbiosis in the pathogenesis of Crohn’s disease, highlighting the impact of genetic, environmental, and microbiota factors on disease progression and the potential for therapeutic strategies to restore barrier integrity and balance microbial communities.
What was studied?
The study focused on the pathogenesis of Crohn’s disease (CD), with particular emphasis on the role of epithelial barrier dysfunction and microbial dysbiosis. CD is characterized by chronic inflammation of the gastrointestinal tract, which primarily affects the ileum and colon. The research explored how the failure of the intestinal epithelial barrier allows microbial infiltration, triggering immune system activation and contributing to the perpetuation of inflammation. It also discussed the role of genetic predispositions and environmental factors in disrupting the barrier integrity, which exacerbates the disease.
Who was studied?
The study did not specifically identify patient groups or subjects as part of its methodology, as it is a review of existing literature. However, it examined a broad range of research involving human and animal models, including those with genetic susceptibilities and environmental exposures that influence CD development. The study drew upon various sources to illustrate how microbiota imbalances and impaired epithelial functions contribute to disease onset, progression, and flare-ups.
Most important findings
Key findings of the study include the central role of the epithelial barrier in protecting the gastrointestinal tract. When this barrier is compromised, luminal bacteria and other substances breach the submucosa, leading to immune activation and persistent inflammation. This dysbiosis, or imbalance in the gut microbiome, exacerbates inflammation and disrupts mucosal healing. Genetic factors, such as mutations in the MUT2 and FUT2 genes, impair barrier function, allowing for increased pathogen penetration. Furthermore, environmental factors like diet, smoking, and pollutants further weaken the epithelial barrier and exacerbate microbial dysbiosis, creating a vicious cycle of inflammation.
Recent studies have also highlighted the role of tight junction proteins (like occludins and claudins) in maintaining the barrier integrity. The degradation of these proteins in Crohn’s disease facilitates the entry of harmful microbes, promoting an inflammatory response. The study underscores the importance of restoring this barrier and balancing the microbiome to prevent disease progression.
Key implications
This review underscores the need for therapeutic strategies that focus on restoring the integrity of the epithelial barrier and addressing microbial dysbiosis in Crohn’s disease patients. Treatments aimed at increasing mucus production, enhancing tight junction function, and rebalancing gut microbiota could significantly reduce inflammation and maintain long-term remission. Understanding the interactions between genetic, environmental, and microbial factors offers new avenues for personalized treatment approaches and early intervention strategies, ultimately improving patient outcomes.
The Link between Ankylosing Spondylitis, Crohn’s Disease, Klebsiella, and Starch Consumption
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This article investigates the relationship between ankylosing spondylitis, Crohn’s disease, Klebsiella pneumoniae, and starch consumption, suggesting that high starch intake may trigger the growth of Klebsiella and exacerbate disease symptoms, with potential therapeutic implications for dietary management.
What was studied?
This article explores the link between ankylosing spondylitis (AS), Crohn's disease (CD), Klebsiella pneumoniae, and starch consumption. The study investigates how these elements interact and contribute to the development of AS and CD. Both AS and CD are chronic diseases associated with inflammation, and their onset is thought to be influenced by genetic and environmental factors. The study discusses the hypothesis that Klebsiella pneumoniae, a gut microbe, plays a key role in the initiation and progression of these diseases, especially in individuals genetically predisposed, such as those carrying the HLA-B27 allelotypes. The article emphasizes the role of diet, particularly the consumption of starch, in triggering the growth of Klebsiella in the gut, which may activate immune responses leading to inflammation in both the joints (AS) and the gut (CD).
Who was studied?
This review does not focus on a specific cohort of patients but synthesizes data from various studies involving patients diagnosed with AS and CD. The focus is on individuals with genetic susceptibility, specifically those carrying the HLA-B27 allele, which is strongly associated with AS and has been implicated in IBD. The studies referenced in this review discuss patients from different geographical regions, particularly those in Europe, North America, and parts of Asia. The research explores the role of gut microbes, specifically Klebsiella, in patients with AS and CD. Additionally, the review includes studies on the impact of dietary factors, particularly starch consumption, on the gut microbiota and disease progression in these conditions.
Most important findings
This study highlights several significant findings that help explain the link between AS, CD, Klebsiella pneumoniae, and starch consumption. One of the key points is the role of Klebsiella pneumoniae as a potential microbial trigger for both AS and CD. The bacteria are more likely to proliferate in the gut of individuals who consume high levels of starch, which is thought to provide a favorable environment for Klebsiella growth. The research shows that high starch consumption, notably resistant starch, increases the bacterial load of Klebsiella in the gut, which can exacerbate both AS and CD. This finding suggests a dietary intervention as a potential therapeutic approach to manage these diseases. Additionally, the study underscores the molecular mimicry hypothesis, where immune responses to Klebsiella antigens cross-react with self-antigens, particularly HLA-B27, leading to autoimmune inflammation in the joints (AS) and gut (CD).
Another critical finding is the potential of a low-starch diet to reduce disease activity in AS and CD patients. Evidence from clinical trials and observational studies indicates that reducing starch intake can help decrease inflammation, as it limits the growth of Klebsiella and potentially other pathogenic microbes. This is especially significant when combined with conventional treatments such as biologics and anti-inflammatory drugs.
Key implications
The findings of this review have several important clinical implications. First, they highlight the need for a more integrated approach to managing AS and CD, where dietary modification could be considered alongside pharmacological treatments. Specifically, a low starch diet may help reduce disease activity and improve patient outcomes, particularly in those with AS and CD linked to Klebsiella infections. Furthermore, the research underscores the importance of understanding the gut-liver and gut-joint interactions in autoimmune diseases. Clinicians should consider dietary factors when managing patients with these conditions, particularly in patients who exhibit elevated levels of anti-Klebsiella antibodies or show signs of microbiome dysbiosis.
Primary sclerosing cholangitis and inflammatory bowel disease comorbidity: an update of the evidence
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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This review updates the current understanding of PSC-IBD, discussing its unique clinical features, the increased risk of malignancies, and the challenges in managing this comorbidity.
What was studied?
This review article focuses on the comorbidity of primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC) and inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), specifically ulcerative colitis (UC) and Crohn's disease (CD). It provides an update on the current evidence surrounding this association. PSC-IBD is a unique disease phenotype that poses a significant challenge in clinical management. The article delves into the pathogenetic mechanisms underlying this comorbidity, including genetic predispositions, immune dysregulation, and the role of microbiota. It also highlights the distinct clinical characteristics of IBD in patients with PSC, noting differences in disease presentation and severity compared to IBD patients without PSC. The increased risk of colorectal cancer (CRC) and hepatobiliary malignancies in PSC-IBD patients is discussed, alongside the current approaches to screening and management.
Who was studied?
The review consolidates data from various studies involving patients diagnosed with both PSC and IBD. While the study doesn't involve new patient cohorts, it summarizes findings from cohort studies, meta-analyses, and population-based studies, primarily from North America, Europe, and some parts of Asia. The patients studied typically have PSC associated with UC, though a smaller proportion has PSC with CD. The research on PSC-IBD includes both adults and pediatric populations, with an emphasis on the different clinical outcomes seen in these groups. The studies also assess the risk of malignancies such as CRC, cholangiocarcinoma (CCA), and gallbladder carcinoma (GBC), and the impact of IBD severity on the progression of PSC.
Most important findings
The review confirms that patients with PSC have a significantly higher incidence of IBD, particularly UC, compared to the general population. The data suggest that approximately 60-80% of PSC patients also have IBD, with UC being the most common form of IBD in these individuals. Interestingly, the clinical presentation of IBD in PSC patients is typically milder than in IBD alone. For example, PSC-IBD patients often exhibit pancolitis with a right-to-left intestinal inflammatory gradient, with rectal sparing and backwash ileitis being common features. However, despite this relatively quiescent clinical course, these patients are at a higher risk for developing CRC and other hepatobiliary malignancies, such as CCA and GBC. The review also emphasizes the importance of vigilant screening for these malignancies in PSC-IBD patients, suggesting annual colonoscopies and liver function tests.
Key implications
The findings have significant implications for the management of PSC-IBD patients. Clinicians should be aware of the unique clinical phenotype of PSC-IBD, which may present with less severe symptoms despite extensive colitis. These patients require close monitoring, especially given their increased risk of malignancy. Surveillance for CRC, CCA, and GBC should be a priority, with regular screening intervals recommended based on disease severity and the presence of risk factors such as age and comorbidities. The review underscores the need for personalized treatment approaches, as the management of PSC-IBD differs from that of PSC or IBD alone. Additionally, the potential role of microbiota dysbiosis in disease progression highlights the need for further research into microbiome-based therapies. Finally, the review calls for more robust clinical trials and research to establish evidence-based guidelines for the management and screening of PSC-IBD patients, particularly focusing on the relationship between IBD severity and PSC progression.
Mendelian Randomization Reveals Causal Gut Microbiota Signatures in Six Thyroid Diseases
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
Graves’ Disease (GD)
Graves’ Disease (GD)
OverviewGraves’ Disease (GD) affects approximately 0.5% of the population, predominantly women. First-line treatment options—antithyroid medications, radioactive iodine, and surgery— often result in significant side effects, incomplete remissions, and frequent relapses. Further, current first-line treatment options focus on symptoms management, and reflect an inadequate understanding of the etiology of the condition. However, recent research reveals a […]
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Mendelian‑randomization of 18,340 MiBioGen participants and > 349k FinnGen controls identifies 32 gut genera with causal roles—some protective, others harmful—across six thyroid diseases, highlighting therapeutic microbiome targets.
What was studied?
This original investigation employed a two‑sample Mendelian randomization (MR) framework to test whether genetically predicted variation in gut microbiota (GM) composition exerts causal effects on six thyroid diseases (TDs): nontoxic diffuse goiter (NDG), nontoxic multinodular goiter (NMG), nontoxic single thyroid nodule (NSTN), Graves’ disease (GD), Plummer disease (PD) and thyrotoxicosis with toxic single thyroid nodule (TSTN). Genome‑wide association study (GWAS) summary statistics for 119 genera (1,531 SNPs) served as exposures, while disease outcomes were derived from large population‑based GWAS datasets. IVW was the primary MR method, complemented by weighted median, MR‑Egger, and sensitivity checks for heterogeneity and pleiotropy.
Who was studied?
GM data originated from the MiBioGen consortium (18,340 primarily European participants), and thyroid phenotypes came from FinnGen Release 10 (906–6,699 cases and ≥ 349,000 controls per phenotype, all of European ancestry). Thus, the analytic sample represents adult Europeans with genotyped data and harmonized microbial and thyroid phenotypes.
Most important findings
MR identified 32 genera with putative causal links to TDs. Protective associations included Clostridium innocuum group, Ruminiclostridium 5 and Lachnoclostridium for NDG (OR ≈ 0.59–0.72), Bifidobacterium and Sutterella for NMG (OR ≈ 0.77–0.83), and Ruminiclostridium 9, Victivallis and Butyricimonas for GD (OR ≈ 0.75–0.85). Conversely, taxa such as Alistipes, Methanobrevibacter, Ruminococcaceae UCG014 (NDG), Ruminococcus gauvreauii group and Rikenellaceae RC9 (NMG), Eubacterium rectale group and Desulfovibrio (GD), and Dorea, Eggerthella and Phascolarctobacterium (PD) increased disease risk (OR 1.2–2.3). For TSTN, Parasutterella was protective, whereas Sutterella, Oscillibacter and Clostridium sensu stricto 1 conferred marked risk (OR ~ 2–3.4).
Key implications
These results strengthen the concept of a gut–thyroid axis by demonstrating genus‑level causal effects, not mere correlations. Protective genera often produce short‑chain fatty acids (e.g., butyrate), enhance epithelial barrier integrity and modulate T‑cell differentiation, whereas risk genera have pro‑inflammatory or lipopolysaccharide (LPS)‑rich profiles. Clinically, microbiome‑targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as fiber supplementation, next‑generation probiotics or microbiota‑directed drugs may complement iodine optimisation and immunomodulation for TD prevention or adjunctive therapy. However, the findings pertain to European ancestry and genus‑level resolution; host–microbe–immune interactions and sex‑specific effects warrant validation in multi‑ethnic, mechanistic, and longitudinal cohorts.
Extraintestinal Manifestations in Inflammatory Bowel Disease: From Pathophysiology to Treatment
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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This review explores the pathophysiology, prevalence, and treatment strategies for extraintestinal manifestations (EIMs) in Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis, emphasizing the role of immune responses, microbiome alterations, and biologic therapies in managing these systemic conditions.
What was studied?
This review article explores extraintestinal manifestations (EIMs) in patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), particularly focusing on Crohn’s disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC). EIMs are systemic conditions that occur outside the gastrointestinal tract but are linked to the underlying inflammatory processes of IBD. The study explores the pathophysiology, clinical features, and treatment strategies for various EIMs, which can involve the musculoskeletal, dermatological, ocular, and hepatobiliary systems. It also discusses the mechanisms underlying these manifestations, including immune responses, microbial factors, and genetic predispositions, as well as the impact of therapies used to treat IBD on EIMs.
Who was studied?
The study does not focus on a single cohort but rather synthesizes findings from various studies involving patients with Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis. It draws on data from clinical studies, cohort analyses, and patient registries, including large sample sizes, to better understand the prevalence and impact of EIMs in IBD patients. The patients studied were diagnosed with IBD and presented with various extraintestinal manifestations, such as arthritis, uveitis, and hepatobiliary disorders. The study includes data on patients with both active and remission stages of IBD, offering a comprehensive view of how EIMs can occur at different disease stages and how they influence patient quality of life.
Most important findings
The review highlights several key findings related to the pathophysiology and treatment of EIMs. First, it emphasizes that EIMs can arise from immune responses either extending from intestinal inflammation or occurring as independent inflammatory events in organs outside the gastrointestinal tract. This is driven by mechanisms such as immune cross-reactivity, microbial dysbiosis, and genetic susceptibility. Specifically, the article notes that certain microbial communities, such as reduced levels of Coprococcus and Ruminococcus species, are associated with inflammatory arthritis and psoriasis in IBD patients, suggesting a link between gut microbiota alterations and systemic inflammation.
The article also examines the impact of IBD therapies on EIMs, particularly biologics like anti-TNF-α agents, which are effective in managing both IBD and its associated extraintestinal conditions. The review shows that anti-TNF therapies, such as infliximab (IFX) and adalimumab (ADA), have high efficacy in treating musculoskeletal EIMs like arthritis and skin manifestations like pyoderma gangrenosum. However, it also cautions about potential paradoxical effects, where biologics may induce or worsen certain conditions, such as psoriasis or uveitis, in a small subset of patients.
Key implications
The findings underscore the importance of a multidisciplinary approach to managing IBD, given the wide range of potential EIMs. Early identification and appropriate management of these extraintestinal conditions are critical for improving the overall quality of life for IBD patients. The review suggests that treatments should be tailored not only to control intestinal inflammation but also to address systemic manifestations. For example, while biologic therapies like anti-TNF agents can effectively manage both IBD and EIMs, careful monitoring for paradoxical effects is essential. The study advocates for the use of a precision medicine approach, which considers genetic, environmental, and microbiome factors, to better predict and treat EIMs in IBD patients. Future research is needed to explore the role of gut microbiota in EIM pathogenesis further and to develop more targeted therapies that can address both intestinal and systemic manifestations of IBD.
Ocular Manifestations of IBD: Pathophysiology, Epidemiology, and Iatrogenic Associations of Emerging Treatment Strategies
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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This review explores ocular manifestations in IBD, including episcleritis, uveitis, and scleritis, discussing their pathophysiology, epidemiology, and management, with an emphasis on the role of IBD treatments and the impact of the microbiome.
What was studied?
This review article examines the ocular extraintestinal manifestations (EIMs) of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), with a focus on pathophysiology, epidemiology, clinical presentation, and management strategies. The study particularly emphasizes the impact of conditions like episcleritis, scleritis, and uveitis in patients with IBD, exploring their association with both disease activity and the impact of IBD treatments. The article also delves into how emerging therapies, including biologics, influence ocular health, particularly through potential iatrogenic effects, which may complicate disease management.
Who was studied?
The review synthesizes findings from various studies that involved patients diagnosed with IBD, specifically Crohn's disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC). It highlights that ocular manifestations are more common in patients with CD than UC, with variations in prevalence depending on factors like disease duration, smoking, and age. The article draws attention to studies that have examined the incidence of ocular manifestations in large cohorts, as well as research on the genetic and environmental factors that may influence the occurrence of these conditions. Gender, ethnicity, and other demographics are also considered in understanding the risk factors associated with IBD-related ocular conditions.
Most important findings
The most common ocular EIMs associated with IBD include episcleritis, uveitis, and scleritis. Episcleritis, affecting 2–5% of IBD patients, often correlates with active disease flares and typically presents with mild to moderate discomfort. Uveitis, particularly anterior uveitis, is seen in 0.5–3.5% of IBD patients and tends to occur independently of gastrointestinal symptoms, occasionally even preceding the diagnosis of IBD. The prevalence of uveitis is significantly higher in patients with CD, with a notable genetic association with the HLA-B27 allele, commonly linked to ankylosing spondylitis.
Scleritis, though rarer, is of particular concern due to its severity and the potential for ocular complications such as visual impairment or ocular perforation. Treatment of scleritis involves systemic therapy, including oral NSAIDs and corticosteroids, with immunosuppressants being used in refractory cases. Interestingly, biologics such as infliximab are effective in treating ocular manifestations like episcleritis, though they may also paradoxically trigger new cases of uveitis.
Key implications
The findings underscore the need for heightened awareness and early detection of ocular manifestations in IBD patients, as these conditions can occur independently of gastrointestinal symptoms and may precede the diagnosis of IBD. The risk of ocular complications is significant, with conditions like scleritis potentially leading to irreversible vision damage. This highlights the importance of multidisciplinary care involving both gastroenterologists and ophthalmologists to ensure timely diagnosis and appropriate management.
Emerging treatment strategies for IBD, including biologics, offer new hope in managing ocular manifestations, but the iatrogenic risks, such as the potential for triggering uveitis, warrant caution. It is crucial for clinicians to carefully monitor ocular health in patients undergoing treatment with corticosteroids, immunomodulators, and biologics to prevent or mitigate ocular complications. Additionally, understanding the microbiome's role in the pathogenesis of ocular EIMs and exploring microbial modulation could open new avenues for preventive and therapeutic strategies.
Novel Insights into the Pathogenesis of Inflammatory Bowel Diseases
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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Crohn’s Disease
Crohn’s Disease
Crohn's disease is a chronic inflammatory condition of the gastrointestinal tract that can cause a wide range of symptoms, including abdominal pain, diarrhea, and fatigue. The exact cause of the disease remains unclear, but it is believed to result from a combination of genetic predisposition and environmental factors. Although there is no cure, ongoing advancements in medical research continue to improve management strategies and quality of life for those affected by Crohn's disease.
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This review focuses on the complex pathogenesis of Crohn’s Disease, exploring the roles of microbiome dysbiosis, immune system dysregulation, and environmental factors in disease progression, while highlighting novel therapeutic and diagnostic strategies
What was studied?
This paper reviews recent developments in the understanding of Crohn's Disease (CD), particularly focusing on its pathogenesis and the emerging role of the microbiome in shaping disease outcomes. It also delves into the influence of epigenetics, immune responses, and the interplay between environmental factors and microbial communities. The review synthesizes data on how these factors contribute to the disease's chronicity and provides insights into potential therapeutic strategies, such as microbiome-targeted treatments.
Who was studied?
The review addresses studies that examine a broad spectrum of individuals affected by Crohn's Disease, with an emphasis on genetic, environmental, and microbial influences. It considers both pediatric and adult populations, as well as patients with varying phenotypes of CD, such as inflammatory, fistulizing, and stricturing forms. The review highlights how differences in microbiota composition may influence disease severity and response to treatment, particularly in treatment-naïve individuals and those with diverse environmental exposures.
Most important findings
The most significant findings from the review underscore the role of dysbiosis (microbial imbalance) in Crohn's Disease, notably how reduced microbial diversity and the overgrowth of pathogenic bacteria contribute to the inflammation seen in CD patients. Specific microbiome signatures are now linked with disease severity, and these microbial imbalances may also influence immune system dysregulation. T-helper (Th) cells, particularly Th17, play a central role in driving the inflammation in CD, and microbial interactions may exacerbate this process. The paper also explores the growing evidence of how environmental factors—such as diet, antibiotics, and pollution—can influence the microbiome and contribute to disease onset and progression.
Recent studies also point to the potential for personalized therapies that target the microbiome, such as fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) or microbiome modulation to restore balance and alleviate symptoms. Furthermore, advancements in multi-omics technologies and single-cell transcriptomics are offering more profound insights into the genetic and immune pathways involved, enabling more targeted and effective therapeutic strategies.
Key implications
The review highlights several key implications for clinical practice. First, a better understanding of microbiome dysbiosis could lead to innovative, non-invasive diagnostic tools that predict disease severity and response to treatment. The evolving microbiome-targeted therapies provide promising avenues for personalized medicine, especially in patients who do not respond to conventional therapies. Moreover, the identification of specific microbial signatures for Crohn’s Disease could lead to novel biomarkers for early diagnosis and for monitoring disease progression in real-time. Finally, the intersection of epigenetics and microbiome alterations opens new paths for preventative strategies, particularly in genetically predisposed populations, emphasizing early-life interventions.
Psoriasis as a Potential Risk Factor for Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD)
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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This study finds that psoriasis is associated with an increased risk of developing inflammatory bowel disease, particularly ulcerative colitis, emphasizing the importance of early gastrointestinal monitoring in psoriasis patients.
What was studied?
This study investigates the potential link between psoriasis and inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), specifically Crohn's disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC), using a nationally representative Korean cohort. The objective was to determine whether psoriasis serves as a risk factor for the subsequent development of IBD, based on a large-scale, retrospective, nested case-control study. The study also sought to explore whether the relationship varies between the two subtypes of IBD and across different demographic and clinical subgroups.
Who was studied?
The study focused on individuals from the Korean National Health Insurance Service (NHIS) National Sample Cohort, which includes over a million participants with detailed medical records from 2002 to 2019. A total of 10,966 IBD patients (with CD or UC) were matched to 43,864 controls based on key demographic variables like age, sex, income, region, and index date. The participants were further categorized into various subgroups based on factors such as age, sex, income level, residential area, and Charlson Comorbidity Index (CCI) score. Psoriasis history was assessed using diagnostic codes before the index date for IBD diagnosis, and psoriasis subtypes were identified for completeness, though detailed analysis of subtypes was not conducted.
Most important findings
The study found that individuals with a history of psoriasis had a significantly higher risk of developing IBD. Psoriasis was linked to a higher likelihood of developing UC across most subgroups, while the association with CD was statistically significant only in those under 45 years of age. The association between psoriasis and IBD was observed to be more pronounced in individuals with higher comorbidity burdens, those living in urban areas, and those with lower income. These findings suggest that psoriasis could be a significant risk factor for developing IBD, particularly UC.
Key implications
The results from this study suggest that clinicians should be vigilant for gastrointestinal symptoms in patients with psoriasis, as these individuals may have an increased risk of developing IBD. Since the association was stronger for UC, healthcare providers should closely monitor psoriasis patients for early signs of UC, particularly those in high-risk subgroups, such as younger individuals, men, and those with higher comorbidity burdens. The study also highlights the importance of considering gastrointestinal comorbidities when managing psoriasis, particularly in light of the shared immune pathways, such as the IL-23/IL-17 axis, that contribute to both psoriasis and IBD. Although the study does not establish causality, the findings underscore the need for further research to understand the underlying mechanisms driving this association and to develop targeted prevention strategies for individuals at risk of both conditions.
Graves’ Disease Gut Microbiota Signature: Key Microbial Changes in Autoimmune Thyroid Disease
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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Graves’ Disease (GD)
Graves’ Disease (GD)
OverviewGraves’ Disease (GD) affects approximately 0.5% of the population, predominantly women. First-line treatment options—antithyroid medications, radioactive iodine, and surgery— often result in significant side effects, incomplete remissions, and frequent relapses. Further, current first-line treatment options focus on symptoms management, and reflect an inadequate understanding of the etiology of the condition. However, recent research reveals a […]
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Graves’ disease patients display a distinct gut microbiota signature, characterized by reduced diversity and altered abundance of key microbial taxa, including increased Bacilli, Prevotella, and Megamonas, and decreased Ruminococcus and Alistipes, suggesting a role for the microbiome in GD pathogenesis.
What was studied?
This study, titled "Intestinal microbiota changes in Graves’ disease: a prospective clinical study," specifically investigated the alterations in gut microbiota composition and diversity in patients with Graves’ disease (GD) compared to healthy controls. Using a cross-sectional design, the researchers employed 16S rRNA gene sequencing of fecal samples to characterize the intestinal microbial profiles. The primary aim was to elucidate whether GD, an autoimmune thyroid disorder, is associated with distinct changes in the gut microbiota. The study explored both alpha and beta diversity metrics, as well as the abundance of specific microbial taxa, to determine key differences that might serve as microbiome signatures for GD. This focus on the "Graves’ disease gut microbiota signature" is crucial for understanding the interplay between thyroid autoimmunity and the intestinal ecosystem.
Who was studied?
The study cohort consisted of 39 patients diagnosed with GD and 17 healthy controls, all recruited from Beijing Haidian Hospital, China, between April and December 2017. Participants were matched for age, sex, and body mass index (BMI) to reduce confounders. GD patients were newly diagnosed, untreated, and had no recent exposure to antibiotics, prebiotics, or medications affecting gut flora. Both groups had no history of gastrointestinal diseases. The GD group included 11 males and 28 females (ages 15–67), while the control group had 6 males and 11 females (ages 13–62). All participants adhered to a light diet prior to sample collection to minimize dietary variation effects on gut microbiota.
Most important findings
The analysis revealed a significant reduction in gut microbial diversity among GD patients compared to healthy controls, as evidenced by lower Chao1 and Shannon indices. Principal coordinate analysis (PCoA), non-metric multidimensional scaling (NMDS), and principal component analysis (PCA) all demonstrated that the overall microbial communities in GD patients were distinctly separated from those of controls, confirming disease-associated dysbiosis.
Crucially, the study identified a unique microbiota signature associated with GD. The relative abundances of several taxa were markedly altered:
Taxa (Genus/Order/Class)
Trend in GD Patients
Bacilli (Class)
Increased
Lactobacillales (Order)
Increased
Prevotella (Genus)
Increased
Megamonas (Genus)
Increased
Veillonella (Genus)
Increased
Ruminococcus (Genus)
Decreased
Rikenellaceae (Family)
Decreased
Alistipes (Genus)
Decreased
Linear discriminant analysis effect size (LEfSe) confirmed these taxa as potential biomarkers, with LDA scores above 3. Notably, increases in Prevotella and Megamonas have been linked to immune modulation and may impact the efficacy of certain therapies. The diminished presence of Ruminococcus, Rikenellaceae, and Alistipes aligns with findings in other autoimmune and inflammatory conditions, suggesting a possible shared microbial mechanism underlying immune dysregulation.
Key implications
This study provides evidence that GD is characterized by a distinct gut microbiota signature, marked by reduced diversity and specific shifts in microbial taxa. The "Graves’ disease gut microbiota signature"—notably increased Bacilli, Lactobacillales, Prevotella, Megamonas, Veillonella, and decreased Ruminococcus, Rikenellaceae, Alistipes—may serve as potential biomarkers for disease presence and progression. These findings highlight the potential utility of gut microbiome profiling in the diagnosis and management of GD, and open avenues for future research into microbiome-targeted interventions. Clinicians should consider that GD-associated dysbiosis may influence disease pathogenesis and responsiveness to treatment. However, causality cannot be inferred due to the study’s cross-sectional design, and results may not be generalizable beyond the Chinese population. The study lays foundational knowledge for integrating microbiome data into precision medicine approaches for autoimmune thyroid diseases.
Intestinal Microbiota Changes in Graves’ Disease: Microbial Signatures and Clinical Impact
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
Graves’ Disease (GD)
Graves’ Disease (GD)
OverviewGraves’ Disease (GD) affects approximately 0.5% of the population, predominantly women. First-line treatment options—antithyroid medications, radioactive iodine, and surgery— often result in significant side effects, incomplete remissions, and frequent relapses. Further, current first-line treatment options focus on symptoms management, and reflect an inadequate understanding of the etiology of the condition. However, recent research reveals a […]
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This study found that Graves’ disease is associated with reduced gut microbial diversity and specific increases in Bacilli, Lactobacillales, Prevotella, Megamonas, and Veillonella, alongside decreases in Ruminococcus, Rikenellaceae, and Alistipes, identifying a distinctive intestinal microbiota signature relevant to GD pathogenesis.
What was studied?
This study investigated the intestinal microbiota composition and diversity in patients with Graves’ disease (GD) compared to healthy controls, aiming to identify specific microbial changes associated with GD. The research addresses the knowledge gap regarding how autoimmune thyroid dysfunction may alter gut microbiota, potentially influencing disease pathogenesis and progression. The focus keyphrase, "intestinal microbiota changes in Graves’ disease," is central to the study, as the authors performed high-throughput 16S rRNA gene sequencing on fecal samples to comprehensively profile and compare the gut microbial communities between the two groups. By elucidating these microbial signatures, the study provides foundational data for understanding the interplay between gut bacteria and autoimmune thyroid disease.
Who was studied?
The study included 39 patients with newly diagnosed, untreated Graves’ disease (GD) and 17 healthy controls, all recruited from Beijing Haidian Hospital, China, between April and December 2017. The GD group comprised 11 males and 28 females, aged 15–67 years, while the control group included 6 males and 11 females, aged 13–62 years, and was matched for age, sex, and body mass index. Both groups excluded individuals with a history of gastrointestinal diseases, recent antibiotic or prebiotic use, hormonal medication, Chinese herbal medicine, pregnancy, smoking, or excessive alcohol consumption. All participants adhered to a light diet for one week prior to fecal sampling to minimize dietary confounding. Diagnosis of GD followed established Chinese Society of Endocrinology criteria, ensuring a well-defined study population.
Most important findings
The major findings revealed a marked reduction in microbial diversity (both richness and evenness) in GD patients compared to healthy controls, as assessed by Chao1 and Shannon diversity indices. Beta-diversity analyses (PCoA, NMDS, PCA, and PLS-DA) demonstrated clear separation between the microbiota profiles of GD patients and controls, indicating significant compositional shifts. Linear discriminant analysis effect size (LEfSe) pinpointed specific taxa altered in GD: Bacilli, Lactobacillales, Prevotella, Megamonas, and Veillonella were significantly increased in GD patients, whereas Ruminococcus, Rikenellaceae, and Alistipes were decreased. These taxa changes suggest a dysbiotic state characterized by expansion of potentially pro-inflammatory or immune-modulating bacteria and loss of genera often associated with gut health and metabolic regulation. The increased abundance of Prevotella, in particular, may have implications for immune modulation and drug responsiveness, while decreased Ruminococcus and Alistipes have been linked to other autoimmune and inflammatory conditions. These microbial shifts represent a distinct intestinal microbiota signature for GD, relevant for inclusion in a microbiome signatures database.
Key implications
The study’s findings underscore a significant association between Graves’ disease and gut microbiota dysbiosis, marked by decreased diversity and characteristic alterations in microbial taxa. These changes may contribute to or reflect underlying immune dysregulation in GD and could influence disease activity, response to therapy, or development of comorbidities. The identification of specific bacterial changes provides potential biomarkers for GD diagnosis or monitoring and highlights new avenues for investigating microbiota-targeted interventions, such as probiotics or dietary modification, in autoimmune thyroid disorders. However, as a cross-sectional study, causality cannot be established, and results may be influenced by regional dietary patterns. Further longitudinal and mechanistic studies are needed to clarify the causal links and therapeutic potential of modulating the gut microbiome in GD.
Osteoporosis Complications in Crohn’s Disease Patients: Factors, Pathogenesis, and Treatment Outlines
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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This review discusses the pathogenesis of osteoporosis in Crohn’s disease, focusing on the role of cytokines, glucocorticoids, and malnutrition. It emphasizes the importance of early detection and treatment strategies to prevent fractures and improve patient outcomes.
What was studied?
This paper investigates the prevalence, pathogenesis, and treatment of osteoporosis in patients with Crohn’s disease (CD), a condition known for its gastrointestinal involvement but also associated with several extra-intestinal complications. It explores the multifactorial causes of osteoporosis in CD, including inflammation, malnutrition, and the use of glucocorticoids. The review highlights the mechanisms contributing to low bone mineral density (BMD), the link between CD-related cytokine activity and bone resorption, and the role of steroid treatment in accelerating bone loss. The article also assesses therapeutic strategies, including steroid-sparing medications, bisphosphonates, calcium, and vitamin D supplementation, emphasizing their role in both managing CD symptoms and improving bone density.
Who was studied?
The study focuses on Crohn’s disease patients, particularly those diagnosed with osteoporosis or osteopenia as extra-intestinal complications of the disease. It encompasses individuals of various ages, though particular attention is given to those in the long-term stages of CD or those undergoing surgical interventions like bowel resections, which further increase the risk for low BMD. The review synthesizes data from studies involving both male and female patients, addressing the role of cytokines, glucocorticoids, and malabsorption in the pathophysiology of osteoporosis within the context of CD. Research findings are drawn from cohorts with varying levels of disease severity, from mild to moderate and severe forms of CD.
Most important findings
The most significant findings in this review underline the complexity of osteoporosis in CD, driven primarily by the inflammatory processes that increase bone resorption. Pro-inflammatory cytokines such as TNF-alpha, IL-6, and IL-17 play a key role in altering bone metabolism by activating the RANKL pathway, which leads to increased osteoclast activity and subsequent bone loss. Long-term corticosteroid use, which is common in CD treatment, further exacerbates osteoporosis by decreasing the effectiveness of bone formation and increasing bone resorption. Glucocorticoids also contribute to hormonal imbalances, particularly reducing the production of estrogen and androgen, which are essential for bone health.
The review also highlights malnutrition as a contributing factor, especially due to nutrient malabsorption in the intestines, resulting in deficiencies in calcium, vitamin D, and vitamin K, all of which are crucial for bone metabolism. A deficiency in these nutrients compromises bone density and contributes to osteoporosis in CD patients. Vitamin B12 and folate deficiencies further complicate this process by increasing homocysteine levels, which are associated with increased bone resorption.
Key implications
The review highlights the need for early and proactive management of osteoporosis in CD patients, particularly given its prevalence and potential for progression to severe complications, such as fractures. Screening for osteoporosis using DEXA scans should be integrated into routine care for patients with CD, particularly for those with risk factors like steroid use, malnutrition, or advanced disease. Clinicians should focus on implementing a multi-faceted treatment approach that combines medications to control CD symptoms with therapies to improve bone health. Steroid-sparing biologics like infliximab, along with the use of bisphosphonates and appropriate vitamin supplementation, can significantly mitigate the risks associated with osteoporosis in CD patients.
Graves & Crohn: Genetic Evidence for Microbiome-Mediated Crosstalk
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
Graves’ Disease (GD)
Graves’ Disease (GD)
OverviewGraves’ Disease (GD) affects approximately 0.5% of the population, predominantly women. First-line treatment options—antithyroid medications, radioactive iodine, and surgery— often result in significant side effects, incomplete remissions, and frequent relapses. Further, current first-line treatment options focus on symptoms management, and reflect an inadequate understanding of the etiology of the condition. However, recent research reveals a […]
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Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) is a common gastrointestinal disorder characterized by symptoms such as abdominal pain, bloating, and altered bowel habits. Recent research has focused on the gut microbiota's role in IBS, aiming to identify specific microbial signatures associated with the condition.
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Mendelian-randomization of East-Asian GWAS data shows Crohn disease genetics raise Graves disease risk, while ulcerative colitis genetics are protective, highlighting microbiome-immune pathways linking gut and thyroid autoimmunity.
What was studied?
This original research employed bidirectional two-sample Mendelian randomization (MR) to test for causal relationships between Graves disease (GD) and inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Genome-wide significant single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) for GD were taken from Biobank Japan (BBJ), while SNPs for IBD—including Crohn disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC)—came from the International IBD Genetics Consortium. Multiple MR methods (inverse-variance weighted, MR-Egger, weighted median and MR-PRESSO) were applied to account for heterogeneity and pleiotropy, mimicking a randomized trial at the level of inherited genetic variation.
Who was studied?
The analysis drew on 2176 GD cases and 210 277 controls of East-Asian ancestry from BBJ, and 2824 IBD cases (1690 CD; 1134 UC) plus 3719 controls from East-Asian, Indian and Iranian cohorts within the IIBDGC panel. Mean age at GD diagnosis (not reported) typically peaks at 30-50 years, while mean CD and UC diagnosis ages were 27.6 ± 12.2 and 35.8 ± 13.7 years, respectively. Male representation was 27 % in GD versus 67 % in CD and 50 % in UC, ensuring sex-balanced causal inference.
Most important findings
Direction (Exposure → Outcome)
OR (IVW)
95 % CI
p-value
Interpretation
IBD → GD
1.24
1.01-1.52
0.041
Overall IBD increases GD risk
CD → GD
1.30
1.06-1.59
0.010
Crohn loci elevate GD risk by ~30 %
UC → GD
0.71
0.58-0.86
<0.001
UC loci appear protective
GD → IBD
1.04
0.88-1.23
0.62
No overall reverse causality
GD → CD*
1.33
1.15-1.53
<0.001
GD variants modestly raise CD risk
GD → UC
0.82
0.62-1.09
0.18
No effect on UC
*after exclusion of pleiotropic SNP rs1569723. Forest and leave-one-out plots on pages 4-6 visually confirm these asymmetric effects, with CD-associated SNPs clustering above the null line and UC-associated SNPs below.
Key implications
The asymmetric genetic links suggest shared immune-microbiome pathways between GD and CD, but distinct mechanisms in UC. CD-associated variants intersect with HLA-DRB1, JAK-STAT and PTPN22 loci—genes also tied to microbial sensing and T-helper 17 regulation—supporting the view that dysbiotic Crohn-type microbiota may precipitate thyroid autoimmunity. Conversely, UC-specific variants (e.g., epithelial barrier genes) may foster microbial communities that dampen GD risk. Clinically, heightened vigilance for thyroid dysfunction in CD patients, and consideration of microbiota-targeted or JAK inhibition strategies, could improve interdisciplinary care. The results also provide candidate microbial signatures (e.g., reduced Haemophilus abundance previously noted in CD) for inclusion in microbiome databases tracking autoimmune overlap.
Graves’ Disease Gut Microbiome Signatures: Key Genera and Clinical Implications
February 12, 2026
/
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
Graves’ Disease (GD)
Graves’ Disease (GD)
OverviewGraves’ Disease (GD) affects approximately 0.5% of the population, predominantly women. First-line treatment options—antithyroid medications, radioactive iodine, and surgery— often result in significant side effects, incomplete remissions, and frequent relapses. Further, current first-line treatment options focus on symptoms management, and reflect an inadequate understanding of the etiology of the condition. However, recent research reveals a […]
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This study reveals distinct gut microbiome alterations in Graves’ disease, identifies 12 key bacterial genera as diagnostic signatures, and shows microbiota recovery after antithyroid therapy, linking dysbiosis to immune regulation and disease pathogenesis.
What was studied?
This prospective study investigated the relationship between gut microbiota composition and the development of Graves’ disease (GD), with a particular focus on identifying distinct microbial signatures and their associations with immune dysregulation. Using 16S rRNA sequencing, the researchers profiled the gut microbiota in newly diagnosed GD patients both before and after antithyroid drug (ATD) therapy, compared to healthy controls. The study aimed to characterize alterations in gut microbial diversity and specific taxa, evaluate their associations with clinical and immune parameters (including cytokines such as IL-17), and assess the impact of standard GD treatment on restoring microbiome balance. Importantly, the study utilized machine learning (random forest analysis) to identify bacterial genera that could distinguish GD patients from healthy individuals with high accuracy, offering potential for diagnostic biomarker development and deeper insight into the gut-immune-thyroid axis.
Who was studied?
The study enrolled 65 newly diagnosed, untreated Graves’ disease patients (18 men, 47 women; median age 30) of Chinese Han ethnicity, treated at the Endocrinology Department of the First Affiliated Hospital of Nanchang University between October 2018 and September 2019. Thirty-seven of these patients completed a 3-month follow-up after receiving methimazole-based ATD therapy. The control group comprised 33 healthy volunteers (10 men, 23 women; median age 27) with no known diseases. All participants provided fecal and blood samples for microbiome and clinical parameter analyses. Strict inclusion and exclusion criteria were applied to avoid confounding factors such as recent antibiotic, probiotic, or prebiotic use, and comorbid autoimmune, gastrointestinal, hepatic, or endocrine diseases. The study also performed a subgroup analysis of GD patients with and without impaired liver function.
Most important findings
The gut microbiota of GD patients exhibited significantly lower richness and diversity compared to healthy controls, indicating marked dysbiosis. At baseline, notable microbial shifts included increased abundance of Bacilli (class), Lactobacillales (order), Streptococcaceae (family), and the genera Streptococcus, Veillonella, and Erysipelatoclostridium, all associated with pro-inflammatory states. In contrast, key short-chain fatty acid (SCFA)-producing and anti-inflammatory taxa—such as Peptostreptococcaceae, Christensenellaceae, Marinifilaceae, Rikenellaceae (families), and Roseburia, Romboutsia, Lachnospira, Eubacterium ventriosum (genera)—were significantly decreased in GD patients. After 3 months of ATD therapy, the microbiota composition of GD patients began to recover toward that of healthy controls, with partial restoration of SCFA-producing taxa and reduction of pro-inflammatory genera. IL-17, a cytokine associated with Th17-mediated immune response, decreased significantly post-treatment, and its levels correlated inversely with SCFA-producing bacteria such as Eubacterium hallii. Random forest analysis identified 12 bacterial genera—including Veillonella, Streptococcus, and Roseburia—that could collectively distinguish GD patients from controls with high diagnostic accuracy (AUC=0.90). Subgroup analysis revealed that reductions in Weissella and Leuconostocaceae were linked to impaired liver function in GD. Overall, the findings support a model where GD is associated with gut dysbiosis characterized by loss of beneficial, anti-inflammatory taxa and enrichment of pro-inflammatory bacteria, contributing to immune imbalance and disease pathogenesis.
Key implications
The study demonstrates that specific gut microbiome signatures are closely associated with Graves’ disease, highlighting dysbiosis as a potential contributor to immune dysregulation and disease progression. The partial recovery of microbiome composition and immune markers following antithyroid therapy suggests that gut microbiota may be both a biomarker and a therapeutic target in GD. The identification of 12 key bacterial genera that robustly differentiate GD from healthy states provides a foundation for future diagnostic tools, potentially enabling earlier detection or risk stratification. Moreover, associations between specific taxa and immune/inflammatory parameters (e.g., Th17/Treg balance, IL-17) lend support to the concept of microbiota-mediated modulation of autoimmune thyroid disease. These findings encourage further exploration of microbiome-targeted interventions—such as probiotics, prebiotics, or fecal microbiota transplantation—to restore microbial balance and improve clinical outcomes in GD. The study also underscores the need for longer-term and larger-scale research to validate and expand upon these results.
Thromboembolic Events in Patients with Inflammatory Bowel Disease: A Comprehensive Overview
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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This review explores the link between IBD and thromboembolic events, highlighting the increased risks, particularly in patients with active disease, corticosteroid treatment, and post-surgery. It emphasizes the need for thromboprophylaxis and further research on the pathophysiology of these complications.
What was studied?
The paper discusses thromboembolic events (TEs) in patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), specifically addressing the pathophysiology, epidemiology, and management of venous thromboembolism (VTE) and arterial thromboembolism (ATE). It explores how IBD, through chronic inflammation and altered immune responses, increases the risk of thromboembolism, particularly during disease flare-ups or post-surgery. The review further examines the underlying mechanisms that contribute to thromboembolic events in IBD patients, including the role of coagulation pathways, platelets, and various risk factors such as medication, hospitalizations, and comorbidities.
Who was studied?
The study focuses on patients with IBD, specifically those diagnosed with Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis. These patients were assessed in terms of their risk for developing thromboembolic events, both venous and arterial. Studies included patients from various geographical regions, including those undergoing hospitalizations and surgeries, and some specific subsets such as pregnant females and postoperative patients. The paper compares IBD patients with the general population to better understand the increased risks of VTE and ATE, focusing on demographics, disease activity, and the use of specific treatments like corticosteroids.
Most important findings
The most significant findings of this review indicate that patients with IBD are at a significantly increased risk for thromboembolic events, including deep vein thrombosis (DVT) and pulmonary embolism (PE), with a 2–3 fold higher risk compared to the general population. The risk of developing thromboembolism is notably higher during disease flare-ups, hospitalization, and post-surgical periods. Patients with IBD who are treated with corticosteroids are particularly vulnerable due to the medication's pro-coagulant effects, which increase factors like VII, VIII, and IX in the blood, promoting thrombosis. Platelet activation is also observed in IBD patients, contributing to thromboembolic events, as evidenced by the presence of markers like CD40L and P-selectin on circulating platelets. Moreover, studies show that VTE in IBD patients tends to occur at a younger age compared to the general population, and those with IBD have a higher risk of recurrent thromboembolic events, particularly post-surgery.
Mesenteric ischemia, a rare but serious thromboembolic complication, has been linked to IBD, particularly in patients with active disease and a history of surgery. The inflammation in the intestines can lead to endothelial damage, which then activates the coagulation cascade, increasing the likelihood of thrombosis in both veins and arteries. This review also highlights the need for thromboprophylaxis, especially during hospital admissions and flare-ups of IBD, to reduce the incidence of thromboembolic complications.
Key implications
The review emphasizes the importance of recognizing the elevated risk of thromboembolic events in IBD patients and the need for tailored management strategies. Clinicians must be aware of the increased risk during flare-ups, surgeries, and with corticosteroid use, and should consider prophylactic anticoagulation therapies for hospitalized patients. This is particularly relevant in those with active disease or post-surgery. The findings also underscore the need for future research into the pathophysiology of thromboembolism in IBD, particularly to identify biomarkers that could help predict and assess thrombotic risks. The potential for platelet activation and altered coagulation in IBD calls for more targeted therapies that address both inflammation and thrombosis.
The relationship between serum calprotectin levels and disease activity in patients with subacute thyroiditis.
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
The study demonstrated that serum calprotectin is significantly elevated during acute subacute thyroiditis and drops with recovery, offering a novel, independent marker for disease activity, though it does not predict permanent hypothyroidism.
What was studied?
This study investigated serum calprotectin (S100A8/A9) as a potential biomarker for the diagnosis and follow-up of subacute thyroiditis, specifically subacute granulomatous (De Quervain) thyroiditis. The focus was on evaluating calprotectin's utility in differentiating the acute inflammatory phase from the recovery phase of the disease, and whether its levels can predict persistent hypothyroidism. Calprotectin, a cytosolic protein complex primarily produced by neutrophils and monocytes, is known to be elevated in various acute and chronic inflammatory states, but had not previously been evaluated in subacute thyroiditis. Patients were assessed using an array of standard laboratory parameters (e.g., free thyroxine [fT4], thyroid-stimulating hormone [TSH], C-reactive protein [CRP], erythrocyte sedimentation rate [ESR], white blood cell [WBC] count, absolute lymphocyte, and neutrophil counts) during both the acute and recovery phases, with persistent hypothyroidism determined at six months.
Who was studied?
The study included 36 adult patients (mean age 44.1 ± 8.8 years; 80.6% female) with a confirmed diagnosis of subacute granulomatous thyroiditis, presenting to a single tertiary center in Turkey between November 2018 and January 2020. Patients with confounding conditions (other infections, autoimmune or rheumatic disorders, recent steroid use, pregnant, major surgery, chronic hepatic/renal/cardiac diseases, or malignancies) were rigorously excluded to ensure specificity. Diagnosis was based on clinical presentation (fever, neck pain, thyrotoxic symptoms), elevated ESR and CRP, and supportive ultrasonographic findings. All patients provided informed consent, and local ethics approval was granted.
Most important findings
Serum calprotectin levels were significantly higher in the acute inflammatory phase than in the recovery phase (median 96.92 ng/mL [IQR: 24.47–130.37] vs. 37.98 ng/mL [IQR: 14.02–20.52]; p < 0.001). Similar trends were observed for other acute phase markers (ESR, CRP, WBC, ANC), all of which decreased upon resolution. However, calprotectin did not correlate with these classical inflammatory markers or with TSH and fT4 in either phase. Logistic regression revealed that neither calprotectin nor any traditional inflammatory marker predicted the development of permanent hypothyroidism at six months. The study concluded that, while calprotectin is a sensitive indicator of acute inflammation in subacute thyroiditis, it is not useful as a prognostic marker for long-term thyroid dysfunction. No significant correlations were identified between calprotectin and other inflammatory or thyroid parameters, pointing to its independence from other markers.
Marker
Acute Phase (Median/IQR or Mean±SD)
Recovery Phase (Median/IQR or Mean±SD)
p-value
Calprotectin (ng/mL)
96.92 (24.47–130.37)
37.98 (14.02–20.52)
<0.001
ESR (mm/h)
81.17 ± 23.19
19.00 (13.0–26.75)
<0.001
CRP (mg/L)
31.05 (17.62–46.12)
3.23 (3.23–4.16)
<0.001
WBC (10³/mm³)
8.27 ± 2.44
6.72 ± 1.85
<0.001
ANC (10³/mm³)
5.31 ± 2.00
3.73 ± 1.44
<0.001
TSH (μU/L)
0.010 ([< 0.001]-0.037)
3.51 ± 2.69
<0.001
fT4 (pmol/L)
19.13 (15.59–31.37)
11.33 (10.49–12.41)
<0.001
Key implications
The findings support serum calprotectin as a reliable and independent marker for the diagnosis and monitoring of the acute phase of subacute thyroiditis, enhancing clinical discrimination during active disease. However, its lack of association with persistent hypothyroidism restricts its use as a prognostic tool for long-term outcomes. The lack of correlation between calprotectin and classical markers implies mechanistic independence, potentially providing unique insight into innate immune activity in thyroid inflammation. Microbiome researchers and clinicians may consider including calprotectin as part of a broader signature for neutrophil-driven inflammatory processes. Further, larger, controlled studies are needed to clarify the predictive value of calprotectin for tissue-damaging sequelae and to explore therapeutic modulation (e.g., zinc supplementation) in subacute thyroiditis.
Graves’ Disease Gut Microbiota Signatures: Key Microbial Shifts and Clinical Implications
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
Graves’ Disease (GD)
Graves’ Disease (GD)
OverviewGraves’ Disease (GD) affects approximately 0.5% of the population, predominantly women. First-line treatment options—antithyroid medications, radioactive iodine, and surgery— often result in significant side effects, incomplete remissions, and frequent relapses. Further, current first-line treatment options focus on symptoms management, and reflect an inadequate understanding of the etiology of the condition. However, recent research reveals a […]
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This study reveals that Graves’ disease patients exhibit distinct gut microbiota signatures, with increased Bacteroidetes and Prevotellaceae and decreased Firmicutes and Lachnospiraceae, strongly associated with thyroid function markers. These microbial shifts may play a role in GD pathogenesis and serve as potential clinical biomarkers.
What was studied?
This original research article investigated the alterations in gut microbiota composition among patients with Graves’ disease (GD), a systemic autoimmune thyroid disorder characterized by hyperthyroidism. The study aimed to characterize and compare the gut microbial communities of GD patients and healthy controls using 16S rRNA gene sequencing. It sought to identify specific microbial taxa associated with GD and examine their relationship with clinical parameters of thyroid function, such as free thyroxine (FT4), thyrotropin (TSH), and thyroperoxidase antibody (TPOAb) status. The researchers also evaluated whether microbiome signatures could serve as potential biomarkers to distinguish GD patients from healthy individuals.
Who was studied?
The study population comprised 55 patients previously diagnosed with GD and 48 age-, sex-, and body mass index-matched healthy controls, all recruited from Chang Gung Memorial Hospital in Taiwan between October 2017 and March 2020. GD diagnosis was based on clinical features and laboratory criteria—including symptoms of thyrotoxicosis, diffuse goiter, ophthalmopathy, abnormal thyroid function tests, and positive TSH receptor autoantibodies. The healthy controls had normal thyroid function and no history of thyroid disease. Both groups were screened to exclude confounding conditions (e.g., recent antibiotic use, gastrointestinal disorders, other autoimmune diseases). Fecal samples were collected from all participants for microbiota analysis.
Most important findings
A total of 11.7 million sequencing reads were analyzed, yielding 684 operational taxonomic units (OTUs) in the GD group and 671 in controls, with similar richness and diversity between groups. However, principal coordinate and discriminant analyses revealed significant differences in overall community structure (ANOSIM p < 0.001). Key microbiome shifts in GD patients included a decreased relative abundance of Firmicutes and increased Bacteroidetes and Actinobacteria at the phylum level. Notably, families such as Prevotellaceae and Veillonellaceae and the genus Prevotella_9 were enriched in GD patients, whereas Lachnospiraceae, Ruminococcaceae, Faecalibacterium, and Lachnospira were more abundant in healthy controls. Metagenomic profiling identified 22 significantly altered bacterial taxa. Many GD-enriched taxa, including Prevotella_9, Parabacteroides, Collinsella, and Actinomyces_odontolyticus, showed strong positive correlations with TPOAb and FT4, and negative correlations with TSH. Conversely, taxa enriched in controls, such as Faecalibacterium and Lachnospiraceae NK4A136 group, showed the opposite pattern. A random forest model based on predominant taxa achieved an area under the curve (AUC) of 0.825, indicating these microbial features could effectively differentiate GD patients from controls.
Key implications
This study demonstrates that while overall gut microbial diversity remains unchanged, the taxonomic composition in GD patients is significantly altered, featuring a distinct microbial signature. The enrichment of pro-inflammatory taxa (such as Prevotella_9 and Veillonellaceae) and the reduction of anti-inflammatory butyrate producers (like Faecalibacterium and Lachnospiraceae) suggest a potential role of gut dysbiosis in GD pathogenesis. These findings highlight the gut microbiota as a possible contributor to, or biomarker of, autoimmune thyroid disease. The strong association between specific microbial taxa and thyroid-related clinical parameters underscores the potential for microbiome-based diagnostics or therapeutics in GD. However, causality cannot be established, and further longitudinal and functional studies are warranted to clarify the mechanistic links and clinical utility.
Graves’ Disease Gut Microbiota: Distinct Microbial Signatures and Clinical Associations
February 12, 2026
/
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
Graves’ Disease (GD)
Graves’ Disease (GD)
OverviewGraves’ Disease (GD) affects approximately 0.5% of the population, predominantly women. First-line treatment options—antithyroid medications, radioactive iodine, and surgery— often result in significant side effects, incomplete remissions, and frequent relapses. Further, current first-line treatment options focus on symptoms management, and reflect an inadequate understanding of the etiology of the condition. However, recent research reveals a […]
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Graves’ disease patients show distinctive gut microbiota profiles, with increased Bacteroidetes and specific pro-inflammatory bacteria, despite no difference in overall diversity. Key taxa correlate with clinical GD parameters, highlighting their potential as diagnostic biomarkers and supporting a role for gut dysbiosis in GD pathogenesis.
What was studied?
This original research article examined alterations in the gut microbiota composition of patients with Graves' disease (GD) compared to healthy controls using 16S rRNA gene sequencing. The primary aim was to characterize the gut microbial communities in GD, assess differences in bacterial diversity and abundance, and explore correlations between specific microbiota and clinical parameters of GD. The study also evaluated the potential of microbiome profiles to serve as discriminative biomarkers for distinguishing GD patients from healthy individuals, thereby contributing to a better understanding of the gut-thyroid axis in autoimmune thyroid disease.
Who was studied?
The study enrolled 55 patients with clinically diagnosed Graves’ disease and 48 age-, sex-, and BMI-matched healthy controls. All GD patients were recruited from the Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism at Chang Gung Memorial Hospital, Taiwan, and had been previously diagnosed and treated with anti-thyroid drugs (propylthiouracil, methimazole, or carbimazole), with an average follow-up of over 45 months. The control group was selected from a health screening center and had no history of thyroid disease, with normal thyroid-related laboratory values. Exclusion criteria included pregnancy, gastrointestinal disorders, concurrent autoimmune diseases, recent antibiotic or probiotic use, hormonal or herbal drug intake, gastrointestinal surgery, and strict vegetarianism. Fecal samples were collected from all participants for gut microbiota analysis.
Most important findings
The study found no statistically significant difference in overall gut microbial richness or diversity between GD patients and healthy controls, as measured by standard alpha diversity indices. However, beta diversity metrics—including principal coordinate analysis (PCoA) and partial least squares-discriminant analysis (PLS-DA)—demonstrated a clear separation in overall microbiota composition between the two groups (ANOSIM, p < 0.001). At the phylum level, GD patients exhibited a decreased abundance of Firmicutes and an increased abundance of Bacteroidetes and Actinobacteria compared to controls. Key microbial signatures in GD included increased levels of the families Prevotellaceae and Veillonellaceae, and the genera Prevotella_9, Parabacteroides, Collinsella, and Actinomyces_odontolyticus. In contrast, healthy controls had higher abundances of Lachnospiraceae, Ruminococcaceae, and the genera Faecalibacterium, Lachnospira, and Lachnospiraceae NK4A136. Notably, 22 bacterial taxa showed statistically significant differences between groups; 18 were increased and 4 decreased in GD patients. Several of these taxa, especially those enriched in GD, were positively correlated with GD-associated clinical parameters such as thyroperoxidase antibody (TPOAb) and free thyroxine (FT4) levels, and negatively correlated with thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH). A machine learning model based on the top 15 discriminant taxa achieved an area under the ROC curve (AUC) of 0.825, indicating strong potential for microbiota-based discrimination of GD status.
Key implications
This study demonstrates that Graves’ disease is associated with a distinct gut microbiota signature, despite similar overall bacterial diversity compared to healthy controls. The shift towards increased Bacteroidetes and Actinobacteria and decreased Firmicutes, as well as the enrichment of specific pro-inflammatory and immunomodulatory taxa (such as Prevotella_9 and Veillonellaceae), supports the hypothesis that gut dysbiosis may contribute to GD pathogenesis via immune modulation. The strong correlation between key microbial taxa and clinical indicators of GD suggests that these bacteria may play a role in disease activity or progression. Moreover, the successful discrimination of GD patients based on gut microbiota profiles suggests potential for developing non-invasive microbial biomarkers for GD diagnosis or monitoring. However, as this was a cross-sectional, single-center study, causality remains undetermined, and larger multi-omics studies are needed to clarify mechanistic pathways and explore therapeutic interventions targeting the gut microbiome in GD.
Alteration in gut microbiota is associated with immune imbalance in Graves’ disease
February 12, 2026
/
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
Graves’ Disease (GD)
Graves’ Disease (GD)
OverviewGraves’ Disease (GD) affects approximately 0.5% of the population, predominantly women. First-line treatment options—antithyroid medications, radioactive iodine, and surgery— often result in significant side effects, incomplete remissions, and frequent relapses. Further, current first-line treatment options focus on symptoms management, and reflect an inadequate understanding of the etiology of the condition. However, recent research reveals a […]
•
This study reveals distinct compositional changes in the gut microbiota of Graves’ disease patients, notably increased Bacteroidetes and Prevotellaceae and decreased Firmicutes and Lachnospiraceae, suggesting potential microbial biomarkers and a role for gut dysbiosis in the disease’s pathogenesis.
What was studied?
This original research study investigated the composition of the gut microbiota in patients with Graves’ disease (GD), an autoimmune thyroid disorder characterized by hyperthyroidism. The focus keyphrase "gut microbiota in Graves’ disease" defines the core of this work, and the study aimed to determine whether there are distinct microbial signatures associated with GD compared to healthy controls. Researchers collected fecal samples from both groups and performed 16S rRNA gene sequencing to analyze the microbial communities present. The study also examined correlations between specific microbial taxa and clinical parameters relevant to GD, such as thyroid hormone levels and autoantibody status, seeking to identify potential microbial biomarkers that could distinguish GD patients from healthy individuals.
Who was studied?
The study population comprised 55 patients with previously diagnosed Graves' disease and 48 age-, sex-, and BMI-matched healthy controls recruited from a health screening center. All GD patients were under routine follow-up and had been treated with standard anti-thyroid drugs. Controls were screened to exclude thyroid disease and matched for relevant demographic and anthropometric factors. Exclusion criteria for both groups included recent antibiotic or probiotic use, presence of other autoimmune diseases, gastrointestinal disorders, recent gastrointestinal surgery, pregnancy, and strict vegetarianism. This careful selection ensured that observed differences in gut microbiota could be attributed primarily to GD status rather than other confounding factors.
Most important findings
The study found that while overall microbial richness and diversity were similar between GD patients and healthy controls, the global composition of the gut microbiota was significantly different, as demonstrated by principal coordinate analysis and partial least squares-discriminant analysis (ANOSIM p < 0.001). Notably, GD patients exhibited a decreased abundance of Firmicutes and an increased abundance of Bacteroidetes and Actinobacteria at the phylum level. At more refined taxonomic levels, GD patients had higher levels of Prevotellaceae, Veillonellaceae, Prevotella_9, Parabacteroides, Collinsella, and Actinomyces_odontolyticus, while healthy controls had higher levels of Lachnospiraceae, Ruminococcaceae, Faecalibacterium, and Lachnospira. Several of these taxa, particularly those enriched in GD, showed strong positive correlations with GD clinical parameters, including TPO antibodies and free T4, and negative correlations with TSH. A random forest classifier using the top 15 most discriminative taxa achieved an AUC of 0.825 for distinguishing GD patients from controls, highlighting the discriminative potential of these gut microbiome signatures.
Key implications
This study provides compelling evidence that the gut microbiota in Graves’ disease is characterized by distinct compositional alterations, despite similar overall diversity compared to healthy individuals. The identification of specific microbial taxa—particularly increased Prevotellaceae, Veillonellaceae, and Prevotella_9, alongside decreased Lachnospiraceae and Faecalibacterium—suggests possible microbial signatures relevant to GD pathogenesis or progression. These findings support the hypothesis that the gut microbiota may influence or reflect immune dysregulation in GD. Clinically, these microbial signatures could potentially serve as non-invasive biomarkers for GD diagnosis or monitoring, and may, in the future, guide the development of microbiota-targeted interventions. Further longitudinal and mechanistic studies are required to elucidate causality and functional consequences.
Graves’ Disease and Depression: Immunity, Hormones & Microbiome Explained
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
Graves’ Disease (GD)
Graves’ Disease (GD)
OverviewGraves’ Disease (GD) affects approximately 0.5% of the population, predominantly women. First-line treatment options—antithyroid medications, radioactive iodine, and surgery— often result in significant side effects, incomplete remissions, and frequent relapses. Further, current first-line treatment options focus on symptoms management, and reflect an inadequate understanding of the etiology of the condition. However, recent research reveals a […]
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Graves Disease potentiates depression via autoimmune cytokines, hormonal excess and gut‑microbiome shifts. This review consolidates epidemiology and mechanisms, highlighting microbial signatures (Prevotellaceae, SCFA depletion) of translational interest.
What was reviewed?
This narrative review synthesizes epidemiological and mechanistic literature linking Graves’ disease (GD) to depression. The authors searched PubMed/MEDLINE, Cochrane Library and Web of Science up to 22 March 2023, retrieving 11 human population studies (5 cohort, 3 cross‑sectional, 3 case‑control) and multiple basic‑science reports that collectively explore immune, hormonal and microbiome pathways connecting GD and mood disorders.
Who was reviewed?
The clinical evidence base spans >30 000 participants from Asia, Europe, Africa and North America. Cohorts ranged from large national databases (e.g., 20 975 Asian patients; 2 200 000 Swedes) to smaller hospital samples, covering adults, pregnant women and paediatric cases. Collectively, these studies consistently show higher depression risk in overt or sub‑clinical hyperthyroidism compared with euthyroid controls. Key mechanistic papers include rodent models of hyperthyroidism, human cytokine profiling, and microbiota analyses in 263 GD versus 239 healthy controls.
Most important findings
Graves’ disease‑related hyperthyroidism is increasingly recognised as a biological driver of depressive symptoms. The mechanisms converge on immune–neuroendocrine crosstalk and gut‑brain communication, each amplifying neuroinflammation and neurotransmitter dysregulation. The table below delineates the three core pathways and the epidemiological evidence base.
Pathway / Evidence domain
Key mechanistic details and clinical observations
Auto‑immunity & neuroinflammation
Elevated IL‑1β, IL‑6, IL‑17A and TNF‑α degrade tight‑junction proteins, breach the blood–brain barrier and activate microglia. Resultant dopaminergic, serotonergic and glutamatergic imbalances underpin mood disturbances.
Endocrine dysregulation
Excess circulating T₃/T₄ suppress cortical dopamine–norepinephrine signalling, trigger oxidative stress, and promote insulin resistance and sex‑hormone imbalance—each independently linked to depressive phenotypes.
Thyroid‑gut‑microbiome‑brain axis
GD is marked by loss of short‑chain‑fatty‑acid‑producing Bacteroides and enrichment of Prevotella, Veillonella and Lactobacillus. These shifts distort tryptophan‑serotonin metabolism and skew Th17/Treg balance, further fuelling neuroinflammatory cascades.
Epidemiological risk
Across 11 clinical studies (>30 000 participants), GD or hyperthyroidism confers a 1.5‑ to 2‑fold increase in depressive symptoms; untreated disease and high free T₃ correlate with the greatest risk.
Key implications
Recognising GD as an independent driver of depression justifies routine mood screening in endocrine clinics and prompts integrative management. Potential interventions include early antithyroid therapy, β‑blockade, probiotics/synbiotics targeting SCFA restoration, and anti‑cytokine or HPA‑axis‑modulating strategies, though prospective trials remain scarce.
Incidence of and Risk Factors for Paradoxical Psoriasis or Psoriasiform Lesions in Inflammatory Bowel Disease Patients Receiving Anti-TNF Therapy
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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This systematic review and meta-analysis examines the incidence and risk factors for paradoxical psoriasis or psoriasiform lesions in IBD patients treated with anti-TNF therapy, providing crucial insights into the dermatological side effects of these commonly prescribed medications.
What was studied?
The systematic review and meta-analysis focused on the incidence and risk factors associated with paradoxical psoriasis or psoriasiform lesions in patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) who were treated with anti-tumor necrosis factor (anti-TNF) therapy. Anti-TNF therapies, such as infliximab, adalimumab, and certolizumab, have been widely used in the treatment of IBD, including Crohn's disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC). However, a paradoxical phenomenon has been observed where these therapies, which are also used to treat psoriasis, can induce psoriasis or psoriasiform skin lesions in some patients. This review aimed to quantify the pooled incidence of these skin lesions and identify the demographic and clinical risk factors that might contribute to their development.
Who was studied?
The study included a total of 30 articles comprising 24,547 IBD patients who were treated with anti-TNF agents. The studies were selected based on strict inclusion criteria, including observational cohort studies or case-control studies published in English, with full-text access. The patients included in the studies were diagnosed with IBD, either CD or UC, and had received anti-TNF therapy. The data focused on the incidence of psoriasis and psoriasiform lesions, with additional information on potential risk factors such as age, gender, smoking status, and the specific type of anti-TNF therapy used. These studies were conducted across a range of geographic locations, including Europe, North America, and Asia, offering insights into the global prevalence of anti-TNF-induced psoriasis in IBD patients.
Most important findings
The pooled incidence of psoriasis and/or psoriasiform lesions following anti-TNF therapy in IBD patients was 6.0%, with significant heterogeneity observed across studies. The incidence was higher for psoriasiform lesions compared to psoriasis. Meta-regression analysis identified several significant risk factors associated with the development of psoriasis or psoriasiform lesions. Female patients, younger age at the initiation of anti-TNF therapy, smoking status, and specific anti-TNF agents (adalimumab and certolizumab) were all found to be associated with an increased risk of developing these skin lesions. Additionally, ileocolonic Crohn's disease patients showed a higher risk compared to other IBD phenotypes. The study also found variations in risk depending on geographical region and population, suggesting that factors like environmental exposure and genetic predispositions might play a role in these outcomes.
Key implications
The findings from this study have several clinical implications. First, clinicians should be aware of the potential for paradoxical psoriasis or psoriasiform lesions when prescribing anti-TNF therapy for IBD, particularly for patients who are female, younger, or smokers. These patients may require closer monitoring for dermatological side effects. Moreover, the study suggests that the use of adalimumab or certolizumab might carry a higher risk of skin complications compared to infliximab, which may influence treatment decisions. The identification of these risk factors allows for more personalized approaches to IBD treatment, enabling clinicians to make more informed decisions regarding the use of anti-TNF therapies and the management of potential side effects. Understanding the mechanisms underlying these skin reactions could also lead to better preventive strategies or the development of therapies aimed at mitigating these adverse effects. Given the increasing use of anti-TNF therapies, further research is needed to explore the molecular mechanisms behind the paradoxical skin reactions and to identify additional risk factors.
Microbial dysbiosis in the gut drives systemic autoimmune diseases
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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This review examines how microbial dysbiosis in the gut contributes to systemic autoimmune diseases like type 1 diabetes, MS, RA, and SLE. It emphasizes microbial influences on immune responses and suggests potential microbiome-based therapies.
What was studied?
The review article explores the relationship between microbial imbalances (dysbiosis) in the gut and the development of systemic autoimmune diseases. It highlights how dysbiosis in the gastrointestinal tract may trigger or exacerbate diseases such as type 1 diabetes (T1D), multiple sclerosis (MS), rheumatoid arthritis (RA), and systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). The study examines how changes in the composition of the microbiome influence immune responses, leading to inflammation and autoimmunity. It emphasizes the role of microbial metabolites and the interaction between the gut microbiota and the host’s immune system in modulating immune functions, such as differentiation of T cells and the production of interleukins, which are critical in autoimmune disease pathogenesis.
Who was studied?
This review article synthesizes findings from a broad range of studies, including clinical and preclinical research, focusing on how microbial dysbiosis affects systemic autoimmune diseases. It discusses data from animal models (mice, rats) and human patients with autoimmune conditions. Specific emphasis is placed on the role of microbial species like Prevotella copri, Faecalibacterium prausnitzii, and Lactobacillus species, which influence immune responses either by promoting inflammation or exerting anti-inflammatory effects. The review incorporates findings on the relationship between gut microbial populations and the systemic immune response in diseases like T1D, MS, RA, and SLE.
Most important findings
The review underscores that microbial dysbiosis can drive systemic inflammation by affecting the integrity of the gut barrier, leading to the leakage of microbial metabolites like lipopolysaccharides (LPS) into the bloodstream. These metabolites contribute to immune system sensitization, promoting inflammatory responses. In autoimmune diseases such as T1D, MS, RA, and SLE, specific microbial taxa such as Bacteroides dorei and Prevotella copri have been associated with disease onset or progression. In contrast, beneficial microbes like Faecalibacterium prausnitzii can induce regulatory T cells and produce anti-inflammatory metabolites like butyrate. Furthermore, the review highlights the potential of microbiome-based therapies, including prebiotics, probiotics, and fecal transplants, to modulate immune responses and mitigate autoimmune disease symptoms.
Key implications
The article presents a compelling case for the gut microbiota as a modulator of systemic autoimmune diseases, suggesting that microbial dysbiosis could be a target for therapeutic interventions. Microbial modulation, through diet, lifestyle, or targeted microbiome-based therapies, holds potential for treating or preventing autoimmune diseases. This understanding opens up new avenues for clinical research into microbiome-based biomarkers and personalized treatment approaches for autoimmune conditions. The identification of specific microbial signatures associated with disease progression offers promise for early diagnosis and the development of microbiome-targeted interventions to prevent or manage autoimmune diseases effectively.
Bidirectional Causality Between Graves’ Disease and the Gut Microbiome Revealed by Mendelian Randomization
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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This bidirectional Mendelian Randomization (MR) study establishes a causal link between Graves’ disease and gut microbiome alterations, confirming thyroid–gut axis interactions and identifying key microbial taxa as risk or protective factors.
What was studied?
This study investigated the causal relationship between Graves’ disease (GD) and the gut microbiome using a bidirectional two-sample Mendelian randomization (MR) approach. Researchers utilized genome-wide association study (GWAS) summary statistics to examine whether changes in the gut microbiome contribute to the development of GD and whether GD, in turn, alters the gut microbiome. The study was grounded in the concept of the thyroid–gut axis (TGA), which posits bidirectional regulation between thyroid function and gut microbial composition. By leveraging MR methods, including inverse-variance weighting (IVW), weighted median, weighted mode, MR-Egger, and simple mode, the study aimed to infer causality while controlling for confounding and reverse causation.
Who was studied?
The analysis was conducted using GWAS data from two large cohorts. The gut microbiome dataset (n = 18,340) was derived from 24 international cohorts spanning European, Middle Eastern, East Asian, Hispanic/Latin American, and African American populations, as part of the MiBioGen consortium. The Graves’ disease dataset (n = 212,453; including 2,176 GD cases and 210,277 controls) came from BioBank Japan, representing individuals of Asian descent. Taxonomic profiling in the microbiome dataset used 16S rRNA sequencing, capturing 211 taxa after quality control and rarefaction.
Most important findings
The study identified several taxa with significant causal effects in both directions:
Gut Microbiome → GD:
Taxon
Direction
OR
Method
Deltaproteobacteria (Class)
↑ Risk
3.603
MR-Egger
Mollicutes (Class)
↑ Risk
2.354
Simple Mode
Ruminococcus torques group (Genus)
↑ Risk
1.445
IVW
Oxalobacter (Genus)
↑ Risk
2.395
Wald Ratio
Ruminococcaceae UCG 011 (Genus)
↑ Risk
1.379
Weighted Median
Peptococcaceae (Family)
↓ Risk
0.536
IVW
Anaerostipes (Genus)
↓ Risk
0.489
Weighted Median
GD → Gut Microbiome:
Taxon
Direction
OR
Method
Anaerofilum (Genus)
↑ Post-GD
1.586
MR-Egger
Oxalobacteraceae (Family)
↑ Post-GD
1.085
IVW
Intestinimonas, Peptococcus, etc.
↑ Post-GD
~1.04–1.13
IVW/Median
Clostridium innocuum group (Genus)
↓ Post-GD
0.918
IVW
Sutterella (Genus)
↓ Post-GD
0.953
IVW
No evidence of heterogeneity, horizontal pleiotropy, or weak instrument bias was detected, strengthening the causal inference.
Key implications
This study provides robust evidence of a bidirectional causal relationship between Graves’ disease and specific gut microbial taxa, thereby supporting the existence of a thyroid–gut axis (TGA). The identification of microbiota such as Deltaproteobacteria and Anaerostipes as risk and protective factors, respectively, highlights candidate biomarkers and potential therapeutic targets. Moreover, the findings suggest that GD not only results from microbiome alterations but can itself induce compositional changes, potentially exacerbating autoimmune dysregulation. These results offer a strong foundation for incorporating Graves’ disease gut microbiome causality into both diagnostic algorithms and microbiome-targeted intervention (MBTI) frameworks.
Succinate metabolism: underlying biological mechanisms and emerging therapeutic targets in inflammatory bowel disease
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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This review discusses succinate’s role in IBD pathogenesis, focusing on its dual role in inflammation and tissue repair. The review underscores the importance of microbiota-driven succinate regulation and explores potential therapeutic strategies targeting succinate metabolism in IBD.
What was studied?
This review focused on the dual roles of succinate in the pathogenesis and modulation of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), particularly its involvement in immune regulation and metabolism. Succinate, a key metabolite produced by both host cells and gut microbiota, plays an essential role in the inflammation process by influencing immune cell signaling and modulating intestinal barrier functions. The review examines the metabolic and immune interactions between succinate and inflammatory pathways in IBD, along with the microbial factors that influence succinate levels.
Who was studied?
The study reviewed data from both clinical and experimental models of IBD, focusing particularly on patients with Crohn's disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC). It highlights the dysregulation of succinate metabolism in these patients, noting increased succinate concentrations in the serum and feces, especially during active disease phases. It also explores the role of various gut microbiota, specifically those that produce succinate, and their influence on IBD severity.
Most important findings
The review identifies succinate as a central molecule linking metabolism, immune responses, and microbiota in IBD. Elevated succinate levels correlate with disease severity, particularly in IBD patients where microbial dysbiosis leads to increased succinate production. Succinate acts through the SUCNR1 receptor, initiating pro-inflammatory pathways, including NF-kB and MAPK signaling, which exacerbate intestinal inflammation. In contrast, at lower concentrations, succinate can promote tissue repair by enhancing epithelial cell function and supporting immune responses that repair intestinal barriers. The concentration-dependent effects of succinate, where low levels are protective and high levels induce inflammation, provide crucial insights into potential therapeutic strategies.
The review also emphasizes the importance of gut microbiota composition in regulating succinate levels. Specific bacteria such as Phascolarctobacterium and Dialister consume succinate, while Bacteroides and Prevotella contribute to its production, influencing the inflammatory environment in the gut. This dual role is further modulated by factors like diet, antibiotics, and microbial balance, underlining the complex relationship between microbiota and host metabolism in IBD.
Key implications
The findings suggest potential therapeutic strategies targeting succinate metabolism. By modulating microbial succinate production or altering the host’s succinate signaling pathways, it may be possible to attenuate the inflammatory responses in IBD. SUCNR1 antagonists, probiotics that consume succinate, or dietary interventions that optimize succinate production-consumption balance are promising approaches. Understanding the precise concentration thresholds for succinate’s protective and pathogenic roles could pave the way for more personalized and effective treatments, particularly in early-stage or flare-up IBD. Further research into the spatial dynamics of succinate signaling within the gut, coupled with microbiome-targeted therapies, offers new avenues for clinical interventions.
Metabolic Influences of Gut Microbiota Dysbiosis on Inflammatory Bowel Disease
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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This review investigates how gut microbiota dysbiosis impacts metabolic functions and immune responses in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), highlighting key microbial changes and therapeutic potential through microbiome manipulation.
What was studied?
This review explores the metabolic influences of gut microbiota dysbiosis in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), specifically examining how alterations in gut microbiota composition contribute to the progression of IBD. The authors investigate the role of microbial changes in metabolic pathways, highlighting how dysbiosis affects both immune response and metabolic functions in the colon.
Who was studied?
The review focuses on human patients diagnosed with IBD, particularly those with Crohn’s disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC). The authors detail changes in the microbial composition of the gut in these patients compared to healthy individuals, highlighting key microbial species such as Escherichia coli, Firmicutes, and Bacteroidetes that are either depleted or enriched during the disease.
Most important findings
The review identifies several key findings in the relationship between gut microbiota dysbiosis and IBD. Notably, IBD patients exhibit reduced diversity in their gut microbiota, with a depletion of beneficial short-chain fatty acid (SCFA)-producing bacteria and an increase in proinflammatory microbes like adherent-invasive E. coli. These microbial shifts are linked to the disturbance of critical metabolic functions such as bile acid hydrolysis, SCFA production, and redox balance. The review also discusses the metabolic dysfunction of the host, including defective SCFA transport, impaired hydrogen sulfide detoxification, and disrupted immune signaling pathways, all of which contribute to chronic inflammation and disease progression.
Key implications
This review underscores the complex interaction between gut microbiota dysbiosis and host metabolism in IBD. The metabolic perturbations driven by microbial imbalances are critical to disease development, suggesting that targeting these microbial pathways could offer new therapeutic strategies. Approaches such as fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) and probiotics, aimed at restoring microbiota balance, are highlighted as potential treatments. However, further research is needed to clarify the cause-effect relationship and to identify specific molecular mechanisms governing these interactions.
Artificial intelligence-assisted capsule endoscopy for detecting lesions in Crohn’s disease
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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This study systematically reviews the use of AI-assisted capsule endoscopy for detecting lesions in Crohn’s disease. AI showed high diagnostic accuracy with a sensitivity of 94% and specificity of 97%, highlighting its potential to improve the diagnostic process, though more research is needed for validation.
What was studied?
The study reviewed and analyzed the application of artificial intelligence (AI), specifically deep learning (DL), in capsule endoscopy for detecting lesions in patients with Crohn’s disease (CD). Capsule endoscopy is an effective diagnostic tool used for visualizing the gastrointestinal tract, particularly in cases like CD, where intestinal lesions are irregularly distributed and challenging to detect using traditional methods. The study synthesized data from various clinical trials to evaluate AI’s role in improving diagnostic accuracy and identifying mucosal lesions associated with Crohn’s disease. The research was motivated by the increasing reliance on AI in medical diagnostics and aimed to assess its efficiency in enhancing the detection of CD lesions through capsule endoscopy.
Who was studied?
The meta-analysis included eight studies that collectively analyzed a total of 444 patients, with 353 diagnosed with CD and 91 control participants. These studies involved AI-assisted image analysis of capsule endoscopy images, and the research primarily focused on the diagnostic accuracy of AI models in identifying lesions related to CD. The studies included a mix of retrospective and prospective designs, with participants ranging in number from 10 to 133 per study. These studies were conducted between 2020 and 2024, employing a variety of AI algorithms, including convolutional neural networks (CNNs) and other deep learning models, to assess their diagnostic performance.
Most important findings
The study found that AI-assisted capsule endoscopy demonstrated high diagnostic accuracy for detecting lesions in Crohn’s disease. Specifically, the pooled sensitivity of AI in identifying CD lesions was 94%, with a specificity of 97%. Other vital metrics included a favorable likelihood ratio (PLR) of 32.7, a negative likelihood ratio (NLR) of 6%, and a diagnostic odds ratio (DOR) of 576, all suggesting that AI can effectively distinguish CD lesions from other conditions. The area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) was found to be 0.99 , indicating excellent overall diagnostic performance. These findings suggest that AI models, profound learning algorithms, have substantial potential in assisting clinicians, especially less experienced ones, in detecting CD lesions during capsule endoscopy.
Key implications
The primary implication of this study is that AI, specifically deep learning and CNN algorithms, can significantly enhance the diagnostic process in Crohn’s disease, especially for clinicians who may have limited experience with capsule endoscopy. AI’s ability to automate lesion detection can reduce human error, shorten the time needed for image analysis, and improve the diagnostic yield of capsule endoscopy. However, the study also points out the need for further research, particularly large-scale, prospective studies with external validation, to confirm the robustness and generalizability of these AI systems. The current research is limited by small sample sizes and the lack of external validation, which raises concerns about the reliability and applicability of the findings in diverse clinical settings.
Genetic and Epigenetic Etiology of Inflammatory Bowel Disease: An Update
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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This review focuses on the genetic and epigenetic factors that contribute to Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD), highlighting key genes and microbiome interactions, and their role in disease pathogenesis and treatment response.
What was studied?
The study explores the genetic and epigenetic mechanisms underlying Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD), including both Crohn's Disease (CD) and Ulcerative Colitis (UC). The review analyzes various genetic factors and their relationship with IBD, highlighting how genetic predispositions interact with the microbiome and immune system. It also delves into pharmacogenetic aspects, explaining how genetic variations affect responses to treatment, and discusses the emerging role of epigenetic modifications, including DNA methylation and histone modifications, in disease pathogenesis.
Who was studied?
This review synthesizes data from numerous studies involving patients diagnosed with IBD. It includes research on genetic predispositions, epigenetic factors, and microbiome alterations in patients with both UC and CD. The review also references studies conducted on populations with varying genetic backgrounds, particularly focusing on how these genetic factors interact with environmental elements like diet, lifestyle, and microbial exposure, influencing disease onset and progression.
Most important findings
One of the key findings of the review is the identification of several genetic loci associated with IBD, including the NOD2 gene, which plays a crucial role in immune system activation and microbial recognition. Other genes, such as ATG16L1, CARD9, and CLEC7A, are also significantly implicated in the pathogenesis of IBD. These genes are associated with immune response regulation and the handling of gut microbiota, which is crucial in maintaining intestinal homeostasis. The review also highlights the role of epigenetic factors like DNA methylation in modifying the expression of genes related to inflammation and immune responses, influencing the severity of IBD. Furthermore, genetic and microbiome interactions were found to be pivotal in exacerbating the immune response, leading to the chronic inflammation characteristic of IBD.
Key implications
The review underscores the complexity of IBD, suggesting that both genetic and epigenetic factors are involved in the disease’s onset and progression. From a clinical perspective, understanding these genetic predispositions can enhance personalized treatment strategies, improving the effectiveness of drugs by aligning them with patients' genetic profiles. The microbiome's involvement also opens new avenues for therapy, including microbiota-based treatments such as fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT). The identification of genetic markers for disease severity and treatment response could pave the way for pharmacogenetic testing, helping clinicians to choose the most appropriate treatments based on a patient's genetic makeup.
Nephrolithiasis in Crohn’s Disease Patients: A Review of the Literature
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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This review discusses nephrolithiasis in Crohn’s disease patients, highlighting the increased risk, pathophysiology, and preventative measures. It emphasizes dietary interventions and fluid intake to reduce the formation of kidney stones.
What was studied?
This review article examines the relationship between nephrolithiasis (kidney stones) and Crohn's disease, a common form of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). It focuses on the risk factors, pathophysiology, and management of nephrolithiasis in Crohn’s disease patients. The study also discusses preventative strategies for reducing kidney stone formation in these patients. It is well established that patients with Crohn's disease are at an increased risk for nephrolithiasis, and this review highlights the complex mechanisms, including altered gut flora, intestinal inflammation, and dietary habits, which contribute to stone formation in IBD. The article further investigates the role of dehydration, high protein diets, and bowel resections as significant contributors to kidney stone formation in Crohn’s disease patients.
Who was studied?
The review draws from various studies focusing on patients with Crohn's disease who have developed nephrolithiasis. This includes both adult and pediatric populations, with a particular focus on individuals who have undergone abdominal surgeries such as bowel resection or ileostomies, which are commonly performed in Crohn’s disease management. The article also incorporates data from large cohort studies and case series that provide a comprehensive view of the prevalence and risk factors associated with kidney stones in this patient group. Patients who have had surgery for Crohn’s disease are considered to be at higher risk for nephrolithiasis, particularly those who develop steatorrhea and malabsorption as a result of small bowel resections.
Most important findings
The review reveals that the incidence of nephrolithiasis in Crohn’s disease patients ranges from 7% to 28%, significantly higher than the general population's lifetime risk of 1-15%. The most common type of kidney stones in Crohn’s patients are calcium oxalate stones, which are often linked to increased urinary oxalate excretion and reduced levels of calcium and magnesium in the urine. The pathophysiology of nephrolithiasis in Crohn’s disease is multifactorial. Chronic diarrhea, malabsorption, and dehydration are major contributors to increased urinary oxalate levels, while small bowel resections can lead to fat malabsorption, which subsequently enhances oxalate absorption. Furthermore, Crohn’s disease patients are often at risk for altered intestinal microbiota, leading to reduced levels of oxalate-degrading bacteria, which further increases the risk of oxalate stone formation.
Additionally, the review emphasizes the role of diet in kidney stone formation. Patients with Crohn’s disease tend to have a high-protein, high-oxalate diet, which contributes to elevated urinary oxalate excretion. The reduction in urinary citrate due to small bowel disease or resections also promotes stone formation, as citrate is an inhibitor of calcium oxalate crystallization. Uric acid stones also occur in Crohn’s patients, particularly those with ileostomies, as they experience increased urine acidity due to bicarbonate losses. This combination of risk factors—dehydration, high dietary protein, and altered intestinal absorption—results in a higher incidence of nephrolithiasis in Crohn’s disease patients.
Key implications
The review stresses the importance of preventive measures to reduce the risk of nephrolithiasis in Crohn’s disease patients. Given the high prevalence of kidney stones in this population, clinicians should consider strategies such as increased fluid intake to produce at least 2.5 liters of urine per day, dietary modifications to reduce sodium and animal protein intake, and increasing the consumption of fruits and vegetables to improve citrate levels and reduce urinary supersaturation. For patients with a history of bowel resections or ileostomies, careful monitoring of kidney function and urine composition is crucial. Additionally, the review highlights the importance of early diagnosis and prompt treatment of nephrolithiasis to prevent complications like chronic kidney disease (CKD) or end-stage renal disease (ESRD). This includes the use of imaging techniques, such as ultrasound or CT scans, to detect kidney stones early in symptomatic patients.
Advancements in Immunomodulatory Therapies for IBD and Their Interplay With the Gut–Brain Axis
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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This review explores immunomodulatory therapies for IBD, focusing on their impact on the gut-brain axis. It evaluates conventional and emerging treatments like biologics, FMT, and probiotics, emphasizing their role in improving IBD outcomes and addressing neuropsychiatric symptoms.
What was studied?
This review article explored the advancements in immunomodulatory therapies for Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD), with a focus on their interaction with the gut-brain axis. The review synthesizes recent findings related to IBD pathogenesis, treatment efficacy, and new therapeutic strategies, particularly those targeting the gut-brain microbiota axis. It emphasizes how dysregulated immune responses in the gut, including inflammation and microbial imbalances, contribute to the disease progression and neuropsychiatric symptoms associated with IBD. The article also evaluates conventional and emerging treatments such as biological agents, stem cell therapies, probiotics, and fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT).
Who was studied?
The review summarizes findings from various research studies on IBD treatment, primarily targeting immunomodulatory therapies and their effects on the gut-brain axis. These studies include clinical trials, cohort studies, and meta-analyses involving IBD patients of varying ages and backgrounds. The study population in the review spans a broad spectrum of patients with Crohn’s disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC), with a focus on those with severe or refractory disease forms. The review highlights the impact of these therapies on patient outcomes and their potential for alleviating both gastrointestinal and neuropsychiatric symptoms related to IBD.
Most important findings
The most significant findings of the study emphasize the role of the gut-brain axis in IBD pathophysiology and treatment efficacy. Biological agents like infliximab and vedolizumab have demonstrated remission rates of 40-69% in IBD patients, significantly improving outcomes. FMT emerged as a promising therapy, with clinical remission rates as high as 87.1% in ulcerative colitis patients, compared to 66.7% in the placebo group. The review also highlighted the role of probiotics and prebiotics in managing IBD and its associated neuropsychiatric conditions by modulating the gut microbiota and reducing inflammation. Moreover, stem cell therapies are gaining attention as they offer immune modulation and tissue repair benefits, although they are still in the experimental phase.
Key implications
The review suggests that targeting the gut-brain axis offers a novel therapeutic strategy for IBD management. This approach can address both the gastrointestinal and neuropsychiatric symptoms commonly associated with IBD. The use of immunomodulatory therapies, including biologics and stem cell treatments, has led to significant improvements in patient outcomes, though challenges remain with variability in response, long-term safety concerns, and accessibility. FMT shows considerable potential as an adjunct therapy, particularly in cases of ulcerative colitis, but further research is needed to standardize protocols and ensure long-term safety. Additionally, the integration of neuropsychological interventions, such as psychobiotics and cognitive-behavioral therapy, could enhance treatment outcomes by addressing the complex relationship between the gut and brain in IBD patients.
Molecular Alteration Analysis of Human Gut Microbial Composition in Graves’ disease Patients
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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Graves’ Disease (GD)
Graves’ Disease (GD)
OverviewGraves’ Disease (GD) affects approximately 0.5% of the population, predominantly women. First-line treatment options—antithyroid medications, radioactive iodine, and surgery— often result in significant side effects, incomplete remissions, and frequent relapses. Further, current first-line treatment options focus on symptoms management, and reflect an inadequate understanding of the etiology of the condition. However, recent research reveals a […]
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This study identified a microbiome signature in Graves’ disease marked by reduced microbial richness and elevated Prevotella_9 and Haemophilus, with losses in Faecalibacterium and Alistipes, supporting a role for gut dysbiosis in GD pathogenesis.
What was studied?
This study investigated alterations in the intestinal microbiota composition of patients with Graves' disease (GD) to explore possible microbiome signatures associated with the condition. The researchers used a combination of denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE), real-time PCR, and high-throughput 16S rRNA gene sequencing (V3–V4 region) to compare microbial diversity, composition, and abundance in GD patients versus healthy controls. The study aimed to evaluate both qualitative and quantitative differences in gut microbiota and determine whether dysbiosis may be implicated in GD pathogenesis.
Who was studied?
The study analyzed fecal samples from 27 GD patients (10 males, 17 females, aged 35–50) and 11 healthy age- and sex-matched controls (4 males, 7 females). All GD patients had a disease duration of 1.5 years and were medication-free for at least six months before sampling. None of the participants had recent antibiotic, probiotic, or prebiotic use. Samples were collected at Xi'an Jiaotong University’s affiliated hospital and processed under strict ethical guidelines.
Most important findings
Graves' disease patients exhibited reduced gut microbial diversity, evidenced by significantly lower richness indices (Observed Species, Chao1, ACE, and Good’s coverage) compared to controls, although Shannon and Simpson indices were not statistically different. The most pronounced alterations were seen in specific taxa:
Real-time PCR confirmed significantly reduced copy numbers of Bifidobacterium and Lactobacillus in GD (P < 0.05), suggesting depletion of beneficial microbes. Meanwhile, Bacteroides vulgatus was slightly increased, and Clostridium leptum slightly reduced, although these changes did not reach significance by q-value correction.The dominant microbial phyla in GD were Bacteroidetes (57.6%) and Firmicutes (32.9%), with GD patients having a lower Firmicutes: Bacteroidetes ratio compared to controls.
Key implications
This study reveals that Graves' disease is associated with a distinct gut microbiota signature characterized by reduced microbial richness and altered abundances of both beneficial and potentially pathogenic taxa. The significant increase in Haemophilus parainfluenzae and Prevotella_9, along with the depletion of Faecalibacterium and Alistipes, suggests immune-related microbial imbalance. These taxa may serve as major microbial associations (MMAs) for GD and could be investigated as microbial targets for microbiome-based interventions. The depletion of Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium also suggests potential for probiotic or prebiotic therapy. While causality remains unresolved, the findings reinforce the need to consider intestinal dysbiosis as a contributing factor in GD pathogenesis and therapy development.
New developments in our understanding of ankylosing spondylitis pathogenesis
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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This review discusses the pathogenesis of ankylosing spondylitis, highlighting the role of Type 17 immune responses, gut microbiome dysbiosis, and metabolic factors in disease development. It also explores therapeutic advancements targeting these pathways.
What was studied?
This article provides an in-depth examination of the pathogenesis of ankylosing spondylitis (AS), focusing on recent developments in understanding the role of immune responses, particularly Type 17 immunity, in its development. It delves into the multifactorial aspects of AS pathogenesis, including genetic factors, immune cell involvement, and gut microbiome alterations. A significant part of the research highlights the involvement of the IL-23/IL-17 axis in driving inflammation and joint damage, particularly in the context of autoimmune responses. The review also presents the contribution of immunometabolism and local metabolic environments in the joints as important factors in disease progression. In addition, it explores therapeutic advancements targeting Type 17 immune responses, such as monoclonal antibodies and small molecules, and how these have provided insights into managing AS more effectively.
Who was studied?
The studies referenced in the article primarily focus on patients with ankylosing spondylitis (AS) and spondyloarthritis (SpA), as well as animal models. These include individuals diagnosed with AS, with some studies specifically comparing male and female patients due to observed gender differences in disease prevalence and progression. Genetic studies involving twins and first-degree relatives of AS patients suggest a strong hereditary component, with a significant association with the HLA-B27 gene. Additionally, the review references animal models, particularly HLA-B27 transgenic rats and mouse models of AS, which provide insights into the role of gut microbiota, immune system interactions, and metabolic changes in AS pathogenesis. The human studies also focus on biomarkers like IL-17 and IL-23, and immune cells, particularly T-helper cells, which are elevated in AS patients and play a crucial role in disease mechanisms.
Most important findings
The review identifies several key findings regarding the pathogenesis of AS. First, it reaffirms the importance of the IL-23/IL-17 immune axis, which has been implicated in the inflammation seen in AS. IL-23, a cytokine produced by myeloid cells, stimulates the differentiation of T-helper (TH17) cells, which in turn secrete pro-inflammatory cytokines such as IL-17, IL-22, and IL-17F. These cytokines are critical for the inflammation observed in the entheses (the sites where tendons or ligaments insert into the bone), a hallmark of AS. The article also discusses the importance of genetic factors, particularly the HLA-B27 allele, in increasing the susceptibility to AS. Moreover, the review highlights the growing evidence linking the gut microbiome to AS, with studies showing that patients with AS often exhibit dysbiosis, or microbial imbalance, in their gut. Changes in gut microbiota may influence immune responses, exacerbating inflammation and contributing to disease progression.
Another important finding from the article is the emerging role of the local metabolic environment in the joints in driving AS. The review discusses how metabolic factors, such as high salt diets and low pH, can influence T-cell responses, particularly TH17 cells, and how these factors might contribute to joint inflammation. Animal studies have demonstrated that a high-salt diet can exacerbate autoimmune responses, including those in the joints of AS models, further linking diet and metabolism to disease pathogenesis.
Key implications
The implications of these findings are significant for both understanding AS and developing more targeted therapies. The identification of the IL-23/IL-17 axis as central to AS pathogenesis supports the use of monoclonal antibodies targeting IL-17, such as secukinumab, in treating the disease. These therapies have shown promise in clinical trials, offering better control of disease activity and symptoms. Additionally, the potential role of gut microbiota in AS suggests that modifying the microbiome through dietary interventions, probiotics, or antibiotics might offer a novel approach to managing the disease. The connection between the local metabolic environment and immune responses opens new avenues for therapeutic strategies, such as targeting metabolic pathways in the joint and gut. Overall, the review suggests that AS treatment should be personalized, taking into account the genetic, immune, and metabolic factors involved in each patient’s disease.
Gut Microbiota: Role in Pathogen Colonization, Immune Responses and Inflammatory Disease
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
The review explores the role of gut microbiota in immune regulation and pathogen resistance, particularly in inflammatory diseases like IBD. It highlights the effects of microbiota dysbiosis and the potential for therapeutic interventions to manage gut inflammation.
What was studied?
This review explores the role of gut microbiota in pathogen colonization, immune responses, and its influence on inflammatory diseases, particularly Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD). It examines the complex relationship between gut microbes and the immune system, focusing on how the microbiota can influence immune regulation, prevent infections, and contribute to diseases like IBD. The study addresses the concept of dysbiosis, where an imbalance in the microbiota can promote disease and disrupt immune function, ultimately leading to inflammation.
Who was studied?
The review considers a broad range of studies involving both animal models and human patients. Animal models, especially germ-free mice, were used to study the role of the microbiota in immune responses and disease prevention. The review also discusses studies involving human patients with IBD, investigating how their gut microbiota composition correlates with disease progression. The research encompasses the interactions between specific microbial species in the gut and the immune system, along with how these interactions differ in individuals with conditions like IBD.
Most important findings
The review reveals the critical role of gut microbiota in maintaining immune homeostasis and preventing pathogen colonization. A healthy microbiota supports the immune system by promoting the production of immunoglobulins, such as IgA and IgG, which help defend against pathogens. It also supports immune cell activation and differentiation, such as the development of regulatory T cells (Tregs) that prevent excessive inflammation. On the flip side, dysbiosis—imbalance in microbial populations—has been linked to chronic diseases like IBD, where pathogenic bacteria such as Enterobacteriaceae can outgrow and exacerbate inflammation. The study further emphasizes that microbiota plays a significant role in modulating systemic immune responses, not just local gut immunity. The composition of the microbiota can also influence the body's ability to resist infections outside of the gut, which has broad implications for systemic immunity.
Key implications
The findings suggest that understanding how gut microbiota influences immune regulation could lead to new therapeutic approaches for inflammatory diseases like IBD. By manipulating the microbiota through interventions like probiotics, prebiotics, or diet, it may be possible to restore balance and prevent or treat conditions related to dysbiosis. Additionally, the review highlights the potential for microbiota-targeted therapies to improve immune system function and combat infections, both locally within the gut and systemically. A more nuanced understanding of the microbiota’s role in immune modulation could provide new avenues for clinical management of autoimmune and inflammatory conditions.
Intestinal Stricture in Crohn’s Disease
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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This review explores the pathophysiology, risk factors, and management of intestinal strictures in Crohn’s Disease, emphasizing genetic, environmental, and imaging factors, as well as current therapeutic approaches.
What was studied?
The paper reviews the incidence, pathophysiology, risk factors, and management of intestinal strictures in Crohn’s Disease (CD). Strictures, which involve the narrowing or constriction of the intestines, are a common complication of CD, and they often lead to significant morbidity. The study examines the mechanisms behind stricture formation, including chronic inflammation and fibrosis, as well as the role of genetic and environmental factors in influencing the likelihood of developing strictures. It also discusses various diagnostic techniques and management strategies, emphasizing the need for individualized treatment approaches to improve patient outcomes.
Who was studied?
This study synthesizes findings from a wide range of patient populations, particularly those with Crohn’s Disease who experience stricture formation. It includes data from various international studies that focus on patients with differing disease phenotypes, including those with small bowel and colonic strictures. Patients with CD who required surgical interventions due to complications like bowel obstruction or fistulas were particularly studied, with a focus on those undergoing long-term follow-ups. The paper also highlights genetic and environmental factors that predispose specific individuals to develop strictures.
Most important findings
The review emphasizes the complex mechanisms of fibrosis and inflammation that contribute to stricture formation in CD. Chronic inflammation leads to the thickening of the intestinal wall through the accumulation of extracellular matrix (ECM) and mesenchymal cell expansion. This process, driven by fibroblast activation and the secretion of pro-inflammatory cytokines such as TNF-α and IL-1β, leads to fibrosis and strictures.
Genetic factors, particularly mutations in the NOD2 and TNF-α genes, are associated with a higher risk of developing strictures. Patients with biallelic mutations in the CARD15 gene have a significantly higher risk of progressing to stricturing disease. Environmental factors like smoking, age of diagnosis, and the use of steroids are also major contributors to disease progression. Endoscopic findings, such as deep mucosal ulcerations, are predictive of stricture development.
In terms of diagnosis, imaging tools like transabdominal ultrasonography (TUS), CT, and MRI enterography are highlighted for their high sensitivity in detecting strictures. Endoscopy remains a gold standard, especially in assessing disease severity and the extent of mucosal damage. However, it is not always suitable for assessing deep small bowel lesions, and newer techniques like double-balloon enteroscopy (DBE) and capsule endoscopy have been introduced to overcome this limitation.
Key implications
The review underscores the importance of early diagnosis and personalized management strategies for patients with Crohn’s Disease and strictures. It highlights the role of non-invasive imaging techniques in identifying strictures early, which can potentially delay the need for surgery. The advancements in biological therapies, particularly anti-TNF-α treatments, offer hope for controlling inflammation and preventing the progression of fibrosis. However, while biologics are effective in inducing and maintaining remission, they may not always prevent stricture formation, and some patients may still require surgical interventions. Endoscopic dilation, strictureplasty, and surgery are presented as key therapeutic options for managing strictures when medical therapy fails.
Relationship between the gut microbiota and bile acid composition in the ileal mucosa of Crohn’s disease
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
This study links gut microbiota dysbiosis with bile acid composition changes in Crohn's disease. The altered microbial and bile acid profiles may play a significant role in disease progression, offering potential therapeutic avenues.
What was studied?
This study focused on the relationship between the gut microbiota and bile acid composition in the ileal mucosa of patients with Crohn’s disease (CD). The researchers sought to investigate how microbial alterations (dysbiosis) in the small intestine correlate with changes in bile acid metabolism, which plays a crucial role in gut health and disease. The authors analyzed the microbial structure and bile acid composition in CD patients during clinical remission and compared them to non-CD controls. They also explored the link between specific gut microbiota taxa and the alterations in bile acid profiles.
Who was studied?
The study involved 38 CD patients in clinical remission and 12 non-CD controls. The participants were selected based on their clinical status, including disease activity indices (CDAI) for the CD group. The samples were collected using balloon-assisted enteroscopy (BAE) from the distal ileum, with samples categorized into active and inactive lesions based on endoscopic findings. The microbiota was analyzed from mucosal samples, while bile acid composition was analyzed from intestinal fluid.
Most important findings
The study found significant alterations in both the gut microbiota composition and bile acid profiles of CD patients. Specifically, the relative abundance of Escherichia was significantly higher in CD patients compared to non-CD controls, while Faecalibacterium and Roseburia (both butyrate-producing genera) were notably reduced. These findings align with previously reported dysbiosis in IBD, where an increase in facultative anaerobes like Escherichia was observed, particularly in active lesions. Furthermore, the study identified a shift in bile acid composition in CD patients, with a higher proportion of conjugated bile acids (such as glycocholic acid and taurocholic acid) and a reduction in the unconjugated bile acids like lithocholic acid (LCA). The composition of bile acids was linked to the microbial community, as higher levels of Escherichia and Lactobacillus were positively correlated with an increased proportion of conjugated bile acids, while Roseburia and Faecalibacterium were negatively correlated with conjugated bile acids.
Key implications
These findings highlight the interplay between the gut microbiota and bile acid metabolism in the pathophysiology of CD. The alteration of bile acid composition, particularly the increase in conjugated bile acids, may suggest malabsorption of bile acids in the ileum, possibly contributing to inflammation in CD. Moreover, the relationship between specific gut microbial taxa and bile acid metabolism could provide potential biomarkers for diagnosing and monitoring disease activity in IBD. Targeting microbiota profiles or manipulating bile acid metabolism could open up new therapeutic avenues for treating CD. Probiotic therapies or dietary interventions aimed at restoring beneficial microbiota and normalizing bile acid metabolism may offer additional strategies to manage or mitigate disease activity.
Viral Microbiome Signatures in Graves’ Disease: A Comprehensive Review
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
Graves’ Disease (GD)
Graves’ Disease (GD)
OverviewGraves’ Disease (GD) affects approximately 0.5% of the population, predominantly women. First-line treatment options—antithyroid medications, radioactive iodine, and surgery— often result in significant side effects, incomplete remissions, and frequent relapses. Further, current first-line treatment options focus on symptoms management, and reflect an inadequate understanding of the etiology of the condition. However, recent research reveals a […]
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This review links genetics, hormones, environment and especially viral exposures—EBV and HCV—to the Th1‑centric immunopathology of Graves’ disease, highlighting chemokine signatures relevant to microbiome‑based risk models.
What was reviewed?
This narrative review collates epidemiological data, genetic predisposition, endogenous influences (e.g., oestrogen effects), environmental exposures and—most germane to microbiome‑focused clinicians—viral associations implicated in Graves’ disease (GD). It synthesises findings from population studies, molecular genetics and translational immunology to outline how host genetics (≈79 % of risk) interact with modifiable factors (≈21 %) to precipitate autoimmune hyperthyroidism.
Who was reviewed?
The authors analysed evidence drawn predominantly from adult cohorts in Europe, North America and East Asia, where GD incidence peaks between 30–60 years and exhibits a 5–10‑fold female preponderance. Additional data came from mechanistic studies using primary thyrocytes, B‑cell assays and interferon‑treated hepatitis C virus (HCV) cohorts, enabling integration of clinical and experimental perspectives.
Most important findings
Genomic studies confirm a polygenic architecture enriched for T‑cell regulatory loci (HLA‑DR3, CTLA‑4, PTPN22, CD40) that biases toward a Th1‑skewed response. Endogenous oestrogen signalling, skewed X‑chromosome inactivation and microchimerism further augment female risk. Environmentally, excess iodine, selenium, or vitamin D deficiency, smoking, halogenated pesticides, and dioxin (Agent Orange) exposure modulate disease penetrance. Crucially for microbiome signature databases, the review catalogues viral links: foamy viruses (inconclusive), parvovirus B19 (weak), Epstein–Barr virus (EBV reactivation expands TRAb‑positive B cells) and HCV. Large cohort and meta‑analytic data show that chronic HCV infection elevates thyroid autoantibody prevalence and hypothyroidism, while HCV‑related mixed cryoglobulinaemia markedly increases GD risk. HCV envelope protein E2 binds thyrocyte CD81, triggering IL‑8/CXCL10 production, thereby recruiting CXCR3⁺ Th1 cells and perpetuating autoimmunity. These microbe‑driven inflammatory signatures (CXCL9/10/11 axis) provide candidate biomarkers for a “thyroid‑autoimmunity virome” module within broader microbiome analytics.
Key implications
For clinicians, recognising viral and environmental co‑factors refines risk stratification and informs screening: (i) test thyroid function and antibodies in chronic HCV or EBV reactivation; (ii) counsel on iodine intake, smoking cessation, and micronutrient sufficiency; (iii) anticipate attenuated antithyroid‑drug requirements in interferon‑treated HCV patients. From a translational standpoint, integrating viral chemokine fingerprints into microbiome databases could uncover convergent immune pathways applicable to other organ‑specific autoimmunities and guide targeted immunomodulation.
Homeostasis and Inflammation in the Intestine
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
The paper reviews the complex relationship between gut microbiota, immune responses, and intestinal health, highlighting how disturbances in these interactions can lead to inflammatory diseases.
What was studied?
This study explores the mechanisms that regulate intestinal homeostasis and inflammation, focusing on how the immune system interacts with the gut microbiota. The gut is home to a complex community of microbes, and the ability of the immune system to coexist with these microbes is essential for maintaining health. Disruptions to this delicate balance can lead to chronic diseases like inflammatory bowel disease (IBD).
Who was studied?
The research examines both human and animal models, including mice and zebrafish, to investigate the interactions between intestinal cells, the immune system, and the microbiota. Special focus is given to the function of various immune cells and the epithelial barrier in the gut, as well as how these interactions change under conditions of disease or stress.
Most important findings
The study found that the gut microbiota plays a crucial role in shaping immune responses, maintaining intestinal homeostasis, and preventing inflammation. Specifically, the gut microbiota instructs immune cells, guiding their proper development and function. Disruptions to the gut barrier and microbial imbalance, often seen in conditions like Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis, can trigger inappropriate immune responses, leading to chronic inflammation. Cells such as Paneth cells, which produce antimicrobial peptides, are key in regulating the microbial community in the gut, and mutations in genes like ATG16L1 can impair their function, exacerbating disease. The integrity of the intestinal epithelium, including tight junctions, is also vital for maintaining homeostasis, and disruptions to this barrier can result in disease.
Key implications
The findings highlight the importance of microbial interactions in regulating immune responses and maintaining gut health. Understanding how the microbiota influences immune function and epithelial integrity could lead to new approaches for treating chronic inflammatory diseases. Therapies targeting microbial populations or modulating immune responses could offer promising treatments for diseases like IBD, where inflammation is driven by immune system dysregulation.
Long-term risk of inflammatory bowel disease in autoimmune hepatitis: Over a 20-year population-based study
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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This study explores the long-term risk of developing IBD in AIH patients, identifying smoking as a significant risk factor and showing that while IBD increases cirrhosis prevalence, it does not worsen liver-related complications in AIH patients.
What was studied?
This article investigates the long-term risk of developing inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) in patients with autoimmune hepatitis (AIH), focusing on a 20-year population-based study conducted using data from Clalit Health Services in Israel. The study aimed to explore the incidence, risk factors, and potential impact of IBD on liver-related outcomes in AIH patients. It also examined the temporal relationship between AIH and IBD, considering how both diseases coexist and whether IBD exacerbates liver complications in AIH patients.
Who was studied?
The study involved 1284 adult patients diagnosed with AIH between 2000 and 2024, using data from a large healthcare database in Israel. The cohort excluded patients with pre-existing cirrhosis, other chronic liver diseases, or IBD before their AIH diagnosis to ensure a more accurate assessment of the risk of developing IBD post-AIH. The study also considered various demographic factors, such as age, gender, socioeconomic status, and lifestyle factors like smoking, to identify potential risk factors for IBD development in this population.
Most important findings
The key finding of the study was that 9.81% of AIH patients developed IBD, most commonly Crohn’s disease (CD), during the follow-up period. The cumulative incidence of IBD increased progressively over time, with a notable rise in risk after 10 years. Smoking was identified as an independent risk factor for the development of IBD in AIH patients. The study also revealed that AIH patients with coexisting IBD had a higher prevalence of cirrhosis compared to those with AIH alone. Interestingly, while the presence of IBD was associated with greater liver fibrosis, it did not lead to an increased risk of severe liver-related complications like hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), esophageal varices, or ascites.
The study further highlighted the absence of significant differences in the incidence of major liver-related complications between AIH patients with and without IBD, suggesting that while IBD may accelerate liver fibrosis, it may not directly influence the progression to end-stage liver disease in AIH patients. Furthermore, the findings underscore that CD, rather than ulcerative colitis (UC), is more commonly associated with AIH in this cohort, a trend that may reflect population-specific immune triggers.
Key implications
The findings of this study have significant clinical implications for the management of AIH patients, especially those at risk for developing IBD. The identification of smoking as a modifiable risk factor for IBD suggests that smoking cessation could be an important strategy in reducing the risk of developing IBD in AIH patients. The study also emphasizes the need for vigilant monitoring of AIH patients for the early signs of IBD, particularly Crohn’s disease, given its higher prevalence in this population.
Although the presence of IBD was associated with an increased prevalence of cirrhosis, the absence of an increased risk of severe liver-related complications suggests that IBD may not have a substantial effect on the progression of liver disease in AIH patients. However, these findings highlight the need for continued research to further understand the mechanisms linking IBD and AIH, particularly through shared immune pathways or genetic factors, which could provide insights for better clinical management and personalized treatment strategies.
Siderophore-mediated iron acquisition and modulation of host-bacterial interactions
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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This review explores siderophore-mediated iron acquisition in the gut, its role in bacterial growth, and its impact on microbial community dynamics and host immunity, with implications for IBD, infections, and colorectal cancer.
What was studied?
The study explored siderophore-mediated iron acquisition in the gastrointestinal tract, focusing on its role in bacterial-host interactions. Siderophores are small molecules that bacteria secrete to scavenge iron from the host, a vital micronutrient. This review particularly looks at how siderophores influence bacterial growth, community dynamics, and host immune responses, with implications for both pathogen-driven diseases like infections and microbiota-driven diseases such as inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD) and colorectal cancer. The paper also emphasizes the competition for iron between resident microbiota and pathogens and the ways in which host mechanisms limit bacterial iron availability.
Who was studied?
The study primarily discusses how siderophore production and iron acquisition strategies are employed by different bacterial taxa within the intestinal microbiota, both in pathogenic bacteria and resident commensals. It includes data from rodent models, clinical studies, and experimental models using microbiota-transplanted mice to study how siderophore production by both beneficial and harmful bacteria impacts the intestinal environment. The review also covers the role of the host’s iron-binding proteins like lactoferrin and lipocalin-2 (Lcn2) in regulating microbial iron availability and their effects on the intestinal microbial community and inflammation.
Most important findings
The review identifies the key role of siderophores in regulating iron availability within the gut and modulating microbial communities. Specific bacteria, particularly from the Enterobacteriaceae family, produce siderophores such as enterobactin, salmochelin, and yersiniabactin, which enable them to outcompete other bacteria for iron. The competition for this limited resource can drive microbial community shifts in the gut, favoring siderophilic bacteria and potentially leading to dysbiosis, especially in the context of diseases like IBD and colorectal cancer.
Siderophore production also modulates the host’s immune system. For example, some siderophores can reduce the production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) by immune cells, offering a protective advantage to bacteria in inflamed environments. However, other siderophores, such as enterobactin, can activate inflammatory pathways by modulating iron homeostasis in host cells. This suggests that while siderophores can enhance microbial growth, they also influence host immune responses, sometimes exacerbating inflammation.
Moreover, host defenses, like Lcn2, can bind siderophores and restrict bacterial access to iron, illustrating the host’s nutritional immunity. The balance between bacterial iron acquisition and host immune response is crucial for maintaining a symbiotic relationship or fostering pathogenic conditions. The ability of some bacteria to resist these host defenses, through the production of Lcn2-resistant siderophores, provides them a competitive edge, particularly in the inflamed intestines of IBD patients.
Key implications
This review highlights the critical role of siderophore-mediated iron acquisition in both maintaining the gut microbiota and in the pathogenesis of diseases like IBD and colorectal cancer. The findings suggest that therapeutic interventions targeting siderophore systems could be an effective strategy for managing microbial dysbiosis and inflammation. For example, inhibitors of siderophore production or the development of synthetic sideromycins (antibiotics conjugated to siderophores) might help control pathogenic overgrowth while preserving beneficial microbiota. Additionally, understanding the precise role of siderophores in modulating host immune responses could lead to new therapeutic avenues for diseases involving chronic inflammation, such as IBD.
The review also underscores the need for further research to better understand the interaction between host iron regulation and microbial siderophore systems, particularly how these interactions influence immune responses and disease outcomes. Future studies could investigate the potential of siderophore-targeted therapies in treating infections, inflammation, and even cancer, particularly in microbiota-driven pathologies.
Microbiome in Graves Disease Hypothyroidism: Insights from Integrated Analysis for Clinicians
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
Graves’ Disease (GD)
Graves’ Disease (GD)
OverviewGraves’ Disease (GD) affects approximately 0.5% of the population, predominantly women. First-line treatment options—antithyroid medications, radioactive iodine, and surgery— often result in significant side effects, incomplete remissions, and frequent relapses. Further, current first-line treatment options focus on symptoms management, and reflect an inadequate understanding of the etiology of the condition. However, recent research reveals a […]
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Integrated microbiome-metabolome study reveals dysbiosis and metabolic shifts in Graves' disease and hypothyroidism, highlighting potential biomarkers like depleted Bacteroides for thyroid disorders.
What was studied?
This original research investigated the gut microbiome in Graves disease hypothyroidism through an integrated analysis of fecal microbiota and metabolome profiles in patients with Graves' disease (GD) and hypothyroidism (HT) compared to healthy controls. Using 16S rRNA gene sequencing for microbial composition and untargeted liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry for metabolomics, the study aimed to identify distinct microbial and metabolic signatures, explore correlations between microbiota, metabolites, and clinical thyroid indicators (e.g., TSH, FT3, FT4, TRAb), and uncover potential pathways linking gut dysbiosis to thyroid dysfunction. Functional predictions via PICRUSt and pathway enrichment with KEGG highlighted microbial roles in metabolism, while OPLS-DA and Spearman correlations elucidated group differences and interactions.
Who was studied?
The study enrolled 90 participants from Shanghai Tenth People's Hospital, including 30 patients with newly diagnosed GD (mean age ~40 years, predominantly female), 30 with HT (similar demographics), and 30 age- and sex-matched healthy controls without thyroid disorders or recent antibiotic use. GD was diagnosed based on hyperthyroidism symptoms, elevated FT3/FT4, suppressed TSH, and positive TRAb; HT by hypothyroidism symptoms, reduced FT3/FT4, elevated TSH, and positive TPOAb/TgAb. Exclusion criteria included pregnancy, other autoimmune diseases, gastrointestinal disorders, or probiotic/antibiotic use within three months to minimize confounders affecting the microbiome.
Most important findings
The gut microbiome in Graves disease hypothyroidism showed reduced alpha diversity (Shannon index) in both GD and HT groups compared to controls, with beta diversity (Bray-Curtis) indicating distinct clustering. At the phylum level, Firmicutes dominated, but Bacteroidetes were depleted in disease groups; genus-level shifts included decreased Bacteroides and Prevotella in GD and HT, increased Enterococcus and Veillonella in GD, and elevated Ruminococcus in HT. These alterations suggest dysbiosis contributing to immune dysregulation, relevant for a microbiome signatures database where depleted Bacteroides (anti-inflammatory, SCFA producers) and enriched Enterococcus (potential pathogens) could serve as markers for GD, while Ruminococcus overabundance might signal HT. Metabolomics identified 120 differential metabolites, with GD showing enriched bile acids (e.g., cholic acid) and amino acids (e.g., L-tryptophan), HT displaying depleted fatty acids (e.g., oleic acid) and increased steroids. Correlations revealed Bacteroides positively linked to anti-inflammatory metabolites like indole-3-acetic acid, negatively to TRAb in GD; network analysis highlighted clusters where microbiota influenced thyroid hormones via metabolic pathways like tryptophan and bile acid metabolism.
Microbial Association
GD Signature
HT Signature
Control
Potential Database Relevance
Bacteroides (genus)
Depleted
Depleted
Abundant
Anti-inflammatory marker; low levels indicate dysbiosis in thyroid autoimmunity
Enterococcus (genus)
Enriched
Normal
Low
Pathogenic shift in GD; associated with increased inflammation
Ruminococcus (genus)
Normal
Enriched
Normal
HT-specific; linked to altered SCFA production
Prevotella (genus)
Depleted
Depleted
Abundant
Common depletion; potential for broad thyroid disorder screening
Key implications
These findings imply that clinicians could use gut microbiome profiling as a non-invasive tool for early detection and monitoring of GD and HT, integrating fecal biomarkers like Bacteroides depletion or bile acid elevation into diagnostic panels to complement thyroid function tests. Therapeutically, targeting dysbiosis via probiotics (e.g., Bacteroides-enriched) or fecal microbiota transplantation might modulate immune responses and metabolic pathways, potentially alleviating symptoms or preventing progression. For clinical practice, this bridges microbiome research by suggesting personalized interventions based on signatures, such as tryptophan supplementation for GD to counteract indole pathway disruptions. Future longitudinal studies should validate causality, perhaps through Mendelian randomization, to refine microbiome-based therapies and expand databases for precision medicine in endocrinology.
Graves’ Disease Gut Microbiome Signature: Key Genera and Clinical Implications
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
Graves’ Disease (GD)
Graves’ Disease (GD)
OverviewGraves’ Disease (GD) affects approximately 0.5% of the population, predominantly women. First-line treatment options—antithyroid medications, radioactive iodine, and surgery— often result in significant side effects, incomplete remissions, and frequent relapses. Further, current first-line treatment options focus on symptoms management, and reflect an inadequate understanding of the etiology of the condition. However, recent research reveals a […]
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This prospective study identifies a unique gut microbiome signature in Graves’ disease, characterized by decreased SCFA-producing bacteria and increased pro-inflammatory taxa, which partially recovers with antithyroid therapy. Twelve genera robustly distinguish GD, offering potential for early diagnosis and microbiome-targeted interventions.
What was studied?
This prospective study evaluated the relationship between gut microbiota (GM) composition and Graves’ disease (GD), an autoimmune thyroid disorder, in newly diagnosed patients. Using 16S rRNA gene sequencing of fecal samples, the researchers profiled and compared the GM of 65 untreated GD patients and 33 healthy controls. They assessed microbiota changes before and after three months of antithyroid drug (ATD) therapy. The investigation aimed to identify specific microbial signatures associated with GD, measure their correlation with clinical parameters, and observe whether GM dysbiosis recovers following treatment. Additionally, a subgroup analysis examined differences in microbiota among GD patients with or without impaired liver function.
Who was studied?
A total of 98 individuals of Chinese Han ethnicity participated: 65 were newly diagnosed, untreated GD patients (18 men, 47 women; median age 30 years), and 33 were healthy volunteers (10 men, 23 women; median age 27 years) recruited from the First Affiliated Hospital of Nanchang University. The GD group met stringent diagnostic criteria (clinical symptoms, thyroid hormone and antibody levels, and ultrasound findings). Exclusion criteria included recent antibiotic/probiotic use, previous ATD therapy, gastrointestinal or other autoimmune diseases, liver disease, or pregnancy. Of the 65 GD patients, 37 completed three months of follow-up on methimazole. A subgroup of GD patients with impaired liver function (GDH) was also analyzed separately from those with normal liver function (GDN).
Most important findings
The study demonstrated that the gut microbiota composition of GD patients is significantly distinct from healthy controls. GD patients exhibited reduced alpha diversity (richness and diversity) of their GM, while beta diversity analyses confirmed a clear separation between groups. Specifically, the GD group showed increased abundance of Bacilli (class), Lactobacillales (order), Streptococcaceae (family), and the genera Streptococcus, Veillonella, and Erysipelatoclostridium. Conversely, there were reductions in families such as Peptostreptococcaceae, Christensenellaceae, Marinifilaceae, and Rikenellaceae, and in genera including Roseburia, Romboutsia, Lachnospira, and Eubacterium ventriosum—all associated with production of short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) and anti-inflammatory effects.
Using a random forest model, 12 genera were identified that could distinguish GD patients from controls with high accuracy (AUC = 0.9021), making them strong candidates for microbiome-based GD biomarkers. Correlations were observed between specific bacterial genera and clinical indicators: for instance, Veillonella abundance was positively correlated with thyroid hormone levels (FT3, FT4) and thyrotrophin receptor antibodies (TRAb), while several SCFA-producing genera showed negative correlations.
After three months of ATD therapy, the GM of GD patients showed partial recovery: the abundance of previously increased taxa (e.g., Streptococcus, Streptococcaceae) decreased, while the abundance of SCFA-producers (e.g., Romboutsia, Lachnospira, Eubacterium ventriosum) increased. However, diversity remained lower compared to controls, and some dysbiosis persisted, indicating incomplete restoration of the microbiome. IL-17 levels, a marker of Th17-mediated immune response, decreased significantly post-treatment and were negatively correlated with Eubacterium hallii group abundance.
In GD patients with impaired liver function, reductions in Weissella and Leuconostocaceae were associated with liver injury markers, supporting a possible gut-liver axis in GD pathophysiology.
Key implications
The study establishes a robust microbiome signature for Graves' disease, linking specific changes in gut microbial composition to disease presence and clinical parameters. The reduction in SCFA-producing, anti-inflammatory genera and the enrichment of pro-inflammatory bacteria suggest that GM dysbiosis may contribute to GD pathogenesis via immune modulation (e.g., Th17/Treg imbalance). Identification of 12 discriminatory genera provides a foundation for developing microbiome-based diagnostics or risk stratification tools for GD—potentially enabling earlier intervention before overt symptoms arise. The observed partial restoration of the GM following antithyroid therapy also suggests therapeutic modulation of the microbiome could complement GD management. The findings emphasize the importance of the gut-thyroid and gut-liver axes in autoimmune endocrine diseases, with implications for personalized medicine and the development of microbiome-targeted interventions.
Microbiome-metabolome generated bile acids gatekeep infliximab efficacy in Crohn’s disease
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
This study reveals the significant role of gut microbiome and metabolome signatures in predicting infliximab response in Crohn’s Disease, suggesting that microbiome-based biomarkers could guide personalized treatment strategies.
What was studied?
This study aimed to identify biomarkers that predict non-response to infliximab treatment in Crohn’s Disease (CD) patients by exploring gut microbiome and metabolome interactions. Researchers sought to characterize how these microbiome-metabolome signatures influence the immune system and therapeutic efficacy, specifically in terms of M1 macrophage suppression and regulatory T cell (Treg) dominance.
Who was studied?
The study involved 100 CD patients who were starting infliximab therapy, as well as a control group of 49 healthy individuals. The patients were followed over time to evaluate their responses to infliximab, while their baseline microbiome and metabolome were analyzed to understand factors associated with primary non-response to the treatment.
Most important findings
The study found that certain microbiome signatures and metabolites were strongly associated with treatment response. Specifically, a reduction in beneficial bacteria like Bifidobacterium and Faecalibacterium at baseline was linked to infliximab failure. The gut microbiome of non-responders showed increased levels of pro-inflammatory genera such as Escherichia and Shigella, while beneficial species were significantly depleted. Metabolomic analysis also highlighted that non-responders had lower levels of taurochenodeoxycholic acid (TCDCA), which is associated with the regulation of immune cells, including Tregs. Fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) experiments confirmed that microbiota from non-responders exacerbated inflammation in mice, supporting the role of specific gut microbial communities in treatment resistance. Additionally, a machine learning model based on microbiome data was able to predict treatment outcomes with an accuracy of 80.5%.
Key implications
These findings suggest that baseline microbiome and metabolome profiles could serve as predictive biomarkers for infliximab efficacy in CD patients. The research emphasizes the role of the gut microbiota in modulating immune responses and the importance of bile acid metabolism in treatment outcomes. This could lead to more personalized treatment strategies for CD, enabling clinicians to identify potential non-responders early and consider alternative therapeutic approaches. Additionally, restoring beneficial bacteria and specific metabolites could improve treatment outcomes in the future.
Phage therapy: Targeting intestinal bacterial microbiota for the treatment of liver diseases
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
This review explores phage therapy as a promising treatment for liver diseases linked to gut microbiota imbalances. It highlights key findings on how phages target harmful bacteria, restoring microbiome balance and improving liver function.
What was studied?
This paper reviews the role of phage therapy in targeting the intestinal bacterial microbiota for the treatment of liver diseases. It highlights the growing interest in using phages as a therapeutic strategy to manipulate the microbiota and address liver conditions associated with microbial imbalances, such as non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), alcoholic liver disease, and cirrhosis. The review also discusses phage therapy's ability to precisely target harmful bacterial populations without causing extensive disruption to the overall gut microbiome.
Who was studied?
The studies referenced in the review predominantly focus on animal models, particularly mice, and clinical case studies involving human patients with liver diseases. The populations studied range from those with liver conditions such as NAFLD, alcoholic liver disease, primary sclerosing cholangitis, and cirrhosis, to patients undergoing phage therapy for various bacterial infections. The paper also references clinical trials that assess the effectiveness and safety of phage treatments, as well as preclinical studies exploring phages' potential in microbiome manipulation.
Most important findings
The review presents several key findings regarding the potential of phage therapy in liver diseases. It identifies specific bacterial genera in the gut microbiota, such as Bacteroides, Blautia, Dorea, and Prevotella, that are more abundant in patients with liver conditions, suggesting they could be potential targets for phage therapy. The paper also discusses how phages can selectively reduce the abundance of these pathobionts, helping to restore a balanced microbiota. Moreover, phages' role in reducing inflammation and alleviating liver disease symptoms is emphasized, with studies showing that phages targeting Enterococcus faecalis or Klebsiella pneumoniae can improve liver function in animal models of alcohol-induced liver injury and cirrhosis.
Another important finding is that the use of engineered or synthetic phages, which are designed to broaden the host range and reduce resistance, offers a promising way to overcome challenges associated with natural phages. The paper also mentions that synthetic biology platforms can create phages tailored to target specific bacterial strains, enhancing the precision of phage therapy.
Key implications
Phage therapy's potential for liver disease treatment highlights its ability to target specific gut bacteria linked to the progression of liver conditions. This targeted approach could offer a more effective and less disruptive alternative to broad-spectrum antibiotics, which can exacerbate dysbiosis. Phage therapy also holds promise for combating antimicrobial-resistant infections, a growing concern in clinical settings. However, the review emphasizes that clinical trials are still necessary to validate the safety and efficacy of phage therapy for liver diseases. Further research should focus on identifying the most suitable bacterial targets, optimizing phage cocktails, and ensuring that phage treatment does not induce significant resistance or cause off-target effects.
The effect of iron therapy on oxidative stress and intestinal microbiota in inflammatory bowel diseases: A review on the conundrum
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
This review examines the impact of iron therapy on oxidative stress and the intestinal microbiota in IBD, highlighting the complexities of managing iron deficiency in these patients. It emphasizes the need for careful iron therapy management to avoid exacerbating oxidative stress and microbial imbalance.
What was studied?
This review article focuses on the effects of iron therapy on oxidative stress and intestinal microbiota in individuals with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Specifically, it investigates the relationship between iron supplementation, redox status, and the gut microbiota, examining how iron deficiency and therapy can influence disease outcomes in IBD patients. The article also highlights the clinical implications of these findings and the potential consequences of both iron deficiency and excess on the gastrointestinal system.
Who was studied?
The review synthesizes evidence from various studies, primarily involving patients with IBD, including both Crohn's disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC). These patients are often affected by iron deficiency anemia (IDA) or non-anemic iron deficiency (NAID), conditions common in IBD due to factors like chronic inflammation, malabsorption, and blood loss. The review also references studies in healthy volunteers to compare the effects of iron therapy and oxidative stress.
Most important findings
The review emphasizes that iron deficiency and iron supplementation both significantly influence oxidative stress and intestinal microbiota in IBD. Iron deficiency is associated with increased oxidative stress, while iron supplementation—especially intravenous iron—has been shown to increase oxidative stress markers and alter the microbiota. The studies reveal conflicting results on the impact of oral versus intravenous iron therapy, with oral iron generally showing less impact on oxidative stress than intravenous formulations. Notably, intravenous iron therapy is linked with increased reactive oxygen species (ROS), which could potentially exacerbate inflammation and alter the gut microbial environment. Furthermore, iron therapy, whether oral or intravenous, alters the intestinal microbiota, potentially influencing the gut's inflammatory status. Some iron formulations may exacerbate dysbiosis, while others, such as Lactobacillus plantarum, may aid in iron absorption without significantly harming the microbiota.
Key implications
The review suggests that while iron therapy is necessary to address iron deficiency in IBD patients, its administration must be managed carefully to avoid exacerbating oxidative stress or disturbing the intestinal microbiota. Clinicians should consider low-dose or intermittent oral iron therapy in quiescent IBD and reserve intravenous iron for more severe cases. Given the observed changes in the microbiota, it's important to further study the long-term clinical significance of these alterations and their potential effects on disease activity and patient outcomes. A personalized approach to iron therapy is recommended, factoring in the patient’s specific IBD condition, disease activity, and iron status.
Copper in infectious disease: Using both sides of the penny
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
Copper’s dual role as both an antimicrobial and essential micronutrient plays a significant part in the host-pathogen interaction, with pathogens evolving resistance mechanisms while hosts leverage copper to combat infections. This study offers insights into how copper impacts infection biology, potentially informing new therapeutic strategies.
What was studied?
This study explores the dual roles of copper in infectious diseases, highlighting its essential function in both host immune defense and pathogen survival. Copper acts as a toxic substance to pathogens but is also a vital micronutrient necessary for cellular processes, including redox reactions and electron transfer. The research delves into how pathogens utilize copper to thrive within the host while also examining the ways in which the host manipulates copper to combat infections. The study provides a comprehensive understanding of copper's multifaceted role at the host-pathogen interface.
Who was studied?
The research focuses on the interaction between various pathogens, including bacteria, fungi, and viruses, and the host immune system. It emphasizes how copper is both a weapon for the host and a challenge for pathogens. The study examines how different pathogens, particularly bacterial pathogens, adapt to the toxic effects of copper through mechanisms like copper export and sequestration, enabling them to survive inside host cells. It also investigates the host's strategies for manipulating copper levels to either enhance its toxic effects against pathogens or limit microbial access to copper to prevent infection.
Most important findings
The study reveals that copper’s role in infection is complex and dual-faceted. On one hand, copper is essential for the host’s immune system, enabling the activation of copper-dependent enzymes that defend against pathogens and regulate oxidative stress. On the other hand, pathogens have developed various mechanisms to counteract copper toxicity, such as copper export systems and the production of metal-binding proteins. These adaptive strategies allow pathogens to survive in environments where copper levels are high, such as within the host during infection. The research highlights how the host also exploits copper’s toxic effects to kill pathogens, particularly through the actions of immune cells like macrophages. Moreover, the study suggests that the manipulation of copper levels, either by enhancing its toxic effects on pathogens or limiting its availability, could provide new therapeutic strategies for managing infections.
Key implications
These findings underscore copper's essential and paradoxical role in infectious disease. While copper is toxic to many pathogens, its dual role as both a nutrient and a weapon makes it a valuable tool in the host’s immune response. The study's insights into how pathogens manage copper stress can inform the development of novel therapies, such as copper-based antimicrobial agents, to combat infections. Additionally, understanding how the host manipulates copper to regulate immune responses suggests new approaches for enhancing the immune system during infection. Therapeutic interventions targeting the mechanisms of copper acquisition and resistance in pathogens, as well as strategies to modulate copper levels in the host, could offer new avenues for treating a range of infections.
Clinical Features of Intra-Abdominal Abscess and Intestinal Free-Wall Perforation in Korean Patients with Crohn’s Disease
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
This study examines the clinical features, risk factors, and treatment outcomes of intra-abdominal abscesses (IA) and intestinal free-wall perforations (IP) in Korean patients with Crohn’s disease, highlighting the role of intestinal stricture and disease behavior in complication development.
What was studied?
The study explores the clinical characteristics of intra-abdominal abscesses (IA) and intestinal free-wall perforations (IP) in Korean patients with Crohn’s disease (CD). These complications, which often arise from deep transmural inflammation, can severely affect patient outcomes. The research examines the differences in clinical features, risk factors, and associated complications between IA and IP, highlighting how the progression of CD influences the development of these conditions. The study aimed to investigate these differences to improve treatment strategies and patient prognosis.
Who was studied?
The study involved patients diagnosed with Crohn’s disease across 32 hospitals in Korea, focusing on those who developed complications such as IA and IP. The cohort included 1286 patients, with 147 (11.4%) diagnosed with IA and 83 (6.5%) with IP. The study explored various factors like age, disease behavior, intestinal stricture, and perianal fistulas, comparing these features in patients with IA, IP, and those without such complications. Data were collected from retrospective medical records spanning multiple years, providing a broad view of the disease progression and complications.
Most important findings
The study revealed several key findings that enhance the understanding of IA and IP in the context of Crohn’s disease. Firstly, the average age of patients with IA was lower than that of patients with IP, suggesting that IA may develop earlier in the disease course. Additionally, patients with IA were more likely to have perianal fistulas and intestinal strictures, which were significantly more prevalent compared to the control group. The development of intestinal stricture after diagnosis was strongly associated with both IA and IP, with patients showing a markedly higher risk for these complications if strictures were present. Disease behavior also played a role: patients with IP had a higher frequency of stricturing and penetrating disease (B2 and B3) compared to those with IA, indicating that more aggressive forms of Crohn’s disease were linked to IP.
Interestingly, both IA and IP patients had higher rates of disease progression during follow-up, though IA was more likely to develop later in the disease course. The study also pointed out the importance of timely diagnosis, as delays could worsen the severity of these complications.
Key implications
This study underscores the importance of identifying patients at high risk for developing IA and IP based on their disease phenotype, presence of strictures, and perianal fistulas. Early diagnosis and timely intervention could significantly reduce the risk of these severe complications. The findings suggest that while the mechanisms behind IA and IP may be similar, their clinical features differ enough to warrant distinct management strategies. Treatment options such as antibiotic therapy, drainage, and selective surgical resection may be necessary, particularly when these complications are not managed early. The study calls for further investigation into the underlying genetic and environmental factors that influence the development of IA and IP, as well as the potential role of biologics in preventing these complications.
Prevalence and Bidirectional Association Between Autoimmune Liver Disease and Inflammatory Bowel Disease
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
This study provides a comprehensive meta-analysis on the prevalence and bidirectional association between inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) and autoimmune liver disease (AILD), shedding light on the significant overlap between these conditions and their shared pathophysiological mechanisms.
What was studied?
This meta-analysis explored the prevalence and bidirectional association between autoimmune liver diseases (AILD) and inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). The study aimed to quantify how frequently IBD occurs among patients with AILD and vice versa. AILDs, including primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC), autoimmune hepatitis (AIH), and primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC), are immune-mediated liver diseases. The research also investigated potential common mechanisms, such as the role of the gut-liver axis, which could contribute to the development of both conditions. By synthesizing data from 172 observational studies, the research sought to improve understanding of how these diseases influence each other and inform clinical management strategies.
Who was studied?
The study encompassed data from 172 observational studies, including a total of 1,550,966 participants. These participants were diagnosed with either IBD, AILD, or both. The data was collected from a wide range of geographic regions, and the studies involved patients from different demographic backgrounds, including various age groups and ethnicities. Specific focus was given to patients with Crohn’s disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC), the two main types of IBD, as well as patients with different kinds of AILD, namely PSC, AIH, and PBC. The study examined how these diseases coexisted in patients, focusing on their prevalence in various groups.
Most important findings
The meta-analysis revealed a notable prevalence of IBD in AILD patients, with the highest rate observed in PSC patients. Approximately 32% of patients with AILD had IBD, with PSC being the most strongly associated with IBD, particularly UC. The prevalence of IBD in PSC patients was found to be significantly higher compared to other forms of AILD, suggesting that PSC might serve as a strong marker for IBD risk. Conversely, the study found that about 2.28% of patients with IBD also had AILD. Among IBD patients, PSC was the most common form of AILD, followed by autoimmune hepatitis and primary biliary cirrhosis, though these conditions were less prevalent. This bidirectional relationship suggests a complex interplay between the two conditions, with gut-liver interactions potentially driving the association. The study also found variations in these associations across different regions and demographics.
Key implications
The findings from this meta-analysis suggest that clinicians should be vigilant in monitoring patients with IBD for signs of AILD, particularly PSC, as it is highly prevalent among this group. The shared pathophysiological mechanisms between IBD and AILD, such as immune system dysregulation and microbial factors, warrant further exploration. For IBD patients, especially those with UC or extensive disease, regular liver function tests and screening for AILD should be part of routine care to enable early detection and improve management. Similarly, patients with AILD, particularly those with PSC, should undergo screening for IBD, as early detection can help prevent the progression of both conditions. The bidirectional nature of the relationship between these diseases calls for a multidisciplinary approach to treatment, with collaboration between gastroenterologists and hepatologists to optimize patient care.
Iron Deficiency Anemia: An Overlooked Complication of Crohn’s Disease
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
This study highlights the high prevalence of iron deficiency anemia (IDA) in Crohn’s disease patients and its association with worse hospitalization outcomes, including longer stays, higher costs, and more readmissions. The findings stress the need for early IDA screening and management in this population.
What was studied?
This study aimed to explore the prevalence of iron deficiency anemia (IDA) among patients with Crohn’s disease (CD), using a large, USA-based cohort. The researchers investigated the association between IDA and various hospitalization outcomes, including length of stay, total charges, need for blood transfusions, and rates of readmission. By analyzing data from the Nationwide Readmissions Database (NRD), they sought to determine the burden of IDA in CD patients and its impact on disease management.
Who was studied?
The study analyzed 72,076 hospitalized CD patients aged 18 and older. Of these, 8.1% had a comorbid diagnosis of IDA, and the remaining patients were used as a comparison group. The patients included in the study had varying disease activity, and the data was adjusted to control for factors such as age, sex, disease complications, and comorbid conditions. The study also excluded patients with anemia of chronic disease (ACD), focusing on IDA as the key factor.
Most important findings
The study found that 8.1% of CD patients had IDA, a condition that was linked to worse hospitalization outcomes. Patients with IDA had a significantly longer length of stay (median of 4 days vs. 3 days in non-IDA patients), higher median hospitalization costs, and were more likely to require blood transfusions. Additionally, CD patients with IDA had increased rates of non-elective readmissions, both within 30 days and 90 days after discharge. The study also highlighted that IDA in CD patients was associated with a higher prevalence of gastrointestinal bleeding, fistulas, and abscesses, which are common complications of CD. However, IDA was not significantly associated with inpatient mortality after controlling for other variables. Multivariate regression analysis revealed that IDA increased the odds of readmission by 25% within 30 days and by 39% within 90 days.
Key implications
This study underscores the significant burden of IDA in patients with Crohn’s disease and its association with worse clinical outcomes, such as longer hospital stays, higher costs, and higher readmission rates. It emphasizes the need for early recognition and management of IDA in this patient population to improve hospitalization outcomes. The findings suggest that IDA is an underappreciated complication in CD, and routine screening for anemia should be integrated into clinical practice, particularly given its impact on quality of life and the increased risk of comorbid conditions such as gastrointestinal bleeding and fistula formation. Future research should focus on refining diagnostic approaches to differentiate IDA from anemia of chronic disease (ACD) in CD patients and on developing optimal management strategies, including more widespread use of parenteral iron supplementation.
Pyoderma gangrenosum and inflammatory bowel disease: Recent insights into epidemiology, pathogenesis, and therapeutic approaches.
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
This review explores the relationship between pyoderma gangrenosum and inflammatory bowel disease, focusing on epidemiology, clinical features, and treatment approaches. It emphasizes the need for more research to standardize diagnosis and treatment protocols, especially in light of the growing use of biologics.
What was studied?
This review investigates the association between pyoderma gangrenosum (PG) and inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), a rare but significant extraintestinal manifestation. The study covers epidemiology, clinical features, risk factors, and treatment responses of PG in patients with IBD. The article synthesizes data from 115 published case reports and series, focusing on the epidemiological features of PG in both adult and pediatric populations. It also evaluates therapeutic approaches, highlighting the growing use of biologics and the complex nature of treatment, which varies depending on the severity and individual patient response.
Who was studied?
The reviewed articles cover a range of patients with PG and IBD, with a focus on both adults and children. In adult populations, PG is often diagnosed in middle-aged patients, predominantly affecting females. The relationship between PG and IBD has been thoroughly investigated in cohort studies and case series. For children, IBD remains the most common comorbidity with PG, although reports suggest varying presentations based on comorbid conditions and the presence of other immune disorders. This review highlights the diversity in clinical manifestations of PG, with patients presenting at various stages of IBD, sometimes before, during, or after IBD diagnosis.
Most important findings
Recent large cohort studies reveal that the prevalence of PG is significantly higher in IBD patients compared to the general population. The review includes findings from diverse datasets, with IBD being diagnosed in 34% of PG patients. It highlights that PG is more common in patients with Crohn's disease (CD) than ulcerative colitis (UC). The clinical manifestations of PG are highly variable, but they most commonly involve ulcerative lesions that appear on the extremities, particularly below the knee. Treatment outcomes also show considerable variation, with most patients requiring systemic therapies like corticosteroids, immunosuppressants, or biologics. The review underscores the evolving therapeutic strategies, especially the increasing use of TNF-α inhibitors, reflecting efforts to target overlapping inflammatory pathways between PG and IBD.
Key implications
The study emphasizes the importance of recognizing PG as a significant clinical challenge in managing IBD patients, particularly due to its complex and varied clinical presentation. While biologics have become central to the treatment of PG, the individualized nature of therapy suggests that current approaches are still not standardized. The findings call for better diagnostic criteria and more controlled studies to establish definitive treatment protocols and to understand the underlying pathophysiological mechanisms linking PG to IBD. There is a critical need for multi-center, prospective studies that can overcome the limitations of the available data, such as reporting bias and small sample sizes, to help refine treatment strategies and improve patient outcomes.
Succinate’s Dual Roles in Inflammatory Bowel Disease
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
This narrative review explores succinate's dual immunoregulatory roles in IBD, examining how its concentration affects inflammation and tissue repair. The study discusses potential therapeutic strategies targeting succinate metabolism and its signaling pathways.
What was studied?
This review explores the complex and dual roles of succinate in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), emphasizing its involvement in the microbiota-metabolism-immune axis. Succinate, a metabolite produced both by host cells and gut microbiota, plays a significant role in IBD by influencing immune responses and metabolic pathways that drive disease progression or promote tissue repair. The review focuses on how succinate's effects are modulated by its concentration, which can either exacerbate inflammation or support healing processes in the gut.
Who was studied?
The review integrates findings from human clinical studies and preclinical models, including mice and pigs, to explore succinate's role in IBD. The focus is on the gut microbiota's influence on succinate production, the effect of succinate on immune cells such as macrophages and T cells, and how succinate's accumulation in the intestinal lumen correlates with disease activity in IBD patients. This research highlights the specific bacteria involved in succinate metabolism and the subsequent immune responses within the gut, particularly during active disease phases.
Most important findings
Succinate’s role in IBD is context-dependent, with evidence pointing to both pro-inflammatory and anti-inflammatory effects. Elevated succinate levels in IBD patients correlate with more severe disease, as succinate activates immune pathways that exacerbate inflammation. Succinate acts through its receptor, SUCNR1, triggering pro-inflammatory signaling pathways like Wnt/β-catenin and NF-κB, which contribute to intestinal barrier dysfunction, increased fibrosis, and immune cell activation. In contrast, at physiological concentrations, succinate supports tissue repair by promoting anti-inflammatory responses and enhancing epithelial barrier function. The review highlights how the balance between succinate-producing and succinate-consuming bacteria in the gut influences these outcomes. Dysbiosis in IBD patients, particularly the overgrowth of succinate-producing bacteria, contributes to increased succinate levels, exacerbating the disease.
Key implications
The findings suggest that succinate could be a target for therapeutic intervention in IBD. By regulating succinate levels or its signaling pathways, it may be possible to manage the immune responses that drive IBD. Therapies could involve targeting the gut microbiota to balance succinate production and consumption or developing SUCNR1 antagonists to block succinate’s pro-inflammatory effects. Additionally, monitoring succinate levels in patients could provide valuable diagnostic information, allowing for personalized treatment strategies that align with the specific metabolic and immune environment of each patient.
NOD2 in Crohn’s Disease—Unfinished Business
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
This review explores the genetic complexities of NOD2 in Crohn's disease, emphasizing its role in the stricturing phenotype and the need for deeper research into rare variants and their functional impacts.
What was studied?
This article delves into the complex relationship between the NOD2 gene and its contribution to the pathogenesis of Crohn's disease (CD). The NOD2 gene, a crucial part of the immune response, has been extensively studied since its identification in 2001 as a major factor in CD. The review highlights how NOD2’s dysfunction leads to the disease through impaired bacterial clearance, resulting in chronic inflammation, altered immune responses, and fibrosis. Recent advances in genetic studies, including genome-wide association studies (GWAS) and next-generation sequencing (NGS), have provided deeper insights into the specific variations of NOD2 and their impacts on disease phenotypes, particularly the fibrostenotic subtype of CD.
Who was studied?
The review synthesizes findings from a wide range of patient populations across different geographical regions, including pediatric and adult patients with CD. Notably, studies involving genetic sequencing from cohorts in Europe, North America, and other diverse regions have been analyzed. The article also discusses studies on specific NOD2 mutations like R702W, G908R, and L1007fs, which are frequently studied in relation to CD. Additionally, the authors explore how these mutations contribute to the stricturing phenotype and disease complications such as fibrosis. This study also includes analyses of the genetic and phenotypic correlations observed in individuals with rare and common variants of NOD2.
Most important findings
The most critical finding of this review is the significant role of NOD2 in Crohn’s disease pathogenesis, particularly in its contribution to the stricturing phenotype. Variants of NOD2, such as R702W, G908R, and L1007fs, have been found to impair immune responses, particularly the response to bacterial stimuli. This leads to defective bacterial clearance, triggering inflammatory pathways that drive the disease. The article underscores that despite extensive research, many questions remain about how rare variants within the NOD2 gene contribute to disease. The review also addresses the challenges of associating rare variants with CD due to their low frequency and lack of functional testing. Additionally, the research emphasizes that while NOD2’s role in CD is well established, further investigation into how these variants interact with the microbiome is needed.
Key implications
The review highlights the potential for NOD2 to serve as a clinical tool for personalized medicine in CD. The identification of specific NOD2 mutations can aid in early disease prediction and stratification, particularly for patients at high risk of developing fibrosis. The possibility of using NOD2 as a biomarker for disease progression opens new avenues for targeted therapies aimed at preventing complications, such as stricturing and the need for surgery. However, the review also emphasizes the need for further research into the genetic heterogeneity of NOD2 and its interaction with the microbiome. Understanding how different NOD2 variants influence the immune system could lead to more precise treatments tailored to individual genetic profiles, enhancing clinical outcomes.
Environmental risk factors of inflammatory bowel disease: toward a strategy of preventative health
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
This review explores environmental risk factors for Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis, highlighting modifiable exposures such as smoking, diet, and early-life antibiotic use, and their impact on disease prevention.
What was studied?
This review focuses on the environmental risk factors associated with the development of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), specifically Crohn’s disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC). It explores the complex interplay between environmental exposures, microbiome alterations, and immune responses that contribute to the onset and progression of IBD. The review synthesizes findings from various meta-analyses, highlighting modifiable risk factors such as smoking, diet, and early-life antibiotic use, while also discussing protective factors like breastfeeding and Mediterranean diets. It aims to provide a strategy for reducing IBD risk through environmental modifications and guides healthcare providers on preventing IBD through lifestyle changes.
Who was studied?
This review does not focus on a specific patient group but instead synthesizes data from multiple studies involving a wide range of populations across different age groups and ethnic backgrounds. It includes studies from both high-prevalence and newly industrialized regions, focusing on individuals who have been exposed to various environmental factors and assessing how these exposures influence the likelihood of developing CD and UC. The review also examines preclinical cohorts, including those at high genetic risk for IBD, to identify potential biomarkers and environmental factors that may trigger disease onset.
Most important findings
The review identifies several environmental factors that contribute to the pathogenesis of IBD. Smoking is a significant risk factor, especially for Crohn’s disease, and has been shown to worsen disease progression. In contrast, a Mediterranean diet rich in fiber, fruits, vegetables, and fish has a protective effect, potentially reducing inflammation and modulating the gut microbiome. Early life exposures, such as antibiotic use and breastfeeding, play crucial roles in shaping the gut microbiota, with breastfeeding being protective against IBD. The review highlights the Hygiene Hypothesis, which suggests that a lack of early exposure to microbes in sterile environments increases the risk of immune-mediated diseases like IBD. Lifestyle factors such as physical activity, stress management, and maintaining a healthy weight are associated with a lower risk of IBD.
Key implications
The findings suggest that modifiable environmental factors present an opportunity for preventive health strategies aimed at reducing the incidence of IBD. Healthcare providers can play a pivotal role in advising patients on lifestyle and dietary changes that can mitigate the risk of developing IBD. The review also stresses the importance of future research to develop high-quality interventional studies that can more definitively assess the effectiveness of environmental modifications in preventing IBD. Identifying biomarkers associated with ecological exposures will further help in targeting high-risk individuals for early interventions. In particular, the review calls for more comprehensive studies involving diverse populations to understand the varying effects of environmental factors on IBD risk across different regions and demographics.
The Prevalence of Zinc Deficiency in Crohn’s Disease Patients
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
The study reveals a higher prevalence of zinc deficiency in Crohn’s disease patients compared to healthy controls. While serum zinc levels did not differ significantly between groups, the increased deficiency rate in CD highlights the need for zinc monitoring and potential supplementation in these patients.
What was studied?
The study investigates the prevalence of zinc deficiency in patients with Crohn's disease (CD), a form of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Zinc is an essential trace element involved in various physiological processes, including immune function and intestinal health. The study aimed to evaluate serum zinc levels in CD patients and compare them with healthy controls, considering factors like age, sex, and site of inflammation in relation to zinc deficiency. Given the importance of zinc in immune function and gut barrier integrity, the study also explored its potential role in the pathogenesis and exacerbation of CD.
Who was studied?
The study included 65 patients with confirmed CD, recruited from a cohort of patients attending clinics in Iran. These patients were compared with 65 healthy controls who had no gastrointestinal diseases, no recent use of dietary supplements, and no gastrointestinal symptoms such as diarrhea or vomiting. Both groups were matched for age and sex to ensure comparability, and their serum zinc levels were measured and analyzed. Data was collected on the patients' demographic factors, site of inflammation, and the presence of other comorbidities.
Most important findings
The study found that while the average serum zinc level in CD patients (88.1 ng/dL) was not significantly different from the control group (86.2 ng/dL), zinc deficiency was significantly more prevalent in CD patients. Specifically, 21.5% of CD patients had zinc deficiency compared to 7.7% in the control group (P=0.025). However, the difference in serum zinc levels between males and females, or across different age groups, was not statistically significant. The site of inflammation within the gastrointestinal tract (e.g., ileitis, colitis, ileocolitis) did not appear to affect zinc levels or deficiency rates. These findings suggest that while serum zinc levels were relatively similar between CD patients and healthy controls, CD patients exhibited a higher rate of zinc deficiency.
Key implications
The study's findings indicate that zinc deficiency is more common in CD patients than in healthy controls, highlighting the need for routine screening of zinc levels in this population. Zinc plays a crucial role in immune function and maintaining the intestinal barrier, and its deficiency could potentially contribute to disease exacerbation, malnutrition, and impaired immune responses in CD patients. Given the higher prevalence of zinc deficiency in CD, clinicians should consider zinc supplementation for patients with low serum zinc levels, especially since zinc deficiency can worsen IBD symptoms, delay recovery, and increase susceptibility to infections. Further studies are needed to better understand the long-term effects of zinc deficiency in CD and to explore whether zinc supplementation can improve disease outcomes.
Correlations between serum cytokines and gut microbiota in patients with Graves’ disease: A case-control study
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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Graves’ Disease (GD)
Graves’ Disease (GD)
OverviewGraves’ Disease (GD) affects approximately 0.5% of the population, predominantly women. First-line treatment options—antithyroid medications, radioactive iodine, and surgery— often result in significant side effects, incomplete remissions, and frequent relapses. Further, current first-line treatment options focus on symptoms management, and reflect an inadequate understanding of the etiology of the condition. However, recent research reveals a […]
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This case–control study demonstrates that Graves’ disease is associated with distinct gut microbiota alterations, closely linked to immune cytokine profiles and thyroid dysfunction, identifying key bacterial genera and microbial-immune correlations relevant for clinical and translational research.
What was studied?
This case–control observational study investigated the associations between peripheral blood cytokine profiles and gut microbiota composition in patients with Graves' disease (GD), the most common autoimmune thyroid disorder. The study aimed to elucidate the interplay between immune dysregulation—specifically changes in cytokines such as interleukin-10 (IL-10), transforming growth factor β (TGF-β), and interleukin-17A (IL-17A)—and alterations in gut microbial communities, potentially contributing to GD pathogenesis. These gut microbiome cytokine associations are pivotal to understanding Graves' disease better. The researchers performed comprehensive profiling using high-resolution 16S rRNA gene sequencing for fecal microbiota and multiplex cytokine arrays for serum immune markers, alongside standard thyroid function testing. The study also included in silico functional prediction of microbial metabolic pathways. Statistical analyses (including alpha and beta diversity, correlation, and discriminant analyses) were employed to identify microbial signatures associated with immune and thyroid dysfunction in GD.
Who was studied?
The study enrolled 30 consecutive, untreated Graves’ disease patients (primarily female, as per GD epidemiology) admitted to the Department of Endocrinology at the Third Affiliated Hospital of Qiqihar Medical University (China) between January and July 2023. Thirty age- and sex-matched healthy controls (HC) were recruited from individuals undergoing routine physical examination in the same period. Exclusion criteria included alternative causes of thyrotoxicosis, autoimmune comorbidities, recent antibiotic/probiotic or immunosuppressive use, pregnancy/lactation, and acute infections, ensuring a focused comparison of GD-specific changes. Both groups were matched for demographic variables, and comprehensive baseline data (age, sex, BMI) were collected.
Most important findings
The study revealed significant gut microbial dysbiosis in Graves’ disease, with lower overall microbial diversity and richness compared to healthy controls. At the phylum level, GD patients exhibited reduced Firmicutes and increased Bacteroidetes. Discriminative analysis identified 19 taxa with altered abundance, most notably: decreased Bifidobacterium and Veillonella (commensals) and increased Prevotella_9 and Megamonas (potential pathobionts). Importantly, cytokine-microbiota correlations showed that anti-inflammatory cytokines (IL-10, TGF-β) were positively associated with Bifidobacterium and Parasutterella, but negatively with Prevotella_9 and Megamonas.
Conversely, the pro-inflammatory cytokine IL-17A was positively correlated with Prevotella_9 and Megamonas and negatively with Bifidobacterium and Veillonella. Key thyroid function indices (TSH, FT3, FT4, TRAb) were also linked to specific bacterial genera, underscoring a multi-layered gut-immune-thyroid axis. Functional predictions indicated upregulation of energy and immune-related pathways in the GD microbiome, alongside downregulation of amino acid metabolism, membrane transport, and xenobiotic degradation.
Key implications
This study provides robust evidence that Graves’ disease is characterized by gut microbial dysbiosis, which is closely intertwined with immune imbalance and thyroid dysfunction. The identification of specific bacterial genera, such as increased Prevotella_9 and Megamonas (linked to pro-inflammatory cytokines and hyperthyroidism), and decreased Bifidobacterium and Veillonella (linked to anti-inflammatory cytokines and thyroid regulation), offers potential microbial biomarkers for GD diagnosis and monitoring. These findings suggest that modulating the gut microbiome or targeting the cytokine-microbiota axis could represent novel therapeutic strategies for GD. Additionally, the study highlights the need for further mechanistic and interventional research to clarify causality and therapeutic potential, as well as validation in larger and more diverse populations.
Targeted Therapies and Microbiome Insights in Graves’ Disease: A Clinical Review
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
Graves’ Disease (GD)
Graves’ Disease (GD)
OverviewGraves’ Disease (GD) affects approximately 0.5% of the population, predominantly women. First-line treatment options—antithyroid medications, radioactive iodine, and surgery— often result in significant side effects, incomplete remissions, and frequent relapses. Further, current first-line treatment options focus on symptoms management, and reflect an inadequate understanding of the etiology of the condition. However, recent research reveals a […]
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Microbiome-Targeted Interventions (MBTIs)
Microbiome-Targeted Interventions (MBTIs)
Microbiome Targeted Interventions (MBTIs) are cutting-edge treatments that utilize information from Microbiome Signatures to modulate the microbiome, revolutionizing medicine with unparalleled precision and impact.
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This review maps the immune‑microbial mechanisms driving Graves’ disease and evaluates next‑generation biologics, small molecules and tolerance‑inducing peptides that may replace conventional ablation therapies.
What was reviewed?
This narrative review collates pre‑clinical and clinical data on Graves’ disease (GD) pathogenesis and evaluates emerging “precision” therapeutics that intervene at discrete immune‑molecular checkpoints—CD20, CD40/CD40L, BAFF, neonatal Fc‑receptor, HLA‑DRβ1‑Arg74—or directly antagonise the thyrotropin receptor (TSHR) via monoclonal antibodies, small‑molecule inverse agonists or CAR‑T strategies. It also summarises complementary insights from genetics, epigenetics and the gut microbiome that refine present pathogenic models and inform candidate drug targets.
Who was reviewed?
The authors executed a PubMed search (no end‑date; English language only) for mechanistic and interventional studies, excluding case reports, letters and abstracts. Included material spans animal models, phase I–II trials, population genetics and multi‑centre microbiome consortia (e.g., INDIGO). Clinical data predominantly involve adult GD patients (with or without orbitopathy), whereas immunobiology derives from both human biospecimens and murine thyroiditis/GD models. Overall, the synthesis integrates evidence from several hundred individuals across Europe and Asia plus complementary in‑vivo platforms.
Most important findings
Immune escape hinges on TSHR‑stimulating antibodies driven by aberrant T‑ and B‑cell costimulation (CD40/CD40L) and BAFF‑mediated survival of autoreactive B cells. Genome‑wide and epigenetic studies highlight HLA‑DR, CTLA‑4, PTPN22 and FOXP3 variants, while single‑cell RNA‑seq reveals expanded memory B‑cell and CD16⁺ NK‑cell compartments. Importantly for microbiome signature databases, GD exhibits a reproducible dysbiosis: reduced α‑diversity and phylum‑level shifts summarised below.
Therapeutically, anti‑CD20 (rituximab) and anti‑CD40 (iscalimab) achieve biochemical remission in 40‑50 % of early GD, especially when baseline TRAb < 20 IU/L. FcRn blockade (batoclimab) rapidly de‑tiers TRAbs; TSHR‑blocking mAb K1‑70 and small molecules (ANTAG‑3, VA‑K‑14, S37) normalise thyroid hormones in murine models. Peptide apitope ATX‑GD‑59 restores tolerance in 50 % of mild GD, and TSHR‑CAR‑T selectively deletes TRAb‑producing B cells in vivo.
Key implications
Targeted immunomodulators promise durable euthyroidism without ablation or life‑long levothyroxine, and microbiome data suggest adjunctive avenues such as microbial metabolite supplementation or dysbiosis‑directed probiotics. Integration of host genetics, microbiota and antigen‑specific therapy could enable precision stratification, minimising exposure to broad immunosuppression and its respective risks.
The Role of Gut Microbiota in Intestinal Inflammation with Respect to Diet and Extrinsic Stressors
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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The review examines the relationship between gut microbiota, diet, and extrinsic stressors in promoting intestinal inflammation, with implications for managing IBD. It emphasizes the potential benefits of dietary changes and probiotics in restoring gut health and mitigating inflammation.
What was studied?
The review focuses on how gut microbiota influences intestinal inflammation, particularly in the context of diet and extrinsic stressors. The paper explores the interaction between microbiota dysbiosis and intestinal diseases such as inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). The authors examine the role of diet, antibiotics, sleep disturbance, physical activity, and environmental stressors like heat, cold, and pollutants in altering the gut microbiome, which could contribute to intestinal inflammation. Specifically, they address the microbial shifts that occur with these stressors and their potential to either promote or prevent inflammation in the gut.
Who was studied?
The paper highlights studies conducted in both animal models and human populations, providing insights into how changes in the gut microbiome are linked to diseases such as IBD. The studies primarily explore changes in the microbiota composition in response to dietary habits, extrinsic environmental factors, and physical or psychological stress. These factors were observed to influence the abundance of certain bacterial families and genera, such as Lactobacillus, Bifidobacterium, and Faecalibacterium, all of which play crucial roles in maintaining intestinal health. The findings offer valuable insights for clinicians working with IBD patients or those affected by dysbiosis due to external factors.
Most important findings
One of the most critical findings is the relationship between gut microbiota alterations and intestinal inflammation. The review reports that environmental and dietary stressors like high-fat diets and environmental pollutants can significantly alter the gut microbiota, promoting the growth of pro-inflammatory bacteria such as Enterobacteriaceae. The paper highlights the reduction in beneficial microbes like Lactobacillus and Faecalibacterium, which are known to produce anti-inflammatory metabolites like short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs). Furthermore, psychological stress was shown to exacerbate inflammation by reducing the proportion of beneficial bacteria and increasing the abundance of harmful microbes, which are associated with intestinal barrier dysfunction.
The paper discusses the beneficial effects of certain diets, such as the Mediterranean diet, on the gut microbiota composition. High fiber and prebiotic-rich foods were found to support the growth of beneficial bacteria, enhancing gut health and reducing inflammation. Conversely, western-style diets, rich in fats and sugars, were linked to higher levels of inflammatory bacteria, contributing to conditions like IBD.
Key implications
The findings underline the importance of addressing diet and extrinsic stressors when managing patients with intestinal inflammation or IBD. Clinicians should consider dietary interventions, such as increasing fiber intake and incorporating probiotic-rich foods, to help modulate the gut microbiota in favor of reducing inflammation. The review also suggests that managing stress and reducing exposure to harmful environmental factors, such as pollutants, can play a role in improving gut health. Probiotic treatments might also be a promising strategy to restore gut balance and prevent the progression of IBD. Further studies are necessary to fully understand the direct mechanisms linking stress, diet, and microbiota alterations to inflammation, especially in clinical settings.
Extraintestinal Manifestations of Inflammatory Bowel Disease
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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This review discusses the extraintestinal manifestations of IBD, focusing on the pathophysiology, prevalence, and associations with treatment. It emphasizes the role of immune system dysfunction, genetics, and microbiome in triggering these manifestations, with implications for clinical management.
What was studied?
This review article explores the extraintestinal manifestations (EIMs) associated with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), particularly focusing on Crohn's disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC). It discusses the prevalence, pathophysiology, and various manifestations that affect organs and systems outside the gastrointestinal tract, such as dermatological, ophthalmological, musculoskeletal, hepatobiliary, and other organ systems. It also touches on potential causal mechanisms and associations with IBD treatments.
Who was studied?
The study primarily focuses on a wide range of patients with IBD, drawing data from both adult and pediatric populations. The article highlights findings from pediatric centers where IBD's extraintestinal manifestations are reported to be more prevalent compared to general adult populations. Additionally, it emphasizes the associations of EIMs with underlying IBD disease, genetic factors (such as HLA phenotypes), and the treatments used, such as immunosuppressive and biologic therapies.
Most important findings
The article reveals that EIMs of IBD can involve nearly every organ system, with the skin, eyes, joints, and hepatobiliary system being among the most commonly affected. Dermatological manifestations such as erythema nodosum and pyoderma gangrenosum are particularly prevalent in patients with CD. These skin conditions often correlate with the activity of the underlying disease, indicating a shared immune-mediated pathophysiology. Musculoskeletal issues, particularly peripheral arthritis and axial arthropathy (ankylosing spondylitis and sacroiliitis), are also common and significantly impact the quality of life of IBD patients. Additionally, hepatobiliary manifestations like primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC) are more frequently observed in patients with UC, while non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) and other liver-related complications are common in CD.
The pathogenesis of these manifestations is complex and involves immune system dysregulation, bacterial factors, genetic predispositions, and the impact of IBD treatments. Recent studies in animal models highlight the importance of gut microbiota in the expression of EIMs, particularly in genetically predisposed individuals. Moreover, the role of medications, especially corticosteroids and immunosuppressants, in triggering or exacerbating EIMs has been observed in some patients.
Key implications
Understanding the broad spectrum of extraintestinal manifestations in IBD is crucial for clinicians, as EIMs often present before the onset of gastrointestinal symptoms, complicating the diagnosis. Recognizing these manifestations early can lead to more timely interventions and prevent long-term complications. For pediatric patients, the prevalence of EIMs is notably higher, emphasizing the need for careful monitoring across different age groups. Additionally, since some manifestations, like pyoderma gangrenosum and uveitis, can occur independent of IBD activity, they may require separate therapeutic strategies, which could include immunosuppressive or biologic treatments.
Beneficial Effects of a Low-Nickel Diet on Relapsing IBS-Like and Extraintestinal Symptoms of Celiac Patients during a Proper Gluten-Free Diet: Nickel Allergic Contact Mucositis in Suspected Non-Responsive Celiac Disease
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) is a common gastrointestinal disorder characterized by symptoms such as abdominal pain, bloating, and altered bowel habits. Recent research has focused on the gut microbiota's role in IBS, aiming to identify specific microbial signatures associated with the condition.
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A study of celiac patients revealed that persistent symptoms during gluten-free eating may stem from nickel allergic contact mucositis. A low-nickel diet significantly improved gastrointestinal and systemic symptoms.
What was studied?
This study examined how a low-nickel diet influences persistent gastrointestinal and extraintestinal symptoms in celiac patients who remain symptomatic despite full serologic and histologic remission on a gluten-free diet. Because a gluten-free diet often increases dietary nickel exposure—especially from foods like corn—the investigators explored whether nickel allergic contact mucositis (ACM) contributes to symptom relapse in patients who would otherwise be considered to have non-responsive celiac disease. Nickel sensitivity was evaluated using an oral mucosa patch test, and symptom changes were assessed through a modified Gastrointestinal Symptom Rating Scale.
Who was studied?
A total of 102 adults with celiac disease adhering to a strict gluten-free diet for at least 12 months were screened. After excluding individuals with lactose intolerance, Helicobacter pylori infection, inflammatory bowel disease, cancer, or insufficient symptom severity, 20 women aged 23–65 completed the study. All participants were in confirmed serologic and histologic remission yet reported relapsing gastrointestinal or systemic symptoms. Each underwent nickel oral mucosa patch testing and subsequently followed a low-nickel diet for three months in addition to their gluten-free diet.
Most important findings
The study revealed consistent nickel sensitivity among the final cohort: all 20 participants exhibited positive findings on the oral mucosa patch test, indicating nickel ACM. Symptomatic patterns showed three distinct phases. Symptoms initially improved with gluten withdrawal but then recurred during prolonged gluten-free eating, suggesting increasing dietary nickel load from nickel-rich gluten-free staples. After initiation of the low-nickel regimen, patients experienced marked improvement across both gastrointestinal and systemic symptoms. The trend was evident in symptom trajectory graphs, where nickel-related symptoms such as bloating, loose stools, dermatitis, headache, and fatigue demonstrated a clear rise during prolonged gluten-free eating and an equally clear drop after nickel restriction. Table 1 summarizes symptom directionality, showing more than 80% of symptoms improving after the diet change.
Finding
Observation
Prevalence of nickel ACM
100% of final cohort positive on oral mucosa patch test
Symptom relapse during prolonged GFD
83.3% of symptoms worsened
Symptom improvement on a low-nickel diet
83.4% of symptoms improved
Significant improvements
10 of 24 symptoms reached statistical significance
Key implications
This study highlights nickel ACM as an underrecognized contributor to persistent symptoms in celiac patients on long-term gluten-free diets. Since many gluten-free foods are naturally high in nickel, dietary nickel exposure becomes a potential trigger for IBS-like and systemic manifestations. The findings support incorporating nickel sensitivity evaluation into the workup for non-responsive celiac disease once gluten exposure and villous damage are excluded. Clinically, a structured low-nickel diet may reduce symptoms substantially and prevent misclassification of nickel sensitivity as refractory celiac disease or unexplained IBS-like relapse. The work also underscores broader dietary-microbial interactions: nickel-sensitive mucosal inflammation likely alters microbial ecology, contributing to symptom generation and emphasizing the relevance of nickel-associated microbial signatures in clinical microbiome frameworks.
Nutritional Status and Its Detection in Patients with Inflammatory Bowel Diseases
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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This paper explores the nutritional status of IBD patients, highlighting common nutrient deficiencies, the importance of early screening, and the role of therapies like infliximab in improving nutritional outcomes.
What was studied?
This paper focuses on nutritional status and its detection in patients with inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD), specifically Crohn’s disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC). It explores the mechanisms leading to malnutrition in IBD, including altered digestion, malabsorption, and drug-nutrient interactions. The study also evaluates various screening tools used to assess the nutritional risk in these patients.
Who was studied?
The study involved patients diagnosed with IBD, including both those with active disease and those in remission. These patients face a higher risk of malnutrition, often due to disease-related complications like malabsorption, diarrhea, and changes in appetite. The review also looks into the impact of disease activity on nutritional status, with a focus on IBD-related nutrient deficiencies, including deficiencies in vitamins like B12 and D, as well as minerals such as iron, zinc, and magnesium.
Most important findings
The review highlights several crucial findings regarding malnutrition in IBD patients. It emphasizes the importance of regular nutritional screening, particularly using tools like the Saskatchewan Inflammatory Bowel Disease–Nutrition Risk Tool (SaskIBD-NR Tool) and the IBD-specific Nutritional Screening Tool (IBD-NST). These tools are useful for identifying nutritional risk before the onset of severe malnutrition. Nutrient deficiencies, particularly in vitamin B12, folate, iron, and zinc, were found to be prevalent in IBD patients, with CD patients being more vulnerable to deficiencies like vitamin B12 due to the common ileocecal location of the disease. Additionally, the use of anti-TNFα therapy, such as infliximab, was shown to improve nutritional status in IBD patients, with better outcomes observed when nutritional status was optimized before therapy.
Key implications
The findings of this study have important implications for both clinical practice and research. For clinicians, this paper underscores the need for routine and specific nutritional screenings in IBD patients to identify those at risk of malnutrition early, allowing for timely interventions. It also points out the significance of dietary and pharmacological interventions, such as the use of anti-TNFα therapy, in improving nutritional outcomes. For researchers, the study calls for further validation of IBD-specific nutritional screening tools and the exploration of the relationship between nutritional status and disease outcomes, particularly in the context of surgery and long-term disease management.
Effects of Trace Elements on Endocrine Function and Pathogenesis of Thyroid Diseases—A Literature Review
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
Graves’ Disease (GD)
Graves’ Disease (GD)
OverviewGraves’ Disease (GD) affects approximately 0.5% of the population, predominantly women. First-line treatment options—antithyroid medications, radioactive iodine, and surgery— often result in significant side effects, incomplete remissions, and frequent relapses. Further, current first-line treatment options focus on symptoms management, and reflect an inadequate understanding of the etiology of the condition. However, recent research reveals a […]
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This review summarizes current evidence on how trace elements influence thyroid hormone synthesis, metabolism, and the development of thyroid diseases, highlighting mechanistic links, clinical implications, and the interplay with the microbiome.
What was reviewed?
This narrative literature review comprehensively examines the roles of trace elements—including iron (Fe), copper (Cu), cobalt (Co), iodine (I), manganese (Mn), zinc (Zn), silver (Ag), cadmium (Cd), mercury (Hg), lead (Pb), and selenium (Se)—in thyroid physiology, hormone synthesis, and the pathogenesis of thyroid diseases. The review details the molecular mechanisms by which these elements affect thyroid hormone biosynthesis, metabolism, immune function, and oxidative stress within the thyroid gland. It further explores how imbalances in these elements contribute to the development and progression of various thyroid disorders, including Graves’ disease, Hashimoto’s thyroiditis, hypothyroidism, autoimmune thyroiditis, thyroid nodules, thyroid cancer, and postpartum thyroiditis. Special attention is given to the dual role of certain elements as both essential micronutrients and potential endocrine disruptors, and to their emerging roles as therapeutic targets or biomarkers.
Who was reviewed?
This review synthesizes findings from a wide range of studies involving diverse populations—adults and children, both healthy and with thyroid disease, from various geographic regions (including iodine-deficient and iodine-sufficient areas). It includes research on different subgroups such as pregnant women, patients with autoimmune thyroid diseases, those exposed to occupational or environmental heavy metals, and individuals undergoing specific thyroid treatments. Evidence is drawn from human epidemiological studies, clinical trials, animal experiments, and cellular/molecular investigations.
Most important findings
The review highlights that optimal concentrations of Fe, I, Cu, Zn, and Se are critical for healthy thyroid hormone synthesis and metabolism. Deficiencies in Fe, Zn, Se, or I, or toxic exposures to Cd, Hg, and Pb, disrupt thyroid hormone production, immune tolerance, and redox balance, predisposing individuals to hypothyroidism, autoimmune thyroiditis, and thyroid cancer. For example, Fe is essential for thyroperoxidase activity; Cu and Zn are components of antioxidant enzymes; Se is vital for deiodinase function; while both deficiency and excess I impact hormone synthesis through mechanisms such as the Wolff–Chaikoff effect. Heavy metals (Cd, Hg, Pb) promote oxidative stress, immune dysregulation, and oncogenic transformation. The review also notes gender-specific and age-dependent differences in trace element effects, and complex interactions between environmental exposure, genetic susceptibility, and thyroid disease risk. Recent research into ferroptosis and cuproptosis (forms of metal-dependent cell death) suggests potential for novel biomarkers and therapeutic strategies in thyroid cancers.
Key microbial and microbiome associations:
While the review centers on trace elements, it references the gut microbiome’s role in thyroid autoimmunity, especially its impact on trace element absorption (notably Fe and Se) and immune modulation. Dysbiosis may impair micronutrient status, influencing the risk and severity of autoimmune thyroid diseases. This emerging connection between trace element metabolism, the gut microbiome, and thyroid autoimmunity is a promising area for further investigation and may be relevant for microbiome signature databases.
Key implications
Clinical management of thyroid disorders should consider patients’ trace element status, exposure to environmental toxins, and dietary habits. Screening and correcting micronutrient deficiencies (Fe, Zn, Se, I) can help prevent or ameliorate thyroid dysfunction, while minimizing exposure to toxic metals (Cd, Hg, Pb) is crucial for thyroid health. Personalized approaches, considering genetic and microbiome influences, may optimize prevention and treatment. Some trace elements (Se, Fe, Cu) and related molecular pathways (ferroptosis, cuproptosis) hold promise as therapeutic targets or diagnostic/prognostic biomarkers in thyroid cancer and autoimmunity. Integration of trace element assessment into clinical and public health practice, alongside continued research into their interplay with the microbiome, could significantly improve thyroid disease outcomes.
The Copper/Zinc Ratio Correlates With Markers of Disease Activity in Patients With Inflammatory Bowel Disease.
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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This study links the Cu/Zn ratio with markers of disease activity in IBD, suggesting it as a potential biomarker for disease monitoring. It emphasizes the role of zinc and copper deficiencies in IBD progression.
What was studied?
This study examines the relationship between zinc (Zn) and copper (Cu) concentrations, particularly the Cu/Zn ratio, and markers of disease activity in patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), including Crohn's disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC). Zinc and copper are trace elements essential for immune function and antioxidant processes. The study explores how these elements, along with the Cu/Zn ratio, correlate with clinical markers of inflammation, such as C-reactive protein (CRP) and fecal calprotectin (FC), in patients with active IBD. This correlation could provide insights into the potential role of these trace elements in disease progression and activity.
Who was studied?
The study involved 154 IBD patients (98 with CD and 56 with UC), who were recruited from a gastroenterology department in Basel, Switzerland. Participants were in various stages of disease activity, with a majority of CD patients in clinical remission. Disease activity was assessed using the Harvey–Bradshaw Index (HBI) for CD and the Modified Truelove and Witts Severity Index (MTWSI) for UC. The patients' zinc and copper levels were measured alongside inflammatory markers (CRP and FC), and their relationship was analyzed through multiple linear regression models, adjusting for confounding factors like age and gender.
Most important findings
The study found that zinc insufficiency was present in 11.2% of CD patients and 14.3% of UC patients. Copper insufficiency was observed in 20.4% of CD patients and 7.1% of UC patients. Zinc deficiency in IBD patients was associated with anemia, hypoalbuminemia, and elevated levels of both CRP and FC, indicating an active inflammatory state. On the other hand, copper deficiency was linked to lower CRP values and a trend toward lower FC in both CD and UC patients. The key finding was that the Cu/Zn ratio correlated significantly with disease activity markers: the Cu/Zn ratio was positively associated with CRP levels in both CD and UC patients, and with FC levels specifically in UC patients. The study also found that adjusting for serum albumin did not significantly affect the correlation between Cu/Zn ratio and CRP, suggesting that the Cu/Zn ratio could be a reliable marker for systemic inflammation in IBD patients.
Key implications
These findings suggest that the Cu/Zn ratio may serve as a novel biomarker for assessing disease activity in IBD patients. The significant correlation between the Cu/Zn ratio and inflammatory markers like CRP and FC points to the potential utility of this ratio in clinical settings, offering a non-invasive way to monitor disease progression. Given the elevated Cu/Zn ratio observed in active disease states, monitoring these trace elements could improve the management of IBD, allowing for better-informed treatment decisions, particularly in cases where traditional markers of inflammation may not provide a full picture. Additionally, the study highlights the importance of addressing micronutrient deficiencies in IBD patients, as deficiencies in zinc and copper may contribute to disease severity and complications. Further prospective studies are needed to validate the Cu/Zn ratio as a diagnostic and prognostic tool in IBD, and to explore the potential benefits of zinc and copper supplementation as part of IBD management.
The effects of hyperbaric treatment on perianal fistula activity in patients with Crohn’s disease
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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This study demonstrates the promising role of hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT) as an adjunct treatment for perianal fistulas in Crohn’s disease. It shows substantial improvements in fistula healing, disease activity, and inflammatory markers, with sustained effects over 9 months post-treatment.
What was studied?
The study explores the use of hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT) as an adjunctive treatment for perianal fistulas in patients with Crohn’s disease (CD). The primary objective was to assess the efficacy of HBOT combined with conventional therapies in reducing fistula activity, as well as to evaluate its impact on disease activity indices and biomarkers. The effects were assessed through various parameters, including the Crohn’s Disease Activity Index (CDAI), Simple Endoscopic Score for Crohn’s Disease (SES-CD), Perianal Crohn’s Disease Activity Index (PDAI), and laboratory tests like faecal calprotectin and CRP levels.
Who was studied?
The study enrolled 11 patients diagnosed with Crohn’s disease and active perianal fistulas. These patients had a minimum disease duration of three years and had a history of recurrent disease episodes and fistula activity. All participants underwent conventional therapies, including immunosuppressive treatments, biological drugs (in some cases), and surgery for fistula management. Hyperbaric oxygen therapy was introduced as a supplementary treatment, with participants receiving 30 sessions over six weeks. The cohort consisted of a small group of patients, aged around 30 years, with a mix of male and female participants.
Most important findings
The study found that HBOT, when combined with conventional therapies, resulted in substantial clinical improvements. The CDAI scores showed an 81.8% improvement in disease activity. Fistula healing, as assessed by the PDAI, showed a 54.5% remission rate, with patients showing marked reduction in fistula activity. The clinical effects were sustained over a 9-month follow-up period, with significant improvements in endoscopic scores (SES-CD) and faecal calprotectin levels. These findings suggest that HBOT contributes not only to reducing fistula activity but also to overall disease management in Crohn’s disease patients.
Key implications
This study highlights the potential of HBOT as a therapeutic adjunct for patients with Crohn’s disease complicated by perianal fistulas. The findings suggest that HBOT may offer a new treatment option, especially for those with recurrent fistula activity unresponsive to conventional treatments. Moreover, the combination of HBOT with biologic therapies may enhance therapeutic outcomes, though larger studies are needed to confirm these results and establish optimal treatment regimens. The significant improvements in disease markers such as faecal calprotectin and CRP suggest that HBOT may also play a role in modulating inflammation and supporting mucosal healing.
Gut Microbiome Signatures in Graves’ and Hashimoto’s Disease: Microbial Markers and ABC Transporter Pathway Insights
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
Graves’ Disease (GD)
Graves’ Disease (GD)
OverviewGraves’ Disease (GD) affects approximately 0.5% of the population, predominantly women. First-line treatment options—antithyroid medications, radioactive iodine, and surgery— often result in significant side effects, incomplete remissions, and frequent relapses. Further, current first-line treatment options focus on symptoms management, and reflect an inadequate understanding of the etiology of the condition. However, recent research reveals a […]
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This study demonstrates that Graves’ disease and Hashimoto’s thyroiditis patients share distinct gut microbiome signatures—particularly involving Bacillus, Blautia, and Ornithinimicrobium—and a common enrichment of the ABC transporter pathway, supporting a microbiome-driven mechanism in autoimmune thyroid disease pathogenesis.
What was studied?
This study investigated the alterations in gut microbiota composition and function in patients with Graves’ disease (GD) and Hashimoto’s thyroiditis (HT), the two most common forms of autoimmune thyroid disease (AITD). The authors collected fecal samples from patients with GD, HT, and healthy controls, analyzing the gut microbial communities through 16S rRNA sequencing. Thyroid function and autoantibody levels were measured to confirm disease status. Furthermore, the study employed advanced bioinformatics analyses, including LEfSe (Linear Discriminant Analysis Effect Size), random forest modeling, and functional pathway predictions using KEGG (Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes) and COG (Clusters of Orthologous Groups) databases. The primary aim was to identify specific microbial taxa and metabolic pathways associated with GD and HT, and to explore whether common microbial or metabolic signatures could differentiate patients from healthy individuals. The authors also sought to uncover functional shifts in gut microbial metabolism potentially relevant to AITD pathogenesis.
Who was studied?
The study enrolled 70 Han Chinese adults from northeast China: 27 patients with GD, 27 patients with HT, and 16 healthy controls. All patients were newly diagnosed, had not received anti-thyroid or hormone replacement therapy, and were free from other autoimmune diseases, recent antibiotic or probiotic use, metabolic disorders, and significant surgeries affecting the gastrointestinal tract. The control group had normal thyroid function and negative thyroid antibodies. All participants underwent standardized clinical, laboratory, and microbiological assessments. The strict inclusion and exclusion criteria ensured minimal confounding from comorbidities or medication use, and the cohort represents a relatively homogenous ethnic and geographic background, enhancing internal validity though potentially limiting generalizability.
Most important findings
The study revealed that although the overall abundance and diversity of gut microbiota were similar between GD, HT, and healthy controls, the structure and composition of the microbial communities were markedly different in patients with autoimmune thyroid disease. Notably, HT patients had the highest levels of Proteobacteria and Actinobacteria, with these phyla also elevated in GD compared to controls. Both GD and HT groups exhibited increased levels of Erysipelotrichia, Cyanobacteria, and Ruminococcus_2, while Bacillaceae and Megamonas were depleted relative to controls. At the genus level, Prevotella_9, Ruminococcus_2, and Lachnospiraceae_NK4A136_group were elevated in GD, and Enterococcus was elevated in HT, while Megamonas was more abundant in healthy individuals. Random forest analysis identified Bacillus, Blautia, and Ornithinimicrobium as potential biomarkers for distinguishing GD and HT from healthy controls, with high discriminative accuracy (AUC up to 1). Functional prediction analyses indicated that the “ABC transporter” metabolic pathway—a key system for ATP-dependent substrate transport—was enriched in both disease groups, suggesting its involvement in disease pathogenesis. GD and HT patients also showed greater microbial enrichment in carbohydrate transport/metabolism and a reduction in amino acid transport/metabolism. Furthermore, unique and shared bacterial taxa were linked to metabolic pathways such as glutathione, arachidonic acid, purine, and pyrimidine metabolism, implicating these pathways in the autoimmune process.
Key implications
This study provides evidence that patients with GD and HT share a common dysbiotic gut microbiome signature and functional metabolic alterations, particularly involving the ABC transporter pathway and several key bacterial taxa. These findings suggest that gut microbiome changes may contribute to the pathogenesis of AITD through disruption of specific microbial communities and metabolic pathways. Identification of Bacillus, Blautia, and Ornithinimicrobium as potential diagnostic biomarkers could facilitate early detection or risk stratification of AITD based on stool microbiome analysis. The enrichment of the ABC transporter pathway points to potential mechanistic links between gut microbiota metabolism and thyroid autoimmunity and may offer new therapeutic targets. The results support the concept of a “thyroid-gut axis,” where microbial and metabolic profiles are intimately associated with thyroid autoimmunity. However, the study’s limitations, including its single-center design and ethnically/geographically homogenous cohort, highlight the need for larger, diverse, and mechanistic studies to confirm and expand upon these findings.
Environmental Influences on the Onset and Clinical Course of Crohn’s Disease
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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This review explores environmental factors such as smoking, diet, and air pollution that influence the onset and progression of Crohn's disease. It highlights the importance of smoking cessation and dietary adjustments in managing the disease.
What was studied?
The study explored the environmental influences on the onset and clinical course of Crohn’s disease (CD), focusing on factors such as childhood hygiene, lifestyle choices, diet, air pollution, smoking, breastfeeding, and seasonal variation. The authors provided a comprehensive overview of how these environmental factors may either exacerbate or contribute to the onset of CD. In particular, they highlighted that changes in childhood hygiene, such as urban upbringing and access to sanitary conditions, might play a role in disease development. At the same time, smoking and diet were identified as significant environmental risk factors. The study also aimed to establish the link between early life factors, such as breastfeeding and appendectomy, and the risk of developing CD.
Who was studied?
The study reviewed a wide range of epidemiological data and prior studies on the environmental factors contributing to the development and course of Crohn’s disease. It focused on populations from various geographic locations, highlighting the rising incidence of CD in industrialized countries and examining childhood hygiene, air pollution, and lifestyle factors such as smoking and diet. The review also explored the impact of breastfeeding, air pollution, and appendectomy, looking at both retrospective and prospective data from case-control and cohort studies. It did not focus on specific patient groups but instead aggregated findings from multiple studies to determine common environmental risk factors.
Most important findings
The following table summarizes the key findings related to the environmental risk factors for Crohn’s disease:
Environmental Factor
Key Findings
Smoking
Smoking is a major risk factor, with smokers experiencing more relapses, greater intestinal complications, and a higher need for surgery. Smoking cessation leads to improved outcomes.
Diet
A Western diet, high in fats and low in fiber, increases the risk of developing CD. Diets rich in fiber, fruits, and vegetables have protective effects.
Breastfeeding
Mixed evidence on breastfeeding's protective role. Some studies suggest that breastfeeding for over six months may reduce CD risk, but the findings are not consistent.
Air Pollution
Exposure to air pollution, particularly traffic-related pollutants, is linked to an increased risk of early-onset CD, with studies suggesting that air pollutants negatively affect gut microbiota and epithelial cells.
Appendectomy
Early appendectomy has been found to increase the risk of CD in the first year following surgery, although this risk reduces after five years. Appendectomy’s role in UC is clearer, showing a protective effect.
Key implications
The findings suggest that environmental factors, particularly smoking, diet, and potentially air pollution, play a significant role in both the onset and clinical course of Crohn’s disease. The review emphasized that smoking cessation should be a priority for patients with CD to reduce relapses and complications. Additionally, while dietary interventions could be beneficial, more research is needed to establish firm dietary recommendations. The role of breastfeeding in preventing CD requires further investigation, as the protective effects observed in some studies were not consistent. Overall, understanding these environmental risk factors can help clinicians provide more personalized care and interventions, particularly in preventing disease onset and managing disease flares.
Psoriasis and inflammatory bowel disease: links and risks
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
This review examines the genetic, immune, and microbiological links between psoriasis and inflammatory bowel disease, focusing on shared pathophysiological mechanisms and treatment strategies.
What was studied?
This review article investigates the links between psoriasis and inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), including the genetic, immunological, and environmental factors that contribute to the co-occurrence of these conditions. It highlights shared risk factors, including genetic susceptibility loci, immune dysregulation, and microbiota alterations, that drive the pathogenesis of both diseases. Furthermore, the review provides a comprehensive look at the similarities in the immune mechanisms underlying psoriasis and IBD, especially focusing on the IL-23/Th17 immune pathway, which is central to the inflammatory process in both diseases. The study also explores the pharmacological treatments commonly used to manage psoriasis and IBD, discussing the overlap and specificities of treatment regimens.
Who was studied?
The article synthesizes research from various studies on individuals with psoriasis and IBD. It incorporates findings from both human studies and animal models. Patients with psoriasis and those with Crohn’s disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC), the two primary forms of IBD, are the central focus. The review discusses the genetic overlap between these diseases, emphasizing the role of specific genetic loci (e.g., PSORS1 for psoriasis and IL-23R for IBD) that predispose individuals to both conditions. The article also examines the role of the gut microbiome and immune system, with particular attention to inflammatory mediators, immune cells such as T-cells, macrophages, and dendritic cells, and their involvement in the pathogenesis of both psoriasis and IBD.
Most important findings
One of the most important findings from this review is the genetic overlap between psoriasis and IBD, particularly the shared susceptibility loci, such as the PSORS1 locus for psoriasis and IL-23R for IBD. The presence of these shared genetic markers suggests a common genetic pathway that predisposes individuals to both conditions. The review also highlights the significant role of the immune system, particularly the IL-23/Th17 axis, in driving inflammation in both psoriasis and IBD. This immune pathway leads to the activation of T-cells and the production of proinflammatory cytokines, such as IL-17, which contribute to the inflammatory processes in both diseases.
Additionally, the article points out that microbiota dysbiosis plays a crucial role in the pathogenesis of both psoriasis and IBD. In both conditions, there is a shift in the microbial composition, with a reduction in anti-inflammatory bacteria and an increase in proinflammatory microbes. This imbalance exacerbates the inflammatory response and further contributes to disease progression. In terms of treatment, the review reveals that therapies targeting IL-17, such as secukinumab, have shown efficacy in psoriasis but are less effective in IBD, suggesting disease-specific differences in immune responses despite shared pathways.
Key implications
The implications of these findings are significant for both the management and treatment of psoriasis and IBD. Understanding the shared genetic and immune pathways between the two diseases opens the door for more targeted, personalized therapies that address both skin and gut inflammation simultaneously. The identification of the IL-23/Th17 axis as a central player in disease progression suggests that immunomodulatory treatments targeting this pathway could be beneficial in treating both psoriasis and IBD, though the differential response of these diseases to certain treatments, such as anti-IL-17 therapy, requires consideration of disease-specific factors.
Comprehensive Review: Genetic Architecture and Clinical Implications in Graves’ Disease
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
Graves’ Disease (GD)
Graves’ Disease (GD)
OverviewGraves’ Disease (GD) affects approximately 0.5% of the population, predominantly women. First-line treatment options—antithyroid medications, radioactive iodine, and surgery— often result in significant side effects, incomplete remissions, and frequent relapses. Further, current first-line treatment options focus on symptoms management, and reflect an inadequate understanding of the etiology of the condition. However, recent research reveals a […]
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A multi‑ethnic review summarising >80 genetic loci underlying Graves’ disease, their clinical correlates and emerging precision‑medicine applications.
What was reviewed?
This narrative review synthesises more than three decades of genetic investigations into Graves’ disease (GD), spanning early candidate‑gene work through contemporary genome‑wide association studies (GWAS). It catalogues >80 susceptibility loci, detailing how immune‑regulatory (e.g., HLA‑DRB1, CTLA4, PTPN22) and thyroid‑specific (TSHR, TG) variants contribute to disease risk and phenotypic diversity. The authors chronologically trace methodological advances—from linkage analyses to large, multi‑ethnic GWAS—highlighting how each step refined our understanding of GD heritability (estimated at 60–80%) and polygenic architecture.
Who was reviewed?
The review aggregates evidence from over 30 000 individuals of European ancestry (Icelandic/UK) and nearly 10 000 East‑Asian participants (Chinese, Japanese, Korean), in addition to smaller Indonesian, Turkish and other cohorts. It contrasts allele frequencies, effect sizes and population‑specific signals (e.g., PTPN22*620W absent in Asians), thereby underscoring genetic heterogeneity and the importance of ancestry‑tailored risk models.
Most important findings
Across populations, the largest effects arise from HLA class II, CTLA4, TSHR and PTPN22, yet most variants confer modest odds ratios (~1.1). Notably, low‑frequency variants in FLT3 and ADCY7 exhibit larger effects (~1.5) and elevate circulating FLT3‑ligand, linking haematopoietic signalling to autoimmunity. The bubble plot on page 4 visually ranks the top 10 loci by odds ratio versus allele frequency, illustrating the inverse relationship between variant rarity and statistical power. Clinically oriented sections dissect genotype–phenotype links: specific CTLA4, HLA and TSHR alleles predict younger onset, larger goitres and higher thyroid‑stimulating antibody titres, while HLA‑B38:02/DRB108:03 mark risk for antithyroid‑drug‑induced agranulocytosis. Although the paper does not directly explore the thyroid microbiome, it foregrounds immune pathways (e.g., T‑cell co‑stimulation, B‑cell activation) that also mediate host–microbe cross‑talk, making these loci prime candidates for future microbiome–genome interaction studies and inclusion in microbiome signature databases.
Key implications
Elucidation of GD’s complex genetic landscape advances precision endocrinology: incorporating genotypes into the “GREAT+” score refines relapse prediction after antithyroid therapy, and CD40/HLA haplotypes may stratify responders to emerging biologics. Integrating genetic risk with environmental modifiers (stress, iodine, smoking) and, prospectively, thyroid‑resident microbiota could enable holistic risk stratification, personalised monitoring and targeted immunomodulation.
Altered fecal bile acid composition in active ulcerative colitis
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
This study reveals altered fecal bile acid composition in IBD patients, especially UC, suggesting the potential of bile acids as biomarkers for disease severity and differentiation between UC and CD.
What was studied?
This study investigates the relationship between fecal bile acid composition and inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), particularly focusing on ulcerative colitis (UC) and Crohn’s disease (CD). Researchers sought to identify specific bile acid species that are altered in active disease and whether these alterations correlate with markers of disease severity such as fecal calprotectin and C-reactive protein (CRP). The aim was to explore if bile acid profiles could serve as potential biomarkers for distinguishing between IBD subtypes and assessing disease activity.
Who was studied?
The study included 62 patients with IBD (38 with CD and 24 with UC) and 17 healthy controls. The IBD patients were assessed based on clinical diagnosis and disease activity, with markers such as fecal calprotectin and CRP used to measure inflammation. Stool samples were collected from all participants, and the bile acid composition was analyzed using liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS).
Most important findings
The study found that IBD patients exhibited significant alterations in fecal bile acid composition compared to healthy controls. Notably, UC patients had lower levels of secondary bile acids, such as deoxycholic acid (DCA) and lithocholic acid (LCA), and a higher proportion of primary bile acids like cholic acid (CA) and chenodeoxycholic acid (CDCA). In contrast, CD patients showed increased levels of secondary bile acids. Specifically, UC patients had a decreased ratio of secondary to primary bile acids compared to controls, suggesting impaired bile acid metabolism. In UC, a negative correlation was observed between the levels of certain bile acids (such as hyodeoxycholic acid and glycolithocholic acid) and fecal calprotectin, a marker of mucosal inflammation. However, in CD patients, bile acid levels did not correlate with inflammation markers. The study also identified that bile acid composition could potentially distinguish between UC and CD, with specific bile acids like GHDCA and GCDCA showing diagnostic potential for UC.
Key implications
The altered fecal bile acid composition in IBD patients, particularly UC, offers insight into the underlying metabolic disturbances associated with disease activity. This finding highlights the potential of bile acids as non-invasive biomarkers for IBD, specifically for distinguishing between UC and CD. The correlation between bile acid levels and disease markers like fecal calprotectin suggests that bile acid profiles could also serve to monitor disease activity and assess treatment responses, particularly in UC. Further studies are needed to confirm the clinical validity of these biomarkers and to explore their therapeutic potential, such as modulating bile acid metabolism to improve disease outcomes. Additionally, these findings could contribute to the development of personalized treatment strategies based on bile acid profiles.
Gut Microbiome in Graves’ Disease and Orbitopathy: Distinct Signatures and Clinical Implications
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
Graves’ Disease (GD)
Graves’ Disease (GD)
OverviewGraves’ Disease (GD) affects approximately 0.5% of the population, predominantly women. First-line treatment options—antithyroid medications, radioactive iodine, and surgery— often result in significant side effects, incomplete remissions, and frequent relapses. Further, current first-line treatment options focus on symptoms management, and reflect an inadequate understanding of the etiology of the condition. However, recent research reveals a […]
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This study demonstrates that gut microbiome composition and function differ significantly between Graves’ disease and Graves’ orbitopathy, with specific taxa correlating with thyroid autoimmunity. These findings highlight the potential of gut microbial markers for distinguishing GO from GD and understanding disease mechanisms.
What was studied?
This original research article conducted a comparative assessment of the gut microbial composition and predicted metabolic function in patients with Graves’ disease (GD) and Graves’ orbitopathy (GO), as well as healthy controls. Using 16S rRNA gene sequencing, the authors aimed to identify specific intestinal bacterial taxa and functional signatures associated with GD and GO, in order to better understand the microbiome-related differences between these two clinical phenotypes. The study also explored whether gut microbial features could provide markers to distinguish GO from GD in clinical practice, and how these microbial alterations might relate to disease pathophysiology, particularly autoimmunity.
Who was studied?
The study population consisted of 30 patients with Graves’ disease (GD) without orbitopathy, 33 patients with Graves’ orbitopathy (GO), and 32 healthy control subjects, all recruited from the outpatient department of Beijing Tongren Hospital, Capital Medical University. The three groups were matched for age and sex, and strict inclusion and exclusion criteria were applied, such as age (18-65 years), no recent use of antibiotics, probiotics, hormonal medications, or Chinese herbal medicine, and absence of chronic gastrointestinal disorders, systemic diseases, or other autoimmune conditions. Both GD and GO patients had normalized thyroid hormone levels at the time of sampling, minimizing confounding effects of thyroid dysfunction. GO was diagnosed according to EUGOGO guidelines, and all participants provided informed consent.
Most important findings
The gut microbiota of GD and GO patients showed significant alterations in comparison to healthy controls, with notable differences between the GD and GO groups themselves. Alpha diversity (Shannon index) was significantly reduced in both GD and GO patients relative to controls, indicating lower microbial diversity. At the phylum level, GO patients had a significant decrease in Deinococcus-Thermus and Chloroflexi compared to GD patients. Genus-level analysis revealed that Subdoligranulum and Bilophila were increased, while Blautia, Anaerostipes, Dorea, Butyricicoccus, Romboutsia, Fusicatenibacter, unidentified_Lachnospiraceae, unidentified_Clostridiales, Collinsella, Intestinibacter, and Phascolarctobacterium were decreased in GO relative to GD. Additionally, Prevotella copri was enriched in both GD and GO groups compared to controls.
Random forest modeling identified Deinococcus-Thermus, Cyanobacteria, and Chloroflexi as among the top taxa distinguishing between the groups. Importantly, several microbial taxa—including Subdoligranulum and Lachnospiraceae—showed strong associations with serum thyrotropin receptor antibody (TRAb) levels, a key marker of thyroid autoimmunity, even after adjusting for age and sex. Functional predictions (via KEGG pathways) indicated enhanced nucleotide metabolism, energy metabolism, and enzyme family pathways in GD and GO, with viral protein family enrichment specifically in GD.
Key implications
These findings underscore that distinct gut microbiome signatures characterize GD and GO, supporting the hypothesis that gut dysbiosis may contribute to the development and progression of Graves’ orbitopathy in GD patients. The microbial taxa identified—especially the reduction of butyrate-producing and anti-inflammatory bacteria such as Lachnospiraceae and Blautia in GO—suggest mechanisms linking the microbiome to immune activation and orbital inflammation. The robust association of specific microbes with TRAb levels further highlights the potential of gut microbial markers as adjuncts in diagnosis, risk stratification, or even as therapeutic targets for GO. Functional pathway enrichment, notably in nucleotide and energy metabolism, hints at altered host-microbe metabolic interactions in these autoimmune thyroid conditions. However, larger multicenter studies and mechanistic investigations are needed to confirm causality and clinical utility.
Gut Microbiota in Graves’ Disease and Graves’ Orbitopathy: Distinct Microbial Signatures and Implications
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
Graves’ Disease (GD)
Graves’ Disease (GD)
OverviewGraves’ Disease (GD) affects approximately 0.5% of the population, predominantly women. First-line treatment options—antithyroid medications, radioactive iodine, and surgery— often result in significant side effects, incomplete remissions, and frequent relapses. Further, current first-line treatment options focus on symptoms management, and reflect an inadequate understanding of the etiology of the condition. However, recent research reveals a […]
•
This study identified distinct alterations in gut microbiota composition and function in Graves’ disease and Graves’ orbitopathy patients compared to healthy controls, highlighting specific microbial taxa and metabolic pathways that may contribute to disease mechanisms and serve as future biomarkers.
What was studied?
This original research article investigated the differences in gut microbial composition and predicted microbial metabolic functions between patients with Graves’ disease (GD), those with Graves’ orbitopathy (GO), and healthy controls. Using 16S rRNA gene sequencing, the study sought to identify specific gut microbiota signatures and metabolic pathway alterations associated with each disease state, with the focus keyphrase "gut microbiota in Graves’ disease and Graves’ orbitopathy." The study aimed to enhance understanding of the relationship between the gut microbiome and the pathophysiology of GD and GO, and to explore whether distinct microbial and metabolic profiles could help distinguish GD from GO in clinical practice.
Who was studied?
The study population consisted of 30 patients with GD (without GO), 33 patients with GO, and 32 healthy controls, all recruited from the Department of Endocrinology at Beijing Tongren Hospital, Capital Medical University, China, between 2017 and 2019. Participants were matched for age and sex where possible. Inclusion criteria for GD and GO were based on established clinical guidelines, with GO diagnosed according to the EUGOGO criteria. Participants with recent probiotic or antibiotic use, hormonal medication, gastrointestinal disease, major systemic illness, pregnancy, or substance abuse were excluded. All GD and GO patients were on antithyroid medications and had normal FT3 and FT4 levels at enrollment. The selected cohorts were designed to minimize confounding factors and ensure differences in gut microbiota were attributable to disease status.
Most important findings
The study revealed that both GD and GO patients exhibited significantly reduced gut microbial diversity compared to healthy controls, as shown by the Shannon index, indicating dysbiosis in disease states. Beta-diversity analysis demonstrated distinct clustering of microbial communities among the three groups. At the phylum level, GO patients had a significant decrease in Deinococcus-Thermus and Chloroflexi compared to GD patients, while GO patients also showed increased Bacteroidetes and decreased Firmicutes relative to controls. At the genus level, GO patients exhibited higher levels of Subdoligranulum and Bilophila and lower levels of Blautia, Anaerostipes, Dorea, Butyricicoccus, Romboutsia, Fusicatenibacter, unidentified Lachnospiraceae and Clostridiales, Collinsella, Intestinibacter, and Phascolarctobacterium compared to GD. Several taxa, particularly Subdoligranulum and unidentified Lachnospiraceae, showed strong associations with TRAb levels (thyrotrophin receptor antibody) in both GD and GO, suggesting a potential link between specific gut bacteria and disease immunopathology. Random forest analysis identified Deinococcus-Thermus, Cyanobacteria, and Chloroflexi as top taxa for distinguishing between groups. Functionally, predicted KEGG pathway analysis indicated that both GD and GO patients’ gut microbiota were enriched for nucleotide metabolism, energy metabolism, and enzyme family pathways compared to controls. A unique enrichment of viral protein family pathways was observed in GD compared to GO, aligning with hypotheses about viral triggers in autoimmunity.
Key implications
This study provides robust evidence that the gut microbiota in Graves’ disease and Graves’ orbitopathy is altered in both composition and predicted metabolic function, with distinct microbial signatures for each condition. The identification of specific taxa (e.g., Deinococcus-Thermus, Chloroflexi, Subdoligranulum, and Lachnospiraceae) that differentiate GD from GO and their association with TRAb levels may offer new biomarkers for disease stratification and risk assessment. The functional enrichment of nucleotide and energy metabolism pathways and the unique viral protein family pathway in GD suggest that the gut microbiome may contribute to disease mechanisms and progression. These findings support the potential for microbiome-based diagnostic tools and therapeutic strategies targeting gut microbial modulation in the management of Graves’ disease and its extrathyroidal manifestations.
Gut Microbiota Signatures in Graves’ Disease: Key Associations and Biomarker Potential
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
Graves’ Disease (GD)
Graves’ Disease (GD)
OverviewGraves’ Disease (GD) affects approximately 0.5% of the population, predominantly women. First-line treatment options—antithyroid medications, radioactive iodine, and surgery— often result in significant side effects, incomplete remissions, and frequent relapses. Further, current first-line treatment options focus on symptoms management, and reflect an inadequate understanding of the etiology of the condition. However, recent research reveals a […]
•
This study reveals that Graves’ disease is linked to distinct gut microbiota alterations, particularly increased Ruminococcus and Lactobacillus and decreased Synergistetes and Phascolarctobacterium, which correlate with thyroid autoantibody status and may serve as microbiome-based biomarkers for disease activity and therapeutic response.
What was studied?
The study investigated the associations between gut microbiota composition and thyroidal function status in Chinese patients with Graves’ disease (GD), focusing on how gut microbial profiles relate to clinical characteristics and thyroid autoantibody levels, particularly thyrotropin receptor antibody (TRAb). Using 16S rDNA high-throughput sequencing, the researchers compared the gut microbiota of untreated primary GD patients with healthy controls and further analyzed changes in microbiota after anti-thyroid drug therapy (Methimazole). The study aimed to identify specific microbial signatures linked to GD and the restoration of thyroid function following treatment, and to explore correlations between gut microbial taxa and thyroid autoimmunity markers.
Who was studied?
The study enrolled 15 adult patients (7 males, 8 females) with newly diagnosed, untreated primary GD from Jinling Hospital, Southeast University, Nanjing, China. Fourteen healthy adult volunteers (6 males, 8 females) served as controls. All participants were between 18 and 65 years old, from the same geographic region (Jiangsu Province), and had similar dietary backgrounds. Exclusion criteria included a history of autoimmune, metabolic, gastrointestinal, or genetic diseases, recent antibiotic/probiotic use, special diets, pregnancy, or major organ dysfunction. For the treatment group analysis, 13 GD patients were re-sampled after 3–5 months of Methimazole treatment, once their thyroid function had largely normalized.
Most important findings
The study found that patients with untreated GD exhibited significantly reduced gut microbiota alpha diversity (lower observed OTUs, Shannon, and Simpson indices) compared to healthy controls. The most notable microbial shifts at the genus level included significant increases in Lactobacillus, Veillonella, and Streptococcus in GD patients, with Blautia and Ruminococcus also elevated. Conversely, beneficial genera such as Phascolarctobacterium and Synergistetes were depleted in GD patients. After Methimazole treatment and restoration of thyroid function, gut microbial diversity improved, and the abundance of Blautia, Corynebacterium, Ruminococcus, and Streptococcus decreased, while Phascolarctobacterium increased.
Correlational analysis revealed that TRAb levels were positively associated with the abundance of Lactobacillus and Ruminococcus, and negatively associated with Synergistetes and Phascolarctobacterium. Synergistetes abundance was also negatively correlated with other thyroid autoantibodies (TGAb, TPOAb), suggesting a possibly protective role. Notably, changes in Ruminococcus and Phascolarctobacterium closely tracked changes in TRAb levels before and after treatment. The findings suggest that Ruminococcus and Lactobacillus may serve as novel microbial biomarkers for GD, while Synergistetes and Phascolarctobacterium may exert protective effects against thyroid autoimmunity.
Key implications
This study underscores a strong association between GD and gut microbiota dysbiosis, with specific microbial signatures correlating with disease activity and immune status. The depletion of potentially protective genera (Synergistetes, Phascolarctobacterium) and enrichment of taxa like Ruminococcus and Lactobacillus in GD patients are particularly relevant for microbiome signature databases. Importantly, restoration of euthyroid status partially normalizes the gut microbiota, implying that thyroid function and the gut microbiome are dynamically linked. These findings highlight the potential of targeting the gut microbiota for novel GD biomarkers or therapeutic interventions, though causality remains to be established. Further research with larger cohorts and mechanistic studies is warranted to clarify the role of gut microbes in GD pathogenesis and management.
Genome sequences of copper resistant and sensitive Enterococcus faecalis strains isolated from copper-fed pigs in Denmark
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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This study examines the genome sequences of copper-resistant Enterococcus faecalis strains isolated from copper-fed pigs. It identifies key resistance genes, highlighting the potential for co-transfer of copper and antibiotic resistance, with implications for agricultural practices and pathogen control.
What was studied?
This study investigated the genome sequences of six Enterococcus faecalis strains that were isolated from copper-fed pigs in Denmark. The strains were selected based on their copper resistance or sensitivity, providing insight into the molecular mechanisms underlying copper resistance in E. faecalis. Enterococcus faecalis, a Gram-positive bacterium commonly found in the gastrointestinal tracts of both humans and animals, has been known for its role as a pathogen. The study also examined how copper resistance genes in these strains could potentially co-exist with antibiotic resistance genes, providing valuable insights into the growing concern of multi-drug-resistant pathogens. Comparative genomic analysis was used to assess the differences between copper-resistant and copper-sensitive strains and to identify potential co-transfer of resistance determinants.
Who was studied?
The study involved six E. faecalis strains (S1, S12, S17, S18, S19, and S32), which were isolated from healthy pigs that were fed copper-supplemented diets. These strains were compared in terms of their copper resistance capabilities and their genomic features. Three of the strains (S1, S18, and S32) were identified as copper-resistant, while the other three (S12, S17, and S19) were copper-sensitive. The researchers used whole-genome sequencing and comparative genome analysis to study the genetic makeup of these strains, with a particular focus on genes related to copper and antibiotic resistance.
Most important findings
The genomic analysis revealed significant differences between copper-resistant and copper-sensitive E. faecalis strains. Notably, the copper-resistant strains (S1, S18, and S32) contained genes encoding copper resistance, including the copYABZ operon, which was absent in the copper-sensitive strains. The copA, copB, and copZ genes involved in copper efflux and homeostasis were present in all the strains but were more prominent in the copper-resistant strains. Additionally, a tcrYAZB operon, responsible for high-level copper resistance, was found in the copper-resistant strains, as well as a cueO gene encoding a multicopper oxidase that helps detoxify copper by converting Cu(I) to Cu(II).
The study also identified that the copper-resistant strains contained additional genes related to antibiotic resistance, such as tetM (tetracycline resistance) and vanA (vancomycin resistance). The presence of these genes in the same strains suggests a potential co-transfer mechanism between copper and antibiotic resistance. Furthermore, mobile genetic elements, such as transposases, were found near the copper resistance genes, indicating that copper resistance could be transferred to other bacteria in the environment.
Key implications
The findings highlight the complex relationship between copper resistance and antibiotic resistance in E. faecalis, suggesting that copper supplementation in livestock feed could inadvertently contribute to the development of multidrug-resistant strains. The identification of genetic elements responsible for copper resistance and their co-location with antibiotic resistance genes raises concerns about the spread of resistance through horizontal gene transfer, especially in environments where both copper and antibiotics are used, such as in agriculture.
This study emphasizes the need for careful management of copper use in animal feed, as it may not only contribute to copper resistance in bacteria but also to the emergence of multidrug-resistant pathogens. The genomic insights into E. faecalis resistance mechanisms offer a better understanding of how resistance determinants are transferred and could inform strategies to reduce the spread of resistance in both agricultural and clinical settings. Further research into the environmental impact of copper use in agriculture, and the role of E. faecalis as a reservoir for resistance genes, could help mitigate the risks associated with copper supplementation in livestock.
Mycobacterium avium subspecies paratuberculosis (MAP) and Crohn’s disease: the debate continues
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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The study examines the debate surrounding Mycobacterium avium subspecies paratuberculosis (MAP) in Crohn’s disease, with conflicting data on its role as a causative factor. Anti-MAP therapies show mixed results, highlighting the need for further investigation into MAP's involvement in CD pathogenesis.
What was studied?
The study investigates the role of Mycobacterium avium subspecies paratuberculosis (MAP) in Crohn’s disease (CD), considering its historical context, detection in patients, and potential pathogenesis. The researchers explore the similarities between Crohn’s disease and Johne’s disease in ruminants, both of which share clinical features, including chronic intestinal inflammation. The research focuses on MAP's presence in patients with CD and examines whether it is a causative factor or merely a bystander.
Who was studied?
The research primarily addresses studies conducted on patients diagnosed with Crohn's disease, comparing the prevalence of MAP in these individuals with that in healthy controls. This includes a series of clinical studies examining MAP's presence through molecular and immunological testing methods such as PCR, ELISA, and interferon release assays. The studies also assess the impact of anti-MAP therapies on patients, considering the disease’s progression and treatment response.
Most important findings
The study highlights the significant presence of MAP in patients with Crohn's disease compared to non-CD patients, though its causal role remains unclear. Several studies have demonstrated higher rates of MAP positivity in CD patients, with one study reporting a prevalence of 92% in CD patients compared to 26% in controls. However, while MAP is more prevalent in CD patients, the relationship between its presence and disease progression is still debated. The research also shows that MAP may trigger an immune response in CD patients, but this evidence remains inconclusive. Furthermore, anti-MAP therapies, including antibiotics like rifabutin and clofazimine, have shown mixed results, with some studies reporting improvement in clinical symptoms while others find no significant long-term benefit.
Key implications
The findings suggest that MAP could play a role in the pathogenesis of Crohn’s disease, but more research is needed to determine whether it is a causative agent or simply a bystander. The presence of MAP in a significant proportion of CD patients warrants further investigation into whether anti-MAP therapies could become part of standard treatment protocols. The study underscores the need for randomized controlled trials that confirm MAP’s role in CD and assess the efficacy of targeted therapies. Future studies should focus on whether MAP eradication correlates with clinical improvement and explore the potential for personalized treatment strategies based on MAP status.
Graves’ Disease Gut Microbiome Signature: Diagnostic and Pathogenic Insights
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
Graves’ Disease (GD)
Graves’ Disease (GD)
OverviewGraves’ Disease (GD) affects approximately 0.5% of the population, predominantly women. First-line treatment options—antithyroid medications, radioactive iodine, and surgery— often result in significant side effects, incomplete remissions, and frequent relapses. Further, current first-line treatment options focus on symptoms management, and reflect an inadequate understanding of the etiology of the condition. However, recent research reveals a […]
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This cross-sectional study found that Graves’ disease patients have distinctly altered gut microbiota—lower Firmicutes, higher Bacteroidetes, and reduced butyrate-producers—suggesting a role for the microbiome in disease pathogenesis and as a diagnostic biomarker.
What was studied?
This cross-sectional original research article investigated the composition and metabolic functions of the gut microbiota in patients with Graves’ disease (GD) compared to healthy controls. Using high-throughput 16S rRNA gene sequencing of fecal samples, the study aimed to profile differences in microbial diversity, identify specific taxonomic shifts, and examine associations between gut microbiota and thyroid function, autoimmunity, and metabolism. The research further explored whether certain microbial signatures could serve as noninvasive diagnostic biomarkers for GD, and assessed the potential mechanistic links between gut microbiota alterations and the pathogenesis of autoimmune thyroid disease.
Who was studied?
The study population comprised 45 untreated GD patients (12 males, 33 females; ages 16–65, median age 37) and 59 healthy control volunteers (22 males, 37 females; ages 22–71, median age 43). Controls were matched for age and sex, and all participants were recruited from the same hospital in Shanghai, China. Inclusion criteria for GD were based on ATA guidelines and included elevated thyroid hormone levels, decreased TSH, diffuse thyroid enlargement by ultrasonography, and positive TRAB antibodies. All subjects were free from malignancy, gastrointestinal, or other endocrine diseases, and had not used antibiotics, probiotics, or prebiotics for at least one month prior to sampling. Fecal samples were collected after overnight fasting, and comprehensive thyroid function and antibody profiles were measured for all participants.
Most important findings
The most notable microbiome-related findings were a significant reduction in alpha diversity and abundance of specific gut microbiota in GD patients compared to controls. At the phylum level, GD patients exhibited a lower proportion of Firmicutes and a higher proportion of Bacteroidetes. At the genus level, GD patients had increased Bacteroides and Lactobacillus but decreased abundances of Blautia, [Eubacterium]_hallii_group, Anaerostipes, Collinsella, Dorea, unclassified_f_Peptostreptococcaceae, and [Ruminococcus]_torques_group. Subgroup analyses indicated that Lactobacillus may play a key role in the pathogenesis of autoimmune thyroid disease, with higher levels observed in GD patients with concurrent Hashimoto’s thyroiditis. Correlation analyses revealed that Blautia levels positively correlated with TPOAB and TMAB levels, suggesting a possible anti-inflammatory, regulatory function; conversely, Bacteroides levels negatively correlated with these antibodies, and Dorea showed a negative correlation with TPOAB. Functional predictions showed that Blautia was strongly associated with multiple metabolic pathways, implicating its role in energy and immune regulation. A diagnostic model using the top nine discriminative genera achieved an AUC of 0.81, indicating strong potential for microbial biomarkers in GD diagnosis.
Key implications
These findings suggest that gut microbiota dysbiosis—characterized by decreased Firmicutes and butyrate-producers, and increased Bacteroides and Lactobacillus—may contribute to the pathogenesis of Graves’ disease through impaired intestinal barrier function, altered immune regulation, and disrupted metabolic signaling. The identified microbial shifts, particularly the reduction of butyrate-producing bacteria such as Blautia and [Eubacterium]_hallii_group, may diminish regulatory T cell differentiation and promote chronic inflammation and autoimmunity. The strong diagnostic potential of a nine-genera microbiome signature offers a promising, noninvasive approach for distinguishing GD patients from healthy individuals. Clinically, the study highlights the potential for microbiome-based diagnostics and therapeutics in GD, but also underscores the need for further mechanistic and longitudinal research to validate causality and therapeutic targets.
Gut Microbiota in Graves’ Disease: Microbial Signatures and Diagnostic Potential
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
Graves’ Disease (GD)
Graves’ Disease (GD)
OverviewGraves’ Disease (GD) affects approximately 0.5% of the population, predominantly women. First-line treatment options—antithyroid medications, radioactive iodine, and surgery— often result in significant side effects, incomplete remissions, and frequent relapses. Further, current first-line treatment options focus on symptoms management, and reflect an inadequate understanding of the etiology of the condition. However, recent research reveals a […]
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This study identified distinctive alterations in gut microbiota in Graves’ disease, including reduced diversity and specific taxonomic shifts. Key microbial signatures correlated with thyroid autoimmunity, highlighting potential diagnostic biomarkers and suggesting that microbiome modulation may offer new therapeutic avenues for Graves’ disease.
What was studied?
This original research article investigated the gut microbiota composition and its metabolic functions in patients with Graves’ disease (GD), an autoimmune thyroid disorder. The study aimed to uncover specific microbial signatures associated with GD, explore correlations between gut microbiota and thyroid function, and evaluate the potential of microbiome profiles as non-invasive diagnostic tools for GD. Using high-throughput 16S rRNA sequencing of fecal samples, the authors compared the microbial diversity, abundance, and structure between untreated GD patients and matched healthy controls. They further analyzed the relationships between specific bacterial genera, thyroid autoantibody levels, and predicted metabolic pathway involvement, with an emphasis on the identification of microbiome-based biomarkers for GD. The focus keyphrase "gut microbiota in Graves’ disease" is central to this investigation, as the study provides new insights into how gut microbial alterations may contribute to the pathogenesis and potential diagnosis of GD.
Who was studied?
The study cohort comprised 45 untreated patients with Graves’ disease (12 males, 33 females; median age 37, range 16–65 years) and 59 healthy controls (22 males, 37 females; median age 43, range 22–71 years), all recruited from the Shanghai Tenth People's Hospital. Controls were matched for age and sex, confirmed to be free of thyroid disease by clinical and laboratory assessment, and none had received antibiotics, probiotics, or prebiotics for at least one month prior to sampling. Subjects with malignancies, gastrointestinal, or other endocrine diseases were excluded. Fecal samples, collected after an overnight fast, were stored at -80°C until analysis. Detailed clinical data, including thyroid function tests (FT3, FT4, TT3, TT4, TSH) and thyroid autoantibodies (TGAB, TPOAB, TMAB, TRAB), were obtained for all participants to facilitate correlation analyses between microbiota and disease phenotypes.
Most important findings
The study revealed a marked reduction in alpha diversity (species richness and evenness) of the gut microbiome in GD patients compared with healthy controls, indicating a less robust and potentially dysbiotic microbial community. At the phylum level, GD patients exhibited significantly lower Firmicutes and higher Bacteroidetes proportions. Notably, at the genus level, GD patients had elevated levels of Bacteroides and Lactobacillus, while beneficial butyrate-producing genera such as Blautia, [Eubacterium]_hallii_group, Anaerostipes, Collinsella, Dorea, unclassified Peptostreptococcaceae, and [Ruminococcus]_torques_group were significantly depleted. Lactobacillus levels were particularly increased in GD patients with concurrent Hashimoto’s thyroiditis, suggesting a role in broader autoimmune thyroid disease (AITD) pathogenesis.
Correlation analyses demonstrated that Blautia levels positively correlated with thyroid autoantibodies (TPOAB, TMAB), while Bacteroides showed inverse associations, and Dorea was negatively correlated with TPOAB. Functional predictions implicated Blautia in key metabolic pathways (lipid, amino acid, and carbohydrate metabolism), hinting that its depletion may disrupt intestinal homeostasis and immune regulation. A diagnostic model using nine genera distinguished GD patients from controls with high accuracy (AUC=0.81). Collectively, the findings support a model where microbial dysbiosis—characterized by loss of butyrate producers and expansion of potentially pathogenic taxa—may impair intestinal barrier integrity, promote systemic inflammation, and trigger or exacerbate thyroid autoimmunity.
Key implications
This study underscores the significant role of gut microbiota in the pathogenesis and potential non-invasive diagnosis of Graves’ disease. The identified microbial signatures—particularly the depletion of butyrate-producing genera and enrichment of Bacteroides and Lactobacillus—may contribute to immune dysregulation and thyroid dysfunction through alterations in intestinal permeability and pro-inflammatory signaling. The strong association between specific genera and thyroid autoantibody levels suggests that microbiota-driven immune mechanisms could be central to GD onset and progression. The diagnostic model based on microbial markers offers a promising, non-invasive adjunct for GD detection. These results open avenues for microbiome-based therapeutic interventions and precision diagnostics in AITD, but further studies are necessary to clarify causality, elucidate underlying mechanisms, and validate these biomarkers in larger, diverse populations.
Mycobacterium avium subspecies paratuberculosis and its relationship with Crohn’s disease
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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This review investigates the ongoing debate over the potential role of Mycobacterium avium subspecies paratuberculosis in Crohn’s disease. Despite frequent detection in patients, MAP's causative role remains unproven, with studies showing inconsistent results, particularly regarding treatment efficacy.
What was studied?
This study investigates the role of Mycobacterium avium subspecies paratuberculosis (MAP) as a potential causative agent for Crohn’s disease (CD). MAP is a known pathogen causing Johne’s disease in ruminants and is often found in the intestines of CD patients. The paper discusses the various lines of evidence suggesting a link between MAP and CD, including molecular, serological, and microbiological approaches. However, the article also addresses the controversies surrounding this hypothesis, particularly in light of failed attempts to treat CD with antimycobacterial therapy. The research delves into the difficulties in conclusively proving that MAP is the causative agent of CD, despite its frequent detection in patients.
Who was studied?
The article surveys the work of various researchers who have examined MAP's role in CD. It reviews studies that focus on the detection of MAP DNA in the intestines and blood of CD patients, serological reactivity to MAP antigens, and the effects of antimicrobial treatment. It also mentions a series of experimental studies, which include attempts to culture MAP from CD patients and tests for genetic susceptibility that might predispose individuals to MAP infection. Importantly, the authors highlight the failure of some large-scale studies to demonstrate definitive therapeutic benefits from antimycobacterial treatment, even though MAP is frequently detected in CD patients.
Most important findings
The study reveals multiple points of contention in the debate about whether MAP plays a causal role in CD. The article identifies that while MAP has been frequently isolated from the intestinal tissues and blood of CD patients, it has not been consistently proven to be the direct cause of disease. Additionally, attempts to treat CD patients with antimycobacterial drugs have yielded inconclusive results, suggesting that MAP may not be a primary causative agent. Despite this, MAP’s ability to infect macrophages and survive within granulomas, similar to other mycobacteria, is highlighted as a key feature that warrants further investigation. The study also addresses the challenges in detecting MAP, given its slow growth and the issues with traditional culture methods. The evidence from various studies suggests that while MAP is often present in CD patients, its exact role remains elusive, and it may be one of several contributing factors to disease progression.
Key implications
The failure to prove MAP as a causative factor in CD despite its frequent detection underscores the complexity of inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD). The inability to produce consistent results with antimycobacterial therapy challenges the hypothesis that MAP is the primary cause of CD. However, the research suggests that MAP may still play a role in the disease's pathogenesis, potentially in conjunction with other factors such as host immune response, genetics, and microbial dysbiosis. These findings point to the need for further research on the interplay between MAP and other microbial or environmental factors in the development of CD. The article also emphasizes the importance of improving detection methods and treatment strategies to better understand the role of MAP and other microbes in IBD.
Epidemiological studies of migration and environmental risk factors in the inflammatory bowel diseases
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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This review examines how migration and environmental risk factors influence the onset and course of inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD), with a focus on migrant populations transitioning from low-incidence to high-incidence regions. It emphasizes the need for further studies on generational changes and environmental triggers of IBD.
What was studied?
This article reviews the environmental risk factors and migration patterns related to the increasing incidence of inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD), specifically Crohn's disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC). The study primarily focuses on epidemiological data, drawing attention to migration patterns that help identify environmental influences contributing to the onset and clinical progression of IBD. It assesses migration cohorts, with particular emphasis on first and second-generation migrants moving from regions with low IBD incidence to areas with higher prevalence, in order to study the environmental triggers involved.
Who was studied?
The study investigates populations from various ethnic backgrounds, especially focusing on first- and second-generation migrants. These cohorts were chosen due to their transition from areas with low IBD incidence to areas with high IBD prevalence, thus providing an excellent opportunity to explore the effects of environmental changes on disease manifestation. The study highlights the epidemiology of IBD in migrant populations from the Middle East, including immigrants to Australia, as a prime example of how migration studies can offer insight into the contribution of environmental factors. Furthermore, the review discusses the differences in disease characteristics between migrants and native populations and between different generations of migrants.
Most important findings
The article presents a comprehensive review of several epidemiological studies that have identified various environmental factors associated with IBD. It found that migration from low-incidence regions to high-incidence regions leads to an increased risk of IBD, especially among second-generation migrants. Studies from countries like the UK, Sweden, and Israel showed a rise in the incidence of IBD among first- and second-generation migrants from regions with historically low IBD rates. Notably, migrants from Middle Eastern countries to developed countries such as Australia were identified as an emerging cohort for further research into IBD's environmental triggers. Smoking, oral contraceptive use, and childhood infections were identified as significant but controversial environmental factors. Additionally, a shift towards Westernized diets and lifestyles in migrant populations was implicated in the increasing prevalence of IBD, supporting the hygiene hypothesis, which posits that improved hygiene and decreased exposure to infections may increase susceptibility to autoimmune diseases like IBD.
Key implications
The primary implication of this study is the identification of migrant groups, especially those from regions with historically low IBD incidence, as ideal candidates for future epidemiological research. These populations offer a unique opportunity to study the environmental risk factors influencing IBD onset in developed countries. Furthermore, the review underscores the need for studies that compare first- and second-generation migrants to understand how lifestyle and environmental changes influence the development and progression of IBD. This approach could lead to a better understanding of IBD's pathogenesis and provide insights into how modern lifestyles, including diet and hygiene, contribute to disease manifestation. Additionally, future research should focus on disentangling the genetic and environmental factors involved in IBD to help develop targeted prevention and treatment strategies for at-risk populations.
Genetic and environmental factors influencing Crohn’s disease
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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This review highlights the genetic and environmental factors influencing Crohn’s disease, including the role of NOD2 mutations, smoking, diet, and vitamin D deficiency. It underscores the need for personalized treatment strategies to manage this complex disease.
What was studied?
This review focuses on the genetic and environmental factors influencing Crohn's disease (CD), examining how both genetic susceptibility and environmental exposures contribute to the onset and progression of the disease. It discusses key genetic variants like NOD2, which plays a crucial role in immune regulation, and the environmental factors such as smoking, diet, and vitamin D deficiency. The review aims to clarify the interaction between immune dysregulation, gut microbiome changes, and environmental exposures, with a particular focus on how these factors influence disease pathogenesis and therapeutic outcomes.
Who was studied?
The review incorporates data from studies involving patients with Crohn's disease, encompassing both adult and pediatric populations. It particularly looks at patients with a genetic predisposition to CD, including those with known mutations in genes like NOD2 and IL23R. Additionally, it examines how lifestyle factors such as smoking and diet, as well as environmental factors like vitamin D levels, impact the development and severity of Crohn’s disease. The study also considers how these factors interact with the gut microbiome, influencing disease activity and response to treatment.
Most important findings
The review highlights that mutations in the NOD2 gene significantly increase the risk of developing Crohn’s disease by impairing immune regulation, leading to heightened inflammation in the intestines. Smoking is another major risk factor, exacerbating the disease by altering gut microbiota and increasing inflammation. Diet also plays a critical role; high-fat and low-fiber diets contribute to increased inflammation and microbial imbalance, while omega-3 fatty acids and fiber can have protective effects. Vitamin D deficiency is commonly found in CD patients and is linked to worse disease outcomes, emphasizing the importance of maintaining adequate vitamin D levels to support immune regulation and intestinal health.
Key implications
The findings suggest that personalized management strategies are crucial for Crohn’s disease patients, considering both their genetic predispositions and environmental factors. Smoking cessation and dietary interventions should be prioritized as part of a comprehensive treatment plan, especially as smoking is linked to disease exacerbation. The review also recommends monitoring vitamin D levels in CD patients, as supplementation may help reduce inflammation and improve disease outcomes. Given the interplay between the microbiome and these factors, future research into microbiome-based therapies could offer promising treatments, further improving disease management.
Crohn’s disease and clinical management today: How it does?
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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This review examines the environmental and genetic factors influencing Crohn's disease, offering insight into how these factors contribute to disease onset, progression, and management. The study highlights the increasing incidence in developing countries and the role of diet, smoking, and infections.
What was studied?
This study focuses on the epidemiological factors contributing to the development and progression of Crohn's disease (CD). It reviews both the environmental and genetic influences that contribute to the onset and clinical course of the disease, examining the role of diet, stress, infections, and genetics, as well as the impact of microbial exposure. The review systematically examines how these external risk factors influence the disease's development, relapse, and long-term management.
Who was studied?
The review encompasses a wide range of studies focusing on different populations globally, from industrialized countries to developing nations. It highlights various age groups and how these factors contribute differently to the disease’s incidence and progression. Additionally, the study includes references to the rising incidence of CD, particularly in developing countries, and the higher prevalence among individuals in their 20s to 50s. Both male and female populations are represented, with additional focus on the environmental exposures in these regions.
Most important findings
The review identifies several key environmental and genetic factors that influence the development of CD. Smoking is a significant risk factor, as it exacerbates disease progression. Infections, particularly Clostridium difficile, are linked to disease relapse. Dietary factors, such as a low-fiber diet, are shown to play a critical role in disease exacerbation. Genetic predispositions, especially mutations in genes like NOD2, are closely associated with earlier disease onset and familial occurrences. The study also emphasizes that environmental changes, particularly in industrialized countries, contribute to an increasing incidence of CD, highlighting the importance of understanding the complex interplay between genetics, diet, and microbial exposure in managing the disease.
Key implications
Understanding the environmental and genetic risk factors for Crohn's disease has profound implications for both diagnosis and treatment. Clinicians can utilize this information to improve patient management by focusing on modifiable risk factors such as diet, smoking cessation, and infection prevention. Early diagnosis and personalized treatment strategies based on these external factors, combined with genetic testing, may help prevent disease progression and improve patient outcomes. Furthermore, the findings support the need for global surveillance to monitor the rising incidence of CD, particularly in regions where the disease is becoming more prevalent.
A comparative study of the gut microbiota in immune-mediated inflammatory diseases-does a common dysbiosis exist?
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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Multiple Sclerosis (MS)
Multiple Sclerosis (MS)
OverviewIn the past decade, research has shown that the enormous community of microbes that live in the gut, known as the gut microbiota, are closely linked to human health and disease. This relationship is primarily due to the gut microbiota’s impact on systemic immune responses. There is growing evidence that these impacts on immune function are […]
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This study reveals that gut microbiota dysbiosis in immune-mediated inflammatory diseases includes shared enrichment of pro-inflammatory taxa like Streptococcus and Eggerthella, alongside depletion of beneficial genera such as Roseburia. These patterns support a common microbial signature across IMIDs and highlight potential targets for diagnosis and therapeutic intervention.
What was studied?
This study examined whether a common gut microbiota dysbiosis exists across multiple immune-mediated inflammatory diseases (IMIDs), specifically Crohn’s disease (CD), ulcerative colitis (UC), multiple sclerosis (MS), and rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Researchers employed 16S rRNA gene sequencing of stool samples and machine learning techniques to identify both disease-specific and shared microbial signatures. This pilot investigation also explored the potential of taxonomic features to classify disease states using random forest classifiers.
Who was studied?
The study included 99 participants: 20 with CD, 19 with UC, 19 with MS, 21 with RA, and 23 healthy controls (HC). Patients were recruited from clinical centers in Winnipeg, Canada, and met disease-specific diagnostic criteria. Inclusion criteria mandated age above 18 and no antibiotic use in the preceding 8 weeks. Biological replicates were collected approximately two months apart to assess microbial stability over time.
What were the most important findings?
The study identified a shared gut microbiota dysbiosis signature across IMIDs, marked by reduced diversity and distinct taxonomic shifts compared to healthy controls. Alpha diversity was significantly lower in IMID groups, especially in CD. Key genera enriched across all disease groups included Actinomyces, Eggerthella, Clostridium III, Faecalicoccus, and Streptococcus—potential Major Microbial Associations (MMAs) due to their pro-inflammatory profiles and consistent presence in IMID cohorts. In contrast, Gemmiger, Lachnospira, and Roseburia were significantly depleted in IMIDs and are known to produce anti-inflammatory metabolites like butyrate. Machine learning classifiers distinguished disease from HC with high accuracy (AUC up to 0.95 for CD), confirming the reliability of these microbial features as diagnostic indicators. Disease-specific signatures were also detected: Bifidobacterium was elevated in UC, Intestinibacter in CD, and unclassified Erysipelotrichaceae in MS.
Actinomyces, Eggerthella, Clostridium III, Faecalicoccus, Streptococcus
Shared Microbial Decreases
Gemmiger, Lachnospira, Roseburia
Disease-Specific Associations
Intestinibacter (CD), Bifidobacterium (UC), Erysipelotrichaceae (MS), Roseburia (↓ in RA)
Microbiome Metrics
Alpha diversity lowest in CD, highest in healthy controls; compositional shifts significant
Clinical Implications
Supports development of microbiome-targeted diagnostics and interventions
Diagnostic Performance
AUCs: CD vs HC = 0.95; classification robust for all IMIDs using Gram-positive taxa
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study provides compelling evidence for a partially conserved gut microbiota dysbiosis pattern in IMIDs, despite their diverse clinical presentations. The findings suggest that microbial taxa such as Streptococcus and Eggerthella may contribute to shared pathogenic mechanisms via modulation of host immunity, while depletion of butyrate-producing genera like Roseburia may reflect a breakdown in mucosal tolerance. These MMAs highlight targets for microbiome-modulating interventions and support their integration into risk stratification and personalized treatment strategies. Furthermore, the study underscores the diagnostic potential of microbiota-based machine learning tools, offering a route to non-invasive, microbiome-informed screening across inflammatory conditions.
Alterations of the Gut Microbiota in Hashimoto’s Thyroiditis Patients
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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Hashimoto’s Thyroiditis
Hashimoto’s Thyroiditis
Hashimoto’s Thyroiditis (HT) is an autoimmune disease that progressively damages the thyroid, often causing hypothyroidism and affecting women disproportionately. Research links HT to gut dysbiosis via the gut–thyroid axis and highlights heavy metals like nickel, arsenic, and lead as contributors to oxidative stress and thyroid dysfunction.
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Gut microbiota analysis in Hashimoto’s thyroiditis patients identified significant dysbiosis, with increased pro-inflammatory taxa and reduced beneficial microbes, correlating with thyroid autoantibodies.
What Was Studied?
This study systematically investigated alterations in the gut microbiota composition in patients with Hashimoto’s thyroiditis (HT), an organ-specific autoimmune disease, compared to healthy controls. The researchers used 16S rRNA sequencing to profile and compare the gut microbiota of 50 HT patients and 27 matched healthy controls. The study aimed to identify microbial biomarkers associated with HT and their correlations with clinical parameters, such as thyroid peroxidase antibody (TPO-Ab) and thyroglobulin antibody (TG-Ab) levels.
Who Was Studied?
The study involved two cohorts: an exploration cohort of 28 HT patients and 16 healthy controls, and a validation cohort of 22 HT patients and 11 healthy controls. All participants were of Han Chinese ethnicity, aged between 18 and 65 years, and matched for age, sex, and BMI. Patients included were euthyroid and free from confounding conditions or recent medications that could affect the gut microbiota.
Key Findings
The study revealed significant differences in the gut microbiota composition between HT patients and healthy controls, though overall bacterial diversity and richness were similar. HT patients exhibited a marked increase in Firmicutes and a reduction in Bacteroidetes, with a significantly higher Firmicutes-to-Bacteroidetes (F/B) ratio. At the genus level, the abundances of Blautia, Roseburia, Ruminococcus_torques_group, and Eubacterium_hallii_group were significantly increased in HT patients. In contrast, beneficial genera like Bacteroides, Fecalibacterium, and Prevotella_9 were significantly decreased.
The researchers identified 27 genera with significant differences between HT patients and controls using linear discriminant analysis effect size (LEfSe). Ten genera, including Bacteroides and Fecalibacterium, were highlighted as potential biomarkers, achieving high diagnostic accuracy with AUC values of 0.91 and 0.88 in the exploration and validation cohorts, respectively.
Microbiota changes were correlated with clinical parameters. For instance, increased levels of Blautia and Dorea were positively associated with TPO-Ab and TG-Ab, while reduced levels of Fecalibacterium and Bacteroides correlated inversely with these antibodies.
Greatest Implications
The findings highlight the potential role of gut dysbiosis in the pathogenesis of HT. The observed microbial shifts suggest a loss of anti-inflammatory and barrier-supporting taxa, such as Fecalibacterium, and an increase in pro-inflammatory or mucin-degrading taxa, such as Ruminococcus_torques_group. This dysbiosis may contribute to immune activation and thyroid autoimmunity through mechanisms like increased intestinal permeability and molecular mimicry. Additionally, the identified microbial biomarkers could serve as non-invasive tools for HT diagnosis and disease monitoring. However, longitudinal studies and experimental validation are needed to confirm causality and explore therapeutic interventions targeting the gut microbiota.
Analysis of subgingival microbiome of periodontal disease and rheumatoid arthritis in Chinese: A case-control study
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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This study on the subgingival microbiome in rheumatoid arthritis and periodontitis identified Treponema enrichment in RA. Despite similar microbial richness across groups, specific dysbiotic shifts suggest that oral bacteria, particularly Treponema and Porphyromonas, may bridge periodontal and systemic inflammation in RA pathogenesis.
What was studied?
This study investigated the subgingival microbiome in Chinese patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA), periodontitis (PD), and healthy controls, aiming to explore potential microbial links between RA and PD. Using 16S rRNA Illumina MiSeq sequencing, the authors characterized bacterial composition and diversity in subgingival plaque, identifying differentially abundant taxa and evaluating whether oral microbiota might play a contributory role in RA pathogenesis via periodontal inflammation.
Who was studied?
A total of 143 participants were enrolled, comprising 54 RA patients, 45 PD patients, and 44 healthy controls, all recruited from Sichuan Provincial People’s Hospital. Inclusion criteria excluded individuals with systemic diseases other than RA or PD, and participants had not used antibiotics or immunosuppressive therapies in the preceding three months. Subgingival plaque samples were collected from six standardized index teeth for uniformity across groups.
What were the most important findings?
Although microbial richness (as measured by alpha diversity indices like Chao and Simpson) did not differ significantly among the RA, PD, and control groups, key compositional shifts were observed. Most notably, the phylum Spirochaetes—and its lineage down to the genus Treponema—was significantly enriched in RA patients at all taxonomic levels (P < 0.008). These results were specific to RA; while PD patients showed a similar trend, the differences did not reach statistical significance.
Additionally, RA samples showed higher relative abundances of Porphyromonas, Prevotella, and Veillonella, which are consistent with previous literature identifying these as periodontopathogenic taxa. Conversely, Streptococcus and Gemella, both associated with a healthy oral microbiome, were significantly depleted in RA. Interestingly, Tannerella, another "red complex" pathogen, was also elevated in RA (P = 0.010), supporting a dysbiotic profile that overlaps with PD yet remains distinct.
From a microbiome signatures perspective, Treponema and Porphyromonas gingivalis are reaffirmed as Major Microbial Associations (MMAs) due to their consistent elevation and mechanistic links to citrullination and RA immunopathology. The study also reinforces the microbial overlap and divergence between RA and PD, highlighting subgingival niches as potential sources of systemic immune modulation.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study adds to a growing body of evidence implicating the oral microbiome—specifically the subgingival community—in the pathogenesis of rheumatoid arthritis. The consistent enrichment of Treponema across all taxonomic levels in RA patients suggests it may play a previously underappreciated role in RA, warranting mechanistic exploration, especially in relation to periodontal-immune crosstalk. The differential regulation of classic periodontal pathogens between RA and PD patients also underscores that, while these diseases share microbial risk factors, their oral dysbiosis patterns are not identical.
For clinical application, the identification of Treponema and Porphyromonas as MMAs provides potential microbial biomarkers for RA risk screening. Furthermore, the observation that RA patients without clinically diagnosed PD still harbor elevated pathobiont levels suggests that subclinical periodontal dysbiosis may be a risk modifier in RA development. This has implications for early intervention strategies and supports the integration of dental and rheumatologic care. For the Microbiome Signatures Database, this study strongly validates subgingival Treponema spp. as a population-specific MMA for RA and supports the prioritization of oral-microbiome-focused MBTIs.
Assessment of Thyroid Function and Oxidative Stress State in Foundry Workers Exposed to Lead
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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The study found that foundry workers exposed to lead had higher blood lead levels, increased thyroid hormones, and markers of oxidative stress compared to controls. These results indicate a significant oxidative-antioxidant imbalance due to lead exposure, stressing the need for better occupational health measures to prevent
What was studied?
The study assessed thyroid function and oxidative stress in foundry workers occupationally exposed to lead (Pb) dust and fumes. It investigated the correlation between blood lead levels (BLL) and thyroid hormones, as well as markers of oxidative stress.
Who was studied?
The study involved 59 adult male foundry workers exposed to lead and a control group of 28 male subjects with no history of lead exposure or thyroid abnormalities.
What were the most important findings?
Foundry workers had significantly higher blood lead levels (16.5±1.74 µg/dl) compared to the control group (12.8±1.16 µg/dl).
The exposed group exhibited significantly increased levels of free triiodothyronine (FT3) and free thyroxine (FT4), and decreased levels of thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH).
Markers of oxidative stress showed a significant increase in malondialdehyde (MDA) and a significant decrease in glutathione (GSH) among exposed workers.
A significant positive correlation was found between BLL and duration of employment, while a negative correlation existed between BLL and both TSH and GSH levels.
Elevated thyroid hormones were observed in 32.76% of the occupationally exposed workers.
There was a significant positive relationship between GSH and TSH, and between MDA and FT3 and FT4 among exposed workers.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study suggests that occupational exposure to lead dust and fumes can stimulate thyroid function, resulting in increased thyroid hormone levels, which may contribute to an oxidative-antioxidant imbalance. This imbalance, indicated by increased MDA and decreased GSH levels, underscores the potential health risks associated with prolonged exposure to lead, highlighting the need for improved protective measures and monitoring in industrial settings.
Comparative Analysis of Taxonomic and Functional Gut Microbiota Profiles in Relation to Seroconversion of Thyroid Peroxidase Antibodies in Euthyroid Participants.
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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Hashimoto’s Thyroiditis
Hashimoto’s Thyroiditis
Hashimoto’s Thyroiditis (HT) is an autoimmune disease that progressively damages the thyroid, often causing hypothyroidism and affecting women disproportionately. Research links HT to gut dysbiosis via the gut–thyroid axis and highlights heavy metals like nickel, arsenic, and lead as contributors to oxidative stress and thyroid dysfunction.
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This study explored gut microbiota profiles in TPOAb-positive and TPOAb-negative euthyroid individuals. While no significant diversity differences were found, specific taxa like Desulfovibrionaceae were associated with TPOAb presence. Further research is needed to determine their role in autoimmune thyroid disease progression.
What was studied?
This study investigated the taxonomic and functional gut microbiota profiles of euthyroid individuals with and without thyroid peroxidase antibodies (TPOAb), a marker for autoimmune thyroid diseases such as Hashimoto’s thyroiditis. The goal was to assess whether gut microbiota composition differs in individuals with TPOAb before the clinical onset of autoimmune thyroid disease and to evaluate ethnic variations in thyroid biomarkers.
Who was studied?
The study examined 1,468 euthyroid participants aged 35 years and older from the multiethnic HELIUS cohort, including European Dutch, Moroccan, and Turkish individuals. Of these, 159 participants were TPOAb-positive, and 1,309 were TPOAb-negative. Fecal microbiota composition was analyzed using 16S rRNA sequencing.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed no significant differences in global gut microbiota diversity (alpha or beta diversity) between TPOAb-positive and TPOAb-negative individuals. However, 138 microbial taxa were nominally associated with TPOAb presence, with 13 taxa consistently significant across multiple statistical methods. Among the most notable taxa, members of the Desulfovibrionaceae family were positively associated with TPOAb presence, while certain taxa from the Clostridiales vadin BB60 group were negatively associated. Functional pathway analysis indicated reduced abundance of pathways related to D-glucarate degradation, glycolysis, and adenosylcobalamin biosynthesis in TPOAb-positive participants, although none of these associations were statistically significant after correction for multiple testing. Ethnicity emerged as a more significant factor in microbiota variation than TPOAb status, with no ethnic differences in thyroid biomarker levels found.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study underscores the role of gut microbiota in the early stages of autoimmune thyroid disease, suggesting that microbial alterations may not be the primary driver of TPOAb seroconversion. However, the associations between specific taxa and TPOAb presence warrant further investigation to elucidate their potential involvement in disease progression. The lack of robust differences in microbiota composition between groups highlights the need for longitudinal studies to determine causal relationships between gut dysbiosis and autoimmune thyroiditis. Moreover, the findings emphasize the importance of considering ethnic diversity in microbiome research to ensure accurate interpretation of results.
Elevated Lactoferrin and Anti-Lactoferrin Antibodies in Endometriosis: Autoimmune and Microbiome Insights
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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This study confirms elevated lactoferrin and anti-lactoferrin antibody levels in endometriosis, suggesting autoimmune involvement. Anti-lactoferrin drops post-surgery, hinting at a biomarker role, while lactoferrin ties to inflammation and potential microbiome links.
What Was Studied?
This study, conducted by Mori-Yamanaka et al. and published in Tohoku J. Exp. Med. in 2023, definitively explored serum lactoferrin (LTF) and anti-lactoferrin antibody (aLF) levels in patients with endometriosis. Endometriosis, a chronic inflammatory condition marked by ectopic endometrial-like tissue, remains poorly understood in terms of its underlying mechanisms. The researchers aimed to determine whether LTF, an iron-binding glycoprotein with antimicrobial and anti-inflammatory properties, and aLF, an autoantibody tied to immune dysregulation, play roles in the disease’s pathology. By measuring these markers in the blood of endometriosis patients compared to controls and assessing changes after surgical intervention, the study sought to uncover potential links to inflammation and autoimmunity. Although the study did not directly investigate microbiome signatures, LTF’s known role in modulating microbial environments suggests a possible indirect connection to gut or pelvic microbiome alterations in endometriosis.
Who Was Studied?
The research focused on 68 Japanese women undergoing surgery at Shiga University of Medical Science Hospital between November 2020 and May 2022. Of these, 51 had surgically and histopathologically confirmed endometriosis, spanning all stages (I-IV) per the revised American Society for Reproductive Medicine classification. The remaining 17 women, who underwent surgery for other gynecological issues like uterine myomas or benign ovarian tumors, served as controls without endometriosis. This cohort provided a robust sample to compare LTF and aLF levels across disease states and post-treatment outcomes, offering clinicians a clear demographic context for interpreting the findings.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study conclusively demonstrated that serum LTF and aLF levels are significantly elevated in endometriosis patients compared to controls, with p-values of 0.016 and 0.028, respectively. These elevations were particularly striking in advanced stages (III and IV), showing stronger statistical significance (LTF: p = 0.024; aLF: p = 0.016) compared to controls. Following surgery in 21 patients, aLF levels dropped markedly (p < 0.001), while LTF levels showed no significant change (p = 0.102). Notably, 43% of endometriosis patients exhibited aLF levels above the reference range, a prevalence akin to autoimmune conditions. Although microbiome data wasn’t directly assessed, LTF’s antimicrobial properties hint at potential microbial associations, possibly involving dysbiosis in the pelvic or gut microbiome, which could exacerbate inflammation in endometriosis. These findings position LTF and aLF as key players in the disease’s inflammatory and possibly autoimmune landscape.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
This study’s implications are profound for clinicians managing endometriosis. The elevated aLF levels, mirroring patterns in autoimmune diseases, strongly suggest that endometriosis involves an autoimmune component, potentially driven by immune responses to microbial or endogenous triggers. This insight could shift treatment paradigms toward immune-modulating therapies. Moreover, the significant post-surgical decline in aLF levels establishes it as a promising biomarker for monitoring disease activity and treatment success, offering a practical tool for clinical decision-making. While LTF’s role remains less clear, its persistence post-surgery and antimicrobial function imply a complex interplay with inflammation and possibly the microbiome, warranting further investigation into microbial signatures like those of Lactobacillus or Prevotella, known to influence pelvic health. Despite the study’s limitations—its small sample and surgical focus—these findings pave the way for innovative diagnostics and therapies, urging clinicians to consider immune and microbial factors in endometriosis care.
Exploring the Bidirectional Link Between Graves’ Disease and Gut Microbiome: New Insights Into the Thyroid–Gut Axis
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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This study confirms a bidirectional causal relationship between Graves’ Disease and the gut microbiome. Key taxa like Deltaproteobacteria elevate GD risk, while others, such as Anaerostipes, are protective. These findings advance our understanding of the thyroid-gut axis and suggest microbiome-targeted interventions for GD.
What was studied?
This study investigated the bidirectional causal relationship between Graves’ Disease (GD) and the gut microbiome. Utilizing Mendelian randomization (MR), it examined how alterations in the gut microbiome might influence GD and vice versa, supporting the thyroid–gut axis (TGA) concept. Genome-wide association study (GWAS) summary datasets, which analyze millions of genetic variants across diverse populations to identify associations between genetic markers and specific traits, were sourced from international consortiums to evaluate these interactions.
Who was studied?
The study involved two large datasets. Gut microbiome data included 18,340 samples spanning diverse ethnic groups (European, Middle Eastern, East Asian, Hispanic/Latin American, and African American), while GD data included 212,453 samples of Asian ethnicity, sourced from Biobank Japan. These comprehensive datasets were analyzed to identify instrumental variables linking genetic variants to gut microbiome composition and GD susceptibility.
What were the most important findings?
The study established a bidirectional causal relationship between Graves’ disease (GD) and the gut microbiome, identifying key microbial associations that act as either risk or protective factors. Risk factors for GD included the classes Deltaproteobacteria (odds ratio [OR] = 3.603) and Mollicutes, as well as the genera Ruminococcus torques group, Oxalobacter, and Ruminococcaceae UCG 011. Protective associations were observed for the family Peptococcaceae and the genus Anaerostipes (OR = 0.489). Furthermore, GD was found to alter gut microbiome composition, increasing the abundance of genera like Anaerofilum (OR = 1.584) and reducing taxa such as the Clostridium innocuum group (OR = 0.918) and Sutterella (OR = 0.953). These findings highlight the regulatory activity of the thyroid–gut axis (TGA) and provide strong evidence for its involvement in GD pathogenesis.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings underscore the critical role of the gut microbiome in GD pathogenesis and its reciprocal interaction with thyroid health. Identifying specific microbial taxa as risk or protective factors offers actionable insights for microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs), such as probiotics or dietary modifications, tailored to mitigate GD risk or progression. The bidirectional relationship between GD and the gut microbiome highlights the need for integrated approaches addressing both thyroid and gut health. These results could guide the development of precision medicine strategies, leveraging the gut microbiome to modulate immune responses and improve clinical outcomes for patients with GD. This research also establishes a foundational understanding of major microbial associations (MMAs) within the TGA, paving the way for future therapeutic innovations. Further, this study establishes a methodological precedent for using Mendelian Randomization to discern causal effects in microbiome-related research.
Gut microbiota in early pediatric multiple sclerosis: a case−control study
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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This study identified significant gut microbiota dysbiosis in pediatric MS, with increased pro-inflammatory taxa and metabolic shifts. Findings suggest early microbial perturbations may contribute to disease pathogenesis.
What was studied?
This study explored the gut microbiota of children diagnosed with early-onset pediatric multiple sclerosis (MS) and compared it to controls of similar age and sex. The researchers aimed to identify gut microbial community differences, including taxonomic and functional perturbations, and examined the influence of immunomodulatory drug (IMD) exposure. This study also predicted functional metabolic pathways based on microbial profiles.
Who was studied?
The study involved 18 children with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS) and 17 healthy controls. The participants, aged 4 to 18 years, were enrolled from a University of California, San Francisco pediatric clinic. MS cases were within two years of symptom onset, with half being IMD-naïve. Both groups were matched by age and sex, with controls lacking autoimmune conditions or recent antibiotic exposure.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed significant microbial differences between pediatric MS cases and controls. MS cases exhibited an enrichment in pro-inflammatory taxa, including Desulfovibrionaceae (e.g., Bilophila, Desulfovibrio) and Christensenellaceae, and a depletion of anti-inflammatory taxa such as Lachnospiraceae and Ruminococcaceae. Additionally, metabolic pathways related to glutathione metabolism were enriched in MS cases, regardless of IMD exposure. Notably, IMD exposure correlated with reduced beta diversity variations, suggesting partial modulation of the microbiome toward a more control-like composition. Furthermore, the study observed shifts in microbial genes involved in lipopolysaccharide biosynthesis and immune modulation, linking gut dysbiosis with potential mechanisms of neuroinflammation and neurodegeneration.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study highlights the potential role of gut microbiota in the early pathogenesis of pediatric MS. The observed microbial dysbiosis aligns with a pro-inflammatory milieu that may contribute to immune dysregulation in MS. The findings underscore the importance of gut-targeted interventions, such as dietary modifications or probiotics, as potential therapeutic strategies. The results also emphasize the need for longitudinal studies to elucidate causative versus consequential relationships between gut dysbiosis and MS development.
Integrative analysis of gut microbiome and host transcriptome reveal novel molecular signatures in Hashimoto’s thyroiditis
February 12, 2026
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Hashimoto’s Thyroiditis
Hashimoto’s Thyroiditis
Hashimoto’s Thyroiditis (HT) is an autoimmune disease that progressively damages the thyroid, often causing hypothyroidism and affecting women disproportionately. Research links HT to gut dysbiosis via the gut–thyroid axis and highlights heavy metals like nickel, arsenic, and lead as contributors to oxidative stress and thyroid dysfunction.
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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This study revealed novel molecular signatures linking gut microbiota and transcriptome in Hashimoto's thyroiditis, advancing diagnostic and therapeutic approaches.
What Was Studied?
Integrative analysis reveals novel gut microbiota-transcriptome signatures for Hashimoto's thyroiditis, aiding early diagnosis and treatment.This study explored the molecular signatures of Hashimoto’s thyroiditis (HT) through an integrative analysis of gut microbiome and host transcriptome (miRNA/mRNA). It aimed to identify novel molecular markers and elucidate the gut-thyroid axis, using data from 31 early HT patients and 30 healthy controls across discovery and validation cohorts. The study sought to uncover interactions between the gut microbiota and host gene expression, providing insights into HT pathogenesis.
Who Was Studied?
Participants included 31 early HT patients and 30 healthy individuals aged 18–65. HT cases were defined by elevated thyroid antibodies (TPOAb/TGAb) and morphological abnormalities while maintaining normal thyroid function. Exclusions included antibiotic or probiotic use, significant dietary changes, or comorbid conditions. Blood and fecal samples were collected for transcriptomic and metagenomic sequencing.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study identified subtle but significant gut microbiota alterations in early HT patients. While alpha diversity was unchanged, beta diversity analysis revealed compositional shifts, including increased Bacillota_A and Spirochaetota at the phylum level and significant differences in 24 genera and 67 species. Beneficial microbes like Barnesiella intestinihominis were reduced, while opportunistic pathogens like Peptostreptococcus were enriched. Host transcriptome analysis identified 1975 downregulated and 1821 upregulated mRNAs, alongside 27 miRNAs. Immune and inflammation-related pathways were enriched, with hsa-miR-548aq-3p and hsa-miR-374a-5p playing key roles. Key molecular signatures included three bacterial species (Salaquimonas_sp002400845, Clostridium_AI_sp002297865, Enterocloster_citroniae) and six RNAs (e.g., GADD45A, IRS2, SMAD6). These integrated signatures demonstrated strong diagnostic potential (AUC=0.95) in distinguishing HT patients from healthy controls.
What Are the Greatest Implications?
This research advances understanding of the gut-thyroid axis and provides a robust framework for early HT diagnosis and treatment. Molecular signatures identified offer potential for targeted therapies, including microbiome modulation. For example, restoring beneficial microbes such as Barnesiella intestinihominis or targeting specific pathogenic species may offer therapeutic benefits. Integration of gut microbiota and transcriptome data sets a precedent for multidimensional biomarker development in autoimmune conditions.
Mercury and nickel allergy/ Risk factors in fatigue and autoimmunity
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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Hypersensitivity to mercury and nickel was significantly more common in fatigued and autoimmune patients than in healthy controls. Removal of dental metals reversed symptoms and immune activation, suggesting that metal-driven immune dysregulation may underlie fatigue and autoimmunity.
What was studied?
This observational study examined the relationship between hypersensitivity to metals—specifically mercury and nickel—and the prevalence of chronic fatigue and autoimmune disorders. The research utilized the MELISA® (Memory Lymphocyte ImmunoStimulation Assay) to assess in vitro lymphocyte reactivity to various metals among patients with autoimmune thyroiditis, fatigue without endocrinopathy, and occupational exposure to dental metals. The central goal was to evaluate whether metal hypersensitivity constitutes a risk factor for fatigue and autoimmunity and whether removal of metal exposures (e.g., dental amalgam) could reverse symptoms.
Who was studied?
The study analyzed 72 fatigued patients divided into three primary groups: (1) 22 patients with autoimmune thyroiditis, including some with autoimmune polyglandular syndrome (APS); (2) 28 fatigued individuals without endocrinopathies, many of whom experienced local or systemic symptoms linked to dental alloys; and (3) 22 fatigued professionals with long-term occupational metal exposure, including dentists and technicians. A control group of 13 healthy, fatigue-free individuals without autoimmunity was also included. Lymphocyte reactivity to 17 metals was measured using the MELISA® test. Additionally, two patients underwent dental amalgam replacement and were followed for symptom changes and immune reactivity post-intervention.
What were the most important findings?
Lymphocyte stimulation indices revealed that reactivity to inorganic mercury and nickel was significantly elevated in all fatigued patient groups compared to healthy controls. Specifically, 72.7% of autoimmune thyroiditis patients and 61.1% reacted to mercury and nickel, respectively, with similar trends in the other fatigued cohorts. This pattern was not seen with most other metals, suggesting a specific immunologic sensitivity to mercury and nickel in this population. Notably, healthy controls exhibited no reactivity to nickel and minimal reactivity to mercury. Two representative case studies illustrated that removal of metal-containing dental restorations significantly reduced both symptom burden and lymphocyte reactivity in follow-up MELISA® tests. One patient, initially disabled due to fatigue and autoimmune comorbidities, returned to work and experienced sustained health improvements after amalgam replacement.
These findings imply a mechanistic link between metal-driven immune activation and chronic fatigue, potentially via inflammatory disruption of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis. Nickel exposure, often underestimated, appeared especially important, with sensitization possibly enhanced by environmental and occupational exposures (e.g., stainless steel, dental alloys, cigarette smoke). The results further underscore the inadequacy of patch testing alone in detecting systemic hypersensitivity and support the utility of MELISA® as a diagnostic adjunct.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This paper provides early, compelling evidence that hypersensitivity to mercury and nickel may play a causative role in the symptomatology of fatigue, autoimmune disorders, and related syndromes like chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS). It introduces the concept that these metals can induce systemic immune activation, not merely local contact dermatitis, thereby contributing to dysregulation of the HPA axis and the development or exacerbation of autoimmunity. Clinically, the study supports consideration of metal sensitization in patients with unexplained fatigue or autoimmune disease, and it opens the door to therapeutic strategies involving metal detoxification or elimination—particularly amalgam removal. Furthermore, the study highlights MELISA® testing as a superior method for detecting metal sensitization compared to standard patch tests, particularly in systemic presentations. This work is foundational in drawing attention to metallomic contributors to chronic inflammatory and autoimmune conditions.
Meta-analysis of gut microbiome studies identifies disease-specific and shared responses
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This meta-analysis standardized and re-analyzed data from 28 gut microbiome studies across ten diseases, identifying consistent microbiome signatures associated with specific diseases and a non-specific response common to multiple conditions. Key findings suggest both potential microbial diagnostics and treatments, emphasizing the importance of understanding shared versus disease-specific microbial responses in future research and clinical applications.
What was studied?
The meta-analysis focused on the human gut microbiome’s association with various diseases by analyzing 28 published case-control gut microbiome studies covering ten diseases. The researchers aimed to standardize the processing and analysis of these datasets to identify consistent patterns and shifts in the gut microbiome associated with specific diseases or a generalized health-disease spectrum.
Who was studied?
The participants of the original case-control studies comprised individuals with different diseases, including colorectal cancer, inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), and others, alongside control groups of healthy individuals. The meta-analysis integrated data only from studies with publicly available 16S amplicon sequencing data of stool samples from at least 15 case patients, excluding studies focused solely on children under 5 years old.
What were the most important findings?
Consistent Microbial Patterns: The meta-analysis revealed consistent and specific microbiome changes associated with various diseases. For instance, diseases like colorectal cancer showed an enrichment of pathogenic bacteria, while a depletion of health-associated bacteria marked conditions like IBD.
Non-Specific Microbial Responses: A significant finding was that many microbial associations are not disease-specific but rather indicate a non-specific response shared across multiple disease states. Approximately half of the genera identified were common to more than one disease, suggesting a generalized microbial response to disease states rather than unique disease-specific signatures.
Diagnostic and Therapeutic Implications: The study identified distinct categories of dysbiosis (microbial imbalance) that could guide the development of microbiome-based diagnostics and therapeutics. For example, enriching for depleted beneficial microbes could be a strategy for diseases characterized by such depletions.
What are the greatest implications of this meta-analysis?
Improved Disease Understanding: By providing a clearer picture of the microbiome’s role in various diseases, the study helps refine our understanding of disease mechanisms and potential microbial contributions to disease processes.
Guidance for Future Research: The findings suggest that future microbiome research in disease contexts should consider the non-specificity of many microbial changes. This realization could influence how researchers design studies and interpret results, potentially focusing on truly disease-specific microbial signatures.
Clinical Applications: The identification of consistent microbial patterns and signatures across diseases opens pathways to developing novel diagnostics and therapies, such as probiotics or fecal microbiota transplants, targeted at restoring healthy microbial communities or addressing specific dysbioses.
Data Sharing and Standardization: The study underscores the value of making raw data and metadata from microbiome studies publicly available and highlights the benefits of using standardized methods for data processing and analysis to compare and integrate results across studies.
Overall, this meta-analysis clarifies the microbiome’s role in disease and sets a framework for future research and clinical applications by demonstrating the importance of understanding both disease-specific and non-specific microbial responses.
Molecular Alteration Analysis of Human Gut Microbial Composition in Graves’ disease Patients
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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This study shows significant alterations in gut microbiota diversity in Graves' disease (GD) patients, with increased Prevotellaceae and Pasteurellaceae and decreased Enterobacteriaceae. Findings support gut microbial dysbiosis in GD, potentially contributing to its pathogenesis and informing new treatments.
What was studied? The study investigated the gut microbial composition in patients with Graves’ disease (GD) compared to healthy controls.
Who was studied? The study involved 27 GD patients and 11 healthy controls, with fecal samples collected for analysis.
What were the most important findings?
The association between gut microbiota and host homeostasis is pivotal for understanding various diseases, including autoimmune disorders like Graves’ disease (GD), characterized by hyperthyroidism and ophthalmopathy. This study hypothesized that gut bacteria play a significant role in GD pathogenicity. To investigate this, the intestinal bacterial composition of 27 GD patients and 11 healthy controls was analyzed using PCR-DGGE of the 16S rRNA gene targeting the V3 region and Real-time PCR for specific bacterial groups. High-throughput sequencing of the 16S rRNA gene (V3+V4 regions) was performed on randomly selected samples using the Hiseq2500 platform.
The results revealed a lower diversity of intestinal bacteria in GD patients compared to controls. Statistical analyses indicated significant alterations in bacterial phyla, with a higher relative abundance of Prevotellaceae and Pasteurellaceae, and a lower abundance of Enterobacteriaceae, Veillonellaceae, and Rikenellaceae in GD patients. At the genus level, Prevotella_9 and Haemophilus were significantly increased, whereas Alistipes and Faecalibacterium were decreased in GD patients. Notably, the species Haemophilus parainfluenza was more abundant in GD patients.
What are the greatest implications of this study? The findings support the hypothesis of gut microbial dysbiosis in GD, suggesting that changes in the gut microbiota may contribute to the disease’s pathogenesis. These insights could pave the way for novel therapeutic approaches targeting gut microbiota in GD treatment.
Molecular estimation of alteration in intestinal microbial composition in Hashimoto’s thyroiditis patients
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
Hashimoto’s Thyroiditis
Hashimoto’s Thyroiditis
Hashimoto’s Thyroiditis (HT) is an autoimmune disease that progressively damages the thyroid, often causing hypothyroidism and affecting women disproportionately. Research links HT to gut dysbiosis via the gut–thyroid axis and highlights heavy metals like nickel, arsenic, and lead as contributors to oxidative stress and thyroid dysfunction.
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This study revealed novel molecular signatures linking gut microbiota and transcriptome in Hashimoto's thyroiditis, advancing diagnostic and therapeutic approaches.
What Was Studied?
This study examined alterations in the gut microbiota composition of patients with Hashimoto's thyroiditis (HT). It aimed to investigate the relationship between intestinal dysbiosis and HT through quantitative and qualitative analysis of gut microbial diversity and composition using techniques such as PCR-DGGE, real-time PCR, and pyrosequencing of 16S rRNA genes.
Who Was Studied?
The study analyzed fecal samples from 29 HT patients and 12 healthy individuals aged 40–60 years. Patients were diagnosed based on elevated thyroid antibodies (TPOAb and TGAb) and other clinical markers, including TSH and T4 levels. Healthy controls had normal thyroid function and no history of antibiotic or probiotic use in the 60 days preceding the study.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study revealed significant gut microbiota dysbiosis in Hashimoto’s thyroiditis (HT) patients compared to healthy controls. HT patients exhibited an increased abundance of inflammatory phyla like Proteobacteria and decreased beneficial phyla such as Firmicutes and Bacteroidetes. At the genus level, Escherichia-Shigella and Parasutterella were elevated, while anti-inflammatory genera such as Prevotella_9 and Dialister were significantly reduced. Escherichia coli was particularly overrepresented, potentially contributing to intestinal barrier disruption and inflammation linked to thyroid autoimmunity.
Real-time PCR showed significant reductions in Bifidobacterium and Lactobacillus, essential for producing immune-regulating SCFAs, while alpha diversity indicated bacterial overgrowth in HT patients. Functional diversity measures showed no significant changes, pointing to microbial imbalance rather than increased functional diversity. Pyrosequencing confirmed these findings, demonstrating a distinct microbial profile in HT patients. These results highlight the role of gut dysbiosis in HT pathogenesis and suggest potential therapeutic strategies targeting microbiome restoration.
What Are the Greatest Implications?
This study highlights gut microbiota dysbiosis as a potential contributor to the pathogenesis of HT. The findings suggest that the overrepresentation of inflammatory and opportunistic pathogens, such as Escherichia coli and Escherichia-Shigella, coupled with the reduction of beneficial microbes like Bifidobacterium and Lactobacillus, may influence immune regulation and thyroid autoimmunity. Restoring microbial balance through probiotics, dietary interventions, or targeted microbiome therapies could serve as novel strategies for managing HT. These results underscore the critical role of gut health in autoimmune diseases and provide a foundation for developing microbiome-targeted interventions.
Multiple sclerosis patients have a distinct gut microbiota compared to healthy controls
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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This case-control study investigates the gut microbiota's role in multiple sclerosis (MS) pathogenesis by comparing the fecal microbiota of relapsing-remitting MS patients to healthy controls. Findings reveal significant microbial dysbiosis in MS patients, highlighting differences in the abundance of specific bacterial genera, supporting the gut microbiota's involvement in MS etiology.
What was studied?
The research focused on investigating the potential role of gut microbiota in the pathogenesis of Multiple Sclerosis (MS), particularly relapsing-remitting MS (RRMS). It aimed to compare the fecal microbiota composition between RRMS patients and healthy controls, analyze the microbial diversity, and assess the predictive power of microbiota profiles in distinguishing disease status.
Who was studied?
The study included 31 RRMS patients, categorized based on their disease phase (active or in remission), and 36 age- and sex-matched healthy controls. The RRMS patients were between 18 and 80 years of age, met the McDonald diagnostic criteria for MS, and had an Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) score between 1 and 6. The selection criteria excluded individuals with prior significant surgeries, current antibiotic or probiotic use, or a history of autoimmune diseases other than MS.
What were the most important findings?
Distinct Microbial Community Profiles: RRMS patients had significantly different gut microbiota compositions compared to healthy controls, with specific genera such as Pseudomonas, Pedobacter, Blautia, and Dorea showing higher abundance in RRMS patients, while genera like Adlercreutzia, Parabacteroides, and Lactobacillus were more abundant in controls.
Species Richness and Diversity: Active disease phase was associated with a trend towards lower species richness compared to healthy controls, while remission phase microbiota exhibited similar species richness to controls.
Predictive Power of Gut Microbiota: Using Random Forests (RF) and operational taxonomic unit (OTU) profiles, the study achieved significant classification accuracy in distinguishing RRMS patients from healthy controls based on gut microbiota composition.
Functional Implications: The functional analysis suggested alterations in pathways related to fatty acid metabolism, defense mechanisms, and glycolysis, indicating a broader impact of gut microbiota dysbiosis on metabolic functions.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings underscore the importance of gut microbiota in the etiology and pathogenesis of RRMS, suggesting that dysbiosis may not only be a marker of the disease but also potentially contribute to its development and progression. These results open avenues for future research to explore gut microbiota as a therapeutic target or biomarker for MS. Understanding the specific roles of altered microbiota and their metabolic pathways could lead to new interventions to modulate the gut microbiome to manage or prevent MS. Moreover, the predictive model based on gut microbiota composition presents a novel approach for identifying individuals at risk of RRMS, offering the potential for early intervention and personalized treatment strategies.
Role of Cholestyramine in Refractory Hyperthyroidism: A Case Report and Literature Review
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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A 52-year-old woman with refractory iodine-induced hyperthyroidism showed significant improvement with cholestyramine, reducing FT4 by 30% in 5 days. Despite conventional treatments failing, cholestyramine proved effective, leading to euthyroidism. This highlights cholestyramine's potential as an adjunct therapy.
What was studied?
The study investigated the role of cholestyramine as an additional treatment for refractory iodine-induced hyperthyroidism in a patient who did not respond to conventional therapies.
Who was studied?
A 52-year-old female patient with a history of goiter who developed iodine-induced hyperthyroidism following a CT scan with contrast. The patient had obstructive symptoms and was unresponsive to standard treatments, including dexamethasone, carbimazole, and propranolol.
What were the most important findings?
After adding cholestyramine, the patient’s FT4 levels decreased by 30% within 5 days and normalized by 12 days.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
Cholestyramine can be an effective adjunct therapy for managing refractory iodine-induced hyperthyroidism, suggesting a potential new treatment avenue for similar cases, such as Grave's Disease (GD). This case highlights the need for alternative treatments when conventional therapies fail and emphasizes the utility of cholestyramine in rapid thyroid hormone reduction.
Serendipity in Refractory Celiac Disease: Full Recovery of Duodenal Villi and Clinical Symptoms after Fecal Microbiota Transfer
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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A patient with refractory celiac disease type II achieved complete duodenal villi recovery and symptom resolution after fecal microbiota transfer. This unexpected outcome suggests that microbiome manipulation may offer a novel treatment for RCD II, providing an alternative to immunosuppressive therapies for this challenging condition.
What was studied?
This study examined the impact of fecal microbiota transfer (FMT) on a patient with refractory celiac disease type II (RCD II). The patient initially received FMT as treatment for recurrent Clostridium difficile infection (CDI), but the intervention unexpectedly resulted in full recovery of duodenal villi and resolution of celiac symptoms, suggesting a potential therapeutic role for microbiome manipulation in RCD II.
Who was studied?
A 68-year-old woman with a 10-year history of RCD II was the subject of this study. Despite adherence to a strict gluten-free diet, she experienced persistent villous atrophy and malabsorption. She had been receiving budesonide therapy and later underwent cladribine treatment, neither of which alleviated her condition. The patient was repeatedly hospitalized due to severe diarrhea, dehydration, and infections, and was ultimately treated with FMT for recurrent CDI.
What were the most important findings?
FMT not only resolved the patient’s CDI but also led to complete histological recovery of the duodenal mucosa. Before FMT, duodenal biopsies confirmed villous atrophy (Marsh IIIA) and an abnormal intraepithelial lymphocyte population (>80%). However, post-FMT, the patient experienced significant clinical improvement, gaining weight and becoming symptom-free. Follow-up biopsies at six months showed full villous recovery (Marsh 0), although 71% of intraepithelial lymphocytes remained aberrant.
Microbiome analysis of the FMT donor revealed a high Shannon diversity index (3.81), suggesting a diverse and resilient microbial community. Unfortunately, due to the lack of a pre-FMT stool sample from the patient, a direct comparison of microbiome shifts could not be conducted. However, the resolution of symptoms and histological improvement strongly indicate that microbiome alterations played a role in disease modulation. Given previous studies implicating gut dysbiosis in celiac disease pathogenesis, this case highlights a possible causal role of microbiota in maintaining the chronic inflammatory state of RCD II.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study provides compelling evidence that microbiome manipulation may be a viable therapeutic strategy for RCD II, a condition with limited treatment options and high mortality risk. The findings suggest that gut dysbiosis could be a key driver of persistent villous atrophy in RCD II and that FMT may help restore intestinal homeostasis. If confirmed in larger studies, this could shift the treatment paradigm for RCD II, potentially offering an alternative to immunosuppressive therapies or autologous stem cell transplantation. Given the poor prognosis associated with RCD II, the ability to restore mucosal integrity through microbiome-targeted interventions represents a significant advancement. Further research should explore optimal donor selection, microbial composition, and long-term effects of FMT in RCD II patients.
The Comorbidity of Endometriosis and Systemic Lupus Erythematosus: A Systematic Review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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This review explores the significant comorbidity between systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and endometriosis, emphasizing shared pathological pathways.
DOI: 10.7759/cureus.42362
What Was Reviewed?
This systematic review examined the comorbidity between endometriosis and systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), two chronic conditions with significant implications for women's health. The review aimed to elucidate the prevalence, shared pathophysiological mechanisms, and risk factors linking these diseases, emphasizing immune dysregulation, genetic predispositions, and hormonal influences. The review synthesized findings from nine studies conducted between 2011 and 2021, including case-control, cohort, and systematic review methodologies.
Who Was Reviewed?
The review focused on studies of females aged 12-60, representing the pubertal to postmenopausal age range. The population comprised patients with diagnosed endometriosis and SLE. The studies predominantly included participants from diverse ethnicities and geographies, screened based on standardized inclusion criteria to establish the prevalence and interaction of these conditions.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The review confirmed a statistically significant correlation between endometriosis and SLE, with women diagnosed with either condition at a heightened risk of developing the other. The findings implicated immune dysregulation, characterized by diminished cytotoxic T-cell activity and elevated humoral immune responses, as a central mechanism. Notable microbial associations include increased systemic inflammation mediated by cytokines such as interleukin-1, interleukin-6, and tumor necrosis factor (TNF-α). Genetic factors also played a role, with gene loci such as PTPN22 associated with increased susceptibility to both conditions. Surgical interventions like hysterectomy were linked to increased inflammation and subsequent autoimmune activation, while modified surgical techniques showed promise in mitigating risk.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Review?
This review highlights the necessity for clinicians to adopt an interdisciplinary approach when managing patients with either endometriosis or SLE, as their comorbidity exacerbates disease burden and complicates treatment. It emphasizes the importance of targeted therapies to modulate immune response alongside careful evaluation of surgical and hormonal treatment strategies to minimize adverse outcomes. The findings suggest a potential for incorporating microbial and genetic markers into diagnostic and therapeutic protocols to improve outcomes.
The gut microbiota and endometriosis: From pathogenesis to diagnosis and treatment
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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The review explored the connection between gut microbiota and endometriosis, highlighting potential influences on disease mechanisms through hormonal, immune, and inflammatory pathways. It suggests that modulating gut microbiota could lead to innovative diagnostic and therapeutic approaches for endometriosis. This review further suggests that via Fecal Microbiota Transplantation (FMT) may provide a novel therapeutic approach for the clinical treatment of endometriosis.
What was reviewed?
The study reviewed the relationship between the gut microbiota and endometriosis, focusing on how the gut microbiota may influence the pathogenesis, diagnosis, and potential treatment of endometriosis through various mechanisms such as estrogen modulation, immune response, and inflammation.
Who was reviewed?
The review did not involve specific individuals as subjects of study but instead synthesized findings from various studies that investigate the gut microbiota’s involvement in patients with endometriosis. It includes analysis of microbial profiles and their correlations with the disease.
What were the most important findings?
Important findings highlighted that alterations in the gut microbiota are associated with endometriosis and could potentially influence the disease’s pathogenesis through mechanisms linked to hormonal balance, immune modulation, and inflammatory responses. Specifically, changes in bacterial diversity and specific bacterial groups (such as an increase in the Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes ratio) were noted in patients with endometriosis.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The review suggests that targeting the gut microbiota might offer new strategies for the diagnosis and treatment of endometriosis. Understanding the role of the gut microbiota in endometriosis could lead to non-invasive diagnostic biomarkers and novel therapeutic approaches that involve modulating the gut microbiota through diet, probiotics, or even fecal microbiota transplantation.
Medical-Grade Honey as a Potential New Therapy for Bacterial Vaginosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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Medical-grade honey demonstrates selective antimicrobial, anti-biofilm, and microbiome-restorative properties in bacterial vaginosis, with early evidence suggesting it may complement or replace antibiotics and reduce recurrence. Large-scale clinical trials are needed to establish its clinical utility.
What was reviewed?
This review article examines current evidence on the use of medical-grade honey (MGH) as a novel therapy for bacterial vaginosis (BV), a prevalent condition among women of reproductive age characterized by a dysbiosis of the vaginal microbiome. BV is associated with a reduction in protective, lactic acid-producing lactobacilli and an overgrowth of pathogenic anaerobes, often resulting in recurrent symptoms even after standard antibiotic treatment. The authors explore the multifaceted antimicrobial, anti-biofilm, prebiotic, probiotic, anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, and immunomodulatory properties of MGH, and how these may address the shortcomings of conventional therapies. The review synthesizes in vitro, animal, and limited clinical evidence, highlighting the mechanisms by which MGH can selectively inhibit BV-associated pathogens while supporting beneficial microbial populations.
Who was reviewed?
The review encompasses research involving a range of populations and experimental models: in vitro studies on pathogenic and commensal vaginal microbes; animal models, including rats and rhesus macaques, investigating the effects of honey or its constituents on vaginal flora and tissue; and small-scale clinical studies and case series with women experiencing BV or related gynecological disorders. The clinical evidence includes a pilot study using MGH in women with vaginal complaints (including BV), trials on honey-based therapies for cervicitis, and preclinical models examining the impact of honey on vaginal microbiota and tissue health. The reviewed populations predominantly comprise women of reproductive age, but also incorporate data from non-human models to elucidate mechanisms of action.
Most important findings
The review underscores that MGH exhibits broad-spectrum antimicrobial activity through multiple mechanisms—osmotic effects, acidic pH, hydrogen peroxide production, and diverse bioactive compounds (e.g., phenolics, flavonoids). Importantly, MGH's antimicrobial impact is selective: while it significantly inhibits BV-associated pathogens such as Gardnerella vaginalis and Atopobium vaginae, it generally spares or even promotes lactobacilli, which are central to a healthy vaginal microbiome. MGH also disrupts biofilms, a critical factor in BV recurrence and antibiotic resistance, by breaking down the extracellular matrix and preventing biofilm formation. Unlike antibiotics, which can further disrupt the microbiome and drive resistance, MGH supports restoration of the vaginal ecosystem via prebiotic and probiotic effects, encouraging growth of beneficial bacteria. Additional anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, and immunomodulatory properties may promote mucosal healing and reduce recurrence. Clinical evidence, though limited, suggests symptomatic and microscopic improvement in BV and related conditions with intravaginal MGH application.
Key implications
MGH represents a promising alternative or complementary therapy for BV, offering broad-spectrum antimicrobial action without promoting resistance and with the potential to restore a healthy vaginal microbiome. Its ability to eradicate biofilms and modulate inflammation gives it distinct advantages over conventional antibiotics, which are plagued by high recurrence rates, microbiome disruption, and increasing resistance. The favorable impact of MGH on lactobacilli and the microenvironment suggests a paradigm shift toward therapies that restore ecological balance rather than merely suppressing pathogens. However, robust clinical trials are urgently needed to confirm efficacy, optimal formulations, and long-term outcomes before routine clinical adoption.
Relationships between female infertility and female genital infections and pelvic inflammatory disease
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) is a complex interplay between pathogens, immune responses, and microbial communities. As research continues to uncover the microbiome's role in reproductive health, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as probiotics, prebiotics, and transplants are redefining how we prevent and treat PID. This page dives deep into these innovations, offering a glimpse into the future of personalized, biologically informed women’s healthcare.
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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A large-scale Taiwanese study found that upper and lower genital tract infections, but not comorbidities or bacterial vaginosis, independently increased infertility risk. PID and lower genital tract inflammation showed the strongest associations, emphasizing the critical role of reproductive tract infections in female infertility.
What was studied?
This population-based nested case-control study investigated the associations between female genital tract infections, selected comorbidities, and infertility using data from the Taiwan National Health Research Database (NHIRD) between 2000 and 2013. The study specifically evaluated whether infections such as pelvic inflammatory disease (PID), bacterial vaginosis (BV), and endometritis, as well as comorbid conditions like obesity, lipid metabolism disorders, and abortion history, were linked to an increased risk of diagnosed infertility. The research leveraged the large scope of the NHIRD, which includes nearly the entire Taiwanese population, to provide robust epidemiological insights. The analysis involved both univariate and multivariate conditional logistic regression to adjust for confounding variables and to isolate the independent associations of different infections and comorbidities with infertility risk in women, stratified by age groups (≤40 and >40 years).
Who was studied?
The study included 18,276 women newly diagnosed with infertility and 73,104 age-matched controls without infertility, all identified from the NHIRD. Controls were matched by age (within three years) and index year and were required to have a history of pregnancy but no prior diagnosis of infertility or use of ovulation stimulants or gonadotropins. Exclusion criteria covered prior hysterectomy, bilateral oophorectomy, cancer, prior chemotherapy or radiotherapy, polycystic ovary syndrome, ovarian failure, endometriosis, adenomyosis, amenorrhea, and Turner syndrome. The mean age of the cohort was 31 years, and the population was predominantly Han Chinese women residing in Taiwan. Patients were further stratified into two age groups (≤40 and >40 years) to assess potential age-related interactions with infertility risk factors.
Most important findings
The most significant finding was a robust association between upper and lower genital tract infections and increased risk of infertility, evident even after controlling for comorbidities and other confounders. Specifically, pelvic inflammatory disease involving the ovary, fallopian tube, pelvic cellular tissue, and peritoneum showed odds ratios (OR) of 4.82 and 6.03 for infertility. Cervical, vaginal, and vulvar inflammation had even higher associations, with ORs of 7.79 and 6.65. Clinicians found that BV and endometritis were associated with infertility in univariate analysis, but multivariate models did not confirm these associations, indicating that other factors or confounders may mediate their effect. Comorbidities such as obesity, lipid disorders, dysthyroidism, and abortion initially showed associations with infertility, but these did not persist after adjustment. Importantly, the study did not examine specific pathogens, but referenced the role of Chlamydia trachomatis, Neisseria gonorrhoeae, Mycoplasma genitalium, Ureaplasma urealyticum, and Trichomonas vaginalis as potential microbial contributors to tubal factor infertility.
Key implications
These findings reinforce the central role of female genital tract infections, particularly upper tract involvement and lower tract inflammation, in the pathogenesis of infertility. The lack of an independent association with bacterial vaginosis and endometritis after adjustment suggests that not all genital infections contribute equally to infertility risk and highlights the importance of distinguishing between associative and causal relationships. For clinicians, this underscores the need for vigilant screening, diagnosis, and management of PID and lower genital tract inflammation as part of infertility workups. The study’s population-based design adds weight to these recommendations, advocating for targeted prevention and early intervention strategies that could mitigate the risk of infertility associated with genital tract infections. These microbiome-related insights are particularly relevant for developing microbiome signatures and risk-stratification tools in reproductive medicine.
Bacterial vaginosis and its association with infertility, endometritis, and pelvic inflammatory disease
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
•
Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
•
Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
•
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) is a complex interplay between pathogens, immune responses, and microbial communities. As research continues to uncover the microbiome's role in reproductive health, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as probiotics, prebiotics, and transplants are redefining how we prevent and treat PID. This page dives deep into these innovations, offering a glimpse into the future of personalized, biologically informed women’s healthcare.
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This review details the links between bacterial vaginosis, endometritis, pelvic inflammatory disease, and infertility, highlighting the role of vaginal and endometrial microbiota disruptions and their impact on reproductive outcomes and management strategies.
What was reviewed?
This review article comprehensively examines the associations between bacterial vaginosis (BV), endometritis, pelvic inflammatory disease (PID), and infertility, with a particular focus on the underlying microbiome-related mechanisms. The paper synthesizes current evidence on how disruptions in the vaginal and endometrial microbiota, characterized predominantly by a loss of beneficial lactobacilli and an overgrowth of anaerobic bacteria, contribute to the pathogenesis of these gynecological conditions. The review covers diagnostic criteria, treatment options, recurrence issues, and the role of the vaginal and endometrial microbial signatures in affecting reproductive outcomes, both naturally and in assisted reproduction settings. It also explores potential mechanistic pathways linking these infections to infertility, including inflammation, immune responses, microbial toxin production, and increased susceptibility to sexually transmitted infections (STIs).
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesizes data from a broad range of studies involving women of reproductive age, particularly those diagnosed with BV, endometritis, or PID, as well as women experiencing infertility (including those undergoing fertility treatments such as in vitro fertilization [IVF]). It considers diverse populations, including women with tubal and non-tubal infertility, women with unexplained or idiopathic infertility, and those with recurrent implantation failure or miscarriage. The article also references clinical trials and meta-analyses, drawing on evidence from both symptomatic and asymptomatic women across multiple ethnic groups and geographic regions.
Most important findings
The review highlights that optimal vaginal health is typically characterized by a microbiota dominated by lactobacilli, which produce lactic acid and antimicrobial compounds, conferring protection against pathogenic bacteria. BV is marked by a depletion of these protective lactobacilli and an overgrowth of anaerobes such as Gardnerella vaginalis, Atopobium vaginae, Megasphaera spp., and others. This microbial imbalance is strongly associated with an increased risk of endometritis and PID, both of which are significant causes of infertility. Notably, more than 85% of PID cases are linked to BV-associated bacteria and/or STIs, but fewer than half involve classic pathogens like Neisseria gonorrhoeae or Chlamydia trachomatis, underscoring the importance of the broader vaginal microbiome.
BV increases the risk of acquiring STIs, which further amplify the risk of upper genital tract infections and infertility. Mechanistically, BV-related bacteria can induce genital tract inflammation, alter immune responses, produce enzymes that degrade cervical mucus, and facilitate pathogen ascension to the endometrium and fallopian tubes. Women with BV and non-lactobacillus-dominated endometrial microbiota have lower implantation and pregnancy rates, particularly in IVF settings. Chronic endometritis (CE) is highly prevalent among women with unexplained infertility and recurrent implantation failure, and cure of CE with antibiotics improves reproductive outcomes. Despite these associations, causality between BV and infertility is not fully established due to heterogeneity in diagnostic criteria, patient populations, and study designs.
Key implications
The review underscores the clinical importance of recognizing and treating BV, endometritis, and PID—especially in women with infertility or at risk of reproductive complications. Early diagnosis and appropriate antibiotic treatment for symptomatic BV and CE can improve fertility outcomes, particularly in IVF patients. The findings also call for a more nuanced understanding of the vaginal and endometrial microbiome, advocating for future research to refine the definitions of “normal” versus “abnormal” microbial states and to clarify the mechanisms linking microbial dysbiosis to infertility. Given the high recurrence rates and diagnostic challenges, integrating microbiome-based diagnostics and interventions (including probiotics) into preconceptional and fertility care may offer new avenues for improving women’s reproductive health.
Effects of dietary quercetin on female fertility in mice: implication of transglutaminase 2
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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Chronic dietary quercetin in female mice reduces litter numbers, increases litter size in youth, and accelerates ovarian follicle maturation via TG2 inhibition, suggesting potential risks for premature ovarian aging and reduced fertility with prolonged supplementation.
What was studied?
This original research investigated the long-term effects of dietary quercetin supplementation on female fertility and ovarian physiology in mice, with a specific focus on the role of the enzyme transglutaminase 2 (TG2). Quercetin, a widely consumed flavonoid supplement, is known for its antioxidant properties, but its effects on female reproductive health remain poorly characterized. The study evaluated birth outcomes (number and size of litters, birth spacing) and detailed ovarian histology (folliculogenesis) in mice administered quercetin (5 mg/kg/day) for nine months. Two breeding periods were analyzed: one during prime reproductive age (2–6 months) and another during later reproductive age (8–11 months). The researchers also compared wild-type mice with TG2-null mice to determine whether the observed effects were mediated through TG2 inhibition.
Who was studied?
The subjects were C57BL/6 female mice, either wild-type or genetically modified to lack TG2 (TG2-null), and their offspring. Each experimental group consisted of four females and two males, with both wild-type and TG2-null genotypes represented. Mice were randomly assigned to receive either quercetin or vehicle via drinking water, and breeding outcomes were monitored during two distinct reproductive periods. The offspring of these dams were also analyzed for ovarian morphology and follicle counts at four weeks of age. Additionally, male fertility was assessed by mating quercetin-exposed males with untreated females to exclude male-mediated effects.
Most important findings
Dietary quercetin supplementation produced complex, age-dependent effects on female fertility and ovarian physiology in mice. In young wild-type females, quercetin reduced the total number of litters by approximately 60% and increased the interval between births (birth spacing), indicating a reduction in overall reproductive potential. Paradoxically, these same young females exhibited a nearly 70% increase in average litter size, a change associated with significantly enhanced ovarian folliculogenesis—specifically, an increase in mature antral follicles and a corresponding depletion of primordial and primary follicles. In older females, quercetin reversed its effect, reducing litter size. Importantly, TG2-null mice displayed similar changes in follicle development and litter size as quercetin-treated wild-type mice, and were unresponsive to additional quercetin, indicating that quercetin’s effects are predominantly mediated via TG2 inhibition.
Key implications
This study demonstrates that chronic dietary quercetin, at doses relevant to human supplementation, can adversely affect female reproductive potential by accelerating follicle maturation and depleting ovarian reserves, likely through inhibition of TG2. The findings suggest a risk of premature ovarian aging and reduced fertility with long-term quercetin use in females of reproductive age. The data also highlight TG2 as a novel regulator of ovarian aging and folliculogenesis. These insights are clinically relevant for counseling women considering quercetin supplementation and inform potential mechanisms underlying reproductive disorders, such as those observed in TG2-targeting autoimmune diseases like celiac disease. For microbiome signatures databases, the study underscores the importance of tracking host-microbe interactions influenced by dietary polyphenols and their systemic enzymatic targets.
Microbiota and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
•
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) is a complex interplay between pathogens, immune responses, and microbial communities. As research continues to uncover the microbiome's role in reproductive health, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as probiotics, prebiotics, and transplants are redefining how we prevent and treat PID. This page dives deep into these innovations, offering a glimpse into the future of personalized, biologically informed women’s healthcare.
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This review highlights how vaginal microbiota imbalance, particularly bacterial vaginosis, significantly increases the risk of pelvic inflammatory disease. Advanced molecular methods have identified diverse microbes linked to PID, emphasizing the importance of microbiome health in preventing serious reproductive infections.
What was reviewed?
This review examined the complex relationship between pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) and the genital microbiota. It focused on recent advancements in molecular microbiological techniques and their implications for understanding the diverse bacterial communities in both healthy and diseased states of the female genital tract. It also explored how changes in these microbial communities (dysbiosis), specifically bacterial vaginosis, could significantly increase the risk of PID, sexually transmitted infections (STIs), HIV, and adverse reproductive outcomes.
Who was reviewed?
The review analyzed findings from several clinical and molecular microbiology studies involving women diagnosed with pelvic inflammatory disease or other genital infections. It included detailed analyses of microbial communities identified through culture-based methods and advanced molecular techniques, such as 16S rRNA sequencing, PCR-based identification, and cloning and sequencing methods. Patient groups ranged from asymptomatic healthy individuals to women with symptomatic PID, endometriosis, salpingitis, and tubo-ovarian abscesses (TOAs).
What were the most important findings?
The most important findings were that PID is typically polymicrobial, involving a diverse range of pathogens beyond traditional culprits like Chlamydia trachomatis and Neisseria gonorrhoeae. Advanced molecular techniques revealed that bacterial vaginosis-associated bacteria (BVAB), including Gardnerella vaginalis, Atopobium vaginae, and several anaerobic species (e.g., Prevotella, Sneathia, and BVAB 1, 2, and 3), significantly associate with PID development. This contrasts with earlier beliefs that focused primarily on classic sexually transmitted pathogens. The data strongly indicate that vaginal microbiota disturbances, especially reductions in protective Lactobacillus species, substantially increase the risk of ascending infections to the upper genital tract.
Clinicians are increasingly recognizing novel microbial phylotypes and traditionally overlooked anaerobes in PID, especially in severe cases like TOAs. Anaerobes such as Prevotella, Bacteroides, and Peptostreptococcus have frequently emerged as critical players. The identification of BV-associated microbes in salpingitis and abscesses reinforces the microbial continuum from vaginal dysbiosis to upper genital tract infections, providing substantial evidence that microbial dysbiosis directly predisposes women to PID.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review significantly impacts clinical practice by underscoring the importance of maintaining a healthy vaginal microbiota to prevent upper genital tract infections. Clinicians should recognize BV as a critical modifiable risk factor for PID and associated complications, including infertility and ectopic pregnancy. The findings emphasize the urgent need for improved screening and treatment strategies for BV to reduce PID incidence and associated reproductive health complications. Additionally, molecular identification of novel pathogens stresses the necessity of broad-spectrum antimicrobial regimens capable of targeting a diverse microbial landscape, especially anaerobes. Future research must continue exploring the therapeutic and preventive potential of maintaining a healthy vaginal microbiome.
A Multi-Omic Systems-Based Approach Reveals Metabolic Markers of Bacterial Vaginosis and Insight into the Disease
February 12, 2026
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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This study used a multi-omic approach to reveal key microbial and metabolic markers of bacterial vaginosis. It identified two distinct symptomatic BV metabotypes, each defined by unique microbial and metabolite associations, underscoring the need for metabolomics-informed clinical diagnostics.
What was studied?
The study investigated the vaginal microbiome and metabolome of reproductive-age women to identify metabolic markers and microbial associations linked to bacterial vaginosis (BV). Researchers used a multi-omic systems-based approach, integrating deep 16S rRNA gene sequencing with metabolomic profiling of vaginal lavage samples collected from 36 women. This study sought to overcome the limitations of traditional diagnostic methods like the Nugent score and Amsel criteria, which have been criticized for inconsistency and inability to accurately capture symptomatic BV cases.
Who was studied?
The study involved 36 women of reproductive age, who varied demographically and behaviorally. Participants were clinically evaluated for BV using Amsel criteria and Nugent scoring. Vaginal lavage samples were collected from these women and subjected to both microbial and metabolic analyses. The cohort included both symptomatic and asymptomatic women, covering a diverse range of Nugent scores and BV symptoms, to enable the identification of associations between microbial taxa, metabolomic profiles, and disease status.
Most Important Findings
The study identified distinct microbial and metabolomic profiles associated with BV. It showed that microbial community composition, as assessed by 16S rRNA gene sequencing, reflected Nugent scores but poorly matched Amsel criteria. In contrast, metabolomic profiles were more aligned with Amsel-defined symptomatic BV, highlighting the potential diagnostic value of metabolic markers.
The researchers distinguished two symptomatic BV metabotypes (SBVI and SBVII), each linked to unique microbial and metabolic features. SBVI correlated with Mobiluncus spp. and Allisonella spp., while SBVII correlated with Hallella spp. Both metabotypes were marked by disruption of epithelial integrity but differed in microbial signatures and metabolic profiles.
Key microbial associations included increased abundance of Gardnerella spp. and Dialister spp. in samples with high Nugent scores. Dialister spp. correlated strongly with elevated levels of putrescine and cadaverine, compounds responsible for BV-associated odor. Mobiluncus spp. were associated with increased 2-methyl-2-hydroxybutanoic acid, linked to vaginal discharge, while Gardnerella spp. were connected to diethylene glycol, associated with vaginal pain. The study also noted that decreases in lactic acid-producing lactobacilli and increases in acetate- and propionate-producing bacteria characterized the BV state. Importantly, the relative abundance of Gardnerella spp. and Dialister spp. was not consistently associated with Amsel criteria, underscoring the complexity of the microbiome-symptom relationship.
Implications of this Study
This study advances understanding of BV by providing molecular-level evidence that the symptomatic state of BV cannot be attributed solely to microbial composition. Instead, it highlights that metabolic activity and metabolite production, driven by specific bacterial taxa, play a critical role in disease manifestation. The identification of two distinct symptomatic BV metabotypes suggests that BV is not a singular condition but may arise via different microbial and metabolic pathways. These findings imply that clinical diagnostics for BV should integrate metabolomic data alongside microbial profiling to improve accuracy and reduce misclassification based on Nugent score or Amsel criteria alone. These insights open avenues for targeted microbiome-based interventions and the development of metabolite-specific therapeutic strategies.
An Integrated Efficacy and Safety Analysis of Single-Dose Secnidazole 2 g in the Treatment of Bacterial Vaginosis
February 12, 2026
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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This study confirms secnidazole’s efficacy and safety as a one-dose treatment for BV, improving outcomes while supporting microbiome restoration.
What was studied?
This integrated study analyzed the efficacy and safety of a single-dose 2 g oral formulation of secnidazole (SOLOSEC™) for the treatment of bacterial vaginosis (BV) in women. Drawing from two randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled pivotal clinical trials, the researchers aimed to evaluate whether this simplified regimen could overcome the adherence challenges commonly associated with the current extended-dose treatments for BV. The study compared clinical cure rates, microbiological outcomes, and adverse event profiles between the secnidazole and placebo groups, providing a comprehensive efficacy and safety assessment to support regulatory approval and clinical use.
Who was studied?
The integrated analysis included 288 women who met all inclusion and exclusion criteria—169 were treated with 2 g of secnidazole, and 119 received a placebo. Participants ranged in age from 18 to 54 years, with a median of 31. The racial composition was diverse, with over 50% identifying as Black or African American. Participants were also stratified by the number of BV episodes in the past year (three or fewer vs. four or more), acknowledging the recurrent nature of BV in many women. All participants had to meet the four Amsel criteria for BV, ensuring consistency with FDA standards.
What were the most important findings?
The integrated analysis demonstrated that single-dose secnidazole significantly improved clinical outcomes compared to placebo. Patients treated with secnidazole were far more likely to experience complete resolution of symptoms, normalization of discharge and odor, and restoration of a healthy vaginal microbiome. Microbiological analysis showed that more patients achieved normal Nugent scores following treatment, which correlates with reduced presence of BV-associated anaerobic bacteria and increased dominance of beneficial Lactobacillus species. The drug was effective across both first-time and recurrent cases and provided consistent benefits regardless of race. Secnidazole targets key BV-associated organisms such as Gardnerella vaginalis, Atopobium vaginae, and Prevotella, while sparing protective lactobacilli. This microbial specificity aligns closely with the recognized dysbiotic profile of BV and suggests secnidazole may facilitate reestablishment of microbiome homeostasis. Adverse effects were mild and infrequent, most commonly involving vaginal yeast overgrowth and transient gastrointestinal discomfort, with no significant safety concerns emerging in the analysis.
What are the implications of this study?
The findings establish secnidazole as a compelling treatment option for BV that addresses both clinical symptoms and the underlying microbial imbalance. The one-dose regimen greatly enhances patient adherence, a crucial factor in reducing recurrence and treatment failure. Because secnidazole selectively targets harmful bacteria while preserving beneficial species, it supports the restoration of a healthy vaginal microbiome, a key goal in microbiome-based therapeutic strategies. The study also reinforces the validity of BV’s microbial signature as a foundation for targeted intervention. As such, secnidazole not only demonstrates therapeutic efficacy but also contributes to a growing paradigm of microbiome-conscious treatment approaches in gynecologic care.
Antimicrobial activity of bovine lactoferrin against Gardnerella species clinical isolates
February 12, 2026
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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Bovine lactoferrin shows promise as an adjunctive treatment for bacterial vaginosis, inhibiting metronidazole-resistant G. vaginalis strains and potentiating the effects of clindamycin. Its ability to sequester iron and act synergistically with antibiotics could offer an innovative solution to antibiotic resistance in BV.
What was studied?
The study investigated the antimicrobial activity of bovine lactoferrin (MTbLF) against clinical isolates of Gardnerella vaginalis (G. vaginalis), which is a key pathogen in the development of bacterial vaginosis (BV). The study also examined the potential synergistic effects of bovine lactoferrin when combined with commonly used antibiotics, metronidazole and clindamycin. It utilized a range of in vitro experiments to determine the dose-dependent effects of MTbLF and its ability to inhibit the growth of both metronidazole-resistant and susceptible G. vaginalis isolates.
Who was studied?
The study focused on 71 clinical isolates of Gardnerella vaginalis that were presumptively identified from vaginal samples collected from women diagnosed with bacterial vaginosis. The researchers subjected these isolates to antimicrobial susceptibility testing to evaluate their resistance profiles against metronidazole and clindamycin.
What were the most important findings?
The study found that MTbLF exhibited significant antimicrobial activity against G. vaginalis isolates, including those resistant to metronidazole. The inhibitory effect was dose-dependent and not strain-dependent, suggesting that MTbLF could effectively target G. vaginalis, regardless of the strain. Combining MTbLF with clindamycin enhanced the antibiotic's efficacy against G. vaginalis, producing a synergistic effect. This finding highlights the potential of MTbLF as an adjunctive treatment for BV, particularly in cases involving antibiotic-resistant strains. Additionally, the study confirmed that G. vaginalis strains were unable to utilize bovine lactoferrin as an iron source, contrasting with their ability to acquire iron from human lactoferrin, which may contribute to the pathogen’s resilience in the vaginal environment.
What are the implications of this study?
The study highlights the potential of MTbLF as an adjunct or alternative treatment for BV, especially in cases where traditional antibiotics like metronidazole and clindamycin are ineffective due to resistance. Given its iron-binding properties, MTbLF could help disrupt the growth of G. vaginalis by depriving it of essential iron, thereby hindering its ability to proliferate. The observed synergy between MTbLF and clindamycin could pave the way for more effective combination therapies. Furthermore, MTbLF’s ability to inhibit G. vaginalis, even in biofilm-forming states, highlights its potential in managing BV, a condition known for its recurring nature and complexity. These findings warrant further exploration, particularly in clinical settings, to assess the safety and pharmacokinetics of MTbLF in treating and preventing BV recurrence.
Association Between Dietary Patterns and Bacterial Vaginosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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A diet high in processed foods and sugar increases bacterial vaginosis (BV) risk, while a plant-based diet lowers it. This study highlights the importance of dietary choices in vaginal health, providing insights for clinicians on how nutrition influences the vaginal microbiome.
What was Studied?
This study investigated the relationship between dietary patterns and bacterial vaginosis (BV) in women. Researchers analyzed how different diets influenced BV risk, focusing on five major dietary patterns: "Healthy diet," "Unhealthy diet," "Ovo-vegetarian diet," "Pseudo-Mediterranean diet," and "Western diet."
Who was Studied?
The study included 144 women diagnosed with BV and 151 healthy controls. Participants were recruited from a gynecology clinic in Tehran, Iran, between November 2020 and June 2021. Researchers assessed dietary intake using a food frequency questionnaire and diagnosed BV using the Amsel criteria.
Most Important Findings
Women who followed an "Unhealthy diet" high in sugar, solid oils, red meat, sweets, fried potatoes, and refined grains had a significantly higher risk of BV. Those in the highest tertile of this diet were more than three times as likely to have BV compared to those in the lowest tertile.
Conversely, the "Ovo-vegetarian diet," rich in vegetables, beans, whole grains, and eggs, was strongly associated with a lower BV risk. Women in the highest adherence group for this diet had an 84% lower chance of BV compared to those in the lowest adherence group.
The study also observed a protective but not statistically significant effect of the "Pseudo-Mediterranean diet," which includes nuts, fish, olives, and olive oil. No clear association was found between BV and the "Healthy diet" or "Western diet."
Microbiome analysis linked the "Unhealthy diet" with a disruption in vaginal flora, favoring BV-associated bacteria like Gardnerella vaginalis, Bacteroides spp., Mobiluncus spp., and Mycoplasma hominis. In contrast, the "Ovo-vegetarian diet" promoted conditions favorable for Lactobacillus dominance, which helps maintain vaginal health.
Implications of the Study
This study reinforces the role of diet in vaginal microbiome balance and BV risk. Clinicians should encourage patients to reduce processed foods, refined sugars, and saturated fats while promoting a plant-based diet rich in fiber, whole grains, and essential nutrients. Future research should explore whether dietary modifications can serve as an effective strategy for BV prevention and treatment.
Association Between Heavy Metal Exposure and Bacterial Vaginosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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This cross-sectional study identified a strong link between elevated serum lead and cadmium levels and increased risk of bacterial vaginosis. It suggests that heavy metal exposure may disrupt vaginal microbiota stability and immunity, contributing to BV susceptibility and pointing to new environmental factors in BV prevention strategies.
What was Studied?
The study examined the association between exposure to heavy metals, specifically lead, cadmium, and mercury, and the risk of bacterial vaginosis (BV) among American women. Using a cross-sectional design, the researchers analyzed data from 2,493 women aged 18 to 49 years who participated in the 2001–2004 cycles of the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES). They measured serum levels of these heavy metals and assessed BV status using Nugent scoring, aiming to clarify whether environmental exposure to heavy metals correlates with BV prevalence.
Who was Studied?
The study included 2,493 American women aged between 18 and 49 years. All participants were selected from NHANES datasets, which provide a representative sample of the U.S. population. The researchers collected vaginal swabs to diagnose BV using the Nugent score and measured serum concentrations of lead, cadmium, and mercury. They controlled for several covariates such as age, body mass index, socioeconomic factors, cholesterol levels, and physical activity to ensure reliable statistical analysis.
Most important findings
The study found a significant positive association between serum lead and cadmium levels and the risk of developing bacterial vaginosis. Specifically, women with the highest serum lead concentrations had a 35% increased risk of BV compared to those with the lowest levels. Similarly, higher cadmium levels were associated with a 41% increased risk of BV in fully adjusted models. However, the researchers found no significant association between serum mercury levels and BV risk.
Stratified analyses revealed that the positive association between lead exposure and BV was more pronounced in women aged 37 to 49 years, those with lower education levels, and those with a higher body mass index. For cadmium, the risk was especially higher among women aged 18 to 24 and 37 to 49 years, and among those of non-Hispanic white and black ethnicity. These results suggest that lead and cadmium may influence vaginal microbiota stability, possibly through immunotoxic or endocrine-disrupting mechanisms, contributing to vaginal dysbiosis and increased BV susceptibility.
Implications of this Study
This study provides the first epidemiological evidence linking heavy metal exposure to increased risk of bacterial vaginosis. The findings suggest that environmental pollutants may act as overlooked risk factors in BV pathogenesis by compromising host immune function, disrupting hormonal balance, and potentially altering the vaginal microbiome. Clinicians and public health officials should consider environmental heavy metal exposure as part of BV risk assessment and prevention strategies. Reducing heavy metal exposure through regulatory policies and patient education could offer an additional layer of protection against BV and its associated reproductive health risks. These results highlight the importance of integrating environmental factors into the broader framework of microbiome-related disease prevention.
Bacterial biota of women with bacterial vaginosis treated with lactoferrin
February 12, 2026
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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This study explored the effects of lactoferrin on the vaginal microbiota in women with bacterial vaginosis, showing its potential as a non-antibiotic treatment option.
What was studied?
This study investigated the bacterial biota in women with bacterial vaginosis (BV) and assessed the effects of two different concentrations of vaginal lactoferrin pessaries (100 mg and 200 mg) on the vaginal bacterial composition. The aim was to characterize the vaginal microbiota before, during, and after lactoferrin treatment.
Who was studied?
Sixty sexually active women of reproductive age (18–45 years old) with symptomatic acute BV were studied. The women were randomly assigned to two groups: one group received 200 mg lactoferrin vaginal pessaries, and the other received 100 mg lactoferrin vaginal pessaries.
What were the most important findings?
The study showed that lactoferrin treatment significantly altered the vaginal microbiota in women with BV. During the treatment, both 100 mg and 200 mg doses of lactoferrin reduced the abundance of bacteria commonly associated with BV, such as Gardnerella, Prevotella, and Lachnospira. Concurrently, the levels of Lactobacillus species increased. The most significant changes were with the 200 mg lactoferrin dose, which maintained the bacterial balance up to 2 weeks after treatment. In contrast, the 100 mg dose did not maintain the microbiota balance as effectively post-treatment, with an increase in Gardnerella and Prevotella species observed. The study also highlighted that Lactobacillus helveticus became the dominant species during and after treatment, a species not previously detected in the vaginal microbiome of these participants.
What are the implications of this study?
The findings suggest that lactoferrin could be a viable alternative therapeutic approach for BV, offering a non-antibiotic treatment option. By promoting the growth of Lactobacillus species and reducing pathogenic bacteria, lactoferrin helps restore a healthier vaginal microbiota. This approach may overcome some of the limitations of antibiotic treatments for BV, such as recurrence and resistance development. The emergence of Lactobacillus helveticus during lactoferrin treatment suggests the potential for new probiotic strains for BV management. These results also point toward the need for further research on the role of lactoferrin in maintaining long-term vaginal health.
Bacterial Communities in Women with Bacterial Vaginosis:
February 12, 2026
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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This study used high-resolution sequencing to analyze bacterial communities in women with BV. Findings reveal distinct microbial associations, diagnostic inconsistencies, and racial differences in BV prevalence, highlighting the need for microbiome-targeted therapies and improved diagnostic tools.
What Was Studied?
This study investigated the composition and diversity of vaginal bacterial communities in women with bacterial vaginosis (BV) using high-resolution phylogenetic analysis. Researchers aimed to identify specific bacterial species associated with BV and determine their relationship to clinical diagnostic criteria. By employing deep sequencing of the 16S rRNA gene, the study provided a more precise taxonomic classification of BV-associated bacteria.
Who Was Studied?
The study analyzed vaginal swabs from 220 women with and without BV. Researchers diagnosed BV using Amsel’s clinical criteria and confirmed cases with Gram staining. The study examined bacterial communities in diverse participants, including Black and White women, to assess potential differences in microbiome composition by race.
Key Findings and Microbial Associations
Women with BV exhibited highly diverse and heterogeneous vaginal bacterial communities, unlike those without BV, whose microbiomes were dominated by Lactobacillus crispatus or Lactobacillus iners. The study identified Leptotrichia amnionii and Eggerthella sp. as the only bacteria significantly associated with all four Amsel’s diagnostic criteria for BV. Other BV-associated bacteria, including Gardnerella vaginalis, Atopobium vaginae, Prevotella spp., and Sneathia sanguinegens, correlated with specific diagnostic features, such as clue cells and amine odor.
The study also revealed distinct subgroups of BV-associated bacteria that co-occurred, suggesting metabolic interdependencies. Notably, Black women without BV had higher levels of certain BV-associated bacteria than White women, which may contribute to BV’s higher prevalence in this population. Additionally, the findings highlighted discrepancies between Amsel’s criteria and Nugent scoring, emphasizing the need for more refined diagnostic tools.
Implications of the Study
This study highlights the complexity of BV as a polymicrobial condition rather than an infection caused by a single pathogen. Identifying bacterial species at high resolution improves diagnostic accuracy and reveals potential microbial interactions that sustain BV. The research supports the need for microbiome-targeted therapies rather than broad-spectrum antibiotics, which often fail to prevent recurrence. Racial differences in vaginal microbiota composition suggest that BV treatment strategies should account for population-specific variations.
These findings emphasize the importance of advanced sequencing techniques in BV research, providing a foundation for future studies to develop better diagnostic criteria and treatment options.
Bacterial Vaginosis – A Brief Synopsis of the Literature
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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This review explores bacterial vaginosis, emphasizing its recurrence, microbial associations, and treatment challenges. It highlights the need for microbiome-based therapies, standardized diagnostic criteria, and potential partner treatment to reduce reinfection. The findings underscore the importance of improved strategies for long-term BV management.
What Was Reviewed?
This review provides a comprehensive synopsis of the current literature on bacterial vaginosis (BV), focusing on its epidemiology, recurrence, persistence, and treatment challenges. The authors examine the impact of BV on reproductive and sexual health, highlighting its association with sexually transmitted infections (STIs) and adverse pregnancy outcomes. Additionally, the review explores the role of the vaginal microbiota in BV pathogenesis, emphasizing the need for more effective long-term treatment options and standardized definitions for recurrent and persistent BV.
Who Was Reviewed?
The review synthesizes studies on women of reproductive age diagnosed with BV, including those with recurrent infections. It also explores research on the vaginal microbiota, sexual partners' role in BV transmission, and the effectiveness of current treatments. By analyzing epidemiological data from various regions, it highlights differences in BV prevalence and risk factors.
Key Findings and Microbial Associations
BV shifts the vaginal microbiota by depleting Lactobacillus species and allowing anaerobic bacteria like Gardnerella vaginalis, Atopobium vaginae, Prevotella spp., and Mobiluncus spp. to overgrow. This microbial imbalance disrupts the vaginal ecosystem and increases susceptibility to STIs, including Neisseria gonorrhoeae, Chlamydia trachomatis, and HIV. Even with metronidazole or clindamycin treatment, BV recurs in up to 80% of cases within three months. The review explores BV recurrence, showing how reinfection, an inability to restore a Lactobacillus-dominant microbiota, and bacterial biofilms contribute to persistent infections. Clinicians rely on Amsel’s criteria and Nugent scoring for diagnosis, but inconsistent definitions of recurrent and persistent BV complicate management. The review also examines partner treatment as a strategy to reduce BV recurrence, though past studies show mixed results.
Implications of the Review
BV remains a significant clinical challenge due to its high recurrence rates, unclear etiology, and association with reproductive health complications. This review calls for more research into microbiome-based therapies, improved diagnostic tools, and standardized definitions of recurrent BV. The findings suggest that future treatment approaches should not only target BV-associated bacteria but also focus on restoring a stable vaginal microbiota. Additionally, reconsidering partner treatment as part of BV management could be an avenue for reducing recurrence rates, provided that future studies can confirm its effectiveness.
Bacterial vaginosis and biofilms: Therapeutic challenges and innovations
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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This review links BV recurrence to resilient biofilms formed by Gardnerella vaginalis. Probiotics and biofilm disruptors (e.g., Astodrimer gel) improve outcomes by restoring Lactobacillus dominance. Current antibiotics fail to penetrate biofilms, necessitating multimodal therapies. Future research should explore VMT and microbiome-targeted interventions for sustained BV remission.
What was Reviewed?
This narrative review examined the role of biofilms in bacterial vaginosis (BV), focusing on their contribution to treatment resistance and recurrence. The authors synthesized evidence from clinical studies and trials to evaluate the limitations of current antibiotic therapies and explored emerging solutions, such as biofilm-disrupting agents and probiotics, to improve BV management.
Who was Reviewed?
The review analyzed data from diverse patient populations in clinical studies, including women with recurrent BV. It incorporated findings from trials investigating biofilm-targeted therapies, such as enzymatic disruptors (e.g., dispersin B) and probiotics (e.g., Lactobacillus crispatus), to assess their efficacy in restoring vaginal microbiota balance.
What were the most Important Findings?
The review highlighted that BV-associated biofilms, primarily formed by Gardnerella vaginalis and Atopobium vaginae, shield pathogenic bacteria from antibiotics, driving recurrence. Major microbial associations (MMA) included polymicrobial anaerobic communities displacing protective Lactobacillus species. Probiotics and biofilm-disrupting agents (e.g., boric acid, Astodrimer gel) showed promise in clinical trials, with probiotics delaying recurrence by 51% and Astodrimer gel significantly reducing recurrence rates. Notably, Lactobacillus crispatus-based therapies were emphasized for restoring vaginal acidity and inhibiting biofilm formation.
What are the Implications of this Review?
The findings emphasize the need to shift from antibiotic-only approaches to multimodal strategies targeting biofilms. Clinicians should consider adjunct therapies like probiotics and biofilm disruptors to enhance treatment efficacy and reduce recurrence. The review also calls for further research into vaginal microbiome transplantation (VMT) and personalized therapies to address biofilm resilience.
Bacterial Vaginosis and Chlamydia in Tubal Infertility
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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Study links BV and past chlamydial infection to tubal infertility, with 87.5% of BV-positive women having tubal damage. Both infections were often asymptomatic. IVF pregnancy rates were unaffected, but BV showed lower implantation trends. Findings highlight BV’s role in infertility, urging early screening to prevent tubal damage.
What was Studied?
This cross-sectional study investigated the association between bacterial vaginosis (BV), past chlamydial infection, and tubal infertility in women undergoing IVF. The researchers analyzed vaginal swabs and serologic data from 286 women undergoing 344 IVF cycles to determine whether these infections impacted pregnancy rates or were linked to specific infertility causes.
Who was Studied?
The study included 286 women undergoing IVF treatment at a tertiary care infertility referral center in Glasgow, Scotland. Participants provided high vaginal and endocervical swab samples before oocyte retrieval, with serologic testing for Chlamydia trachomatis and BV diagnosis based on Gram staining and anaerobic culture.
What were the most Important Findings?
The study found strong, independent associations between tubal infertility and both BV (87.5% of BV-positive women had tubal damage) and past chlamydial infection (91.2% seropositivity in tubal infertility cases). Notably, BV and chlamydial infections were frequently asymptomatic, with no active chlamydial infections detected. Major microbial associations (MMA) included reduced Lactobacillus dominance in BV-positive women, alongside overgrowth of anaerobic bacteria. Despite these associations, pregnancy rates after IVF were unaffected by BV or past chlamydial infection, though BV-positive women had numerically lower implantation rates (15.2% vs. 31.0% in chlamydia-seropositive women).
What are the Implications of this Study?
The findings underscore BV as a potential pelvic pathogen contributing to tubal damage, independent of chlamydial infection. While IVF success rates remained comparable across groups, the high prevalence of tubal infertility in BV-positive women suggests that early screening and treatment of asymptomatic BV could prevent long-term reproductive complications. Clinicians should consider BV as a modifiable risk factor in infertility workups, particularly in cases of unexplained tubal pathology.
Bacterial Vaginosis and its Association with Infertility, Endometritis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease
February 12, 2026
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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BV disrupts Lactobacillus dominance, increasing infertility risk via inflammation, PID, and endometritis. L. crispatus probiotics reduce BV recurrence; CE treatment boosts IVF success. Early screening and microbiome-targeted therapies are vital to prevent reproductive complications.
What was Reviewed?
This expert review examined the associations between bacterial vaginosis (BV), endometritis, pelvic inflammatory disease (PID), and infertility, synthesizing evidence from clinical studies, microbiome research, and treatment outcomes. The authors explored how BV-related dysbiosis contributes to upper genital tract infections and reproductive complications, while evaluating diagnostic challenges and emerging therapeutic strategies.
Who was Reviewed?
The review analyzed data from diverse populations of reproductive-age women, including those with infertility, recurrent BV, or PID. It incorporated findings from studies on vaginal and endometrial microbiota, clinical trials on BV treatments (e.g., antibiotics, probiotics), and research on immune and inflammatory responses linked to infertility.
What were the most Important Findings?
BV, characterized by reduced Lactobacillus dominance and overgrowth of anaerobes like Gardnerella vaginalis and Atopobium vaginae, was strongly associated with tubal infertility (3.3-fold higher prevalence in infertile women) and PID. Major microbial associations (MMA) included elevated levels of proinflammatory cytokines (IL-1β, IL-6, IL-8) in BV-positive women, which disrupt endometrial receptivity. Subclinical PID, often linked to BV, reduced pregnancy likelihood by 40%. Notably, Lactobacillus crispatus probiotics reduced BV recurrence by 15% compared to placebo, while endometrial microbiota dominated by non-lactobacilli correlated with lower IVF success rates. Chronic endometritis (CE), prevalent in 34%–66% of unexplained infertility cases, improved fertility outcomes post-antibiotic treatment, with cured CE showing a 76.3% pregnancy rate versus 20% in persistent cases.
What are the Implications of this Review?
The findings underscore BV as a modifiable risk factor for infertility, emphasizing the need for early screening and treatment to prevent PID and CE. Clinicians should consider Lactobacillus-based probiotics and biofilm-disrupting agents for recurrent BV. For infertility workups, endometrial microbiota analysis and CE testing are critical, particularly in cases of repeated implantation failure. Future research should prioritize longitudinal studies to clarify causal links between BV dysbiosis and infertility, while optimizing personalized therapies targeting the vaginal microbiome.
Bacterial Vaginosis Biofilms: Challenges to Current Therapies and Emerging Solutions
February 12, 2026
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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This review discusses bacterial vaginosis, biofilm formation, and emerging therapies targeting biofilms for more effective BV treatments.
What was reviewed?
The paper provides a comprehensive review of bacterial vaginosis (BV), its association with biofilm formation, and challenges related to current treatment strategies. The review explores the microbial composition of BV, focusing on the primary pathogen, Gardnerella vaginalis, and the complex nature of BV biofilms, which contribute to the high recurrence rates of the infection. The review presents emerging therapeutic alternatives targeting BV biofilms, including natural antimicrobial agents and biofilm disruptors.
Who was reviewed?
The review examined various studies, clinical trials, and scientific literature that explored the microbial nature of bacterial vaginosis (BV), focusing on biofilm formation and its implications for treatment. It also reviewed the role of G. vaginalis and other anaerobic bacteria in the pathogenesis of BV, along with current and emerging treatment strategies targeting these biofilms. The review synthesized information from studies that investigated the efficacy of traditional therapies, such as metronidazole and clindamycin, as well as novel biofilm-disrupting agents like DNases, probiotics, and plant-derived antimicrobials.
What were the most important findings?
The review emphasizes the polymicrobial nature of bacterial vaginosis, with a marked decrease in beneficial lactobacilli species and an increase in anaerobic bacteria, such as Gardnerella vaginalis, Atopobium vaginae, Mobiluncus spp., Bacteroides spp., and Prevotella spp. A major highlight of the paper is the critical role of biofilms in BV pathogenesis, as these microbial communities exhibit significant resistance to conventional antibiotic treatments like metronidazole. This biofilm formation creates a dense matrix that protects the bacteria from immune system clearance and limits the effectiveness of standard therapies. Biofilms composed primarily of G. vaginalis are particularly resilient, contributing to treatment failure and the recurrence of BV. The review further discusses how researchers are exploring novel therapies, such as DNases, retrocyclins, probiotics, and plant-derived antimicrobials, to overcome biofilm-related antibiotic resistance. The paper also identifies the need for more research into multi-species biofilm interactions to develop more effective treatments for BV.
What are the implications of this review?
The implications of this review are significant for the clinical management of BV. The findings highlight the need for new treatment strategies that can specifically target biofilms, which are a major obstacle to the eradication of BV. Given the high recurrence rates of BV despite current antibiotic therapies, exploring alternative treatments that can disrupt biofilm structures, such as biofilm disruptors and natural antimicrobials, is essential. Clinicians may benefit from being aware of emerging treatments that could offer better outcomes, particularly for recurrent BV cases that do not respond well to standard treatments. Additionally, the review underscores the importance of considering the entire microbiome, including lactobacilli, when developing treatment plans to ensure that therapies do not disrupt the beneficial microbial community, which is crucial for vaginal health.
Bacterial Vaginosis Is Associated with Variation in Dietary Indices
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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A high glycemic load diet increases bacterial vaginosis (BV) risk, while nutrient-rich diets lower it. This study highlights the link between diet quality and vaginal microbiome balance, providing insights for clinicians on how dietary interventions may help prevent BV.
What was Studied?
This study examined how dietary indices, including glycemic load (GL), glycemic index (GI), the Healthy Eating Index (HEI), and the Naturally Nutrient Rich (NNR) score, influence bacterial vaginosis (BV) prevalence, progression, and persistence. Researchers aimed to determine whether overall dietary quality, rather than just individual nutrients, affects vaginal microbiome balance.
Who was Studied?
The study analyzed data from 1,735 nonpregnant women aged 15 – 44, primarily African American (85.5%), recruited from health clinics in Birmingham, Alabama. Researchers assessed annual dietary intake using the Block98 food frequency questionnaire and classified vaginal flora using Nugent Gram-stain criteria.
Most Important Findings
A higher glycemic load significantly increased the risk of BV. For every 10-unit increase in GL, the likelihood of BV progression and persistence rose. High-GL diets, which result in frequent blood sugar spikes, may contribute to vaginal flora imbalances and increased oxidative stress, reducing the body's ability to maintain a protective microbiome.
Conversely, women with higher NNR scores, which reflect greater nutrient density per calorie, had a lower risk of BV. This suggests that diets rich in vitamins, minerals, and fiber may help support a healthy vaginal microbiome. HEI scores above 70, indicating greater adherence to dietary guidelines, were associated with a reduced BV risk, but this association was only borderline significant after adjusting for confounding factors.
Unlike GL, which considers both carbohydrate quality and quantity, glycemic index (GI) showed no clear link to BV. Because GI only measures how quickly food raises blood sugar without accounting for quantity, it may not fully capture how diet affects vaginal health.
Implications of the Study
This study highlights the role of diet quality in vaginal microbiome health. Clinicians should counsel patients on the risks of high-GL diets and emphasize nutrient-dense food choices to lower BV risk. Future research should explore how dietary modifications influence BV outcomes and whether interventions targeting glycemic load can serve as preventive measures.
Bacterial Vaginosis Recurrence: Drivers, Challenges, and Treatment
February 12, 2026
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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This review explores bacterial vaginosis recurrence, emphasizing microbial persistence, reinfection, and partner treatment. It highlights the need for improved therapeutic strategies, including antimicrobial and microbiome-focused approaches, to reduce recurrence and improve long-term cure rates.
What Was Reviewed?
This review examines the drivers of bacterial vaginosis (BV) recurrence and the challenges and opportunities in partner treatment. BV is a prevalent vaginal condition with a high recurrence rate, often within six months of treatment. The review explores the mechanisms behind recurrence, including reinfection from untreated sexual partners, the persistence of BV-associated bacteria (BVAB), and the role of biofilms. It also discusses past research on whether treating male and female sexual partners can improve BV cure rates and the barriers to implementing partner treatment in clinical settings.
Who Was Reviewed?
The review evaluates studies involving women diagnosed with BV, particularly those who experience recurrent infections. It also incorporates research on the sexual partners of these women, analyzing the microbial composition of the male urethra and penile skin and how bacterial exchange between partners may contribute to reinfection. Clinical trials on partner treatment strategies, including those testing antibiotics like metronidazole and clindamycin, are also assessed.
Key Findings and Microbial Associations
BV recurrence has multiple causes, with reinfection from sexual partners being an overlooked factor. The review shows that BV-associated bacteria like Gardnerella vaginalis, Atopobium vaginae, and Prevotella spp. can transfer between partners, including heterosexual and same-sex couples. This supports the idea that BV may have a sexually transmissible component.
Past studies on partner treatment have had mixed results, leading to skepticism. Many were limited by small sample sizes, inconsistent diagnostic criteria, and short follow-ups. However, newer research suggests that when partners adhere to antibiotics, recurrence rates may drop. The review highlights challenges in partner treatment trials, including low participation and the need for therapies targeting bacterial biofilms and antimicrobial resistance.
Implications of the Review
BV’s high recurrence rate not only causes discomfort but also increases risks like preterm birth and STI susceptibility. This review calls for a fresh approach, including reconsidering partner treatment. While current guidelines do not recommend treating partners, emerging evidence suggests that doing so, alongside therapies that promote a stable, lactobacilli-dominated vaginal microbiota, may improve long-term cure rates. Future studies should refine partner treatment, enhance antimicrobial strategies, and develop microbiome-targeted therapies to prevent recurrence.
Bacterial Vaginosis: Current Diagnostic Avenues and Future Opportunities
February 12, 2026
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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This review explores bacterial vaginosis diagnostics, highlighting traditional limitations and emerging molecular solutions. Advances in sequencing, metabolomics, and AI-driven analysis offer promising improvements, enhancing diagnostic accuracy and treatment strategies.
What was reviewed?
This review examines the current methods for bacterial vaginosis (BV) diagnosis and explores future opportunities for improving diagnostic accuracy. It provides an in-depth analysis of traditional clinical and microscopic diagnostic methods, their limitations, and the potential of emerging molecular, metabolomic, and proteomic approaches. The review also highlights the microbiome’s role in BV pathogenesis and discusses how advances in sequencing technologies and biomarker discovery could enhance diagnosis and treatment.
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesizes findings from multiple studies on BV diagnosis, including research on bacterial populations associated with BV, clinical diagnostic criteria, and emerging molecular techniques. It draws from a wide range of studies on vaginal microbiome composition, molecular assays, and point-of-care (POC) diagnostic tools.
What were the most important findings?
Bacterial vaginosis occurs when the vaginal microbiome shifts, reducing lactobacilli and increasing anaerobic bacteria like Gardnerella vaginalis and Atopobium vaginae. Traditional diagnostic methods, including Amsel’s criteria and the Nugent score, have been widely used for decades. However, both have limitations, especially in detecting asymptomatic cases.
Amsel’s criteria require at least three of four clinical signs: thin discharge, high vaginal pH, clue cells, and a fishy odor. The Nugent score relies on Gram staining and bacterial morphotypes. Both methods are subjective and prone to interobserver variability, leading to misdiagnosis, particularly in resource-limited settings.
Molecular diagnostic tools offer better sensitivity and specificity. Nucleic acid amplification tests (NAATs) detect multiple BV-associated bacteria in a single test, making diagnoses more accurate. Next-generation sequencing (NGS) has revealed that BV results from a polymicrobial community, not a single pathogen.
New diagnostic approaches include metabolomics and proteomics, which analyze metabolic byproducts and proteins linked to BV. The sialidase enzyme, produced by BV-associated bacteria, is a promising diagnostic marker. Proteomic studies have identified immune-related proteins that change in BV. These molecular markers could improve diagnostic accuracy and enable personalized treatments.
Artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning are also being explored for BV diagnosis. AI models analyze microbiome data, metabolomic signatures, and patient outcomes to identify patterns. These advancements could enhance diagnostic precision, especially in clinical settings where fast, accurate, and cost-effective tests are essential.
What are the implications of this review?
The findings highlight the urgent need for improved BV diagnostics, especially in resource-limited settings where syndromic management is common. Relying only on symptoms often leads to misdiagnosis and unnecessary antibiotic use, increasing resistance. Shifting to molecular diagnostics and biomarker-based testing could improve accuracy, reduce misdiagnosis, and enhance treatment outcomes. A key takeaway is that BV diagnosis should go beyond bacterial identification. It should include microbial interactions, biofilm presence, metabolic activity, and immune responses. Rapid point-of-care molecular tests, combined with machine learning and biomarker-based approaches, could greatly improve BV diagnosis and management. Understanding microbial communities and biofilms in BV may also lead to better treatments, including microbiome-targeted therapies and potential vaccines. Since BV increases the risk of sexually transmitted infections, preterm birth, and reproductive issues, improving diagnostic accuracy is essential for better patient outcomes.
Bacterial Vaginosis: What Do We Currently Know?
February 12, 2026
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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This review explores bacterial vaginosis (BV), emphasizing microbial shifts, diagnostic challenges, and treatment strategies. It highlights the role of biofilms, emerging molecular diagnostics, and microbiome-based therapies like probiotics and vaginal microbiota transplantation, advocating for more effective, microbiome-informed approaches to managing BV and its recurrence.
What Was Reviewed?
This review provides an in-depth exploration of bacterial vaginosis (BV), focusing on its etiology, diagnostic challenges, and treatment strategies. It explores the link between the vaginal microbiome and bacterial vaginosis, highlighting the shift from a Lactobacillus-dominated environment to one dominated by anaerobic bacteria like Gardnerella vaginalis and Atopobium vaginae. The review evaluates molecular and clinical diagnostic tools such as Amsel’s criteria, Nugent scoring, and PCR-based methods. Additionally, it highlights the limitations of antibiotic treatments due to high recurrence rates. It also explores emerging therapies, including probiotics, vaginal microbiota transplantation (VMT), and biofilm-targeting strategies.
Who Was Reviewed?
This review synthesizes data from various studies examining the vaginal microbiome and its role in BV. It considers research on women of reproductive age from different geographic regions and ethnic backgrounds, recognizing the variability in vaginal microbiota composition. The review also addresses the broader clinical implications of BV, notably its links to sexually transmitted infections, pregnancy complications, and reproductive health.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The most significant finding is that BV is a polymicrobial shift, not an infection caused by a single pathogen. A healthy vaginal microbiome is dominated by Lactobacillusspp, but BV causes Lactobacilli decline and anaerobe overgrowth, including Gardnerella vaginalis and Prevotella spp. These bacteria form biofilms that contribute to antibiotic resistance and high recurrence rates.
The review highlights the flaws in traditional diagnostic methods. Amsel’s criteria and Nugent scoring are widely used but lack precision. PCR-based molecular diagnostics provide more accuracy and reliability. Emerging enzymatic and nanotechnology-based diagnostic tools offer potential advancements in BV detection.
Treatment challenges are another crucial aspect. Standard antibiotic therapies, including metronidazole and clindamycin, have a 50% recurrence rate within six months. This has driven interest in alternative approaches, including probiotics aimed at restoring Lactobacillus populations, vaginal microbiota transplantation (VMT) as a means of repopulating healthy microbiota, and biofilm-disrupting agents such as DNases and antimicrobial peptides. Additionally, the review explores the role of sexual transmission in BV persistence and the potential benefits of treating male partners.
What Are the Implications of This Review?
The findings in this review emphasize the need for more effective diagnostic and therapeutic approaches for BV. The recognition of BV as a polymicrobial dysbiosis rather than a traditional infection suggests that future treatments should focus on restoring a healthy microbiome rather than eliminating bacteria. The high recurrence rate associated with antibiotic treatments highlights the need for strategies that address biofilm-associated resistance and microbiome resilience.
Probiotic-based interventions and vaginal microbiota transplantation could redefine BV treatment by offering long-term microbiome stability. Moreover, the identification of novel diagnostic biomarkers and rapid molecular techniques may enhance early detection and targeted interventions. Clinically, incorporating microbiome-focused therapies into gynecologic and obstetric care could improve reproductive health outcomes by reducing BV-related complications significantly. BV complications include increased susceptibility to sexually transmitted infections and adverse pregnancy events, emphasizing the need for innovative microbiome-based treatments urgently. The review ultimately advocates for a shift toward microbiome-informed medical strategies for managing BV.
Boric Acid for the Treatment of Vaginitis: New Possibilities Using an Old Anti-Infective Agent
February 12, 2026
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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Boric acid offers promising results for treating resistant vulvovaginal candidiasis, bacterial vaginosis, and trichomoniasis. It shows comparable efficacy to oral itraconazole, with fewer adverse events.
What was studied?
The study focused on the use of boric acid as a treatment for various types of microbial vaginitis, specifically vulvovaginal candidiasis (VVC), bacterial vaginosis (BV), and trichomoniasis. Researchers aimed to compare its efficacy with conventional treatments and determine its potential as an alternative or supplementary therapy.
Who was studied?
This review evaluated clinical trials, observational studies, and interventional studies, including case series and reports. It did not focus on a single group of patients but instead summarized findings from various studies involving individuals with VVC, BV, and trichomoniasis. The studies reviewed ranged from those using boric acid for mycotic vaginitis to those evaluating its effect on bacterial vaginosis and trichomoniasis.
What were the most important findings?
The systematic review revealed that boric acid (BA) demonstrated a promising efficacy profile in treating vulvovaginal candidiasis (VVC), particularly in cases caused by Candida glabrata, which is resistant to azole treatments. The review found an average cure rate of 76% for VVC treated with BA. For recurrent bacterial vaginosis, BA combined with 5-nitroimidazole showed effective control, with promising results for reducing relapses. Maintenance therapy with BA also showed similar efficacy to oral itraconazole for VVC and BV, suggesting it may serve as an alternative for managing these conditions. For Trichomonas vaginalis, prolonged boric acid monotherapy cured a substantial portion of patients with recurrent infections, although the exact regimen still requires further research. The study found that the adverse events associated with boric acid treatment were minimal, with a 7.3% occurrence of mild, temporary side effects.
What are the implications of this study?
The rising antimicrobial resistance in vaginitis pathogens, especially those resistant to conventional treatments such as azoles and metronidazole, makes boric acid an appealing alternative. Its broad-spectrum antimicrobial action, including the inhibition of biofilm formation, makes it a strong candidate for treating persistent and recurrent infections. The study suggests that boric acid could be integrated into treatment regimens for patients with recurrent vulvovaginal candidiasis, bacterial vaginosis, and trichomoniasis, offering an option for cases resistant to other therapies.
Cannabidiol (CBD) Acts as an Antioxidant on Gardnerella vaginalis
February 12, 2026
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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CBD shows antibacterial and antibiofilm activity against Gardnerella vaginalis, suggesting its potential as a novel treatment for bacterial vaginosis, particularly in biofilm-related infections.
What was Studied?
This study focused on the antibacterial and antibiofilm effects of cannabidiol (CBD) on Gardnerella vaginalis, a bacterium commonly associated with bacterial vaginosis (BV). CBD, a non-psychoactive compound derived from cannabis, is known for its antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, and antibacterial properties. The researchers explored how CBD affects G. vaginalis, particularly its metabolic activity, survivability, and biofilm formation. The study examined CBD’s potential as a therapeutic agent to combat BV, given the challenges of high recurrence and resistance to conventional treatments.
Who was Studied?
The clinical isolates of Gardnerella vaginalis were the primary subjects of this study. These bacterial strains were obtained from patients with BV and were treated with CBD to assess its impact on their viability, metabolic activity, and biofilm production. The research team studied the bacterium’s response to CBD in vitro, particularly to changes in membrane potential, reactive oxygen species (ROS) levels, and the bacterial ability to form and maintain biofilms.
What were the most Important Findings?
The study demonstrated that CBD has potent antibacterial effects on G. vaginalis, with a minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) of 2.5 µg/mL. CBD was found to reduce metabolic activity and cause a significant decrease in bacterial survivability. It achieved this by inducing rapid membrane hyperpolarization and cytoplasmic ATP leakage without increasing membrane permeability, which suggests a non-lytic mode of action. CBD exhibited antioxidant properties by reducing intracellular ROS levels in a dose-dependent manner. Notably, CBD not only inhibited the formation of new biofilms but also disrupted preformed mature biofilms of G. vaginalis. The metabolic activity and biomass of these biofilms were significantly reduced following CBD treatment, with up to 90% reduction at higher concentrations. Notably, the free radical scavenger α-tocopherol neutralized CBD's antibacterial effect, highlighting the role of reactive oxygen species in CBD’s action.
What are the Implications of this Study?
This research suggests that CBD could be a novel therapeutic agent for treating BV caused by Gardnerella vaginalis, especially given its dual action on both live bacteria and biofilms. Biofilms are notoriously difficult to treat with conventional antibiotics, and their disruption is a critical step in reducing the recurrence rates of BV. CBD's ability to both prevent biofilm formation and reduce the viability of mature biofilms makes it a promising candidate for overcoming current treatment limitations, such as antibiotic resistance and the persistence of infection due to biofilm protection. Furthermore, the antioxidant properties of CBD may offer additional benefits in managing oxidative stress in the vaginal environment. These findings warrant further exploration into the potential clinical applications of CBD for BV, particularly as a safer and more effective alternative to existing treatments that may disrupt the vaginal microbiota.
Clinicians’ use of Intravaginal Boric Acid Maintenance Therapy for Recurrent Vulvovaginal Candidiasis and Bacterial Vaginosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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This study evaluates the use of intravaginal boric acid for recurrent vulvovaginal candidiasis and bacterial vaginosis, highlighting its long-term tolerability, high patient satisfaction, and rare side effects.
What was Studied?
This study examined the use of intravaginal boric acid (BA) maintenance therapy in women with recurrent vulvovaginal candidiasis (rVVC) and recurrent bacterial vaginosis (rBV). The researchers performed a retrospective chart review to evaluate clinicians' approaches to prescribing BA for these conditions, focusing on dosage, duration of use, patient satisfaction, and side effects. The study aimed to assess the effectiveness, tolerability, and satisfaction of long-term BA therapy in real-world clinical settings.
Who was Studied?
The study reviewed the medical records of 78 patients from a Johns Hopkins University-affiliated outpatient gynecology clinic. These patients were prescribed intravaginal BA for either rVVC, rBV, or both conditions. The patients were selected based on specific criteria, including multiple visits where BA usage was documented, and those who were prescribed a long-term BA regimen (more than a month). Patients were excluded if there was insufficient documentation regarding the initiation or duration of BA use.
What were the Most Important Findings?
The study revealed that maintenance therapy with intravaginal boric acid was commonly prescribed for rVVC and rBV, with an average duration of use estimated at 13.3 months. A significant portion of patients (37.2%) used BA for a year or more, with some patients continuing therapy for more than three years. The treatment regimen typically included a 7-14 day induction phase with BA, followed by a maintenance phase where patients used 300mg or 600mg of BA 2-3 times per week.
Despite the lack of long-term safety data, the study found high patient satisfaction with BA therapy (76.9%), though a small number of patients (16.7%) were dissatisfied, typically due to continued or worsening symptoms. The study also indicated that patients with rVVC were more likely to receive BA as part of an antifungal induction regimen, while patients with rBV were often prescribed antibiotics in addition to BA. Side effects were rare, with a few patients reporting vaginal irritation or leaking, but these effects were generally manageable.
What are the Implications of this Study?
This study provides real-world evidence supporting the use of intravaginal boric acid as a long-term treatment for recurrent vulvovaginal candidiasis and bacterial vaginosis. Despite the absence of large-scale prospective studies, the findings suggest that BA is well-tolerated over extended periods and that it may be an effective option for women with azole-resistant infections. This study's insights into patient satisfaction, side effects, and clinical practice could inform future treatment guidelines and clinical trials for rVVC and rBV. However, more robust, prospective studies are needed to confirm the efficacy and long-term safety of BA maintenance therapy and to compare it with other available treatments.
Combatting antibiotic resistance in Gardnerella vaginalis: A comparative in silico investigation for drug target identification
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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This study identifies phospho-2-dehydro-3-deoxyheptonate aldolase as a drug target in Gardnerella vaginalis and highlights five FDA-approved compounds as potential treatments for bacterial vaginosis.
Who was Studied?
This study focused on combating antibiotic resistance in Gardnerella vaginalis, a bacterium frequently associated with bacterial vaginosis (BV). The researchers employed an in silico approach to identify potential drug targets and therapeutic strategies. By utilizing subtractive genomics and comparative genomics, they analyzed the G. vaginalis proteome to find unique proteins crucial for bacterial survival and virulence, which could serve as drug targets. The study further explored FDA-approved compounds using virtual screening techniques to identify potential inhibitors of these targets. Additionally, the study performed detailed protein structural modeling, docking, and ADMET profiling of the shortlisted compounds to assess their suitability for therapeutic use.
Who was Studied?
The study focused on Gardnerella vaginalis, which is often linked to bacterial vaginosis. It did not study individuals directly but rather the bacterial proteome, applying computational methods to identify druggable targets within the pathogen. The proteome of G. vaginalis was retrieved from the UniProt database, and various bioinformatics tools were used to identify potential drug targets based on their essentiality, uniqueness, and non-homology to human proteins.
What are the Most Important Findings?
The study identified phospho-2-dehydro-3-deoxyheptonate aldolase (PDA) as a promising drug target for G. vaginalis. This enzyme plays a critical role in the shikimate pathway, which is essential for producing aromatic amino acids and other metabolites. The identification of this enzyme is significant because it is non-homologous to human proteins, reducing the risk of off-target effects. The researchers found five compounds from the DrugBank database that could inhibit PDA effectively. The compounds demonstrated strong binding affinities to the target protein, suggesting their potential as effective treatments. Virtual screening results showed that these compounds have favorable pharmacokinetic profiles, including good bioavailability, and do not inhibit key enzymes responsible for drug metabolism, making them promising candidates for repurposing to treat G. vaginalis infections.
What are the Implications of the Study?
This study presents a significant step toward identifying new therapeutic strategies for treating G. vaginalis infections, particularly in the face of rising antibiotic resistance. The identification of PDA as a drug target opens up new possibilities for developing treatments that are more effective than current antibiotics, which often face resistance issues. The use of in silico methods, such as molecular docking and virtual screening, allows for the rapid identification of promising drug candidates, saving time and resources compared to traditional experimental approaches. By repurposing FDA-approved compounds, the study suggests a faster route to clinical application, potentially providing affordable treatments for bacterial vaginosis. This approach also highlights the potential of computational tools in addressing antibiotic resistance and discovering new uses for existing drugs.
Computational approach for drug discovery against Gardnerella vaginalis
February 12, 2026
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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This study identifies DAHP synthase as a promising drug target for Gardnerella vaginalis in the treatment of bacterial vaginosis, presenting potential inhibitors with favorable pharmacokinetics.
What was studied?
This study explored a computational approach for drug discovery to identify effective treatments against Gardnerella vaginalis (G. vaginalis), the primary cause of bacterial vaginosis (BV). The researchers used a combination of subtractive proteomics, molecular docking, molecular dynamics (MD) simulations, and ADMET profiling to identify potential drug targets and screen inhibitor compounds. The target enzyme selected for further analysis was 3-deoxy-7-phosphoheptulonate synthase (DAHP synthase), which plays a vital role in the shikimate pathway, crucial for the biosynthesis of essential aromatic amino acids.
Who was Studied?
The study analyzed the proteome of G. vaginalis strain. Using computational tools, the study identified 11 potential drug targets within the bacterium, with DAHP synthase being the chosen target for subsequent inhibitor screening. This approach leverages bioinformatics to identify non-homologous bacterial proteins that do not share similarities with the human proteome, reducing the risk of potential toxicity or off-target effects.
Most Important Findings
One of the study's major findings is the identification of DAHP synthase as a critical target for drug development against G. vaginalis. This enzyme is central to the shikimate pathway, which is involved in the production of aromatic amino acids like phenylalanine, tyrosine, and tryptophan, as well as secondary metabolites such as antibiotics and toxins. Inhibiting this enzyme could disrupt essential bacterial functions, impairing the pathogen's ability to thrive in the human host.
Additionally, the study highlighted several inhibitors from the ZINC database that showed high binding affinities towards DAHP synthase, surpassing even the control ligand phosphoenolpyruvate in docking simulations. ZINC98088375, in particular, exhibited promising pharmacokinetic properties, such as high bioavailability and solubility, making it a potential candidate for oral drug formulation. The study also examined the pharmacokinetic behavior of these compounds using PBPK modeling, revealing how health conditions can affect drug absorption and systemic circulation.
Implications of this Study?
This study highlights the potential of computational drug design in overcoming the challenges of treating BV, especially in the face of antibiotic resistance and biofilm formation by G. vaginalis. The identified DAHP synthase inhibitors could lead to more effective treatments, offering an alternative to existing therapies, which have limitations such as high recurrence rates and resistance. The study's approach to selecting drug targets based on subtractive proteomics ensures that only bacterial proteins that do not overlap with human proteins are targeted, thus minimizing toxic or off-target effects.
The ADMET profiling and PBPK modeling offer insight into the safety and efficacy of the compounds, making them potential candidates for further development in clinical settings. This integrated-omics approach provides a rational framework for discovering new therapeutics for BV, highlighting the importance of personalized medicine based on individual health conditions.
Contribution of Essential Oils to the Fight against Microbial Biofilms—A Review
February 12, 2026
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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This review explores the antimicrobial potential of essential oils (EOs) in combating microbial biofilms, highlighting their effectiveness against pathogens like S. aureus and C. albicans. EOs can serve as an alternative or adjunct to conventional antibiotics, particularly in medical device infections.
What was reviewed?
The review paper focuses on the contribution of essential oils (EOs) in combating microbial biofilms, with an emphasis on their antimicrobial properties and the potential application in medical, food, and other industrial sectors. The review explores the growing body of scientific data showing the effectiveness of essential oils against biofilms, which are known to contribute to persistent infections, particularly those associated with medical devices and chronic infections. The paper provides an in-depth analysis of several studies that highlight how EOs, through their diverse chemical compositions, possess the ability to disrupt biofilm formation by bacteria and fungi.
Who was reviewed
The review analyzed various scientific literature and research papers that evaluated the effectiveness of essential oils in combating microbial biofilms. The focus was on assessing how different essential oils have antimicrobial properties that can disrupt biofilm formation and enhance the effectiveness of traditional treatments.
What were the most important findings?
The most important finding of this review is the significant role essential oils (EOs) can play in combating microbial biofilms, which are highly resistant to conventional antibiotics. The review outlines various essential oils, such as those derived from Melaleuca alternifolia (tea tree oil), Lavandula angustifolia (lavender oil), and Cinnamomum zeylanicum (cinnamon oil), that have been proven to inhibit or eradicate biofilms. Specifically, the antimicrobial components of EOs, including terpenes and terpenoids, act by permeabilizing bacterial membranes, which makes biofilms more susceptible to antimicrobial treatments. The review emphasizes that these oils not only affect planktonic bacteria but also disrupt biofilms formed on surfaces, which is crucial in the context of medical devices like catheters and prosthetics.
In terms of microbial associations, the review focuses on EOs' efficacy against a range of pathogenic organisms, including Staphylococcus aureus, Escherichia coli, and Candida species. Biofilms formed by these organisms on medical devices are notably resistant to conventional treatments, and the use of EOs could offer a complementary or alternative approach. The synergistic effect of combining EOs with traditional antibiotics is also highlighted, as this combination increases the efficacy of treatment and reduces the chances of biofilm formation.
What are the implications of this review?
The review reveals the potential of essential oils as a safe and effective alternative to conventional antibiofilm agents, particularly for infections related to medical devices, foodborne illnesses, and oral health. The diverse chemical compositions of EOs reduce the likelihood of microbial resistance, a growing concern with traditional antibiotics. Furthermore, the combination of EOs with other antimicrobial treatments offers promising results for tackling biofilm-related infections more effectively. The study suggests that further clinical trials and the optimization of EO formulations are needed to fully harness their potential in combating biofilms, especially in medical and industrial applications. Incorporating EO-based therapies into current infection control practices could help address the persistent problem of biofilm-associated infections, which are difficult to treat with traditional antibiotics alone.
Current Treatment of Bacterial Vaginosis—Limitations and Need for Innovation
February 12, 2026
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This review reveals high BV recurrence rates after metronidazole or clindamycin treatment due to microbial biofilms and potential sexual transmission. While both antibiotics show similar short-term efficacy, they differ in resistance patterns. Biofilm disruptors and partner treatment may improve outcomes, but better diagnostics and combination therapies are urgently needed.
What was Reviewed?
This comprehensive review critically examines the current limitations in bacterial vaginosis (BV) treatment, with particular focus on the high recurrence rates following standard antibiotic therapies, including both metronidazole and clindamycin. The authors analyze the microbial factors contributing to treatment failure, specifically the role of polymicrobial biofilms and antimicrobial resistance patterns in Gardnerella vaginalis and other BV-associated bacteria. The review also explores emerging evidence for sexual transmission of BV-associated microorganisms and evaluates novel therapeutic approaches targeting biofilm disruption and partner treatment strategies.
Who was Reviewed?
The review synthesizes data from multiple clinical trials and observational studies involving women with recurrent BV across diverse populations. It incorporates microbiological research on vaginal and penile microbiota, including studies demonstrating the presence of BV-associated bacteria in male sexual partners. The analysis also examines in vitro studies of biofilm formation and disruption, as well as limited clinical trials of adjunctive therapies like boric acid and probiotics.
Key Findings and Microbial Associations
The review highlights that BV represents a profound dysbiosis where protective Lactobacillus species, particularly L. crispatus, are replaced by a polymicrobial consortium including Gardnerella vaginalis, Atopobium vaginae, and various Clostridiales species. These pathogens form resilient biofilms that protect them from both metronidazole and clindamycin, the two first-line antibiotics for BV. While short-term cure rates approach 80% for both medications, recurrence rates exceed 50% within 6-12 months. The review notes important differences between the antibiotics: clindamycin appears more effective against certain biofilm-embedded pathogens like A. vaginae but may promote clindamycin-resistant anaerobic gram-negative rods, while metronidazole faces challenges with intrinsically resistant G. vaginalis clades. Both antibiotics fail to address the potential sexual transmission of BV-associated bacteria, which are detectable in male partners' genital microbiota and may contribute to reinfection.
Implications of the Review
The review underscores that current antibiotic regimens, whether using metronidazole or clindamycin, are insufficient for long-term BV control due to biofilm persistence and potential sexual transmission. Clinicians should continue following treatment guidelines but recognize these limitations when managing recurrent cases. The findings suggest several important considerations: vaginal clindamycin may be preferable for certain BV subtypes or in pregnancy, while metronidazole remains the most widely studied option. For recurrent BV, adjunctive approaches like biofilm disruptors (boric acid, DNase) or partner treatment may be worth considering, though more research is needed. The review emphasizes the need for improved diagnostics to identify BV subtypes and resistance patterns, as well as the development of combination therapies targeting both pathogens and biofilms. Public health measures promoting condom use and further research into sexual transmission dynamics could help reduce BV recurrence at the population level.
Dietary Intake of Selected Nutrients Affects Bacterial Vaginosis in Women
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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Higher dietary fat intake increases the risk of bacterial vaginosis (BV), while folate, vitamin E, and calcium may lower severe BV risk. This study suggests dietary interventions could play a role in managing BV, offering insights for clinicians on how nutrition affects vaginal microbiome balance.
What was Studied?
This study examined the relationship between dietary intake and the presence of bacterial vaginosis (BV) in women. Researchers assessed how macronutrient and micronutrient consumption, particularly fat intake and essential vitamins, influenced the risk of BV and severe BV.
Who was Studied?
The study analyzed data from 1,521 non-pregnant women, aged 15–45, who were part of a larger longitudinal study of vaginal flora in Birmingham, Alabama. The majority (86%) were African American. Participants underwent clinical assessments and completed a food frequency questionnaire.
Most Important Findings
The study found a significant association between dietary fat intake and the risk of BV. Women consuming higher amounts of total fat, saturated fat, and monounsaturated fat had an increased likelihood of BV and severe BV. Total fat intake was linked to a 50% higher risk of BV, while saturated fat and monounsaturated fat were particularly associated with severe BV.
Conversely, higher intakes of folate, vitamin E, and calcium were associated with a reduced risk of severe BV. These nutrients may support local immune function, potentially counteracting the microbial imbalance seen in BV. Energy intake had a marginal association with BV, while carbohydrate and protein intake showed no significant links. The study suggests that a high-fat diet may alter vaginal microflora, increase vaginal pH, and contribute to BV development.
Implications of the Study
Diet plays a crucial role in vaginal health, with fat consumption significantly influencing BV risk. Clinicians can reduce BV risk by advising patients to lower fat intake and increase folate, vitamin E, and calcium. Researchers should further explore how dietary fat disrupts vaginal microbiota and whether targeted nutritional changes can serve as effective prevention strategies.
Dietary Patterns and Bacterial Vaginosis: is there any association?
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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A nutrient-rich diet lowers bacterial vaginosis (BV) risk, while processed foods increase it. This study highlights the importance of dietary choices in vaginal microbiome balance, offering insights for clinicians on how diet influences BV risk.
What was Studied?
Researchers investigated how dietary acid load and adherence to the Alternative Healthy Eating Index (AHEI) affect bacterial vaginosis (BV) risk. They aimed to determine whether dietary patterns and acid-producing foods influence the vaginal microbiome and BV prevalence.
Who was Studied?
The study included 143 women diagnosed with BV and 151 healthy controls, aged 18–45, from a gynecology clinic in Tehran, Iran. Researchers assessed dietary intake using a validated food frequency questionnaire and diagnosed BV using the Amsel criteria.
Most Important Findings
A high AHEI score significantly lowered BV risk. Women in the highest AHEI tertile had a 75% lower chance of developing BV. Consuming more vegetables, nuts, legumes, and unprocessed meats further reduced BV odds. In contrast, high intakes of sugar-sweetened beverages, trans fats, and sodium increased BV risk by up to three times.
Dietary acid load, measured by potential renal acid load (PRAL) and net endogenous acid production (NEAP), showed no significant link to BV. This suggests that overall diet quality, rather than dietary acid-base balance, plays a more critical role in BV risk.
Microbiome analysis linked high AHEI adherence to a Lactobacillus-dominant vaginal environment, which protects against BV. In contrast, poor dietary choices promoted the growth of BV-associated bacteria such as Gardnerella vaginalis, Atopobium spp., and Prevotella spp..
Implications of the Study
Diet quality directly affects vaginal microbiome health. Clinicians should encourage patients to adopt a plant-based diet rich in vegetables, nuts, and legumes while limiting sugar-sweetened beverages and trans fats. Future research should explore whether dietary interventions can serve as an effective strategy for BV prevention and management.
Diversity of Vaginal Microbiota Associated with Bacterial Vaginosis
February 12, 2026
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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This study analyzed vaginal microbiota diversity in women with BV using molecular techniques. It identified key BV-associated bacteria and emphasized the need for molecular diagnostics and microbiome-targeted therapies.
What Was Studied?
This study analyzed the diversity and composition of vaginal microbiota in women with bacterial vaginosis (BV) using molecular techniques. Researchers compared the microbial communities of BV-positive and healthy women to identify bacterial associations with BV and determine potential diagnostic markers.
Who Was Studied?
The study included 50 women diagnosed with BV and 50 healthy women from China. Researchers collected vaginal samples and analyzed bacterial diversity using PCR-denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE), 454 pyrosequencing, and quantitative PCR (qPCR).
Key Findings and Microbial Associations
The study revealed a significant increase in bacterial diversity in BV-positive women compared to healthy controls. The dominant bacterial phyla in BV included Bacteroidetes, Actinobacteria, and Fusobacteria, whereas healthy women had microbiomes dominated by Firmicutes, particularly Lactobacillus species.
Several bacterial genera were strongly associated with BV, including Gardnerella, Atopobium, Megasphaera, Eggerthella, Aerococcus, Leptotrichia/Sneathia, Prevotella, and Papillibacter. These bacteria may serve as potential molecular markers for BV diagnosis. While no single bacterium could be used as a definitive BV indicator, the presence of multiple BV-associated genera strongly correlated with the condition.
The study also highlighted the limitations of traditional culture-based methods in capturing the complexity of BV microbiota. High-throughput sequencing provided a more detailed picture of the vaginal bacterial ecosystem, revealing low-abundance taxa that previous studies had overlooked.
Implications of the Study
These findings reinforce that BV is a polymicrobial condition rather than an infection caused by a single pathogen. The increased bacterial diversity in BV underscores the need for diagnostic approaches that consider microbial community shifts rather than relying solely on individual bacterial markers.
The study supports the development of molecular-based diagnostic tools targeting BV-associated bacteria for more accurate detection. Additionally, understanding microbial interactions in BV could lead to microbiome-targeted therapies rather than traditional broad-spectrum antibiotic treatments, which often fail to prevent recurrence.
Dynamics of Vaginal Microbiota Before, During and After Episodes of Bacterial Vaginosis
February 12, 2026
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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This study analyzed daily changes in vaginal microbiota before, during, and after BV episodes. Findings highlight microbial instability, early dysbiosis markers, and the need for microbiome-focused BV treatments.
What Was Studied?
This study investigated the daily fluctuations of vaginal microbiota before, during, and after bacterial vaginosis (BV) episodes. Researchers aimed to understand how microbial communities shift over time, particularly in symptomatic and asymptomatic BV cases. They sought to identify microbial patterns that could predict BV onset, persistence, and resolution.
Who Was Studied?
The study followed 25 women over 10 weeks, including 15 with symptomatic BV, six with asymptomatic BV, and four without BV. Participants self-collected vaginal samples daily, which researchers analyzed using 16S rRNA sequencing. The study also recorded vaginal symptoms, menstrual cycle phases, and sexual behaviors to assess how these factors influenced microbiota changes.
Key Findings and Microbial Associations
The study revealed that vaginal microbiota exhibit significant daily fluctuations, especially in women with BV. Before BV episodes, microbial diversity increased, with a rise in anaerobes such as Gardnerella vaginalis, Atopobium vaginae, Prevotella spp., and Megasphaera spp.. Women with symptomatic BV showed a notable decline in Lactobacillus crispatus, while Lactobacillus iners persisted at low levels, suggesting its role in transitional microbial states.
During symptomatic BV, bacterial communities became more heterogeneous, with a dominance of strict anaerobes and a rise in vaginal pH. Some women experienced rapid shifts in microbiota, while others maintained a stable but Lactobacillus-depleted state. Interestingly, after antibiotic treatment, most women’s microbiota temporarily shifted toward a Lactobacillus-dominated state, particularly L. iners. However, within 2-4 weeks, many reverted to their pre-treatment microbial profiles, indicating a high risk of BV recurrence.
Implications of the Study
This study highlights the dynamic nature of vaginal microbiota and reinforces the need for improved BV management strategies. Since BV-associated bacteria can persist and re-emerge despite treatment, future therapies should focus on long-term microbial stabilization rather than short-term symptom relief. The findings suggest that monitoring microbiota changes over time could help predict BV recurrence and guide personalized treatment strategies.
Additionally, the study highlights the limitations of current diagnostic methods, such as Amsel’s criteria and Nugent scoring, which do not capture daily microbial shifts. Incorporating molecular techniques into routine diagnostics could improve BV detection and allow for earlier intervention by identifying microbial imbalances before symptoms develop. This approach could also help tailor treatment strategies, reduce recurrence rates, and support long-term vaginal microbiome stability.
Efficacy and Safety of Different Drugs for the Treatment of Bacterial Vaginosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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This meta-analysis compared BV treatments, identifying ornidazole as the most effective oral drug and sucrose/probiotics as top non-antibiotic options. Restoring Lactobacillus dominance is key, with vaginal probiotics and sucrose showing high cure rates.
What was reviewed?
This systematic review and network meta-analysis examined the efficacy and safety of multiple treatments for bacterial vaginosis (BV), a common vaginal dysbiosis characterized by the overgrowth of anaerobic bacteria and a decline in protective Lactobacillus species. The study compared antibiotics (metronidazole, clindamycin, tinidazole, secnidazole, ornidazole, ofloxacin) with non-antibiotic therapies (sucrose, probiotics) to determine the most effective and safest options for clinical use. The analysis incorporated both direct and indirect comparisons across studies, providing a comprehensive ranking of treatments based on cure rates and adverse effects.
Who was reviewed?
The meta-analysis included 42 randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and observational studies, encompassing patients diagnosed with BV. The studies were sourced from PubMed and Embase, ensuring a broad evaluation of existing evidence. Participants were treated with either oral or vaginal formulations of the studied drugs, allowing subgroup analyses to assess differences in administration routes.
Most Important Findings
The review highlighted that BV, characterized by a shift from Lactobacillus-dominant vaginal microbiota to an overgrowth of anaerobic bacteria like Gardnerella vaginalis, Atopobium vaginae, and Bacteroides spp., responds differently to treatments. Ornidazole emerged as highly effective, with a clinical cure rate superior to clindamycin and secnidazole. Sucrose and probiotics also showed promise, with sucrose ranking highest in clinical cure probability and probiotics demonstrating fewer adverse effects compared to metronidazole. Notably, metronidazole and secnidazole had higher adverse reaction rates than placebo, while probiotics and sucrose were safer alternatives. The study underscored the importance of restoring Lactobacillus dominance to rebalance vaginal microbiota, as sucrose promotes Lactobacillus growth by lowering vaginal pH, and probiotics directly reintroduce beneficial bacteria.
Implications of the Review
The findings suggest that ornidazole could be a superior alternative to traditional BV treatments like metronidazole, particularly for oral administration. Non-antibiotic options like sucrose and probiotics offer effective and safer alternatives, aligning with microbiome-focused therapies. Clinicians should consider these options, especially for patients with recurrent BV or those prone to adverse effects from antibiotics. The study also calls for more high-quality trials to validate these results and explore long-term outcomes.
Efficacy of Vitamin C Vaginal Tablets in Preventing Recurrence of Bacterial Vaginosis: A Randomized Controlled Trial
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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This study demonstrates that 250 mg vitamin C vaginal tablets reduce the recurrence of bacterial vaginosis, offering an effective and safe prophylactic treatment.
What was Studied?
This study evaluated the efficacy of vitamin C vaginal tablets as a prophylactic treatment for recurrent bacterial vaginosis (rBV). The research was a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial involving 142 women who had been successfully treated for a recent episode of BV using either metronidazole or clindamycin. These women were randomly assigned to receive either vitamin C or a placebo for six months, to prevent the recurrence of BV.
Who was Studied?
The study involved 142 women aged between 18 and 50 years who had a history of recurrent episodes of bacterial vaginosis, defined as at least two acute episodes in the past year. After successful treatment of a BV episode, participants were randomized into two groups: one receiving 250 mg of vitamin C vaginal tablets and the other a placebo. The study participants were monitored for recurrence of BV for six months.
What were the Most Important Findings?
The study demonstrated that the use of vitamin C vaginal tablets significantly reduced the recurrence rate of BV in women compared to the placebo group. After three months of treatment, the recurrence rate in the vitamin C group was 6.8%, whereas the placebo group had a recurrence rate of 14.7%. After six months, the recurrence rate was 16.2% in the vitamin C group, compared to 32.4% in the placebo group, which was statistically significant (P = 0.024). The vitamin C treatment also showed a significant pH-lowering effect, which is thought to contribute to the inhibition of pathogen overgrowth. Additionally, the Kaplan-Meier survival analysis indicated that the vitamin C group had a significantly lower probability of experiencing a BV relapse (P = 0.029). The treatment was well tolerated, with minimal adverse events, mostly local reactions like itching and burning.
What are the Implications of this Study?
The study highlights the potential of vitamin C vaginal tablets as an effective prophylactic treatment for recurrent bacterial vaginosis. By lowering vaginal pH, vitamin C helps re-establish a more acidic environment, preventing the overgrowth of harmful anaerobic bacteria, such as Gardnerella vaginalis. This finding is significant for women with recurrent BV, particularly those with antibiotic-resistant strains or those who experience frequent recurrences after antibiotic therapy. Given the safety profile and efficacy of vitamin C, it presents a promising alternative or complementary approach to current BV treatments, offering a simple and non-invasive way to manage this chronic condition.
Fighting polymicrobial biofilms in bacterial vaginosis
February 12, 2026
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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This review examines how polymicrobial biofilms contribute to bacterial vaginosis (BV) treatment failure and explores alternative strategies for improved therapy.
What was studied?
The study focused on the role of polymicrobial biofilms in bacterial vaginosis (BV) and their impact on treatment outcomes. The review highlights the complexity of BV, which is often driven by polymicrobial biofilms consisting of a variety of microorganisms, including Gardnerella vaginalis, Fannyhessea vaginae, Prevotella bivia, and other anaerobic bacteria. The study also explores how these biofilms contribute to BV's persistence and resistance to treatment.
Who was studied?
The review covers various studies that investigated the microbial composition of BV and its associated biofilms, focusing on the microbial species that are involved in these biofilm structures. It includes research on the role of Gardnerella vaginalis and other BV-associated pathogens in forming biofilms that contribute to the persistence of BV in the vaginal environment.
What were the most important findings?
The review underscores that the formation of polymicrobial biofilms is central to BV's persistence and recurrence. These biofilms provide a protective matrix that shields bacteria from the effects of antimicrobial agents like metronidazole and clindamycin. The study highlights that Gardnerella vaginalis and Fannyhessea vaginae are the dominant species within these biofilms, facilitating the growth of other BV-associated bacteria like Prevotella bivia. This synergistic interaction among bacteria enhances their resistance to treatment and increases the likelihood of BV recurrence.
The study also points out that biofilms are more difficult to treat than planktonic bacteria due to their reduced susceptibility to antibiotics, making treatment regimens less effective. Antibiotics can reduce the bacterial load, but biofilms often persist, leading to relapse.
This review also explores promising alternative strategies, such as probiotics, prebiotics, and phage endolysins. These approaches aim to restore the natural vaginal microbiota by promoting the growth of beneficial Lactobacillus species and reducing the pathogenic bacteria that drive BV.
What are the implications of this study?
The study highlights the critical role of polymicrobial biofilms in BV persistence and recurrence. It suggests that addressing the biofilm structure should be a key focus in developing more effective BV treatments. Traditional antibiotic therapies are insufficient in eliminating BV due to biofilm formation, which provides a physical barrier to treatment and contributes to the high rates of recurrence. The review points to the potential for alternative treatments, like probiotics and phage therapy, to improve patient outcomes by targeting these biofilms and restoring a balanced vaginal microbiome. However, the study stresses the need for further research to validate these therapies and establish their long-term effectiveness.
By understanding the polymicrobial nature of BV and its role in antimicrobial resistance, clinicians can better navigate the challenges of recurrent infections. Exploring non-antibiotic treatments and biofilm-targeting therapies offers a promising direction for more sustainable BV management, providing hope for patients who suffer from recurrent episodes that are resistant to conventional therapies.
Guidelines for the treatment of bacterial vaginosis: focus on tinidazole
February 12, 2026
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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This review evaluates the use of tinidazole in treating bacterial vaginosis, highlighting its efficacy, favorable pharmacokinetics, and reduced side effects compared to metronidazole, especially for recurrent cases.
What was reviewed?
The study reviewed the guidelines for treating bacterial vaginosis (BV), with a specific focus on using tinidazole. It assessed the effectiveness of tinidazole as an alternative treatment for BV, compared its pharmacokinetic profile with that of metronidazole, and discussed its potential for treating refractory and recurrent BV cases. The review also included data on various treatment regimens, including single and multiple doses, and compared outcomes with other treatment options like clindamycin.
Who was reviewed?
The review focused on the clinical guidelines and available studies regarding the treatment of bacterial vaginosis, specifically examining the role of tinidazole in BV management. It looked at various clinical trials, case studies, and clinical experiences from multiple populations, highlighting the use of tinidazole in both acute and recurrent BV cases.
What were the most important findings?
The review highlighted that tinidazole, a second-generation nitroimidazole antiprotozoal agent, is effective in treating BV, especially in cases that are refractory to metronidazole or in individuals who experience frequent relapses. Tinidazole has a favorable pharmacokinetic profile, including a longer half-life, which allows for reduced dosing frequency compared to metronidazole. The review also noted that tinidazole had fewer gastrointestinal side effects, such as nausea and metallic taste, compared to metronidazole, making it a more tolerable alternative. Tinidazole was effective in a variety of dosing regimens, including a single dose or multiple daily doses.
The study noted that both tinidazole and metronidazole effectively target the pathogens commonly associated with BV, although minimal comparative data exist to definitively establish the superiority of one over the other. Additionally, the review emphasized the importance of considering tinidazole for women with recurrent or difficult-to-treat BV, where metronidazole and other first-line treatments fail.
What are the implications of this study?
The findings emphasize the value of tinidazole as an effective alternative for treating bacterial vaginosis, particularly in cases that are resistant to or relapse after standard metronidazole treatment. Its improved pharmacokinetics and reduced side effects enhance its potential for long-term use in managing BV, offering a viable option for patients with recurrent infections. Given the persistent nature of BV and its association with complications such as preterm birth and pelvic inflammatory disease, the use of tinidazole could provide significant clinical benefits, particularly for those who do not respond to conventional therapies. The review also emphasizes the need for further research into head-to-head comparisons of tinidazole and metronidazole to more conclusively define their relative roles in BV treatment.
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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This study identifies three key bacterial vaginosis-associated species using DNA sequencing and phylogenetics. By classifying BVAB-1, BVAB-2, and BVAB-3, the findings advance understanding of BV’s microbial landscape and highlight new opportunities for targeted diagnostics and treatment.
What Was Studied?
This study analyzed bacterial vaginosis-associated bacteria (BVAB) at the species level using DNA sequencing and phylogenetic analysis. Researchers sought to identify the exact species of BVAB-1, BVAB-2, and BVAB-3, which were previously unknown and only classified by molecular signatures. By applying metagenomic sequencing and comparative analysis, the study aimed to provide clarity on the taxonomy of these bacteria and their role in bacterial vaginosis (BV) pathogenesis.
Who Was Studied?
The study analyzed bacterial DNA extracted from vaginal specimens of women diagnosed with BV. Using genomic data from previous metagenomic studies, the researchers compared BVAB sequences to known bacterial genomes, identifying their closest relatives and evolutionary relationships.
Key Findings and Microbial Associations
The study successfully identified the species of three previously unclassified BV-associated bacteria. BVAB-1 was found to be Clostridiales genomosp. BVAB-1 (later renamed Candidatus Lachnocurva vaginae), BVAB-2 was classified as Oscillospiraceae bacterium strain CHIC02, and BVAB-3 was identified as Mageeibacillus indolicus. These species, previously unknown, are strictly anaerobic and uncultivable in standard laboratory conditions. Their identification provides a more detailed understanding of the microbial shifts in BV and offers new insights into their role in vaginal dysbiosis.
The findings reinforce the idea that BV is not caused by a single pathogen but by a complex shift in the vaginal microbiome. The presence of BVAB-1, BVAB-2, and BVAB-3 in women with BV suggests they may contribute to the condition's persistence and recurrence. By using metagenomic sequencing and phylogenetic analysis, the study clarifies the taxonomy of these bacteria and their evolutionary relationships. This species-level identification allows for improved diagnostics and targeted research into BV-associated microbial interactions.
Implications of the Study
Identifying the specific species associated with BV significantly improves diagnostic and treatment strategies. Clinicians currently use broad-spectrum antibiotics to treat BV, but discovering these species enables the development of more targeted therapies. This study also emphasizes the need for continued metagenomic research, as many BV-associated bacteria are difficult to culture and study in traditional lab settings. With more precise species identification, researchers can better understand how these bacteria interact with the vaginal microbiome and contribute to BV recurrence.
Impact of oral metronidazole treatment on the vaginal microbiota and correlates of treatment failure
February 12, 2026
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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This study assesses the impact of metronidazole on the vaginal microbiota, revealing that high G. vaginalis and pathobionts correlate with treatment failure, suggesting a need for biofilm-disrupting therapies in some BV patients.
What was studied?
The study examined the effects of a standard 7-day oral metronidazole treatment on the vaginal microbiota of women diagnosed with bacterial vaginosis (BV) and/or Trichomonas vaginalis. The research aimed to evaluate the impact of the treatment on microbiota changes and identify correlates of treatment failure.
Who was studied?
The study involved 68 HIV-negative, nonpregnant women aged 18-45 years, all diagnosed with BV and/or T. vaginalis, although thirteen women were excluded afterwards. The participants were primarily from Rwanda and included women at high risk for BV, such as those with multiple sexual partners or previous treatments for BV or sexually transmitted infections.
What were the most important findings?
The results revealed a modest reduction in BV-associated anaerobes following metronidazole treatment, with only 16.4% of women showing a decrease of more than 50% in bacterial concentration. The treatment increased lactobacilli, particularly Lactobacillus iners, but did not significantly alter the concentrations of pathobionts, such as Gardnerella vaginalis. Treatment failure was notably more common in women who had a higher pretreatment concentration of G. vaginalis or pathobionts. The presence of biofilms in women with high G. vaginalis abundance may contribute to the suboptimal cure rates, which aligns with the hypothesis that biofilm formation protects these pathogens from metronidazole's effects.
What are the implications of this study?
This study provides valuable insight into why metronidazole treatment for BV often results in high recurrence rates. The findings suggest that metronidazole alone may not be sufficient for women with high G. vaginalis abundance or high pathobiont concentrations. These women may benefit from additional treatments targeting biofilm disruption or specific pathogens, which could help improve the effectiveness of BV therapy and reduce recurrence. The study underscores the complexity of vaginal dysbiosis and the importance of considering microbial composition, including the role of lactobacilli and pathobionts, when determining the most effective treatment strategy for BV.
Improved cure of bacterial vaginosis with single dose of tinidazole (2g), Lactobacillus rhamnosus GR-1, and Lactobacillus reuteri RC-14
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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Tinidazole
Tinidazole
Tinidazole is a nitroimidazole antimicrobial that selectively targets anaerobic bacteria and protozoa, reshaping the gut ecosystem by depleting pathogenic anaerobes while preserving commensals. Clinically validated for giardiasis, bacterial vaginosis, and colorectal surgery prophylaxis. Its DNA-disrupting and biofilm-penetrating actions reduce inflammatory triggers and create niches for healthy microbiota to rebound.
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This study shows that oral probiotics significantly boost cure rates of bacterial vaginosis when used with tinidazole, restoring a healthy vaginal microbiome.
What Was Studied?
This randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial investigated whether the combination of a single 2g dose of tinidazole and daily oral probiotics (Lactobacillus rhamnosus GR-1 and Lactobacillus reuteri RC-14) improved bacterial vaginosis (BV) cure rates in women, compared to tinidazole alone. BV, a condition characterized by dysbiosis in the vaginal microbiome and reduction of protective Lactobacillus species, has shown poor long-term response to antibiotic treatment alone. The study aimed to determine if probiotic supplementation could enhance the therapeutic efficacy of tinidazole by restoring a more favorable microbial balance.
Who Was Studied?
Sixty-four Brazilian women diagnosed with BV based on Amsel’s criteria and Nugent scoring participated in the study. The participants were randomly assigned to either a placebo group or a probiotic group, both of which received the same tinidazole dose. The probiotic group also received daily capsules containing L. rhamnosus GR-1 and L. reuteri RC-14 for four weeks. Women with other vaginal infections, recent antibiotic use, or immunosuppression were excluded. The trial assessed both subjective symptoms and microbiological cure at the end of the treatment period.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
At the end of the four-week treatment, the probiotic group exhibited a significantly higher cure rate compared to the placebo group as measured by Amsel’s criteria and Nugent score. Women in the probiotic group were assessed with “normal” vaginal microbiota based on Gram stain, compared to the placebo group. Importantly, the study also noted reduced BV-associated microbial morphotypes (Gram-variable rods, curved anaerobes) and a statistically significant improvement in key clinical indicators, including pH, discharge, and odor in the probiotic group. While both groups used tinidazole, the probiotics played a key role in enhancing microbiota restoration. Notably, the probiotic strains used in the study are known for producing biosurfactants, bacteriocins, and signaling molecules that can disrupt pathogenic biofilms, particularly those formed by Gardnerella vaginalis. This mechanism may explain their strong microbiome-modulating effect.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
This study provides robust clinical evidence supporting the adjunctive use of probiotics with antibiotics to treat BV and improve microbiota restoration. By demonstrating that oral administration of specific Lactobacillus strains significantly improves cure rates and promotes a return to healthy vaginal flora, the study bridges microbiome science with practical gynecological care. Clinicians managing recurrent or treatment-resistant BV can consider integrating targeted probiotic strains to reduce recurrence and enhance long-term remission. Additionally, the study underscores the need for strain-specific probiotic selection, given the inconsistent outcomes with nonspecific lactobacilli. The use of probiotics also holds promise in preserving drug efficacy and reducing the need for prolonged antibiotic exposure, which aligns with antimicrobial stewardship principles and microbiome health preservation.
Lactobacillus crispatus inhibits growth of Gardnerella vaginalis and Neisseria gonorrhoeae on a porcine vaginal mucosa model.
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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The study shows that Lactobacillus crispatus inhibits the growth of Gardnerella vaginalis and Neisseria gonorrhoeae by lowering pH and producing lactic acid, offering insights into microbiome-targeted interventions for bacterial vaginosis and sexually transmitted infections.
What was Studied?
The study investigated the effects of Lactobacillus crispatus on the growth of Gardnerella vaginalis and Neisseria gonorrhoeae using a porcine vaginal mucosa (PVM) model. It aimed to explore how Lactobacillus crispatus influences the growth of these pathogens and whether it could help prevent or inhibit infection through mechanisms such as the production of lactic acid and pH reduction.
Who was Studied?
The study focused on human clinical isolates of Lactobacillus crispatus, Gardnerella vaginalis, and Neisseria gonorrhoeae. The researchers inoculated these isolates into the ex vivo PVM to observe their colonization, biofilm formation, and interactions.
What were the Most Important Findings?
The study revealed that Lactobacillus crispatus significantly inhibited the growth of both Gardnerella vaginalis and Neisseria gonorrhoeae on the porcine vaginal mucosa model. This inhibition occurred primarily due to the lactic acid production by L. crispatus, which lowered the vaginal pH to levels hostile to these pathogens. The results showed that both G. vaginalis and N. gonorrhoeae grew and formed biofilms at clinically relevant densities on PVM. In particular, the biofilm formation by G. vaginalis and N. gonorrhoeae was evident, and the presence of L. crispatus hindered this process. The production of lactic acid by L. crispatus was crucial for reducing the pH below 5.5, which subsequently inhibited pathogen growth. Conditioned media (CM) from L. crispatus cultures inhibited the growth of N. gonorrhoeae, even when the pH was adjusted to levels conducive for its growth.
What are the Implications of this Study?
The study demonstrates that Lactobacillus crispatus, a key member of the vaginal microbiota, plays a significant protective role against the colonization of harmful pathogens like Gardnerella vaginalis and Neisseria gonorrhoeae. It exerts direct antimicrobial effects and modulates vaginal pH through lactic acid production. By lowering pH, L. crispatus shows potential as both a therapeutic agent and a preventive measure against bacterial vaginosis and sexually transmitted infections, including gonorrhea. This finding supports the importance of maintaining a healthy vaginal microbiota dominated by Lactobacillus species to reduce susceptibility to infections. The PVM model serves as a valuable tool for studying the complex interactions between vaginal microbiota and pathogens, offering insights into the development of targeted microbiome-based interventions.
Metabolic Signatures of Bacterial Vaginosis
February 12, 2026
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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This study revealed how bacterial vaginosis alters vaginal metabolism, linking specific microbial shifts with distinctive metabolite profiles. It showed that BV-associated bacteria drive metabolic changes that increase vaginal pH, disrupt epithelial integrity, and produce characteristic symptoms, offering new diagnostic markers and therapeutic targets.
What was studied?
The study investigated the metabolic signatures associated with bacterial vaginosis (BV) by integrating global metabolomic profiling with microbiome analysis. Specifically, the researchers aimed to identify metabolomic patterns in vaginal fluid linked to the presence and concentration of specific vaginal bacteria, particularly BV-associated bacteria. They used mass spectrometry-based metabolomics and combined it with broad-range 16S rRNA gene sequencing and quantitative PCR (qPCR) to correlate metabolic changes with microbial community composition and clinical diagnostic criteria for BV.
Who was studied?
The study involved two cohorts of reproductive-age women. In the primary cohort, the researchers analyzed cervicovaginal lavage (CVL) samples from 40 women with BV and 20 women without BV, classified using both Amsel criteria and Nugent scoring. They validated their findings in a second cohort of 40 women with BV and 20 women without BV, ensuring reproducibility of metabolite associations across two independent datasets.
What were the most important findings?
The study demonstrated that BV is marked by dramatic shifts in vaginal metabolite profiles, reflecting the transition from a Lactobacillus-dominant microbiome to a polymicrobial anaerobic community. Researchers identified 279 metabolites, of which 62% differed significantly between women with and without BV. Women with BV exhibited lower concentrations of intact amino acids, dipeptides, and sugars, while showing elevated levels of amino acid catabolites, polyamines (putrescine and cadaverine), and short-chain fatty acids like succinate. These metabolic changes reflected enhanced amino acid catabolism and decreased carbohydrate metabolism, indicating fundamental shifts in microbial metabolism.
Major microbial associations (MMA) included higher abundance of BV-associated bacteria such as Gardnerella vaginalis, Atopobium vaginae, Prevotella spp., Megasphaera spp., and BV-associated bacteria types 1-3 (BVAB1-3), which correlated positively with metabolites like putrescine, cadaverine, and succinate. Conversely, protective lactobacilli (Lactobacillus crispatus and L. jensenii) correlated with intact amino acids, sugars, lactate, and antioxidants like glutathione, reflecting their role in maintaining vaginal health.
Importantly, the study also linked specific metabolites to individual Amsel diagnostic criteria. For example, cadaverine and N-acetylputrescine correlated with elevated vaginal pH and amine odor; deoxycarnitine and pipecolate correlated with the presence of clue cells. These findings suggest that metabolite profiles, more than microbiome composition alone, drive clinical manifestations of BV.
What are the implications of this study?
This study provides compelling evidence that BV is a metabolically distinct condition, not solely defined by microbial composition but by functional metabolic activity of the altered microbiome. The researchers demonstrated that BV-associated bacteria actively reshape the vaginal metabolic environment by depleting amino acids and sugars while increasing production of metabolites that elevate vaginal pH, promote epithelial disruption, and produce characteristic BV symptoms. These metabolic signatures offer potential biomarkers for improving BV diagnostics beyond traditional clinical criteria, which often fail to capture asymptomatic or intermediate cases. This work highlights avenues for targeted therapies that address not only microbial imbalance but also metabolic disruptions, such as treatments designed to restore amino acid levels, reduce polyamine production, or inhibit key metabolic pathways associated with BV pathology.
Microbiota in vaginal health and pathogenesis of recurrent vulvovaginal infections: a critical review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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Vulvovaginal Candidiasis (VVC)
Vulvovaginal Candidiasis (VVC)
Vulvovaginal candidiasis (VVC) is a common fungal infection caused by Candida albicans. Disruptions in the vaginal microbiome and immune responses contribute to its development. Effective treatment involves both antifungal therapy and strategies to restore microbiome balance, preventing recurrent infections and addressing emerging antifungal resistance.
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This review clarifies the role of vaginal microbiota in health and recurrent infections, highlighting Lactobacillus complexity, pathogen interactions, and the need for personalized diagnostic and treatment approaches. It calls for deeper exploration into fungal and parasitic vaginal microbiome components to enhance understanding and clinical care of recurrent vulvovaginal infections.
What was reviewed?
This review analyzed existing knowledge of vaginal microbiota (VMB) in relation to vaginal health and recurrent vulvovaginal infections (RVVI), focusing specifically on bacterial vaginosis (BV), vulvovaginal candidiasis (VVC), and trichomoniasis (TV). The authors critically assessed current insights derived from advanced molecular techniques, highlighting how both bacterial and fungal communities influence vaginal health, and discussed the interactions among these communities and their role in the pathogenesis of recurrent infections.
Who was reviewed?
This critical review evaluated literature from diverse sources, including peer-reviewed studies identified through databases such as PubMed and Google Scholar. Included were studies employing both culture-dependent and culture-independent methods to characterize vaginal microbial communities in healthy women and those suffering from recurrent vaginal infections, including bacterial vaginosis, vulvovaginal candidiasis, and trichomoniasis.
What were the most important findings?
The review highlights the complexity and variability of vaginal microbiota, challenging the traditional view that Lactobacillus dominance universally signifies vaginal health. While Lactobacilli typically protect vaginal health by producing lactic acid, maintaining acidic conditions that prevent infections, certain species such as L. iners can instead contribute to instability and disease susceptibility. In bacterial vaginosis, reduced Lactobacilli and increased anaerobes, especially Gardnerella vaginalis, play a critical role. G. vaginalis contributes significantly to disease through biofilm formation and secretion of virulence factors, including vaginolysin and sialidases.
For vulvovaginal candidiasis and trichomoniasis, microbial interactions are key determinants of disease progression. Candida albicans, usually harmless in its yeast form, can shift to a pathogenic hyphal state under elevated pH or disrupted microbiota, highlighting crucial interactions between bacteria and fungi in maintaining health. In trichomoniasis, Trichomonas vaginalis actively damages vaginal epithelial cells and suppresses beneficial Lactobacilli through mechanisms including protease secretion and biofilm formation, exacerbated by symbiotic interactions with mycoplasmas and dsRNA viruses that further enhance virulence.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review stresses the importance of understanding individual variability and complex interactions within the vaginal microbiota when managing recurrent vulvovaginal infections. It emphasizes that traditional beliefs, such as universal Lactobacillus dominance indicating vaginal health, are oversimplifications. This knowledge demands that clinicians adopt more nuanced diagnostics and personalized approaches to treatment. Furthermore, the authors highlight critical gaps in our understanding of the fungal and parasitic components of the vaginal microbiota, suggesting a need for further research utilizing comparative genomics and longitudinal microbiome profiling to guide improved clinical management strategies for RVVI.
NMR Metabolomics of Symbioses Between Bacterial Vaginosis Associated Bacteria
February 12, 2026
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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This study highlights metabolic interactions between Gardnerella vaginalis and Prevotella bivia, revealing their role in bacterial vaginosis and preterm birth risk. Using NMR metabolomics, it identifies acetate as a key metabolite linked to vaginal dysbiosis, offering insights for improving BV diagnostics and potential microbiome-targeted interventions.
What was studied?
This study investigated the metabolic interactions and symbiotic relationships between bacterial vaginosis (BV)-associated bacteria, particularly Gardnerella vaginalis and Prevotella bivia, using NMR metabolomics. It aimed to characterize their metabolic strategies, assess how co-culture influences metabolite production, and explore implications for vaginal microbiome composition and related health outcomes.
Who was studied?
The study focused on a panel of BV-associated bacterial isolates, including G. vaginalis (multiple strains), P. bivia, Atopobium vaginae, Mobiluncus curtisii, and Peptostreptococcus anaerobius, along with a selection of Lactobacillus species, which are commonly associated with vaginal health.
Most Important Findings
The study revealed that P. bivia and G. vaginalis exhibit a mutualistic metabolic relationship, with G. vaginalis supplying asparagine and P. bivia providing uracil. This metabolic exchange influences their ability to thrive in the vaginal environment, potentially promoting BV. The metabolic diversity within G. vaginalis was highlighted, distinguishing strains using either the bifid shunt (BS) pathway or mixed acid fermentation (MAF). Notably, MAF strains produced acetate, formate, and ethanol, contributing to alterations in the vaginal chemical environment. The co-culture of P. bivia with MAF G. vaginalis strains increased acetate production, a hallmark metabolite associated with BV and spontaneous preterm birth (sPTB).
Additionally, the study confirmed that L. iners cannot produce acetate, meaning that acetate detected in L. iners-dominated microbiomes originates from other BV-associated bacteria like G. vaginalis. This suggests that acetate levels may serve as a microbial marker for vaginal dysbiosis and potential inflammatory conditions. The findings reinforce that lactate production by Lactobacillus species, particularly L. acidophilus, plays a protective role by acidifying the vaginal environment, whereas acetate and succinate contribute to BV-related dysbiosis.
Implications of this study
This study provides insights into how bacterial interactions shape the vaginal microbiome and contribute to BV and sPTB. The findings suggest that variations in G. vaginalis metabolism influence the severity and persistence of BV, affecting vaginal pH and inflammatory responses. The identification of key metabolic interactions could refine prediction models for BV and sPTB by incorporating metabolite-based biomarkers like acetate, aspartate, and lactate. Clinicians could leverage this information to develop targeted interventions, such as probiotic therapies, to restore a lactate-dominant vaginal microbiome and reduce the risk of adverse reproductive outcomes.
Pathogenesis of Bacterial Vaginosis: Discussion of Current Hypotheses
February 12, 2026
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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This review explores the competing hypotheses behind bacterial vaginosis (BV), emphasizing microbial shifts, racial disparities, and sexual transmission. Key findings suggest BV may be sexually transmitted and driven by Gardnerella vaginalis biofilms, necessitating novel treatment strategies beyond standard antibiotics. Understanding BV pathogenesis is essential for improving prevention and care.
What Was Reviewed?
This review examines the competing hypotheses on bacterial vaginosis (BV) pathogenesis. BV is a prevalent vaginal condition linked to adverse health outcomes such as preterm labor, pelvic inflammatory disease, and increased susceptibility to sexually transmitted infections (STIs). Despite its clinical significance, BV’s underlying cause remains controversial. Researchers debate whether BV results from a single pathogen, microbial imbalance, sexual transmission, genetics, or hygiene practices. The review evaluates each hypothesis and identifies research gaps that must be addressed to improve prevention and treatment strategies.
Who Was Reviewed?
The review synthesizes findings from multiple studies, including epidemiological research, microbiome sequencing, and clinical trials. It assesses the variations in vaginal microbial communities and risk factors across different populations. It includes data comparing African American and European ancestry women, evaluating whether BV prevalence differences are due to genetic predisposition, sexual networks, or socioeconomic factors. In addition, it also examines studies on sexual behavior, hygiene, and microbial interactions to understand BV development and persistence.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
BV occurs when Lactobacillus-dominant vaginal microbiota shifts to an overgrowth of anaerobes like Gardnerella vaginalis, Atopobium, and Prevotella. A major debate centers on whether this microbial shift is the result of an exogenous infection or an imbalance within the vaginal ecosystem. One hypothesis suggests BV is a sexually transmitted condition, as studies consistently link new sexual partners and unprotected intercourse to increased BV risk. Condom use has been shown to reduce recurrence, and BV-associated bacteria, including G. vaginalis, have been detected in both male and female partners. However, conflicting data exist, particularly in cases of BV occurring in virginal individuals.
Another hypothesis proposes that G. vaginalis acts as a keystone pathogen, initiating biofilm formation that facilitates the overgrowth of anaerobic bacteria. These biofilms make BV highly resistant to antibiotic treatment, leading to frequent recurrence. This aligns with studies showing that biofilm persistence, rather than reinfection, is responsible for many recurrent BV cases.
Racial disparities in BV prevalence have also been noted, with African American women more likely to have diverse anaerobic vaginal microbiota compared to women of European ancestry. Some studies suggest genetic or environmental factors, such as diet and socioeconomic status, play a role. However, the evidence remains inconclusive.
What Are the Implications of This Review?
A deeper understanding of BV pathogenesis is essential for developing more effective treatment and prevention strategies. If BV is sexually transmitted, partner treatment may be necessary to reduce recurrence. Addressing biofilm resilience could improve antibiotic efficacy, potentially through biofilm-disrupting agents or microbiome restoration therapies. Additionally, racial disparities highlight the need for research into genetic, environmental, and behavioral influences on vaginal microbiota. Future studies should focus on controlled clinical trials and microbiome-based interventions to prevent and manage BV more effectively.
Prebiotic Maltose Gel Can Promote the Vaginal Microbiota From BV-Related Bacteria Dominant to Lactobacillus in Rhesus Macaque
February 12, 2026
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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This study explores the impact of prebiotic maltose gel on the vaginal microbiota of rhesus macaques, showing its potential to shift microbial balance from BV-related bacteria to Lactobacillus dominance, presenting an alternative to antibiotic treatments for bacterial vaginosis.
What was studied?
This study examined the effects of prebiotic maltose gel on the vaginal microbiota in rhesus macaques, specifically its ability to promote the transition of the vaginal microbiota from a bacterial vaginosis (BV)-related bacteria-dominant state to a Lactobacillus-dominant state. The researchers tested whether maltose gel, as a non-antibiotic agent, could effectively encourage the proliferation of Lactobacillus species while suppressing the growth of BV-associated bacteria such as Fusobacterium, Parvimonas, and Mobiluncus.
Who was studied?
The study involved eighteen healthy female rhesus macaques, who were randomly divided into two groups. One group received the prebiotic maltose gel treatment, while the other received a placebo gel. The researchers collected vaginal microbiota samples at several time points during the treatment and after the gel withdrawal to observe changes in microbial composition.
What were the most important findings?
The results showed that maltose gel treatment significantly increased the abundance of Lactobacillus in the vaginal microbiota of rhesus macaques. Throughout the treatment, the Lactobacillus levels gradually increased, while the diversity and abundance of BV-associated bacteria, such as Fusobacterium, Parvimonas, Mobiluncus, and others, decreased. However, following the withdrawal of maltose gel, the Lactobacillus levels gradually decreased, although they remained higher than baseline levels at certain time points, indicating a lasting but moderate effect. This shift towards Lactobacillus dominance in the vaginal microbiota supports the potential of maltose gel as a prebiotic treatment for bacterial vaginosis (BV).
In terms of microbial diversity, the alpha diversity indices of the vaginal microbiota decreased significantly during treatment with maltose gel. The treatment caused a marked decrease in diversity, while the placebo group showed no significant changes. After drug withdrawal, the diversity of microbiota in both groups tended to increase, but the effects of maltose gel were more persistent in promoting Lactobacillus proliferation.
What are the implications of this study?
The study suggests that maltose gel may serve as a promising alternative to antibiotics in the treatment and prevention of bacterial vaginosis. Since BV is often recurrent despite antibiotic treatments, which can also disrupt beneficial Lactobacillus species, maltose gel offers a non-antibiotic strategy that can potentially maintain a healthy vaginal microbiota dominated by Lactobacillus. The prebiotic nature of maltose gel promotes the growth of Lactobacillus while reducing the harmful bacteria associated with BV, without inducing antibiotic resistance.
This study highlights the potential of developing prebiotics like maltose gel as adjunct therapies to traditional BV treatments, offering a more sustainable, long-term solution that supports the microbiome's natural composition. However, further studies, including those in human populations, are necessary to assess the long-term effects and feasibility of such treatments.
Probiotics are a Good Choice for the Treatment of Bacterial Vaginosis
February 12, 2026
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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This meta-analysis reviewed 12 randomized controlled trials and found that probiotics significantly improve the clinical cure rate of bacterial vaginosis. Probiotic use restored beneficial Lactobacillus populations and reduced pathogenic bacteria, highlighting their potential as an effective treatment option and adjunct therapy alongside antibiotics.
What was Reviewed?
The meta-analysis reviewed the efficacy of probiotics as a treatment option for bacterial vaginosis (BV). The authors systematically analyzed 20 randomized controlled trials (RCTs) involving 2093 participants to assess whether probiotics, used alone or alongside antibiotics, could improve BV cure rates and restore healthy vaginal microbiota. The review evaluated the clinical cure rates, recurrence rates, adverse effects, and microbial outcomes associated with probiotic administration, considering different probiotic strains, dosages, administration routes, and treatment durations.
Who was Reviewed?
The meta-analysis included RCTs that enrolled women diagnosed with bacterial vaginosis. These participants came from diverse populations, including various age groups and geographic locations. The included studies assessed the effects of probiotic therapy compared to placebo or standard antibiotic treatment, with follow-up periods ranging from a few weeks to several months. The reviewed trials involved women with symptomatic BV, recurrent BV, and asymptomatic cases diagnosed based on standard clinical criteria.
What were the most Important Findings?
This meta-analysis demonstrated that probiotics improved the clinical cure rate of bacterial vaginosis and reduced recurrence compared to control groups. The data consistently showed that probiotics, whether administered orally or intravaginally, enhanced treatment outcomes, with intravaginal probiotics showing slightly better performance. Notably, probiotics used alongside antibiotics provided additional clinical benefit beyond antibiotics alone, suggesting a synergistic relationship.
Beyond clinical outcomes, the review emphasized critical microbial shifts. Women receiving probiotics consistently exhibited an increased abundance of beneficial Lactobacillus species, particularly Lactobacillus crispatus and Lactobacillus jensenii. At the same time, pathogenic bacteria associated with BV, such as Gardnerella vaginalis and Atopobium vaginae, decreased. This microbial rebalancing supports the hypothesis that probiotics help restore vaginal eubiosis, reducing both symptoms and the risk of recurrence. The study's microbiome findings are especially valuable for understanding how probiotics can modify the vaginal ecosystem in BV patients.
What are the Implications of this Review?
This meta-analysis provides strong evidence supporting the use of probiotics as a safe and effective adjunct or alternative treatment for bacterial vaginosis. It underscores the clinical benefit of probiotics in enhancing cure rates, reducing recurrence, and promoting a healthy vaginal microbiota dominated by Lactobacillus species. The findings suggest that clinicians should consider integrating probiotic therapy, particularly intravaginal formulations, into BV treatment protocols. Furthermore, this analysis supports the role of microbiome-targeted therapies in restoring microbial balance and reducing the risk of recurrent infections. The microbial associations identified here, particularly the positive shifts toward Lactobacillus dominance, provide valuable microbial signatures for future BV management and intervention strategies.
Recurrent Bacterial Vaginosis Following Metronidazole Treatment is Associated with Microbiota Richness at Diagnosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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This study links high pre-treatment vaginal microbiota diversity to BV recurrence after metronidazole. Women with sustained clearance had lower richness. Lactobacillus iners improved immune markers temporarily, but no cases achieved L. crispatus dominance. Biofilm-forming taxa like Atopobium persisted, suggesting resistance mechanisms.
What was Studied?
This study investigated the association between pre-treatment vaginal microbiota composition and the likelihood of recurrent bacterial vaginosis (BV) following metronidazole treatment. The researchers analyzed cervicovaginal lavage samples from women diagnosed with BV using 16S rRNA gene sequencing to identify microbial signatures linked to treatment failure or success. The study aimed to determine whether specific microbiota characteristics at diagnosis could predict treatment outcomes, including transient clearance, sustained clearance, or recurrence of BV.
Who was Studied?
The study included 28 women diagnosed with symptomatic BV, confirmed by Nugent scoring, who were enrolled in a clinical trial. Participants were non-pregnant, free of other reproductive tract infections, and had not used antibiotics in the 14 days before enrollment. Samples were collected at baseline (pre-treatment), 7–10 days post-treatment, and 28–32 days post-treatment to assess microbial and immune changes.
What were the most Important Findings?
The study revealed that women who failed to clear BV or experienced recurrence had significantly higher pre-treatment microbial richness and evenness than those with sustained clearance. Significant microbial associations (MMA) included polymicrobial anaerobic taxa such as Gardnerella vaginalis, Prevotella, Sneathia, and Atopobium, which were dominant at baseline. Notably, Lactobacillus iners (CT2) dominance post-treatment was associated with improved mucosal immune markers, including elevated SLPI and reduced ICAM-1, but these benefits were transient in cases of recurrence. The persistence of diverse, low-abundance taxa and biofilm-forming bacteria like Atopobium and Sneathia post-treatment suggested their role in treatment resistance. Importantly, no participants achieved Lactobacillus crispatus (CT1) dominance, highlighting a gap in current therapeutic efficacy.
What are the Implications of this Study?
The findings underscore the limitations of metronidazole in treating BV, particularly in cases with high pre-treatment microbial diversity. The study suggests that microbiome profiling could help identify women at risk of treatment failure, paving the way for personalized therapies. Future research should explore adjunct treatments, such as Lactobacillus crispatus biotherapeutics or biofilm disruptors, to improve outcomes. Additionally, the transient immune improvements observed with Lactobacillus dominance emphasize the need for sustained microbiome modulation to prevent recurrence and associated complications like STI susceptibility.
Recurrent bacterial vaginosis–an old approach to a new problem
February 12, 2026
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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The study finds that hydrogen peroxide vaginal washout effectively alleviates recurrent bacterial vaginosis symptoms, restoring pH and eliminating pathogens in most cases, though it does not fully restore Lactobacillus populations.
What was Studied?
The study evaluated the efficacy of 3% hydrogen peroxide as a single vaginal washout treatment for recurrent bacterial vaginosis (rBV). The primary aim was to assess how hydrogen peroxide affects the symptoms and microbiological profile of women with rBV, particularly focusing on the reduction of vaginal malodor, restoration of vaginal pH, and the absence of bacterial pathogens like Gardnerella vaginalis and other anaerobes.
Who was Studied?
The study involved 30 women with clinically confirmed recurrent bacterial vaginosis, defined as experiencing symptoms of vaginal malodour and discharge after having previously been treated for BV with metronidazole. These women were recruited from a clinical setting and included only those who were symptomatic with BV, had mixed anaerobes isolated in their vaginal swabs, and did not have other genital infections such as gonorrhea, chlamydia, or Candida. A total of 23 women completed the study.
What were the Most Important Findings?
The results demonstrated that the hydrogen peroxide vaginal washout was effective in reducing the malodorous vaginal discharge, with 78% of women reporting complete resolution of symptoms after three weeks. The treatment also led to improvements in vaginal pH, with 96% of women returning to a normal acidic pH. All women showed an absence of "clue cells" and a lack of mixed anaerobes in their vaginal cultures post-treatment. The presence of Lactobacillus species also improved, though to a lesser extent. The study found that hydrogen peroxide was well-tolerated by all participants, with no significant adverse effects such as irritation or inflammation.
However, while hydrogen peroxide improved discharge and malodour in most cases, the full restoration of vaginal lactobacilli colonies did not occur in all women, and two women still experienced mild symptoms. The treatment also failed to restore lactobacilli levels to the extent seen in other BV treatments, indicating that while hydrogen peroxide is effective for symptom relief, it may not be sufficient to fully re-establish the normal vaginal microbiota.
What are the Implications of this Study?
This study suggests that hydrogen peroxide vaginal washout could serve as an alternative or adjunct to antibiotics for treating recurrent bacterial vaginosis. It offers a non-antibiotic approach that is well-tolerated and effective in reducing the primary symptom of malodour. Given the lack of significant side effects and the complete absence of bacterial pathogens in post-treatment cultures, hydrogen peroxide may provide a useful option for women who experience frequent recurrences of BV and are reluctant to use antibiotics due to side effects or resistance concerns. However, the study highlights that hydrogen peroxide treatment may not fully restore vaginal microbiota, specifically Lactobacillus populations, which suggests the need for additional interventions to ensure long-term microbiota health and prevent recurrence.
Saccharomyces cerevisiae–based Probiotic as Novel Anti-microbial Agent for Therapy of Bacterial Vaginosis
February 12, 2026
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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This study evaluated a Saccharomyces cerevisiae-based probiotic for bacterial vaginosis treatment. The probiotic selectively inhibited BV-associated pathogens like G. vaginalis without harming beneficial lactobacilli, offering a microbiome-friendly alternative to antibiotics.
What was Studied?
The study investigated the potential therapeutic effects of a Saccharomyces cerevisiae-based probiotic as a novel antimicrobial agent in the treatment of bacterial vaginosis (BV). The researchers aimed to evaluate whether this yeast-based probiotic could inhibit the growth of BV-associated pathogenic bacteria and restore vaginal microbial balance, offering an alternative to standard antibiotic treatments.
Who was Studied?
The study utilized in vitro models to assess the antimicrobial activity of the S. cerevisiae-based probiotic against a range of bacterial strains associated with bacterial vaginosis, including Gardnerella vaginalis, Atopobium vaginae, Mobiluncus curtisii, and others. No human or animal participants were involved; rather, laboratory strains of pathogenic bacteria were cultured and tested against the probiotic formulation.
What were the most Important Findings?
The study revealed that the S. cerevisiae-based probiotic demonstrated strong antimicrobial activity against key BV-associated pathogens. Specifically, the probiotic effectively inhibited the growth of G. vaginalis, A. vaginae, M. curtisii, and Prevotella bivia in vitro. Notably, the inhibition was dose-dependent, with higher concentrations of the probiotic resulting in greater suppression of these pathogens. Importantly, the probiotic did not affect beneficial Lactobacillus species such as L. crispatus and L. jensenii, which are critical for maintaining vaginal health. This selectivity highlights a significant microbial signature, the probiotic selectively targeted pathogenic bacteria associated with dysbiosis while sparing commensal, health-associated bacteria. Additionally, the study suggested that the probiotic may modulate the vaginal microbiome by reducing the overgrowth of anaerobic pathogens without disrupting the protective lactobacilli.
What are the Implications of this Study?
The findings of this study have significant implications for the management of bacterial vaginosis. Current BV treatments rely heavily on antibiotics, which often lead to recurrence and may disrupt the vaginal microbiota by eliminating beneficial lactobacilli alongside pathogens. The yeast-based probiotic offers a non-antibiotic therapeutic strategy that can selectively inhibit BV-associated pathogens while preserving or even promoting beneficial microbial populations. This approach could potentially reduce recurrence rates, limit the development of antibiotic resistance, and improve vaginal microbiome resilience. For clinicians, this highlights a promising avenue for microbiome-informed interventions in BV management that target dysbiosis while maintaining microbial balance.
Secnidazole for the Treatment of Bacterial Vaginosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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This systematic review analyzed six trials evaluating secnidazole for bacterial vaginosis treatment. Secnidazole at 2 g significantly improved clinical and microbiologic cure rates, showing comparable efficacy to metronidazole. The single-dose regimen enhances adherence, offering an alternative for patients with recurrent BV or adverse effects from standard therapies.
What was Reviewed?
This systematic review evaluated the clinical efficacy, safety, and microbiological outcomes of secnidazole as a treatment option for bacterial vaginosis (BV). The authors reviewed randomized controlled trials that compared secnidazole at different doses with placebo, standard antibiotic regimens, or combination therapies. The review also considered how secnidazole affected the vaginal microbiota, particularly its ability to reduce the abundance of BV-associated bacteria and restore beneficial Lactobacillus species.
Who was Reviewed?
The review encompassed clinical studies involving adult women diagnosed with bacterial vaginosis, with diagnosis typically based on Amsel criteria or Nugent score. The included studies varied in sample size but consistently targeted non-pregnant women of reproductive age who were experiencing symptomatic or recurrent BV. The population also included women with a history of BV treatment failures or recurrences, a subgroup of particular interest due to the chronic and recurrent nature of the condition.
What were the most Important Findings?
This review demonstrated that secnidazole significantly improved both the clinical and microbiological cure rates of bacterial vaginosis compared to placebo. Specifically, in women with three or fewer BV episodes in the last year, 2 g secnidazole substantially reduced BV risk. In women with four or more episodes, the benefit persisted but with slightly lower magnitude.
The clinical cure rate of 2 g secnidazole was comparable to metronidazole (500 mg), oral metronidazole 2 g single dose, secnidazole combined with vaginal metronidazole, or secnidazole plus vaginal ornidazole. However, the 2 g dose performed better than the 1 g dose.
This review highlighted that probiotic therapy was not the focus, but secnidazole use indirectly supports the concept of restoring vaginal eubiosis by reducing pathogenic bacteria. The review did not explicitly measure microbiome shifts in terms of Lactobacillus species or pathogenic taxa, but the improved microbiologic cure rate reflects pathogen reduction.
The authors also emphasized that a single-dose regimen of secnidazole improved patient adherence compared to multi-dose metronidazole or tinidazole therapies. However, beyond adherence, secnidazole's therapeutic effect was statistically similar to these standard treatments. The review proposed secnidazole as a good alternative for women who experienced adverse effects or recurrence with current BV medications.
What are the Implications of this Review?
This review offers clear clinical guidance: secnidazole at 2 g is an effective, single-dose treatment option for bacterial vaginosis, providing comparable cure rates to metronidazole and combination therapies. It may serve as a valuable alternative, particularly for women with recurrent BV or those who face side effects from standard antibiotics. Additionally, while the review did not analyze microbial signatures in detail, the consistent microbiologic cure rates indirectly support the role of secnidazole in reducing BV-associated dysbiosis. Clinicians should consider secnidazole as a viable option in their therapeutic arsenal, particularly when treatment adherence and recurrence prevention are priorities.
Single-Dose, Bioadhesive Clindamycin 2% Gel for Bacterial Vaginosis: A Randomized Controlled Trial
February 12, 2026
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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This study evaluates the efficacy and safety of a single-dose 2% clindamycin vaginal gel for treating bacterial vaginosis, demonstrating significant clinical and bacteriologic cure rates compared to a placebo.
What was studied?
This study focused on assessing the efficacy and safety of a single-dose, bioadhesive 2% clindamycin vaginal gel in treating bacterial vaginosis (BV). The study was randomized, controlled, and double-blind, comparing clindamycin with a placebo gel.
Who was studied?
The study included women who had a clinical diagnosis of bacterial vaginosis, defined by meeting all four Amsel’s criteria, and with Nugent scores of 7-10. The researchers randomized the participants into two groups: the clindamycin gel group and the placebo group. The study enrolled a racially diverse population, including a high percentage of Black women, and most participants had a history of recurrent BV.
What were the most important findings?
The study demonstrated that the 2% clindamycin vaginal gel was significantly more effective than the placebo in achieving clinical cure, defined as the resolution of three of the four Amsel’s criteria, at the test-of-cure visit (day 21-30). The clinical cure rate was 70.5% for the clindamycin group, compared to 35.6% for the placebo group, with a difference of 34.9%. Additionally, clindamycin showed statistically significant improvements in bacteriologic and therapeutic cure rates. The gel was also well-tolerated, with vulvovaginal candidiasis being the most common adverse event, a known side effect of clindamycin use.
The study highlights the importance of the bioadhesive property of clindamycin gel, which allows for sustained drug release, thus increasing retention and enhancing the treatment’s efficacy. This mechanism is particularly relevant for improving patient compliance and the therapeutic outcomes in BV treatment. The study design adhered to FDA guidance, specifically including only participants with high Nugent scores (7-10), which strengthens the validity of the findings.
What are the implications of this study?
The study’s findings offer a promising new option for treating BV with a single-dose vaginal gel that enhances patient compliance through reduced leakage and prolonged retention time. The significant clinical cure rates observed in patients with recurrent BV are especially important, as recurrent BV is a common and challenging condition to manage. The study demonstrates that clindamycin’s bioadhesive formulation may be more effective than traditional treatment options that require multiple applications. This gel could become an essential treatment in managing BV, especially in women who experience frequent recurrences.
The study supports the need for further research into improving BV treatment strategies. It also reinforces the importance of managing BV to prevent complications such as infertility, pelvic inflammatory disease, and increased susceptibility to sexually transmitted infections, including HIV.
The Human Microbiome during Bacterial Vaginosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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This review explores bacterial vaginosis, focusing on microbial imbalances, immune responses, and diagnostic challenges. It highlights the need for microbiome-based treatments and improved diagnostics to reduce recurrence and improve BV management.
What Was Reviewed?
This review examines the human microbiome during bacterial vaginosis (BV), focusing on microbial shifts, host immune responses, and diagnostic challenges. It evaluates BV as a polymicrobial condition rather than an infection caused by a single pathogen. The review highlights how microbial imbalances contribute to BV symptoms, persistence, and recurrence. Additionally, it explores epidemiological factors, diagnostic methods, and host-microbiome interactions that influence BV progression and treatment response.
Who Was Reviewed?
The review synthesizes findings from studies involving women diagnosed with BV, including those experiencing recurrent infections. It incorporates data from molecular sequencing studies and microbiological research to assess the composition of the vaginal microbiome during BV. Additionally, it examines host immune responses to BV-related microbial changes and evaluates the link between BV and increased susceptibility to sexually transmitted infections (STIs) and pregnancy complications such as preterm birth.
Most Important Findings
BV disrupts the vaginal microbiome by reducing Lactobacillus species and increasing anaerobic bacteria such as Gardnerella vaginalis, Atopobium vaginae, Prevotella spp., Mobiluncus spp., and Sneathia spp. Unlike infections that trigger a strong inflammatory response, BV presents as a microbial imbalance rather than an acute immune reaction. The review also highlights how bacterial biofilms protect BV-associated bacteria from antibiotic treatment, contributing to high recurrence rates.
The study also discusses BV’s complex interaction with the host immune system. BV-associated bacteria produce virulence factors that degrade the vaginal mucosal barrier, leading to increased inflammatory markers such as interleukin-1β (IL-1β) and tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α). This immune dysregulation may explain BV’s association with increased STI susceptibility and adverse pregnancy outcomes.
Diagnosing BV remains challenging due to inconsistencies in clinical and laboratory criteria. Amsel’s clinical criteria and Nugent scoring, which rely on symptom assessment and Gram staining, remain the primary diagnostic tools. However, these methods fail to account for BV’s diverse microbial community, leading to inconsistencies in diagnosing recurrent and persistent cases. The review emphasizes the need for molecular sequencing-based diagnostics that provide a more precise understanding of BV-associated bacterial communities.
Implications of the Review
BV presents a significant clinical challenge due to its high recurrence rate, treatment limitations, and association with reproductive health complications. The review underscores the importance of shifting towards microbiome-targeted therapies rather than relying solely on broad-spectrum antibiotics. Future research should focus on developing treatments that restore Lactobacillus-dominant vaginal microbiota and prevent biofilm formation. Refining molecular diagnostic techniques will help clinicians identify BV-associated bacterial communities more accurately, improving treatment strategies and reducing recurrence.
This review highlights the urgent need for improved diagnostic criteria, personalized treatment approaches, and a deeper understanding of the vaginal microbiome’s role in BV persistence. Advancing these areas of research will help clinicians develop more effective, long-term solutions for BV management.
The interplay between microbiota, metabolites, immunity during BV
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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This review explains how microbial shifts, metabolite production, and immune responses interact in bacterial vaginosis. It highlights the roles of Gardnerella, Atopobium, and other anaerobes in disrupting vaginal health and discusses how their metabolic byproducts and immune modulation drive BV symptoms and persistence.
What was Reviewed?
This review explored the complex interplay between the vaginal microbiota, metabolite production, and local immune responses in the pathogenesis of bacterial vaginosis (BV). The authors synthesized existing research on how shifts in the vaginal microbiome from Lactobacillus-dominant communities to polymicrobial anaerobic communities contribute to BV development, symptoms, and recurrence. The review particularly emphasized the combined role of microbiota composition, bacterial metabolic products, and vaginal immune responses in driving clinical outcomes and disease persistence.
Who was Reviewed?
The review covered a wide body of research focusing on reproductive-age women diagnosed with or at risk for BV. It drew from studies examining the vaginal microbiota, including key bacteria such as Gardnerella vaginalis, Atopobium vaginae, Prevotella spp., Mobiluncus spp., and Sneathia sanguinegens, as well as the protective Lactobacillus species like L. crispatus and L. iners. It also reviewed studies on the vaginal metabolome and immune responses in BV-positive and BV-negative women.
Most Important Findings
The review consolidated evidence that BV is a multifactorial condition characterized by dysbiosis of the vaginal microbiota, metabolic disruption, and altered immune responses. It described how healthy vaginal microbiomes are dominated by Lactobacillus species, particularly L. crispatus, which maintain vaginal acidity and protect against pathogens. In contrast, BV involves a shift toward a polymicrobial anaerobic community, with increased abundance of Gardnerella vaginalis, Atopobium vaginae, Prevotella spp., Mobiluncus spp., and Sneathia spp., collectively referred to as major microbial associations (MMA) of BV.
These BV-associated bacteria produce key metabolites, including short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) like acetate and propionate, and volatile amines like putrescine and cadaverine, which raise vaginal pH and produce the characteristic fishy odor of BV. Additionally, BV-associated biofilm formation, particularly involving G. vaginalis and A. vaginae, enhances bacterial persistence and resistance to treatment.
The review highlighted that these microbial and metabolic changes interact with the host’s immune system. BV patients exhibit elevated pro-inflammatory cytokines, especially IL-1β, without a corresponding increase in neutrophil recruitment. This unique immune profile likely results from SCFA-mediated suppression of neutrophil chemotaxis and explains why BV lacks overt inflammatory symptoms despite microbial overgrowth.
Implications of this Review
This review emphasizes the need to redefine BV beyond a simple microbial imbalance. It emphasizes that the metabolic products of BV-associated bacteria and their impact on host immunity are central to disease progression and recurrence. Clinicians should consider not only microbial community shifts but also metabolite profiles and immune responses when diagnosing and managing BV. The review calls for the integration of multi-omic data, microbiome, metabolome, and immunome, to develop more accurate diagnostics and targeted therapeutic strategies. Understanding these interactions may guide the design of personalized interventions to restore microbial and metabolic homeostasis, reduce BV recurrence, and mitigate associated reproductive health risks.
The right bug in the right place: opportunities for bacterial vaginosis treatment
February 12, 2026
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This review explores the role of vaginal microbiota in bacterial vaginosis and highlights emerging microbiome-informed treatments. It emphasizes microbial signatures of BV, the limitations of antibiotics, and the potential of targeted biotherapeutics to restore microbial balance and reduce recurrence.
What was Reviewed?
This review examines the current understanding of the vaginal microbiome and its relationship to bacterial vaginosis (BV). It discusses how microbial dysbiosis contributes to the onset and persistence of BV and evaluates the potential therapeutic strategies that could leverage microbiome science to treat and prevent the condition. The authors explore the complexity of vaginal microbial communities, particularly focusing on the imbalance between health-associated Lactobacillus species and BV-associated anaerobic bacteria. They review both existing antibiotic treatments and emerging microbiome-informed interventions, including live biotherapeutics and vaginal microbiota transplants (VMT).
Who was Reviewed?
The review focused on published research involving women diagnosed with bacterial vaginosis, as well as healthy women with Lactobacillus-dominated vaginal microbiota. The authors synthesized data from clinical studies, in vitro experiments, and microbiome profiling studies that examined microbial composition, treatment responses, and microbial dynamics in BV-affected and healthy populations. They also reviewed preclinical studies exploring potential microbial therapeutics, including specific bacterial strains and vaginal microbiome restoration strategies.
What were the Most Important Findings?
The review highlighted that bacterial vaginosis is characterized by a distinct microbial signature: a depletion of Lactobacillus species (notably L. crispatus, L. jensenii, and L. gasseri) and an overgrowth of anaerobic bacteria. This microbial imbalance leads to elevated vaginal pH and inflammation, contributing to symptoms and increasing susceptibility to other infections.
The authors emphasized that standard antibiotic treatments, like metronidazole and clindamycin, often result in high recurrence rates and can disrupt both pathogenic and beneficial bacterial populations. They reviewed emerging microbiome-based therapies aimed at correcting vaginal dysbiosis without harming commensal microbes. These include probiotic formulations containing Lactobacillus strains, VMT, and precision antimicrobials targeting specific BV-associated pathogens. Notably, they discussed the importance of strain-specific effects, showing that not all Lactobacillus strains equally promote vaginal health, and that strain selection is critical for therapeutic success.
A key finding was that sustained remission from BV is linked to successful re-establishment of a Lactobacillus-dominant community, specifically L. crispatus. The review also addressed how host factors, sexual activity, and antibiotic exposure influence microbial dynamics, indicating the need for personalized, microbiome-informed approaches to BV treatment.
What are the Implications of this Review?
This review carries significant implications for clinicians managing bacterial vaginosis. It highlights the limitations of antibiotic-centric treatments and underscores the need for microbiome-conscious strategies that restore and maintain vaginal microbial balance. The evidence supports moving toward targeted interventions such as live biotherapeutics and VMT, which can selectively suppress BV-associated pathogens while promoting beneficial lactobacilli. Clinicians should consider that effective, long-term BV management may depend not only on pathogen eradication but also on rebuilding a resilient, health-associated vaginal microbiome. The review points to the potential of precision microbial therapies tailored to individual microbial profiles, marking a shift toward personalized vaginal microbiome medicine. For microbiome signatures research, the paper enriches the understanding of the specific bacterial players involved in BV dysbiosis and recovery.
Tinidazole in the treatment of bacterial vaginosis
February 12, 2026
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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This review assesses the use of tinidazole for treating bacterial vaginosis, comparing its efficacy, side effects, and cost to metronidazole. It highlights tinidazole’s favorable side effect profile and its role in treating recurrent BV.
What was studied?
The study evaluated the clinical effectiveness of tinidazole in treating bacterial vaginosis (BV) and compared different dosing regimens. It specifically examined the use of tinidazole in comparison with placebo, focusing on its impact on cure rates and recurrence prevention. Additionally, the pharmacokinetics, safety, and microbial susceptibility of tinidazole in the context of BV treatment were assessed.
Who was studied?
The study involved patients diagnosed with bacterial vaginosis, and it included women treated with tinidazole to evaluate its efficacy. Various groups were compared, including those receiving different doses of tinidazole and a placebo group.
What were the most important findings?
The study found that tinidazole demonstrated significant efficacy in the treatment of BV, with cure rates notably higher in the tinidazole groups compared to placebo. Specifically, the 2 g single-dose regimen was shown to be more effective than placebo, but there was no significant difference in efficacy between tinidazole given in a 2-day regimen versus a single 2 g dose. Moreover, the research revealed that the drug's antimicrobial activity extended beyond typical BV-associated pathogens like Gardnerella vaginalis to other anaerobic species. However, resistance was noted in 54% of G. vaginalis isolates and 96% of Lactobacillus isolates, indicating the complex dynamics of the vaginal microbiome in BV. The study also evaluated the safety profile of tinidazole, showing that it was generally well-tolerated compared to other treatments like metronidazole, with fewer gastrointestinal side effects.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study suggests that tinidazole is a viable alternative to metronidazole for BV treatment, especially for recurrent cases where metronidazole may have limited effectiveness. The findings support the use of tinidazole in patients who have not responded well to first-line treatments and indicate that it may be a useful agent for reducing recurrence, particularly when administered with proper dosing regimens. Moreover, tinidazole's action against G. vaginalis and other anaerobes reinforces the need to understand microbial resistance patterns when treating BV, highlighting the complexity of the vaginal microbiome. These results could encourage clinicians to adopt tinidazole more frequently in clinical practice, particularly for cases where standard therapies fail.
Treatment of Bacterial Vaginosis with Topical Clindamycin or Metronidazole
February 12, 2026
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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This study compares the microbiological effects of metronidazole and clindamycin in treating bacterial vaginosis, highlighting differences in antimicrobial resistance and efficacy in eliminating BV-associated pathogens.
What was studied?
The study investigated the microbiologic response to treatment for bacterial vaginosis (BV) with topical clindamycin and metronidazole. It focused on the microbiological changes observed in vaginal flora before and after treatment, assessing the impact of these treatments on bacterial populations, including Gardnerella vaginalis, Mycoplasma hominis, and anaerobic gram-negative rods.
Who was studied?
The study included 119 nonpregnant, premenopausal women aged 18 to 45 diagnosed with BV using clinical and Gram stain criteria. They were randomized to receive either clindamycin vaginal ovules or metronidazole vaginal gel. The study also evaluated the microbiologic response over a 3-month follow-up period.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed that both metronidazole and clindamycin treatments resulted in significant changes in the vaginal microflora. Both treatments led to decreased colonization by Gardnerella vaginalis and Mycoplasma hominis, common BV-associated pathogens. However, metronidazole was more effective in reducing the colonization of Prevotella bivia and black-pigmented Prevotella species. Clindamycin treatment resulted in the emergence of resistant subpopulations of P. bivia and black-pigmented Prevotella species, with resistance to clindamycin increasing significantly 7 to 12 days after treatment. In contrast, metronidazole showed no such increase in resistance. The study found that while both treatments resulted in similar clinical cure rates, the microbiological response differed between the two, with metronidazole proving to be more effective in eradicating anaerobic gram-negative rods. The study further emphasized that the increased clindamycin resistance following treatment with clindamycin could complicate the management of BV, especially with recurrent cases.
What are the implications of this study?
The study highlights the differences in the microbiologic response to clindamycin and metronidazole, suggesting that while both are effective in treating BV, metronidazole may offer a more favorable outcome, particularly in terms of preventing the emergence of antibiotic resistance. The increased clindamycin resistance observed with repeated use suggests that clindamycin may not be the ideal choice for recurrent BV cases. This finding has implications for clinicians in choosing the most appropriate treatment for BV, especially for patients with recurrent infections. The study underscores the importance of antimicrobial stewardship and the potential for developing resistance with the overuse of antibiotics like clindamycin.
Unveiling Resistance and Virulence Mechanisms under Darwinian Positive Selection for Novel Drug Discovery for Gardnerella vaginalis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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The study analyzed the genetic evolution of Gardnerella vaginalis, focusing on its resistance and virulence under Darwinian positive selection. It identifies new drug targets and emphasizes the pathogen's evolving resistance mechanisms.
What was Studied?
The study focused on Gardnerella vaginalis, a significant pathogen responsible for bacterial vaginosis(BV), examining its mechanisms of resistance and virulence under Darwinian positive selection. The researchers utilized comparative genomic analysis to identify resistance and virulence-related genes and their evolutionary patterns. The study also aimed to discover potential new drug targets by analyzing these genomic features in the context of the pathogen's evolutionary adaptations.
Who was Studied?
The study analyzed 97 genomes of Gardnerella vaginalis strains, representing a diverse collection of isolates obtained from the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) datasets. The strains were carefully selected to reflect the genetic variability and resistance phenotypes of this important pathogen, enabling a comprehensive understanding of its evolution.
What were the most Important Findings?
The study identified several crucial findings that provide new insights into the evolution and pathogenic potential of G. vaginalis. The pathogen exhibits significant genomic diversity, which plays a role in its survival and adaptation to selective pressures, particularly from antibiotics. The analysis revealed some genes, such as Mef(A), associated with resistance to macrolides, and tet(M) and tet(L), linked to resistance against tetracycline. These resistance genes were found to be positively selected in multiple G. vaginalis lineages, reflecting the evolutionary pressures that have shaped the pathogen's resistance capabilities.
Furthermore, the study highlighted the pathogen’s ability to form biofilms, a feature that enhances its survival in the host and increases its resistance to antibiotic treatment. This biofilm formation is also associated with the pathogen's ability to engage in horizontal gene transfer, further complicating the treatment landscape. The pan-resistome analysis indicated that the pathogen has an "open" resistome, suggesting its high capacity to acquire new resistance genes, making it a continuously evolving threat. The researchers also identified two potential drug targets, sigA, a sigma factor involved in transcription initiation, and UDP-N-acetylenolpyruvoylglucosamine reductase, an enzyme crucial for cell wall synthesis. These proteins are vital to the pathogen's survival and represent promising targets for the development of new therapeutic approaches.
What are the Implications of this Study?
The study’s findings highlight the dynamic nature of Gardnerella vaginalis and its ability to rapidly adapt to environmental pressures, particularly through the acquisition of resistance genes. The evolution of resistance mechanisms and the presence of virulence factors underscore the pathogen's significant role in reproductive and sexual health complications. The open pan-resistome suggests that G. vaginalis can continue to evolve and acquire new resistance traits, posing an ongoing challenge to existing treatments. The identification of novel drug targets like sigA and UDP-N-acetylenolpyruvoylglucosamine reductase offers valuable insights into how future therapies could be designed to combat infections caused by this pathogen. This research calls for continued surveillance of G. vaginalis strains to track resistance trends and refine clinical treatment strategies.
Vaginal Microbiome Recovery After Bacterial Vaginosis Treatment
February 12, 2026
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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This study examines vaginal microbiome recovery after metronidazole treatment for BV. Findings show delayed microbiota stabilization, L. iners dominance post-treatment, and the need for improved diagnostic tools to predict BV recurrence.
What Was Studied?
This observational study examined how the vaginal microbiota recovers after standard antibiotic treatment for bacterial vaginosis (BV). Researchers assessed changes in microbial composition before and after a five-day metronidazole treatment to determine how long it takes for the vaginal microbiome to return to a healthy state.
Who Was Studied?
The study included 30 women diagnosed with BV and 30 healthy women as controls. Researchers collected vaginal swabs before treatment (Day 1) and at follow-ups on Day 8 and Day 15 to compare microbiota recovery between the two groups. They analyzed microbial composition using 16S rRNA gene sequencing and measured BV status using Nugent scores.
Most Important Findings
Before treatment, BV-positive women had lower levels of Lactobacillus crispatus and Lactobacillus jensenii and a higher presence of Gardnerella vaginalis, Prevotella timonensis/bivia, and Atopobium vaginae. After metronidazole treatment, microbial diversity significantly decreased, and Lactobacillus iners became dominant (67.8% on Day 8). By Day 15, the vaginal microbiota of BV-treated women closely resembled that of healthy women. However, some BV-associated bacteria, including G. vaginalis and P. timonensis/bivia, began to re-emerge in a subset of participants.
The study also highlighted inconsistencies between Nugent scoring and microbiome sequencing results. While Nugent scores normalized in most BV-treated women by Day 8, sequencing data showed that bacterial communities still differed from those of healthy women, only stabilizing around Day 15. These findings suggest that clinical diagnostic methods may not fully capture microbiome recovery dynamics.
Implications of the Study
This study provides valuable insights into BV treatment outcomes and microbiome recovery. While metronidazole effectively reduces BV-associated bacteria, microbiome shifts continue for up to two weeks post-treatment. The dominance of L. iners after treatment raises questions about its role in BV recurrence. Future treatments should focus on restoring a L. crispatus-dominated microbiota, which is more protective against BV. The study also highlights the need for molecular-based diagnostics to better track microbiome recovery and predict BV recurrence.
Vaginal Microbiota Molecular Profiling in Women with Bacterial Vaginosis
February 12, 2026
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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This study assessed vaginal microbiota in BV-positive women using real-time PCR. It found reduced Lactobacillus crispatus, biofilm-associated pathogens, and high diagnostic accuracy for molecular testing. Results suggest PCR-based diagnostics improve BV detection and highlight the need for microbiome-targeted therapies.
What Was Studied?
This study evaluated the microbial composition of the vaginal microbiota in women with bacterial vaginosis (BV) using molecular profiling techniques. Researchers aimed to determine the dominant bacterial species in BV, assess the role of Lactobacillus species, and evaluate the diagnostic potential of a multiplex real-time PCR test. This approach was considered as an alternative to traditional diagnostic methods like Amsel’s criteria and Nugent scoring, which often lack consistency.
Who Was Studied?
The study included 331 non-pregnant women who reported vaginal discharge. BV was confirmed through clinical examination and Nugent scoring. To gain a more detailed understanding of microbial composition, researchers analyzed vaginal microbiota using a real-time PCR test called Femoflor. This test detects key BV-associated bacteria, sexually transmitted disease (STD) pathogens, and some viruses, providing a broader perspective on vaginal health.
Most Important Findings
The study found that BV-positive women had significantly lower Lactobacillus levels compared to healthy controls. More specifically, Lactobacillus crispatus was severely depleted, while Lactobacillus iners remained dominant in many BV cases. This distinction is important, as L. crispatus is associated with a healthy vaginal microbiome, whereas L. iners is often found in transitional microbiota states and may contribute to recurrence.
Additionally, the study identified a significant presence of anaerobic bacteria in BV cases. Gardnerella vaginalis was the most prevalent, followed closely by Atopobium vaginae (recently renamed Fannyhessea vaginae), Prevotella bivia, Mobiluncus spp., Peptostreptococcus anaerobius, and Megasphaera spp.. These bacteria play a crucial role in biofilm formation, which not only protects BV-associated pathogens from antibiotic treatment but also increases the likelihood of recurrence.
The study emphasized the high diagnostic accuracy of the Femoflor real-time PCR test. Unlike traditional methods, this molecular test demonstrated high sensitivity and specificity in detecting BV-associated microbiota, even in cases where the vaginal microbiota appeared intermediate. The test was also able to detect STD pathogens such as Mycoplasma genitalium, Chlamydia trachomatis, and Neisseria gonorrhoeae, which were present only in BV-positive women. This finding suggests a potential link between BV and increased susceptibility to sexually transmitted infections.
Implications of the Study
These findings reinforce the need for molecular diagnostics in BV management. Traditional methods like Amsel’s criteria and Nugent scoring rely on subjective interpretation and often fail to identify BV in women with intermediate microbiota. The study suggests that real-time PCR testing offers a more reliable alternative, improving diagnostic accuracy and guiding more targeted treatment approaches.
The depletion of L. crispatus and dominance of L. iners in BV cases also raises concerns about the effectiveness of current treatment strategies. L. iners is often present in transitional microbiota states and does not provide the same protective benefits as L. crispatus. Future therapies should focus on restoring L. crispatus-dominated microbiota while addressing biofilm-associated bacterial communities to prevent recurrence. The study supports integrating molecular diagnostics into routine gynecological care and highlights the need for microbiome-targeted interventions to improve BV outcomes.
Effectiveness of Partially Hydrolyzed Guar Gum on Cognitive Function and Sleep Efficiency in Healthy Elderly Subjects in a Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled, and Parallel-Group Study
February 12, 2026
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Brain Health
Brain Health
Brain health encompasses the overall functioning and well-being of the brain, including cognitive function, emotional and psychological well-being, neurological integrity, behavioral health, neurodevelopmental health, age-related brain health, and brain resilience and plasticity.
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The study explores the potential of partially hydrolyzed guar gum (PHGG), a water-soluble prebiotic dietary fiber, to improve cognitive function, sleep efficiency, and overall mental health in healthy elderly individuals. Given the growing global concern over cognitive decline and dementia among aging populations, the study investigates PHGG as a functional food component that may positively influence brain health through the gut-brain axis.
What Was Reviewed?
The study reviewed the effectiveness of partially hydrolyzed guar gum (PHGG), a water-soluble prebiotic dietary fiber, on cognitive function, sleep efficiency, and overall mental health in elderly individuals. The research specifically focused on assessing the impact of PHGG supplementation on cognitive domains such as visual memory and simple attention, sleep quality parameters like sleepiness on rising, and mood states including vigor and confusion. The study also considered the safety and tolerability of PHGG in the target population. The review encompasses the potential mechanisms through which PHGG may exert its effects, particularly its role in modulating the gut microbiome and the production of short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs), which are implicated in the gut-brain axis and neuroprotection.
Who Was Reviewed?
The subjects of the review were 66 healthy elderly Japanese individuals aged 60 years or older. These participants were free from cognitive impairment (as indicated by a Mini Mental State Examination score of 24 or higher) and were not undergoing treatment for chronic diseases that could influence the outcomes. The participants were randomly assigned to receive either PHGG supplementation (5 g/day) or a placebo for a duration of 12 weeks. The study specifically targeted an elderly population to investigate whether PHGG could mitigate age-related cognitive decline and improve sleep quality, given that these issues are particularly prevalent in this demographic.
What Were the Most Important Findings of This Review?
Cognitive Function:
The most significant finding was the improvement in visual memory observed in the PHGG group after 12 weeks of supplementation. Visual memory scores were significantly higher in the PHGG group compared to the placebo group, suggesting that PHGG has a positive effect on this critical cognitive domain. Improvements in simple attention were also noted at 8 weeks, although this was less emphasized.
Sleep Quality:
The PHGG group demonstrated significant improvements in sleep quality, particularly in the domain of "sleepiness on rising," after 8 weeks of supplementation. This improvement indicates better sleep efficiency and mental clarity upon waking, which are essential for maintaining daily function in the elderly.
Mood and Mental Health:
Although no significant intergroup differences were observed, within-group analyses revealed that PHGG supplementation led to increased vigor and reduced confusion, suggesting a potential benefit of PHGG on mood states, although these findings were more exploratory.
Safety:
The study confirmed the safety of PHGG, as no adverse events were reported, making it a viable supplement for elderly populations.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Review?
Potential Role of PHGG in Cognitive Health:
The study suggests that PHGG supplementation could serve as a functional food intervention to enhance cognitive function, particularly visual memory, in elderly individuals. This finding is significant as visual memory is crucial for daily activities and maintaining independence in aging populations. The positive effects observed may indicate that PHGG could be a valuable tool in preventing or delaying cognitive decline.
Enhancement of Sleep Quality:
Improved sleep quality, as evidenced by reduced sleepiness on rising, has broad implications for overall health and well-being in the elderly. Sleep disturbances are common in aging, and interventions like PHGG that can improve sleep efficiency are likely to contribute to better cognitive function, mood, and quality of life.
Implications for the Gut-Brain Axis:
The study reinforces the concept that the gut microbiome, modulated by prebiotic interventions like PHGG, plays a crucial role in brain health. By promoting the production of SCFAs and improving gut health, PHGG may influence brain function through the gut-brain axis, offering a non-pharmacological approach to support cognitive and mental health in the elderly.
Foundation for Future Research:
While the study provides promising data, it also highlights the need for further research with larger sample sizes, longer durations, and objective assessments. The findings lay the groundwork for more comprehensive studies that could explore the long-term effects of PHGG on cognitive decline, its mechanisms of action, and its potential to prevent dementia.
Microbiota–Gut–Brain Axis: Barrier Function and Lymphatic System in Neurological Health
February 12, 2026
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Brain Health
Brain Health
Brain health encompasses the overall functioning and well-being of the brain, including cognitive function, emotional and psychological well-being, neurological integrity, behavioral health, neurodevelopmental health, age-related brain health, and brain resilience and plasticity.
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This review explores the microbiota–gut–brain axis, highlighting the role of gut microbiota in barrier integrity and lymphatic transport. It discusses microbial metabolites, vagus nerve signaling, and meningeal lymphatics as critical communication pathways, emphasizing their implications for gastrointestinal and neurological disorders.
What Was Reviewed?
This review explores the microbiota–gut–brain axis (MGBA), with a focus on the interplay between the gut microbiota, intestinal and blood-brain barrier integrity, and the lymphatic system. The authors examine how gut microbes influence barrier function through neural transmission, metabolite production, immune modulation, and gut hormone signaling. A significant aspect of the review is the role of lymphatic vessels as a previously underappreciated conduit between the gut and brain. The review also discusses the impact of microbiota dysbiosis on barrier dysfunction and its implications for both gastrointestinal and neurological diseases.
Who Was Reviewed?
The review synthesizes findings from various microbiome studies, including those investigating the microbiota's role in intestinal permeability, neuroinflammation, and neurological conditions. It integrates evidence from experimental models and human studies to highlight key mechanisms underlying MGBA communication.
Key Findings and Microbiome Associations
The review underscores that the gut microbiota exerts a profound influence on both the intestinal and blood-brain barriers, modulating permeability and contributing to systemic homeostasis. Several key points emerge:
Microbiota and Barrier Function: Gut microbes regulate intestinal and blood-brain barrier integrity through microbial metabolites such as short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs), neurotransmitter production, and immune modulation. Butyrate, for example, strengthens the blood-brain barrier by enhancing tight junction protein expression.
Lymphatic System as a Communication Pathway: The lymphatic network, particularly intestinal lacteals, serves as a conduit for microbiota-derived molecules and immune cells, linking gut health with central nervous system (CNS) function. Dysregulation of lymphatic transport mechanisms is implicated in neurological disorders.
Gut Microbiota Dysbiosis and Neurological Conditions: Altered microbiota composition contributes to neuroinflammatory and neurodegenerative diseases. Increased gut permeability and translocation of microbial products, such as lipopolysaccharides (LPS), trigger systemic inflammation, which can exacerbate conditions like Alzheimer's and Parkinson’s disease.
Vagus Nerve and Microbial Metabolites: The vagus nerve is a major conduit for gut-brain signaling. Microbial-derived neurotransmitters, including serotonin and dopamine precursors, influence neurological health. In animal models, vagotomy disrupts gut microbiota–mediated neurological effects, further supporting the role of direct neural communication.
Meningeal Lymphatics and CNS Immunity: The meningeal lymphatic system is increasingly recognized as an essential pathway for brain waste clearance and immune regulation. Dysfunction in these lymphatic vessels is linked to neuroinflammatory conditions such as multiple sclerosis and Alzheimer's disease.
Implications of This Review
The findings emphasize the importance of maintaining gut microbiota balance to preserve barrier integrity and prevent systemic inflammation that may contribute to neurological diseases. This review suggests that therapeutic interventions targeting the microbiota—such as prebiotics, probiotics, fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT), and microbiota-modulating diets—could play a role in managing both gastrointestinal and neurodegenerative conditions. Additionally, interventions that enhance lymphatic function, such as VEGF-C-mediated lymphangiogenesis, have shown promise in mitigating neuroinflammatory disorders by regulating microbiota-host interactions.
Neuromicrobiology, an Emerging Neurometabolic Facet of the Gut Microbiome?
February 12, 2026
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Brain Health
Brain Health
Brain health encompasses the overall functioning and well-being of the brain, including cognitive function, emotional and psychological well-being, neurological integrity, behavioral health, neurodevelopmental health, age-related brain health, and brain resilience and plasticity.
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The paper reviews neuromicrobiology, examining how the gut microbiome influences brain health and cognitive function through neuroactive metabolites like GABA, serotonin, and dopamine, focusing on their biosynthesis, transport, and impact on the gut-brain axis and mental health.
What Was Reviewed?
The paper reviews the emerging field of neuromicrobiology, which explores the interactions between the gut microbiome and the brain, particularly focusing on how gut microbiota produce neuroactive metabolites that influence cognitive function and brain health. It addresses the biosynthesis, absorption, and transport of these neuroactive metabolites, including neurotransmitters such as γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA), serotonin, dopamine, and others. The review also discusses how these compounds interact with the gut-brain axis and their implications for mental health and neurological disorders.
Who Was Reviewed?
The review synthesizes research across multiple studies involving both human and animal models. It examines the gut microbiota's role in producing neuroactive compounds and their potential effects on the central nervous system (CNS). The paper does not focus on a specific population but rather on a broad range of studies that include both healthy and diseased subjects to understand the underlying mechanisms of gut-brain communication via microbial metabolites.
What Were the Most Important Findings of This Review?
Diversity of Neuroactive Metabolites:
The review highlights the diversity of neuroactive metabolites produced by the gut microbiome, including neurotransmitters like GABA, serotonin, dopamine, and their precursors. These metabolites are synthesized by a variety of gut bacteria, and their production is influenced by factors such as diet, genetics, and environmental conditions.
Mechanisms of Interaction with the Brain:
The paper details the pathways through which these neuroactive metabolites interact with the brain, emphasizing the "bottom-up" pathway of the gut-brain axis. This includes the direct signaling of neurotransmitters via the vagus nerve, modulation of the immune system, and the transport of metabolites across the blood-brain barrier (BBB) via transport proteins or secreted microbial extracellular vesicles (MEVs).
Impact on Mental Health and Neurological Disorders:
The review discusses how dysbiosis (an imbalance in gut microbiota) is linked to various mental health disorders, including depression, anxiety, and neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer's and Parkinson's. It suggests that microbial metabolites could play a significant role in the pathophysiology of these conditions, offering potential targets for therapeutic interventions.
Microbiota-Targeted Interventions (MBTIs):
The paper underscores the potential of microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs), such as prebiotics, probiotics, synbiotics, and postbiotics, to modulate gut-brain interactions. However, it also notes that the precise mechanisms underlying these interventions are not fully understood, which limits their current therapeutic application.
Challenges and Future Directions:
A major theme is the complexity and challenges of translating current findings into clinical practice. The review identifies gaps in understanding how microbial neuroactive metabolites specifically influence brain function and calls for more mechanistic studies to establish causality and therapeutic potential.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Review?
Advancement of Neuromicrobiology:
The review positions neuromicrobiology as a crucial field for understanding the gut-brain axis and its impact on brain health. It suggests that advances in this area could lead to novel approaches for preventing and treating neurological and psychiatric disorders by targeting the gut microbiome.
Potential for Novel Therapeutics:
The insights into microbial production of neuroactive compounds open up possibilities for developing new microbiota-targeted therapies. These could include specific probiotics engineered to produce neurotransmitters, or prebiotic diets designed to enhance the production of beneficial metabolites, which could be tailored to individual patient needs based on their gut microbiome composition.
Integration of Multi-Omics Approaches:
The paper calls for the integration of metagenomic, metabolomic, and transcriptomic data to better understand the microbiome-gut-brain axis. This could enable a more comprehensive understanding of how gut microbes influence brain health and lead to the identification of biomarkers for disease or targets for intervention.
Need for Mechanistic Research:
The "Neuromicrobiology, an Emerging Neurometabolic Facet of the Gut Microbiome?" review emphasizes the need to move beyond correlation studies and towards mechanistic research that clarifies how specific gut microbes and their metabolites influence brain function. This will be critical for developing evidence-based therapeutic applications and understanding individual variability in response to microbiome-targeted interventions.
Implications for Public Health:
By highlighting the role of the gut microbiome in brain health, the review suggests that dietary and lifestyle interventions targeting the gut microbiome could become a key component of public health strategies for preventing cognitive decline and mental health disorders.
Image modified from the original "Neuromicrobiology, an emerging neurometabolic facet of the gut microbiome?" review paper. Figure 4: The pathways through which gut microbiota-derived neuroactive compounds reach the brain—indirect transportation via modulation of host neurotransmitter biosynthesis, microbial extracellular vesicle (MEV) transportation, and direct transport—highlight the complex interactions between the gut and the brain. These mechanisms provide multiple routes through which the gut microbiome can impact brain function and behavior, emphasizing the importance of the gut-brain axis in health and disease.
Review test
February 12, 2026
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Brain Health
Brain Health
Brain health encompasses the overall functioning and well-being of the brain, including cognitive function, emotional and psychological well-being, neurological integrity, behavioral health, neurodevelopmental health, age-related brain health, and brain resilience and plasticity.
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test
The gut microbiome in neurological disorders
February 12, 2026
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Brain Health
Brain Health
Brain health encompasses the overall functioning and well-being of the brain, including cognitive function, emotional and psychological well-being, neurological integrity, behavioral health, neurodevelopmental health, age-related brain health, and brain resilience and plasticity.
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This review underscores the pivotal role of the gut microbiome in neurological health and disease, while also highlighting the potential for developing microbiome-based therapies. However, it calls for caution in interpreting the current evidence, advocating for more rigorous research to translate these findings into clinical practice.
What was reviewed?
This review comprehensively examined the emerging role of the gut microbiome in neurological disorders, focusing on the microbiota-gut-brain axis—a bidirectional communication network that links the gut microbiome to central nervous system (CNS) functions. The authors reviewed existing literature and studies that explore how gut microbiota influence neurodevelopment, aging, and the pathophysiology of various neurological disorders, including Alzheimer’s disease, autism spectrum disorder (ASD), multiple sclerosis, Parkinson’s disease, stroke, and traumatic brain injury. The review also examines the potential for microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) as therapeutic strategies in these conditions.
Who was reviewed?
The review primarily focused on:
Animal Models: A significant portion of the evidence comes from studies involving germ-free mice and other animal models, which have been used to demonstrate the impact of the gut microbiota on neurodevelopment, neuroinflammation, and behavior.
Human Studies: The review also included cross-sectional, observational, and interventional studies in human subjects, particularly in populations affected by neurological disorders. These human studies often explored correlations between microbiota composition and disease states, cognitive functions, and responses to microbiome-targeted interventions such as probiotics and dietary changes.
What were the most important findings of this review?
The most important findings of the review include:
Microbiota-Gut-Brain Axis: The gut microbiome plays a crucial role in brain health through multiple pathways, including immune modulation, neurotransmitter production, and regulation of neuroinflammation.
Neurodevelopment: Early-life microbiota composition significantly influences neurodevelopmental processes, with evidence from both animal and human studies suggesting that disruptions in the microbiota-gut-brain axis can affect cognitive and social behaviors.
Aging and Neurological Disorders: A diverse gut microbiome is associated with healthier aging and may protect against cognitive decline. In neurological disorders such as MS, PD, AD, and ASD, altered gut microbiota compositions have been observed, with certain bacterial taxa linked to disease pathophysiology.
Therapeutic Potential: There is growing evidence that microbiome-targeted interventions (e.g., probiotics, prebiotics, dietary changes) may modulate disease outcomes, though the field is nascent, and robust clinical trials are needed to confirm these therapeutic effects.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The greatest implications of this review are:
Potential for New Therapeutics: Understanding the microbiota–gut–brain axis could lead to novel therapeutic strategies targeting the gut microbiome to treat or prevent neurological disorders. This could involve probiotics, prebiotics, dietary interventions, or fecal microbiota transplantation.
Need for Longitudinal Studies: Many of the findings are based on cross-sectional studies, which provide a snapshot in time but do not establish causality. There is a need for longitudinal cohort studies and randomized controlled trials to better understand how microbiota changes over time in relation to disease progression and treatment response.
Precision Medicine: Integrating microbiome data with other omics (genomics, metabolomics) could help tailor treatments to individual patients based on their microbiota composition, potentially enhancing the effectiveness of therapies for neurological disorders.
Holistic Understanding of Neurological Diseases: The review highlights the importance of considering the gut microbiome as an integral part of understanding and managing neurological diseases, potentially shifting paradigms in neurology towards a more comprehensive systems biology approach.
Integration of Systems Biology: The authors underscore the importance of integrating microbiome research with genomic, metabolomic, and other multiomic data to understand the mechanisms underlying the microbiota-gut-brain axis fully. This approach could lead to the identification of biomarkers and the development of more precise interventions.
Potential for Preventive Measures: The review suggests that modulating the microbiome early in life or during the aging process could serve as a preventive strategy against cognitive decline and other neurological disorders. This could shift the focus from treating diseases after they manifest to preventing them through microbiome management.
Conclusion from the Authors
Recent advances have highlighted the critical role that the gut microbiota plays in both the development and maintenance of brain function. Evidence from a growing body of clinical and animal research strongly supports the involvement of the microbiota in neurological disorders such as Parkinson’s disease, multiple sclerosis, and autism spectrum disorder, with emerging insights into its role in Alzheimer’s disease and stroke. However, the field remains in its early stages, and researchers must exercise caution in interpreting these findings. Small sample sizes, methodological inconsistencies, and potential biases often limit the current body of work. To move forward, there is a pressing need for well-designed, large-scale studies that can accurately elucidate the complex relationships within the microbiota-gut-brain axis.
Future research must shift from observational studies to those that can establish causality and explore functional outcomes. This necessitates a greater emphasis on interventional approaches, such as the use of probiotics, prebiotics, and fecal microbiota transplantation, in longitudinal studies. Such approaches should aim to identify the microbiota as a biomarker of disease and test the efficacy of microbiota-targeted therapies in clinical populations.
Given the considerable interindividual variability in microbiota composition, a significant challenge lies in defining what constitutes a "healthy" microbiome. This variability complicates efforts to develop standardized therapeutic approaches. Nevertheless, it also opens the door to personalized medicine, where treatments are tailored to the individual’s unique microbiome profile. To advance this goal, researchers must delve deeper into the microbial ecosystem, beyond just bacterial genera, employing metagenomic and multi-omic techniques to understand the full spectrum of microbial influence on brain health.
Additionally, expanding research to include other components of the microbiome, such as viruses and bacteriophages, will be crucial to gaining a comprehensive understanding of their role in brain function. Investigating the interaction between host genetics and the microbiome is another underexplored area that holds promise for uncovering the biological mechanisms underlying neurological disorders. Systems biology approaches will be vital for integrating these diverse data streams and providing a holistic view of microbiota-gut-brain interactions.
Diet remains a major factor influencing microbiota composition, especially in the context of neurological disorders that affect nutritional intake. Understanding the relationship between diet, microbiota, and brain health will be key to developing dietary interventions that support neurological health throughout life. As research progresses, the influence of dietary components and microbial metabolites on health will likely become a central focus in the quest to develop microbiota-based therapies.
The interaction between medications and the microbiota is an emerging area of interest, as recent studies indicate that a substantial number of drugs can alter the gut microbiome. This interaction has significant implications for drug efficacy and safety, underscoring the need for further investigation. As we continue to explore these complex relationships, the next five years of research will be pivotal in determining how the microbiota can be harnessed to develop effective therapies for neurological disorders.
Image modified from the original "The gut microbiome in neurological disorders" Figure 2: Pathways of communication between the microbiota and the brain
The gut microbiota–brain axis in neurological disorder
February 12, 2026
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Brain Health
Brain Health
Brain health encompasses the overall functioning and well-being of the brain, including cognitive function, emotional and psychological well-being, neurological integrity, behavioral health, neurodevelopmental health, age-related brain health, and brain resilience and plasticity.
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This review highlights the critical role of gut microbiota in brain health and neurological disorders, suggesting that microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) could revolutionize the treatment and management of these conditions. However, further research is needed to fully understand the mechanisms involved and to develop safe and effective microbiome-targeted therapies.
What was reviewed?
The review paper provides a comprehensive overview of the gut microbiota-brain axis (GBA) and its role in various neurological disorders. Specifically, the paper examined the intricate bidirectional communication between the gut microbiota (GM) and the central nervous system (CNS), exploring how dysbiosis (an imbalance in the gut microbiota) contributes to the pathogenesis of neurological conditions such as Alzheimer’s disease (AD), Parkinson’s disease (PD), multiple sclerosis (MS), autism spectrum disorder (ASD), anxiety, depression, and stroke. The review also delved into the mechanisms by which gut microbiota influence brain health, including neurotransmitter production, endocrine signaling, immune modulation, and neuronal pathways.
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesized findings from a broad range of preclinical and clinical studies, drawing upon research involving animal models, human subjects, and in vitro experiments. The paper reviewed studies that have investigated the composition of gut microbiota in individuals with neurological disorders compared to healthy controls, as well as studies that explored the mechanistic pathways connecting gut microbiota with brain function. Additionally, the review considered research on potential microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as probiotics, prebiotics, and dietary modifications that could influence neurological health.
What were the most important findings of this review?
The review highlighted several key findings:
Bidirectional Communication of the Gut-Brain Axis: The gut-brain axis (GBA) operates through complex bidirectional communication involving multiple pathways, including neural, endocrine, immune, and metabolic routes. These pathways allow gut microbiota to influence brain function and, conversely, enable the brain to affect gastrointestinal processes.
Microbiota Dysbiosis and Neurological Disorders: Dysbiosis, or alterations in the gut microbiota composition, is consistently associated with several neurological disorders. For instance, individuals with AD, PD, MS, ASD, and mood disorders exhibit distinct microbiota profiles compared to healthy controls, including reduced diversity and imbalances in specific microbial taxa.
Mechanistic Pathways: The review detailed how gut microbiota impact brain health through various mechanisms:
Neurotransmitters: Gut microbes produce and modulate key neurotransmitters such as serotonin, dopamine, and GABA, which are crucial for CNS function.
Endocrine Signaling: Short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) produced by gut bacteria influence the release of gut hormones like GLP-1 and PYY, which affect mood, memory, and learning.
Immune Modulation: Gut microbiota influence the immune system, affecting neuroinflammation and playing a role in the pathogenesis of psychiatric and neurodegenerative diseases.
Neuronal Pathways: The vagus nerve serves as a direct communication route between the gut and the brain, with microbial metabolites potentially activating neurons.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The review has several significant implications:
Personalized Medicine: The variability in gut microbiota among individuals suggests that personalized approaches to treating neurological disorders could be more effective. Tailoring interventions based on an individual's microbiota profile could optimize therapeutic outcomes.
Microbiome as a Therapeutic Target: The findings underscore the potential of microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) in treating neurological disorders. Probiotics, prebiotics, dietary changes, and possibly even fecal microbiota transplants (FMT) could be developed as therapeutic strategies to restore gut microbiota balance and improve neurological outcomes.
Development of Biomarkers: The distinct microbial profiles observed in various neurological disorders suggest that gut microbiota composition could serve as a biomarker for early diagnosis, prognosis, and monitoring of treatment responses in these conditions.
Mechanistic Insights into Neurological Disorders: By elucidating the mechanisms through which gut microbiota influence brain function, the review opens new avenues for understanding the pathophysiology of neurological disorders. This knowledge could lead to more targeted and effective treatments that address the underlying causes of these diseases.
Interdisciplinary Research and Clinical Translation: The review highlights the need for continued collaboration between microbiology, neuroscience, immunology, and clinical research to translate these findings into practical applications. Developing effective MBTIs requires a deep understanding of the gut-brain axis, which can only be achieved through interdisciplinary research.
A systematic review of randomised clinical trials – The safety of vaginal hormones and selective estrogen receptor modulators for the treatment of genitourinary menopausal symptoms in breast cancer survivors
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Breast Cancer
Breast Cancer
Traditionally linked to genetic predispositions and environmental exposures, emerging evidence highlights the microbiome as a critical and underappreciated factor influencing breast cancer progression, immune response, and treatment outcomes.
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Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) is one of the most effective treatments for women experiencing the symptoms of menopause, particularly vasomotor symptoms such as hot flashes and night sweats. But its benefits go beyond just symptom management. HRT can also play a key role in improving vaginal health by alleviating dryness and discomfort, which are common complaints among women in menopause. Additionally, it helps prevent bone loss, significantly reducing the risk of osteoporosis and fractures, which are more common after menopause. Despite its many benefits, HRT is not one-size-fits-all; it’s essential to tailor treatment based on individual health profiles, taking into account the risks like breast cancer, blood clots, and heart disease that come with prolonged use.
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This review assesses the safety of vaginal hormones and SERMs in treating genitourinary menopausal symptoms in breast cancer survivors. It finds no significant rise in serum estrogen levels or an increased risk of breast cancer recurrence, but more extensive studies are needed to confirm these findings.
What was studied?
This systematic review focused on the safety of vaginal hormone therapies and selective estrogen receptor modulators (SERMs) for the treatment of genitourinary menopausal symptoms (GMS) in breast cancer survivors. It specifically aimed to evaluate the risks of breast cancer recurrence associated with these treatments, as well as any significant rise in serum estrogen levels following their use. The study assessed randomized clinical trials (RCTs) that tested vaginal estrogen therapies, dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA), and oral SERMs, all of which are used to manage menopausal symptoms, particularly those affecting the genitourinary system. The review also aimed to clarify the clinical safety of these therapies in the context of breast cancer, where concerns about estrogenic effects potentially increasing the risk of cancer recurrence are prevalent.
Who was studied?
The review included breast cancer survivors who were treated with various forms of hormone therapy to manage genitourinary menopausal symptoms. The studies selected for this review specifically focused on postmenopausal women, ages 18 and older, who had previously been diagnosed with breast cancer and were undergoing treatments such as vaginal estrogen therapies (e.g., estriol and estradiol) and dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) gel. Participants in these trials did not have any active breast cancer or recurrence but had been treated for early-stage breast cancer, often receiving tamoxifen or aromatase inhibitors (AIs) as part of their post-cancer endocrine therapy.
Most important findings
The systematic review found that none of the included studies specifically assessed breast cancer recurrence, a critical factor for these patients. However, among the studies observing for serious adverse effects, no increased incidence of breast cancer recurrence was reported. Additionally, studies did not observe a persistent or significant rise in serum estrogen levels following the use of vaginal estrogen products or DHEA gel. The reviewed RCTs demonstrated that while vaginal estrogen may cause transient elevations in estrogen levels, these levels did not remain elevated over time, minimizing the risk of systemic absorption that could impact breast cancer recurrence. One study found transient estrogen rises in serum levels, but no significant long-term effects were noted. The review highlighted the need for larger RCTs with longer follow-up periods to better assess the potential risks of these therapies in breast cancer survivors.
Key implications
The findings suggest that vaginal estrogen and DHEA gel may be viable options for managing genitourinary menopausal symptoms in breast cancer survivors, as long as serum estrogen levels do not rise significantly or persistently. These therapies appear to be relatively safe with regard to breast cancer recurrence, based on current evidence, although more robust clinical trials with longer follow-up are needed. Given the complex relationship between hormonal treatments and cancer recurrence risk, clinicians should consider these findings carefully, especially in patients undergoing aromatase inhibitor therapy. While the review supports the use of vaginal estrogen as a second-line treatment for severe genitourinary symptoms in breast cancer survivors, it calls for more comprehensive trials to provide clearer evidence on long-term safety.
The Role of Lead and Cadmium in Gynecological Malignancies
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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Breast Cancer
Breast Cancer
Traditionally linked to genetic predispositions and environmental exposures, emerging evidence highlights the microbiome as a critical and underappreciated factor influencing breast cancer progression, immune response, and treatment outcomes.
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This study explores the role of lead and cadmium in gynecological malignancies, focusing on their ability to mimic estrogen and induce oxidative stress, contributing to cancer development. It highlights their potential as biomarkers for early detection and treatment.
What was studied?
The paper investigates the impact of two toxic heavy metals, lead (Pb) and cadmium (Cd), on the development of gynecological cancers such as ovarian, endometrial, and cervical cancers. The authors explore how these metals contribute to cancer development, particularly through mechanisms like oxidative stress, DNA damage, and their ability to mimic estrogen. This review highlights the potential of Pb and Cd as biomarkers for cancer risk and progression, emphasizing their roles in the oncogenesis of gynecological malignancies.
Who was studied?
The study centers around women exposed to Pb and Cd, particularly those with gynecological cancers. It examines clinical and experimental research linking elevated metal levels to cancer occurrence, focusing on ovarian, cervical, and endometrial cancers. The research delves into the biological changes these metals cause, including hormonal disruption, oxidative stress, and DNA damage, all of which are associated with cancer development.
Most important findings
The study identifies the carcinogenic properties of Pb and Cd, showing that both metals function as metalloestrogens, activating estrogen receptors and mimicking estrogen’s effects. This mechanism contributes to hormone-dependent cancers like ovarian, endometrial, and cervical cancers. Elevated levels of Pb and Cd were found in neoplastic tissues of these cancers, establishing a clear connection between their presence and increased cancer risk. These metals were also found to disrupt oxidative stress regulation, leading to cellular damage. Pb has been linked to increased cancer risks, particularly breast cancer, while Cd similarly affects estrogen receptors, promoting hormone-related cancers. The study also points to the possibility of using Pb and Cd as biomarkers for early detection and progression monitoring of gynecological cancers.
Key implications
This research underscores the importance of reducing environmental and occupational exposure to Pb and Cd, which are modifiable risk factors for gynecological cancers. Identifying these metals as potential biomarkers provides a valuable tool for early detection and diagnosis, offering a new avenue for cancer risk assessment. Reducing exposure to these metals is essential to mitigate cancer risk, and further studies are needed to understand their full role in cancer development.
Probiotics as Anti-Tumor Agents: Insights from Female Tumor Cell Culture Studies
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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Breast Cancer
Breast Cancer
Traditionally linked to genetic predispositions and environmental exposures, emerging evidence highlights the microbiome as a critical and underappreciated factor influencing breast cancer progression, immune response, and treatment outcomes.
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Probiotics were shown to significantly reduce cancer cell proliferation, promote apoptosis, and inhibit migration in breast and ovarian cancer cells, suggesting their potential as adjunctive cancer therapies.
What was studied?
This study explores the effects of probiotics as potential anti-tumor agents in two female cancer cell lines: MDA-MB-231 (triple-negative breast cancer) and OVCAR-3 (ovarian adenocarcinoma). Researchers tested several probiotic strains, including Streptococcus thermophilus, Lactobacillus delbrueckii, and Bifidobacterium lactis, assessing their impact on cancer cell proliferation, migration, and protein expression related to the cell cycle and apoptosis.
Who was studied?
The study focused on two human cancer cell lines: MDA-MB-231, representing triple-negative breast cancer, and OVCAR-3, an ovarian adenocarcinoma cell line. These cell lines were chosen due to their relevance in aggressive forms of cancer, which are often characterized by high proliferation rates and metastatic potential. Probiotic strains were applied in vitro to test their anti-tumor effects.
Most important findings
The study demonstrated that probiotic lysates significantly reduced the proliferation of both cancer cell lines. Specifically, the Lactobacillus strains (E and F) showed the most promising anti-proliferative effects, with a reduction of up to 70% in cell proliferation. Western blot analysis revealed key molecular changes: an increase in phosphorylated p53 (a tumor suppressor protein) in the OVCAR-3 cells, suggesting a potential induction of apoptosis. Additionally, there was a notable decrease in proteins associated with cancer cell survival and migration, including cyclin D1 (critical for cell cycle progression), p-ERK1 (involved in survival signaling), and RhoA (linked to cell migration). The probiotic treatment reduced cell migration, particularly in the OVCAR-3 cells, without affecting non-cancerous cells, highlighting a degree of specificity for tumor cells.
Probiotic Strain
Actions
Streptococcus thermophilus
Antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, anti-mutagenic
Lactobacillus delbrueckii
Inhibits colitis-associated cancer development
Bifidobacterium lactis
Supports intestinal barrier function, anti-cancer
Lactobacillus acidophilus
Anticarcinogenic, immune stimulation
Lactobacillus rhamnosus
Anti-colon cancer, modulates gut microbiota
Lactobacillus casei
Immune system stimulation, anticarcinogenic
Key implications
The findings suggest that certain probiotic strains may offer new adjunctive therapies for cancer treatment, specifically in breast and ovarian cancers. Their ability to reduce tumor cell proliferation, promote cell death, and inhibit migration could complement existing treatments, potentially improving patient outcomes. However, further studies are needed, especially in vivo, to explore the full potential and safety of probiotics as cancer therapies. The specificity of probiotics for tumor cells without harming healthy cells is a critical factor for their future clinical use.
Physical Activity and Breast Cancer Risk: Evidence, Mechanisms, and Clinical Implications
February 12, 2026
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Breast Cancer
Breast Cancer
Traditionally linked to genetic predispositions and environmental exposures, emerging evidence highlights the microbiome as a critical and underappreciated factor influencing breast cancer progression, immune response, and treatment outcomes.
•
Resistance (Strength) Training
Resistance (Strength) Training
OverviewResistance (strength) training appears to exert modest but meaningful effects on the human gut microbiome. Unlike aerobic exercise, which often leads to pronounced changes in microbial diversity and taxonomic shifts, short-term resistance training tends to result in minimal changes in overall microbiome composition or alpha-diversity. However, this does not indicate a lack of functional impact. […]
•
This review summarizes evidence linking physical activity to reduced breast cancer risk, with significant benefits for postmenopausal women. Mechanisms include hormonal modulation, reduced inflammation, enhanced immunity, and potential microbiome interactions, supporting exercise as a key preventive strategy.
What was reviewed?
This narrative review, “The Role of Physical Activity in Breast Cancer Prevention,” synthesizes epidemiological and mechanistic research on how physical activity influences breast cancer risk, with a particular focus on postmenopausal women. Drawing on cohort, case-control, and meta-analytic studies, the review evaluates the magnitude of risk reduction associated with various intensities and types of physical activity. It also explores the biological mechanisms underlying these associations, including hormonal regulation, inflammation, immune function, and metabolic changes. Notably, while the review does not directly assess microbiome composition, it highlights the multifactorial nature of breast cancer risk and the growing importance of modifiable lifestyle factors—such as exercise—that may intersect with microbiome-related pathways.
Who was reviewed?
The review encompasses evidence from multiple population subgroups, primarily focusing on women, since over 99% of breast cancer cases occur in females. It surveys data from premenopausal and postmenopausal women, including those with hereditary risk factors (e.g., BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutations) and those exposed to varying environmental and lifestyle risks. The review references studies with broad demographic representation, including cross-cultural research on breast cancer incidence in women who migrate from low- to high-risk countries, underscoring the significance of lifestyle and environmental exposures. While the review is not a systematic meta-analysis, it draws on systematic reviews, meta-analyses, and large-scale cohort studies to present a holistic view of the evidence.
Most important findings
A consistent body of evidence demonstrates a significant inverse association between physical activity, resistance training, and breast cancer risk. Systematic reviews and meta-analyses report risk reductions ranging from 10% to 80%, depending on the population, study design, and activity intensity. The average risk reduction is about 12–25%, with the strongest protective effect seen in postmenopausal women who engage in moderate-to-vigorous exercise sustained over the lifespan. The benefit is also evident for premenopausal women, particularly with vigorous activity. Importantly, the protective effect of physical activity appears independent of weight loss, indicating direct biological effects.
Mechanistically, physical activity is proposed to lower breast cancer risk through several pathways relevant to the emerging field of microbiome-host interaction. These include reductions in circulating estrogen, progesterone, and insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) levels, all of which are implicated in breast cancer pathogenesis. Exercise also leads to decreased levels of chronic inflammatory markers such as C-reactive protein (CRP) and enhances immune surveillance—specifically, increased natural killer cell activity, which is critical for the identification and destruction of abnormal cells. Notably, high-intensity interval training (HIIT) is linked to a more significant increase in natural killer cells compared to moderate exercise, suggesting a possible dose-response relationship.
Though not explicitly addressed in the review, these mechanisms may intersect with the gut microbiome, as both inflammation and estrogen metabolism are influenced by microbial communities. For example, the gut microbiota modulates systemic estrogen levels via β-glucuronidase expression and enterohepatic circulation, and physical activity is known to shape microbiome diversity and function. Therefore, the observed associations between exercise and breast cancer risk may, in part, be mediated by microbiome-driven metabolic and immunological pathways.
Key implications
The review strongly supports the promotion of physical activity as a viable, low-risk strategy to reduce breast cancer risk across diverse populations, especially among postmenopausal women. Public health recommendations should emphasize at least 150 minutes per week of moderate-intensity or 75 minutes of vigorous-intensity exercise, with additional benefits seen at higher activity levels. Clinicians should incorporate physical activity counseling into routine preventive care for women, regardless of baseline body weight or genetic risk. The potential for exercise to favorably modulate hormonal, inflammatory, and immune factors—possibly via microbiome interactions—underscores the need for further research into how these pathways converge. Integrating exercise into cancer prevention strategies may also complement emerging microbiome-targeted interventions, paving the way for more personalized, holistic approaches to breast cancer prevention.
Citation
Edwards D. The Role of Physical Activity in Breast Cancer Prevention. J Evol Health. 2019;4(1). doi:10.15310/J34146744
Breast tissue, oral and urinary microbiomes in breast cancer
February 12, 2026
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Breast Cancer
Breast Cancer
Traditionally linked to genetic predispositions and environmental exposures, emerging evidence highlights the microbiome as a critical and underappreciated factor influencing breast cancer progression, immune response, and treatment outcomes.
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This study explores the differences in microbiomes across breast tissue, oral, and urinary sites in women with and without breast cancer. Key findings suggest distinct microbiomic patterns in cancerous tissue and the urinary microbiome, providing new insights into the role of microbiota in cancer development.
What was studied?
This study aimed to explore the role of the microbiome in breast cancer, specifically comparing the microbiomes of breast tissue, oral cavity, and urinary tract in women with and without breast cancer. The researchers hypothesized that cancerous breast tissue would have a distinct microbiome compared to benign tissue and that microbiomes from distant sites (oral and urinary) would also show signs of dysbiosis. The microbial profiles were analyzed by amplifying the bacterial 16S rRNA gene from various samples and analyzing them with QIIME-based bioinformatics tools.
Who was studied?
The study enrolled 78 women, including 57 women with invasive breast cancer undergoing mastectomy and 21 healthy women undergoing cosmetic breast surgeries such as mammoplasty or mastopexy. The participants were stratified by their cancer status, menopausal status, and other clinical characteristics, including body mass index (BMI) and age. Samples from breast tissue, oral rinse, and urine were collected for analysis.
Most important findings
The study revealed significant differences in the microbiomes of breast tissue from cancer patients compared to non-cancer controls. Notably, cancer patient breast tissue exhibited decreased relative abundance of Methylobacterium, a finding linked to breast cancer pathology. However, there were no significant differences in oral microbiomes between cancer and non-cancer patients. Urinary microbiomes, on the other hand, showed differences largely explained by menopausal status, with peri/postmenopausal women having decreased levels of Lactobacillus. Cancer patients, independent of menopausal status, showed increased levels of gram-positive bacteria, including Corynebacterium, Staphylococcus, Actinomyces, and Propionibacteriaceae, suggesting a distinct microbiomic pattern in cancer patients, particularly in the urinary microbiome.
Key implications
The findings highlight the potential for using microbiome analysis as a tool for understanding breast cancer, suggesting that the microbiomes of different body sites, particularly the breast tissue and urinary microbiomes, may serve as biomarkers for cancer. Specifically, the altered microbial profile in cancerous breast tissue, alongside the observed dysbiosis in urinary microbiomes, could provide insight into how systemic factors, such as hormonal changes, affect microbial communities in cancer patients. Further investigation is needed to validate these associations in larger cohorts and to explore potential therapeutic implications.
Gut microbiome associations with breast cancer risk factors and tumor characteristics: a pilot study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Breast Cancer
Breast Cancer
Traditionally linked to genetic predispositions and environmental exposures, emerging evidence highlights the microbiome as a critical and underappreciated factor influencing breast cancer progression, immune response, and treatment outcomes.
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This pilot study links gut microbiome diversity with breast cancer risk factors and tumor characteristics, particularly in HER2+ tumors and those with early menarche. It suggests microbial alterations in these groups that may influence cancer development and risk.
What was studied?
This study explored the relationship between the gut microbiome and breast cancer risk factors and tumor characteristics, focusing on the diversity of gut microbiota in relation to estrogen receptor (ER), progesterone receptor (PR), and human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2) status, as well as other factors such as age at menarche, body mass index (BMI), and total body fat (TBF). The authors used 16S ribosomal RNA sequencing to analyze fecal samples from women diagnosed with incident breast cancer, aiming to discern microbial differences across these parameters.
Who was studied?
The study was conducted with 37 women diagnosed with incident invasive breast cancer. Most participants were Hispanic (73%), and the majority (75%) had overweight or obesity, with a mean age of 50.6 years. These women were either premenopausal (54%) or postmenopausal (46%), and their breast cancer diagnosis varied in terms of stage (I/II or III), grade (I/II or III), and hormone receptor status (ER+/PR+ or ER−/PR−). The study considered various risk factors, including BMI, TBF, parity, and physical activity levels.
Most important findings
The study found no significant differences in gut microbiome diversity by ER or PR status, tumor grade, or stage. However, women with HER2+ breast cancer had lower alpha diversity compared to those with HER2− tumors. Additionally, a higher abundance of Bacteroidetes and a lower abundance of Firmicutes were noted in HER2+ compared to HER2− patients. Women with earlier age at menarche (≤ 11 years) also exhibited lower diversity and an altered composition, with a significant decrease in Firmicutes abundance. Interestingly, women with higher TBF (> 46%) had significantly lower diversity than those with lower TBF (≤ 46%).
Key implications
The findings suggest that the gut microbiome is associated with key breast cancer risk factors such as HER2 status, age at menarche, and body composition. A lower microbial diversity, particularly among HER2+ patients and those with early menarche, may indicate an altered microbiome that could influence breast cancer progression or susceptibility. These associations warrant further investigation with larger sample sizes and longitudinal studies to confirm the microbiome's role in breast cancer subtypes and prognosis.
A comprehensive analysis of breast cancer microbiota and host gene expression
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Breast Cancer
Breast Cancer
Traditionally linked to genetic predispositions and environmental exposures, emerging evidence highlights the microbiome as a critical and underappreciated factor influencing breast cancer progression, immune response, and treatment outcomes.
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The study analyzed breast tumor and adjacent tissues, linking microbiota composition to cancer pathways. Key findings implicate specific microbes in breast cancer progression.
What Was Studied?
This study investigated the microbial composition of breast tumor tissues compared to non-cancerous adjacent (NCA) tissues, focusing on identifying specific microbiota associated with different breast cancer subtypes. The research utilized RNA sequencing data from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA), analyzing microbial reads and their association with host gene expression profiles to explore the role of the tumor microbiota in breast cancer pathogenesis.
Who Was Studied?
The study involved 668 breast tumor tissue samples and 72 NCA samples. The samples were filtered to exclude male patients, metastatic cases, and individuals with a history of breast cancer or neoadjuvant therapy, ensuring a robust cohort for microbial and host gene analysis.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study identified distinct microbial signatures between tumor and NCA tissues. Proteobacteria were significantly enriched in tumor samples, while Actinobacteria were more prevalent in NCA tissues. Specific microbial taxa, such as Haemophilus influenzae, were associated with genes involved in tumor-promoting pathways, including the G2M checkpoint, E2F transcription factors, and mitotic spindle assembly. Similarly, Listeria fleischmannii correlated with epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition pathways, a hallmark of cancer metastasis.
Twelve of the most abundant species, including Escherichia coli, Mycobacterium fortuitum, and Salmonella enterica, showed significant differential abundance between tumor and NCA tissues. These species are notable for their potential roles in DNA damage and estrogen metabolism, contributing to genomic instability and hormonal dysregulation in breast cancer. The findings also revealed that less prevalent taxa often showed the most significant differential abundance, highlighting the challenges of detecting meaningful microbial shifts in underpowered studies.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
This research underscores the complex interplay between the tumor microbiota and host gene expression in breast cancer. The enrichment of specific microbial taxa in tumor tissues and their associations with oncogenic pathways suggest that the microbiota may play an active role in breast cancer progression. These findings open avenues for microbiota-targeted interventions and diagnostic tools based on microbial markers. Furthermore, the study highlights the need for large-scale, well-controlled cohorts to accurately characterize the tumor microbiome and its clinical relevance.
Association between Gut Microbiota and Breast Cancer: Diet as a Potential Modulating Factor
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Breast Cancer
Breast Cancer
Traditionally linked to genetic predispositions and environmental exposures, emerging evidence highlights the microbiome as a critical and underappreciated factor influencing breast cancer progression, immune response, and treatment outcomes.
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This study links reduced gut microbial diversity and specific taxa (e.g., Acidaminococcus, Hungatella) to breast cancer, influenced by diet. Findings suggest microbiome-targeted interventions and dietary strategies could mitigate breast cancer risk.
What Was Studied?
This study examined the association between gut microbiota composition and breast cancer, focusing on the role of diet as a potential modulating factor. Researchers conducted a case-control study involving 42 newly diagnosed, treatment-naïve BCa patients and 44 age-matched cancer-free controls. The gut microbiome was analyzed through 16S rRNA sequencing, and dietary patterns were assessed using the National Cancer Institute Diet History Questionnaire.
Who Was Studied?
Participants included females aged 20–89 years from the Oregon Health & Science University. breast cancer patients were diagnosed through biopsy and had not yet undergone any treatment. Cancer-free controls were matched by age and underwent recent mammograms with non-suspicious results. The study collected fecal samples, dietary data, and comprehensive lifestyle information to ensure robust comparisons.
Most Important Findings
The study identified significant differences in the gut microbiome composition between breast cancer cases and controls, including reduced microbial diversity among breast cancer patients, indicative of dysbiosis. Specifically, the genera Acidaminococcus, Hungatella, and Tyzzerella were enriched, while controls exhibited enrichment of genera such as Christensenellaceae and Dialister. These findings were linked to dietary patterns: Acidaminococcus correlated with lower fruit intake, Hungatella with reduced dairy intake but increased vegetable consumption, and Tyzzerella was not significantly associated with dietary variables. Importantly, the reduced diversity and altered microbial profiles in breast cancer patients align with previous evidence suggesting a role for gut dysbiosis in cancer progression via immune modulation and microbial metabolite production.
Greatest Implications
This study highlights the gut microbiome's potential as a biomarker for breast cancer risk and emphasizes the role of diet in modulating microbial composition. Dysbiosis, characterized by an imbalance in gut microbiota, is linked to breast cancer, suggesting that microbiome-targeted dietary interventions could aid in prevention and management. For example, increased consumption of whole fruits may help reduce levels of Acidaminococcus, a genus enriched in breast cancer patients, while higher dairy intake could lower the abundance of Hungatella, a genus associated with TMAO production and cancer-promoting pathways. Interestingly, the study also found that greater vegetable consumption was linked to higher levels of Hungatella, which has been associated with increased risks of both breast and colorectal cancer. These findings underscore the complexity of dietary influences on the gut microbiome and their potential role in cancer prevention.
Breast cancer but not the menopausal status is associated with small changes of the gut microbiota
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Breast Cancer
Breast Cancer
Traditionally linked to genetic predispositions and environmental exposures, emerging evidence highlights the microbiome as a critical and underappreciated factor influencing breast cancer progression, immune response, and treatment outcomes.
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This study shows that breast cancer, rather than menopausal status, drives subtle gut microbiota changes. Dysbiosis in BC patients included reduced Blautia obeum and Bifidobacterium. Functional impacts, such as downregulated NAD pathways, suggest gut microbiota's potential role in cancer progression.
What Was Studied?
This study investigated the relationship between gut microbiota composition and breast cancer (BC), focusing on the potential impact of menopausal status on microbiota variations. The researchers used shotgun metagenomics to compare the gut microbiota of 88 newly diagnosed BC patients (47 premenopausal and 41 postmenopausal) with 86 cancer-free controls, stratified by menopausal status.
Who Was Studied?
The participants included Polish women divided into two groups: BC patients and controls. The BC group was further divided into premenopausal and postmenopausal subgroups. Fecal samples were collected before systemic cancer treatment, and patients with prior antibiotic use, inflammatory bowel disease, or a history of cancer (for controls) were excluded.
Most Important Findings
The study showed that menopausal status had no significant impact on the overall gut microbiota composition or diversity. However, breast cancer (BC) patients exhibited gut dysbiosis compared to controls. Premenopausal BC patients demonstrated lower abundances of taxa such as Bifidobacterium and Collinsella massiliensis but higher abundances of the genus Gemmiger. In postmenopausal BC patients, taxa such as Blautia obeum, Dorea formicigenerans, and Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron were reduced, while Faecalibacterium prausnitzii showed an overrepresentation, potentially indicating a protective or prognostic role. Functional alterations were minimal, with the NAD salvage pathway downregulated in premenopausal BC patients, possibly affecting DNA repair. Enterotype analysis revealed that Bacteroides-dominated enterotypes were more common in controls, while Prevotella and Alistipes were enriched in BC patients. Additionally, bacterial diversity was notably lower in postmenopausal BC patients compared to controls, emphasizing the role of gut dysbiosis in BC pathology rather than menopausal status.
Bacteroides enterotypes prevalent in controls; Prevotella and Alistipes enriched in BC patients.
N/A
Postmenopausal BC Patients (Alpha-Diversity)
Lower bacterial diversity compared to controls.
N/A
Greatest Implications
The study underscores the importance of gut microbiota in BC development, suggesting that dysbiosis may not be directly related to menopausal status but rather to BC pathology itself. These findings have potential diagnostic implications, as machine learning models using gut microbiota profiles demonstrated an ability to distinguish BC patients from controls with high accuracy (AUC > 0.8). The study highlights the need for further research to explore the mechanisms linking microbiota alterations and BC progression, particularly focusing on key taxa like Faecalibacterium prausnitzii and Bifidobacterium, as well as geographic and lifestyle factors influencing microbiota composition.
Breast cancer in postmenopausal women is associated with an altered gut metagenome
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Breast Cancer
Breast Cancer
Traditionally linked to genetic predispositions and environmental exposures, emerging evidence highlights the microbiome as a critical and underappreciated factor influencing breast cancer progression, immune response, and treatment outcomes.
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The study revealed altered gut microbiota in postmenopausal breast cancer patients, with enriched inflammation-associated species and depleted butyrate producers. Functional gene changes suggest links to systemic inflammation and metabolic imbalance, providing insights into microbiota's role in cancer progression.
What Was Studied?
This study investigated the differences in the composition and functional capacities of gut microbiota between postmenopausal breast cancer patients and postmenopausal healthy controls. The researchers conducted a comprehensive shotgun metagenomic analysis to assess microbial diversity, taxonomic abundance, functional gene profiles, and potential associations with clinical indices.
Who Was Studied?
The study involved 44 postmenopausal breast cancer patients and 46 postmenopausal healthy controls, as well as 18 premenopausal breast cancer patients and 25 premenopausal healthy controls. All participants were treatment-naive and free from other conditions such as diabetes or inflammatory bowel diseases, which could confound the microbiome analysis.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study found significant differences in gut microbial diversity and composition between postmenopausal breast cancer patients and healthy controls. Microbial diversity was higher in breast cancer patients. Forty-five microbial species exhibited significant differences in abundance; 38 species were enriched in breast cancer patients, including Escherichia coli, Klebsiella sp., and Prevotella amnii, while 7 species, such as Eubacterium eligens and Lactobacillus vaginalis, were depleted. Functionally, the gut metagenomes of patients were enriched in genes linked to lipopolysaccharide (LPS) biosynthesis, iron transport, and secretion systems, which may contribute to systemic inflammation and metabolic alterations. Importantly, butyrate-producing bacteria like Roseburia inulinivorans were reduced in patients, potentially affecting anti-inflammatory processes.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
This study highlights the potential role of gut microbiota in influencing systemic inflammation, estrogen metabolism, and immune regulation in postmenopausal breast cancer. The enrichment of LPS biosynthesis and iron transport genes points to mechanisms that may drive inflammation and tumorigenesis. The depletion of butyrate producers suggests a loss of anti-inflammatory microbiota functions, underscoring the gut microbiota’s importance in maintaining immune homeostasis. These findings suggest that gut microbiota could serve as biomarkers for breast cancer and potential therapeutic targets to mitigate disease progression.
Breast cancer patients from the Midwest region of the United States have reduced levels of short-chain fatty acid-producing gut bacteria
February 12, 2026
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Breast Cancer
Breast Cancer
Traditionally linked to genetic predispositions and environmental exposures, emerging evidence highlights the microbiome as a critical and underappreciated factor influencing breast cancer progression, immune response, and treatment outcomes.
•
Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This study identifies gut dysbiosis in breast cancer patients, highlighting reduced SCFA-producing bacteria and altered microbial pathways. Findings suggest microbiome-targeted interventions could aid breast cancer treatment.
What was studied?
This study investigated the gut microbiome composition in breast cancer (BC) patients from the Midwest region of the United States, focusing on its taxonomic composition and functional profiling. Using 16S ribosomal RNA sequencing, the study examined the bacterial microbiome, specifically targeting short-chain fatty acid (SCFA)-producing bacteria. It aimed to identify microbial dysbiosis and its potential role in breast cancer pathobiology, emphasizing regional differences in microbiome signatures.
Who was studied?
The study included 22 breast cancer patients and 19 healthy controls, all recruited from the University of Iowa. Participants were matched by race, body mass index (BMI), and sex. Inclusion criteria required BC patients to have invasive breast cancer, with exclusion criteria such as antibiotic use during sample collection. Healthy controls were similarly screened for factors that might impact gut microbiota, like recent antibiotic or laxative use.
What were the most important findings?
The study identified significant gut microbiome differences between breast cancer patients and healthy controls, particularly in alpha and beta diversity measures. Breast cancer (BC) patients showed evidence of gut dysbiosis, including a decrease in beneficial SCFA-producing bacteria and an enrichment of pro-inflammatory taxa. These alterations suggest a microbiome imbalance that may contribute to inflammation and disease progression. Furthermore, the study highlighted functional disruptions in microbiome pathways, with reduced production of SCFAs such as propionate and acetate, which are essential for maintaining gut health and modulating immune responses. These findings underscore the importance of microbiome-targeted interventions to restore microbial balance and support breast cancer treatment.
SCFA reduction contributes to inflammation and impaired gut motility.
Pro-Inflammatory Bacteria
Enriched Eggerthella lenta, Blautia species
Reduced levels
Linked to inflammation and cancer progression.
Functional Pathways
Decreased SCFA pathways (propionate, acetate)
Intact pathways
Dysbiosis may exacerbate systemic inflammation and disrupt gut homeostasis.
Beta Diversity Clustering
Significant clustering distinct from HC
No significant clustering
Indicates an altered microbiome composition in BC.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings underscore the role of gut microbial dysbiosis in breast cancer, with SCFA-producing bacteria depletion linked to inflammation and cancer pathogenesis. This highlights potential avenues for microbiome-targeted therapies, such as probiotics or dietary interventions, aimed at restoring SCFA production and microbial balance. Moreover, the study emphasizes the need for region-specific microbiome research to tailor interventions effectively.
Composition and Functional Potential of the Human Mammary Microbiota Prior to and Following Breast Tumor Diagnosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Breast Cancer
Breast Cancer
Traditionally linked to genetic predispositions and environmental exposures, emerging evidence highlights the microbiome as a critical and underappreciated factor influencing breast cancer progression, immune response, and treatment outcomes.
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This study explores the mammary microbiota's composition and function before and after breast cancer diagnosis, revealing dysbiosis and metabolic shifts as early markers.
What was studied?
This study investigated the composition and functional potential of the human mammary microbiota in healthy breast tissues and those associated with breast cancer development. The researchers focused on tissue samples collected before cancer diagnosis (prediagnostic or PD), as well as adjacent normal (AN) and tumor (T) tissues from breast cancer patients. Using 16S rRNA sequencing and functional metagenomic predictions, they aimed to identify bacterial dysbiosis and metabolic changes associated with breast cancer progression.
Who was studied?
A total of 141 women were included in the study, contributing 159 breast tissue samples. These included 49 samples from healthy individuals (H), 15 from prediagnostic cases (PD), 49 from adjacent normal tissues (AN), and 46 from tumor tissues (T). The prediagnostic samples were obtained from women who later developed breast cancer, allowing researchers to explore early microbial changes.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed significant bacterial dysbiosis and metabolic reprogramming in PD, AN, and T tissues compared to healthy tissues. Prediagnostic tissues exhibited an intermediary bacterial composition between healthy and cancerous tissues. Shifts in specific bacterial families such as Bacillaceae, Streptococcaceae, and Corynebacteriaceae were detected in PD tissues and were more pronounced in AN and T tissues. Functional analysis revealed reduced bacterial metabolic activities, particularly pathways related to xenobiotics degradation, which could otherwise protect against carcinogenesis. Additionally, altered correlations between host gene expression and microbial functions were observed, highlighting potential early microbial responses to tumor microenvironments.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This research highlights the mammary microbiota's potential as a critical biomarker for early breast cancer detection and risk stratification by revealing bacterial dysbiosis and metabolic reprogramming in prediagnostic tissues, suggesting microbial changes may precede clinical symptoms or histological abnormalities. The identification of an intermediary microbiota composition in prediagnostic tissues supports the microbiome's role in early cancer development, indicating microbial shifts as potential early drivers or responders to tumorigenesis. A significant reduction in metabolic functions, such as xenobiotic degradation, in cancer-associated tissues implies a diminished microbial ability to detoxify carcinogens, increasing susceptibility to tumor formation. Altered correlations between microbial taxa and host gene expression further suggest dynamic interactions influencing immune responses, inflammation, and cellular proliferation, with positive associations between microbial functions and tumor-related genes pointing to potential mechanistic links to cancer progression.
These findings not only enhance understanding of the microbiota's role in breast cancer but also offer clinical translation opportunities, including the development of non-invasive diagnostic tools based on prediagnostic microbial signatures, microbiome-modulating therapies to target dysbiosis, and therapeutic interventions aimed at restoring protective bacterial functions and reducing cancer risk.
Comprehensive profiles and diagnostic value of menopausal-specific gut microbiota in premenopausal breast cancer
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Breast Cancer
Breast Cancer
Traditionally linked to genetic predispositions and environmental exposures, emerging evidence highlights the microbiome as a critical and underappreciated factor influencing breast cancer progression, immune response, and treatment outcomes.
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This study identifies menopausal-specific gut microbial markers and functional pathways linked to breast cancer, offering diagnostic potential and insights into prevention.
What was studied?
This study investigated the gut microbiota profiles, diagnostic value, and functional pathways specific to premenopausal breast cancer patients. It aimed to identify unique gut microbial markers distinguishing premenopausal breast cancer patients from postmenopausal patients and age-matched controls. The study also explored functional pathways of gut microbiota linked to breast cancer progression and diagnostic potential.
Who was studied?
The study analyzed 267 participants divided into four groups: premenopausal controls (Pre-C, n=50), premenopausal breast cancer patients (Pre-BC, n=100), postmenopausal controls (Post-C, n=17), and postmenopausal breast cancer patients (Post-BC, n=100). All breast cancer patients were newly diagnosed with stage I–II disease and excluded if they had received treatments or medications affecting gut microbiota before fecal sample collection.
What were the most important findings?
The study highlights significant differences in gut microbial diversity, composition, and functional pathways between premenopausal and postmenopausal breast cancer patients. Premenopausal breast cancer patients showed reduced α-diversity and distinct β-diversity compared to controls, with alterations in specific bacterial taxa linked to inflammation and cancer progression. In contrast, postmenopausal patients exhibited a different microbial profile, including an increase in pathogenic bacteria. Functional pathway analyses revealed steroid-related and oncogenic pathways in premenopausal patients, while postmenopausal patients were associated with chemical carcinogenesis and aldosterone-regulated pathways. The findings emphasize the diagnostic potential of gut microbiota in differentiating breast cancer subtypes and guiding prevention strategies.
Aspect
Premenopausal Breast Cancer
Postmenopausal Breast Cancer
Universal Markers (Both Types)
α-Diversity
Significantly reduced compared to controls
No reduction observed compared to postmenopausal controls
-
β-Diversity
Distinct from controls
Distinct from controls
-
Enriched Microbes
Bacteroides fragilis, Anaerostipes (linked to inflammation and progression)
Chemical carcinogenesis; Aldosterone-regulated pathways
-
Diagnostic Potential
Strong microbial markers for distinguishing premenopausal breast cancer
Strong microbial markers for distinguishing postmenopausal breast cancer
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What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings underscore the diagnostic potential of microbial markers for early, non-invasive breast cancer detection based on menopausal status. Identifying these microbial and functional pathways expands the understanding of breast cancer pathogenesis, especially in premenopausal women. Moreover, the study highlights the gut microbiota as a modifiable factor, suggesting potential interventions like probiotics or dietary changes to mitigate breast cancer risk.
Gut and oral microbial compositional differences in women with breast cancer, women with ductal carcinoma in situ, and healthy women
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Breast Cancer
Breast Cancer
Traditionally linked to genetic predispositions and environmental exposures, emerging evidence highlights the microbiome as a critical and underappreciated factor influencing breast cancer progression, immune response, and treatment outcomes.
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This study reveals distinct gut microbiota profiles in breast cancer and DCIS patients, with reduced alpha diversity and functional shifts linked to inflammation. Major microbial associations, including enriched Bacteroides guilds, underscore potential microbiome-targeted interventions. Oral microbiota showed minimal differences, highlighting the gut's critical role in breast cancer progression.
What was studied?
This study investigated and compared the gut and oral microbiota in three distinct groups: women with breast cancer (BC), women with ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS), and healthy women. Fecal and oral samples were collected and analyzed using 16S rRNA sequencing to assess microbial diversity, composition, and predicted functional potential.
Who was studied?
The study analyzed samples from 154 women, comprising 73 with BC, 32 with DCIS, and 49 healthy controls. Samples were collected before any therapy to ensure no treatment effects influenced the microbiota.
What were the most important findings?
The study found significant differences in gut microbiota composition and diversity between groups, while the oral microbiota exhibited fewer variations. Women with BC had lower gut microbial alpha diversity compared to healthy women. Beta diversity analysis revealed distinct microbial profiles for the BC and DCIS groups compared to healthy controls. Taxonomic analysis identified several major microbial associations (MMAs) in the gut: the Bacteroides and Enterobacteriaceae guilds were enriched in BC patients, while the Clostridiales guild was more prevalent in healthy women. Functionally, the gut microbiota of BC patients showed increased pathways for lipopolysaccharide (LPS) biosynthesis, glycan metabolism, and sphingolipid metabolism, which are linked to systemic inflammation and cancer progression. Conversely, the oral microbiota showed minimal variation across cohorts, with no significant differences in functional pathways or microbial guilds.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings highlight the role of gut microbiota in breast cancer development and progression. The identification of distinct microbial signatures and functional pathways provides a basis for developing microbiome-targeted interventions aimed at improving treatment outcomes and prognosis. Notably, the lack of significant findings in oral microbiota suggests that gut microbiota might have a more critical role in breast cancer etiology. These results pave the way for further research on microbiome-based diagnostic tools and therapeutic strategies for breast cancer.
Intestinal microbiota influences clinical outcome and side effects of early breast cancer treatment
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Breast Cancer
Breast Cancer
Traditionally linked to genetic predispositions and environmental exposures, emerging evidence highlights the microbiome as a critical and underappreciated factor influencing breast cancer progression, immune response, and treatment outcomes.
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Gut microbiota influences early breast cancer prognosis and treatment side effects, with specific commensals correlating to outcomes. Chemotherapy alters microbiota, favoring beneficial species and improving immune modulation and neuroprotection.
What was studied?
This study examined the impact of intestinal microbiota on the clinical outcomes and side effects of early breast cancer (BC) treatments. Shotgun metagenomics was used to analyze fecal microbiota samples from 76 early BC patients, both pre- and post-chemotherapy. The study aimed to identify specific microbial species associated with BC prognosis and the side effects of chemotherapy, focusing on neurological, gastrointestinal, and metabolic complications. It also explored the functional relevance of gut microbiota in immunocompetent mouse models colonized with BC patient microbiota to establish a causal link between gut microbial composition and tumor growth or therapy efficacy.
Who was studied?
The study involved 76 female BC patients from the CANTO trial (NCT01993498), a long-term prospective cohort designed to quantify and prevent treatment-related toxicities. Patients provided fecal samples before and after chemotherapy, and their plasma was also analyzed for metabolomics. A separate analysis included healthy volunteers (54 Italian and 282 samples from public metagenomes) to contrast microbial signatures. Mouse models were humanized with fecal microbiota from patients and healthy individuals to assess the causal relationship between microbiota and BC outcomes.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed that the gut microbiota composition significantly correlates with BC prognosis and treatment side effects. Patients with more aggressive tumors (larger size, advanced stage, lymph node involvement) had overrepresentation of species like Clostridiaceae, Veillonella, Bacteroides uniformis, and Blautia wexlerae. In contrast, patients with better prognosis had higher levels of Akkermansia muciniphila, Collinsella aerofaciens, and Eubacterium rectale. Chemotherapy shifted microbial diversity, reducing bacteria associated with poor prognosis and increasing favorable commensals like Methanobrevibacter smithii and Blautia obeum. Functionally, favorable microbiota patterns were linked to neuroprotective and immunomodulatory pathways, such as polyamine biosynthesis and ketogenesis, while unfavorable profiles were associated with inflammation and metabolic dysregulation. Humanized mouse models demonstrated that fecal microbiota from healthy volunteers enhanced tumor response to chemotherapy compared to microbiota from BC patients.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study underscores the gut microbiota's role as a biomarker and potential therapeutic target in BC management. The findings suggest that monitoring and modulating gut microbiota could optimize chemotherapy efficacy, mitigate side effects, and improve overall prognosis. Strategies like fecal microbiota transplantation, probiotics, or diet interventions targeting specific microbiota shifts may hold promise. The causal evidence provided by mouse models highlights the translational potential of microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) to improve clinical outcomes for breast cancer patients.
Microbial Dysbiosis Is Associated with Human Breast Cancer
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Breast Cancer
Breast Cancer
Traditionally linked to genetic predispositions and environmental exposures, emerging evidence highlights the microbiome as a critical and underappreciated factor influencing breast cancer progression, immune response, and treatment outcomes.
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Microbial dysbiosis, marked by reduced bacterial load and altered species composition, is linked to breast cancer progression. Enrichment of Methylobacterium radiotolerans in tumors and depletion of Sphingomonas yanoikuyae in normal tissue suggest diagnostic and therapeutic potential for microbiota-based interventions in breast cancer.
What Was Studied?
This study examined the microbiota present in breast tumor tissue compared to paired normal breast tissue from the same individuals, as well as healthy breast tissue from individuals without breast cancer. Using next-generation sequencing and quantitative PCR, the research aimed to identify differences in microbial composition, bacterial load, and their potential impact on the tumor microenvironment and breast cancer progression.
Who Was Studied?
The study included 20 breast cancer patients with estrogen receptor-positive (ER+) tumors, for whom paired tumor and normal adjacent tissue were analyzed. Additional bacterial load analysis included 23 healthy controls undergoing reduction mammoplasty. Gene expression profiling was conducted on tissue from six breast cancer patients and three healthy individuals.
Most Important Findings
The study revealed distinct microbial signatures associated with breast cancer. Methylobacterium radiotolerans was significantly enriched in tumor tissue, while Sphingomonas yanoikuyae was more abundant in paired normal tissue. A strong inverse correlation between the abundance of these two species was observed in normal tissue, but not in tumor tissue. Importantly, bacterial load in tumor tissue was markedly reduced compared to both paired normal and healthy breast tissue, with advanced-stage tumors exhibiting the lowest bacterial counts. This reduction in bacterial load correlated with decreased expression of antibacterial response genes, including Toll-like receptors (TLR2, TLR5, and TLR9) and antimicrobial effectors like IL-12A and BPI.
These findings suggest that microbial dysbiosis and a diminished antibacterial immune response in tumor tissue may contribute to breast cancer progression. Additionally, the results highlight the potential diagnostic value of bacterial load as a marker for breast cancer staging.
Greatest Implications
The association between microbial dysbiosis and breast cancer offers novel insights into the disease’s pathogenesis. The depletion of beneficial bacteria, such as Sphingomonas yanoikuyae, and a reduced immune response may create a permissive environment for tumorigenesis. This study supports the exploration of microbiota as a diagnostic tool and potentially as a therapeutic target to restore a healthy microbial balance and enhance immune surveillance. The inverse correlation between bacterial load and tumor stage underscores its potential utility in disease staging and progression monitoring.
The oral microbiome and breast cancer and non-malignant breast disease, and its relationship with the fecal microbiome in the Ghana Breast Health Study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Breast Cancer
Breast Cancer
Traditionally linked to genetic predispositions and environmental exposures, emerging evidence highlights the microbiome as a critical and underappreciated factor influencing breast cancer progression, immune response, and treatment outcomes.
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The study linked reduced oral microbiome diversity and altered microbial profiles to breast cancer and non-malignant breast disease, highlighting strong correlations between oral and fecal microbiomes in cases versus controls. Genera such as Porphyromonas showed significant inverse associations with breast cancer risk.
What was studied?
This study investigated the relationship between the oral microbiome, breast cancer, and non-malignant breast disease, as well as the correlation between the oral and fecal microbiomes in a case-control population in Ghana. Researchers analyzed microbiome samples from 881 women, including 369 breast cancer cases, 93 non-malignant cases, and 419 controls, using 16S rRNA gene sequencing.
Who was studied?
The study population included Ghanaian women aged 18–74 years who were recruited from Accra and Kumasi. Participants comprised breast cancer patients, individuals with non-malignant breast disease, and population-based controls. Oral and fecal microbiome samples were collected, and demographic, lifestyle, and medical history data were recorded.
What are the Most important findings?
The study revealed that oral microbiome alpha-diversity was significantly lower in breast cancer and non-malignant breast disease cases compared to controls. For instance, each 10-unit increase in observed amplicon sequence variants (ASVs) corresponded to a reduction in the odds of breast cancer and non-malignant breast disease by 14% and 21%, respectively. Beta-diversity analyses also showed distinct microbial community compositions between cases and controls. Key genera, including Porphyromonas and Fusobacterium, were inversely associated with breast cancer, with their relative abundances being significantly lower in cases than in controls. A notable finding was the strong inverse correlation between oral Porphyromonas and fecal Bacteroides in breast cancer cases. This relationship is particularly relevant as fecal Bacteroides has been implicated in estrogen metabolism and breast cancer risk. Breast cancer cases also exhibited stronger correlations between oral and fecal microbiomes compared to controls, suggesting a potential systemic interaction.
Shockingly, the study also found that breast cancer and non-malignant breast disease cases were more likely to have taken antibiotics within the last 30 days compared to controls. This raises critical questions about the role of antibiotics in microbiome disruption and their potential contribution to systemic microbial changes that could influence breast cancer risk.
What are the greatest implications?
This study is extraordinary in its scope and implications. It bridges the gap between two traditionally separate microbiomes—oral and fecal—and ties these microbial systems to breast cancer, a disease of immense global health importance. The findings reveal striking patterns: the inverse associations of oral microbiome diversity and specific genera, such as Porphyromonas and Fusobacterium, with breast cancer and non-malignant breast disease are compelling. These microbes, often linked to periodontal disease, emerge here as potential protective or systemic markers in a population with distinct environmental and health contexts.
The strong correlation between the oral and fecal microbiomes in breast cancer cases further underscores the interconnectedness of microbial communities and highlights systemic microbial interactions that remain underexplored in cancer research. The inverse relationship between Porphyromonas in the oral microbiome and Bacteroides in the fecal microbiome—key players in estrogen metabolism—provides intriguing clues about the mechanisms underlying breast cancer pathogenesis.
Ni(II) Cd(II) mixed ligand complexes as dual antimicrobial and anti inflammatory agents
February 12, 2026
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Dimethylglyoxime (DMG)
Dimethylglyoxime (DMG)
Dimethylglyoxime represents a novel therapeutic paradigm that exploits a fundamental metabolic difference between pathogenic bacteria and their mammalian hosts. By selectively depleting bacterial access to nickel, a cofactor essential for multiple pathogenic enzymes but unnecessary for human physiology, DMG offers a theoretically host-sparing antimicrobial approach.
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Nickel
Nickel
Bacteria regulate transition metal levels through complex mechanisms to ensure survival and adaptability, influencing both their physiology and the development of antimicrobial strategies.
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Cadmium (Cd)
Cadmium (Cd)
Cadmium (Cd) is a highly toxic heavy metal commonly found in industrial, agricultural, and environmental settings. Exposure to cadmium can occur through contaminated water, food, soil, and air, and it has been linked to a variety of health issues, including kidney damage, osteoporosis, and cancer. In agriculture, cadmium is often present in phosphate fertilizers and can accumulate in plants, entering the food chain. Its toxicity to living organisms makes cadmium a subject of regulatory concern worldwide, particularly in industrial waste disposal and environmental monitoring.
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Ni(II) Cd(II) mixed ligand complexes showed broad in vitro antimicrobial activity against key bacterial and fungal pathogens and moderate anti-inflammatory effects via albumin denaturation inhibition, supporting metal chelation as a tunable strategy for targeting dysbiosis associated pathobionts while highlighting significant toxicity related translational constraints.
What was studied?
Ni(II) Cd(II) mixed ligand complexes were synthesized and characterized to evaluate their in vitro antimicrobial and anti-inflammatory activities. The authors prepared mixed ligand complexes of Ni(II) and Cd(II) using 2,4-dinitrophenylhydrazine (DNPH) and dimethylglyoxime (DMG) in a 1:1:1 metal to ligand ratio, then performed comprehensive physicochemical characterization and biological testing. Elemental CHNO analysis, molar conductance, UV–visible spectroscopy, FTIR, powder X ray diffraction, thermal analysis, magnetic measurements, and SEM imaging were used to confirm complex formation, non-electrolytic behavior, octahedral geometry, nanocrystalline structure, and thermal stability. The central aim was to determine whether these Ni(II) Cd(II) mixed ligand complexes, which incorporate nitrogen and oxygen donor atoms and the classic nickel chelator DMG, exhibit meaningful antibacterial, antifungal, and anti-inflammatory effects that could justify further exploration as bioactive coordination compounds.
Who was studied?
No human or animal subjects were included. Instead, the study employed reference microbial strains and an in vitro protein denaturation system as experimental models. Antimicrobial activity was assessed against Gram positive bacteria Bacillus subtilis and Staphylococcus aureus, Gram negative bacteria Escherichia coli and Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and the fungal species Aspergillus niger and Candida albicans, all obtained from MTCC culture collections. These taxa include clinically relevant pathobionts commonly implicated in soft tissue, device-associated, and mucosal infections that intersect with microbiome research. Anti-inflammatory activity was modeled using egg albumin (bovine serum albumin analogue) denaturation in phosphate-buffered saline, with diclofenac sodium as the reference nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug. Thus, the biological data reflect direct effects on key bacterial and fungal taxa plus a generic protein denaturation model rather than host tissue or in vivo outcomes.
Most important findings
Structurally, both Ni(II) and Cd(II) complexes behaved as non-electrolytes in DMF with low molar conductance, showed IR shifts consistent with coordination through DNPH and DMG donor atoms, and exhibited electronic spectra and magnetic moments consistent with octahedral geometry. PXRD patterns demonstrated crystalline materials with nanoscale crystallite sizes of approximately 56.7 nm for Ni(II) and 69.3 nm for Cd(II), and thermogravimetric analyses showed multistep decomposition, confirming reasonable thermal stability suitable for further formulation work.
Biologically, both complexes demonstrated measurable antimicrobial activity that increased with concentration. At 30 and 60 μg/ml, the Ni(II) complex showed particularly good activity against B. subtilis and E. coli, with inhibition zones of 15 and 17 mm for B. subtilis and 11 and 19 mm for E. coli, relative to chloramphenicol standards. In contrast, the Cd(II) complex was more potent against P. aeruginosa and especially C. albicans at 60 μg/ml, where inhibition of C. albicans reached 18 mm compared with very weak action of the Ni(II) complex against this yeast. Activity against A. niger was modest for both complexes. This pattern indicates that complexation to DNPH and DMG alters metal bioavailability and broadens activity across a clinically relevant spectrum that spans Gram positive and Gram negative bacteria and opportunistic fungi.
From a microbiome signatures perspective, the inclusion of E. coli, P. aeruginosa, S. aureus, B. subtilis, and C. albicans is notable, since these taxa frequently emerge as major microbial associations in dysbiotic mucosal and device related infections and are of interest when designing microbiome targeted interventions or co therapies. The differential sensitivity of C. albicans to the Cd(II) complex in particular suggests that mixed ligand metal chelates could in principle be tuned to selectively suppress fungal pathobionts such as Candida while exerting varying pressure on bacterial community members.
For anti-inflammatory effects, both Ni(II) and Cd(II) complexes inhibited egg albumin denaturation in a concentration dependent fashion. At 500 μg/ml, the Ni(II) complex achieved 84.56 percent inhibition, the Cd(II) complex 79.55 percent, and diclofenac sodium 96.05 percent. Calculated IC50 values were 230.75 μg/ml for diclofenac, 257.31 μg/ml for the Ni(II) complex, and 270.83 μg/ml for the Cd(II) complex, indicating that while less potent than the reference NSAID, the complexes display meaningful anti-denaturation activity. The authors attribute the bioactivity partly to chelation effects, where coordination reduces metal ion polarity and increases lipophilicity, facilitating penetration into microbial cells and interaction with protein targets.
Key implications
For clinicians and microbiome researchers, these findings position Ni(II) Cd(II) mixed ligand complexes as proof of concept scaffolds rather than ready translational candidates. The complexes show that combining DNPH and the classical nickel chelator dimethylglyoxime around a transition metal center can yield thermally stable, nanocrystalline coordination compounds with broad antimicrobial spectra against several clinically relevant taxa, including E. coli, P. aeruginosa, S. aureus, B. subtilis, and C. albicans, while also delivering moderate anti-inflammatory effects via inhibition of protein denaturation.
However, systemic use of Ni and particularly Cd raises substantial toxicity and metallotoxicity concerns, limiting realistic applications to highly localized or surface bound contexts such as coatings, dressings, or device surfaces. From a microbiome signatures standpoint, the work supports the broader concept that metal coordination chemistry and chelation can be leveraged to modulate pathobionts that are strongly represented in dysbiotic states, potentially informing the design of safer metal based or metal chelator based agents that target C. albicans and other MMAs without introducing toxic metals into the host environment. Future work should focus on metal substitution to less toxic centers, evaluation in biofilm models that better replicate microbiome architecture, and an explicit assessment of collateral effects on beneficial commensals before any clinical application is considered.
The Impact of Arsenic, Cadmium, Lead, Mercury, and Thallium Exposure on the Cardiovascular System and Oxidative Mechanisms in Children
February 12, 2026
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Cardiovascular Health
Cardiovascular Health
Recent research has revealed that specific gut microbiota-derived metabolites are strongly linked to cardiovascular disease risk—potentially influencing atherosclerosis development more than traditional risk factors like cholesterol levels. This highlights the gut microbiome as a novel therapeutic target for cardiovascular interventions.
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The review examines how exposure to arsenic, cadmium, lead, mercury, and thallium impacts the cardiovascular system and oxidative mechanisms in children, highlighting long-term health risks and suggesting preventive strategies.
What was reviewed?
The paper reviewed the impact of exposure to five heavy metals, arsenic, cadmium, lead, mercury, and thallium, on the cardiovascular system and oxidative mechanisms in children. These metals are well-known for their toxicity, particularly in vulnerable populations like children, whose developing physiology makes them more susceptible to the harmful effects of environmental pollutants. The review focuses on how these metals induce oxidative stress, inflammation, and disruptions in lipid metabolism, which can lead to cardiovascular problems both in the short and long term.
Who was reviewed?
The review focuses on studies involving children, as this population is particularly vulnerable to the toxic effects of heavy metals. The studies reviewed examine how environmental exposure to arsenic, cadmium, lead, mercury, and thallium affects cardiovascular health in children. These studies cover a range of biological effects, from changes in blood pressure and heart function to structural alterations in the heart and vascular system. The paper emphasizes the need to address these risks in pediatric populations, who are more susceptible to the long-term effects of metal toxicity due to their developing organs and higher relative intake of pollutants through food, air, and water.
What were the most important findings?
The review highlights several critical findings. Exposure to arsenic, cadmium, lead, mercury, and thallium is linked to significant cardiovascular issues in children, including elevated blood pressure, impaired heart function, and changes in heart structure. For example, exposure to arsenic and mercury is associated with endothelial dysfunction, while lead exposure contributes to hypertension. Cadmium has been shown to disrupt lipid metabolism, increasing levels of harmful lipids like LDL cholesterol. Additionally, thallium, while less studied, is noted for its potent toxicity and its impact on the cardiovascular system, including heart damage due to oxidative stress. Oxidative stress plays a pivotal role in these effects by damaging blood vessels, promoting inflammation, and altering lipid profiles. Importantly, early-life exposure to these metals, especially during prenatal development, leads to long-term cardiovascular consequences, potentially setting the stage for cardiovascular diseases in adulthood. The review underscores the need for preventive measures, especially in regions with high environmental contamination, and emphasizes the vulnerability of children to these toxic exposures.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The implications of this review are significant for public health and pediatric care. It calls attention to the need for stricter environmental regulations and policies to limit children's exposure to these toxic metals. The evidence presented underscores the importance of early identification and intervention to mitigate the long-term cardiovascular risks posed by environmental heavy metal exposure. Nutritional strategies, including promoting diets rich in antioxidants and essential nutrients like iron, calcium, and zinc, could reduce metal absorption and counteract oxidative damage. Moreover, providing clean drinking water, especially in areas with arsenic contamination, is critical to safeguarding children's health. This review also suggests that further research is needed to explore the combined effects of multiple metal exposures and their synergistic impacts on child health. These findings could help shape public health strategies and inform clinical practices aimed at reducing the cardiovascular risk in children exposed to environmental pollutants.
Hyperuricemia in chronic kidney disease: Emerging pathophysiology and a novel therapeutic strategy
February 12, 2026
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Cardiovascular Health
Cardiovascular Health
Recent research has revealed that specific gut microbiota-derived metabolites are strongly linked to cardiovascular disease risk—potentially influencing atherosclerosis development more than traditional risk factors like cholesterol levels. This highlights the gut microbiome as a novel therapeutic target for cardiovascular interventions.
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This review outlines how hyperuricemia in chronic kidney disease arises from distinct filtration and tubular reabsorption defects, driving inflammation, endothelial dysfunction, and renal decline while highlighting emerging phenotype-guided approaches to therapy.
What was reviewed?
Hyperuricemia in chronic kidney disease was reviewed as an emerging pathophysiological process shaped by the interplay of glomerular filtration and tubular urate handling. This review emphasized how the hyperuricemia in chronic kidney disease phenotype reflects not only reduced filtration but also excessive tubular reabsorption, a distinction with major implications for interpreting serum uric acid levels and targeting therapy. The authors synthesized mechanistic, epidemiologic, and therapeutic evidence, presenting a cohesive framework in which urate acts as both a marker and a mediator of progressive kidney injury. They highlighted two key mechanisms—monosodium urate crystal formation and soluble uric acid–driven inflammation, both contributing to oxidative stress, endothelial dysfunction, and altered intrarenal hemodynamics.
Who was reviewed?
The review summarized mechanistic and clinical evidence from both human and experimental studies. It examined patients with CKD across stages, individuals with diabetes, hypertensive cohorts, and general population groups included in longitudinal studies and meta-analyses. Therapeutic summaries incorporated randomized controlled trials of xanthine oxidase inhibitors and uricosuric agents (including URAT1 inhibitors), as well as retrospective real-world CKD cohorts. Visual elements such as the phenotype-guided treatment algorithm on page 11 demonstrated how these patient groups may be stratified for future targeted interventions.
Most important findings
A central finding is that serum uric acid inadequately reflects true urate burden or pathogenic potential in CKD. The review distinguished glomerular under-filtration from tubular over-reabsorption, noting that the latter may drive early and potentially causal urate-mediated injury. The diagrams in the paper showed how soluble urate and monosodium urate crystals activate the NLRP3 inflammasome, generating IL-1β, IL-18, mitochondrial reactive oxygen species, epithelial injury, and fibrosis. Endothelial dysfunction—mediated by reduced eNOS activity, oxidative stress, and HIF-1α stabilization—disrupts glomerular autoregulation, producing either hyperfiltration or hypoperfusion patterns. Epidemiologic evidence consistently links higher serum uric acid to CKD progression, though recent work shows urinary urate excretion markers (FEUA, UUCR) better correlate with kidney injury. Therapeutic findings indicated that xanthine oxidase inhibitors lower serum urate but inconsistently improve renal outcomes, whereas URAT1 inhibitors (dotinurad, verinurad) enhance urinary uric acid excretion and may better address tubular reabsorption phenotypes, though evidence remains preliminary.
Mechanism / Feature
Microbiome-Relevant or Metabolic Insight
Tubular MSU crystal formation
Driven by urine pH and urate saturation; parallels gut-derived acid–base shifts influencing urate solubility.
Soluble uric acid–NLRP3 activation
Pathway shared with microbial metabolites that modulate inflammasome signaling.
Endothelial dysfunction
Influenced by systemic oxidative and inflammatory load shaped by gut microbial composition.
Uric acid transport (URAT1/GLUT9)
Transporters affected by metabolic milieu, including microbiome-derived purines.
Key implications
This review reframes hyperuricemia in CKD as a heterogeneous, phenotype-driven disorder requiring more precise tools than serum urate alone. Urinary urate excretion indices and uric acid–creatinine ratios may better identify patients at risk for progressive kidney injury. The mechanistic evidence suggests that intrarenal urate—not merely circulating urate—drives inflammasome activation, oxidative stress, and endothelial dysfunction. Therapies enhancing urate excretion through URAT1 inhibition may provide clinical benefit, particularly in tubular over-reabsorption phenotypes. Future trials must incorporate phenotype stratification to determine which patients respond best to specific urate-lowering strategies.
Role of Probiotics in Modulating and Managing Metabolic Diseases
February 12, 2026
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Cardiovascular Health
Cardiovascular Health
Recent research has revealed that specific gut microbiota-derived metabolites are strongly linked to cardiovascular disease risk—potentially influencing atherosclerosis development more than traditional risk factors like cholesterol levels. This highlights the gut microbiome as a novel therapeutic target for cardiovascular interventions.
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This review highlights the beneficial role of probiotics in managing metabolic diseases like obesity, type 2 diabetes, and hypertension. It explores how probiotics improve gut health, regulate metabolic processes, and reduce inflammation, offering a promising and sustainable approach to treating these conditions.
What was reviewed?
This review examines the role of probiotics in modulating and managing metabolic diseases, specifically focusing on how probiotics can influence conditions such as obesity, type 2 diabetes, hypertension, and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). It explores the underlying mechanisms through which probiotics work, including modulation of gut microbiota, reduction of inflammation, and improvement in metabolic pathways. The review also highlights various probiotic strains that have shown efficacy in clinical studies and discusses the potential of using probiotics as a therapeutic tool in metabolic disease management.
Who was reviewed?
The review assesses a broad range of studies investigating the effects of probiotics on metabolic diseases. It evaluates clinical trials, animal studies, and microbiome research on specific probiotic strains such as Lactobacillus, Bifidobacterium, and Lactiplantibacillus. It also reviews experimental research that examines how probiotics affect metabolic parameters like glucose and lipid metabolism, body fat composition, and blood pressure. The review discusses findings from research on the gut microbiota and its connection to metabolic disorders, exploring how the microbiota is altered by probiotics and how this leads to health improvements.
What were the most important findings?
The review underscores the significant potential of probiotics in managing various metabolic diseases. Probiotics have been shown to improve glucose control, reduce insulin resistance, and help manage obesity by enhancing fat metabolism. Specific probiotic strains like Lactobacillus gasseri, Lactobacillus rhamnosus, and Bifidobacterium breve were found to reduce body weight, abdominal fat, and systemic inflammation while improving insulin sensitivity. The mechanisms behind these effects include the production of short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs), which are beneficial for metabolism, and the modulation of gut microbiota composition. Additionally, probiotics have been shown to support liver health, particularly in the case of NAFLD, by reducing inflammation and oxidative stress, and in some cases, slowing the progression of fibrosis. The review also emphasizes the importance of multi-strain probiotics, as combinations often provide more robust therapeutic effects compared to single strains.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The greatest implications of this review are for the clinical management and prevention of metabolic diseases. Probiotics represent a promising, natural, and sustainable therapeutic option for managing conditions like obesity, type 2 diabetes, hypertension, and NAFLD. The evidence supporting the role of probiotics in improving metabolic health suggests that they could become a key component of personalized treatment strategies. As probiotics are generally considered safe and have a relatively low risk of adverse effects, they could be integrated into long-term health management protocols, particularly as adjuncts to diet and lifestyle changes. Moreover, the review suggests that further research is needed to fine-tune the use of probiotics, particularly in terms of strain-specific efficacy, optimal doses, and delivery methods.
The potential of prebiotics, probiotics, and synbiotics for ameliorating intestinal barrier dysfunction
February 12, 2026
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Cardiovascular Health
Cardiovascular Health
Recent research has revealed that specific gut microbiota-derived metabolites are strongly linked to cardiovascular disease risk—potentially influencing atherosclerosis development more than traditional risk factors like cholesterol levels. This highlights the gut microbiome as a novel therapeutic target for cardiovascular interventions.
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This review explores how prebiotics, probiotics, and synbiotics can improve gut health and manage diabetes mellitus by enhancing intestinal barrier function and modulating inflammation.
What Was Reviewed?
This paper reviews the potential effects of prebiotics, probiotics, and synbiotics in managing diabetes mellitus (DM), focusing on their ability to restore intestinal barrier function, modulate the immune response, and improve metabolic parameters. It synthesizes findings from various preclinical and clinical studies to assess the effectiveness of these dietary interventions in addressing diabetes-related complications, such as inflammation, insulin resistance, and gut microbiota dysbiosis.
Who was reviewed?
The paper reviewed various clinical and preclinical studies investigating the effects of prebiotics, probiotics, and synbiotics on diabetes mellitus management. It assessed how these interventions influence the gut microbiota, intestinal barrier function, and inflammatory responses in individuals with diabetes. The review specifically looked at studies involving different strains of probiotics like Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium, as well as prebiotics such as inulin, FOS, and GOS. It also considered the use of synbiotics (combinations of prebiotics and probiotics) to evaluate their synergistic effects in managing inflammation and improving metabolic outcomes in diabetes.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The review highlights the growing body of evidence supporting the role of prebiotics, probiotics, and synbiotics in modulating the gut microbiome, which in turn affects diabetes management. Prebiotics such as inulin and fructooligosaccharides (FOS) promote beneficial bacteria and support intestinal barrier function, while probiotics, particularly strains of Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium, help maintain gut homeostasis and modulate immune responses. Synbiotics, which combine prebiotics and probiotics, offer a synergistic approach by enhancing both microbial diversity and the production of short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs), which are crucial for maintaining metabolic health. These interventions improve insulin sensitivity, reduce inflammation, and support the regulation of glucose metabolism. However, the review also notes that the effectiveness of synbiotics does not always surpass that of their individual components, suggesting that further research is needed to optimize these combinations.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Review?
This review underscores the potential of prebiotics, probiotics, and synbiotics as complementary strategies for managing diabetes mellitus, particularly by targeting the intestinal barrier and modulating immune responses. By improving gut health and reducing systemic inflammation, these interventions offer a non-pharmacological approach to managing both type 1 (T1DM) and type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). However, challenges remain, including the variability of outcomes across studies, the need for personalized approaches based on individual microbiota, and the importance of optimizing strain selection and prebiotic doses. Future research should focus on refining these interventions, considering long-term safety, and conducting large-scale clinical trials to confirm their efficacy.
Menopause-Induced Metabolic Shifts: Implications for Cardiovascular and Metabolic Risk
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Cardiovascular Health
Cardiovascular Health
Recent research has revealed that specific gut microbiota-derived metabolites are strongly linked to cardiovascular disease risk—potentially influencing atherosclerosis development more than traditional risk factors like cholesterol levels. This highlights the gut microbiome as a novel therapeutic target for cardiovascular interventions.
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This study reveals that menopause induces significant metabolic changes, including shifts in amino acid and lipid metabolism, which contribute to the increased cardiovascular and metabolic risks in postmenopausal women.
What was studied?
The study examined the metabolic changes that occur during menopause, focusing on how menopause modulates circulating metabolites in midlife women. Researchers specifically analyzed 94 charged metabolites, including amino acids, fatty acids, and other small molecules, to assess how these metabolic changes correlate with the increased risk of chronic diseases, such as cardiovascular disease and diabetes, that affect postmenopausal women. The goal was to understand the broader metabolic shifts that occur during menopause and their potential implications for long-term health risks.
Who was studied?
The study involved 1,193 women from the Tsuruoka Metabolomics Cohort Study, a community-based cohort of Japanese women aged between 40 and 60 years. The participants were divided into three groups based on their menopausal status: premenopausal, menopausal transition, and postmenopausal. To ensure that the results were not influenced by factors such as hormone replacement therapy (HRT), participants with certain health conditions or who had recently used HRT were excluded. The cohort was selected from Tsuruoka City, Japan, and included a diverse group of women across various stages of menopause, allowing for a comprehensive analysis of the metabolic changes associated with this life stage.
Most important findings
The study revealed that menopause is associated with significant shifts in the metabolic profile of women, particularly in metabolites linked to cardiovascular and metabolic risks. As women transitioned from premenopausal to postmenopausal status, several metabolites, including those involved in the urea cycle, TCA cycle, and homocysteine metabolism, showed elevated levels. This included an increase in metabolites like ornithine, taurine, glutamine, and carnitine, which are connected to cardiovascular health risks, such as arteriosclerosis. These metabolic shifts could explain the heightened risk of cardiovascular diseases observed in postmenopausal women. Additionally, higher levels of amino acids such as glutamine and lysine were found, which are often associated with insulin resistance and increased risk for metabolic disorders like diabetes. The study also observed a shift in lipid metabolism, as certain lipid metabolites showed patterns similar to changes seen in traditional lipid markers like total cholesterol and LDL cholesterol, which also change during menopause. These findings suggest that menopause accelerates metabolic changes that may contribute to the development of chronic diseases.
Key implications
The implications of this study are significant for clinical practice, as they suggest that menopause is not only a time of hormonal changes but also a pivotal period for metabolic health. The findings highlight the need for clinicians to monitor metabolic markers in women during the menopausal transition, as these shifts may predict long-term health outcomes such as cardiovascular disease and diabetes. Clinicians should consider metabolic profiling as a tool for identifying women at higher risk for these conditions and may need to implement early interventions, such as lifestyle modifications, to mitigate these risks. Moreover, the results emphasize the importance of personalized prevention strategies, particularly in postmenopausal women, as metabolic changes become more pronounced during this stage.
Susceptibility to environmental heavy metal toxicity among Americans with kidney disease
February 12, 2026
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Cardiovascular Health
Cardiovascular Health
Recent research has revealed that specific gut microbiota-derived metabolites are strongly linked to cardiovascular disease risk—potentially influencing atherosclerosis development more than traditional risk factors like cholesterol levels. This highlights the gut microbiome as a novel therapeutic target for cardiovascular interventions.
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CKD increases blood lead and cadmium concentrations while reducing urinary elimination, heightening susceptibility to heavy metal toxicity in CKD, with disproportionately greater effects in Black Americans.
What was studied?
This original investigation examined heavy metal toxicity in CKD by evaluating how impaired renal function alters the body’s handling of environmental lead and cadmium. Using NHANES 1999–2002 data, the study quantified associations between estimated glomerular filtration rate and circulating versus urinary concentrations of these metals. Because lead and cadmium accumulate in soft tissues and bone and are eliminated primarily through renal pathways, the authors investigated whether reduced kidney function increases susceptibility to environmental exposure even at low levels commonly encountered in the United States. The analysis also assessed racial and ethnic differences in circulating metal levels to determine whether certain groups show disproportionate vulnerability. This included stratified examination of Black, White, Hispanic, and other racial groups to determine whether renal impairment interacts with environmental exposure to elevate toxic burden. Visual data depicts the inverse relationship between eGFR and blood concentrations of lead and cadmium, illustrating higher metal levels among individuals with lower filtration capacity.
Who was studied?
The study population included 5638 NHANES participants with cystatin C measurements, representing a nationally representative civilian, noninstitutionalized US population. Participants ranged from adolescents to older adults, with oversampling of individuals aged ≥60 years. Of these, 17% met criteria for chronic kidney disease (eGFR <60 mL/min/1.73 m²). Racial diversity was considerable: approximately 43% White, 21% Black, and 32% Hispanic among those without CKD, with higher proportions of White participants among those with CKD. A subgroup of 1852 participants also had urinary lead and cadmium levels measured, allowing assessment of excretion patterns. The dataset included detailed demographic, socioeconomic, and household characteristics, providing rich covariate control in multivariate modeling. Age differences between CKD and non-CKD groups were large, with CKD participants averaging 74.6 years. The study therefore captures a broad cross-section of Americans exposed to ambient environmental metals.
Most important findings
The study demonstrated that lower eGFR is strongly associated with higher blood concentrations of both lead and cadmium, while simultaneously predicting reduced urinary excretion of lead. Individuals with CKD showed a 0.23 μg/dL higher lead level compared with those with normal kidney function, despite having lower urinary lead concentrations, supporting reduced renal clearance. Page 3’s regression output (Table 2) shows a statistically significant interaction between Black race and eGFR, with Black participants experiencing a markedly larger rise in blood lead per decrement in renal function. Cadmium exhibited weaker racial modification and smaller absolute differences, but still rose with declining eGFR. These findings support the hypothesis that CKD heightens long-term accumulation of toxic metals, particularly lead, increasing systemic burden and potential toxicity.
Metal / Parameter
Effect of 10 mL/min/1.73 m² Lower eGFR
Blood lead
+0.05 μg/dL
Blood cadmium
+0.02 μg/L
Urinary lead
–0.16 ng/mL
Lead/creatinine
–0.003 unit ratio
Key implications
The findings suggest that declining renal function transforms even low-level environmental exposures into a greater systemic hazard by reducing elimination and increasing total body burden. This vulnerability is amplified in Black Americans, reflecting both physiologic interactions and known environmental inequities. Clinically, this indicates that CKD patients may require stricter environmental safeguards and monitoring of cumulative exposure. Public health measures that reduce community lead exposure may disproportionately benefit individuals with impaired kidney function.
Heavy Metals Toxicity: Mechanism, Health Effects, and Therapeutic Interventions
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Cardiovascular Health
Cardiovascular Health
Recent research has revealed that specific gut microbiota-derived metabolites are strongly linked to cardiovascular disease risk—potentially influencing atherosclerosis development more than traditional risk factors like cholesterol levels. This highlights the gut microbiome as a novel therapeutic target for cardiovascular interventions.
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This review addresses the health effects, toxicity mechanisms, and therapeutic interventions related to heavy metals, highlighting the importance of further research and improved treatment strategies.
What Was Reviewed?
This review article focuses on the mechanisms, health effects, and therapeutic interventions related to the toxicity of heavy metals (HMs) such as chromium, arsenic, cadmium, mercury, and lead. It consolidates extensive research findings on the biochemical properties of these metals and their impact on human health. The review investigates the molecular and cellular effects of heavy metals, including enzyme inhibition, DNA damage, oxidative stress (OS), and protein dysfunction. Furthermore, the article discusses the toxic effects of these metals on various organ systems such as the nervous, cardiovascular, reproductive systems, and their role in cancer development. It emphasises the need for improved understanding and interventions to address the significant health risks posed by these pollutants.
Who was Reviewed?
The review article examines various studies and research on heavy metals (HMs), specifically focusing on their toxicity mechanisms, health effects, and therapeutic interventions. The subjects of the review are the biological systems and human health in response to exposure to heavy metals like arsenic, cadmium, chromium, mercury, and lead. It synthesizes findings from multiple studies that have investigated the impacts of these metals on human physiology, particularly their toxicity at the molecular and cellular levels, and the therapeutic methods developed to mitigate these effects. Therefore, it is not focused on individual people or specific groups but rather on the collective findings from the body of research surrounding these toxic substances and their effects on human health.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The review provides detailed insights into how heavy metals exert their toxic effects, including their interference with cellular functions such as enzyme activity, energy metabolism, and protein synthesis. These disruptions are compounded by oxidative stress, where heavy metals induce the production of reactive oxygen species (ROS), further exacerbating cellular damage. One key finding is the way these metals can accumulate in human tissues, leading to chronic toxicity that affects multiple organ systems. For instance, mercury and lead exposure can cause neurological damage, while cadmium is particularly harmful to kidney function. The review also identifies the role of heavy metals in the development of cancer, suggesting that their ability to induce DNA damage and gene mutations plays a critical role in carcinogenesis. Furthermore, it underscores the importance of therapeutic interventions like chelation therapy, antioxidants, and emerging strategies such as nanotechnology and gene therapy to mitigate these toxic effects.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Review?
The review highlights the urgent need for more effective treatment options and preventive measures against heavy metal toxicity. It calls for continued research into the biochemical mechanisms that underlie metal toxicity and advocates for multidisciplinary approaches to address this global health challenge. By improving understanding of the toxicity pathways, the review sets the stage for developing more targeted and efficient therapeutic strategies. Moreover, it stresses the importance of reducing environmental exposure to heavy metals through stricter regulations and public health initiatives. These findings are crucial for clinicians and public health experts to develop better management strategies for populations at risk of heavy metal exposure.
A metabolic view on menopause and ageing
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Cardiovascular Health
Cardiovascular Health
Recent research has revealed that specific gut microbiota-derived metabolites are strongly linked to cardiovascular disease risk—potentially influencing atherosclerosis development more than traditional risk factors like cholesterol levels. This highlights the gut microbiome as a novel therapeutic target for cardiovascular interventions.
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This study reveals significant metabolic changes in postmenopausal women, including a pro-atherogenic lipid profile and increased amino acids linked to cardiovascular and metabolic risk, emphasizing menopause as a key factor in long-term health risks.
What was studied?
The study focused on the impact of menopause on metabolic changes, particularly the effects of menopause on lipid and amino acid profiles, and their contribution to future cardiovascular and metabolic risks. It analyzed the metabolomic data from 26,065 individuals of Northern European ancestry, examining how menopause alters a broad spectrum of 135 serum metabolites, including lipoproteins, fatty acids, amino acids, and small molecules related to energy metabolism. The study aimed to assess the systemic metabolic shifts associated with menopause, considering not only traditional lipid measures but also detailed lipid subclass measurements and amino acid concentrations, which are emerging as key players in cardiovascular disease (CVD) and metabolic disorders.
Who was studied?
The study involved a large cohort of 26,065 participants, consisting of 16,107 Finnish individuals and 9,958 Estonian individuals. Participants were from a range of ages, predominantly from 40 to 75 years, with the analysis particularly focused on women in the menopausal transition (ages 40-55 years). The study excluded individuals using hormone replacement therapy (HRT), those with diabetes or on lipid-lowering medications, and pregnant women, to focus on natural metabolic shifts associated with menopause. The cohort was racially and ethnically homogenous, primarily consisting of individuals of Northern European descent, which may limit generalizability to other populations.
Most important findings
Postmenopausal women showed significantly higher concentrations of total cholesterol, esterified cholesterol, and lipoprotein subclasses, alongside higher concentrations of apoB and smaller, denser HDL particles. These changes align with increased cardiovascular risk. Higher levels of amino acids such as glutamine, tyrosine, and isoleucine were observed in postmenopausal women, which are linked to increased risk for metabolic diseases like Type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular diseases. Postmenopausal women exhibited increased levels of monounsaturated fatty acids and omega-7 and omega-9 fatty acids, which are associated with lipid metabolism and may influence CVD risk pathways. The study also found that a rapid increase in atherogenic lipid measures occurred between the ages of 45 and 50, coinciding with the onset of menopause, highlighting menopause's role in altering lipid metabolism and contributing to long-term metabolic and cardiovascular risks.
Key implications
The findings from this study underline menopause as a pivotal factor influencing metabolic shifts that increase the risk of cardiovascular and metabolic diseases. The changes in lipid and amino acid profiles suggest that menopause accelerates a shift towards a pro-atherogenic state, which can predispose women to conditions like heart disease and type 2 diabetes. These insights are crucial for clinicians as they highlight the need for early monitoring of metabolic health during the menopausal transition. The study also emphasizes the importance of considering metabolic profiling, including lipoprotein subclass and amino acid measures, as potential biomarkers for future cardiovascular risk in postmenopausal women. Additionally, the role of menopause in influencing fatty acid metabolism suggests that interventions targeting diet and lifestyle may be necessary to mitigate these risks.
Altered Gut Microbiota in Chronic Heart Failure: A Pathway to New Therapies
February 12, 2026
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Cardiovascular Health
Cardiovascular Health
Recent research has revealed that specific gut microbiota-derived metabolites are strongly linked to cardiovascular disease risk—potentially influencing atherosclerosis development more than traditional risk factors like cholesterol levels. This highlights the gut microbiome as a novel therapeutic target for cardiovascular interventions.
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Heart Failure
Heart Failure
Recent research reveals that the gut microbiome significantly influences heart failure progression, contributing to inflammation and other complications.
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This review emphasizes the significant alterations in gut microbiota in severe chronic heart failure (CHF) patients and suggests that gut microbiota modulation could be a promising avenue for therapeutic intervention. The study provides a foundation for future research aimed at leveraging gut microbiota to improve CHF management and patient health.
What Was Studied?
This original research focused on alterations in the gut microbiota composition of patients with severe chronic heart failure (CHF) using bacterial 16S rRNA gene sequencing. The study aimed to uncover microbial dysbiosis patterns and their potential functional implications in CHF.
Who Was Studied?
The study examined 29 CHF patients classified under New York Heart Association (NYHA) Class III-IV and compared them to 30 healthy controls. These individuals were recruited from Harbin Medical University hospitals in China. Inclusion criteria ensured the absence of confounding variables like recent antibiotic use or gastrointestinal surgery.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study found significant differences in microbial composition and diversity between CHF patients and healthy controls:
Phylum-Level Changes: CHF patients showed a significant decrease in Firmicutes (59.5% vs. 72.4%) and a marked increase in Proteobacteria (21.3% vs. 6.9%), suggesting dysbiosis.
Genus-Level Alterations: Notable reductions in SCFA-producing genera like Ruminococcaceae (UCG-004 and UCG-002), Lachnospiraceae FCS020 group, and Dialister were observed. Conversely, pathogenic genera such as Enterococcus and Klebsiella were elevated.
Diversity Metrics: Alpha diversity (Chao1, PD-whole-tree, Shannon indices) and beta diversity (weighted UniFrac distances) were significantly lower in CHF patients, reflecting reduced microbial richness and altered community structure.
Functional Implications: Predicted microbial functions (using PICRUSt) linked to CHF involved disruptions in pathways like cell cycle control, carbohydrate metabolism, and amino acid metabolism. Dysbiosis is also correlated with reduced SCFA production, potentially exacerbating inflammation and metabolic dysregulation.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
This research highlights a potential gut-heart axis, where microbial dysbiosis in CHF may contribute to systemic inflammation and metabolic disturbances via SCFA deficiencies and increased endotoxins. The findings suggest that targeting gut microbiota through therapeutic interventions could represent a novel strategy for managing severe CHF. Moreover, the identified microbial signatures could guide biomarker development for CHF diagnosis and progression monitoring.
Evidence of a causal and modifiable relationship between kidney function and circulating trimethylamine N-oxide
February 12, 2026
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Cardiovascular Health
Cardiovascular Health
Recent research has revealed that specific gut microbiota-derived metabolites are strongly linked to cardiovascular disease risk—potentially influencing atherosclerosis development more than traditional risk factors like cholesterol levels. This highlights the gut microbiome as a novel therapeutic target for cardiovascular interventions.
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This study identifies kidney function as the primary modifiable factor influencing circulating TMAO levels, which are linked to cardiovascular risk. The bidirectional relationship between TMAO and kidney health suggests that reno-protective therapies, particularly GLP-1 receptor agonists, could lower TMAO levels and mitigate associated risks, providing new insights for cardiovascular and renal disease management.
What was studied?
The study investigated the relationship between kidney function and circulating levels of trimethylamine N-oxide (TMAO), a gut microbiota-derived metabolite that has been implicated in increased cardiovascular risk. The researchers aimed to identify the primary factors influencing serum TMAO levels, with a particular focus on the modifiable role of kidney function. They employed a combination of machine learning, epidemiological analysis, and preclinical experiments to explore this relationship and assess whether kidney function not only regulates TMAO levels but is also affected by them, particularly in the context of kidney fibrosis.
Who was studied?
The study involved a cohort of 1,741 adult Europeans from the MetaCardis study, which included participants across a spectrum of cardiometabolic disease severity, ranging from metabolically healthy individuals to those with metabolic syndrome, type-2 diabetes (T2D), and ischemic heart disease (IHD). The cohort was representative of a European population, with individuals recruited from Denmark, France, and Germany. The study also included specific sub-cohorts such as the MetaCardis Body Mass Index Spectrum subset (BMIS), which focused on overweight or obese individuals presenting with features of metabolic syndrome but without overt T2D or ischemic heart disease.
What were the most important findings?
Kidney Function as the Primary Modifiable Factor Influencing TMAO Levels: The study identified kidney function, measured by estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR), as the most significant modifiable factor regulating fasting serum TMAO levels. Lower eGFR, indicative of reduced kidney function, was strongly associated with higher circulating TMAO levels.
Modest Impact of Diet and Gut Microbiota: While diet and gut microbiota composition were found to contribute to circulating TMAO levels, their impact was relatively modest compared to kidney function. The habitual intake of TMAO precursors like red meat and eggs did not significantly correlate with TMAO levels in the study's non-interventional settings.
Bidirectional Relationship Between TMAO and Kidney Function: The study suggested a bidirectional relationship where impaired kidney function leads to higher TMAO levels, and elevated TMAO levels, in turn, contribute to kidney damage, particularly fibrosis. This was corroborated by preclinical models showing that TMAO exposure increases kidney scarring.
Therapeutic Implications of Reno-Protective Drugs: Patients with T2D who were receiving glucose-lowering drugs with reno-protective properties, specifically GLP-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1RAs), had significantly lower circulating TMAO levels compared to matched controls. This finding suggests that reno-protective medications could potentially be used to lower TMAO levels and mitigate associated cardiovascular risks.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
Clinical Management of Cardiovascular Risk: The study highlights the critical role of kidney function in managing cardiovascular risk associated with elevated TMAO levels. It suggests that preserving or improving kidney function could be a key strategy in reducing circulating TMAO levels and, by extension, cardiovascular risk.
Potential for Therapeutic Interventions: The findings imply that reno-protective therapies, particularly those involving GLP-1 receptor agonists, could have a dual benefit in patients with T2D or other cardiometabolic conditions: improving kidney function and lowering TMAO levels. This could lead to novel therapeutic strategies aimed at reducing TMAO-related cardiovascular risk.
Reevaluation of Dietary and Microbiota Interventions: While diet and gut microbiota composition have been previously considered major contributors to TMAO levels, this study suggests that in the context of non-interventional settings, their impact may be secondary to that of kidney function. This could shift the focus of future research and clinical practice towards targeting kidney health as a more effective means of controlling TMAO levels.
Mechanistic Insights into TMAO and Kidney Health: The Evidence of a causal and modifiable relationship between kidney function and circulating trimethylamine N-oxide study provides mechanistic insights into how TMAO contributes to kidney damage, particularly through the promotion of renal fibrosis. This understanding could inform future research into the development of targeted therapies that specifically address the pro-fibrotic effects of TMAO in kidney disease.
Gut microbiota in heart failure and related interventions
February 12, 2026
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Cardiovascular Health
Cardiovascular Health
Recent research has revealed that specific gut microbiota-derived metabolites are strongly linked to cardiovascular disease risk—potentially influencing atherosclerosis development more than traditional risk factors like cholesterol levels. This highlights the gut microbiome as a novel therapeutic target for cardiovascular interventions.
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This review explores the gut-heart axis, highlighting how gut microbiota alterations and metabolites like TMAO and SCFAs contribute to heart failure (HF). It evaluates the gut hypothesis, emphasizing bacterial translocation and inflammation in HF, and discusses potential interventions.
What was reviewed?
The Gut Microbiota in Heart Failure and Related Interventions Review article examines the relationship between heart failure (HF) and the gut microbiota, exploring the gut hypothesis of HF, the role of gut microbiota metabolites, and potential microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs). The review provides a comprehensive overview of the current understanding of how changes in gut microbiota composition and its metabolites contribute to HF progression and discusses various interventions, including dietary changes, probiotic therapy, fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT), antibiotics, and other novel approaches.
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesizes findings from various studies involving HF patients and animal models to understand the connection between gut microbiota and HF. It also evaluates research on different interventions and their effects on gut microbiota and HF. Specific studies cited include investigations of bacterial species present in HF patients compared to healthy controls, the impact of gut microbiota metabolites like trimethylamine N-oxide (TMAO) and short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) on HF, and the efficacy of interventions like the DASH diet, Mediterranean diet, probiotics, FMT, and antibiotics.
What were the most important findings of this review?
The review highlights the gut hypothesis of heart failure (HF), where reduced cardiac output and systemic congestion lead to diminished intestinal perfusion, ischemia, and barrier dysfunction. This allows bacterial translocation and endotoxin release, worsening inflammation and HF. HF patients show increased pathogenic bacteria (e.g., Bacteroides, Eubacterium rectale) and decreased beneficial bacteria (e.g., Lachnospiraceae, Ruminococcaceae). Key gut microbiota metabolites, such as TMAO, SCFAs, TMAVA, and PAGln, significantly impact HF. TMAO promotes cardiac fibrosis, hypertrophy, and inflammation, while SCFAs have protective effects, preventing cardiac hypertrophy and fibrosis, reducing inflammation, and providing energy to the failing heart.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The greatest implications of the Gut Microbiota in Heart Failure and Related Interventions review are manifold. It highlights the therapeutic potential of targeting gut microbiota as a promising avenue for heart failure (HF) treatment, suggesting that a deeper understanding of the interactions between gut microbiota and HF could lead to novel strategies that complement existing therapies. Personalized medicine approaches, including dietary changes, probiotics, and potentially fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT), could be tailored to individual patients to address specific microbial imbalances contributing to HF. The review also underscores the importance of preventive strategies, such as adopting diets that support a healthy gut microbiota, in reducing the risk and progression of HF, which could have significant public health implications. Additionally, the review calls for further research to elucidate the mechanisms linking gut microbiota and HF, assess the long-term efficacy and safety of various interventions, and explore the roles of other metabolites and bacterial species in HF. Such research could pave the way for new diagnostic and therapeutic tools in HF management. Overall, the review emphasizes the critical role of gut microbiota in HF and suggests that targeting it could revolutionize HF treatment and prevention.
The Association between Zinc and Copper Circulating Levels and Cardiometabolic Risk Factors in Adults: A Study of Qatar Biobank Data
February 12, 2026
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Cardiovascular Health
Cardiovascular Health
Recent research has revealed that specific gut microbiota-derived metabolites are strongly linked to cardiovascular disease risk—potentially influencing atherosclerosis development more than traditional risk factors like cholesterol levels. This highlights the gut microbiome as a novel therapeutic target for cardiovascular interventions.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study evaluated the associations of zinc, copper, and Zn/Cu ratio with cardiometabolic risk factors in Qatari adults, revealing copper’s protective role and Zn/Cu ratio’s adverse implications for metabolic health.
What was studied?
This study analyzed the relationship between zinc (Zn), copper (Cu), and the zinc-to-copper (Zn/Cu) ratio with cardiometabolic risk (CMR) factors and metabolic syndrome (MetS) using data from the Qatar Biobank. It sought to determine whether circulating levels of these trace minerals and their ratios were associated with various markers of cardiometabolic health, including lipid profiles, blood pressure, glucose levels, and body composition.
Who was studied?
The study included 437 Qatari adults aged 18 and older, representing both sexes. Participants had detailed cardiometabolic and mineral status profiles measured. Individuals with non-communicable diseases, those taking mineral supplements, and pregnant or lactating women were excluded to ensure a clear analysis of trace mineral associations with CMR factors.
Key Findings
This study revealed several associations between trace mineral levels and cardiometabolic markers. High Cu levels were associated with a reduced risk of MetS, lower diastolic blood pressure (DBP), and decreased prevalence of low HDL cholesterol, suggesting a protective role of copper in cardiometabolic health. Conversely, a higher Zn/Cu ratio was linked to an increased risk of MetS and low HDL, indicating that imbalances in these trace elements could worsen metabolic health.
While Zn alone was not strongly correlated with MetS or most CMR factors, it showed weak positive correlations with waist circumference (WC) and triglycerides (TG), which are notable for metabolic processes. Cu, on the other hand, positively correlated with HDL and total cholesterol (TC) while negatively correlating with DBP. These findings emphasize the differential and sometimes opposing roles of these minerals in cardiometabolic regulation.
In terms of microbiome relevance, trace elements like Zn and Cu influence microbial composition and metabolic functions. For example, Zn deficiency can affect glucose metabolism and inflammation, while Cu is a cofactor for antioxidative enzymes like superoxide dismutase, influencing oxidative stress pathways. Dysregulation of these pathways is often linked to microbial dysbiosis, potentially contributing to MetS and other cardiometabolic conditions.
Greatest Implications
The results underscore the need to consider trace element levels, particularly Cu and the Zn/Cu ratio, in cardiometabolic health assessments. The findings suggest that higher Cu levels confer protective effects against MetS and DBP, whereas an elevated Zn/Cu ratio increases the risk of adverse outcomes, including low HDL and MetS. These insights could inform clinical interventions, such as dietary adjustments or supplementation, to balance trace mineral levels and support cardiometabolic health. Additionally, these results highlight the potential role of trace mineral modulation as part of microbiome-targeted therapies, given their influence on systemic inflammation and metabolism.
TMAO: how gut microbiota contributes to heart failure
February 12, 2026
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Cardiovascular Health
Cardiovascular Health
Recent research has revealed that specific gut microbiota-derived metabolites are strongly linked to cardiovascular disease risk—potentially influencing atherosclerosis development more than traditional risk factors like cholesterol levels. This highlights the gut microbiome as a novel therapeutic target for cardiovascular interventions.
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This review underscores the critical role of gut microbiota and TMAO in heart failure pathophysiology and opens up new avenues for therapeutic interventions targeting the gut–TMAO–HF axis. The findings suggest promising directions for future research and clinical applications aimed at improving HF patient care and outcomes.
What Was Reviewed?
This review focused on the involvement of gut microbiota in the pathogenesis and progression of cardiovascular diseases, particularly heart failure (HF). It emphasized the role of gut microbiota-derived metabolite trimethylamine N-oxide (TMAO) in heart failure and explored the potential of the gut–TMAO–HF axis as a therapeutic target for HF treatment.
Who Was Reviewed?
The review considered patients with various forms of heart failure, including acute heart failure (AHF), chronic heart failure (CHF), heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF), and heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF). It also encompassed studies involving animal models and in vitro experiments that investigated the pathophysiological mechanisms of TMAO in HF.
What Were the Most Important Findings of This Review?
This review highlights the critical role of gut microbiota in heart failure (HF). Gut dysbiosis contributes to HF pathogenesis through mechanisms like splanchnic hypoperfusion and intestinal barrier dysfunction. Trimethylamine N-oxide (TMAO), a gut-derived metabolite, significantly impacts cardiovascular pathology by promoting myocardial hypertrophy and fibrosis, inducing inflammatory responses, and causing endothelial dysfunction. Elevated TMAO levels correlate with poorer prognosis and higher mortality in HF patients, serving as an independent predictor for HF outcomes. Potential therapeutic targets include dietary interventions, probiotics, prebiotics, and inhibitors of TMA synthesis, such as 3,3-dimethyl-1-butanol (DMB). Fecal microbial transplantation (FMT) and certain antibiotics also show promise in modulating gut microbiota and reducing TMAO production. These findings support a multifaceted approach to HF management by targeting gut microbiota and its metabolites.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Review?
The "TMAO: how gut microbiota contributes to heart failure" review highlights the importance of novel therapeutic strategies, the prognostic value of TMAO, and future research directions.
Novel Therapeutic Strategies: The review suggests that targeting the gut–TMAO–HF axis could be a revolutionary approach in treating HF. By modulating gut microbiota composition and reducing TMAO levels, it may be possible to improve HF prognosis and patient outcomes. Personalized dietary interventions and the use of probiotics, prebiotics, and phytochemicals hold significant potential for HF management.
Prognostic Value of TMAO: TMAO can serve as a valuable prognostic marker for HF, aiding clinicians in identifying high-risk patients and tailoring more effective treatment strategies. Further research is needed to validate TMAO's role across diverse populations and to explore its utility in clinical practice.
Future Research Directions: Prospective studies are needed to establish a causal relationship between gut microbiota changes and HF. Investigating the detailed mechanisms of how TMAO influences HF progression will be crucial for developing targeted therapies.
Causes of Death in End-Stage Kidney Disease: Comparison Between the United States Renal Data System and a Large Integrated Health Care System
February 12, 2026
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Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD)
Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD)
Dysbiosis in chronic kidney disease (CKD) reflects a shift toward reduced beneficial taxa and increased pathogenic, uremic toxin-producing species, driven by a bidirectional interaction in which the uremic environment disrupts microbial composition and dysbiotic metabolites accelerate renal deterioration.
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End-Stage Renal Disease (ESRD)
End-Stage Renal Disease (ESRD)
End-stage renal disease is the irreversible loss of kidney function marked by uremic toxin accumulation, systemic complications, and the need for dialysis or transplantation. Its pathophysiology involves nephron loss, inflammation, metabolic disruption, and microbiome-derived toxins that accelerate cardiovascular and immune dysfunction.
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This study compared causes of death in ESKD patients between USRDS and KPSC sources, finding low concordance and highlighting limitations in mortality attribution for clinical and translational research contexts.
What was studied?
This study investigated the concordance of causes of death recorded for end-stage renal disease (ESRD) patients when comparing two major data sources: the United States Renal Data System (USRDS) national registry and the Kaiser Permanente Southern California (KPSC) integrated health system. Using mortality data from 2007–2016, researchers quantified how often the underlying cause of death matched across these systems, assessed agreement using Cohen’s weighted kappa statistics, and explored subcategory-specific concordance. Although the investigation did not address microbiome metrics or host–microbe interactions, the study’s findings indirectly inform microbiome-oriented clinical databases by revealing the limitations of mortality attribution data that are often used to correlate microbiome signatures with clinical outcomes.
Who was studied?
The cohort included 4,118 adults with ESRD whose deaths were recorded in both USRDS and KPSC databases. The mean age was 71 years, 41.2% were women, and the population was racially diverse: White (38.2%), Black (21%), Hispanic (28.8%), and Asian (9.1%). Most patients (90.1%) received hemodialysis, with 9.7% on peritoneal dialysis and fewer than 1% post-transplant. Deaths occurred across a decade and reflected the broad demographic composition of Southern California. No microbial sequencing, stool sampling, or infection-specific microbiome characterization was performed, and therefore, microbial signatures cannot be inferred from the dataset.
Most important findings
The study found only slight agreement (overall 36.4%, kappa = 0.20) between the underlying causes of death recorded by USRDS and KPSC. The most common KPSC causes were circulatory (35.7%), endocrine/metabolic (24.2%), and genitourinary (12.9%), while USRDS most frequently reported cardiac disease (46.9%), withdrawal from dialysis (12.6%), and infection (10.1%). Importantly for microbiome-related interpretations, infection-related deaths—a category often relevant for microbial signature studies—showed weak concordance (kappa = 0.20) and low positive agreement (26%), meaning infection-attributed deaths may be inconsistently classified across systems. This variability limits the reliability of linking microbiome patterns to infection-related mortality outcomes when using registry data alone. Variability in categorization, absence of ICD-10 categories in USRDS, and inconsistent coding practices contributed to discordance.
A condensed table summarizing key cross-source patterns:
Category
KPSC most common (%) / USRDS most common (%)
Circulatory/Cardiac
35.7 / 46.9
Endocrine-metabolic
24.2 / 0.4
Genitourinary
12.9 / not listed
Infection
3.0 / 10.1
Key implications
The study underscores substantial limitations in using registry-reported causes of death to interpret clinical outcomes, especially for mechanistic studies that require precise attribution of mortality categories, such as microbiome–mortality correlation research. Inconsistent categorization, particularly for infections, metabolic causes, and chronic disease contributions, means that downstream analyses linking microbial biomarkers to death mechanisms may be confounded by misclassification bias. Improving coding harmonization, integrating standardized ICD-10 categories into registry systems, and ensuring consistent adjudication across care settings would enhance the interpretability of mortality data and improve the accuracy of microbiome-clinical associations in translational research.
Toxic microbiome and progression of chronic kidney disease: insights from a longitudinal CKD-Microbiome Study
February 12, 2026
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Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD)
Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD)
Dysbiosis in chronic kidney disease (CKD) reflects a shift toward reduced beneficial taxa and increased pathogenic, uremic toxin-producing species, driven by a bidirectional interaction in which the uremic environment disrupts microbial composition and dysbiotic metabolites accelerate renal deterioration.
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This study shows how a toxic gut microbiome enriched in uraemic toxin-producing species drives CKD progression, validated across cohorts and animal models, with diet emerging as a modifiable factor.
What was studied?
This original research article examined how the toxic microbiome in chronic kidney disease (CKD) contributes to disease severity and progression, with a particular focus on gut-derived uraemic toxins (UTs), microbial functional capacity, and diet. The study integrates shotgun metagenomics, multiomics profiling, dietary assessment, and fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) experiments. Because the work seeks to define a microbiome signature relevant to CKD, it directly supports efforts to develop a microbiome signatures database. The authors compared 240 non-dialysis CKD patients with healthy controls to identify microbial species producing UT precursors—such as tryptophan- and tyrosine-derived indoles and phenols—and evaluated how these species contribute to increased UT levels and renal injury.
Who was studied?
The main human cohort consisted of 240 adults with non-dialysis CKD stages 2–5 from the French CKD-REIN cohort, with extensive clinical, dietary, toxin, and microbiome characterisation. A subset of 103 patients was followed for approximately three years to assess longitudinal microbiome changes and CKD progression. Matched healthy controls came from the Milieu Intérieur cohort. An independent Belgian CKD cohort (n=79) validated key microbial associations. Animal experiments used CKD model mice receiving FMT from either CKD patients or healthy donors to test causality.
Most important findings
The study identified a distinct CKD-associated gut microbiome, characterised by a marked enrichment of UT precursor-producing species, especially members of Enterocloster, Hungatella, Desulfovibrionaceae, Alistipes, and Intestinimonas. These microbes carry genes involved in kynurenine, indole, phenylacetylglutamine, p-cresyl sulfate, and TMAO synthesis pathways. Multiple figures visually demonstrate strong correlations between these microbial species and serum UT levels. Species depleted in CKD—most prominently Faecalibacterium prausnitzii—correlated negatively with UT concentrations and kidney fibrosis in both humans and mice. Longitudinal analysis showed progressive loss of species richness, increased toxic species ratio, and rising UT levels over three years (Figure 6, page 11). Dietary patterns influenced this trajectory: increased vegetable intake, lower protein consumption, and stable probiotic use reduced the toxic species ratio, while reductions in fibre intake increased it. Causality experiments revealed that transplanting CKD microbiota into CKD mice increased renal fibrosis and UT levels compared with transplantation of healthy stool, confirming a functional toxic role of the CKD microbiome.
Key implications
This study demonstrates that the CKD gut microbiome is not merely altered but functionally toxic, actively driving the production of indole- and phenol-derived UTs that accelerate CKD progression. Microbial species such as Desulfovibrio fairfieldensis, Hungatella spp., and Enterocloster spp. emerge as key contributors to a toxic microbial ecosystem. Conversely, beneficial species—including Faecalibacterium prausnitzii—represent potential therapeutic targets. Diet appears to be a modifiable factor capable of reducing UT-producing taxa, suggesting that plant-based, low-protein dietary interventions may meaningfully modulate dysbiosis. The findings support the integration of microbiome signatures into CKD risk stratification and highlight UT-producing pathways as targets for clinical trial development.
Gut microbiome alterations precede graft rejection in kidney transplantation patients
February 12, 2026
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Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD)
Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD)
Dysbiosis in chronic kidney disease (CKD) reflects a shift toward reduced beneficial taxa and increased pathogenic, uremic toxin-producing species, driven by a bidirectional interaction in which the uremic environment disrupts microbial composition and dysbiotic metabolites accelerate renal deterioration.
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Short-chain Fatty Acids (SCFAs)
Short-chain Fatty Acids (SCFAs)
Short-chain fatty acids are microbially derived metabolites that regulate epithelial integrity, immune signaling, and microbial ecology. Their production patterns and mechanistic roles provide essential functional markers within microbiome signatures and support the interpretation of MBTIs, MMAs, and systems-level microbial shifts across clinical conditions.
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Gut microbiome dysbiosis precedes kidney transplant rejection, marked by loss of SCFA-producing taxa, reduced diversity, and enrichment of disease-associated bacteria. This prerejection signature reflects a prolonged CKD-like state and may serve as an early biomarker and therapeutic target.
What was studied?
Gut microbiome alterations preceding kidney transplant rejection form the focus of this original research article, which uses 16S rRNA gene sequencing to evaluate how microbial composition and function shift before, during, and after graft rejection. The study examines a multicenter cohort and emphasizes the role of short-chain fatty acid (SCFA)–producing taxa as a central microbiome signature. This research reveals that the gut microbiome in kidney transplant recipients shows a recovery trajectory over time, yet this trajectory is disrupted in patients who progress to rejection. Prior to rejection, patients develop a microbiome signature characterized by reduced diversity, reduced SCFA production potential, and increased enrichment of disease-associated genera. This prerejection microbiome resembles a prolonged chronic kidney disease (CKD) gut signature, suggesting that residual CKD-related dysbiosis may play a mechanistic role in immune dysregulation leading to rejection.
Who was studied?
The study analyzes 562 fecal samples collected from 245 individuals participating in the DZIF transplant cohort in Germany, of whom 217 were kidney transplant recipients and 28 were kidney donors. After applying inclusion and exclusion criteria, 76 patients experiencing biopsy-confirmed rejection events were compared with 141 non-rejection patients. A propensity-matched subcohort of 92 individuals (32 rejection, 60 non-rejection) was also analyzed to control for confounders such as age, sex, donor type, HLA mismatch, and time from transplant. Samples were drawn longitudinally before transplant, at predefined intervals post-transplant, at the time of rejection, and in the later post-rejection period, enabling assessment of temporal microbiome dynamics relative to transplant status and graft rejection.
Most important findings
Patients who later rejected their graft exhibited reduced Shannon diversity, lower Simpson evenness, and distinct beta-diversity clustering compared to non-rejection recipients. Key SCFA-producing genera—including Blautia, Faecalibacterium, Roseburia, Coprococcus, and the Ruminococcus torques group—were depleted prior to rejection. Conversely, Streptococcus and Fusobacterium, taxa associated with inflammation and CKD dysbiosis, were enriched. qPCR confirmed functional loss of SCFA-producing pathways, revealing decreased abundance of butyryl-CoA:acetate CoA-transferase (but) and methylmalonyl-CoA decarboxylase (mmdA), with trends toward reduction of bcd and acK enzymes. Pathway analysis (GOmixer) showed increased proteolytic fermentation, reactive nitrogen and oxygen species pathways, and ammonia metabolism in the prerejection state, while healthy controls demonstrated higher mucin degradation and carbohydrate fermentation capacity. Post-rejection, the microbiome began normalizing, with increasing SCFA-producing taxa and reduced inflammatory genera. Comparisons with a published CKD cohort confirmed strong overlap, suggesting rejection-associated dysbiosis represents a persistent CKD-like microbiome state.
Key implications
These findings position the gut microbiome as a predictive and modifiable factor in kidney transplant rejection. Depletion of SCFA-producing taxa and reduced microbial metabolic capacity may impair regulatory T cell modulation, weakening immune tolerance and facilitating rejection. Identifying a pre-rejection microbial signature offers potential for early-detection biomarkers, microbiome-targeted therapeutics, and dietary or microbial interventions aimed at restoring SCFA production, improving immune homeostasis, and enhancing long-term graft survival. Post-rejection normalization suggests that intervention windows may exist both before and after rejection episodes, further underscoring the microbiome’s relevance in clinical transplant management.
Association of low-level heavy metal exposure with risk of chronic kidney disease and long-term mortality
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD)
Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD)
Dysbiosis in chronic kidney disease (CKD) reflects a shift toward reduced beneficial taxa and increased pathogenic, uremic toxin-producing species, driven by a bidirectional interaction in which the uremic environment disrupts microbial composition and dysbiotic metabolites accelerate renal deterioration.
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This study links low-level heavy metal exposure to increased CKD risk and higher cadmium-associated mortality, with synergistic toxicity when both metals are elevated.
What was studied?
This study investigated the association between low-level heavy metal exposure—specifically lead and cadmium—and chronic kidney disease (CKD) risk and long-term mortality, emphasizing how “low-level heavy metal exposure” may influence renal dysfunction and survival outcomes. Using 2003–2012 NHANES data with mortality follow-up through 2019, the researchers examined whether blood lead ≥1.5 μg/dL and blood cadmium ≥0.4 μg/L, both below established toxicity thresholds, were linked to CKD and all-cause mortality. The analysis incorporated demographic, metabolic, cardiovascular, behavioral, and sociodemographic covariates. CKD was defined by an estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) <60 mL/min/1.73 m², and albuminuria analyses were added to mitigate reverse causality. Mortality associations were evaluated using Cox regression models in CKD and non-CKD subgroups. Figures illustrate survival curves, showing steeper declines in groups with elevated cadmium, and details fully adjusted hazard ratios confirming cadmium’s strong mortality signal.
Who was studied?
The cohort included 24,810 adults from a nationally representative U.S. sample, with a mean age of 44.4 years and a near-even sex distribution. According to Table 1 (page 5), 39% had elevated blood lead and 40.3% had elevated cadmium levels. Individuals with higher metal levels were more likely to be older, have lower socioeconomic status, smoke, and exhibit higher rates of hypertension, cardiovascular disease, and stroke. CKD prevalence was 3.9%, representing 1,309 participants. The sample’s diversity—69.3% White, 11.1% Black, 13.4% Hispanic—supports the generalizability of findings. Cross-sectional and longitudinal components enabled evaluation of both CKD risk and long-term mortality across demographic strata.
Most important findings
Low-level exposure to lead and cadmium was clearly associated with clinically relevant kidney and mortality outcomes. Participants with CKD had significantly higher mean blood lead (2.14 vs. 1.58 μg/dL) and cadmium (0.60 vs. 0.53 μg/L). After adjustment, lead ≥1.5 μg/dL (OR 1.41) and cadmium ≥0.4 μg/L (OR 1.23) independently increased CKD odds. Albuminuria analyses confirmed dose-dependent associations even in those with normal eGFR. Mortality analyses demonstrated that elevated cadmium increased risk in both CKD (HR 1.42) and non-CKD (HR 1.40) populations, while lead was not independently predictive. Still, the combined elevation of both metals produced a synergistic mortality effect (HR 1.32). Microbiome-relevant considerations arise from known heavy-metal-induced dysbiosis documented in other literature; while not directly measured here, cadmium and lead can shift gut microbial communities, promote oxidative stress, and disrupt barrier integrity, pathways relevant for microbiome signature databases.
Heavy Metal Exposure
CKD Risk (Adjusted OR)
Mortality Risk (Adjusted HR)
Notable Patterns
Lead ≥1.5 μg/dL
1.41
NS
Linked to CKD but not mortality
Cadmium ≥0.4 μg/L
1.23
1.42 (CKD) / 1.40 (non-CKD)
Strong mortality driver
Both elevated
1.65
1.32
Synergistic interaction
Incremental burden
Dose-dependent
Dose-dependent (Cd strongest)
Aligns with toxicologic data
Key implications
The findings indicate that even low-level heavy metal exposure negatively affects kidney health and survival, challenging current toxicity thresholds. Cadmium’s stronger mortality association suggests it is a critical environmental toxin requiring intensified surveillance and mitigation, especially among smokers and groups with socioeconomic vulnerabilities. Lead’s robust association with CKD reinforces the need for ongoing exposure reduction despite declining national levels. Co-exposure dramatically heightens mortality risk, signaling the importance of cumulative toxicant assessment rather than single-agent evaluation. Clinically, results support incorporating environmental exposure screening into CKD risk assessment and highlight potential relevance for microbiome research, given heavy metals’ documented ability to disrupt microbial ecology and metabolic pathways.
Lactulose Improves Fecal Microflora in CKD Patients
February 12, 2026
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Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD)
Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD)
Dysbiosis in chronic kidney disease (CKD) reflects a shift toward reduced beneficial taxa and increased pathogenic, uremic toxin-producing species, driven by a bidirectional interaction in which the uremic environment disrupts microbial composition and dysbiotic metabolites accelerate renal deterioration.
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Lactulose improved fecal microflora in CKD patients by significantly increasing Bifidobacteria and Lactobacilli while stabilizing renal function. These microbiome shifts counteract dysbiosis-associated toxin generation, supporting lactulose as a clinically relevant microbiome-targeted intervention.
What was studied?
This randomized clinical trial investigated how lactulose improves fecal microbiota composition in chronic kidney disease (CKD) and whether supplementation increases beneficial taxa depleted in CKD, particularly Bifidobacteria and Lactobacilli. The study directly examined whether an 8-week course of lactulose produces measurable microbiome changes and whether these shifts correspond with alterations in renal biomarkers, including serum creatinine and blood urea nitrogen (BUN). The investigators evaluated bacterial genera via anaerobic culturing, enabling quantification of colony-forming units before and after treatment. The study also assessed uremic waste products to contextualize microbiome changes within the metabolic environment characteristic of CKD. According to the results reported on page 1, lactulose produced a significant bifidogenic effect, increasing both Bifidobacteria and Lactobacilli counts compared with placebo.
Who was studied?
The trial included 32 adults with stage 3 or 4 CKD, randomized equally into lactulose and placebo groups. The patient population (mean age approximately 58 years, 43.8 percent male) was clinically stable and free from recent antibiotic exposure or medications affecting gut microbiota. Participants consumed 30 mL lactulose syrup three times daily or matching placebo for eight weeks. All baseline microbiome and clinical characteristics were comparable between groups, as shown in Table 1 on page 3. Patients adhered to standard diets but avoided fermented foods or prebiotics to minimize confounding influences on gut flora. Stool samples collected at baseline and week 8 were processed under anaerobic conditions and cultured on selective media to quantify Bifidobacteria and Lactobacilli (pages 2–3). Importantly, no participants withdrew, and lactulose was well tolerated with no report of major gastrointestinal adverse events.
Most important findings
The most notable finding was the significant enrichment of beneficial taxa, consistent with known dysbiotic signatures of CKD characterized by reduced SCFA-producing organisms and expansion of proteolytic, uremic toxin-generating bacteria. Bifidobacteria counts increased from 3.61 ± 0.54 to 4.90 ± 0.96 log CFU/g in the lactulose group (P < 0.001), whereas the placebo group showed no meaningful change (Table 3, page 4). Lactobacilli similarly increased from 2.79 ± 1.00 to 3.87 ± 1.13 log CFU/g, also without improvement in the placebo arm. These taxa represent major microbial associations relevant to CKD because of their role in reducing luminal pH, suppressing pathogenic clostridia and Bacteroidaceae, and generating beneficial metabolites.
Renal function trends supported the microbiome findings. Serum creatinine significantly decreased in the lactulose group (3.90 ± 1.43 to 3.60 ± 1.44 mg/dL, P = 0.003) and significantly increased in the placebo group (3.87 ± 2.08 to 4.11 ± 1.99 mg/dL, P = 0.03). Although BUN did not differ significantly, the directionality suggested reduced nitrogenous waste retention. The analysis of percent change (page 3) revealed a statistically significant difference between groups, with creatinine decreasing in the lactulose arm and worsening in controls. The study did not measure specific uremic toxins such as p-cresol or indoxyl sulfate, but prior research cited within the article supports lactulose’s capacity to reduce toxin burden by modulating proteolytic fermentation.
Key implications
These findings provide evidence to clinicians that lactulose acts as a microbiome-targeted intervention in CKD, selectively expanding health-associated commensals and counteracting the dysbiosis that contributes to toxin generation. The increase in Bifidobacteria and Lactobacilli supports metabolic shifts toward saccharolytic rather than proteolytic fermentation, potentially reducing gut-derived uremic toxin formation. As CKD progression is tightly linked to intestinal dysbiosis and barrier dysfunction, restoring beneficial taxa may mitigate systemic inflammation and metabolic complications. The observed stabilization or improvement in creatinine further supports lactulose as an adjunctive therapy capable of modifying both microbial composition and renal biochemical markers. Given its affordability, safety profile, and bifidogenic potency, lactulose represents a feasible therapeutic candidate to integrate into microbiome-informed CKD management strategies.
KDIGO 2012 Clinical Practice Guideline for the Evaluation and Management of Chronic Kidney Disease
February 12, 2026
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Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD)
Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD)
Dysbiosis in chronic kidney disease (CKD) reflects a shift toward reduced beneficial taxa and increased pathogenic, uremic toxin-producing species, driven by a bidirectional interaction in which the uremic environment disrupts microbial composition and dysbiotic metabolites accelerate renal deterioration.
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The KDIGO 2012 CKD guideline synthesizes global evidence to refine CKD definition, staging, prognosis, and management, emphasizing albuminuria and GFR as core predictors of progression and mortality.
What was reviewed?
The KDIGO 2012 CKD guideline was reviewed as a comprehensive, evidence-based synthesis of global research on chronic kidney disease (CKD) evaluation, classification, prognosis, and management. This guideline functions as an expert-driven meta-review, integrating hundreds of clinical trials, epidemiologic cohorts, and mechanistic studies to create a unified framework for diagnosing CKD, staging kidney impairment, evaluating risk, and guiding therapy. By standardizing CKD definition using GFR thresholds and albuminuria categories, the KDIGO 2012 CKD guideline supports clinical decision-making across diverse populations. Its emphasis on albuminuria as a core structural marker reflects a major shift arising from microbiome-adjacent research showing that systemic inflammation, metabolic endotoxemia, and microbial-driven vascular dysfunction strongly correlate with increased urinary albumin excretion. The guideline’s recommendations span early identification, blood pressure management, RAAS blockade, protein intake, glycemic targets, mineral and bone disorder (CKD-MBD), anemia, medication dosing, contrast exposure, infection risk, progression surveillance, and referral timing. Together, these components form an integrated management pathway rooted in large-scale evidence synthesis.
Who was reviewed?
Populations evaluated across the KDIGO 2012 CKD guideline derive from extensive international cohorts, including general population samples, high-risk groups such as individuals with diabetes and hypertension, and patients with established CKD stages G1–G5. The evidence base includes children, adults, transplant recipients, and older adults, enabling age-specific considerations in GFR interpretation, albuminuria evaluation, and treatment thresholds. These populations also reflect global diversity, incorporating data from North America, Europe, Asia, Australia, and multinational consortia. Special attention is given to groups with elevated susceptibility—including individuals with obesity, metabolic syndrome, cardiovascular disease, and exposure to nephrotoxins. The guideline’s prognostic framework (CGA: Cause, GFR, Albuminuria) was developed from meta-analytic data on more than two million participants, enabling risk stratification across demographic and clinical subgroups.
Most important findings
The KDIGO 2012 CKD guideline highlights albuminuria and reduced GFR as the two strongest, most consistent predictors of CKD progression, cardiovascular mortality, and all-cause mortality. Albuminuria functions as an early, sensitive indicator of glomerular injury, vascular dysfunction, and systemic inflammation, linking kidney health to metabolic and immune pathways. GFR decline is staged from G1 to G5, but prognosis depends on the combined GFR-albuminuria matrix, shown visually in the guideline’s risk heat map. High albuminuria (A2–A3) greatly amplifies risk even at preserved GFR, suggesting that microbial dysbiosis–driven endothelial damage and metabolite toxicity may influence renal microvascular vulnerability.RAAS blockade is consistently effective in reducing progression in albuminuric CKD, while progression risk increases with elevated blood pressure, diabetes, smoking, obesity, and dyslipidemia. The guideline also underscores the high burden of infection risk, anemia, CKD-MBD, acidosis, and medication toxicity as kidney function declines.
CKD Feature
Clinical Interpretation
Albuminuria A2–A3
Strong predictor of progression and CV mortality
GFR <60 ml/min/1.73 m²
Increased risk of metabolic, endocrine, and drug-related complications
Combined CGA staging
Most accurate prognostic classification
RAAS blockade benefit
Reduced albuminuria and slowed CKD progression
Key implications
The KDIGO 2012 CKD guideline establishes albuminuria and GFR as foundational biomarkers for diagnosis and risk prediction, reinforcing the need for early detection to prevent irreversible nephron loss. Because albuminuria reflects systemic vascular stress, it aligns with emerging microbiome research linking microbial metabolites (e.g., indoxyl sulfate, p-cresol sulfate, TMAO) to endothelial dysfunction and CKD progression. The guideline’s emphasis on RAAS blockade, sodium restriction, glycemic control, and tailored blood pressure targets supports strategies that reduce inflammatory and hemodynamic stressors exacerbated by dysbiosis. Its structured approach to monitoring, referral, and complication management improves consistency of care and enables clinicians to intervene earlier in the disease trajectory.
Key implications
The KDIGO 2012 CKD guideline establishes albuminuria and GFR as foundational biomarkers for diagnosis and risk prediction, reinforcing the need for early detection to prevent irreversible nephron loss. Because albuminuria reflects systemic vascular stress, it aligns with emerging microbiome research linking microbial metabolites (e.g., indoxyl sulfate, p-cresol sulfate, TMAO) to endothelial dysfunction and CKD progression. The guideline’s emphasis on RAAS blockade, sodium restriction, glycemic control, and tailored blood pressure targets supports strategies that reduce inflammatory and hemodynamic stressors exacerbated by dysbiosis. Its structured approach to monitoring, referral, and complication management improves consistency of care and enables clinicians to intervene earlier in the disease trajectory.
Lactulose Improves Renal Function and Gut Microbiota in CKD
February 12, 2026
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Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD)
Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD)
Dysbiosis in chronic kidney disease (CKD) reflects a shift toward reduced beneficial taxa and increased pathogenic, uremic toxin-producing species, driven by a bidirectional interaction in which the uremic environment disrupts microbial composition and dysbiotic metabolites accelerate renal deterioration.
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Short-chain Fatty Acids (SCFAs)
Short-chain Fatty Acids (SCFAs)
Short-chain fatty acids are microbially derived metabolites that regulate epithelial integrity, immune signaling, and microbial ecology. Their production patterns and mechanistic roles provide essential functional markers within microbiome signatures and support the interpretation of MBTIs, MMAs, and systems-level microbial shifts across clinical conditions.
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Lactulose improved renal function in adenine-induced CKD rats by lowering uremic toxins, decreasing indole-producing taxa, and enriching Bifidobacterium and Lactobacillales. These microbiome shifts corresponded with reduced fibrosis and oxidative stress, demonstrating lactulose’s potential as a microbiome-targeted intervention for CKD.
What was studied?
This original research study examined how lactulose improves renal function and gut microbiota dysbiosis and uremic toxin production in adenine-induced chronic kidney disease (CKD) and whether these microbiome shifts translate into measurable improvements in renal function. The investigators used a well-established adenine CKD model, where adenine metabolism produces 2,8-dihydroxyadenine crystals that accumulate in proximal tubules and drive tubulointerstitial injury. After CKD establishment, rats were transitioned to either standard chow or lactulose-supplemented diets (3.0 percent or 7.5 percent), enabling assessment of lactulose’s capacity to alter dysbiosis, reduce serum indoxyl sulfate (IS), p-cresyl sulfate (PCS), and trimethylamine-N-oxide (TMAO), and mitigate renal fibrosis. The study integrated classical nephrology outcomes (serum creatinine, BUN, fibrosis quantification) with microbiome composition profiling using T-RFLP and SCFA quantification, thus offering a translational view of lactulose as a microbiome-targeted intervention (MBTI).
Who was studied?
The study evaluated male Wistar/ST rats induced into CKD through 0.75 percent adenine feeding for three weeks, a model confirmed by marked increases in serum creatinine, BUN, IS, and extensive tubulointerstitial fibrosis documented in the histological micrographs on page 6. After CKD induction, 36 rats were randomized into three groups: control (normal diet), 3.0 percent lactulose, and 7.5 percent lactulose (n=12 per group). An additional normal cohort served as a healthy reference. Fecal and serum sampling occurred at baseline, post-adenine induction, and four weeks after dietary intervention, allowing temporal comparison of renal, metabolic, and microbiome changes. No animals exhibited diarrhea or constipation, supporting model stability.
Most important findings
Lactulose produced dose-dependent improvements in renal function, with both 3.0 percent and 7.5 percent diets lowering serum creatinine and BUN relative to controls, as shown in the plots on page 5. Serum IS, which increased 8.5-fold after adenine, rose further in controls but fell significantly in both lactulose groups by week 4, indicating suppression of indole-producing taxa. PCS levels, markedly elevated in CKD, were likewise reduced. TMAO also trended downward in the 7.5 percent group. These toxin reductions strongly correlated with improvements in creatinine and BUN (scatter plots, page 6).
Microbiota analyses demonstrated that lactulose reduced the relative abundance of Bacteroides and Clostridium cluster XI, both major producers of indole precursors of IS, while increasing Bifidobacterium and Lactobacillales, as shown in the taxa-specific bar graphs on page 10. These represent key beneficial taxa in a CKD microbiome signature and major microbial associations (MMAs) relevant to the suppression of uremic toxins. Despite no large shifts in total SCFA levels across groups, lactulose nonetheless promoted compositional rebalancing toward SCFA-associated genera. Kidney histology (page 8) demonstrated a substantial reduction in tubulointerstitial fibrosis in lactulose groups, consistent with the observed reduction of IS and PCS, which are known drivers of ROS-mediated fibrosis. Lactulose also improved oxidative stress markers, decreasing AOPPs and increasing thiol content and GSH/GSSG ratio.
Key implications
This study provides a mechanistic foundation for using lactulose as an MBTI for CKD, demonstrating dual activity: suppression of IS- and PCS-producing bacterial taxa and restoration of beneficial, SCFA-producing commensals such as Bifidobacterium. The improvement in renal biomarkers aligns with microbiome shifts that reduce indole production and uremic toxin burden. By preventing further tubulointerstitial fibrosis and improving oxidative stress profiles, lactulose addresses upstream drivers of CKD progression rather than only downstream symptoms. Importantly, the findings validate lactulose as an agent capable of reversing core elements of CKD dysbiosis and restoring metabolic homeostasis, supporting its use as a clinically actionable MBTI candidate for nephrology.
Characterization of metal(loid)s and antibiotic resistance in bacteria of human gut microbiota from chronic kidney disease subjects
February 12, 2026
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Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD)
Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD)
Dysbiosis in chronic kidney disease (CKD) reflects a shift toward reduced beneficial taxa and increased pathogenic, uremic toxin-producing species, driven by a bidirectional interaction in which the uremic environment disrupts microbial composition and dysbiotic metabolites accelerate renal deterioration.
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Study of chronic kidney disease microbiome resistance showing metal–antibiotic co-resistance, early-stage enrichment of Firmicutes/Proteobacteria, and progressive loss of resistance genes as CKD advances.
What was studied?
This study investigated chronic kidney disease microbiome resistance, focusing on how metal(loid) exposure and antibiotic pressure shape resistance phenotypes in gut bacteria of CKD patients. The authors characterized bacterial isolates from stool samples across CKD stages, examining their tolerance to arsenic, cadmium, mercury, and lead, as well as their antibiotic resistance patterns. They used culture-based selection on media supplemented with metal(loid)s, followed by antibiotic susceptibility testing and 16S rRNA amplicon sequencing to identify taxa enriched under these selective pressures. Additionally, qPCR targeting a panel of resistance genes evaluated the abundance of microbial genetic determinants associated with both antibiotic and metal(loid) resistance. The study provides mechanistic insight into how progressive renal dysfunction, combined with common exposures such as contaminated tap water and frequent antibiotic use, drives dysbiosis and shapes the gut resistome.
Who was studied?
Participants included sixteen adults divided into four groups: healthy controls and individuals with CKD stages 3, 4, and 5. Each group contained four subjects. All CKD participants were classified based on estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) criteria, and stage 5 subjects included individuals receiving renal replacement therapy. Participants with confounding gastrointestinal, inflammatory, malignant, or immune disorders were excluded to ensure that microbiome shifts reflected CKD pathophysiology rather than unrelated comorbidities. Stool samples—processed aerobically on YCFAm medium—served as the biological source for microbiological isolation, phenotyping, and genomic analyses. Clinical and anthropometric parameters were recorded, although the main analytic focus remained on microbial behavior and genetic signatures.
Most important findings
A central finding is that CKD3 subjects retained a broader range of metal(loid)-resistant bacteria, predominantly Firmicutes and Proteobacteria, mirroring patterns. These isolates frequently displayed co-resistance to antibiotics—including ampicillin, ciprofloxacin, cefazolin, gentamicin, and ceftazidime—especially when metal(loid)s were present at sublethal concentrations. Bacillus spp. and Pseudomonas spp. were consistently enriched, showing multidrug-resistant phenotypes under arsenic and lead exposure. Notably, qPCR revealed a progressive loss of resistance gene diversity across CKD stages. Stage 3 samples retained cadA2k, cadA3k, and arsC (metal resistance) and genes such as strB, floR, arr2, and acrB (antibiotic resistance), while stage 5 samples showed marked depletion, retaining only qnrB1, dhfr1, floR, merA, and cadA2k.
A representative summary of microbial–gene associations is shown below:
Microbial Feature
Associated Resistance Marker
Bacillus & Pseudomonas enrichment
Multidrug antibiotic resistance
Escherichia/Shigella presence
dhfr1, qnrB1
Enterococcus in arsenic exposure
Gentamicin/ampicillin resistance
Decline in Bacteroidetes with CKD progression
Loss of metal(loid) resistance genes
Key implications
Findings highlight a clinically relevant pattern: early CKD stages show greater microbial diversity and richer resistome profiles, while advanced stages display microbiome depletion and reduced genetic determinants of resistance. This suggests that declining renal function—and its metabolic consequences, including uremia and altered gut transit—compresses microbial diversity and selectively reduces gene carriage. The presence of cadA and arsC in CKD3 subjects supports their potential use as early-stage biomarkers of environmental metal exposure and gut dysbiosis severity. From a clinical standpoint, the co-selection of metal and antibiotic resistance underlines the need to consider environmental toxicants when evaluating antibiotic-resistant infections in CKD patients. These results support integrating resistome analysis into CKD microbiome assessment, particularly for detecting hidden environmental exposures that may influence disease trajectory.
The role of gut and genital microbiota and the estrobolome in endometriosis, infertility and chronic pelvic pain
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Chronic Pelvic Pain (CPP)
Chronic Pelvic Pain (CPP)
Chronic Pelvic Pain (CPP) is persistent pain in the pelvic region lasting six months or longer, often multifactorial, impacting physical and emotional well-being, and associated with various medical conditions.
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Infertility
Infertility
Infertility is the inability to conceive after 12 months of regular, unprotected sex. It affects both men and women and can be due to various physical, hormonal, or genetic factors. Treatments include medication, surgery, assisted reproductive technologies, and lifestyle changes.
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This review highlights the gut and genital microbiome's roles in estrogen-driven conditions like endometriosis, infertility, and CPP, emphasizing dysbiosis' impact on inflammation and estrogen metabolism.
What was reviewed?
The reviewed manuscript explored the intricate relationship between the gut and genital microbiomes, the estrobolome, and their roles in the pathophysiology of endometriosis, infertility, and chronic pelvic pain (CPP). The authors critically examined 28 clinical and six preclinical studies to understand microbial dysbiosis's contributions to estrogen metabolism, inflammation, and symptomatology in these conditions. This review also identified methodological gaps in microbiome studies and proposed strategies to improve future research.
Who was reviewed?
The review included human and animal studies, examining women diagnosed with endometriosis, infertility, and CPP, alongside healthy controls. Specific focus was placed on microbial associations in the gut, cervicovaginal, and endometrial microbiomes, with emphasis on bacterial vaginosis-associated bacteria, Lactobacillus depletion, and microbial influences on estrogen-driven mechanisms.
What were the most important findings?
Key findings highlighted that dysbiosis in the gut microbiome disrupts the estrobolome, an essential modulator of estrogen metabolism. This disruption contributes to heightened systemic and local inflammation, potentially exacerbating endometriosis symptoms and infertility. Many studies noted an association between bacterial vaginosis-related bacteria and a reduction in Lactobacillus dominance in the cervicovaginal microbiome with the prevalence of endometriosis and infertility. Additionally, the review underscored a bidirectional relationship between gut microbiota and endometriosis progression in animal models, emphasizing the role of gut dysbiosis in increasing b-glucuronidase activity, leading to elevated circulating estrogen levels.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review underscores the need for rigorous, standardized methodologies to better delineate causal relationships between microbiota and gynecological conditions like endometriosis and CPP. The findings of this review suggest that targeting the microbiome could lead to novel diagnostics and therapeutics for estrogen-driven diseases. The review also highlights the potential of leveraging microbiome-based biomarkers for non-invasive diagnostics and monitoring of endometriosis progression, bridging a critical translational gap in gynecological health.
The role of the vaginal microbiome in distinguishing female chronic pelvic pain caused by endometriosis/adenomyosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Chronic Pelvic Pain (CPP)
Chronic Pelvic Pain (CPP)
Chronic Pelvic Pain (CPP) is persistent pain in the pelvic region lasting six months or longer, often multifactorial, impacting physical and emotional well-being, and associated with various medical conditions.
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This study examines the role of the vaginal microbiome in distinguishing chronic pelvic pain caused by endometriosis and adenomyosis. Findings highlight specific microbial signatures associated with pain severity, offering potential non-invasive biomarkers for differential diagnosis and targeted therapeutic strategies.
What was studied?
This study investigated whether the composition of the vaginal microbiome could serve as a diagnostic biomarker to differentiate chronic pelvic pain (CPP) caused by endometriosis or adenomyosis (EM/AM) from other causes of chronic pelvic pain syndrome (CPPS) in women. Using 16S rRNA sequencing (V4 region), the researchers profiled the vaginal microbiota of 37 women with EM/AM-associated CPP, 25 with CPPS from other causes, and 66 healthy controls without CPPS. Additionally, the study explored whether combining vaginal microbial markers with serum CA125 could improve differential diagnostic accuracy.
Who was studied?
The study included 128 premenopausal women attending the gynecology department of Peking Union Medical College Hospital. These were stratified into three groups: 37 women with surgically confirmed EM/AM-associated CPP, 25 women with non-EM/AM CPPS (adhesions, hydrosalpinx, infertility), and 66 women without any chronic pelvic pain. All participants were HPV-negative, had not recently used antibiotics or vaginal products, and were matched for age, gravidity, parity, and contraceptive method to control for confounding variables.
What were the most important findings?
The vaginal microbiome of women with EM/AM-associated CPP exhibited significantly higher alpha diversity than those in the CPPS and healthy control groups. Taxonomic analyses revealed distinct microbial signatures: increased abundance of Clostridium butyricum, Clostridium disporicum, Alloscardovia omnicolens, and Veillonella montpellierensis, alongside a marked depletion of Lactobacillus jensenii, Lactobacillus reuteri, and Lactobacillus iners. These differentially abundant taxa serve as potential microbiome biomarkers.
Diagnostic performance analysis demonstrated that a combination of microbial biomarkers (specifically, a relative abundance of Clostridium disporicum >0.001105% and Lactobacillus reuteri <0.1911349%) yielded 81.08% sensitivity and 52% specificity for identifying EM/AM-associated CPP. When combined with serum CA125 levels, sensitivity increased to 89.19%, although specificity remained unchanged. Functional predictions via PICRUSt revealed enrichment of metabolic pathways such as amino acid metabolism, energy metabolism, and metabolism of cofactors and vitamins in EM/AM patients, along with downregulation of membrane transport and nucleotide metabolism compared to controls. These shifts may reflect microbial contributions to inflammation and pain signaling pathways implicated in EM/AM-associated CPP.
From a microbiome signature standpoint, the enriched taxa—particularly Clostridium disporicum and Alloscardovia omnicolens—emerge as Major Microbial Associations (MMAs) due to their consistent elevation in EM/AM patients. Conversely, Lactobacillus jensenii and L. reuteri, known for their protective, anti-inflammatory properties, are depleted, suggesting their role in maintaining vaginal eubiosis and preventing EM/AM-associated pathogenesis.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This research provides compelling evidence that the vaginal microbiome harbors discriminative microbial signatures capable of differentiating EM/AM-associated CPP from other forms of chronic pelvic pain. The incorporation of specific microbial biomarkers, particularly when paired with serum CA125, may improve non-invasive diagnostic accuracy, enabling earlier and more targeted therapeutic intervention. Clinically, these findings underscore the potential of microbiome-informed diagnostics for gynecological conditions where conventional markers fall short. More broadly, this study suggests that vaginal dysbiosis, characterized by Lactobacillus depletion and enrichment of saccharolytic and anaerobic species, could be causally linked to EM/AM pathogenesis, possibly via inflammatory or metabolic pathways. Future studies incorporating metagenomic or metabolomic analyses are warranted to functionally validate these microbial associations and to explore the feasibility of microbial modulation as a therapeutic strategy.
A Review of the Anti-inflammatory Properties of Clindamycin in the Treatment of Acne Vulgaris
February 12, 2026
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Clindamycin
Clindamycin
Clindamycin is an antibiotic commonly used to treat a variety of bacterial infections, including skin, bone, joint infections, and bacterial vaginosis. Known for its ability to target Gram-positive bacteria and anaerobes, Clindamycin disrupts protein synthesis in bacteria, halting their growth. While highly effective, its impact on the gut microbiome and the potential for Clostridium difficile infections make it essential to use with caution in certain populations.
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This review details clindamycin’s anti-inflammatory role in acne, showing its impact on C. acnes, cytokines, and immune responses beyond bacterial suppression.
What Was Reviewed?
This review explores the anti-inflammatory properties of clindamycin in the treatment of acne vulgaris. It compiles data on how clindamycin, traditionally recognized for its antibacterial activity, also exhibits significant immunomodulatory effects. The paper focuses on clindamycin’s ability to inhibit Propionibacterium acnes (now Cutibacterium acnes), a key player in acne pathogenesis, and its impact on the inflammatory cascade triggered by this bacterium. The review outlines how clindamycin affects proinflammatory cytokines, leukocyte chemotaxis, phagocytosis, and various cellular pathways, reinforcing the idea that its therapeutic effects in acne extend beyond mere bacterial suppression.
Who Was Reviewed?
The subjects of this review are patients with acne vulgaris, with particular emphasis on the microbiological and immunological dynamics within their pilosebaceous units. The review highlights the involvement of C. acnes and its interactions with host immune responses, detailing cytokine production and inflammatory cell recruitment. Human keratinocytes, monocytes, and neutrophils, both in vitro and in vivo, are discussed extensively to illustrate the inflammatory processes and clindamycin’s effects on them.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
This review underscores that clindamycin’s acne-fighting power lies in both direct antibacterial action and critical anti-inflammatory activities. Clindamycin effectively inhibits C. acnes growth, lipase production, and the resulting free fatty acid buildup, all contributing to acne lesion development. The drug also inhibits the production of key inflammatory mediators, including interleukin-1β (IL-1β), interferon-gamma (IFN-γ), tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α), and granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF), while suppressing leukocyte chemotaxis and enhancing phagocytosis. The review provides detailed evidence that clindamycin diminishes oxidative bursts from phagocytes and curbs the inflammatory cascade at multiple points, reinforcing that its clinical efficacy in acne likely stems from these combined effects, not solely its antibacterial function.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Review?
The findings emphasize the need for clinicians to recognize clindamycin’s dual-action nature. Its anti-inflammatory properties are especially relevant in cases where bacterial resistance is a concern, offering therapeutic benefits even when antibacterial effects are limited. The paper advocates for the continued use of clindamycin, particularly in combination therapies, while highlighting the necessity of antibiotic stewardship. This dual-action insight informs more nuanced acne treatment strategies, acknowledging the complex interplay between microbes and host immunity.
Current indications for the use of clindamycin: A critical review
February 12, 2026
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Clindamycin
Clindamycin
Clindamycin is an antibiotic commonly used to treat a variety of bacterial infections, including skin, bone, joint infections, and bacterial vaginosis. Known for its ability to target Gram-positive bacteria and anaerobes, Clindamycin disrupts protein synthesis in bacteria, halting their growth. While highly effective, its impact on the gut microbiome and the potential for Clostridium difficile infections make it essential to use with caution in certain populations.
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This review analyzes clindamycin’s evidence-based use in infections, its anti-toxin benefits, and microbiome risks, especially C. difficile impact.
What Was Reviewed?
This critical review evaluates the current indications for clindamycin use, consolidating evidence-based guidelines across a range of infectious conditions. It synthesizes data from randomized clinical trials, cohort studies, and expert opinions published between 1966 and 1996, focusing on therapeutic efficacy and safety. The review categorizes evidence by clinical syndrome, discussing clindamycin’s roles in skin and soft tissue infections, necrotizing fasciitis, diabetic foot infections, osteomyelitis, head and neck infections, preoperative prophylaxis, pneumonia, intra-abdominal and pelvic infections, and select protozoal diseases. The review also highlights adverse effects, particularly the significant risk of Clostridium difficile-associated diarrhea.
Who Was Reviewed?
This review encompasses a broad spectrum of patient populations with bacterial and protozoal infections treated with clindamycin. Key patient groups include individuals with skin and soft tissue infections, diabetic foot ulcers, osteomyelitis, necrotizing fasciitis, and recurrent group A streptococcal pharyngitis. The review also covers surgical patients requiring perioperative prophylaxis and those with anaerobic pulmonary infections or pelvic infections. Special attention is given to vulnerable populations such as diabetics and hospitalized patients at risk of C. difficile colonization, illustrating the intersection between microbial ecology and clinical outcomes.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The review confirms that clindamycin remains a vital alternative antibiotic, especially in patients allergic to beta-lactams or for infections involving toxin-producing pathogens like Streptococcus pyogenes. Notably, clindamycin’s efficacy in anaerobic lung infections, diabetic foot infections, and necrotizing fasciitis is well-supported, with its dual action of inhibiting bacterial protein synthesis and suppressing toxin production. However, the review underscores significant concerns over C. difficile-associated diarrhea, with inpatient colonization risks reaching up to 30%. While clindamycin demonstrates broad-spectrum anaerobic activity, its use in abdominal infections is increasingly challenged by cheaper, safer alternatives like metronidazole. From a microbiome standpoint, the paper emphasizes that clindamycin’s prolonged intestinal presence profoundly disrupts gut flora, increasing susceptibility to pathogenic colonization, especially in inpatient settings.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Review?
For clinicians, the key takeaway is the nuanced application of clindamycin: it should be reserved for cases with compelling evidence of benefit, such as invasive streptococcal infections or anaerobic lung abscesses. Stewardship is critical to limit microbiome disruption and resistance proliferation, particularly given the high incidence of C. difficile-related complications. The review calls for judicious prescribing practices, recommending metronidazole-based regimens where feasible and advocating for combination therapies in severe infections to optimize outcomes while minimizing adverse microbiome impacts.
Scientific Rationale and Clinical Basis for Clindamycin Use in the Treatment of Dermatologic Disease
February 12, 2026
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Clindamycin
Clindamycin
Clindamycin is an antibiotic commonly used to treat a variety of bacterial infections, including skin, bone, joint infections, and bacterial vaginosis. Known for its ability to target Gram-positive bacteria and anaerobes, Clindamycin disrupts protein synthesis in bacteria, halting their growth. While highly effective, its impact on the gut microbiome and the potential for Clostridium difficile infections make it essential to use with caution in certain populations.
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This review examines clindamycin’s clinical utility in dermatology, spotlighting its antibacterial and anti-inflammatory roles, resistance concerns, and impact on skin microbiota, with a focus on acne vulgaris.
What Was Reviewed?
This review paper focuses on the scientific rationale and clinical basis for using clindamycin in treating dermatologic diseases. It details clindamycin’s antibacterial and anti-inflammatory roles, particularly its established use in acne vulgaris, folliculitis, rosacea, hidradenitis suppurativa (HS), and staphylococcal infections. The authors also explore its mechanism of action, highlighting how clindamycin inhibits bacterial protein synthesis by targeting the 50S subunit of the bacterial ribosome. The review contrasts clindamycin’s dermatological indications with those of tetracyclines. It checked trends in antibiotic resistance, offering a robust understanding of how clindamycin has maintained relevance in dermatology despite rising resistance concerns.
Who Was Reviewed?
The review primarily covers patients affected by dermatologic conditions where clindamycin is indicated, including acne vulgaris sufferers, individuals with bacterial folliculitis, rosacea, HS, and staphylococcal infections. The paper contextualizes microbial involvement, particularly the role of Cutibacterium acnes (formerly Propionibacterium acnes), and outlines the bacterium's phylotypes and pathogenicity. It also reviews bacterial species relevant to resistance patterns, such as Staphylococcus aureus and Staphylococcus epidermidis, reflecting the broader impact of clindamycin on the skin microbiome.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
Key findings center on clindamycin’s dual action: its efficacy in suppressing C. acnes growth and its notable anti-inflammatory effects. The review emphasizes that specific ribotypes of C. acnes are more virulent, contributing to inflammation and biofilm formation in acne. Topical clindamycin, often combined with benzoyl peroxide or retinoids, proves highly effective across various acne severities, with additional success noted in folliculitis, rosacea, and HS. Resistance trends are a major concern, with C. acnes resistance to clindamycin and macrolides reported in up to 90% of cases in some regions, driven by gene transfers. The review underscores the need for stewardship to mitigate resistance while recognizing clindamycin’s continued clinical value due to its safety, effectiveness, and versatility.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Review?
The review highlights the importance of balancing effective clindamycin use with antibiotic stewardship to limit resistance. For clinicians, the detailed exploration of C. acnes pathogenicity, clindamycin’s mechanism of action, and emerging resistance informs better treatment planning. The paper suggests that, despite high resistance rates, topical clindamycin remains a core treatment, particularly when combined with other agents to reduce monotherapy risks. Additionally, the work calls attention to the delicate balance of the skin microbiome and the need for ongoing surveillance and innovation in dermatologic therapies.
Copper in microbial pathogenesis: Meddling with the metal
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Copper (Cu)
Copper (Cu)
Copper serves as both a vital nutrient and a potential toxin, with its regulation having profound effects on microbial pathogenesis and immune responses. In the body, copper interacts with pathogens, either supporting essential enzyme functions or hindering microbial growth through its toxicity. The gastrointestinal tract, immune cells, and bloodstream are key sites where copper plays a crucial role in controlling infection and maintaining microbial balance. Understanding copper’s interactions with the microbiome and host defenses allows for targeted clinical strategies.
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This review explores copper's role in microbial pathogenesis, highlighting its use by hosts as an antimicrobial weapon and the resistance mechanisms developed by pathogens. It discusses copper's involvement in immune defense and fungal virulence, offering insights into potential therapeutic strategies.
What was studied?
The study examines the role of copper (Cu) in microbial pathogenesis, particularly its dual role as both a necessary cofactor for microbial enzymes and a toxic element that the host uses to limit microbial growth. It reviews how the host utilizes Cu as a weapon and how pathogens have evolved mechanisms to resist its toxicity.
Who was studied?
This research focuses on a variety of pathogens, including bacteria like Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and Salmonella enterica, as well as fungi such as Cryptococcus neoformans. The study explores how these microorganisms interact with copper during infection and how they have developed resistance strategies to cope with copper's toxic effects.
Most important findings
Copper plays a significant role in the immune defense against microbial infections. In mammals, Cu is used to restrict pathogen growth, particularly through its accumulation in the phagolysosome of macrophages, which enhances antimicrobial activity. At the same time, pathogens have developed sophisticated mechanisms to mitigate Cu toxicity. For example, Salmonella and E. coli utilize the Cue and CopA systems to export excess Cu, while fungi like Cryptococcus neoformans use Cu-dependent enzymes like laccase for melanin production, which helps the pathogen evade host immune defenses. The study also highlights that Cu resistance is critical for the virulence of pathogens, where Cu homeostasis is tightly regulated.
Key implications
The findings suggest that Cu is a crucial part of the host's immune response, and understanding how pathogens resist its toxic effects could lead to new therapeutic strategies. Enhancing copper's antimicrobial properties might offer a novel approach for treating infections. The study also underscores the complexity of copper regulation in microbes, which could inform the development of drugs that target these resistance mechanisms.
Novel Insights into the Pathogenesis of Inflammatory Bowel Diseases
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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Crohn’s Disease
Crohn’s Disease
Crohn's disease is a chronic inflammatory condition of the gastrointestinal tract that can cause a wide range of symptoms, including abdominal pain, diarrhea, and fatigue. The exact cause of the disease remains unclear, but it is believed to result from a combination of genetic predisposition and environmental factors. Although there is no cure, ongoing advancements in medical research continue to improve management strategies and quality of life for those affected by Crohn's disease.
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This review focuses on the complex pathogenesis of Crohn’s Disease, exploring the roles of microbiome dysbiosis, immune system dysregulation, and environmental factors in disease progression, while highlighting novel therapeutic and diagnostic strategies
What was studied?
This paper reviews recent developments in the understanding of Crohn's Disease (CD), particularly focusing on its pathogenesis and the emerging role of the microbiome in shaping disease outcomes. It also delves into the influence of epigenetics, immune responses, and the interplay between environmental factors and microbial communities. The review synthesizes data on how these factors contribute to the disease's chronicity and provides insights into potential therapeutic strategies, such as microbiome-targeted treatments.
Who was studied?
The review addresses studies that examine a broad spectrum of individuals affected by Crohn's Disease, with an emphasis on genetic, environmental, and microbial influences. It considers both pediatric and adult populations, as well as patients with varying phenotypes of CD, such as inflammatory, fistulizing, and stricturing forms. The review highlights how differences in microbiota composition may influence disease severity and response to treatment, particularly in treatment-naïve individuals and those with diverse environmental exposures.
Most important findings
The most significant findings from the review underscore the role of dysbiosis (microbial imbalance) in Crohn's Disease, notably how reduced microbial diversity and the overgrowth of pathogenic bacteria contribute to the inflammation seen in CD patients. Specific microbiome signatures are now linked with disease severity, and these microbial imbalances may also influence immune system dysregulation. T-helper (Th) cells, particularly Th17, play a central role in driving the inflammation in CD, and microbial interactions may exacerbate this process. The paper also explores the growing evidence of how environmental factors—such as diet, antibiotics, and pollution—can influence the microbiome and contribute to disease onset and progression.
Recent studies also point to the potential for personalized therapies that target the microbiome, such as fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) or microbiome modulation to restore balance and alleviate symptoms. Furthermore, advancements in multi-omics technologies and single-cell transcriptomics are offering more profound insights into the genetic and immune pathways involved, enabling more targeted and effective therapeutic strategies.
Key implications
The review highlights several key implications for clinical practice. First, a better understanding of microbiome dysbiosis could lead to innovative, non-invasive diagnostic tools that predict disease severity and response to treatment. The evolving microbiome-targeted therapies provide promising avenues for personalized medicine, especially in patients who do not respond to conventional therapies. Moreover, the identification of specific microbial signatures for Crohn’s Disease could lead to novel biomarkers for early diagnosis and for monitoring disease progression in real-time. Finally, the intersection of epigenetics and microbiome alterations opens new paths for preventative strategies, particularly in genetically predisposed populations, emphasizing early-life interventions.
Diagnostic Procedures for Inflammatory Bowel Disease: Laboratory, Endoscopy, Pathology, Imaging, and Beyond
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Crohn’s Disease
Crohn’s Disease
Crohn's disease is a chronic inflammatory condition of the gastrointestinal tract that can cause a wide range of symptoms, including abdominal pain, diarrhea, and fatigue. The exact cause of the disease remains unclear, but it is believed to result from a combination of genetic predisposition and environmental factors. Although there is no cure, ongoing advancements in medical research continue to improve management strategies and quality of life for those affected by Crohn's disease.
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The study examines the role of microbiome in IBD, highlighting its potential in diagnosing, predicting disease progression, and personalizing treatments.
What was studied?
The study examined the diagnostic procedures used for inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), focusing on laboratory tests, endoscopy, imaging, and emerging biomarkers. It also explored the critical role of the gut microbiome in the pathogenesis of IBD, emphasizing how microbial signatures can contribute to both diagnosis and treatment efficacy, helping clinicians better understand the relationship between microbial composition and disease progression.
Who was studied?
The study reviewed IBD patients, particularly those with Crohn’s disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC), comparing their gut microbiota with that of healthy controls. Researchers analyzed microbial variations that could potentially be used as diagnostic markers for IBD, aiming to identify specific microbes associated with disease severity, treatment response, and remission.
Most important findings
The research revealed that IBD patients, particularly those with CD, exhibited significantly altered gut microbiota compared to healthy individuals. For example, patients with IBD had reduced levels of beneficial bacteria such as Faecalibacterium prausnitzii and Bifidobacterium species, which play a crucial role in maintaining gut health. Furthermore, microbiome profiles were linked to disease activity, with fewer butyrate-producing bacteria found in patients who required biological therapy. The study also showed that microbiome-based models could predict IBD with high accuracy, especially in distinguishing between CD and UC. For instance, Zhou et al. developed a model with an accuracy of 87.5% for CD and 79.1% for UC, highlighting the potential of microbiome signatures for early diagnosis and personalized treatment.
Key implications
The findings underscore the importance of integrating microbiome analysis into IBD management. The ability to track disease progression and predict treatment outcomes based on microbiota composition could lead to less invasive, more precise diagnostic methods. This would allow for tailored treatments that consider each patient’s microbial environment, potentially improving long-term outcomes and reducing the need for aggressive therapies.
Crohn’s Disease: Evolution, Epigenetics, and the Emerging Role of Microbiome-Targeted Therapies
February 12, 2026
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Crohn’s Disease
Crohn’s Disease
Crohn's disease is a chronic inflammatory condition of the gastrointestinal tract that can cause a wide range of symptoms, including abdominal pain, diarrhea, and fatigue. The exact cause of the disease remains unclear, but it is believed to result from a combination of genetic predisposition and environmental factors. Although there is no cure, ongoing advancements in medical research continue to improve management strategies and quality of life for those affected by Crohn's disease.
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This review explores the evolving role of microbiome-targeted therapies in Crohn’s disease, focusing on microbial dysbiosis and its implications for disease progression and treatment.
What was studied?
This review focuses on the evolution, epigenetics, and emerging role of microbiome-targeted therapies in Crohn’s disease (CD). Crohn’s disease is a chronic, immune-mediated inflammation of the gastrointestinal tract. Initially identified as a disease affecting only the distal ileum, it is now recognised as a heterogeneous condition with various phenotypes and systemic manifestations. The review explores the role of the microbiome in the disease, particularly in relation to disease pathogenesis, genetic susceptibility, and potential therapies. The study also examines how epigenetics and immunogenetics may influence disease progression and treatment responses, as well as the therapeutic implications of targeting the microbiome.
Who was studied?
The review discusses multiple studies on individuals with Crohn's disease, focusing on both the clinical and molecular aspects of the disease. The studies involved patients with varying disease phenotypes, including those with inflammatory, fistulizing, and stricturing types of CD, and patients with extraintestinal manifestations such as arthritis and psoriasis. These patients were analysed to identify common genetic and environmental factors that contribute to disease onset and progression, with a particular emphasis on the role of microbiome dysbiosis. The findings are based on clinical observations, genetic studies, and microbiome analysis in these individuals.
Most important findings
One of the key insights from this review is the discovery that patients with Crohn’s disease exhibit a unique microbiome composition compared to healthy individuals. This dysbiosis, marked by reduced microbial diversity and an increase in pathogenic species such as E. coli, appears to play a critical role in promoting intestinal inflammation. Specifically, the presence of adherent-invasive E. coli (AIEC) in the intestines of CD patients is linked to heightened inflammation, as these bacteria are capable of invading intestinal epithelial cells and persisting within macrophages. The review also highlights the overlap between genes associated with CD and those related to mycobacterial diseases, suggesting that CD could be an adaptive response to environmental microbes. The review explores how epigenetic factors such as DNA methylation and histone modifications contribute to immune regulation in CD, influencing both the onset and progression of the disease. Finally, the review discusses the potential of microbiome-targeted therapies, such as probiotics and FMT, to manage CD.
Key implications
The findings underscore the critical need for personalised medicine in Crohn's disease, particularly through microbiome-targeted therapies. The identification of microbial signatures associated with disease phenotypes offers the potential for more precise diagnostics and therapeutic interventions. Understanding the genetic and environmental factors that influence the microbiome could lead to better strategies for preventing disease onset and managing disease progression. Additionally, epigenetic insights into CD could guide the development of new therapies that address the underlying immune dysregulation in this condition. Ultimately, microbiome-targeted therapies could help mitigate the chronic inflammation that characterises CD and improve long-term outcomes for patients.
Ni(II) Cd(II) mixed ligand complexes as dual antimicrobial and anti inflammatory agents
February 12, 2026
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Dimethylglyoxime (DMG)
Dimethylglyoxime (DMG)
Dimethylglyoxime represents a novel therapeutic paradigm that exploits a fundamental metabolic difference between pathogenic bacteria and their mammalian hosts. By selectively depleting bacterial access to nickel, a cofactor essential for multiple pathogenic enzymes but unnecessary for human physiology, DMG offers a theoretically host-sparing antimicrobial approach.
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Nickel
Nickel
Bacteria regulate transition metal levels through complex mechanisms to ensure survival and adaptability, influencing both their physiology and the development of antimicrobial strategies.
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Cadmium (Cd)
Cadmium (Cd)
Cadmium (Cd) is a highly toxic heavy metal commonly found in industrial, agricultural, and environmental settings. Exposure to cadmium can occur through contaminated water, food, soil, and air, and it has been linked to a variety of health issues, including kidney damage, osteoporosis, and cancer. In agriculture, cadmium is often present in phosphate fertilizers and can accumulate in plants, entering the food chain. Its toxicity to living organisms makes cadmium a subject of regulatory concern worldwide, particularly in industrial waste disposal and environmental monitoring.
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Ni(II) Cd(II) mixed ligand complexes showed broad in vitro antimicrobial activity against key bacterial and fungal pathogens and moderate anti-inflammatory effects via albumin denaturation inhibition, supporting metal chelation as a tunable strategy for targeting dysbiosis associated pathobionts while highlighting significant toxicity related translational constraints.
What was studied?
Ni(II) Cd(II) mixed ligand complexes were synthesized and characterized to evaluate their in vitro antimicrobial and anti-inflammatory activities. The authors prepared mixed ligand complexes of Ni(II) and Cd(II) using 2,4-dinitrophenylhydrazine (DNPH) and dimethylglyoxime (DMG) in a 1:1:1 metal to ligand ratio, then performed comprehensive physicochemical characterization and biological testing. Elemental CHNO analysis, molar conductance, UV–visible spectroscopy, FTIR, powder X ray diffraction, thermal analysis, magnetic measurements, and SEM imaging were used to confirm complex formation, non-electrolytic behavior, octahedral geometry, nanocrystalline structure, and thermal stability. The central aim was to determine whether these Ni(II) Cd(II) mixed ligand complexes, which incorporate nitrogen and oxygen donor atoms and the classic nickel chelator DMG, exhibit meaningful antibacterial, antifungal, and anti-inflammatory effects that could justify further exploration as bioactive coordination compounds.
Who was studied?
No human or animal subjects were included. Instead, the study employed reference microbial strains and an in vitro protein denaturation system as experimental models. Antimicrobial activity was assessed against Gram positive bacteria Bacillus subtilis and Staphylococcus aureus, Gram negative bacteria Escherichia coli and Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and the fungal species Aspergillus niger and Candida albicans, all obtained from MTCC culture collections. These taxa include clinically relevant pathobionts commonly implicated in soft tissue, device-associated, and mucosal infections that intersect with microbiome research. Anti-inflammatory activity was modeled using egg albumin (bovine serum albumin analogue) denaturation in phosphate-buffered saline, with diclofenac sodium as the reference nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug. Thus, the biological data reflect direct effects on key bacterial and fungal taxa plus a generic protein denaturation model rather than host tissue or in vivo outcomes.
Most important findings
Structurally, both Ni(II) and Cd(II) complexes behaved as non-electrolytes in DMF with low molar conductance, showed IR shifts consistent with coordination through DNPH and DMG donor atoms, and exhibited electronic spectra and magnetic moments consistent with octahedral geometry. PXRD patterns demonstrated crystalline materials with nanoscale crystallite sizes of approximately 56.7 nm for Ni(II) and 69.3 nm for Cd(II), and thermogravimetric analyses showed multistep decomposition, confirming reasonable thermal stability suitable for further formulation work.
Biologically, both complexes demonstrated measurable antimicrobial activity that increased with concentration. At 30 and 60 μg/ml, the Ni(II) complex showed particularly good activity against B. subtilis and E. coli, with inhibition zones of 15 and 17 mm for B. subtilis and 11 and 19 mm for E. coli, relative to chloramphenicol standards. In contrast, the Cd(II) complex was more potent against P. aeruginosa and especially C. albicans at 60 μg/ml, where inhibition of C. albicans reached 18 mm compared with very weak action of the Ni(II) complex against this yeast. Activity against A. niger was modest for both complexes. This pattern indicates that complexation to DNPH and DMG alters metal bioavailability and broadens activity across a clinically relevant spectrum that spans Gram positive and Gram negative bacteria and opportunistic fungi.
From a microbiome signatures perspective, the inclusion of E. coli, P. aeruginosa, S. aureus, B. subtilis, and C. albicans is notable, since these taxa frequently emerge as major microbial associations in dysbiotic mucosal and device related infections and are of interest when designing microbiome targeted interventions or co therapies. The differential sensitivity of C. albicans to the Cd(II) complex in particular suggests that mixed ligand metal chelates could in principle be tuned to selectively suppress fungal pathobionts such as Candida while exerting varying pressure on bacterial community members.
For anti-inflammatory effects, both Ni(II) and Cd(II) complexes inhibited egg albumin denaturation in a concentration dependent fashion. At 500 μg/ml, the Ni(II) complex achieved 84.56 percent inhibition, the Cd(II) complex 79.55 percent, and diclofenac sodium 96.05 percent. Calculated IC50 values were 230.75 μg/ml for diclofenac, 257.31 μg/ml for the Ni(II) complex, and 270.83 μg/ml for the Cd(II) complex, indicating that while less potent than the reference NSAID, the complexes display meaningful anti-denaturation activity. The authors attribute the bioactivity partly to chelation effects, where coordination reduces metal ion polarity and increases lipophilicity, facilitating penetration into microbial cells and interaction with protein targets.
Key implications
For clinicians and microbiome researchers, these findings position Ni(II) Cd(II) mixed ligand complexes as proof of concept scaffolds rather than ready translational candidates. The complexes show that combining DNPH and the classical nickel chelator dimethylglyoxime around a transition metal center can yield thermally stable, nanocrystalline coordination compounds with broad antimicrobial spectra against several clinically relevant taxa, including E. coli, P. aeruginosa, S. aureus, B. subtilis, and C. albicans, while also delivering moderate anti-inflammatory effects via inhibition of protein denaturation.
However, systemic use of Ni and particularly Cd raises substantial toxicity and metallotoxicity concerns, limiting realistic applications to highly localized or surface bound contexts such as coatings, dressings, or device surfaces. From a microbiome signatures standpoint, the work supports the broader concept that metal coordination chemistry and chelation can be leveraged to modulate pathobionts that are strongly represented in dysbiotic states, potentially informing the design of safer metal based or metal chelator based agents that target C. albicans and other MMAs without introducing toxic metals into the host environment. Future work should focus on metal substitution to less toxic centers, evaluation in biofilm models that better replicate microbiome architecture, and an explicit assessment of collateral effects on beneficial commensals before any clinical application is considered.
Nickel chelator dimethylglyoxime inhibits amyloid beta aggregation in vitro and targets nickel-driven Alzheimer’s mechanisms
February 12, 2026
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Alzheimer’s Dementia
Alzheimer’s Dementia
OverviewAlzheimer’s disease (AD) is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder characterized by amyloid-beta (Aβ) plaques, neurofibrillary tangles, neuroinflammation, and metabolic dysfunction, ultimately leading to cognitive decline and dementia. Emerging research highlights the microbiota-gut-brain axis as a crucial factor in AD pathogenesis, with gut dysbiosis contributing to neuroinflammation, immune dysregulation, and blood-brain barrier permeability. Microbial metabolites, such as […]
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Dimethylglyoxime (DMG)
Dimethylglyoxime (DMG)
Dimethylglyoxime represents a novel therapeutic paradigm that exploits a fundamental metabolic difference between pathogenic bacteria and their mammalian hosts. By selectively depleting bacterial access to nickel, a cofactor essential for multiple pathogenic enzymes but unnecessary for human physiology, DMG offers a theoretically host-sparing antimicrobial approach.
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Nickel
Nickel
Bacteria regulate transition metal levels through complex mechanisms to ensure survival and adaptability, influencing both their physiology and the development of antimicrobial strategies.
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This study shows that nickel strongly enhances Aβ40 aggregation, while the nickel chelator dimethylglyoxime inhibits amyloid beta aggregation by sequestering nickel in vitro. It also links nickel to both metal-driven and infection-related Alzheimer’s mechanisms, positioning nickel chelation at the intersection of these pathogenic pathways.
What was studied?
In this experimental study, the authors investigated how the nickel chelator dimethylglyoxime inhibits amyloid beta aggregation, focusing specifically on the recombinant human Aβ40 peptide and its interaction with transition metals, particularly nickel. Using inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS), thioflavin T (ThT) aggregation assays, isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC), and high-resolution mass spectrometry, they quantified the metal content of a commercial recombinant Aβ40 preparation, characterized the impact of Cu²⁺, Zn²⁺, and Ni²⁺ on in vitro aggregation kinetics, and tested whether the nickel chelator dimethylglyoxime (DMG) inhibits amyloid beta aggregation under different metal and pH conditions. They further evaluated whether dimethylglyoxime forms stable complexes with various metals and explored the capacity of orally administered dimethylglyoxime to reach the brain in a murine model, situating these findings within the broader “metal hypothesis” and “infection hypothesis” of Alzheimer’s disease.
Who was studied?
This is an in vitro biochemical and biophysical study using commercially available recombinant human Aβ40 peptide expressed in Escherichia coli, not a clinical or animal efficacy trial. The peptide preparation was analyzed for multi-element metal content and then subjected to aggregation and binding assays in buffered solutions. For the pharmacokinetic aspect, C57BL mice received repeated oral doses of dimethylglyoxime, after which brain tissue was harvested to detect dimethylglyoxime or dimethylglyoxime–metal complexes by FTICR-MS and NMR, although this arm was limited to detection rather than evaluation of behavioral or neuropathological outcomes. No human subjects or clinical Alzheimer’s disease populations were included; the work is best interpreted as mechanistic preclinical data that inform future translational strategies for metal-targeted interventions in Alzheimer’s disease.
Most important findings
ICP-MS of the recombinant Aβ40 peptide revealed substantial metal contamination intrinsic to the preparation, with selenium and nickel being most abundant and appreciable levels of aluminum, copper, manganese, zinc, barium, and strontium also detected, whereas iron was below detection limits. The table on page 3 (Table 1) quantifies a metal: peptide ratio of approximately 0.073 mol Ni per mol Aβ40, indicating that the peptide is already nickel-bound before any experimental supplementation. Functionally, ThT aggregation assays showed that exogenous Ni²⁺ significantly accelerated Aβ40 aggregation in a concentration-dependent manner, with a 2.5-fold increase in aggregation rate at 10 µM Ni²⁺ and 5.7-fold at 100 µM compared with metal-free control, while Zn²⁺ produced even larger enhancements and Cu²⁺ had minimal effect at neutral pH. pH modulation demonstrated that Ni-induced aggregation was facilitated under mildly acidic conditions (pH 6.5) and abolished at alkaline pH 8.5, reinforcing pH-sensitive nickel–peptide interactions. ITC confirmed direct nickel binding to Aβ40 with an apparent Kd of ~4.2 µM and a stoichiometry of ~0.7 Ni per peptide, and thermodynamic parameters (ΔH −5 kJ/mol, positive ΔS) consistent with an exothermic, spontaneous binding reaction.
Dimethylglyoxime robustly inhibited Aβ40 aggregation when added to metal-containing peptide preparations. In the absence of added metal, 100 µM dimethylglyoxime reduced aggregation by 40–85 %, and 500–1000 µM essentially abolished ThT signal, implying that chelation of intrinsic metals within the recombinant peptide (notably Ni²⁺) is sufficient to block β-sheet–rich fibril formation. In the presence of 100 µM Ni²⁺, dimethylglyoxime produced complete inhibition of aggregation at higher chelator concentrations, whereas inhibition in the presence of Cu²⁺ was partial and Zn²⁺-driven aggregation remained only partially suppressible even at 1 mM dimethylglyoxime, mirroring its weaker coordination with zinc. FTICR-MS confirmed stable [DMG]₂–Ni and [DMG]₂–Cu complexes and an absence of similar complexes with Fe, Zn, or Se, explaining the metal-selective chelation pattern. The schematic model on page 8 (Figure 4) integrates these findings into a dual mechanism in which nickel contributes to Alzheimer’s disease both by directly enhancing Aβ aggregation and by supporting nickel-dependent bacterial enzymes in pathogens implicated in Alzheimer’s pathology; dimethylglyoxime occupies an intersection point by depleting nickel for both Aβ and microbial systems. Attempts to detect dimethylglyoxime or its complexes in mouse brain after repeated oral dosing were unsuccessful, suggesting poor blood-brain barrier penetration or rapid metabolism under the tested conditions.
Key implications
The study provides strong mechanistic support for considering nickel as an under-recognized contributor to Aβ40 aggregation and, by extension, to the metal-driven component of Alzheimer’s disease pathogenesis. For clinicians and translational researchers, the data highlight that not all metal chelation strategies are equivalent: a nickel-selective agent such as dimethylglyoxime can inhibit amyloid aggregation driven by nickel while sparing essential metal pools for zinc and iron, at least at the level of direct coordination chemistry.
From a microbiome and microbial metallomics perspective, the work is particularly relevant because many candidate Alzheimer’s-associated pathogens, including Helicobacter pylori, Escherichia coli, and Salmonella Typhimurium, rely on nickel-dependent enzymes such as urease and NiFe hydrogenases; systemic nickel chelation might therefore modulate both host amyloidogenic processes and the viability or virulence of nickel-requiring pathobionts that could participate in brain infection or peripheral immune priming. In the microbiome signatures framework, these nickel-dependent taxa could be considered major microbial associations in an Alzheimer’s disease metallomic-microbiomic axis. However, the inability to demonstrate brain penetration of orally administered dimethylglyoxime underscores a key translational barrier: any clinical strategy based on nickel chelation will require optimization of pharmacokinetics, delivery route, and tissue targeting to influence central nervous system amyloid dynamics. Overall, the findings justify further preclinical work combining nickel chelation, microbiome-targeted interventions, and in vivo Alzheimer's models.
Revolutionizing ovarian cancer therapy by drug repositioning for accelerated and cost-effective treatments
February 12, 2026
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Drug Repurposing
Drug Repurposing
Drug repurposing involves identifying new therapeutic uses for existing drugs, offering a cost-effective and time-efficient pathway to enhance treatment options and address unmet medical needs.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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The review explores drug repositioning for ovarian cancer, highlighting statins, ivermectin, and ormeloxifene as promising treatments. These repurposed drugs offer potential for accelerated and cost-effective therapies.
What was studied?
The study explores drug repositioning as a transformative strategy for ovarian cancer (OC) treatment, highlighting the potential of repurposing existing drugs for more effective, accelerated, and cost-efficient therapies. The review focuses on in vitro experiments with various cancer cell lines and preclinical in vivo models to evaluate the efficacy of repurposed drugs, including antiparasitics, antibiotics, and antiretrovirals, as well as their synergistic potential when combined with conventional cancer therapies like chemotherapy.
Who was studied?
The research reviewed a broad spectrum of studies involving ovarian cancer cell lines (such as SKOV-3, A2780, OVCAR-3) and preclinical murine models. These studies aim to evaluate the effects of repurposed drugs on ovarian cancer cell viability, migration, and tumorigenesis. The review also examined clinical trials involving patients with recurrent or resistant ovarian cancer, particularly focusing on those who were resistant to platinum-based therapies.
Most important findings
The study highlighted several key findings related to the efficacy of repurposed drugs for ovarian cancer treatment. For example, statins like atorvastatin, commonly used for lowering cholesterol, showed promise in inhibiting ovarian cancer cell proliferation and inducing apoptosis through pathways such as Akt/mTOR and MAPK activation. Ormeloxifene, a contraceptive drug, was found to suppress proliferation and promote apoptosis in chemoresistant ovarian cancer cells. Monensin, an antibiotic, showed effectiveness in inhibiting tumor growth and migration by modulating the MEK-ERK signaling pathway. Ivermectin, an antiparasitic, induced cell cycle arrest and apoptosis in ovarian cancer cells, particularly when combined with paclitaxel.
Key implications
The study underscores the potential of drug repositioning to accelerate the availability of new cancer treatments. By leveraging the existing safety profiles of these drugs, researchers can bypass much of the long and expensive drug development process. The ability to repurpose drugs like statins, ivermectin, and monensin could provide cost-effective solutions, particularly in resource-limited settings. Additionally, the synergy between repurposed drugs and existing treatments opens the door for more personalized and combinatory therapeutic strategies, which may improve treatment efficacy and overcome common challenges like drug resistance in ovarian cancer patients.
Recycling the Purpose of Old Drugs to Treat Ovarian Cancer
February 12, 2026
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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Drug Repurposing
Drug Repurposing
Drug repurposing involves identifying new therapeutic uses for existing drugs, offering a cost-effective and time-efficient pathway to enhance treatment options and address unmet medical needs.
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The review explores the potential of repurposing non-oncological drugs for ovarian cancer treatment, highlighting their ability to improve chemotherapy effectiveness and reduce treatment costs, with promising findings from preclinical studies and clinical trials.
What was studied?
This review article investigates the potential for repurposing existing, non-oncological drugs to treat ovarian cancer. It explores the use of drugs like statins, metformin, bisphosphonates, ivermectin, itraconazole, and ritonavir, which are traditionally prescribed for conditions such as high cholesterol, diabetes, osteoporosis, and parasitic infections. The article emphasizes the advantages of this approach, noting that these drugs have well-established safety profiles and could offer quicker, more affordable treatment options for ovarian cancer patients. By combining these repurposed drugs with conventional chemotherapy, researchers hope to improve patient outcomes while reducing the cost and side effects associated with newer, more expensive cancer treatments.
Who was studied?
The review focuses on ovarian cancer, particularly the high-grade serous carcinoma (HGSC) subtype, the most common and aggressive form of the disease. It evaluates several preclinical studies using ovarian cancer cell lines and animal models, which provide insights into the potential of repurposed drugs to improve therapeutic outcomes. These studies include both in vitro testing, which assesses drug effects on cultured cancer cells, and in vivo testing, using animal models to understand how the drugs work in a living organism. In addition, the review incorporates references to ongoing clinical trials, demonstrating the growing interest in using these repurposed drugs in human cancer treatment.
Most important findings
Several important findings emerged from the review, with particular emphasis on how repurposed drugs can target ovarian cancer cells and potentially overcome common challenges like chemoresistance. Statins, for instance, showed promise in reducing ovarian cancer cell proliferation and migration, as well as enhancing the effectiveness of traditional chemotherapy agents like doxorubicin. Metformin, widely used in the treatment of type 2 diabetes, demonstrated potential to reduce cancer cell growth by regulating cellular metabolism and influencing molecular pathways involved in cancer progression. Other promising drugs, such as ivermectin, an anti-parasitic, and itraconazole, an antifungal, have shown significant effects on ovarian cancer cell growth, metastasis, and resistance to chemotherapy. Ritonavir, an antiviral, and bisphosphonates, typically used for treating osteoporosis, also exhibited anticancer properties when used alone or in combination with chemotherapy.
Key implications
The primary implication of this study is the potential for drug repurposing to provide more affordable and accessible treatment options for ovarian cancer, especially in resource-limited settings. By repurposing drugs that are already approved for other conditions, the process of bringing them to clinical use for cancer treatment can be expedited, avoiding the lengthy and expensive drug development process. The combination of these drugs with conventional therapies could be a powerful strategy to overcome the significant challenge of chemoresistance, a common issue in ovarian cancer treatment. Additionally, the use of personalized testing approaches, such as ex vivo models derived from patient samples, could provide tailored treatment strategies, enhancing the likelihood of successful outcomes for individual patients.
Metformin use and survival in people with ovarian cancer: A population-based cohort study from British Columbia, Canada
February 12, 2026
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Drug Repurposing
Drug Repurposing
Drug repurposing involves identifying new therapeutic uses for existing drugs, offering a cost-effective and time-efficient pathway to enhance treatment options and address unmet medical needs.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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This study examines the association between metformin use and survival outcomes in ovarian cancer patients. A significant survival benefit was found in diabetic patients, suggesting metformin may improve ovarian cancer prognosis, although further research is needed for non-diabetic patients.
What was studied?
This study investigates the relationship between metformin use and survival outcomes in patients diagnosed with ovarian cancer. It specifically explores how metformin, a common treatment for type 2 diabetes, impacts the prognosis of ovarian cancer patients. The study focuses on a large cohort of patients diagnosed between 1997 and 2018 in British Columbia, Canada, using time-dependent analysis methods to avoid immortal time bias. The aim is to determine whether metformin use improves survival rates for ovarian cancer patients, particularly in those with diabetes.
Who was studied?
The cohort consisted of 4,951 individuals diagnosed with ovarian cancer in British Columbia, Canada, between 1997 and 2018. Out of these, 711 patients had a history of diabetes, and 236 of them used metformin during the 12 months before diagnosis. The study also included non-diabetic patients, but a separate focus was placed on the diabetic subgroup to better assess the relationship between metformin use and ovarian cancer survival. The patients in the study were followed up until 2020, providing a long-term view of survival outcomes.
Most important findings
The study found that metformin use was associated with a 17% reduction in ovarian cancer-specific mortality across the full cohort, though this result was not statistically significant. However, a significant survival benefit was observed in the subgroup of diabetic patients, where metformin use was linked to a 29% reduction in ovarian cancer-specific mortality. The findings suggest that metformin's effects may be more pronounced in diabetic patients, possibly due to the interaction between diabetes and cancer survival. Importantly, the study accounted for immortal time bias, which has affected previous studies. No statistically significant impact was found with cumulative duration of metformin use or by the type of metformin use (pre-diagnosis, continuing, or new use post-diagnosis), although trends indicated improved survival with continued use of metformin from pre-diagnosis.
Key implications
The findings from this study suggest that metformin could offer a survival benefit for ovarian cancer patients, particularly those with diabetes. The results call for further research, especially focusing on non-diabetic patients, to fully understand the role of metformin in ovarian cancer treatment. While the statistical significance in the full cohort was not achieved, the protective effects observed in the diabetic subgroup warrant further investigation, possibly through randomized controlled trials to mitigate potential confounding factors. Given the widespread use of metformin for diabetes management, its potential application in cancer therapy could provide a low-cost, easily accessible treatment option for ovarian cancer patients.
Repurposing approved non-oncology drugs for cancer therapy: a comprehensive review of mechanisms, efficacy, and clinical prospects
February 12, 2026
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Drug Repurposing
Drug Repurposing
Drug repurposing involves identifying new therapeutic uses for existing drugs, offering a cost-effective and time-efficient pathway to enhance treatment options and address unmet medical needs.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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This review explores the potential of repurposing non-oncological drugs for cancer therapy, highlighting their efficacy in preclinical studies and their mechanisms of action. It emphasizes the benefits of using established drugs to overcome cancer treatment challenges, particularly in overcoming drug resistance and reducing costs.
What was studied?
This comprehensive review addresses the growing interest in repurposing approved non-oncological drugs for cancer therapy. The study examines various classes of drugs, including antimalarials, antibiotics, antivirals, antifungals, and anti-inflammatory agents, that have demonstrated significant antiproliferative, pro-apoptotic, immunomodulatory, and antimetastatic properties. The article provides an in-depth analysis of the mechanisms, efficacy, and clinical prospects of these drugs when used in cancer treatment. It highlights the potential of these repurposed drugs to overcome challenges such as the high cost and lengthy development process associated with new anti-cancer therapies.
Who was studied?
The review primarily discusses preclinical studies and in vitro experiments using cancer cell lines, along with some clinical trials that focus on repurposed drugs. The studies investigate the effects of these drugs on various types of cancers, including breast, prostate, colorectal, ovarian, and lung cancer. The cancer cell lines tested include those from different cancer subtypes, allowing for a broad understanding of how these drugs could be applied to treat multiple forms of cancer. The article also references case studies involving patients treated with repurposed drugs, providing insights into their clinical relevance and potential for broader use in cancer therapy.
Most important findings
The review identifies several repurposed drugs with promising anti-cancer effects. For example, statins, commonly used for cholesterol management, have shown effectiveness in inhibiting tumor growth and enhancing chemotherapy in various cancers. Ivermectin, an antiparasitic drug, has demonstrated anti-tumor effects by reducing cancer cell proliferation and promoting apoptosis. Chloroquine, initially used for malaria, has been highlighted for its ability to suppress autophagy and reduce tumor progression in combination with other chemotherapy agents. Other drugs such as flubendazole, mebendazole, and ritonavir also showed significant anticancer potential, acting through different mechanisms like apoptosis induction, cell cycle arrest, and inhibition of metastasis. These drugs were found to target key cancer-related pathways, including Wnt/β-catenin, AKT/mTOR, and NF-kB signaling, which are crucial for cancer cell survival and progression.
Key implications
The primary implication of this research is that drug repurposing provides an efficient and cost-effective approach to cancer treatment. By utilizing drugs that are already FDA-approved for other diseases, the time and cost associated with developing new cancer therapies can be significantly reduced. Furthermore, the repurposing of drugs with established safety profiles can expedite their transition into clinical practice, offering new therapeutic options for cancer patients, especially in low-resource settings. The findings suggest that combining repurposed drugs with conventional chemotherapy may help overcome drug resistance, a common challenge in cancer treatment. The review emphasizes the need for further clinical trials to validate these preclinical findings and optimize the use of these drugs in cancer therapy.
Causes of Death in End-Stage Kidney Disease: Comparison Between the United States Renal Data System and a Large Integrated Health Care System
February 12, 2026
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Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD)
Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD)
Dysbiosis in chronic kidney disease (CKD) reflects a shift toward reduced beneficial taxa and increased pathogenic, uremic toxin-producing species, driven by a bidirectional interaction in which the uremic environment disrupts microbial composition and dysbiotic metabolites accelerate renal deterioration.
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End-Stage Renal Disease (ESRD)
End-Stage Renal Disease (ESRD)
End-stage renal disease is the irreversible loss of kidney function marked by uremic toxin accumulation, systemic complications, and the need for dialysis or transplantation. Its pathophysiology involves nephron loss, inflammation, metabolic disruption, and microbiome-derived toxins that accelerate cardiovascular and immune dysfunction.
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This study compared causes of death in ESKD patients between USRDS and KPSC sources, finding low concordance and highlighting limitations in mortality attribution for clinical and translational research contexts.
What was studied?
This study investigated the concordance of causes of death recorded for end-stage renal disease (ESRD) patients when comparing two major data sources: the United States Renal Data System (USRDS) national registry and the Kaiser Permanente Southern California (KPSC) integrated health system. Using mortality data from 2007–2016, researchers quantified how often the underlying cause of death matched across these systems, assessed agreement using Cohen’s weighted kappa statistics, and explored subcategory-specific concordance. Although the investigation did not address microbiome metrics or host–microbe interactions, the study’s findings indirectly inform microbiome-oriented clinical databases by revealing the limitations of mortality attribution data that are often used to correlate microbiome signatures with clinical outcomes.
Who was studied?
The cohort included 4,118 adults with ESRD whose deaths were recorded in both USRDS and KPSC databases. The mean age was 71 years, 41.2% were women, and the population was racially diverse: White (38.2%), Black (21%), Hispanic (28.8%), and Asian (9.1%). Most patients (90.1%) received hemodialysis, with 9.7% on peritoneal dialysis and fewer than 1% post-transplant. Deaths occurred across a decade and reflected the broad demographic composition of Southern California. No microbial sequencing, stool sampling, or infection-specific microbiome characterization was performed, and therefore, microbial signatures cannot be inferred from the dataset.
Most important findings
The study found only slight agreement (overall 36.4%, kappa = 0.20) between the underlying causes of death recorded by USRDS and KPSC. The most common KPSC causes were circulatory (35.7%), endocrine/metabolic (24.2%), and genitourinary (12.9%), while USRDS most frequently reported cardiac disease (46.9%), withdrawal from dialysis (12.6%), and infection (10.1%). Importantly for microbiome-related interpretations, infection-related deaths—a category often relevant for microbial signature studies—showed weak concordance (kappa = 0.20) and low positive agreement (26%), meaning infection-attributed deaths may be inconsistently classified across systems. This variability limits the reliability of linking microbiome patterns to infection-related mortality outcomes when using registry data alone. Variability in categorization, absence of ICD-10 categories in USRDS, and inconsistent coding practices contributed to discordance.
A condensed table summarizing key cross-source patterns:
Category
KPSC most common (%) / USRDS most common (%)
Circulatory/Cardiac
35.7 / 46.9
Endocrine-metabolic
24.2 / 0.4
Genitourinary
12.9 / not listed
Infection
3.0 / 10.1
Key implications
The study underscores substantial limitations in using registry-reported causes of death to interpret clinical outcomes, especially for mechanistic studies that require precise attribution of mortality categories, such as microbiome–mortality correlation research. Inconsistent categorization, particularly for infections, metabolic causes, and chronic disease contributions, means that downstream analyses linking microbial biomarkers to death mechanisms may be confounded by misclassification bias. Improving coding harmonization, integrating standardized ICD-10 categories into registry systems, and ensuring consistent adjudication across care settings would enhance the interpretability of mortality data and improve the accuracy of microbiome-clinical associations in translational research.
Iron Overload and Endometriosis: Mechanisms, Implications, and Therapeutic Targets
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Endometriomas
Endometriomas
An endometrioma is a type of ovarian cyst filled with old blood, arising from endometrial tissue outside the uterus, typically causing pain and potentially impacting fertility.
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Infertility
Infertility
Infertility is the inability to conceive after 12 months of regular, unprotected sex. It affects both men and women and can be due to various physical, hormonal, or genetic factors. Treatments include medication, surgery, assisted reproductive technologies, and lifestyle changes.
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Iron overload in endometriosis contributes to oxidative stress, inflammation, and tissue damage, driving lesion persistence and subfertility. Ferroptosis resistance and dysregulated iron metabolism highlight therapeutic opportunities using iron chelators and modulators.
What Was Reviewed?
This systematic review evaluated the role of iron in the pathophysiology of endometriosis. The review synthesized findings from 53 studies, including both human and animal research, to provide a comprehensive understanding of how excess iron contributes to oxidative stress, inflammation, and tissue damage in endometriosis. It also explored iron-related mechanisms such as ferroptosis and the implications for subfertility, symptom severity, and potential malignant transformation.
Who Was Reviewed?
The review included a total of 53 studies: 47 human studies involving 3,556 participants and 6 animal studies. The human studies primarily examined women diagnosed with endometriosis, and the included research utilized various bio-samples such as ovarian endometriomas, peritoneal fluid, and ectopic endometrial lesions. Animal studies focused on endometriosis models to explore systemic and local iron mechanics.
Key Findings
Iron overload is consistently found in endometriotic tissues and peritoneal fluid but not in systemic circulation. This localized iron accumulation stems from repeated bleeding within lesions, leading to oxidative stress and inflammation that perpetuates the ectopic growth of endometrial tissue. Dysregulated iron transport and the failure of homeostatic mechanisms contribute to this pathology, with increased expression of proteins such as divalent metal transporter-1 (DMT1) and decreased ferroportin expression in affected tissues.
Markers of oxidative stress, including lipid peroxidation and DNA damage, were significantly elevated in endometriotic lesions. Aberrant resistance to ferroptosis, an iron-dependent form of cell death, was identified as a key mechanism supporting lesion persistence. Additionally, iron-induced ferroptosis was linked to the production of pro-inflammatory and angiogenic factors like IL-8 and VEGFA, exacerbating inflammation and lesion vascularization.
Iron overload was implicated in subfertility, as higher iron concentrations in ovarian follicles and endometriomas were associated with impaired oocyte quality and development. These findings suggest that iron mechanics might influence folliculogenesis and embryo viability. Importantly, the review highlighted the therapeutic potential of iron chelators and ferroptosis modulators for managing endometriosis.
Implications of the Review
This review underscores the central role of aberrant iron metabolism in the pathogenesis of endometriosis, providing a mechanistic basis for its persistence, progression, and associated complications such as subfertility and chronic pain. Iron-related oxidative stress emerges as a critical driver of inflammation and tissue damage, making it a promising target for therapeutic intervention. Future research should explore the efficacy of iron-targeted treatments, such as chelators, and further elucidate the role of ferroptosis in endometriosis. These insights could lead to novel strategies for mitigating symptom severity and improving fertility outcomes in affected women.
Does Physical Exercise Lower Endometriosis Risk? Systematic Review Insights
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This systematic review found insufficient evidence to confirm that physical exercise reduces endometriosis risk or symptoms, though some data suggest a potential protective effect. Well-designed controlled trials are needed to clarify the role of exercise in endometriosis prevention and management.
What was reviewed?
This systematic review assessed the relationship between physical exercise and endometriosis, specifically examining whether exercise influences the prevalence or symptom improvement of endometriosis. The authors conducted a comprehensive search of English-language studies in PubMed from 1985 to 2012 using terms related to endometriosis and physical exercise. Only original observational or experimental studies that included laparoscopy-confirmed endometriosis and directly addressed the association between exercise and disease prevalence or outcomes were included. Out of 935 articles identified, just six met the inclusion criteria. The review synthesized evidence from these studies to evaluate if regular physical activity acts as a protective factor against the development or progression of endometriosis, as well as to consider whether pain related to endometriosis limits women’s ability to exercise.
Who was reviewed?
The review focused on women of reproductive age, primarily those with laparoscopically diagnosed endometriosis. The included studies were case-control or cohort studies, with varying sample sizes and demographic characteristics. The control groups consisted of women without endometriosis, as well as subgroups with or without infertility. The studies examined both women who engaged in regular physical activity and those who did not, enabling an exploration of potential associations between exercise habits and endometriosis risk or symptomatology.
Most important findings
Across the six studies included, findings regarding the relationship between physical exercise and endometriosis risk or symptom improvement were inconclusive and sometimes contradictory. Some studies indicated a potential protective effect of regular, vigorous physical activity, with reduced endometriosis risk observed among women who exercised more than 2–4 hours per week or engaged in higher-intensity activities. For example, one study found a 65% risk reduction in women with regular exercise, while another noted a 76% lower risk of endometrioma among those performing frequent, high-intensity exercise. However, these effects did not reach statistical significance in all studies, and the possibility of reverse causation—whereby women with endometriosis reduce activity due to pelvic pain—was raised. Notably, the review did not identify any controlled trials or studies specifically evaluating the direct impact of exercise on endometriosis symptoms or disease progression. Microbiome-related mechanisms were not directly addressed in the included studies, but the review highlighted that exercise may confer anti-inflammatory and antioxidant benefits, which are relevant given the inflammatory and oxidative stress components of endometriosis pathophysiology.
Key implications
The review underscores a significant gap in the literature regarding the effects of physical exercise on endometriosis prevention and management. Although some observational data suggest a possible inverse relationship between regular, vigorous exercise and endometriosis risk, the evidence is limited, and causality cannot be established. Importantly, no studies directly evaluated the impact of exercise on microbiome changes in endometriosis, nor did they consistently account for confounding variables or symptom-driven activity reduction. The authors call for well-designed, randomized controlled trials with standardized exercise protocols and validated outcome measures to clarify whether exercise can be recommended as a preventive or therapeutic intervention for endometriosis. Given the disease’s inflammatory and oxidative stress components, future research should also explore the interaction between exercise, systemic inflammation, and the reproductive tract microbiome.
Elevated levels of whole blood nickel in a group of Sri Lankan women with endometriosis: a case control study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study identified elevated blood nickel levels in women with endometriosis, suggesting a potential role of nickel as a metalloestrogen in its pathogenesis.
What was studied?
This study investigated blood nickel and endometriosis by examining whether circulating levels of three metalloestrogens—nickel, cadmium, and lead—were associated with the presence of endometriosis in reproductive-age Sri Lankan women. The researchers aimed to determine whether elevated concentrations of these metals in whole blood might reflect an exposure pattern contributing to the accumulation of metals previously detected in ectopic endometrial tissue. Using highly sensitive analytic techniques, including Total Reflection X-ray Fluorescence and graphite furnace atomic absorption spectroscopy, the study quantified blood metal concentrations and evaluated their statistical relationship to surgically confirmed endometriosis. This work expands on prior findings showing these metals embedded in endometriotic lesions and attempts to clarify whether systemic metal burden may play a mechanistic or exposure-related role.
Who was studied?
The study enrolled 100 women of reproductive age undergoing laparoscopy or laparotomy at a major Sri Lankan hospital. Fifty women with visually confirmed endometriosis formed the case group, and fifty age-matched women without endometriosis served as controls. None were current smokers, minimising confounding from tobacco-related cadmium exposure. Both groups were similar in age and BMI, and indications for surgery among controls included dysmenorrhea, chronic pelvic pain, subfertility, or ovarian masses. All participants provided preoperative venous blood samples, which were processed under tightly controlled laboratory conditions with rigorous quality assurance to ensure high-precision trace metal measurement.
Most important findings
The key discovery was a significantly elevated geometric mean whole blood nickel concentration in women with endometriosis compared with controls. Nickel levels in cases averaged 2.6 μg/L, more than triple the 0.8 μg/L observed in controls. Cadmium and lead levels did not differ significantly, although cases showed slightly lower cadmium and slightly higher lead concentrations. Notably, blood nickel levels reported here fell within ranges considered nontoxic in general populations, yet the consistent elevation in cases suggests biologically relevant exposure or altered handling of nickel in affected women. Nickel’s known ability to activate estrogen receptors in vitro underscores its potential role as a metalloestrogen influencing ectopic tissue survival.
Metal
Cases (μg/L)
Controls (μg/L)
Statistical Significance
Nickel
2.6
0.8
Significant (P=0.016)
Cadmium
0.7
0.8
Not significant
Lead
11.0
6.9
Not significant
Interpretation
Elevated in endometriosis
Baseline levels
Nickel shows clear association
Key implications
These findings suggest that nickel exposure or retention may be associated with endometriosis, potentially through estrogen receptor activation or other endocrine-disrupting mechanisms. Although causality cannot be established from this study, the elevated systemic nickel burden aligns with the presence of nickel in ectopic lesions and contributes to the hypothesis that environmental metals may influence disease development. Future work should explore exposure sources, dose–response relationships, and mechanistic pathways linking trace metals to estrogen-dependent inflammatory disease.
Endometriosis and Ovarian Cancer: An Integrative Review (Endometriosis and Ovarian Cancer)
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
•
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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This review explores the link between endometriosis and ovarian cancer, focusing on genetic mutations like ARID1A, oxidative stress, and estrogen receptor loss, which contribute to the development of malignancy, particularly in the endometrioid and clear-cell subtypes.
What was studied?
This review focuses on the relationship between endometriosis and ovarian cancer, specifically examining how endometriosis, particularly ovarian endometriomas, can lead to malignancy. The review synthesizes data from various studies published over the past five years that explore this association, highlighting genetic, molecular, and inflammatory mechanisms that could contribute to ovarian cancer development. Endometriosis is increasingly recognized not as a benign condition but as one that, under certain circumstances, could evolve into cancer, with epithelial ovarian cancers (EOC) of the endometrioid and clear-cell subtypes being the most common among women with endometriosis.
Who was studied?
The review analyzed studies on women diagnosed with endometriosis and ovarian cancer, particularly those with epithelial ovarian carcinoma (EOC) associated with endometriosis. Studies were included from various clinical trial cohorts, case-control studies, and cross-sectional research. These studies focused on patients with tissue-proven endometriosis, those with endometriosis-associated ovarian cancer (EAOC), and control groups without endometriosis. The review also considered histological subtypes such as endometrioid carcinoma (EC) and clear-cell carcinoma (CCC), which are the most commonly observed malignancies in endometriosis-associated ovarian cancer.
Most important findings
The review found that women with endometriosis are at an increased risk for developing ovarian cancer, particularly of the endometrioid and clear-cell subtypes. Key genetic alterations were identified, including mutations in the ARID1A gene, which leads to the loss of the BAF250a protein and is a frequent event in both ovarian clear-cell carcinoma (OCCC) and endometrioid carcinoma (EAEC). The study also highlighted the role of oxidative stress in malignant transformation, driven by the iron in the fluid of endometriotic cysts, which promotes genetic mutations. Loss of estrogen receptors in some cases of endometriosis-associated carcinoma was observed, possibly contributing to the neoplastic transformation of endometriotic lesions. Additionally, the review pointed to the importance of understanding the distinct histologic features of endometriosis-associated cancers compared to non-endometriosis ovarian cancers, with earlier diagnosis and better prognosis often seen in cases associated with endometriosis.
Key implications
The findings suggest that women with endometriosis, especially those with ovarian endometriomas, are at an increased risk for developing ovarian cancer, specifically the endometrioid and clear-cell subtypes. These insights emphasize the need for closer monitoring of women with endometriosis, particularly in younger women, who are more likely to develop these types of ovarian cancer. The review also underscores the importance of genetic testing, such as identifying mutations in ARID1A and other key genes like PIK3CA and β-catenin, which may help in early detection and provide targets for more personalized treatment strategies. The findings highlight the role of inflammation and oxidative stress in the progression of ovarian cancer in these patients, suggesting potential therapeutic avenues such as antioxidants or inhibitors targeting these pathways. Furthermore, the study calls for more research into the molecular underpinnings of this link to improve early detection, prognosis, and treatment strategies for women at risk.
Metformin as a Potential Treatment Option for Endometriosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
•
Metformin shows potential in treating endometriosis through anti-inflammatory, anti-angiogenic, anti-proliferative effects, and modulation of the gut microbiome. It could be a safe, effective alternative or adjunctive therapy, particularly in patients contraindicated for hormonal therapies or seeking fertility.
What was reviewed?
The paper reviewed the potential use of metformin as a pharmacological treatment for endometriosis, highlighting its diverse biological effects that could beneficially impact the disease. The review extensively explored the role of metformin as an insulin sensitizer, its mechanisms of action, and how these may influence critical aspects of endometriosis pathology, including inflammation, angiogenesis, adhesion, invasion, apoptosis, and interactions with the gut microbiome.
Who was reviewed?
The review examined data from in vitro studies, animal models, and limited human clinical studies on women with endometriosis. The research focused on experimental models that assessed metformin’s effects on endometrial stromal cells, endometrial implants, inflammatory markers, angiogenic factors, and metabolic pathways implicated in endometriosis.
What were the most important findings?
The review reported several crucial findings. Metformin exhibited significant anti-inflammatory properties by reducing cytokines such as IL-6, IL-8, and TNF-α. These anti-inflammatory actions were primarily mediated through the activation of AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK), which modulates inflammation pathways implicated in endometriosis. Metformin also demonstrated potent anti-angiogenic effects, reducing vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-9 levels, thus inhibiting the development and growth of new blood vessels necessary for endometriotic lesion survival. Metformin significantly reduced cell proliferation and promoted apoptosis in endometrial cells, partially by suppressing aromatase activity and by disrupting pathways critical for cell survival such as PI3K/Akt/mTOR. Metformin's impact on adhesion and invasion processes included downregulating adhesion molecules like VCAM-1, potentially reducing lesion formation and attachment.
Metformin influenced the gut microbiota by modulating the estrobolome, the gut microbiome involved in estrogen metabolism. Dysbiosis in endometriosis may exacerbate symptoms by increasing circulating estrogen levels, a mechanism that metformin can positively influence by enhancing beneficial bacterial populations.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review holds significant clinical implications. Metformin emerges as a promising candidate for treating endometriosis due to its broad-spectrum actions without serious adverse effects, unlike current hormonal therapies which can have significant side effects or limited long-term usability. The possibility of using metformin either alone or as an adjunct to existing treatments offers a versatile therapeutic strategy. Its beneficial role in managing obesity-associated hyperestrogenism and inflammation, combined with its safety profile, positions metformin as a potential first-line therapy or adjunctive treatment, especially valuable for women seeking to maintain fertility. The need for more extensive clinical trials was emphasized, underscoring metformin's therapeutic promise.
Endometriosis-associated infertility: From pathophysiology to tailored treatment
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
•
Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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This review synthesizes evidence on the multifactorial mechanisms underlying endometriosis-associated infertility, emphasizing inflammatory, hormonal, anatomical, and molecular drivers. It highlights advances in non-invasive diagnostics, individualized treatment, and the clinical promise of integrating molecular and microbiome signatures into care protocols for improved fertility outcomes.
What was reviewed?
This paper is a detailed review of the current knowledge on endometriosis-associated infertility, synthesizing recent advances in understanding the pathophysiology, diagnosis, and management of this complex and multifactorial condition. The review highlights that endometriosis is not only a localized pelvic disease but also a systemic condition with pleiotropic effects on reproductive health. The review scrutinizes the interactions between inflammation, hormonal dysregulation, altered pelvic anatomy, diminished ovarian reserve, impaired endometrial receptivity, and systemic immune changes, all of which collectively contribute to infertility in women with endometriosis. The authors further discuss animal models, molecular mechanisms, including genetic and epigenetic influences, and the role of stem cells and microRNAs in disease pathogenesis and clinical presentation.
Who was reviewed?
The review focuses on women of reproductive age affected by endometriosis, with particular attention to those experiencing infertility. It draws from a heterogeneous population including both clinical and experimental (animal) models, and examines evidence from diverse phenotypes, ranging from women with minimal, mild, or advanced disease to those with specific subtypes such as ovarian, peritoneal, or deep infiltrating endometriosis. The paper also reviews findings from meta-analyses, randomized controlled trials, cohort studies, and basic science research, ensuring a broad and representative scope of current evidence.
What were the most important findings?
Endometriosis-associated infertility is multifactorial, with the most important mechanisms involving a persistent pro-inflammatory microenvironment, hormonal imbalances, particularly estrogen dominance and progesterone resistance, and anatomical disruption from adhesions and fibrosis. The review underscores that only half of women with endometriosis-associated infertility have typical macroscopic lesions, which contributes to underdiagnosis and delays in treatment. A core finding is that chronic inflammation, stemming from elevated cytokines and immune cell dysfunction, distorts the follicular and endometrial microenvironments, ultimately impairing ovulation, fertilization, embryo development, and implantation. Diminished ovarian reserve, especially in women with ovarian endometriomas, is linked to oxidative stress, stromal fibrosis, and accelerated follicular depletion, which can be exacerbated by surgical interventions.
At the molecular level, the review identifies major microbial associations (MMA) and signatures such as dysregulation of specific genes (e.g., HOXA10, PR isoform B), aberrant DNA methylation, and microRNAs that alter gene expression and promote disease progression. The immune signature of the eutopic endometrium in affected women is notably pro-inflammatory, with increased type I macrophages and impaired regulatory T cell function. Stem cell trafficking and inappropriate differentiation play significant roles in lesion formation at both pelvic and extra-pelvic sites. On the diagnostic front, the review highlights promising advances in non-invasive biomarkers, particularly panels of serum-derived miRNAs with high sensitivity and specificity for disease detection. Treatment recommendations are increasingly individualized, combining surgical, medical, and assisted reproductive strategies tailored to disease severity, ovarian reserve, age, and patient preferences. Novel molecular diagnostic tools, such as transcriptomic-based endometrial receptivity assays and BCL6 testing, are emerging as potential game-changers for clinical decision-making.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review has major implications for clinical practice. It clarifies that endometriosis-associated infertility cannot be addressed with a single, uniform approach; rather, it demands individualized, multidisciplinary care informed by an understanding of both systemic and local pathophysiology. The integration of molecular and microbiome signatures into diagnostic and therapeutic protocols holds promise for earlier detection and more precise interventions. The review also calls attention to the significant impact of diagnostic delays, emphasizing the need for validated, non-invasive tests such as miRNA panels for timely diagnosis and intervention. The authors advocate for collaborative, specialized care in referral centers, incorporating both reproductive surgery and assisted reproductive technologies (ART). The review also recognizes the ongoing need for research to further elucidate molecular mechanisms, optimize biomarker panels, and refine therapeutic algorithms, particularly as new insights into the microbiome, genetics, and immune modulation emerge.
Metformin, the Rise of a New Medical Therapy for Endometriosis? A Systematic Review of the Literature
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
•
Metformin emerges as a promising non-hormonal therapy for endometriosis, showing potent anti-inflammatory, anti-angiogenic, and fertility-enhancing effects, with significant symptom relief in limited clinical testing.
What was reviewed?
The review systematically analyzed existing studies evaluating the potential of metformin as a therapeutic option for endometriosis. It specifically examined the biological mechanisms through which metformin might impact endometriosis, including its anti-inflammatory, anti-angiogenic, and antiproliferative effects. Additionally, the review assessed the results from studies using both animal models and cell cultures, as well as the single clinical study available involving women diagnosed with endometriosis.
Who was reviewed?
The systematic review encompassed in vitro cell culture experiments, animal model studies (primarily rats), and limited clinical data from women with endometriosis. The cell culture studies investigated human endometriotic stromal cells, assessing metformin’s impact on inflammation and proliferation markers. The animal studies involved rats with induced endometriosis, evaluating the reduction of lesion size and biochemical markers after treatment. Researchers drew clinical evidence from a single study involving 90 women diagnosed with stage 1-2 endometriosis who experienced infertility and symptoms such as pelvic pain, dysmenorrhea, and dyspareunia.
What were the most important findings?
The review highlighted multiple significant findings about metformin’s therapeutic potential. In vitro studies demonstrated that metformin effectively reduced inflammation by suppressing key proinflammatory cytokines like interleukin-1β (IL-1β) and IL-8. Metformin also inhibited aromatase activity, crucial in local estrogen production, thereby potentially reducing estrogen-driven endometriosis growth. Another essential finding was metformin’s capacity to modulate the Wnt2/β-catenin signaling pathway, a critical factor in the interaction between stromal and epithelial cells that facilitates lesion proliferation and maintenance. In animal models, metformin treatment significantly regressed endometriotic implants by reducing angiogenic factors such as vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), matrix metalloproteinase-9 (MMP-9), and inflammatory mediators IL-1β and IL-8. Notably, metformin reduced adhesion formation, an essential consideration in endometriosis management.
In the single clinical study reviewed, metformin treatment led to marked improvements in symptom relief, including significant reductions in pelvic pain, dysmenorrhea, and dyspareunia. Importantly, metformin use correlated with increased pregnancy rates, suggesting its potential benefits in fertility preservation among women with endometriosis.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The most critical implication of this systematic review is the promising potential of metformin as a new, non-hormonal treatment option for endometriosis. Metformin’s diverse beneficial effects offer a unique therapeutic profile distinct from conventional hormone-based therapies, which frequently have contraceptive side effects. Given metformin's general safety, affordability, and extensive use for conditions like PCOS and diabetes, its integration into endometriosis treatment could significantly improve patient outcomes, particularly in individuals contraindicated for or intolerant to hormonal therapy or those desiring pregnancy. The review emphasizes the necessity of further clinical trials to definitively establish metformin’s efficacy and optimal usage guidelines in treating endometriosis.
Altered Follicular Fluid Metabolic Pattern Correlates with Female Infertility and Outcome Measures of In Vitro Fertilization
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is a common endocrine disorder that affects women of reproductive age, characterized by irregular menstrual cycles, hyperandrogenism, and insulin resistance. It is often associated with metabolic dysfunctions and inflammation, leading to fertility issues and increased risk of type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This study identified 27 follicular fluid metabolites differentiating infertile from fertile women, developed a predictive Biomarker Score, and demonstrated strong correlations with IVF outcomes, providing a basis for personalized infertility management.
What was studied?
This original research investigated the metabolic profile of follicular fluid (FF) in women undergoing in vitro fertilization (IVF) to determine whether specific biochemical alterations correlate with female infertility and IVF outcomes. Using a targeted metabolomics approach, the study quantified 55 low molecular weight compounds, encompassing energy metabolites, purines, pyrimidines, antioxidants, oxidative/nitrosative stress markers, and amino acids, in FF samples. The research aimed to identify distinct metabolic signatures in infertile women compared to controls (fertile women whose partner’s infertility was the only impediment to conception), and to evaluate the relationship between these metabolic patterns and clinical IVF outcome measures, including oocyte development, embryo quality, and pregnancy rates. A cumulative Biomarker Score, based on deviations in 27 key FF metabolites, was developed to distinguish between fertile and infertile women and to predict IVF success.
Who was studied?
The study cohort consisted of 180 women attending a fertility clinic in Rome, Italy, from 2018 to 2020. The control group (n=35) was composed of women whose infertility was exclusively due to a male factor, ensuring their reproductive competence. The infertile group (n=145) included women diagnosed with endometriosis (n=19), polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS; n=14), age-related reduced ovarian reserve (AR-ROR; n=58), reduced ovarian reserve (ROR; n=29), unexplained infertility (UI; n=14), and genetic infertility (GI; n=11). All participants underwent standardized ovarian stimulation and IVF/ICSI protocols, with FF collected during oocyte retrieval. The study excluded women with mechanical reproductive barriers, cancer history, or premature ovarian failure, and controlled for confounding lifestyle and nutritional factors.
Most important findings
The metabolomic analysis revealed that 27 of 55 measured metabolites significantly differed between infertile and control groups. Infertile women generally exhibited lower FF glucose, higher lactate, elevated purine and pyrimidine catabolites (hypoxanthine, xanthine, uracil, pseudouridine), decreased antioxidants (ascorbic acid, glutathione, vitamin A, vitamin E, coenzyme Q10, carotenoids), increased oxidative/nitrosative stress markers (malondialdehyde, 8-hydroxy-2′-deoxyguanosine, nitrite, nitrate), and reduced levels of several amino acids (notably serine, threonine, arginine, valine, methionine, tryptophan, isoleucine, leucine). These metabolic anomalies were largely consistent across different infertility diagnoses, though some subgroup-specific patterns emerged (e.g., PCOS and GI showed normal FF glucose). The composite Biomarker Score robustly discriminated between control and infertile groups, with scores correlating inversely with key IVF outcomes—number and quality of oocytes/blastocysts, clinical pregnancy, and healthy live birth rates. The Biomarker Score showed high specificity and sensitivity in predicting fertility status and IVF success.
Key implications
This study underscores the central role of FF metabolic composition in female fertility and IVF outcomes. The identification of a 27-metabolite signature and its integration into a Biomarker Score offers a powerful, noninvasive tool for distinguishing fertile from infertile patients and predicting assisted reproduction success. The findings suggest that metabolic profiling of FF could inform personalized interventions to optimize the follicular environment, enhance oocyte quality, and improve IVF success rates. Furthermore, these metabolomic biomarkers could be incorporated into microbiome-multimetabolite databases, facilitating personalized reproductive medicine and potentially guiding future research into the interplay between follicular metabolites, the ovarian microenvironment, and the local microbiome.
Endometriosis-Associated Ovarian Cancer: From Molecular Pathologies to Clinical Relevance
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This review explores the molecular pathogenesis of endometriosis-associated ovarian cancer, highlighting key genetic mutations, hormonal imbalances, and microRNA dysregulation that contribute to the disease. It discusses the potential for personalized treatment strategies based on molecular signatures to improve outcomes in affected patients.
What was studied?
This review examines the molecular pathogenesis of endometriosis-associated ovarian cancer (EAOC), focusing on the genetic, epigenetic, and microenvironmental factors that contribute to the transformation of benign endometriotic lesions into malignancies. The study explores how endometriosis, a chronic condition where endometrial-like tissue grows outside the uterus, increases the risk of developing certain types of ovarian cancer, particularly endometrioid and clear-cell carcinoma. The article discusses the roles of various genetic mutations, including those in genes like p53, K-ras, ARID1A, PIK3CA, and PPP2R1A, as well as the influence of hormonal imbalances, oxidative stress, and inflammation in driving the progression of EAOC.
Who was studied?
The review focuses on molecular and clinical studies involving patients with endometriosis, specifically those at an increased risk for developing ovarian cancer. It explores the genetic and molecular profiles of ovarian endometriotic lesions and compares them with those of normal ovarian tissues and ovarian cancer. The article also highlights the tumor microenvironment, including factors like estrogen signaling, oxidative stress, and microRNA dysregulation, that may contribute to cancer progression in women with endometriosis. The study integrates findings from various patient cohorts and experimental models, emphasizing the need for personalized treatment strategies based on molecular signatures.
Most important findings
The study identifies several key molecular factors involved in the malignant transformation of endometriosis to ovarian cancer. Genetic mutations, such as in the p53 and K-ras genes, along with microsatellite instability, play a critical role in the initiation and progression of tumors. ARID1A mutations, which affect chromatin remodeling, are frequent in clear-cell and endometrioid ovarian carcinomas, leading to genomic instability and increased tumor aggressiveness. Additionally, mutations in the PIK3CA gene, which is involved in the PI3K/AKT/mTOR signaling pathway, were found to be early events in the development of EAOC, particularly in clear-cell carcinoma. The loss of ARID1A expression often coexists with these mutations, further complicating tumor progression. The review also highlights the role of estrogen in promoting endometriotic cell proliferation through signaling pathways, contributing to carcinogenesis. MicroRNAs, including miR-200 and let-7, are involved in regulating epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition and oncogenicity, making them potential biomarkers for EAOC. Moreover, the tumor microenvironment, shaped by oxidative stress and inflammation, further accelerates the carcinogenic process.
Key implications
The molecular insights provided by this review suggest that targeting specific genetic and molecular pathways could be an effective approach to treating EAOC. For example, inhibiting the PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway, which is altered in many EAOC cases, or targeting microRNAs involved in tumor progression, could offer new therapeutic avenues. The review also emphasizes the importance of early detection, especially for patients with endometriosis who are at higher risk for developing ovarian cancer. Understanding the complex interplay between genetic mutations, hormonal factors, and the tumor microenvironment is crucial for developing more effective, personalized treatments for EAOC. Given the poor prognosis associated with clear-cell ovarian carcinoma, which is often diagnosed at advanced stages, the identification of specific molecular signatures could help tailor early interventions to improve patient outcomes.
Bacterial vaginosis and its association with infertility, endometritis, and pelvic inflammatory disease
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) is a complex interplay between pathogens, immune responses, and microbial communities. As research continues to uncover the microbiome's role in reproductive health, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as probiotics, prebiotics, and transplants are redefining how we prevent and treat PID. This page dives deep into these innovations, offering a glimpse into the future of personalized, biologically informed women’s healthcare.
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This review details the links between bacterial vaginosis, endometritis, pelvic inflammatory disease, and infertility, highlighting the role of vaginal and endometrial microbiota disruptions and their impact on reproductive outcomes and management strategies.
What was reviewed?
This review article comprehensively examines the associations between bacterial vaginosis (BV), endometritis, pelvic inflammatory disease (PID), and infertility, with a particular focus on the underlying microbiome-related mechanisms. The paper synthesizes current evidence on how disruptions in the vaginal and endometrial microbiota, characterized predominantly by a loss of beneficial lactobacilli and an overgrowth of anaerobic bacteria, contribute to the pathogenesis of these gynecological conditions. The review covers diagnostic criteria, treatment options, recurrence issues, and the role of the vaginal and endometrial microbial signatures in affecting reproductive outcomes, both naturally and in assisted reproduction settings. It also explores potential mechanistic pathways linking these infections to infertility, including inflammation, immune responses, microbial toxin production, and increased susceptibility to sexually transmitted infections (STIs).
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesizes data from a broad range of studies involving women of reproductive age, particularly those diagnosed with BV, endometritis, or PID, as well as women experiencing infertility (including those undergoing fertility treatments such as in vitro fertilization [IVF]). It considers diverse populations, including women with tubal and non-tubal infertility, women with unexplained or idiopathic infertility, and those with recurrent implantation failure or miscarriage. The article also references clinical trials and meta-analyses, drawing on evidence from both symptomatic and asymptomatic women across multiple ethnic groups and geographic regions.
Most important findings
The review highlights that optimal vaginal health is typically characterized by a microbiota dominated by lactobacilli, which produce lactic acid and antimicrobial compounds, conferring protection against pathogenic bacteria. BV is marked by a depletion of these protective lactobacilli and an overgrowth of anaerobes such as Gardnerella vaginalis, Atopobium vaginae, Megasphaera spp., and others. This microbial imbalance is strongly associated with an increased risk of endometritis and PID, both of which are significant causes of infertility. Notably, more than 85% of PID cases are linked to BV-associated bacteria and/or STIs, but fewer than half involve classic pathogens like Neisseria gonorrhoeae or Chlamydia trachomatis, underscoring the importance of the broader vaginal microbiome.
BV increases the risk of acquiring STIs, which further amplify the risk of upper genital tract infections and infertility. Mechanistically, BV-related bacteria can induce genital tract inflammation, alter immune responses, produce enzymes that degrade cervical mucus, and facilitate pathogen ascension to the endometrium and fallopian tubes. Women with BV and non-lactobacillus-dominated endometrial microbiota have lower implantation and pregnancy rates, particularly in IVF settings. Chronic endometritis (CE) is highly prevalent among women with unexplained infertility and recurrent implantation failure, and cure of CE with antibiotics improves reproductive outcomes. Despite these associations, causality between BV and infertility is not fully established due to heterogeneity in diagnostic criteria, patient populations, and study designs.
Key implications
The review underscores the clinical importance of recognizing and treating BV, endometritis, and PID—especially in women with infertility or at risk of reproductive complications. Early diagnosis and appropriate antibiotic treatment for symptomatic BV and CE can improve fertility outcomes, particularly in IVF patients. The findings also call for a more nuanced understanding of the vaginal and endometrial microbiome, advocating for future research to refine the definitions of “normal” versus “abnormal” microbial states and to clarify the mechanisms linking microbial dysbiosis to infertility. Given the high recurrence rates and diagnostic challenges, integrating microbiome-based diagnostics and interventions (including probiotics) into preconceptional and fertility care may offer new avenues for improving women’s reproductive health.
Endometriosis and Infertility: A review of the pathogenesis and treatment of endometriosis-associated infertility
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
•
Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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This review details the multifactorial pathogenesis of endometriosis-associated infertility, emphasizing molecular, genetic, and inflammatory mechanisms, and evaluates current and emerging treatments, including IVF and novel regenerative therapies.
What was reviewed?
This comprehensive review explores the pathogenesis of endometriosis and its impact on infertility, focusing on the mechanisms by which endometriosis impairs fertility and the current and emerging treatment modalities. The article synthesizes evidence on the etiology of endometriosis, including retrograde menstruation, coelomic metaplasia, altered immunity, stem cell involvement, and genetics, and details how these factors culminate in altered pelvic anatomy, inflammatory microenvironments, and molecular changes in reproductive tissues. The review also evaluates the effects of endometriosis on gametes, embryo development, fallopian tube function, and endometrial receptivity, and discusses the effectiveness of treatments such as surgery, medical therapy, superovulation with intrauterine insemination (IUI), and in vitro fertilization (IVF). Future directions, including novel medical therapies, immune modulation, and stem cell-based approaches, are also considered.
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesizes data from a broad range of studies involving women of reproductive age, primarily aged 25–35, affected by endometriosis with and without infertility. It references epidemiologic data showing an increased prevalence of endometriosis among infertile women (up to 50%) and discusses animal models, such as baboons and mice, to elucidate mechanisms relevant to human disease. The populations reviewed include women with varying stages of endometriosis (minimal/mild to advanced), including those participating in surgical, medical, and assisted reproductive intervention trials. Data on genetic and stem cell contributions are drawn from both human and animal research.
Most important findings
Endometriosis is confirmed as a multifactorial, estrogen-dependent inflammatory disease with a robust association with infertility. Mechanistically, infertility arises from both mechanical disruption (e.g., adhesions, distorted pelvic anatomy) and complex molecular interactions involving immune dysregulation, increased inflammatory cytokines, altered gene expression (notably HOXA10 and Wnt signaling), and oxidative stress. These disrupt ovulation, gamete quality, embryo viability, tubal transport, and endometrial receptivity. Aberrant microbiome or microbial signatures are not a primary focus, but the inflammatory milieu, rich in cytokines and altered immune cell populations, could suggest potential secondary impacts on local microbial communities. Treatments are stage-dependent; surgery is most beneficial for minimal-moderate disease, while IVF remains the most effective for advanced cases. There is limited benefit from medical suppression unless used adjunctively before ART. Emerging approaches, such as stem cell therapy and immune modulation, hold promise for restoring endometrial function and correcting epigenetic alterations.
Key implications
For clinicians, this review underscores the need for individualized management in endometriosis-associated infertility, integrating disease stage, patient age, and reproductive goals. The multifactorial pathogenesis, including immune, genetic, and molecular disruptions, highlights the complexity of diagnosis and treatment, and supports the exploration of targeted, non-hormonal therapies and regenerative approaches. Recognizing the altered inflammatory and possibly microbial environment in the pelvis may inform future research and therapeutic strategies, especially for developing microbiome-informed diagnostic or treatment tools.
Metabolic risk factors and fertility disorders: A narrative review of the female perspective
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is a common endocrine disorder that affects women of reproductive age, characterized by irregular menstrual cycles, hyperandrogenism, and insulin resistance. It is often associated with metabolic dysfunctions and inflammation, leading to fertility issues and increased risk of type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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This review explores how metabolic risk factors—obesity, the female athlete triad, and oxidative stress—contribute to female infertility, highlighting associations with PCOS, endometriosis, and idiopathic infertility, and calling for improved metabolic assessment and molecular diagnostics in clinical practice.
What was reviewed?
This narrative review comprehensively examined the associations between metabolic risk factors and female fertility disorders, focusing on obesity, the female athlete triad (low energy intake, menstrual dysfunction, decreased bone density), and oxidative stress as potential contributors to infertility. The authors aimed to clarify how these metabolic conditions, alongside major infertility-related disorders such as polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) and endometriosis, impact women's reproductive health. The review synthesized evidence from 50 selected studies published between 2006 and 2020, integrating pathophysiological, genetic, lifestyle, and epidemiological perspectives. It also highlighted the prevalence, mechanisms, and clinical consequences of metabolic risks with female infertility and discussed gaps in current knowledge, especially regarding idiopathic infertility and the need for robust molecular markers.
Who was reviewed?
The review focused on studies involving women of reproductive age experiencing infertility. It included populations affected by PCOS, endometriosis, obesity, and those displaying characteristics of the female athlete triad. The selected studies varied in design but excluded animal research and clinical trials of pharmaceutical treatments. The review encompassed diverse geographic regions and considered women with both known and idiopathic infertility, as well as those undergoing assisted reproductive technology (ART). The aim was to gather data relevant to women at risk for or experiencing infertility due to metabolic and lifestyle factors.
Most important findings
The review established a clear and direct association between obesity and increased risk of female infertility, with obese women exhibiting up to a three-fold higher risk compared to those with normal body mass index (BMI). Obesity was linked to anovulation, reduced ART success rates, and increased miscarriage risk. Mechanistically, excess body fat disrupts ovarian steroidogenesis, induces hyperandrogenism, and promotes chronic low-grade inflammation, all of which impair reproductive function. PCOS was highlighted as a central metabolic-endocrine disorder, often comorbid with obesity, insulin resistance, and increased cardiovascular risk. Endometriosis risk showed a more complex relationship with BMI, with evidence suggesting both inverse and direct associations, possibly due to genetic and hormonal influences. The female athlete triad, though less well-studied in this context, was associated with hypothalamic suppression, menstrual dysfunction, and reduced fertility, primarily through chronic energy deficiency and altered estrogen signaling. Oxidative stress, driven by lifestyle factors (e.g., smoking, alcohol, drug use), was identified as a pervasive mediator, damaging DNA and germ cells, increasing risks for PCOS and endometriosis, and contributing to idiopathic infertility. The review emphasized a lack of large-scale population studies and molecular biomarker research linking metabolic status and infertility.
Key implications
For clinicians, the review underscores the necessity of assessing metabolic risk factors, especially obesity and undernutrition, when addressing female infertility. Interventions targeting weight management, healthy nutrition, and lifestyle modification may improve hormonal balance and reproductive outcomes, particularly in women with PCOS. The review also calls for interdisciplinary collaboration to integrate molecular, metabolic, and psychosocial approaches to infertility. Given the anticipated rise in obesity prevalence among women, proactive metabolic assessment and the development of diagnostic molecular signatures are critical for improving ART outcomes and reducing unexplained infertility. Further, the establishment of consensus definitions and large-scale biobank studies will be pivotal for advancing personalized infertility care.
Physical Activity and Exercise Improve Quality of Life in Endometriosis: A Systematic Review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This review found that physical activity and exercise significantly improved pain, emotional well-being, and perceived control in women with endometriosis, supporting their use as safe and effective complementary therapies.
What was reviewed?
This systematic review and meta-analysis evaluated the effectiveness and safety of physical activity (PA) and exercise as adjunctive therapies for women with endometriosis. The authors synthesized data from six randomized controlled trials (RCTs) comprising 251 participants to determine whether structured exercise interventions could alleviate symptoms such as pain, poor quality of life, pelvic floor dysfunction, and bone loss. Despite methodological heterogeneity and incomplete reporting in several studies, a meta-analysis of two RCTs was feasible and focused on the impact of exercise on three domains of the Endometriosis Health Profile-30 (EHP-30): pain, control and powerlessness, and emotional well-being.
Who was reviewed?
The review population consisted of women aged 16 to 51 years with diagnosed endometriosis. Three RCTs required laparoscopic confirmation of endometriosis, while others did not disclose diagnostic criteria. Participants included women with varying disease severity, some with chronic pelvic pain or prior surgical or hormonal treatments. Interventions ranged from Hatha yoga and progressive muscle relaxation to aerobic and resistance exercises, virtual reality (VR) training, and telehealth-based exercise programs.
Most important findings
Across the included trials, physical activity and exercise were generally well-tolerated and resulted in meaningful improvements in multiple domains relevant to endometriosis:
Outcome
Finding
Quality of life
Meta-analysis showed significant improvements in pain (WMD -20.22), control and powerlessness (WMD -23.07), and emotional well-being (WMD -14.35).
Pain reduction
Studies showed reduced daily pain levels in yoga groups and improvements in VAS pain scores, though some did not reach statistical significance.
Mental health
Progressive muscle relaxation and supervised exercise improved mental health scores on SF-36 and EHP-30 scales.
Pelvic floor dysfunction
Exercise had positive, though inconsistently significant, effects on dyspareunia and related symptoms.
Bone mineral density
One study found that exercise mitigated GnRH agonist-induced femoral neck bone loss.
Key implications
This review highlights that physical activity and structured exercise interventions can significantly enhance quality of life, particularly by alleviating pain and improving emotional well-being, for women with endometriosis. The findings suggest that exercise may serve as a complementary, non-pharmacologic therapy with systemic anti-inflammatory and neuromodulatory effects. However, the evidence base remains limited by small sample sizes, inconsistent outcome measures, short follow-up durations, and variable intervention types. The review underscores the urgent need for large-scale, standardized RCTs evaluating patient-centered outcomes using validated tools to better characterize optimal exercise modalities and dosing strategies in endometriosis care.
Low-Nickel Diet in Endometriosis: Symptom Relief and Nickel Mucositis Evidence
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) is a common gastrointestinal disorder characterized by symptoms such as abdominal pain, bloating, and altered bowel habits. Recent research has focused on the gut microbiota's role in IBS, aiming to identify specific microbial signatures associated with the condition.
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Nickel allergic contact mucositis was identified in over 90% of endometriosis patients with IBS-like symptoms. A low-nickel diet significantly reduced gastrointestinal, extra-intestinal, and gynecological symptoms, revealing nickel sensitivity as a key driver of endometriosis symptomatology.
What was studied?
This open-label pilot study evaluated the prevalence of nickel-related allergic contact mucositis in women with endometriosis who reported irritable bowel syndrome (IBS)-like symptoms, and whether a low-nickel diet in endometriosis alleviates gastrointestinal, extra-intestinal, and gynecologic symptoms. Participants underwent a nickel oral mucosa patch test (omPT), then followed a three-month low-nickel diet that excluded high-nickel foods such as legumes, whole grains, cocoa, and tomatoes as summarized in Table 1 on page 4. Symptom burden was quantified with a modified Gastrointestinal Symptom Rating Scale at baseline and after the dietary intervention, and pre-post differences were analyzed with Wilcoxon signed-rank tests.
Who was studied?
Eighty-three women with imaging or laparoscopically confirmed endometriosis were screened; 51 met symptom criteria, four were excluded for celiac disease or wheat allergy, and 16 dropped out, leaving 31 women (mean age 33.5 years) who completed the protocol. Clinical characteristics and sites of disease are detailed in Table 2 on pages 7–8. Notably, 28 of 31 completers (90.3 percent) had a positive omPT and were diagnosed with nickel allergic contact mucositis, whereas 3 of 31 were omPT-negative.
Most important findings
After three months of the low-nickel diet, all 15 gastrointestinal symptoms showed statistically significant reductions in intensity, including abdominal pain, bloating, reflux, altered bowel habits, and urgency. The bar charts on page 9 (Figure 3) illustrate consistent downward shifts across domains. Extra-intestinal symptoms such as headache, fatigue, brain fog, and dermatitis also declined significantly, as did gynecologic symptoms central to endometriosis care, including dysmenorrhea, dyspareunia, and chronic pelvic pain; these trends are shown on page 10 (Figure 4). Collectively, the data suggest that nickel exposure may trigger a low-grade mucosal inflammatory state that phenocopies IBS and amplifies pelvic pain symptomatology in a substantial subset of patients with endometriosis. From a microbiome-relevant perspective, the authors frame nickel as a metalloestrogen and environmental factor that can interact with mucosal immunity and symptom generation; the IBS-like phenotype of nickel allergic contact mucositis aligns with clinical entities frequently linked to gut dysbiosis, offering a plausible interface for future microbiome signatures work even though microbial taxa were not directly assayed in this study. The high positivity rate of omPT in this endometriosis cohort, combined with the broad symptom relief on a targeted elimination diet, positions nickel sensitivity as a potential major association for inclusion in a microbiome-signatures database focused on environmental and host-mucosal interactions.
Key implications
Clinically, routine consideration of nickel sensitivity is warranted in endometriosis patients who report IBS-like symptoms or refractory pelvic pain. The omPT offers a practical diagnostic adjunct, and a supervised low-nickel diet is a reasonable, time-limited therapeutic trial when omPT is positive. For translational research, these findings motivate integration of nickel exposure assessment and nickel-responsive symptom phenotyping into microbiome studies of endometriosis. Although the trial is limited by its small sample size, single-center design, and open-label methodology with notable dietary adherence challenges, the magnitude and breadth of symptom improvement across gastrointestinal, extra-intestinal, and gynecologic domains indicate that nickel allergic contact mucositis may be a clinically meaningful, modifiable driver of symptom burden in endometriosis. Future controlled studies should incorporate objective dietary nickel exposure metrics and mucosal or fecal biomarkers to map nickel-linked inflammatory pathways to microbial community features and to identify major microbial associations that co-vary with nickel-sensitive phenotypes.
How does chronic endometritis influence pregnancy outcomes in endometriosis associated infertility? A retrospective cohort study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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This study shows chronic endometritis significantly increases pregnancy complications in women with endometriosis-associated infertility. Placenta previa, gestational hypertension, and cesarean sections were notably higher, emphasizing the importance of diagnosing and managing CE effectively for improved reproductive outcomes.
What was studied?
The study examined how chronic endometritis (CE) influences pregnancy outcomes in women experiencing infertility related to endometriosis. Specifically, it evaluated whether the coexistence of CE in these women affected their ability to conceive and carry pregnancies successfully. Researchers explored the incidence of pregnancy complications and live birth outcomes following combined laparoscopic and hysteroscopic surgical treatment.
Who was studied?
The study involved 685 women diagnosed with infertility associated with endometriosis. Among these participants, 318 women were diagnosed with chronic endometritis (CE group), while 367 women did not have CE (non-CE group). A subset consisting of 123 clinically pregnant women from the CE group and 369 from the non-CE group was analyzed in depth. These women underwent combined laparoscopy and hysteroscopy between January 2018 and December 2020. Data was meticulously gathered from medical records and telephone follow-ups over 24 months.
What were the most important findings?
The research revealed that chronic endometritis was highly prevalent (46.42%) in patients with endometriosis-associated infertility. Patients diagnosed with CE had increased rates of pregnancy complications compared to those without CE. Specifically, there was a significantly higher occurrence of placenta previa, gestational hypertension, and cesarean deliveries in the CE group. The cumulative pregnancy rate post-surgery was lower in patients with both EMS and CE compared to those without CE, although this difference was not statistically significant. However, notably, higher Endometriosis Fertility Index (EFI) scores (7-10) correlated strongly with improved pregnancy outcomes in both groups, suggesting that EFI scores remain reliable predictors of fertility success after surgical intervention.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study underscores the importance of identifying and treating chronic endometritis in patients suffering from endometriosis-related infertility. Clinicians should be particularly aware that CE significantly increases the risk of adverse pregnancy outcomes, including placenta previa, gestational hypertension, and higher rates of cesarean deliveries. The findings support incorporating routine diagnostic evaluations and proactive management of CE in fertility treatments. They also emphasize the value of combined hysteroscopic and laparoscopic surgical interventions to potentially improve pregnancy outcomes, with careful monitoring and counseling regarding possible complications post-surgery.
Fusobacterium Infection: A New Pathogenic Insight into Endometriosis and Microbiome-Targeted Therapy Potential
February 12, 2026
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Study links Fusobacterium to endometriosis via inflammation and lesion formation. Antibiotics (metronidazole and chloramphenicol) may offer therapeutic potential.
What Was Studied?
This translational study investigated the role of Fusobacterium infection in the pathogenesis of endometriosis. Researchers sought to determine whether bacterial infection, specifically by Fusobacterium nucleatum, contributes to inflammatory alterations in endometrial fibroblasts, potentially leading to the development of endometriosis. The study encompassed molecular analyses, in vitro experiments, and a mouse model to establish causality and elucidate the underlying mechanism.
Who Was Studied?
The study analyzed uterine tissue samples from 79 patients in two Japanese hospitals, divided into cases with endometriosis and controls without the condition. Further, a mouse model was used to test the infectivity and pathogenic potential of Fusobacterium nucleatum compared to other microbes.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
Fusobacterium nucleatum was found to be significantly more prevalent in the endometrial and endometriotic tissues of patients with endometriosis (64.3%) compared to controls (7.1%), while Erysipelothrix, another potential candidate, was not abundant. Fusobacterium infection was shown to upregulate transgelin (TAGLN) expression in fibroblasts, enhancing their motility, adhesion, and migration through the activation of TGF-β signaling, a pathway known to be critical in the progression of endometriosis. In an animal model, mice inoculated with Fusobacterium-infected uterine tissue developed endometriotic lesions, whereas treatment of donor mice with antibiotics (metronidazole and chloramphenicol) significantly reduced lesion formation in recipient mice. These findings suggest that targeting Fusobacterium with antibiotics holds potential to mitigate the progression of endometriosis, underscoring the importance of further exploration into microbiome-targeted therapies.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
This research provides evidence that Fusobacterium infection may play a direct role in the etiology of endometriosis. The identification of a bacterial trigger opens avenues for antibiotic-based interventions and highlights the need for clinical trials targeting endometrial infections. Additionally, it underscores the importance of microbial profiling in endometriosis diagnosis and management, potentially redefining treatment paradigms to include microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs).
Elevated Lead, Nickel, and Bismuth Levels in the Peritoneal Fluid of a Peritoneal Endometriosis Patient without Toxic Habits or Occupational Exposure following a Vegetarian Diet
February 12, 2026
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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A case study links elevated lead, nickel, and bismuth in peritoneal fluid with endometriosis, highlighting potential dietary and environmental exposures as contributors. Further research may identify these potentially toxic elements (PTEs) as diagnostic biomarkers and therapeutic targets.
What was studied?
This case study investigated elevated lead, nickel, and bismuth levels in peritoneal fluid—a key extracellular environment that bathes endometriotic lesions—using ICP-MS/MS analysis. The focus keyphrase elevated lead nickel bismuth peritoneal endometriosis frames the central finding: unusually high concentrations of these potentially toxic elements in a young woman with peritoneal endometriosis despite lacking identifiable toxic or occupational exposures. The study examined how environmental contaminants, diet, and lifestyle might contribute to metal accumulation in the peritoneal cavity, a microenvironment increasingly recognized as influential in inflammatory and hormonal dysregulation relevant to endometriosis pathophysiology. This approach aligns with microbiome-informed clinical interests because toxic element accumulation can modulate immune tone, oxidative stress, and microbial community structure, indirectly shaping local inflammation and lesion activity.
Who was studied?
Researchers evaluated a 22-year-old woman diagnosed with peritoneal endometriosis during laparoscopic surgery. She was a nonsmoker, consumed no alcohol, and reported no occupational or environmental toxic exposures. Importantly, she followed a lacto-ovo vegetarian diet, a potential contributor to trace metal intake. Her peritoneal fluid results were compared with those of an age-matched control patient with a benign serous cystadenoma and with ten additional non-endometriosis controls. This comparative structure allowed investigators to contextualize abnormal metal concentrations and evaluate whether observed elevations were disease-specific or potentially linked to diet or unrecognized environmental exposure.
Most important findings
The most striking result was the extreme elevation of lead (90:1 ratio), accompanied by high nickel and bismuth levels. These potentially toxic elements have known interactions with endocrine and immune pathways, both relevant to endometriosis and potentially influential to microbiome dynamics given their antimicrobial and redox-active properties. Lead and nickel can disrupt estrogen receptor signaling, generate oxidative stress, alter immune cell activation, and shape cytokine patterns—mechanisms paralleling microbiome-mediated inflammatory modulation. The vegetarian diet, rich in plant-derived foods capable of accumulating soil-associated metals, may have contributed to exposure. Bismuth, though less studied in gynecologic contexts, has antimicrobial properties that could influence local microbial signatures in peritoneal or reproductive tissues. Cobalt and barium were also elevated, reinforcing the possibility of cumulative environmental or dietary exposure.
Analyte
Case vs. Control Ratio
Lead (Pb)
90:1
Nickel (Ni)
4:1
Bismuth (Bi)
1.5:1
Cobalt (Co)
5:1
Key implications
These findings suggest that toxic metal accumulation in the peritoneal cavity may contribute to endometriosis development or severity, either directly through oxidative and endocrine disruption or indirectly by influencing microbial behavior, immune tone, and metabolic signaling within the peritoneal microenvironment. Though causality cannot be inferred from a single case, this study underscores the need for broader investigation of environmental exposures—including dietary sources—in reproductive pathology. The work also highlights the potential utility of peritoneal fluid metal signatures as biomarkers for endometriosis, helping integrate environmental toxicology with emerging microbiome-centered diagnostic frameworks.
1H NMR- based metabolomics approaches as non-invasive tools for diagnosis of endometriosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Metabolomic Signature
Metabolomic Signature
Metabolomic signatures are unique metabolite patterns linked to specific biological conditions, identified through metabolomics. They reveal underlying biochemical activities, aiding in disease diagnosis, biomarker development, and personalized medicine. The microbiome significantly affects these signatures, influencing health and disease outcomes through metabolic interactions.
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This study demonstrates the potential of ¹H-NMR metabolomics to diagnose endometriosis non-invasively by identifying metabolic biomarkers and disrupted pathways. Quadratic Discriminant Analysis outperformed Artificial Neural Networks in diagnostic accuracy.
What was studied?
This study investigated the application of metabolomics, specifically through proton nuclear magnetic resonance (¹H-NMR) spectroscopy, to identify non-invasive biomarkers for diagnosing endometriosis. The researchers developed computational models using Quadratic Discriminant Analysis (QDA) and Artificial Neural Networks (ANNs) to analyze metabolic changes in serum samples and assess their utility in early diagnosis of the disease.
Who was studied?
The study analyzed serum samples from 31 infertile women diagnosed with stage II or III endometriosis confirmed via laparoscopy and 15 healthy women without any signs of endometriosis. The participants were aged 22–44 years and were recruited from an infertility center in Iran. Exclusion criteria included recent medical or hormonal treatments, prior gynecological surgeries, or other pelvic inflammatory conditions.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed significant metabolic differences between women with endometriosis and healthy controls. Key findings included elevated levels of 2-methoxyestrone, 2-methoxyestradiol, androstenedione, aldosterone, dehydroepiandrosterone, and deoxycorticosterone in the endometriosis group, alongside decreased cholesterol and primary bile acids. These metabolic changes are linked to disruptions in steroid hormone biosynthesis and bile acid metabolism, indicating underlying hyperestrogenism and impaired hepatic estrogen clearance. The QDA model achieved a correct classification rate of 76%, with 71% positive predictive value and 78% negative predictive value, outperforming the ANN model, which had lower sensitivity and specificity. Metabolic pathway analyses highlighted altered steroid hormone and bile acid biosynthesis, which are critical in the pathophysiology of endometriosis.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study underscores the potential of ¹H-NMR-based metabolomics as a minimally invasive diagnostic tool for endometriosis, reducing reliance on invasive laparoscopy. The identification of specific biomarkers and disrupted pathways could facilitate earlier diagnosis, improved patient stratification, and targeted therapeutic interventions. The findings also demonstrate the utility of computational modeling, particularly QDA, in translating complex metabolomics data into clinically actionable insights. This approach represents a significant advancement in bridging diagnostic gaps for endometriosis.
A metabonomics approach as a means for identification of potentialbiomarkers for early diagnosis of endometriosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Metabolomic Signature
Metabolomic Signature
Metabolomic signatures are unique metabolite patterns linked to specific biological conditions, identified through metabolomics. They reveal underlying biochemical activities, aiding in disease diagnosis, biomarker development, and personalized medicine. The microbiome significantly affects these signatures, influencing health and disease outcomes through metabolic interactions.
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This study used 1H-NMR metabonomics to identify serum biomarkers for early endometriosis diagnosis. Elevated lactate, alanine, and reduced glucose levels highlight metabolic disruptions, offering a minimally invasive diagnostic tool.
What was studied?
This study investigated the identification of predictive biomarkers for early diagnosis of endometriosis using a minimally invasive, serum-based approach. The researchers utilized proton nuclear magnetic resonance (1H-NMR) metabonomics to analyze serum samples, aiming to distinguish endometriosis patients from healthy controls. The study particularly focused on differences in metabolite profiles to identify markers indicative of the condition.
Who was studied?
The study included 45 women aged under 40, divided into two groups. The first group comprised 22 women diagnosed with early-stage endometriosis (Stages I–II) via laparoscopy, while the control group consisted of 23 age- and BMI-matched healthy women with normal menstrual cycles and proven fertility. Participants with recent hormone therapy or irregular menstrual cycles were excluded. Serum samples were collected during the secretory phase of the menstrual cycle.
What were the most important findings?
The study identified several metabolites with significantly altered levels in women with endometriosis compared to controls. Increased levels of lactate, 3-hydroxybutyrate, alanine, leucine, valine, threonine, lysine, glycerophosphatidylcholine, succinic acid, and 2-hydroxybutyrate were observed in the serum of endometriosis patients, while glucose, isoleucine, arginine, and lipid levels were decreased. Multivariate analysis using Partial Least Squares-Discriminant Analysis (PLS-DA) demonstrated strong sensitivity (81.8%) and specificity (91.3%) in distinguishing endometriosis from controls, with an area under the ROC curve of 0.96. Pathway analysis highlighted arginine and proline metabolism disruptions, glycine, serine, and threonine metabolism, pyruvate metabolism, and lysine biosynthesis and degradation. These findings provide a potential non-invasive diagnostic framework and insights into the metabolic disturbances in endometriosis.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study offers a promising step toward non-invasive diagnostic methods for endometriosis, reducing reliance on invasive laparoscopy. The identification of metabolite alterations linked to the disease enhances the understanding of its pathophysiology, emphasizing oxidative stress, anaerobic glycolysis, and metabolic reprogramming similar to malignancies. These findings could lead to better clinical tools for early diagnosis and a deeper understanding of the metabolic underpinnings of endometriosis.
A More Diverse Cervical Microbiome Associates with Better Clinical Outcomes in Patients with Endometriosis: A Pilot Study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Infertility
Infertility
Infertility is the inability to conceive after 12 months of regular, unprotected sex. It affects both men and women and can be due to various physical, hormonal, or genetic factors. Treatments include medication, surgery, assisted reproductive technologies, and lifestyle changes.
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This study links cervical microbiome diversity with endometriosis severity. Findings reveal microbial imbalances, particularly in advanced stages, correlate with pain, infertility, and inflammatory pathways. The cervical microbiome may serve as a diagnostic and therapeutic target for improving outcomes in endometriosis, highlighting its role in reproductive health and disease progression.
What Was Studied?
This pilot study investigated the cervical microbiome in patients with endometriosis and its association with clinical outcomes. The research focused on the microbial diversity, composition, and functional roles in cervical mucus, analyzed using 16S rRNA sequencing. The study included healthy women and patients diagnosed with endometriosis to compare microbial profiles and explore the connection between microbiome alterations, disease progression, and associated symptoms like pain, CA125 levels, and infertility.
Who Was Studied?
The study involved 33 women: 10 healthy controls and 23 patients diagnosed with endometriosis (classified by severity into stages I-II and III-IV). The cervical microbiome was analyzed to assess its correlation with clinical features, such as deep infiltrating endometriosis (DIE), CA125 biomarker levels, pain severity, and infertility.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study revealed that cervical microbiome diversity is significantly associated with clinical outcomes in endometriosis patients. Specifically, a higher microbial diversity was linked to better outcomes, while notable microbial imbalances characterized advanced disease stages and severe symptoms. Patients with advanced stages of endometriosis exhibited a microbial shift, with an increase in Firmicutes and a decrease in Actinobacteria and Bacteroidetes. Unique microbial profiles were observed, such as elevated Lactobacillus jensenii and Streptococcus agalactiae (GBS), alongside reduced Atopobium vaginae in patients with advanced stages.
Patients presenting severe symptoms, including elevated CA125 biomarker levels, infertility, and higher pain scores, showed significantly reduced microbial richness and diversity. Infertility, a common complication of endometriosis, was associated with an increased Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes ratio. Notably, infertility treatments appeared to reverse these imbalances, restoring microbial diversity and community structure to resemble that of fertile individuals. Additionally, deep infiltrating endometriosis (DIE), a severe form of the condition, was correlated with an overrepresentation of Streptococcus and Prevotella at the genus level.
The study’s functional analyses provided insight into the role of the cervical microbiome in disease progression. Pathways associated with microbial alterations, such as signal transduction, secondary bile acid biosynthesis, and nutrient metabolism, were identified. These pathways may contribute to inflammation, immune dysregulation, and potentially malignancy in severe cases. Such findings underscore the intricate relationship between cervical microbial composition and the pathophysiology of endometriosis. This research positions the cervical microbiome as a critical factor in both the diagnosis and management of endometriosis, offering potential for therapeutic interventions targeting microbial imbalances.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
The findings suggest that cervical microbiome diversity may serve as a biomarker for diagnosing and monitoring endometriosis progression and complications. The research highlights the therapeutic potential of targeting microbial imbalances to improve clinical outcomes, particularly in infertility. It also underscores the potential link between microbiome alterations and malignancy risks in severe cases, paving the way for preventive and precision medicine approaches in endometriosis management.
Altered Composition of Microbiota in Women with Ovarian Endometrioma: Microbiome Analyses of Extracellular Vesicles in the Peritoneal Fluid
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
•
This study identifies microbiota alterations in ovarian endometrioma, showing distinct microbial shifts in peritoneal fluid extracellular vesicles. Enrichment of Pseudomonas and Acinetobacter, alongside depletion of Propionibacterium and Actinomyces, suggests inflammatory contributions to pathogenesis. Findings highlight the diagnostic potential of microbiota-derived EVs in endometrioma management.
What was studied?
This study examined the microbiota composition in the peritoneal fluid of women with ovarian endometrioma, focusing specifically on microbiome analyses of extracellular vesicles (EVs). Extracellular vesicles are nanometer-sized particles released by cells, including bacteria, that carry microbial DNA and signaling molecules. The research aimed to determine if women with ovarian endometrioma exhibit distinct microbiota profiles in their peritoneal fluid compared to women without endometriosis. Microbial DNA was sequenced using next-generation sequencing (NGS) of the 16S rDNA V3–V4 regions, allowing for detailed taxonomic identification and comparative analysis.
Who was studied?
The study included 45 women diagnosed with histological evidence of ovarian endometrioma and 45 surgical controls confirmed to be free of endometriosis. Participants were recruited from Asan Medical Center, and peritoneal fluid samples were collected during laparoscopic procedures. Women with endometriosis were classified as having advanced-stage disease, and none of the participants had taken antibiotics, probiotics, or hormonal treatments for 12 weeks prior to sample collection.
What were the most important findings?
The microbiota composition of extracellular vesicles in peritoneal fluid was markedly different between women with ovarian endometrioma and controls. Alpha diversity analysis showed no significant differences in species richness between groups, but beta diversity analysis revealed distinct microbial community shifts in the endometriosis group (p < 0.001). Taxonomic profiling demonstrated increased abundances of Acinetobacter, Pseudomonas, Streptococcus, and Enhydrobacter in women with ovarian endometrioma. Conversely, Propionibacterium, Actinomyces, and Rothia were significantly decreased in the endometriosis group (p < 0.05).
At the family level, Pseudomonadaceae and Moraxellaceae were notably enriched in the endometriosis samples, while Veillonellaceae, Propionibacteriaceae, and Actinomycetaceae were reduced. The data also indicated a significant increase in Pseudomonadales and a decline in Actinomycetales at the order level (p < 0.05). These findings suggest that the altered microbiota composition in extracellular vesicles of the peritoneal fluid may contribute to the inflammatory microenvironment observed in ovarian endometrioma.
Microbial Group
Ovarian Endometrioma
Clinical Implications
Acinetobacter
Increased
Linked to inflammation and immune response in the peritoneal cavity
Pseudomonas
Increased
Associated with pathogenic processes in ovarian endometrioma
Streptococcus
Increased
Potential contributor to local inflammation and immune modulation
Enhydrobacter
Increased
May play a role in extracellular signaling and immune responses
Propionibacterium
Decreased
Loss may disrupt protective anti-inflammatory effects
Indicates loss of protective and commensal populations
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study provides compelling evidence that women with ovarian endometrioma possess distinct microbial communities in the peritoneal environment, carried via extracellular vesicles. The enrichment of pathogenic genera such as Pseudomonas and Acinetobacter, alongside the depletion of protective taxa like Propionibacterium and Actinomyces, suggests that these microbial imbalances could play a role in local inflammation and disease progression. These findings underscore the potential of microbiota-derived EVs as non-invasive biomarkers for ovarian endometrioma and open the door for targeted microbiome-modulating therapies to alleviate inflammatory responses and halt disease progression.
Anti-Endometriotic Effects of Pueraria Flower Extract: A Novel Therapeutic Approach
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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The study explored the effects of Pueraria Flower Extract (PFE) on human endometriotic cells and mice, showing that PFE inhibits cell adhesion, migration, and MMP expression, and reduces lesion formation. Highlighting PFE's potential as a non-invasive treatment alternative, the research provides insights into molecular targets for future therapies in managing endometriosis, a condition with limited current treatments.
What was studied?
This study investigated the anti-endometriotic effects of Pueraria flower extract (PFE) on human endometriotic cells and a mouse model of endometriosis. It evaluated the extract's impact on cellular adhesion, migration, and the expression of matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs), key factors in the establishment of endometriotic lesion.
Who was studied?
The research focused on human-immortalized endometriotic cell lines (11Z and 12Z) and mesothelial Met5A cells in vitro. Additionally, a mouse model of induced endometriosis was used to evaluate the effects of PFE in vivo.
What were the most important findings?
Inhibition of Cell Adhesion and Migration: PFE significantly suppressed the adhesion of endometriotic cells to mesothelial cells and reduced cell migration in wound-healing and transwell assays.
Reduction in MMP Expression: PFE decreased both mRNA and protein levels of MMP-2 and MMP-9, enzymes crucial for tissue invasion and lesion establishment in endometriosis.
ERK1/2 Signaling Activation: The study demonstrated that PFE activates the ERK1/2 pathway, which played a role in inhibiting cell migration. This effect was reversed when an ERK1/2 inhibitor was introduced.
Lesion Suppression in Mice: Oral administration of PFE to mice significantly reduced the number of endometriotic lesions without causing toxicity or weight loss.
Role of Isoflavones: Major isoflavones such as tectorigenin were identified as active compounds in PFE, contributing to its anti-endometriotic effects.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings suggest that PFE and its active compounds, particularly tectorigenin, could serve as potential therapeutic agents for endometriosis. By targeting matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) activity and the ERK1/2 pathway, PFE may provide a novel, non-hormonal intervention to mitigate lesion formation and progression. This research highlights the potential for plant-derived compounds in developing treatments that reduce the recurrence and side effects associated with conventional endometriosis therapies.
Antibiotic therapy with metronidazole reduces endometriosis disease progression in mice: a potential role for gut microbiota
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This study shows that antibiotic therapy with metronidazole reduces endometriotic lesion growth and inflammation in mice by targeting the gut microbiota, particularly Bacteroidetes. Findings suggest that microbiota-targeted treatments may offer new therapeutic avenues for endometriosis management.
What Was Studied?
This study examined the impact of antibiotic therapy with metronidazole on endometriosis disease progression in a mouse model, exploring its potential effects on gut microbiota and inflammation. Researchers induced endometriosis in mice through surgical transplantation of uterine tissue onto the peritoneal wall. Mice were then treated with either broad-spectrum antibiotics (vancomycin, neomycin, metronidazole, and ampicillin) or metronidazole alone, with control groups receiving vehicle-only treatment. The primary goal was to determine if modulating gut bacteria through antibiotic therapy could reduce endometriotic lesion growth and inflammation, potentially revealing gut microbiota as a therapeutic target.
Who Was Studied?
The study utilized a well-established mouse model of surgically induced endometriosis, where uterine tissue from estrus-stage mice was autologously transplanted onto the peritoneal wall. Mice were separated into groups receiving either broad-spectrum antibiotics, metronidazole alone, or vehicle treatments. To assess the effect of gut microbiota on disease progression, fecal transplantation experiments were performed, where feces from endometriosis-induced mice were gavaged into metronidazole-treated mice to observe the restoration of lesion growth and inflammation.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The findings demonstrated that antibiotic therapy, particularly with metronidazole, significantly reduced the size and volume of endometriotic lesions in mice. Mice treated with broad-spectrum antibiotics showed a five-fold reduction in lesion size and markedly fewer proliferating cells and macrophages within the lesions compared to vehicle-treated controls (p < 0.01). Metronidazole-treated mice specifically exhibited smaller ectopic lesions than those receiving neomycin or vehicle, suggesting a unique sensitivity of certain gut bacteria to metronidazole's antimicrobial activity. Importantly, inflammation markers, including IL-1β, TNF-α, IL-6, and TGF-β1, were significantly reduced in the peritoneal fluid of metronidazole-treated mice, indicating a diminished inflammatory response.
Additionally, fecal transplantation experiments highlighted the role of gut microbiota in lesion progression. Oral gavage of feces from endometriosis-induced mice restored lesion growth and inflammation in metronidazole-treated mice, implicating gut bacteria as contributors to disease persistence. 16S rRNA sequencing of fecal samples showed that Bacteroidetes were enriched in endometriosis-induced mice and nearly absent in metronidazole-treated mice, suggesting that the suppression of specific microbial populations might underlie the observed therapeutic effects. This reduction in Bacteroidetes correlated with decreased inflammatory responses and smaller lesion sizes, underscoring the interplay between gut microbiota and endometriosis pathology.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study
The study provides compelling evidence that targeting the gut microbiota with antibiotics like metronidazole can effectively reduce endometriotic lesion growth and inflammation in a mouse model. The findings suggest that Bacteroidetes may contribute to lesion persistence and immune activation, and their depletion through metronidazole treatment alleviates these pathological effects. This raises the possibility of microbiota-targeted therapies as a novel approach to managing endometriosis, potentially offering a non-hormonal alternative to traditional treatments. Furthermore, the study highlights the significance of gut microbiota modulation in controlling systemic and local inflammatory responses, paving the way for research into gut-mediated mechanisms of endometriosis and microbiome-based therapeutic strategies.
Association between endometriosis and risk of histological subtypes of ovarian cancer: a pooled analysis of case–control studies
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Endometriosis significantly increases the risk of clear-cell, low-grade serous, and endometrioid ovarian cancers. This study highlights the need for subtype-specific ovarian cancer surveillance and prevention strategies.
This study examined the association between endometriosis and the risk of specific histological subtypes of ovarian cancer. It involved a pooled analysis of 13 Ovarian Cancer Association Consortium case-control studies. The research aimed to clarify whether the increased risk associated with endometriosis extended to all invasive histological subtypes of ovarian cancer or was limited to specific subtypes.
Who Was Studied?
The study analyzed data from 13,226 controls and 9,818 women with ovarian cancer (7,911 with invasive and 1,907 with borderline ovarian cancer). Among these, 738 women with invasive cancer and 168 with borderline cancer reported a history of endometriosis. The data collection spanned multiple international sites and included self-reported histories of endometriosis.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study found that a history of endometriosis significantly increased the risk for three specific subtypes of invasive ovarian cancer: clear-cell, low-grade serous, and endometrioid cancers. The odds ratios for these associations were 3.05, 2.11, and 2.04, respectively. In contrast, no significant association was observed with high-grade serous or mucinous subtypes, nor with borderline ovarian cancers. The findings suggest that endometriosis acts as a precursor lesion for clear-cell and endometrioid ovarian cancers, with molecular similarities supporting this hypothesis. Notably, the association with low-grade serous cancer requires further study, as this subtype showed distinct molecular characteristics, such as a higher likelihood of KRAS or BRAF mutations compared to TP53 mutations in high-grade serous cancers.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
This study underscores the need for clinicians to recognize the increased risk of specific ovarian cancer subtypes in women with endometriosis. Understanding the mechanisms behind the malignant transformation of endometriosis could enable the identification of high-risk individuals for tailored surveillance or preventive strategies, such as risk-reducing surgery. The study also highlights the importance of considering histological subtypes in ovarian cancer research, reflecting its heterogeneous nature and the need for subtype-specific prevention, screening, and treatment approaches.
Associations Between Endometriosis and Gut Microbiota
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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The gut microbiota has been associated with many diseases, including endometriosis. However, very few studies have been conducted on this topic in human. This study aimed to investigate the association between endometriosis and gut microbiota. Women with endometriosis (N=66) were identified at the Department of Gynaecology and each patient was matched with three controls (N=198) from the general population. All participants answered questionnaires about socioeconomic data, medical history, and gastrointestinal symptoms and passed stool samples. Gut bacteria were analyzed using 16S ribosomal RNA sequencing, and in total, 58 bacteria were observed at genus level in both patients with endometriosis and controls. Comparisons of the microbiota between patients and controls and within the endometriosis cohort were performed. Both alpha and beta diversities were higher in controls than in patients. With the false discovery rate q<0.05, abundance of 12 bacteria belonging to the classes Bacilli, Bacteroidia, Clostridia, Coriobacteriia, and Gammaproteobacter differed significantly between patients and controls. Differences observed between patients with or without isolated ovarian endometriosis, involvement of the gastrointestinal tract, gastrointestinal symptoms, or hormonal treatment disappeared after calculation with false discovery rate. These findings indicate that the gut microbiota may be altered in endometriosis patients.
What Was Studied?
This study investigated the association between endometriosis and gut microbiota. Conducted at Skåne University Hospital in Sweden, the research aimed to understand how the gut microbiome differs in women diagnosed with endometriosis compared to healthy controls. The study included 66 women with endometriosis confirmed through laparoscopy or laparotomy and 198 age, BMI, and smoking-matched controls. Stool samples from both groups were analyzed using 16S ribosomal RNA sequencing to identify bacterial composition at the genus level. The primary objective was to compare the diversity and abundance of gut microbiota between the two groups and explore any microbiome changes correlated with endometriosis characteristics such as disease localization, gastrointestinal symptoms, or hormonal treatment.
Who Was Studied?
The study examined 66 women diagnosed with endometriosis recruited from the Department of Gynaecology at Skåne University Hospital. These participants were matched with 198 controls from the Malmö Offspring Study (MOS), ensuring similarities in age, BMI, and smoking status. Women in the endometriosis group were diagnosed based on clinical criteria, confirmed through surgical procedures, and were excluded if they had comorbid gastrointestinal conditions like Crohn's disease, ulcerative colitis, or irritable bowel syndrome (IBS). The control group, drawn from a population-based cohort, also passed stool samples and completed questionnaires about their medical history and gastrointestinal symptoms.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study found significant differences in gut microbiota diversity and composition between women with endometriosis and healthy controls. Notably, alpha and beta diversities were higher in the control group, suggesting a richer and more varied microbial population compared to endometriosis patients. At the genus level, 12 bacterial genera belonging to the classes Bacteroidia, Clostridia, Coriobacteriia, Bacilli, and Gammaproteobacteria differed significantly between groups. For instance, Bacteroides and Parabacteroides were elevated in endometriosis patients, while Paraprevotella and Lachnospira were found in lower abundance compared to controls. Additionally, there was a distinct alteration in the microbial community within the endometriosis cohort based on disease localization and the presence of gastrointestinal symptoms. Patients with isolated ovarian endometriosis exhibited higher levels of Lachnobacterium and Adlercreutzia compared to those with widespread lesions. Furthermore, the presence of gastrointestinal symptoms correlated with lower levels of SMB53 (Clostridia) and Odoribacter (Bacteroidia), while Prevotella was more abundant. Interestingly, hormone treatment was associated with higher levels of Blautia and Ruminococcus in the Clostridia class, along with Butyricimonas in the Bacteroidia class. These findings support the hypothesis that gut microbiota may be altered in endometriosis patients, with distinct microbial signatures linked to hormonal therapy and gastrointestinal involvement.
Increased in Endometriosis Patients
Decreased in Endometriosis Patients
Bacteroides (Bacteroidia)
Paraprevotella (Bacteroidia)
Parabacteroides (Bacteroidia)
Lachnospira (Clostridia)
Blautia (Clostridia) with hormone treatment
Odoribacter (Bacteroidia) with GI symptoms
Ruminococcus (Clostridia) with hormone treatment
SMB53 (Clostridia) with GI symptoms
Butyricimonas (Bacteroidia) with hormone treatment
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
The study's findings suggest that endometriosis is associated with specific alterations in gut microbiota, which could play a role in the pathophysiology of the disease. The reduced microbial diversity in endometriosis patients points towards a potential dysbiosis that may exacerbate inflammation and modulate estrogen metabolism, both of which are critical in the pathogenesis of endometriosis. Furthermore, specific bacterial shifts linked to hormone treatment indicate that gut microbiota could be influenced by estrogen-related therapies, potentially affecting symptom severity and disease progression. Understanding these microbial associations opens the door to novel therapeutic strategies, such as targeted probiotics or microbiome-based interventions, to alleviate gastrointestinal symptoms and modulate disease activity in endometriosis patients. This research also underlines the need for further studies to explore the bidirectional relationship between gut microbiota and estrogen regulation in estrogen-dependent conditions like endometriosis.
Causal effects of gut microbiome on endometriosis: a two-sample Mendelian randomization study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This Mendelian randomization study found a causal relationship between gut microbiota and endometriosis. Porphyromonadaceae and Anaerotruncus increased risk, while Clostridiales_vadin_BB60_group, Oxalobacteraceae, Desulfovibrio, Haemophilus, and Holdemania were protective. These findings support microbiome-targeted interventions as a potential treatment strategy for endometriosis.
What was studied?
This study investigated the causal relationship between gut microbiome composition and endometriosis using a two-sample Mendelian randomization (MR) approach. The researchers aimed to determine whether specific gut microbiota taxa have a direct causal effect on endometriosis risk rather than a mere observational association.
Who was studied?
The study utilized genome-wide association study (GWAS) summary statistics from two major datasets to investigate the causal relationship between gut microbiota and endometriosis. Exposure data on the gut microbiome were obtained from the MiBioGen consortium, which included 18,340 individuals across 24 cohorts from multiple countries. Outcome data for endometriosis were sourced from the FinnGen consortium, comprising 13,456 endometriosis cases and 100,663 controls, all of European ancestry.
Key Findings
The study identified five bacterial taxa with a protective effect against endometriosis and two taxa associated with increased risk. Protective taxa included Clostridiales_vadin_BB60_group, Oxalobacteraceae, Desulfovibrio, Haemophilus, and Holdemania, all of which exhibited odds ratios (OR) below 1, indicating a reduced likelihood of endometriosis in individuals with higher genetic abundance of these bacteria. In contrast, Porphyromonadaceae and Anaerotruncus were associated with increased endometriosis risk, with ORs above 1, suggesting their potential involvement in disease progression. Sensitivity analyses confirmed the robustness of these findings, as no evidence of pleiotropy or heterogeneity was detected, reinforcing the reliability of the causal associations.
Bacterial Taxa
P-Value
Effect
Clostridiales_vadin_BB60_group
< 0.01
Protective
Oxalobacteraceae
0.014
Protective
Desulfovibrio
0.046
Protective
Haemophilus
0.039
Protective
Holdemania
0.025
Protective
Porphyromonadaceae
0.027
Risk
Anaerotruncus
< 0.01
Risk
Greatest Implications
The findings of this study provide genetic evidence supporting a causal relationship between gut microbiota and endometriosis, reinforcing previous observational research. This suggests that targeting the gut microbiome through interventions such as probiotics, dietary modifications, or microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) could be a novel approach to managing or preventing endometriosis. The identification of specific bacterial taxa that either increase or decrease endometriosis risk offers a foundation for developing microbiome-targeted interventions tailored to patient needs. Additionally, these results support the estrobolome hypothesis, which proposes that gut microbiota influence estrogen metabolism, potentially contributing to the pathophysiology of endometriosis. By establishing a causal link, this study highlights the importance of gut microbiota in the broader endocrine and inflammatory mechanisms underlying the disease, paving the way for further research into microbiome-based therapeutic strategies.
Correlation of calprotectin serum levels with degrees of endometriosis: A cross-sectional study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
•
Nutritional Immunity
Nutritional Immunity
Nutritional immunity restricts metal access to pathogens, leveraging sequestration, transport, and toxicity to control infections and immunity.
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This study found no significant correlation between serum calprotectin levels and the severity of endometriosis. Despite its known role as an inflammatory biomarker, calprotectin did not differentiate between stages of disease, suggesting limited utility in clinical staging and reinforcing the need for localized biomarker assessment.
What was studied?
This cross-sectional study aimed to evaluate the correlation between serum calprotectin levels and the severity of endometriosis. The primary objective was to determine whether calprotectin could serve as a non-invasive biomarker to distinguish the different stages of endometriosis severity based on the revised American Society for Reproductive Medicine (ASRM) classification.
Who was studied?
A total of 46 women diagnosed with endometriosis undergoing laparoscopic or laparotomy procedures at three tertiary hospitals in Jakarta, Indonesia, between July 2017 and April 2018 were enrolled. Blood samples were collected one day prior to surgery, and serum calprotectin was measured using the Phical® ELISA method. Diagnosis and classification of endometriosis were confirmed via histopathological examination following surgery. Exclusion criteria included comorbidities such as diabetes, hypertension, infections, liver disease, or recent corticosteroid/immunosuppressant therapy.
Most important findings:
The distribution of endometriosis stages among participants was as follows: minimal (15.2%), mild (39.1%), moderate (34.8%), and severe (10.9%). Median serum calprotectin levels showed modest variation across groups, with the highest levels in the minimal group (138.98 ng/mL) and the lowest in the mild group (121.49 ng/mL). However, Spearman’s correlation analysis revealed no statistically significant correlation between serum calprotectin levels and the degree of endometriosis (r = –0.16; p = 0.278).
Interestingly, age and BMI showed a moderate positive correlation with endometriosis severity (r = 0.37 and 0.36, respectively; both p < 0.05), which could imply that these host factors are more predictive of disease progression than calprotectin levels.
Despite calprotectin’s recognized value as a biomarker in other chronic inflammatory conditions such as rheumatoid arthritis, obesity, and Crohn’s disease—where it reflects systemic inflammation and correlates with CRP and disease activity—the results of this study do not support its utility in endometriosis staging. The authors acknowledge that calprotectin's utility may be more pronounced in localized samples such as feces or peritoneal fluid rather than systemic circulation, where inflammation may not be as detectably elevated in endometriosis.
Implications:
This study provides evidence against the clinical utility of serum calprotectin as a non-invasive biomarker for grading endometriosis severity. While calprotectin is a well-established marker of inflammation in other systemic and localized inflammatory diseases, its lack of correlation with endometriosis stages underscores the complexity of the disease's inflammatory profile. The findings suggest that systemic markers may not adequately reflect the localized inflammatory microenvironment of endometriotic lesions. The authors recommend further research exploring calprotectin in peritoneal fluid or fecal samples, which may better capture localized inflammatory processes relevant to endometriosis pathogenesis.
Correlation of fecal metabolomics and gut microbiota in mice with endometriosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
•
This study identifies gut microbiota and metabolomic shifts in endometriosis, with altered bile acid biosynthesis and ALA metabolism. Elevated CDCA and UDCA levels, coupled with microbial changes, suggest potential biomarkers and therapeutic targets for managing inflammation in endometriosis.
What Was Studied?
This study investigated the correlation between fecal metabolomics and gut microbiota in mice with endometriosis. Using a controlled experimental design, researchers constructed an endometriosis (EMS) mouse model with female C57BL/6J mice and analyzed fecal samples through non-targeted metabolomics and 16S rRNA sequencing. The primary objective was to identify differential metabolites and microbial compositions that could serve as biomarkers for endometriosis and provide insight into the metabolic pathways affected by gut dysbiosis in EMS. Functional prediction of the gut microbiota was performed using PICRUSt, and metabolite-microbiota correlations were assessed through Spearman correlation coefficients.
Who Was Studied
The study involved female C57BL/6J mice, which were divided into two groups: an EMS group and a control group. Endometriosis was induced in the EMS group through intraperitoneal injection of endometrial fragments, while the control group received saline injections with adipose tissue. Fecal samples were collected from both groups, processed for liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS), and subjected to 16S rRNA sequencing to map microbial diversity and metabolic profiles. The study aimed to simulate the inflammatory and microbiome-related characteristics of endometriosis in humans by using this established animal model.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study identified significant shifts in both fecal metabolomics and gut microbiota composition in mice with endometriosis compared to controls. A total of 156 named differential metabolites were screened, with key changes observed in pathways linked to secondary bile acid biosynthesis and alpha-linolenic acid (ALA) metabolism. Notably, there was an increased abundance of chenodeoxycholic acid (CDCA) and ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA) alongside a decreased presence of ALA and 12,13-EOTrE in the EMS mice. Microbial diversity was reduced in the EMS group, with a specific loss in Bacteroides and Firmicutes, contrasted by increases in Proteobacteria and Verrucomicrobia. At the genus level, there was a marked increase in Allobaculum, Akkermansia, Parasutterella, and Rikenella, with significant decreases in Lachnospiraceae, Lactobacillus, and Bacteroides. Functional predictions revealed alterations in oxidative phosphorylation, alanine, aspartate, glutamate metabolism, and starch and sucrose metabolism. Importantly, the study identified Sphingobium and Pseudomonas viridiflava as consistently enriched in EMS mice, suggesting their potential role in inflammation and metabolic disruption. The correlation analysis demonstrated strong associations between specific metabolites (like CDCA and ALA) and microbial shifts, indicating a complex interaction between gut dysbiosis and metabolic imbalances in endometriosis.
Parameter
Findings in EMS Mice
Metabolomic Changes
156 differential metabolites identified, with key changes in secondary bile acid biosynthesis and alpha-linolenic acid (ALA) metabolism.
Increased Metabolites
Chenodeoxycholic acid (CDCA) and Ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA).
Decreased Metabolites
Alpha-linolenic acid (ALA) and 12,13-EOTrE.
Microbial Diversity
Overall reduction in diversity; significant losses in Bacteroides and Firmicutes.
Phylum-Level Shifts
Proteobacteria and Verrucomicrobia significantly increased in the EMS group.
Genus-Level Increases
Allobaculum, Akkermansia, Parasutterella, and Rikenella.
Genus-Level Decreases
Lachnospiraceae, Lactobacillus, and Bacteroides.
Functional Pathway Alterations
Disrupted oxidative phosphorylation, alanine, aspartate, glutamate metabolism, and starch and sucrose metabolism.
Unique Enrichments
Sphingobium and Pseudomonas viridiflava enriched in EMS mice, indicating roles in inflammation and metabolic disruption.
Metabolite-Microbiota Correlations
Strong correlations between CDCA, ALA, and microbial shifts, suggesting complex interactions contributing to dysbiosis and inflammation.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
The findings suggest that endometriosis is associated with profound shifts in gut microbiota and fecal metabolomics, which may contribute to chronic inflammation and disease persistence. The increased levels of chenodeoxycholic acid (CDCA) and ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA), combined with reductions in ALA, indicate that bile acid metabolism and fatty acid dysregulation are central to the pathogenesis of endometriosis. The enrichment of Allobaculum, Akkermansia, Parasutterella, and Rikenella in the gut microbiota suggests these species could be contributing to local and systemic inflammation, disrupting gut barrier integrity. These microbial and metabolomic signatures could serve as non-invasive biomarkers for diagnosing endometriosis and may offer new therapeutic targets focused on restoring microbial balance and metabolic homeostasis. Furthermore, the study highlights the critical role of gut microbiota in modulating immune responses and metabolic pathways, paving the way for microbiome-targeted treatments in endometriosis management.
Does Exposure of Lead and Cadmium Affect the Endometriosis?
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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The study links lead and cadmium exposure to increased endometriosis risk, emphasizing lead's role at low blood levels and synergistic effects with cadmium. It advocates for strict monitoring and preventive measures to minimize exposure.
What Was Studied?
This study investigated the association between occupational exposure to lead and cadmium and the risk of developing endometriosis (EM) among South Korean female workers. Utilizing medical and biological data from over 26,000 individuals who underwent lead-associated medical examinations between 2000 and 2004, the study examined blood lead levels (BLLs), co-exposure to cadmium, and their relationship with hospital admissions for EM.
Who Was Studied?
The study focused on South Korean female workers exposed to lead as part of their occupation. These individuals underwent specialized medical examinations. A total of 26,542 workers were included, with the study comparing EM admissions in lead-exposed workers against the general population and noise-exposed workers as control groups.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study found that lead exposure, even at relatively low levels (BLLs < 5 µg/dL), was significantly associated with an increased risk of EM. The standard admission rate (SAR) for EM in lead-exposed workers was 1.24 times higher than the general population, and for workers with BLLs < 5 µg/dL, it was 1.44 times higher. Co-exposure to lead and cadmium demonstrated a synergistic effect, amplifying the risk of EM beyond what could be expected from exposure to either metal alone. While cadmium exposure alone did not show a statistically significant association with EM, the relative excess risk due to interaction (RERI) was 0.33, indicating a notable combined impact of these metals. The study also highlighted that oxidative stress induced by heavy metal exposure likely underpins these effects, with mechanisms involving the disruption of antioxidant defenses and cellular damage.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
This research underscores the need to minimize exposure to heavy metals, particularly lead and cadmium, among female workers. It also calls for rigorous monitoring of blood lead and cadmium levels in workplaces to mitigate their combined effects. The findings are critical for understanding the environmental and occupational contributors to EM and suggest that policies limiting heavy metal exposure could have a substantial public health impact, especially for at-risk populations.
Effect of endometriosis on the fecal bacteriota composition of mice during the acute phase of lesion formation
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This study found that endometriosis does not induce significant changes in the fecal bacteriota composition during the acute phase of lesion formation. Findings suggest that gut microbial shifts in endometriosis may emerge only during chronic disease stages, highlighting the need for targeted microbiome interventions over prolonged periods.
What Was Studied?
This study investigated the effect of endometriosis on the fecal bacteriota composition of mice during the acute phase of lesion formation. Researchers aimed to understand whether the establishment of endometriotic lesions would influence gut microbial communities, potentially contributing to systemic inflammation or metabolic disruptions associated with the disease. Uterine tissue fragments from GFP+ donor mice were transplanted into the peritoneal cavity of GFP- wild-type mice, inducing endometriotic lesions. Sham-transplanted mice served as controls. Fecal samples were collected three days before, and at 7 and 21 days after lesion induction, and analyzed through 16S rRNA gene sequencing to map changes in microbial composition.
Who Was Studied?
The study involved C57BL/6 wild-type mice as the experimental model for endometriosis. The model was established by transplanting uterine tissue fragments from GFP+ donor mice into the peritoneal cavity of GFP- recipient mice, allowing for easy visualization of endometriotic lesions. Sham-transplanted animals, which received physiological saline solution instead of tissue fragments, served as controls. The study analyzed fecal samples collected at specific time points to assess microbiota changes during the acute phase of endometriosis development.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study found that the induction of endometriosis did not produce significant changes in the composition of the fecal bacteriota during the acute phase of lesion formation (7 and 21 days post-transplantation). Despite the successful establishment of endometriotic lesions and typical histomorphology observed under fluorescence microscopy, alpha and beta diversity analyses showed no substantial differences between the endometriosis-induced group and sham controls. Detailed sequencing revealed a highly diverse microbial community dominated by Bacteroidales S24-7 group, Lactobacillus, Prevotellaceae UCG-001 group, and Lachnospiraceae NK4A136 group in both experimental and control mice. Notably, contrary to previous studies suggesting dysbiosis following endometriosis induction, this investigation showed microbial stability throughout the acute phase of lesion formation. The researchers speculated that gut microbiota disturbances may become apparent only in the chronic stages of the disease, reflecting long-term inflammation and tissue remodeling. Furthermore, the study emphasized that strict statistical controls, including the removal of singleton OTUs and application of false discovery rate (FDR) corrections, were applied to prevent false positives. These rigorous controls could have contributed to the observed stability of gut microbiota composition, challenging earlier reports of rapid dysbiosis post-endometriosis induction.
Parameter
Findings in Endometriosis-Induced Mice
Microbiota Composition
No significant changes in the overall composition of fecal bacteriota during the acute phase (7 and 21 days post-transplantation).
Alpha Diversity
No substantial differences observed between endometriosis-induced mice and sham controls, indicating microbial richness and evenness remained stable.
Beta Diversity
Analysis showed no significant shifts in microbial community structure between experimental and control groups.
Dominant Genera
Microbiota was dominated by Bacteroidales S24-7 group, Lactobacillus, Prevotellaceae UCG-001 group, and Lachnospiraceae NK4A136 group in both groups.
Impact of Lesion Formation
Induction of endometriosis did not disrupt gut microbiota composition during the acute phase of lesion establishment.
Statistical Controls Applied
Strict controls, including false discovery rate (FDR) corrections and removal of singleton OTUs, were applied to enhance result reliability.
Hypothesized Long-Term Effects
Authors suggest that gut dysbiosis may only emerge in chronic stages of endometriosis, not during initial lesion establishment.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
The study challenges prevailing hypotheses that endometriosis immediately disrupts gut microbiota during the early phases of lesion formation. The findings suggest that intestinal dysbiosis may not occur in the acute phase but could instead be a consequence of chronic inflammation and prolonged disease progression. This insight implies that gut microbial changes observed in patients with endometriosis might reflect long-term disease dynamics rather than initial lesion establishment. These results underscore the need for longitudinal studies to distinguish between acute and chronic microbiome shifts in endometriosis. The findings also highlight the importance of standardized microbiome analysis protocols and strict statistical measures to accurately assess microbial composition in endometriosis models. Understanding the timeline of microbiome alterations in endometriosis could guide therapeutic strategies targeting microbial populations in chronic disease stages rather than acute phases.
Elevated Lactoferrin and Anti-Lactoferrin Antibodies in Endometriosis: Autoimmune and Microbiome Insights
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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This study confirms elevated lactoferrin and anti-lactoferrin antibody levels in endometriosis, suggesting autoimmune involvement. Anti-lactoferrin drops post-surgery, hinting at a biomarker role, while lactoferrin ties to inflammation and potential microbiome links.
What Was Studied?
This study, conducted by Mori-Yamanaka et al. and published in Tohoku J. Exp. Med. in 2023, definitively explored serum lactoferrin (LTF) and anti-lactoferrin antibody (aLF) levels in patients with endometriosis. Endometriosis, a chronic inflammatory condition marked by ectopic endometrial-like tissue, remains poorly understood in terms of its underlying mechanisms. The researchers aimed to determine whether LTF, an iron-binding glycoprotein with antimicrobial and anti-inflammatory properties, and aLF, an autoantibody tied to immune dysregulation, play roles in the disease’s pathology. By measuring these markers in the blood of endometriosis patients compared to controls and assessing changes after surgical intervention, the study sought to uncover potential links to inflammation and autoimmunity. Although the study did not directly investigate microbiome signatures, LTF’s known role in modulating microbial environments suggests a possible indirect connection to gut or pelvic microbiome alterations in endometriosis.
Who Was Studied?
The research focused on 68 Japanese women undergoing surgery at Shiga University of Medical Science Hospital between November 2020 and May 2022. Of these, 51 had surgically and histopathologically confirmed endometriosis, spanning all stages (I-IV) per the revised American Society for Reproductive Medicine classification. The remaining 17 women, who underwent surgery for other gynecological issues like uterine myomas or benign ovarian tumors, served as controls without endometriosis. This cohort provided a robust sample to compare LTF and aLF levels across disease states and post-treatment outcomes, offering clinicians a clear demographic context for interpreting the findings.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study conclusively demonstrated that serum LTF and aLF levels are significantly elevated in endometriosis patients compared to controls, with p-values of 0.016 and 0.028, respectively. These elevations were particularly striking in advanced stages (III and IV), showing stronger statistical significance (LTF: p = 0.024; aLF: p = 0.016) compared to controls. Following surgery in 21 patients, aLF levels dropped markedly (p < 0.001), while LTF levels showed no significant change (p = 0.102). Notably, 43% of endometriosis patients exhibited aLF levels above the reference range, a prevalence akin to autoimmune conditions. Although microbiome data wasn’t directly assessed, LTF’s antimicrobial properties hint at potential microbial associations, possibly involving dysbiosis in the pelvic or gut microbiome, which could exacerbate inflammation in endometriosis. These findings position LTF and aLF as key players in the disease’s inflammatory and possibly autoimmune landscape.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
This study’s implications are profound for clinicians managing endometriosis. The elevated aLF levels, mirroring patterns in autoimmune diseases, strongly suggest that endometriosis involves an autoimmune component, potentially driven by immune responses to microbial or endogenous triggers. This insight could shift treatment paradigms toward immune-modulating therapies. Moreover, the significant post-surgical decline in aLF levels establishes it as a promising biomarker for monitoring disease activity and treatment success, offering a practical tool for clinical decision-making. While LTF’s role remains less clear, its persistence post-surgery and antimicrobial function imply a complex interplay with inflammation and possibly the microbiome, warranting further investigation into microbial signatures like those of Lactobacillus or Prevotella, known to influence pelvic health. Despite the study’s limitations—its small sample and surgical focus—these findings pave the way for innovative diagnostics and therapies, urging clinicians to consider immune and microbial factors in endometriosis care.
Endometriosis induces gut microbiota alterations in mice
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This study demonstrates that endometriosis induces gut microbiota alterations in a murine model, particularly increasing the Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes ratio and enriching Bifidobacterium and Parasutterella. These shifts suggest dysbiosis as a contributing factor to inflammation and immune dysregulation, supporting the potential for microbiota-targeted therapies in endometriosis management.
What Was Studied?
This study investigated the effects of endometriosis on gut microbiota composition in a murine model, specifically evaluating microbial shifts during the progression of endometriosis. Researchers employed a prospective and randomized design, inducing endometriosis in mice through intraperitoneal injection of endometrial tissues. The primary aim was to characterize changes in gut microbiota over time, utilizing 16S ribosomal-RNA gene sequencing to assess microbial diversity and composition at 7, 14, 28, and 42 days post-induction. The experiment included mock groups as controls, which received saline injections instead of endometrial tissue, to account for any procedural effects.
Who Was Studied?
The study involved C57BL6 mice, a commonly used murine model, to mimic endometriosis development. Mice were divided into two groups: those receiving endometrial tissue injections to induce endometriosis, and mock controls receiving only saline. The animals were sacrificed at four different time points (7, 14, 28, and 42 days) for fecal sample collection and microbiota analysis. Researchers conducted 16S rRNA sequencing on these samples to evaluate alterations in microbial communities associated with endometriosis progression.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study revealed that endometriosis induced significant alterations in gut microbiota composition, particularly at 42 days post-induction. Beta diversity analysis demonstrated that the microbial community structure diverged substantially from the mock controls, indicating dysbiosis. At the phylum level, there was an increased Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes ratio, a hallmark often linked to inflammatory conditions. Furthermore, Actinobacteria and Betaproteobacteria were more abundant in the endometriosis group, whereas Bacteroidetes was more dominant in the control group. At the genus level, the study identified increases in Ruminococcaceae-UGG-014, Bifidobacterium, and Parasutterella among endometriosis mice. These microbial shifts suggest that endometriosis disrupts normal gut microbial homeostasis, potentially influencing systemic inflammation and immune modulation. The researchers noted that while alpha diversity remained similar between groups, the specific microbial composition shifted dramatically over the 42-day period. This timeline suggests that gut dysbiosis in endometriosis is progressive and may exacerbate immune system imbalances over time.
Taxonomic Level
Microbiota Findings in Endometriosis-Induced Mice
Phylum Level
Increased Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes ratio. Elevated levels of Actinobacteria and Betaproteobacteria.
Class Level
Enhanced representation of Clostridia and Actinobacteria classes.
Order Level
Notable increase in Lactobacillales and Clostridiales.
Family Level
Significant enrichment of Ruminococcaceae and Bifidobacteriaceae.
Genus Level
Marked increases in Ruminococcaceae-UGG-014, Bifidobacterium, and Parasutterella.
Alpha Diversity
No significant difference in microbial richness or evenness compared to controls.
Beta Diversity
Significant divergence from mock controls, indicating altered microbial community structure.
Inflammatory Associations
Altered microbiota profile is linked to systemic inflammation and immune modulation, suggesting a role in endometriosis progression.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study
The findings underscore the role of gut microbiota dysbiosis in the progression of endometriosis, revealing distinct shifts in microbial populations, especially an elevated Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes ratio. These changes mirror dysbiosis seen in other inflammatory diseases, suggesting that gut microbiota may contribute to systemic inflammation and immune dysfunction in endometriosis. The study highlights the potential for microbiota-targeted therapies to restore gut microbial balance as a therapeutic approach. Additionally, the identification of enriched genera such as Bifidobacterium and Parasutterella suggests potential biomarkers for non-invasive diagnostics. The progressive nature of microbiota alteration observed at 42 days further indicates that early intervention targeting microbial communities could mitigate inflammatory responses and possibly slow disease progression. This research provides a mechanistic link between gut dysbiosis and endometriosis pathology, paving the way for microbiome-based therapeutic strategies.
Exploring the link between dietary zinc intake and endometriosis risk: insights from a cross-sectional analysis of American women
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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STOPs
STOPs
A STOP (Suggested Termination Of Practices) is a recommendation that advocates for the discontinuation of certain medical interventions, treatments, or practices based on emerging evidence indicating that these may be ineffective, harmful, or counterproductive in the management of specific conditions.
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This study links higher dietary zinc intake with increased endometriosis risk among American women, highlighting zinc’s complex role in immune modulation and estrogen-related pathways. Findings emphasize the importance of balanced intake for managing endometriosis risk.
What was studied?
This study investigated the association between dietary zinc intake and the risk of endometriosis among American women. Using cross-sectional data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) collected between 1999 and 2006, the researchers aimed to evaluate whether zinc intake, as a key nutritional factor, was linked to the prevalence of endometriosis. Zinc is known for its essential roles in immune modulation, antioxidative defense, and regulation of matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs), all of which are implicated in endometriosis progression.
Who was studied?
The study included 4,315 American women aged 20–54 years, of whom 331 were diagnosed with endometriosis based on self-reported doctor diagnoses. Participants’ dietary zinc intake was assessed using 24-hour dietary recall interviews, with additional data on demographics, lifestyle, and health covariates collected. Women with extreme caloric intakes or incomplete data were excluded to ensure robustness of results.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed a positive correlation between higher dietary zinc intake and the risk of endometriosis. Women consuming over 14 mg/day of zinc had a significantly higher adjusted odds ratio (1.60, 95% CI: 1.12–2.27, p = 0.009) compared to those with intake ≤8 mg/day. Zinc’s dual role in immune modulation and antioxidative defense was emphasized, particularly its regulation of matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) like MMP-2 and MMP-9, which are key enzymes in tissue remodeling and endometriotic lesion invasion. Interestingly, despite zinc’s known antioxidative and anti-inflammatory roles, excessive intake appeared to have a counterproductive effect. These nuanced findings highlight zinc’s complex role in endometriosis pathophysiology.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This research underscores the potential for dietary zinc as both a marker and modifiable factor in endometriosis risk. It raises questions about zinc’s dualistic effects, where optimal levels may support immune health, but excess intake could exacerbate estrogen-related pathways in endometriosis. Clinicians should be cautious when recommending zinc supplementation for reproductive health, particularly in populations at risk for endometriosis. Furthermore, this study strengthens the biological plausibility of microbiome involvement in endometriosis, as zinc is a crucial cofactor for microbial activity, and its imbalance may alter the gut and pelvic microbiota implicated in the disease.
Fruit and vegetable consumption and risk of endometriosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
•
STOPs
STOPs
A STOP (Suggested Termination Of Practices) is a recommendation that advocates for the discontinuation of certain medical interventions, treatments, or practices based on emerging evidence indicating that these may be ineffective, harmful, or counterproductive in the management of specific conditions.
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Higher fruit intake, especially citrus fruits, was inversely associated with laparoscopically confirmed endometriosis, suggesting a protective effect potentially linked to beta-cryptoxanthin. In contrast, cruciferous vegetables were linked to increased risk, highlighting the complex interplay between diet and endometriosis risk factors.
What Was Studied
This study explored the potential link between the consumption of fruits and vegetables and the risk of laparoscopically confirmed endometriosis. Using data collected from the Nurses' Health Study II, the researchers analyzed dietary habits over a 22-year period, investigating whether certain food groups and nutrients influenced the likelihood of developing endometriosis.
Who Was Studied
Participants included premenopausal women aged 25–42 years who were enrolled in the Nurses' Health Study II cohort. These women completed biennial surveys assessing health status, lifestyle factors, and dietary intake. Those with a history of endometriosis, cancer, infertility, or hysterectomy were excluded from the analysis, ensuring a focused evaluation of diet and disease development.
Most Important Findings
The study found an inverse relationship between fruit consumption, particularly citrus fruits, and the risk of endometriosis. Women who consumed citrus fruits frequently were less likely to develop endometriosis. Conversely, no significant association was found between total vegetable intake and the disease. Cruciferous vegetables, however, were unexpectedly linked to an increased risk. Beta-cryptoxanthin, a nutrient found in citrus fruits, appeared to play a protective role, and the beneficial effects of fruit consumption were especially notable among participants who had a history of smoking. These findings suggest a potential role for specific dietary components in either mitigating or exacerbating the risk of endometriosis.
Implications
The findings highlight the importance of dietary considerations in understanding endometriosis risk. The protective association of citrus fruits underscores the potential of targeted nutritional interventions to reduce risk. The increased risk observed with cruciferous vegetables raises questions about the role of gastrointestinal symptoms, as these vegetables are high in fermentable oligosaccharides, which could exacerbate symptoms and lead to increased diagnosis rates. Future studies exploring these dietary patterns in greater depth are warranted to clarify the underlying mechanisms and to guide dietary recommendations for those at risk.
Gut microbiota imbalance and its correlations with hormone and inflammatory factors in patients with stage 3/4 endometriosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This study explores the gut microbiota imbalance and its correlations with hormone and inflammatory factors in stage 3/4 endometriosis. Key findings reveal distinct microbial shifts linked to hormonal dysregulation and inflammation, offering insights into disease mechanisms and potential microbiome-targeted therapeutic approaches.
What Was Studied?
This study explored the associations between gut microbiota imbalances and hormone and inflammatory factors in patients with stage 3/4 endometriosis (EM). Conducted at Changhai Hospital, Shanghai, the research aimed to determine how gut microbiome alterations correlate with hormone levels and inflammatory markers in women suffering from moderate to severe endometriosis. Using 16S rRNA high-throughput sequencing, researchers analyzed stool samples to compare the gut microbial composition between 12 women diagnosed with stage 3/4 EM and 12 healthy controls. Blood samples were collected to measure serum hormone levels, including estradiol (E2), and inflammatory cytokines, notably IL-8. The primary objective was to identify microbial shifts associated with EM and understand their correlation with hormone imbalances and inflammation, key factors in the pathogenesis of endometriosis.
Who Was Studied?
The study recruited 12 women with a histological diagnosis of stage 3/4 endometriosis from Changhai Hospital and 12 healthy controls, matched for age (18–40 years) and menstrual regularity. Inclusion criteria for the EM group required confirmed diagnoses of moderate to severe endometriosis per the American Fertility Society Revised Classification (1997). All participants were Han women living in Shanghai, with strict exclusion criteria including recent antibiotic or probiotic use, hormonal therapy, pregnancy, and any comorbid gastrointestinal conditions like inflammatory bowel disease. To minimize confounding factors, participants followed a uniform carbohydrate-based diet three days before sampling, and stool samples were collected within three to five days post-menstruation to account for hormonal fluctuation.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study found that women with stage 3/4 endometriosis exhibited a significantly altered gut microbiota profile compared to healthy controls. Notably, the EM group had lower α diversity, indicating reduced microbial richness and variation. At the phylum level, the ratio of Firmicutes to Bacteroidetes was markedly increased in endometriosis patients (3.55 vs. 1.99 in controls), suggesting dysbiosis. The abundance of Actinobacteria, Cyanobacteria, Saccharibacteria, Fusobacteria, and Acidobacteria was significantly higher in the EM group, while Tenericutes were significantly reduced. At the genus level, Bifidobacterium, Blautia, Dorea, Streptococcus, and [Eubacterium] hallii_group showed notable increases, whereas Lachnospira and [Eubacterium] eligens_group were depleted in endometriosis patients. Among the unique genera, Prevotella_7 dominated the EM group, while Coprococcus_2 was prevalent in controls.
Additionally, serum analyses revealed that estradiol (E2) and IL-8 levels were significantly higher in endometriosis patients. Correlation analysis indicated that Blautia and Dorea were positively correlated with elevated E2 levels, while Subdoligranulum abundance inversely correlated with IL-8 levels. These microbial shifts also corresponded with enhanced expression of microbial pathways related to "environmental information processing," "endocrine system," and "immune system," highlighting potential links between gut microbiota and hormonal regulation in endometriosis.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
The findings of this study suggest that gut microbiota imbalances are closely linked with hormone and inflammatory dysregulation in patients with stage 3/4 endometriosis. The observed microbial shifts, particularly the elevated Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes ratio and increased levels of Bifidobacterium, Blautia, Dorea, and Streptococcus, indicate a state of dysbiosis that may exacerbate inflammatory responses and hormonal imbalances. The positive correlation between Blautia and Dorea with estradiol levels points to the gut microbiome's role in modulating estrogen, potentially influencing the development and progression of endometriosis. Furthermore, the association of Subdoligranulum with IL-8 levels suggests a microbial influence on inflammatory cytokine production, which is known to contribute to endometriosis pathophysiology. These insights provide a foundation for exploring microbiome-targeted therapies aimed at restoring microbial balance and modulating hormonal and inflammatory responses in endometriosis patients. This study also underscores the need for further clinical investigations to validate these microbial markers as diagnostic or therapeutic targets.
I Am the 1 in 10—What Should I Eat? A Research Review of Nutrition in Endometriosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This review explores how dietary modifications impact endometriosis progression. Antioxidants, omega-3s, and anti-inflammatory diets show promise in symptom relief and hormonal regulation. Personalized nutrition emerges as a pivotal tool for improving patient outcomes.
What Was Reviewed?
The paper titled "I Am the 1 in 10—What Should I Eat? A Research Review of Nutrition in Endometriosis" provides an extensive review of the role of nutrition in the management and progression of endometriosis. The authors systematically explore various dietary factors and interventions, including antioxidants, polyphenols, omega-3 fatty acids, a low-nickel diet, and the Mediterranean diet, among others, in relation to their effects on inflammation, hormonal modulation, and oxidative stress in endometriosis patients.
Who Was Reviewed?
The review primarily evaluated research studies involving women diagnosed with endometriosis. It integrated findings from human clinical trials, observational studies, and in vitro research to synthesize current evidence on nutritional influences on endometriosis-related symptoms and disease progression.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The review highlighted that endometriosis is a chronic inflammatory and estrogen-dependent condition where dietary modifications can play a pivotal role. It emphasized the following:
Antioxidants and Polyphenols: Foods rich in antioxidants, such as fruits, vegetables, and specific compounds like resveratrol, demonstrated anti-inflammatory and pro-apoptotic effects in reducing endometriosis severity. Polyphenols, especially phytoestrogens, can modulate estrogen activity, impacting endometriotic lesion growth.
Dietary Fats: Omega-3 fatty acids were shown to reduce inflammation and dysmenorrhea, while high consumption of omega-6 and trans fats increased risks.
Specific Diets: The Mediterranean diet, with its anti-inflammatory properties, low-FODMAP and low-nickel diets showed potential benefits in reducing gastrointestinal and systemic symptoms. Gluten-free diets also alleviated pain in a subset of patients.
Dairy and Vitamin D: Dairy consumption, particularly calcium- and vitamin D-rich products, was associated with reduced endometriosis risk. Vitamin D showed immunomodulatory effects, improving inflammatory responses.
Red Meat and Iron Overload: Excessive red meat consumption elevated estrogen and prostaglandin levels, exacerbating endometriosis. The condition was also linked to iron overload in peritoneal fluid, contributing to oxidative stress and infertility.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Review?
The findings underscore the potential for personalized dietary interventions in endometriosis management, emphasizing the integration of anti-inflammatory, low-toxin, and nutrient-rich foods. Clinicians can leverage these insights to recommend diets tailored to reduce inflammation, regulate estrogen metabolism, and mitigate oxidative stress, thereby improving quality of life and fertility outcomes for patients. Furthermore, the review reinforces the importance of microbiome-targeted dietary strategies in addressing endometriosis-related dysbiosis.
Identification of distinct stool metabolites in women with endometriosis for non-invasive diagnosis and potential for microbiota-based therapies
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This study identifies stool-based biomarkers for endometriosis diagnosis and highlights the therapeutic potential of 4-hydroxyindole, a microbiota-derived metabolite, in reducing inflammation and lesion progression.
What Was Studied?
The study examined the stool metabolome of women with endometriosis compared to healthy controls to identify microbiota-derived metabolites with diagnostic and therapeutic potential. Researchers employed metabolomics and microbiota profiling to investigate how altered gut microbiota and their metabolites, specifically 4-hydroxyindole (4HI), affect endometriosis development and progression.
Who Was Studied?
The study included stool samples from 18 women with clinically confirmed endometriosis and 31 healthy control women. The participants’ metabolomic and microbiota profiles were analyzed, followed by functional validation of key metabolites, such as 4HI, in murine and human xenograft models of endometriosis.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study identified a distinct stool metabolome in women with endometriosis, characterized by reduced levels of specific microbiota-derived metabolites, including 4HI. Reduced 4HI was linked to a decreased abundance of beneficial gut bacteria like Faecalibacterium and Lachnospiraceae. 4HI showed remarkable therapeutic potential, as it inhibited the initiation and progression of endometriotic lesions, reduced lesion size and volume, and alleviated inflammation and pain in murine models. Moreover, 4HI was effective in regressing well-developed lesions in pre-clinical models. The metabolic signature also highlighted overlap between endometriosis and inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), suggesting common inflammatory pathways and potential misdiagnosis risks.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
This research revolutionizes the understanding of endometriosis by identifying stool-based biomarkers, particularly 4HI, for non-invasive diagnosis. It highlights 4HI as a promising therapeutic metabolite capable of reducing inflammation and lesion development. These findings pave the way for microbiota-targeted therapies and emphasize the diagnostic overlap with IBD, offering potential for dual-disease screening. Integrating microbiota and metabolomic data offers a novel paradigm for managing endometriosis and related conditions.
Inflammatory cytokines IL-6, IL-10, IL-13, TNF-α and peritoneal fluid flora were associated with infertility in patients with endometriosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This study reveals that inflammatory cytokines (IL-6, IL-10, IL-13, and TNF-α) are significantly elevated in the peritoneal fluid of endometriosis patients with infertility. These findings suggest their potential role as diagnostic biomarkers and therapeutic targets for managing reproductive complications in endometriosis.
What Was Studied?
This study investigated the association of inflammatory cytokines and peritoneal fluid flora with infertility in endometriosis patients. Researchers aimed to explore the correlations between elevated inflammatory markers—IL-6, IL-10, IL-13, and TNF-α—and changes in microbial communities within the peritoneal fluid of women suffering from endometriosis-related infertility. Using Ion Torrent PGM platform sequencing, the microbial composition of the peritoneal fluid was mapped, while ELISA assays were employed to quantify cytokine levels. Logistic regression analysis was conducted to determine the relationship between inflammatory factors and infertility severity.
Who Was Studied?
The study included 55 women diagnosed with endometriosis and infertility and a control group of 30 women without endometriosis or infertility. All participants were treated at a gynecology clinic between June 2014 and July 2017. Peritoneal fluid samples were collected laparoscopically from the vesicouterine and rectovaginal pouches. Women receiving hormonal therapy or antibiotics within two months of surgery were excluded to avoid confounding microbial and inflammatory responses. This patient population allowed for a focused analysis of microbial and cytokine-driven inflammation linked to infertility in endometriosis.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study found that endometriosis patients with infertility exhibited significantly higher levels of IL-6, IL-10, IL-13, and TNF-α in peritoneal fluid compared to controls (p < 0.05). White blood cell counts, including monocytes, neutrophils, eosinophils, and basophils, were also elevated in the peritoneal fluid of endometriosis patients, supporting the inflammatory hypothesis of disease pathogenesis. Analysis of peritoneal fluid microbiota revealed a predominance of Proteobacteria and Firmicutes, with secondary representation from Actinobacteria, Bacteroidetes, Fusobacterium, and Tenericutes. However, there were no significant differences in the abundance of these phyla between endometriosis patients and controls, suggesting that bacteria themselves are not the primary drivers of infertility in endometriosis. Instead, the study highlighted the role of inflammatory cytokines as critical mediators of infertility. Logistic regression analysis confirmed that IL-6, IL-10, IL-13, and TNF-α were significantly correlated with infertility severity in endometriosis patients, suggesting these cytokines may serve as diagnostic biomarkers for assessing infertility risk. Receiver Operating Characteristic (ROC) analysis showed that IL-6 and TNF-α had the highest diagnostic sensitivity, with AUC values of 0.893 for both, indicating their strong predictive value for identifying infertility risk in endometriosis.
Parameter
Findings in Endometriosis Patients with Infertility
Inflammatory Cytokines
Elevated levels of IL-6, IL-10, IL-13, and TNF-α in peritoneal fluid (p < 0.05).
Immune Cell Counts
Increased monocytes, neutrophils, eosinophils, and basophils in peritoneal fluid.
Peritoneal Fluid Microbiota
Dominated by Proteobacteria and Firmicutes, with secondary presence of Actinobacteria, Bacteroidetes, Fusobacterium, and Tenericutes.
Microbial Shifts
No significant differences in bacterial phyla between endometriosis patients and controls.
Diagnostic Biomarkers
IL-6 and TNF-α showed the highest diagnostic sensitivity for infertility with AUC values of 0.893.
Inflammatory Implications
Cytokines linked to immune activation, peritoneal inflammation, and possible inhibition of sperm motility.
Therapeutic Potential
Anti-inflammatory strategies targeting IL-6 and TNF-α could improve fertility outcomes in endometriosis patients.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
This study underscores the critical role of inflammatory cytokines in endometriosis-associated infertility, particularly IL-6, IL-10, IL-13, and TNF-α. These cytokines appear to contribute to peritoneal inflammation, immune cell activation, and possibly sperm motility inhibition, collectively reducing fertility. Although peritoneal fluid microbiota did not significantly differ between endometriosis and control groups, the elevated cytokine levels suggest that microbial translocation and immune responses within the peritoneal cavity may exacerbate inflammation. These findings highlight IL-6 and TNF-α as potential biomarkers for diagnosing infertility in endometriosis patients and suggest that anti-inflammatory therapies targeting these cytokines could improve fertility outcomes. Additionally, the study indicates that monitoring cytokine levels in peritoneal fluid could serve as a non-invasive diagnostic tool for assessing infertility risk in endometriosis, offering a novel approach to reproductive management in affected women.
Iron Overload and Endometriosis: Mechanisms, Implications, and Therapeutic Targets
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Endometriomas
Endometriomas
An endometrioma is a type of ovarian cyst filled with old blood, arising from endometrial tissue outside the uterus, typically causing pain and potentially impacting fertility.
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Infertility
Infertility
Infertility is the inability to conceive after 12 months of regular, unprotected sex. It affects both men and women and can be due to various physical, hormonal, or genetic factors. Treatments include medication, surgery, assisted reproductive technologies, and lifestyle changes.
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Iron overload in endometriosis contributes to oxidative stress, inflammation, and tissue damage, driving lesion persistence and subfertility. Ferroptosis resistance and dysregulated iron metabolism highlight therapeutic opportunities using iron chelators and modulators.
What Was Reviewed?
This systematic review evaluated the role of iron in the pathophysiology of endometriosis. The review synthesized findings from 53 studies, including both human and animal research, to provide a comprehensive understanding of how excess iron contributes to oxidative stress, inflammation, and tissue damage in endometriosis. It also explored iron-related mechanisms such as ferroptosis and the implications for subfertility, symptom severity, and potential malignant transformation.
Who Was Reviewed?
The review included a total of 53 studies: 47 human studies involving 3,556 participants and 6 animal studies. The human studies primarily examined women diagnosed with endometriosis, and the included research utilized various bio-samples such as ovarian endometriomas, peritoneal fluid, and ectopic endometrial lesions. Animal studies focused on endometriosis models to explore systemic and local iron mechanics.
Key Findings
Iron overload is consistently found in endometriotic tissues and peritoneal fluid but not in systemic circulation. This localized iron accumulation stems from repeated bleeding within lesions, leading to oxidative stress and inflammation that perpetuates the ectopic growth of endometrial tissue. Dysregulated iron transport and the failure of homeostatic mechanisms contribute to this pathology, with increased expression of proteins such as divalent metal transporter-1 (DMT1) and decreased ferroportin expression in affected tissues.
Markers of oxidative stress, including lipid peroxidation and DNA damage, were significantly elevated in endometriotic lesions. Aberrant resistance to ferroptosis, an iron-dependent form of cell death, was identified as a key mechanism supporting lesion persistence. Additionally, iron-induced ferroptosis was linked to the production of pro-inflammatory and angiogenic factors like IL-8 and VEGFA, exacerbating inflammation and lesion vascularization.
Iron overload was implicated in subfertility, as higher iron concentrations in ovarian follicles and endometriomas were associated with impaired oocyte quality and development. These findings suggest that iron mechanics might influence folliculogenesis and embryo viability. Importantly, the review highlighted the therapeutic potential of iron chelators and ferroptosis modulators for managing endometriosis.
Implications of the Review
This review underscores the central role of aberrant iron metabolism in the pathogenesis of endometriosis, providing a mechanistic basis for its persistence, progression, and associated complications such as subfertility and chronic pain. Iron-related oxidative stress emerges as a critical driver of inflammation and tissue damage, making it a promising target for therapeutic intervention. Future research should explore the efficacy of iron-targeted treatments, such as chelators, and further elucidate the role of ferroptosis in endometriosis. These insights could lead to novel strategies for mitigating symptom severity and improving fertility outcomes in affected women.
Lactoferrin: a secret weapon in the war against pathogenic bacteria
February 12, 2026
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This review definitively showcases lactoferrin's antimicrobial prowess against resistant bacteria, detailing its mechanisms, effects on virulence factors like biofilms, and potential to restore microbial balance, marking it as a vital therapeutic ally for clinicians.
What Was Reviewed?
This definitive review meticulously examined the antimicrobial properties of lactoferrin (Lf), a cationic glycoprotein integral to the innate immune system, and its potential as a therapeutic weapon against pathogenic bacteria—particularly in the face of escalating antimicrobial resistance. The authors delved into Lf's multifaceted mechanisms of action, which include iron sequestration to starve bacteria, direct disruption of bacterial membranes leading to lysis, and the generation of potent antimicrobial peptides like lactoferricins (Lfcins) and lactoferrampin (Lfampin). The review also explored Lf's ability to neutralize bacterial virulence factors, such as lipopolysaccharides (LPS), secretion systems, and biofilms, across a diverse range of Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria. Additionally, it highlighted Lf's synergistic potential with antibiotics, positioning it as a promising adjuvant in antimicrobial therapies. By synthesizing evidence from in vitro, in vivo, and clinical studies, the review underscored Lf's versatility and safety, emphasizing its approval as a dietary supplement and its accessibility for clinical use.
Who Was Reviewed?
The review encompassed a broad spectrum of studies investigating lactoferrin's antibacterial activity, primarily focusing on in vitro experiments with clinically relevant bacterial species. Key pathogens included Escherichia coli (notably enteropathogenic E. coli [EPEC] and enteroaggregative E. coli [EAEC]), Salmonella Typhimurium, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Streptococcus mutans, Streptococcus pneumoniae, and Helicobacter pylori, among others. It also included research on Lf's effects on bacterial virulence mechanisms, such as biofilm formation and secretion systems, as well as studies exploring its synergistic potential with antibiotics. While the review emphasized laboratory findings, it also touched upon the clinical applications of bovine Lf (bLf), which has been approved as a dietary supplement, highlighting its relevance for both human and veterinary medicine.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The review conclusively demonstrated that lactoferrin (Lf) and its derived peptides exhibit broad-spectrum antimicrobial and anti-biofilm activity against a wide array of pathogenic bacteria, significantly impacting microbiome-relevant taxa. Specific targets include Escherichia coli, Salmonella Typhimurium, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Streptococcus mutans, Streptococcus pneumoniae, Streptococcusagalactiae (GBS) and Helicobacter pylori, alongside others like Bacteroides fragilis and Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron, which are notable in gut microbiota contexts. Lf's mechanisms extend beyond iron sequestration to include direct membrane disruption, inhibition of bacterial adhesion to host cells, and suppression of biofilm formation—a critical factor in chronic infections and dysbiosis. For instance, Lf disrupts biofilms in P. aeruginosa, S. pneumoniae, and S. mutans, key players in microbiome imbalance. It also impairs virulence by targeting secretion systems and proteases in pathogens like H. pylori and Porphyromonas gingivalis. Although not directly focused on microbiome signatures, Lf's ability to modulate bacterial communities—particularly by inhibiting pathogens and biofilms—suggests a pivotal role in maintaining microbial balance in mucosal sites like the gut and oral cavity, reinforced by its presence in breast milk and potential influence on infant microbiome development.
What Are the Greatest Implications of this Review?
The review firmly establishes lactoferrin (Lf) as a versatile, nontoxic therapeutic agent with profound implications for combating antimicrobial resistance, offering clinicians a robust alternative or adjuvant to conventional antibiotics. Its broad-spectrum activity against multidrug-resistant bacteria, without reported resistance development, positions Lf as a critical tool for managing infections where traditional therapies falter. For clinicians focused on microbiome health, Lf's capacity to inhibit biofilms and virulence factors in pathogens like Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Streptococcus pneumoniae suggests it could restore microbial equilibrium in dysbiotic states, such as in the gut or oral cavity. Its safety, affordability, and regulatory approval as a dietary supplement enhance its clinical accessibility for prevention and treatment. Future research into Lf's specific impacts on microbiome signatures and potential synergies with probiotics could further amplify its utility, bridging microbiome research with practical therapeutic applications.
Metabolomics reveals perturbations in endometrium and serum of minimal and mild endometriosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Metabolomic Signature
Metabolomic Signature
Metabolomic signatures are unique metabolite patterns linked to specific biological conditions, identified through metabolomics. They reveal underlying biochemical activities, aiding in disease diagnosis, biomarker development, and personalized medicine. The microbiome significantly affects these signatures, influencing health and disease outcomes through metabolic interactions.
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This study highlights metabolic alterations in endometrial tissue and serum of minimal and mild endometriosis patients, identifying amino acid biomarkers with diagnostic potential. A combined serum panel demonstrated 100% sensitivity and 83% specificity for Stage II diagnosis, offering a promising step toward non-invasive early detection of endometriosis.
What Was Studied?
This study investigated the metabolic perturbations in eutopic endometrial tissue and serum of women with minimal and mild endometriosis (Stages I and II) using ^1H Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR)-based metabolomics. The researchers aimed to identify specific metabolites that could be potential biomarkers for the early, non-invasive diagnosis of endometriosis. The study included multivariate and univariate analyses to identify metabolite changes and their diagnostic potential.
Who Was Studied?
The study included 95 women diagnosed with endometriosis (staged using the revised American Society for Reproductive Medicine criteria) and 24 healthy fertile controls. The participants were recruited from Eastern India and Bangladesh, with exclusion criteria ensuring no confounding conditions such as ovarian tumors or pelvic inflammatory disease. Blood and eutopic endometrial tissue samples were collected during the mid-secretory phase of the menstrual cycle.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
Women with minimal and mild endometriosis exhibited significant metabolic alterations, particularly in amino acids. Alanine, lysine, leucine, proline, and phenylalanine levels were notably dysregulated in serum, with tissue samples showing lower levels of these metabolites, except for proline, which positively correlated with serum levels. Alanine alone demonstrated diagnostic potential for Stage I endometriosis, with 90% sensitivity and 58% specificity.
For Stage II, phenylalanine achieved 100% sensitivity but had lower specificity, while a combined panel of metabolites improved diagnostic accuracy, reaching 100% sensitivity and 83% specificity.
In advanced stages, elevated taurine and myo-inositol levels were linked to increased cell proliferation and angiogenesis, highlighting similarities with tumorigenic processes. These findings underscore the critical role of metabolic shifts in endometriosis progression, particularly involving amino acids and nucleotide synthesis, and suggest their utility in early detection and non-invasive diagnostics.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
This study underscores the potential of metabolomic signatures in elucidating the pathophysiology of endometriosis and developing non-invasive diagnostic tools, especially for early stages where traditional biomarkers like CA-125 are less effective. By identifying a panel of serum metabolites, the research provides a foundation for improving diagnostic accuracy and reducing the need for invasive laparoscopy. Additionally, the observed metabolic similarities between endometriosis and malignancies could inspire further exploration of shared mechanisms, potentially broadening therapeutic targets.
Microbiome of the lower genital tract in Chinese women with endometriosis by 16s-rRNA sequencing technique: a pilot study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This study identifies microbiome shifts in the lower genital tract of Chinese women with endometriosis, marked by Atopobium enrichment and changes in ribosome biogenesis and immune modulation. Findings suggest potential non-invasive biomarkers and therapeutic targets for endometriosis and adenomyosis.
What Was Studied?
This study investigated the microbiome composition of the lower genital tract in Chinese women with endometriosis using 16S rRNA sequencing. Researchers aimed to explore differences in microbial diversity and specific bacterial populations between women diagnosed with endometriosis and healthy controls. The analysis focused on samples collected from the cervical canal, posterior fornix, and uterine cavity to identify distinct microbial profiles and potential biomarkers associated with endometriosis and adenomyosis. A total of 68 participants were included in the study, with 134 samples collected and processed for microbiome analysis.
Who Was Studied?
The study involved 68 women aged 18 to 45, divided into groups: 20 with endometriosis (EM), 19 with adenomyosis (AM), 7 with both adenomyosis and endometriosis (AMEM), and 36 healthy controls (CT). Samples were collected from the cervical canal, posterior fornix, and uterine cavity using sterile techniques to minimize contamination. Participants were excluded if they had bacterial vaginosis (BV), pelvic inflammatory disease, recent antibiotic use, or other infections that might influence microbial composition. This design allowed for a focused investigation of microbiota differences in the lower genital tract specifically related to endometriosis and adenomyosis.
What Were the Most Important Findings
The study found that Lactobacillus remained the predominant genus in the lower genital tract across all groups, reflecting typical vaginal flora. However, significant microbial shifts were observed in women with adenomyosis-endometriosis (AMEM). At the genus level, Atopobium was notably enriched in AMEM patients, representing the most significant microbial difference. While Lactobacillus dominance persisted, AMEM patients exhibited a substantial increase in Coriobacteriaceae and Campylobacteriaceae, indicating a divergence from healthy microbial communities. The AMEM group also displayed elevated levels of Coriobacteriales at the order level, further distinguishing it from other disease groups and controls. Interestingly, LeFSe analysis did not identify specific biomarkers between the cervical canal and posterior fornix, but PICRUSt analysis suggested functional differences, particularly in ribosome biogenesis and two-component system regulation, which may influence immune modulation in endometriosis. The findings suggest that Atopobium may contribute to the pathogenesis of endometriosis through immune disruption, potentially mediated by increased levels of IL-1β, which has been linked to chronic inflammation. The consistent presence of Coriobacteriaceae and Campylobacteriaceae in AMEM further supports a hypothesis of localized dysbiosis contributing to inflammatory processes.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
This study provides evidence of distinct microbiome alterations in the lower genital tract of women with endometriosis, particularly among those with concurrent adenomyosis. The enrichment of Atopobium and Coriobacteriaceae suggests that specific microbial communities may influence inflammatory pathways and disease progression in endometriosis. The identification of ribosome biogenesis and two-component system regulation as significant functional pathways indicates that microbial-induced immune modulation could play a role in lesion persistence and symptom severity. These findings propose Atopobium as a potential microbial biomarker for adenomyosis-endometriosis and highlight the possibility of targeted microbiome-based therapies to disrupt pathological microbial communities. The study underscores the importance of microbial profiling as a non-invasive diagnostic tool for identifying endometriosis-related dysbiosis, potentially leading to earlier detection and intervention.
Microbiome Profile of Deep Endometriosis Patients: Comparison of Vaginal Fluid, Endometrium and Lesion
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This study reveals a distinct microbiome profile in deep endometriosis, with unique bacterial communities in lesion sites, suggesting a role in inflammation and disease progression. Potentially pathogenic genera like Pseudomonas and Alishewanella were abundant, highlighting their possible involvement in endometriotic lesion maintenance and inflammatory responses.
What was studied?
This study explored the microbiome profile in deep endometriosis by comparing the bacterial composition of vaginal fluid, eutopic endometrium, and deep endometriotic lesions. The primary goal was to identify whether distinct microbial patterns exist in these tissue sites of women with deep endometriosis compared to those without the condition. To achieve this, researchers employed high-throughput 16S rRNA sequencing to analyze microbial DNA extracted from tissue samples collected during laparoscopic surgery. The analysis included alpha and beta diversity assessments to determine variations in microbial richness and community structure across different tissue types.
Who was studied?
The study involved 21 participants, including 10 women with histologically confirmed deep endometriosis and 11 healthy controls undergoing laparoscopic surgery for benign gynecological conditions or elective tubal ligation. Samples were obtained from three anatomical sites: vaginal fluid, eutopic endometrium, and deep endometriotic lesions. Participants were carefully screened to exclude those with recent antibiotic, antifungal, or probiotic use, as well as those with autoimmune or inflammatory diseases that could affect microbiome composition.
What were the most important findings?
Microbiome analysis revealed significant differences in bacterial profiles between deep endometriotic lesions, eutopic endometrium, and vaginal fluid. In vaginal fluid and endometrial samples, the microbiome was predominantly composed of Lactobacillus, Gardnerella, Streptococcus, and Prevotella. In contrast, deep endometriotic lesions exhibited a distinct microbial landscape with reduced Lactobacillus and higher relative abundances of Alishewanella, Enterococcus, and Pseudomonas. Notably, Alishewanella and Pseudomonas were almost exclusively found in lesion samples, suggesting these genera may be associated with the inflammatory microenvironment characteristic of deep endometriosis.
Further analysis indicated that deep endometriotic lesions had greater microbial diversity than both vaginal fluid and eutopic endometrium. Beta diversity analysis showed a statistically significant difference in microbial community structure between lesion samples and the other tissue sites (p = 0.036), suggesting that endometriotic tissue supports a unique microbiome that could influence local immune responses and inflammation. These findings point towards a potential role for certain bacteria in the pathogenesis of deep endometriosis, either by promoting inflammation or altering tissue homeostasis.
Microbial Group
Deep Endometriosis Findings
Clinical Implications
Lactobacillus
Decreased in lesion samples
Reduction may contribute to loss of protective barrier
Alishewanella
Increased in lesions
Potential involvement in local inflammation
Pseudomonas
Increased in lesions
Linked to immune modulation and tissue inflammation
Enterococcus
Elevated in lesion samples
Known for its association with chronic inflammation
Alpha Diversity
Increased in lesions compared to other sites
Suggests a unique microbial community fostering inflammation
Beta Diversity
Significantly different from endometrium and vaginal fluid (p = 0.036)
Indicates unique microbial signature in lesions
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The results of this study underscore the presence of a unique microbiome profile in deep endometriotic lesions, characterized by increased microbial diversity and the presence of potentially pathogenic bacteria like Pseudomonas and Alishewanella. These findings suggest that microbiome alterations may contribute to the inflammatory environment observed in endometriosis, potentially influencing disease progression and symptom severity. This study opens avenues for further investigation into microbiome-targeted therapies aimed at modulating bacterial communities in endometriotic tissue to alleviate inflammation and inhibit lesion growth. Additionally, the distinct microbial signatures identified in deep endometriosis lesions may serve as non-invasive biomarkers for early detection and improved clinical management of the disease.
Microbiota composition and distribution along the female reproductive tract of women with endometriosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This study maps the microbiota composition along the reproductive tract in endometriosis patients, revealing microbial dysbiosis, reduced Lactobacillus, and increased Pseudomonas and Sphingobium in upper reproductive sites. These findings suggest potential microbial contributions to inflammation, lesion persistence, and new biomarkers for diagnosing endometriosis.
What Was Studied?
This study investigated the microbiota composition and distribution along the female reproductive tract of women with endometriosis (EMS) compared to healthy controls. Using 16S rRNA amplicon sequencing, researchers mapped microbial communities from five distinct anatomical sites: the lower third of the vagina (CL), posterior vaginal fornix (CU), cervical mucus (CV), endometrium (ET), and peritoneal fluid (PF). The primary aim was to identify differences in microbial communities across these regions and understand how these alterations may contribute to the pathogenesis of endometriosis. A total of 36 women with confirmed pelvic endometriosis and 14 healthy controls undergoing surgery for benign gynecological conditions were included in the study.
Who Was Studied?
The study included 50 women aged 23 to 44, divided into two groups: 36 patients diagnosed with pelvic endometriosis and 14 healthy controls undergoing laparoscopic surgery for benign conditions like ovarian teratoma, serous cystadenoma, or uterine fibroids. All participants had regular menstrual cycles and had not used hormonal drugs, antibiotics, or vaginal medications within six months before sample collection. Samples were collected during the early follicular phase to minimize hormonal variability, and five distinct anatomical locations were sampled to comprehensively map microbial distribution.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study revealed distinct microbiota compositions along the reproductive tract in women with endometriosis compared to healthy controls. The lower reproductive tract (CL, CU) in both groups was predominantly colonized by Lactobacillus, maintaining a stable microbial community. However, microbial diversity began to shift notably at the cervical mucus (CV) in endometriosis patients, with the appearance of Veillonellaceae and an overall reduction in Lactobacillus. This shift continued upward, with dramatic changes observed in the endometrium (ET) and peritoneal fluid (PF) of endometriosis patients. In the ET, Pseudomonas, Acinetobacter, and Vagococcus emerged as dominant taxa, accompanied by a significant reduction of Lactobacillus. The peritoneal fluid samples further diverged, showing high microbial diversity, including Pseudomonas, Acinetobacter, Shewanella, Vagococcus, and Sphingobium, with minimal presence of Lactobacillus. The distinct microbial signatures in these upper reproductive sites suggest a potential role for these genera in promoting inflammation and lesion persistence in endometriosis. Importantly, Sphingobium and Pseudomonas viridiflava were consistently enriched in both the ET and PF of endometriosis patients, indicating their potential as microbial biomarkers for the disease. The findings support the hypothesis that site-specific microbial shifts contribute to the pathogenesis of endometriosis, likely through immune modulation and local inflammation.
Anatomical Site
Microbiota Findings in Endometriosis Patients
Lower Reproductive Tract (CL, CU)
Predominantly colonized by Lactobacillus, maintaining a stable microbial community.
Cervical Mucus (CV)
Notable microbial shift with the appearance of Veillonellaceae and a significant reduction in Lactobacillus.
Endometrium (ET)
Dominated by Pseudomonas, Acinetobacter, and Vagococcus with a marked reduction of Lactobacillus.
Peritoneal Fluid (PF)
High microbial diversity with Pseudomonas, Acinetobacter, Shewanella, Vagococcus, and Sphingobium. Minimal Lactobacillus presence.
Unique Enrichments
Consistent enrichment of Sphingobium and Pseudomonas viridiflava in ET and PF, suggesting potential biomarkers.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
The study’s findings suggest that the microbiota composition along the female reproductive tract in endometriosis patients is markedly different from that of healthy controls, with key disruptions beginning in the cervical mucus and intensifying in the endometrium and peritoneal fluid. The reduction of Lactobacillus and the enrichment of pro-inflammatory taxa such as Pseudomonas, Acinetobacter, Vagococcus, Shewanella, and Sphingobium suggest these species may contribute to local immune activation, chronic inflammation, and potentially lesion maintenance in endometriosis. The identification of Sphingobium and Pseudomonas viridiflava as dominant species in upper reproductive tract samples provides a promising direction for non-invasive biomarkers for diagnosing endometriosis. Furthermore, this microbial dysbiosis may offer therapeutic targets for microbiome-modulating treatments aimed at restoring a healthy reproductive tract microbiota, potentially alleviating symptoms and reducing disease progression. This research underscores the importance of targeting microbial ecosystems in understanding and managing endometriosis.
Molecular detection of intrauterine microbial colonization in women with endometriosis
February 12, 2026
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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STOPs
STOPs
A STOP (Suggested Termination Of Practices) is a recommendation that advocates for the discontinuation of certain medical interventions, treatments, or practices based on emerging evidence indicating that these may be ineffective, harmful, or counterproductive in the management of specific conditions.
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A case-controlled molecular study on 32 women, half with endometriosis and half without, investigated microbial colonization in the intrauterine environment and ovarian cystic fluid. It found significant bacterial variations, with certain bacteria types increasing or decreasing, particularly after treatment with gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonist (GnRHa). The study suggests GnRHa treatment might promote sub-clinical infections in the intrauterine and ovarian environments.
What was studied?
The research focused on investigating microbial colonization in women’s intrauterine environment and cystic fluid, utilizing a molecular approach to detect bacterial presence. This involved examining variations in bacterial types and their implications in the context of endometriosis and treatment effects.
Who was studied?
The study included 32 women, evenly divided between those diagnosed with endometriosis and those without the condition. Each group was further split, with half receiving gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonist (GnRHa) treatment, to explore the treatment’s impact on microbial colonization.
What were the most important findings?
Key findings revealed a broad range of bacterial presence in both endometrial swabs and cystic fluids, with significant changes in bacterial families (decrease in Lactobacillacae and increase in Streptococcaceae, Staphylococaceae, and Enterobacteriaceae) observed in GnRHa-treated women with endometriosis. The 16S metagenome assay was more effective than traditional culture methods, particularly in identifying bacteria in ovarian endometrioma cystic fluid.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study’s findings suggest the presence of sub-clinical infections in the intrauterine environment and ovarian endometrioma cystic fluid, particularly following GnRHa treatment. This raises concerns about the potential for GnRHa therapy to promote silent infections, indicating a need for careful consideration and monitoring of such treatments in women with endometriosis.
Molecular detection of intrauterine microbial colonization in women with endometriosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This study reveals that intrauterine microbial colonization is prevalent in women with endometriosis, particularly with Streptococcaceae, Staphylococcaceae, and Enterobacteriaceae. Findings suggest that GnRHa treatment exacerbates microbial colonization, indicating a possible role for targeted antimicrobial therapies in managing endometriosis-associated inflammation.
What Was Studied?
This study investigated the molecular detection of intrauterine microbial colonization in women with and without endometriosis, utilizing a 16S rDNA metagenome assay to evaluate bacterial presence in endometrial swabs and cystic fluid samples. The primary aim was to explore the role of microbial colonization in the intrauterine environment and its potential contribution to endometriosis pathogenesis, especially in women treated with gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonist (GnRHa). The study compared microbial communities in both endometrial tissue and cystic fluid derived from ovarian endometrioma and non-endometrioma cysts. The analysis aimed to validate the "bacterial contamination hypothesis," which posits that microbial colonization might exacerbate inflammatory responses, contributing to endometriosis progression.
Who Was Studied?
The study included 32 women with endometriosis and 32 women without endometriosis. Among these, half of each group (16 women) received GnRHa treatment for 4–6 months prior to sample collection. Endometrial swabs and cystic fluid samples were collected during laparoscopic procedures at Nagasaki University. Women were included if they were of reproductive age, with regular menstrual cycles, and had not taken antibiotics or immunosuppressants within three months prior to the study. The endometriosis cases were confirmed histologically, and cystic fluids were categorized as either ovarian endometrioma (OE) or non-endometrioma (NE) cysts. The study employed 16S rDNA metagenome sequencing using the Illumina MiSeq system to identify bacterial taxa.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study identified a significant alteration in the microbial landscape within the intrauterine environment and ovarian cystic fluid of women with endometriosis, particularly those undergoing GnRHa treatment. Notably, there was a significant decrease in Lactobacillaceae populations (p < 0.01) and a marked increase in Streptococcaceae, Staphylococcaceae, and Enterobacteriaceae (p < 0.05 for each) in GnRHa-treated women with endometriosis. This microbial shift was associated with sub-clinical infection in the uterine cavity and cystic fluid of ovarian endometrioma. Furthermore, the 16S metagenome assay detected higher proportions of Streptococcaceae and Staphylococcaceae in ovarian endometrioma cyst fluid compared to non-endometrioma cysts, suggesting a unique microbial signature linked to inflammatory pathogenesis. Interestingly, traditional bacterial culture methods failed to detect colonies in the cystic fluids, while PCR analysis revealed substantial colonization. This discrepancy indicates that sub-clinical infections in the uterine and ovarian microenvironments may contribute to the chronic inflammatory state characteristic of endometriosis. The study also proposed that GnRHa-induced hypoestrogenism might reduce the expression of antimicrobial peptides in the genitourinary tract, facilitating microbial colonization and chronic inflammation.
Parameter
Findings in Endometriosis Patients
Intrauterine Microbial Colonization
Significant increase in Streptococcaceae, Staphylococcaceae, and Enterobacteriaceae populations in endometrial tissue and ovarian cystic fluid.
GnRHa Treatment Effects
Decrease in Lactobacillaceae populations (p < 0.01) with elevated Streptococcaceae, Staphylococcaceae, and Enterobacteriaceae (p < 0.05).
Cystic Fluid Microbiome
Higher proportions of Streptococcaceae and Staphylococcaceae in ovarian endometrioma cyst fluid compared to non-endometrioma cysts.
Detection Methods
Traditional bacterial culture failed to detect colonies, but 16S rDNA sequencing revealed substantial colonization.
Hypothesized Mechanism
GnRHa-induced hypoestrogenism may suppress antimicrobial peptides, facilitating microbial colonization and chronic inflammation.
Pathogenic Implications
Suggests sub-clinical infection in uterine and ovarian environments as a contributor to chronic inflammation in endometriosis.
Therapeutic Consideration
Potential for targeted antimicrobial therapy to mitigate microbial load and reduce inflammation in endometriosis.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
The findings provide robust evidence that intrauterine microbial colonization—particularly of Streptococcaceae, Staphylococcaceae, and Enterobacteriaceae—is prevalent in women with endometriosis and is significantly heightened with GnRHa treatment. This suggests that silent intrauterine infections could exacerbate inflammatory responses and potentially influence disease progression. Furthermore, the detection of bacterial DNA in ovarian endometrioma cystic fluid indicates that microbial colonization extends beyond the uterine environment, potentially affecting ovarian tissue integrity. These insights propose that targeted antimicrobial therapy might mitigate intrauterine bacterial load, reduce inflammation, and improve disease management. The study challenges the traditional view of the sterile uterine environment, suggesting that the bacterial contamination hypothesis should be revisited as a contributing factor in endometriosis pathogenesis.
Molecular detection of microbial colonization in cervical mucus of women with and without endometriosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This study identifies intrauterine microbial colonization in endometriosis, with enriched Streptococcaceae, Staphylococcaceae, and Enterobacteriaceae. GnRHa therapy exacerbated microbial imbalances, highlighting potential therapeutic targets for managing inflammation and infection in endometriosis. Findings suggest microbial modulation may enhance treatment outcomes.
What Was Studied?
This study investigated the molecular detection of microbial colonization in cervical mucus of women with and without endometriosis using next-generation sequencing (NGS) technology. The primary aim was to explore whether specific microbial populations in the cervical mucus are associated with endometriosis and could contribute to its pathogenesis. Researchers collected cervical mucus samples from 30 women with endometriosis and 39 women without the condition. The microbial communities were analyzed through 16S rRNA gene sequencing, alongside Gram staining and real-time PCR to validate the presence of specific bacterial species. This study sought to identify microbial signatures that may play a role in the inflammation and immune responses linked to endometriosis progression.
Who Was Studied?
The study included 69 women of reproductive age, with 30 diagnosed with endometriosis (all classified as r-ASRM stages III-IV) and 39 serving as healthy controls. All participants underwent laparoscopic surgery for diagnosis or benign gynecological conditions. Cervical mucus samples were collected before surgery under sterile conditions to prevent contamination, ensuring accurate representation of the microbiota present. Women with gynecological malignancies, pelvic inflammatory disease, bacterial vaginosis, or recent antibiotic use were excluded to prevent confounding microbial shifts.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The analysis revealed that cervical mucus in women with endometriosis harbored distinct microbial communities compared to healthy controls. While Lactobacillus spp. remained dominant across all samples, women with endometriosis showed increased populations of Enterobacteriaceae, Streptococcus, Corynebacterium, Pseudomonas, and Flavobacterium. Notably, Enterobacteriaceae and Streptococcus were significantly enriched in endometriosis patients, as confirmed by real-time PCR analysis (p < 0.05). This elevated presence suggests these bacteria may contribute to inflammatory cascades in the cervix and potentially facilitate disease persistence. Additionally, alpha diversity was significantly higher in the cervical mucus of endometriosis patients, indicating a broader microbial distribution. The study also noted that despite high Lactobacillus prevalence (40–60%), the co-existence of pathogenic bacteria like Enterobacteriaceae and Streptococcus was unique to the endometriosis group, hinting at microbial imbalance. These findings support the hypothesis that cervical microbial colonization could be linked to the development and maintenance of endometriosis through immune modulation and inflammatory responses. The study further postulated that the ascent of these pathogens from the cervix into the uterine cavity may exacerbate inflammatory conditions, potentially triggering endometriosis progression via LPS/TLR4 signaling and innate immune activation.
Parameter
Findings in Endometriosis Patients
Dominant Genera
Lactobacillus spp. remained dominant in both endometriosis patients and controls, with 40–60% prevalence.
Increased Genera
Marked increases in Enterobacteriaceae, Streptococcus, Corynebacterium, Pseudomonas, and Flavobacterium.
Significant Enrichment
Enterobacteriaceae and Streptococcus were significantly enriched (p < 0.05) in the endometriosis group.
Alpha Diversity
Higher alpha diversity observed in endometriosis patients, indicating broader microbial distribution in cervical mucus.
Pathogenic Co-Existence
Despite high Lactobacillus prevalence, Enterobacteriaceae and Streptococcus co-existed exclusively in the endometriosis group.
Inflammatory Associations
These pathogens are suspected to drive inflammatory cascades, contributing to lesion persistence and immune dysregulation.
Migration Hypothesis
Potential pathogen ascent from the cervix to the uterine cavity may exacerbate inflammation and promote endometriosis via LPS/TLR4 signaling and innate immune activation.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
The study provides compelling evidence that specific microbial communities in cervical mucus—particularly Enterobacteriaceae and Streptococcus—are associated with endometriosis. This microbial imbalance suggests that the cervical microbiome may serve as both a diagnostic biomarker and a therapeutic target for endometriosis management. The findings highlight the possibility of cervical microbial migration into the uterine cavity as a driver of inflammation and lesion growth, underscoring the need for further exploration into microbiota-targeted therapies. By identifying microbial dysbiosis at the cervical level, this study opens the door to non-invasive diagnostic methods and preventive strategies aimed at reducing microbial-induced inflammation in endometriosis patients.
Nickel Allergy as a Risk Factor for Endometriosis
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This study identifies nickel allergy as an independent risk factor for endometriosis, highlighting shared immune dysregulation and estrogenic pathways. Using a population-based cohort, researchers found a 2.5-fold increased odds of nickel allergy in women with endometriosis, emphasizing the role of environmental exposures in its pathogenesis.
What Was Studied?
This study examined the association between nickel allergy and endometriosis using a population-based nested case-control design. The research aimed to determine whether nickel allergy is an independent risk factor for endometriosis by analyzing a cohort dataset provided by the South Korean National Health Insurance Service (NHIS), which included approximately 1 million individuals. The study was designed to assess causality and improve upon previous correlational studies.
Who Was Studied?
The study included 4,985 women divided into two groups: 997 women with endometriosis and 3,988 controls matched by age and socioeconomic status. The endometriosis group was identified using diagnostic codes, surgery records, and drug prescriptions between 2009 and 2013, while nickel allergy cases were identified between 2002 and 2008 using specific diagnostic and patch test codes.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The findings revealed that women with endometriosis had a significantly higher prevalence of nickel allergy (0.8%) compared to the control group (0.3%), with an adjusted odds ratio of 2.474 (95% CI: 1.023–5.988; p = 0.044). The study highlights the estrogenic and immune-modulating properties of nickel, suggesting that elevated blood nickel levels associated with nickel allergy may contribute to endometriosis pathogenesis. Both conditions share immunological mechanisms, including cell-mediated hypersensitivity and immune dysregulation. The study also emphasizes the activity of nickel as a metalloestrogen, which may influence endometriosis through its interaction with estrogen receptors. Despite its low clinical prevalence, the findings support nickel allergy as a potential contributing factor to endometriosis, particularly in the context of autoimmune and estrogenic pathways.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
This study underscores the link between environmental factors, such as nickel exposure, and the development of endometriosis. Identifying nickel allergy as a risk factor paves the way for further research into environmental triggers and immune-mediated mechanisms in endometriosis. These findings could lead to targeted prevention strategies, such as reducing nickel exposure in at-risk populations, and inform therapeutic approaches that address immune and estrogenic pathways in endometriosis management.
Oral, Vaginal, and Stool Microbial Signatures in Patients With Endometriosis as Potential Diagnostic Non-Invasive Biomarkers: A Prospective Cohort Study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This study explores oral, vaginal, and stool microbial signatures in patients with endometriosis, highlighting their potential as non-invasive diagnostic biomarkers. Findings suggest distinct microbial shifts in these sites, offering a promising avenue for early detection and targeted intervention in endometriosis management.
What was studied?
This prospective cohort pilot study examined the oral, vaginal, and stool microbiota of three cohorts: confirmed endometriosis patients (ENDO, n=21), patients with other gynecological conditions but no endometriosis (N-ENDO, n=24), and healthy controls without gynecologic disease (HC, n=19). Using 16S rRNA sequencing, the study sought to identify non-invasive microbial biomarkers that could potentially differentiate individuals with endometriosis from others, with the ultimate goal of developing a diagnostic tool.
Who was studied?
A total of 64 women were studied, all age- and sex-matched. ENDO and N-ENDO participants were recruited from a hospital setting where they underwent laparoscopy with histological confirmation. Healthy controls were recruited from a separate longitudinal study (MothersBabies), with no known gynecological pathology.
Key Findings:
The study revealed significant microbial diversity and compositional differences in oral and stool samples among patients with endometriosis, non-endometriosis gynecologic conditions, and healthy controls, while vaginal samples showed no significant variation. Specifically, alpha diversity was reduced in the stool microbiota of endometriosis patients compared to healthy controls, and beta diversity analysis confirmed that both oral and stool communities were distinctly structured across cohorts. LEfSe analysis identified differentially abundant taxa specific to body site and disease severity. In stool samples, Phascolarctobacterium and Lactobacillus were enriched in endometriosis, with Actinomyces elevated in minimal/mild cases and Paraprevotellaceae in moderate/severe cases.
Oral samples from patients with moderate/severe endometriosis were characterized by a marked increase in Fusobacterium, a genus previously shown to facilitate lesion development in murine models and implicated in human periodontal disease. This is especially relevant given the higher incidence of periodontitis in endometriosis patients. Cardiobacterium was elevated in mild disease. In vaginal samples, the enrichment of Escherichia, Enterococcus, and Tepidimonas supports the bacterial contamination hypothesis, which posits that lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-mediated inflammation may play a role in lesion formation.
Here is a summary of the differentially abundant taxa by body site and disease severity:
Body Site
Differentially Abundant Taxa
Stool
Phascolarctobacterium, Lactobacillus ↑ in ENDO; Actinomyces ↑ in minimal/mild; Paraprevotellaceae ↑ in moderate/severe
Oral
Fusobacterium ↑ in moderate/severe ENDO; Cardiobacterium ↑ in minimal/mild ENDO
Vaginal
Escherichia, Enterococcus, Tepidimonas ↑ in ENDO
Implications for Microbiome Research and Clinical Practice:
The study underscores the potential for developing a non-invasive diagnostic tool for endometriosis using microbial biomarkers obtained from oral or stool samples. Specific taxa such as Fusobacterium, Escherichia, and Phascolarctobacterium emerged as promising microbial targets for future mechanistic and therapeutic investigations due to their known roles in modulating inflammation and estrogen metabolism. Additionally, the observed enrichment of Lactobacillus in the stool of patients with endometriosis suggests a possible link to estrobolome activity, with implications for enhanced estrogen recycling and disease progression. Furthermore, the detection of overlapping genera in the gut and peritoneal fluid, as reported in other studies, lends support to the hypothesis that intestinal bacterial translocation may contribute to the peritoneal inflammation characteristic of endometriosis.
Overlap Between Irritable Bowel Syndrome Diagnosis and Endometriosis in Adolescents
February 12, 2026
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) is a common gastrointestinal disorder characterized by symptoms such as abdominal pain, bloating, and altered bowel habits. Recent research has focused on the gut microbiota's role in IBS, aiming to identify specific microbial signatures associated with the condition.
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The study links endometriosis with a fivefold increased risk of IBS in adolescents, emphasizing the role of acyclic pelvic pain severity and inflammation as shared mechanisms. Early screening for IBS and microbiome-targeted interventions could improve outcomes in this group.
What Was Studied?
The study investigated the association between endometriosis and irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) in adolescent females. Specifically, it aimed to determine the prevalence of IBS in those with and without surgically confirmed endometriosis and to explore how pelvic pain severity and other comorbidities influenced this relationship.
Who Was Studied?
The study analyzed data from 323 adolescent females under 21 years of age who participated in the "Women’s Health Study: Adolescence to Adulthood," a longitudinal cohort. Participants were grouped based on the presence or absence of surgically confirmed endometriosis and whether they met the diagnostic criteria for IBS, as defined by Rome IV guidelines or self-reported clinician diagnoses.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study found that adolescents with endometriosis were five times more likely to have IBS than those without endometriosis (adjusted odds ratio [aOR], 5.26). Among participants with endometriosis, the odds of IBS increased with the severity of acyclic pelvic pain, with each 1-point increase in pain severity raising the odds by 31% (aOR, 1.31). A significant overlap in pain-related comorbidities, including migraines, sleep disturbances, and urinary symptoms, was observed in individuals with both conditions. Moreover, central pain sensitization, driven by visceral hypersensitivity and alterations in the peripheral and central nervous systems, was identified as a potential shared mechanism between endometriosis and IBS. This study's microbiome associations highlight the role of inflammatory processes in both conditions. Low-grade mucosal inflammation and mast cell activation, often linked to microbiome dysbiosis, were implicated as contributing factors to the development of IBS in the context of endometriosis.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
This research underscores the need for integrated screening and management strategies for adolescents presenting with endometriosis and/or IBS. Identifying overlapping symptoms early could reduce diagnostic delays and improve patient outcomes. Furthermore, the findings suggest potential pathways for therapeutic interventions targeting the microbiome and immune regulation, such as central sensitization and inflammation. Clinicians should consider IBS in the differential diagnosis for adolescents with severe acyclic pelvic pain, even in the absence of endometriosis.
Persistent Organic Pollutants and Endometriosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This study links persistent organic pollutants (POPs) to metabolic alterations in deep endometriosis, identifying trans-nonachlor and 2-hydroxybutyrate as key markers.
What Was Studied?
This study explored the relationship between persistent organic pollutants (POPs) and the risk of surgically confirmed deep endometriosis by integrating high-resolution metabolomic profiling. It aimed to characterize metabolic changes associated with POP exposure, focusing on polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), organochlorinated pesticides (OCPs), and per-/polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS). The researchers utilized advanced analytical techniques such as gas and liquid chromatography coupled with high-resolution mass spectrometry (HRMS) and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR).
Who Was Studied?
A hospital-based case-control cohort in France was recruited, consisting of women with surgically confirmed deep endometriosis and matched controls without the condition. Serum samples were collected from these participants to measure POP levels and conduct comprehensive metabolomic profiling. The study controlled for confounding variables such as demographic and lifestyle factors, ensuring a robust statistical analysis.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study identified significant links between specific POPs and endometriosis risk. Trans-nonachlor, an organochlorinated pesticide, emerged as the most strongly associated pollutant, doubling the risk of deep endometriosis. Other key POPs included PCBs 180 and 167. Metabolomic profiling revealed distinctive metabolic disruptions in women with endometriosis. These included elevated serum levels of lactate, ketone bodies, multiple amino acids, reduced bile acids, phosphatidylcholines (PCs), cortisol, and hippuric acid. A noteworthy finding was the metabolite 2-hydroxybutyrate, which correlated with both trans-nonachlor exposure and endometriosis risk, acting as a potential biomarker of the disease and its environmental exposure.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
This study is groundbreaking in linking POP exposure to metabolic alterations in deep endometriosis, suggesting an environmental component to the disease's pathogenesis. The findings highlight the potential of metabolomic biomarkers, like 2-hydroxybutyrate, for early diagnosis and monitoring of environmental risk factors. These results emphasize the importance of further research to clarify causal relationships and develop interventions to reduce exposure to harmful pollutants. Clinically, integrating metabolomic and environmental data could improve risk assessment and individualized treatment approaches for endometriosis patients.
Plants as source of new therapies for endometriosis: a review of preclinical and clinical studies
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This review highlights the potential of plant-derived therapies for endometriosis. Key findings include anti-inflammatory, anti-proliferative, and anti-angiogenic effects of herbal extracts and bioactive compounds, offering safer long-term alternatives to conventional treatments.
What Was Reviewed?
This review systematically examined plant-derived agents and their potential for treating endometriosis. The authors focused on three main categories: herbal extracts, specific plant-derived bioactive compounds, and Chinese herbal medicine (CHM). By analyzing preclinical and clinical studies, the review assessed the efficacy, mechanisms of action, and clinical potential of these agents, including compounds such as resveratrol, epigallocatechin-3-gallate, curcumin, and cannabinoids. The paper aimed to critically evaluate the relevance of natural therapies as safer, long-term alternatives to conventional treatments for endometriosis.
Who Was Reviewed?
The review covered studies involving various experimental models, including human cell lines, rodent models of endometriosis, and limited clinical trials on human subjects. These studies collectively investigated the effects of plant-derived agents on cellular and molecular markers of endometriosis, such as inflammation, angiogenesis, and apoptosis. The review also discussed findings from clinical trials of Chinese herbal medicine and individual bioactive compounds.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The review identified several plant-derived agents with significant potential for endometriosis therapy. Herbal extracts such as pueraria flower extract (PFE) and aged black garlic exhibited anti-inflammatory, anti-angiogenic, and anti-proliferative effects in experimental models. Bioactive compounds like resveratrol and curcumin demonstrated pleiotropic effects, targeting processes like estrogen modulation, oxidative stress reduction, and inhibition of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) expression. Chinese herbal medicine formulations were found to alleviate symptoms, reduce lesion size, and prevent recurrence in clinical contexts. Mechanistically, these agents influence key pathways involving cytokines (IL-6, IL-8, TNF-α), transcription factors (NF-κB), and matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs), making them promising candidates for integrative treatment strategies.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Review?
The findings emphasize the need for standardized protocols and further clinical trials to validate the safety and efficacy of plant-derived therapies in human endometriosis patients. The review underscores the potential of these agents as part of multimodal treatment strategies, offering reduced side effects and improved long-term management compared to conventional hormonal or surgical approaches. Additionally, the pleiotropic action of these agents aligns with the complex pathophysiology of endometriosis, addressing inflammation, angiogenesis, and cellular survival concurrently.
Plants as source of new therapies for endometriosis: a review of preclinical and clinical studies
February 12, 2026
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This review assesses plant-derived agents for endometriosis therapy, focusing on mechanisms like inflammation, angiogenesis, and apoptosis. Key agents such as resveratrol and curcumin show preclinical promise, while Chinese herbal medicine (CHM) demonstrates clinical utility.
What Was Reviewed?
This review comprehensively evaluates plant-derived agents as potential therapies for endometriosis. It focuses on herbal extracts, specific plant bioactive compounds, and Chinese herbal medicine (CHM) formulations, assessing their mechanisms of action, therapeutic potential, and preclinical and clinical evidence supporting their use. The authors aim to establish these agents as alternatives to current treatments with fewer side effects and long-term efficacy.
Who Was Reviewed?
The studies reviewed include human endometriotic cell lines, surgically induced endometriosis models in animals, and clinical trials involving human participants. The scope of the review is broad, encompassing various agents such as Pueraria flower extract (PFE), curcumin, resveratrol, and CHM formulations, along with their effects on biological processes like inflammation, angiogenesis, oxidative stress, and apoptosis.
Summary of Plant-Derived Agents
The table below summarizes the plant-derived agents, their models, mechanisms of action, and key findings.
Reduced pain and postoperative recurrence, improved quality of life.
These agents show promise as complementary treatments due to their multi-targeted actions and potential to address limitations of current therapies.
Mechanisms of Action
Mechanistically, the plant-derived agents influence key pathways involving cytokines (IL-6, IL-8, TNF-α), transcription factors (NF-κB), and matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs), making them promising candidates for integrative treatment strategies. The pleiotropic effects of plant-derived agents on critical processes in endometriosis pathogenesis are summarized in the following table:
Pathological Process
Impacted Markers
Intervention
Angiogenesis
VEGF, MMP-2, MMP-9
Resveratrol, curcumin
Inflammation
IL-6, IL-8, TNF-α
Resveratrol, acai extract
Apoptosis Resistance
Bcl-2
Silymarin, curcumin
Oxidative Stress
ROS, catalase, glutathione peroxidase
Resveratrol, silymarin
Proliferation of Lesions
ERK1/2, cyclin D1
Pueraria flower extract, curcumin
Hormonal Dysregulation
Aromatase, COX-2
Resveratrol, puerarin
Most Important Findings
The review highlights the multi-targeted action profiles of plant-derived therapies. Resveratrol shows strong evidence in reducing lesion size, VEGF expression, and inflammation across preclinical and limited clinical settings. Curcumin exhibits anti-inflammatory and anti-angiogenic properties by reducing IL-6, IL-8, and VEGF levels, while improving oxidative stress markers. Silymarin is another promising agent with pro-apoptotic and anti-proliferative effects, though its clinical potential is limited by poor bioavailability. Chinese herbal medicine demonstrates efficacy in reducing postoperative recurrence rates and pain, but its variability requires standardized formulations.
Greatest Implications
Plant-derived agents represent a promising addition to multimodal endometriosis treatments, offering pleiotropic benefits and potentially fewer side effects compared to current therapies. They address critical mechanisms such as inflammation, angiogenesis, and oxidative stress, which are central to endometriosis pathology. However, challenges like standardization, bioavailability, and limited clinical evidence remain.
Presence of metalloestrogens in ectopic endometrial tissue
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This study quantified metalloestrogens—cadmium, nickel, and lead—in ectopic endometrial tissue, suggesting their role in endometriosis persistence.
What Was Studied?
This study investigated the presence of metalloestrogens—heavy metals with estrogenic effects—in ectopic endometrial tissue. Metalloestrogens, such as cadmium, nickel, and lead, have been implicated in estrogen-dependent diseases like endometriosis. The study aimed to quantify these metals in ectopic endometrial tissues from women diagnosed with endometriosis, using advanced analytical techniques.
Who Was Studied?
The study included 50 women of reproductive age who had endometriosis confirmed through laparotomy or laparoscopy. The participants were patients from a gynecology unit at a tertiary care hospital in Sri Lanka. Samples of ectopic endometrial tissue were collected from these women during surgical procedures, and the disease severity was classified based on the Revised American Society for Reproductive Medicine classification system.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study found significant levels of three metalloestrogens—cadmium (2.861 µg/kg), nickel (17.547 µg/kg), and lead (25.785 µg/kg)—in all ectopic endometrial tissue samples analyzed. Among these, lead exhibited the highest concentration. The study is notable for being the first to report the quantitative detection of metalloestrogens in ectopic endometrial tissue. Notably, the presence of these metals varied slightly depending on the tissue site, such as the wall of an endometrioma or nodules in the pelvic region, though these differences were not statistically significant. The findings suggest a potential role for environmental metalloestrogens in the persistence and progression of endometriosis.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
The detection of metalloestrogens in ectopic endometrial tissue underscores their role in the etiology and maintenance of endometriosis. These metals may act as endocrine disruptors, binding to estrogen receptors in ectopic tissue and mimicking estrogenic effects, thereby contributing to the persistence of the disease. The findings highlight the need for further research to elucidate the mechanistic pathways by which metalloestrogens influence endometriosis. Clinicians should consider environmental exposures and diet as a factor in managing and preventing this condition.
Remission of Endometriosis by Hyperbaric Oxygen Treatment in Rats
February 12, 2026
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Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT)
Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT)
Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT) involves breathing pure oxygen in a pressurized chamber, which increases the amount of oxygen dissolved in the blood and delivered to tissues.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This study demonstrates hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT) achieves complete remission of endometriotic lesions in a rat model by reducing hypoxia, inflammation, and TNF-α levels. While HBOT shows potential as a non-invasive therapy for endometriosis, further studies are needed to validate its impact on microbiome modulation.
What Was Studied?
This study, conducted by Aydin et al., investigated the effects of long-term hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT) on experimentally induced endometriosis in a rat model. The primary objective was to assess whether HBOT could lead to remission of endometriotic lesions and alleviate inflammation by modulating peritoneal cytokine levels, particularly tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α). The study evaluated the volume, histopathological changes, and proliferation markers (Ki-67) of endometriotic implants after six weeks of HBOT.
Who Was Studied?
The study was performed on 40 non-pregnant, female Wistar-Albino rats. After surgical induction of endometriosis using an autotransplantation technique, the rats were divided into two groups: one receiving HBOT (20 rats) and a control group (19 rats) without treatment. HBOT was administered for 2 hours daily at 2.5 atm for six weeks. Both groups underwent multiple laparotomies to evaluate lesion volume, histopathological scores, and cytokine levels before and after treatment.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study demonstrated that HBOT resulted in complete remission of endometriotic lesions in a rat model. Significant reductions were observed in lesion volume, histopathological scores, Ki-67 proliferation markers, and TNF-α levels in the peritoneal fluid of the HBOT-treated group compared to controls. Specifically, the mean lesion volume decreased by 29.5% (57.4 ± 12.5 mm³ in the HBOT group vs. 94.6 ± 17.2 mm³ in controls). TNF-α levels were significantly lower in the HBOT group (5.33 ± 1.02 pg/mL vs. 8.16 ± 1.76 pg/mL in controls). Reduced Ki-67 staining indicated diminished cellular proliferation within endometriotic lesions. The findings suggest that HBOT alleviates endometriosis-associated inflammation by suppressing NFκB-mediated pro-inflammatory pathways and reducing TNF-α levels, key drivers of inflammation and angiogenesis in endometriosis.
From a microbiome perspective, while the study did not directly assess microbial changes, the reduction in hypoxia and inflammation could indirectly modulate microbial communities. Hypoxia-driven dysbiosis, favoring facultative anaerobes like E. coli and GBS, is a known contributor to endometriosis pathogenesis. By restoring oxygen levels and dampening inflammation, HBOT may reduce the selective advantage for these pathogens, potentially rebalancing the peritoneal microbiome.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
The study positions HBOT as a potential non-invasive therapeutic strategy for endometriosis, with demonstrated efficacy in reducing lesion size and inflammation. By targeting hypoxia and pro-inflammatory cytokines, HBOT addresses two critical drivers of endometriosis pathophysiology. This has implications for both clinical management and microbiome research, suggesting that HBOT could indirectly modulate microbial dysbiosis in endometriosis. However, the absence of direct microbial analyses leaves a critical gap in validating HBOT as a microbiome-targeted intervention (MBTI). Further studies incorporating microbiome sequencing and metabolomics are essential to establish a direct link between HBOT and microbiome modulation.
The bidirectional relationship between endometriosis and microbiome
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This review highlights the bidirectional relationship between endometriosis and the microbiome, showcasing dysbiosis as a key factor in inflammation and estrogen metabolism. Emerging microbiome-targeted therapies hold promise for diagnosis and treatment.
What Was Reviewed?
The review article explored the bidirectional relationship between endometriosis and the microbiome, emphasizing the role of dysbiosis in the pathogenesis and progression of this chronic inflammatory condition. It discussed microbiome alterations across different sites, including the gut, peritoneal fluid, and female reproductive tract, and evaluated how these microbial shifts influence inflammation, immune modulation, and estrogen metabolism. Furthermore, it highlighted experimental and clinical evidence supporting the potential of microbiome-targeted interventions as both diagnostic tools and treatments for endometriosis.
Who Was Reviewed?
The review synthesized findings from human and animal studies investigating microbiota composition in patients with endometriosis compared to healthy controls. It included a comprehensive analysis of bacterial, viral, and fungal associations across diverse microbiome sites, focusing on patterns of dysbiosis, enriched taxa, and diminished microbial diversity. Specific populations reviewed included women diagnosed with various stages of endometriosis and animal models with surgically induced disease.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The most notable findings included alterations in gut, cervical, and peritoneal fluid microbiota in women with endometriosis. In the gut, elevated levels of Proteobacteria and reduced Lactobacillaceae were observed. The peritoneal fluid showed enrichment of Acinetobacter and Pseudomonas, while the cervical and vaginal microbiomes exhibited decreased diversity and increased abundance of pathogenic species from the Gardnerella and Streptococcus genus. Dysbiosis was associated with heightened inflammatory responses mediated by lipopolysaccharide (LPS) from Escherichia coli, potentially driving lesion formation through the NF-κB pathway. The concept of “estrobolomes,” gut bacteria influencing estrogen reabsorption, was linked to the hyperestrogenic state characteristic of endometriosis. Notably, antibiotic and probiotic treatments in animal models reduced lesion size, supporting the potential therapeutic role of microbiome modulation.
What Are the Greatest Implications?
The implications of this review are twofold: first, the microbiome holds promise as a non-invasive diagnostic tool for endometriosis, potentially reducing diagnostic delays. Second, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs), such as probiotics, prebiotics, and dietary modifications, may offer novel therapeutic avenues. The findings underscore the necessity for further research into microbiome signatures and their clinical applications, particularly in differentiating disease stages and addressing infertility associated with endometriosis.
The Comorbidity of Endometriosis and Systemic Lupus Erythematosus: A Systematic Review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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This review explores the significant comorbidity between systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and endometriosis, emphasizing shared pathological pathways.
DOI: 10.7759/cureus.42362
What Was Reviewed?
This systematic review examined the comorbidity between endometriosis and systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), two chronic conditions with significant implications for women's health. The review aimed to elucidate the prevalence, shared pathophysiological mechanisms, and risk factors linking these diseases, emphasizing immune dysregulation, genetic predispositions, and hormonal influences. The review synthesized findings from nine studies conducted between 2011 and 2021, including case-control, cohort, and systematic review methodologies.
Who Was Reviewed?
The review focused on studies of females aged 12-60, representing the pubertal to postmenopausal age range. The population comprised patients with diagnosed endometriosis and SLE. The studies predominantly included participants from diverse ethnicities and geographies, screened based on standardized inclusion criteria to establish the prevalence and interaction of these conditions.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The review confirmed a statistically significant correlation between endometriosis and SLE, with women diagnosed with either condition at a heightened risk of developing the other. The findings implicated immune dysregulation, characterized by diminished cytotoxic T-cell activity and elevated humoral immune responses, as a central mechanism. Notable microbial associations include increased systemic inflammation mediated by cytokines such as interleukin-1, interleukin-6, and tumor necrosis factor (TNF-α). Genetic factors also played a role, with gene loci such as PTPN22 associated with increased susceptibility to both conditions. Surgical interventions like hysterectomy were linked to increased inflammation and subsequent autoimmune activation, while modified surgical techniques showed promise in mitigating risk.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Review?
This review highlights the necessity for clinicians to adopt an interdisciplinary approach when managing patients with either endometriosis or SLE, as their comorbidity exacerbates disease burden and complicates treatment. It emphasizes the importance of targeted therapies to modulate immune response alongside careful evaluation of surgical and hormonal treatment strategies to minimize adverse outcomes. The findings suggest a potential for incorporating microbial and genetic markers into diagnostic and therapeutic protocols to improve outcomes.
The effect of hyperbaric oxygen therapy in the inflammatory response in a mouse model of endometriosis: An experimental study
February 12, 2026
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This study highlights hyperbaric oxygen therapy's (HBOT) role in reducing inflammation and NFκB expression in a mouse model of endometriosis. The findings suggest HBOT as a promising non-invasive treatment for managing endometriosis-associated inflammation, targeting hypoxia-induced molecular pathways and offering potential microbiome benefits through reduced inflammatory burden.
What Was Studied?
This study investigated the effect of hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT) on the inflammatory response in a mouse model of endometriosis. The authors focused on the potential therapeutic role of HBOT in reducing inflammation and modulating molecular pathways, particularly the nuclear factor kappa beta (NFκB) pathway, which plays a crucial role in the pathophysiology of endometriosis. The research aimed to address hypoxia-induced inflammation in endometriosis by exploring how HBOT, through its oxygen-rich environment, could attenuate the inflammatory cascade.
Who Was Studied?
The study utilized 24 healthy adult female Swiss albino mice. The animals were randomly divided into three groups: a pre-test group (Group I), a post-test group receiving HBOT (Group II), and a post-test group without HBOT (Group III). Endometriosis was induced via xenotransplantation of human endometrial cells into the mice's peritoneum. Group II received HBOT for 10 days (30 minutes, three times daily), while Group III did not undergo HBOT but was evaluated at the same time points.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study found that HBOT significantly reduced the degree of inflammation in endometriosis-induced mice. Group II (HBOT) showed the lowest inflammation scores (1.60 ± 0.53), compared to the pre-test group (9.41 ± 1.99) and the post-test group without HBOT (2.42 ± 0.53). This reduction in inflammation was associated with a significant decrease in NFκB expression, a key pro-inflammatory transcription factor, in the HBOT group. NFκB expression levels correlated strongly with the degree of inflammation (r = 0.670, p ≤ 0.001). These findings suggest that HBOT alleviates the hypoxia-induced inflammatory response by modulating NFκB signaling and reducing peritoneal inflammation.
From a microbiome perspective, hypoxia-induced inflammatory conditions, such as those observed in endometriosis, are often associated with microbial dysbiosis. HBOT's role in reducing inflammation and altering the microenvironment may indirectly influence microbial populations in the peritoneal cavity. This warrants further exploration into whether HBOT could restore microbial balance by reducing the inflammatory burden and hypoxia.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
The study provides strong evidence for HBOT as a potential therapeutic strategy for reducing inflammation in endometriosis. By mitigating the effects of hypoxia and decreasing NFκB activation, HBOT addresses a key molecular mechanism in the pathogenesis of endometriosis. Clinically, these findings support the use of HBOT as a non-invasive, adjunctive therapy to manage endometriosis-related inflammation. Furthermore, this study underscores the importance of targeting the hypoxia-inflammatory axis to improve outcomes for endometriosis patients. However, the findings also highlight the need for additional research to optimize HBOT protocols, including duration and dose, to achieve maximal therapeutic benefits.
The Endobiota Study: Comparison of Vaginal, Cervical and Gut Microbiota Between Women with Stage 3/4 Endometriosis and Healthy Controls
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This study identifies microbiome shifts in vaginal, cervical, and gut sites in stage 3/4 endometriosis. Absence of Atopobium and elevated Gardnerella suggest immune dysregulation, while Escherichia/Shigella dominance in stool correlates with bowel involvement, indicating potential diagnostic biomarkers.
What Was Studied?
This study, titled "The Endobiota Study: Comparison of Vaginal, Cervical, and Gut Microbiota Between Women with Stage 3/4 Endometriosis and Healthy Controls," aimed to evaluate the differences in microbial composition across the vaginal, cervical, and gut microbiomes in women with advanced-stage (3/4) endometriosis compared to healthy controls. Researchers collected and analyzed samples from three anatomical sites—vaginal swabs, cervical swabs, and stool—using 16S rRNA sequencing to determine the diversity and abundance of bacterial genera. The primary objective was to identify specific microbial signatures and dysbiosis patterns associated with advanced endometriosis.
Who Was Studied?
The study included 28 Caucasian women, 14 diagnosed with histologically confirmed stage 3/4 endometriosis and 14 healthy controls. All participants were of reproductive age, with similar age and BMI distributions between groups. Vaginal, cervical, and stool samples were collected from each participant under sterile conditions to prevent contamination. The endometriosis patients were all confirmed to have deep infiltrating endometriosis with extensive lesions, while the control group consisted of asymptomatic women with no clinical or ultrasound evidence of endometriosis.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study uncovered notable dysbiosis in the microbiota composition of women with advanced endometriosis compared to healthy controls. In vaginal samples, Gemella and Atopobium were completely absent in the endometriosis group, suggesting a protective role in healthy women. Cervical samples showed a complete loss of Atopobium and Sneathia in endometriosis patients, while Alloprevotella was significantly elevated. This microbial shift in the cervical microbiota is particularly significant given Atopobium's known associations with maintaining vaginal health. In stool samples, Sneathia, Barnesella, and Gardnerella were significantly decreased in endometriosis patients, while Escherichia/Shigella dominance was observed in two women who subsequently required segmental colon resection for severe bowel involvement. Sensitivity analyses excluding Lactobacillus revealed that Gardnerella represented a significantly higher proportion of the remaining microbiota in the vaginal and cervical niches of the endometriosis group compared to controls (72.9% vs. 36.8% in the vagina and 67.7% vs. 36.8% in the cervix, respectively). Furthermore, Escherichia/Shigella, Streptococcus, and Ureaplasma were markedly elevated, while Prevotella, Dialister, and Megasphaera were significantly reduced. These microbial changes suggest an altered immune response and heightened inflammatory state in women with advanced endometriosis, highlighting potential microbial markers of disease progression.
Anatomical Site
Microbiota Findings in Advanced Endometriosis Patients
Vaginal Samples
Gemella and Atopobium completely absent. Gardnerella significantly elevated (72.9% of microbiota, excluding Lactobacillus).
Cervical Samples
Complete loss of Atopobium and Sneathia. Marked increase in Alloprevotella. Gardnerella elevated (67.7% of microbiota, excluding Lactobacillus).
Stool Samples
Significant decreases in Sneathia, Barnesella, and Gardnerella. Dominance of Escherichia/Shigella observed in two patients requiring bowel resection.
Additional Microbial Shifts
Marked elevation of Escherichia/Shigella, Streptococcus, and Ureaplasma. Reductions in Prevotella, Dialister, and Megasphaera.
Inflammatory Associations
Dysbiosis patterns suggest an altered immune response and heightened inflammatory state in advanced endometriosis.
The impact of endometriosis on dietary choices and activities of everyday life: a cross-sectional study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This review highlights how gluten-free, Mediterranean, and anti-inflammatory diets improve pain perception in endometriosis by reducing inflammation and modulating the gut microbiome. Probiotics and bioactive nutrients such as curcumin enhance therapeutic outcomes.
What was reviewed?
This systematic review evaluated the impact of dietary interventions on pain perception in women diagnosed with endometriosis. It explored the connections between dietary changes and the alleviation of symptoms, particularly chronic pain, and assessed the potential of specific dietary patterns and nutrients to influence disease progression and symptom severity. The review included evidence from various studies highlighting the role of diets such as gluten-free, Mediterranean, and anti-inflammatory diets, along with the incorporation of specific nutrients and probiotics.
Who was reviewed?
The review included studies examining women diagnosed with endometriosis, focusing on their dietary habits, pain management strategies, and overall quality of life. The population spanned diverse stages of endometriosis and varying symptom severities, with dietary interventions as a common self-management approach.
What were the most important findings?
The review identified several key dietary patterns and nutrients that positively influenced pain perception and symptom management in women with endometriosis. A gluten-free diet was associated with symptom relief in patients experiencing gastrointestinal-related pain, while the Mediterranean diet showed benefits in reducing inflammation and pain severity due to its high content of antioxidants, omega-3 fatty acids, and polyphenols. Anti-inflammatory diets also gained traction, particularly in severe cases of endometriosis, where eliminating saturated fats and processed meats improved symptom management.
Major microbial associations (MMAs) of endometriosis were also highlighted, particularly the role of probiotics like Lactobacillus in alleviating pain and potentially modulating the gut microbiome to reduce systemic inflammation. The findings emphasize the therapeutic potential of dietary supplements such as curcumin, resveratrol, and quercetin, which possess anti-inflammatory and antioxidant properties.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The findings suggest that dietary interventions and supplements can serve as non-invasive and complementary strategies for managing endometriosis-related symptoms, particularly chronic pain. By modulating systemic inflammation and influencing the gut microbiome, specific dietary patterns and nutrients may provide a tailored approach to alleviating symptoms. The review underscores the importance of integrating nutritional guidance into endometriosis management protocols.
The Influence of Lactoferrin in Plasma and Peritoneal Fluid on Iron Metabolism in Women with Endometriosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This study demonstrates that peritoneal fluid-to-plasma ferritin and lactoferrin ratios distinguish endometriosis stage and severity. Iron overload and shifting iron-binding protein profiles reveal a localized dysregulation that may influence disease progression and potentially pathogenic microbiome selection.
What was studied?
This study investigated the role of lactoferrin (LF) in relation to iron metabolism in women with and without endometriosis by measuring levels of LF, ferritin (FT), transferrin (TF), and iron (Fe) simultaneously in plasma and peritoneal fluid. The authors specifically explored whether the concentrations and ratios of these iron-related proteins in the two biological compartments could distinguish the presence and progression of endometriosis. The goal was to identify noninvasive or minimally invasive biomarkers that may aid in diagnosing or staging the disease based on iron metabolism, especially given endometriosis’ pro-inflammatory, iron-rich microenvironment.
Who was studied?
The study cohort included 90 women of reproductive age undergoing diagnostic laparoscopy, of whom 57 had histologically confirmed endometriosis (stages I–IV) and 33 did not. Plasma and peritoneal fluid samples were collected pre- and intra-operatively. Subjects were classified based on endometriosis diagnosis and stage, and specimens were evaluated for levels of LF, FT, TF, and Fe using ELISA, immunoturbidimetric assay, and colorimetric methods.
What were the most important findings?
Key findings highlight that ferritin and iron concentrations were significantly elevated in peritoneal fluid compared to plasma, especially in patients with advanced-stage endometriosis. In contrast, transferrin was consistently lower in peritoneal fluid. Notably, lactoferrin levels did not significantly differ between women with and without endometriosis when evaluated independently in plasma or peritoneal fluid, but the peritoneal fluid/plasma lactoferrin ratio decreased progressively with increasing disease severity, significantly distinguishing stage I from stage IV. The ferritin ratio was markedly higher in the endometriosis group, underscoring its potential as a disease marker. Correlation analyses revealed that in severe endometriosis, lactoferrin was significantly associated with ferritin and iron in the peritoneal fluid, suggesting a disrupted iron regulation mechanism localized to the disease microenvironment. Importantly, the elevated ferritin concentrations in peritoneal fluid may serve a compensatory, protective role to sequester iron and mitigate oxidative stress, while lactoferrin may lose this protective function as disease progresses.
From a microbiome perspective, this study underscores the iron-dependent ecological shifts that may select for siderophilic pathobionts. The iron overload and pro-oxidative milieu likely fosters the expansion of iron-requiring microbial taxa, potentially including Escherichia, Enterobacter, and Fusobacterium, known to be enriched in some endometriosis microbiome signatures. While microbial profiling was not performed, the metallomic dysregulation described supports the hypothesis that iron availability is a crucial factor in shaping pathogenic microbial communities in endometriosis.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study provides compelling evidence that iron-binding proteins—particularly ferritin and lactoferrin—play a localized and differential role in the progression of endometriosis. The findings suggest that peritoneal fluid iron metabolism, and especially the ferritin-to-lactoferrin balance, may be a critical axis of disease progression and potentially a therapeutic target. The study introduces the peritoneal fluid/plasma concentration ratio as a novel diagnostic parameter, offering a more granular assessment than conventional plasma markers. The declining lactoferrin ratio and increasing ferritin ratio with disease severity may signal a transition from iron sequestration and immune modulation toward iron-driven oxidative stress and tissue damage. This may serve as a foundation for the development of metallome-targeted diagnostics and therapies, including exogenous lactoferrin supplementation, which the authors suggest could restore iron balance in advanced disease stages. These findings also have implications for understanding how iron dysregulation may foster microbial dysbiosis, providing a mechanistic link between host iron metabolism and the pathophysiological selection of microbial communities in endometriosis.
The Main Theories on the Pathogenesis of Endometriosis
February 12, 2026
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This review synthesizes key theories on endometriosis pathogenesis, emphasizing immune, hormonal, and epigenetic interactions in its progression.
What Was Reviewed?
This review explored the primary theories underlying the pathogenesis of endometriosis, a chronic gynecological disorder characterized by the growth of endometrial-like tissue outside the uterus. The review evaluated various mechanisms, including retrograde menstruation, immune dysregulation, coelomic metaplasia, hormonal imbalance, and epigenetic regulation. Additionally, it considered the role of stem cells and environmental factors in disease onset and progression. The synthesis of these theories aimed to illuminate the multifactorial origins of the disease and its systemic implications.
Who Was Reviewed?
The review included a broad analysis of scientific literature, focusing on research involving women with endometriosis, animal models (notably baboons and mice), and cell-based experiments. Integrating data from diverse biological contexts provided a comprehensive overview of the disease's potential mechanisms.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The review highlighted that endometriosis likely results from an interplay of multiple pathogenic pathways. Immune dysregulation was a central focus, with macrophages, T cells, and dendritic cells contributing to chronic inflammation, suppressed apoptosis, and lesion growth. Hormonal imbalances, particularly estrogen dominance and progesterone resistance, were identified as pivotal in driving lesion persistence and infertility. Epigenetic changes, such as DNA methylation and micro-RNA dysregulation, emerged as significant contributors to disease progression, influencing inflammation, angiogenesis, and cellular proliferation.
This review did not address key microbial associations in endometriosis, but immune-modulated inflammation and altered hormonal environments suggest indirect links to microbiome perturbations. For example, increased inflammatory cytokines (e.g., TNF-α and IL-6) and VEGF in endometriotic lesions may influence local microbial dynamics.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Review?
Understanding the multifactorial nature of endometriosis provides a foundation for developing targeted therapeutic strategies. The review underscores the need for integrative approaches combining hormonal regulation, immune modulation, and potential epigenetic therapies. Additionally, exploring microbiome interactions in this context may reveal novel interventions, particularly in immune-regulated inflammation and hormonal imbalances.
The role of gut and genital microbiota and the estrobolome in endometriosis, infertility and chronic pelvic pain
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Chronic Pelvic Pain (CPP)
Chronic Pelvic Pain (CPP)
Chronic Pelvic Pain (CPP) is persistent pain in the pelvic region lasting six months or longer, often multifactorial, impacting physical and emotional well-being, and associated with various medical conditions.
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Infertility
Infertility
Infertility is the inability to conceive after 12 months of regular, unprotected sex. It affects both men and women and can be due to various physical, hormonal, or genetic factors. Treatments include medication, surgery, assisted reproductive technologies, and lifestyle changes.
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This review highlights the gut and genital microbiome's roles in estrogen-driven conditions like endometriosis, infertility, and CPP, emphasizing dysbiosis' impact on inflammation and estrogen metabolism.
What was reviewed?
The reviewed manuscript explored the intricate relationship between the gut and genital microbiomes, the estrobolome, and their roles in the pathophysiology of endometriosis, infertility, and chronic pelvic pain (CPP). The authors critically examined 28 clinical and six preclinical studies to understand microbial dysbiosis's contributions to estrogen metabolism, inflammation, and symptomatology in these conditions. This review also identified methodological gaps in microbiome studies and proposed strategies to improve future research.
Who was reviewed?
The review included human and animal studies, examining women diagnosed with endometriosis, infertility, and CPP, alongside healthy controls. Specific focus was placed on microbial associations in the gut, cervicovaginal, and endometrial microbiomes, with emphasis on bacterial vaginosis-associated bacteria, Lactobacillus depletion, and microbial influences on estrogen-driven mechanisms.
What were the most important findings?
Key findings highlighted that dysbiosis in the gut microbiome disrupts the estrobolome, an essential modulator of estrogen metabolism. This disruption contributes to heightened systemic and local inflammation, potentially exacerbating endometriosis symptoms and infertility. Many studies noted an association between bacterial vaginosis-related bacteria and a reduction in Lactobacillus dominance in the cervicovaginal microbiome with the prevalence of endometriosis and infertility. Additionally, the review underscored a bidirectional relationship between gut microbiota and endometriosis progression in animal models, emphasizing the role of gut dysbiosis in increasing b-glucuronidase activity, leading to elevated circulating estrogen levels.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review underscores the need for rigorous, standardized methodologies to better delineate causal relationships between microbiota and gynecological conditions like endometriosis and CPP. The findings of this review suggest that targeting the microbiome could lead to novel diagnostics and therapeutics for estrogen-driven diseases. The review also highlights the potential of leveraging microbiome-based biomarkers for non-invasive diagnostics and monitoring of endometriosis progression, bridging a critical translational gap in gynecological health.
The role of the vaginal microbiome in distinguishing female chronic pelvic pain caused by endometriosis/adenomyosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Chronic Pelvic Pain (CPP)
Chronic Pelvic Pain (CPP)
Chronic Pelvic Pain (CPP) is persistent pain in the pelvic region lasting six months or longer, often multifactorial, impacting physical and emotional well-being, and associated with various medical conditions.
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This study examines the role of the vaginal microbiome in distinguishing chronic pelvic pain caused by endometriosis and adenomyosis. Findings highlight specific microbial signatures associated with pain severity, offering potential non-invasive biomarkers for differential diagnosis and targeted therapeutic strategies.
What was studied?
This study investigated whether the composition of the vaginal microbiome could serve as a diagnostic biomarker to differentiate chronic pelvic pain (CPP) caused by endometriosis or adenomyosis (EM/AM) from other causes of chronic pelvic pain syndrome (CPPS) in women. Using 16S rRNA sequencing (V4 region), the researchers profiled the vaginal microbiota of 37 women with EM/AM-associated CPP, 25 with CPPS from other causes, and 66 healthy controls without CPPS. Additionally, the study explored whether combining vaginal microbial markers with serum CA125 could improve differential diagnostic accuracy.
Who was studied?
The study included 128 premenopausal women attending the gynecology department of Peking Union Medical College Hospital. These were stratified into three groups: 37 women with surgically confirmed EM/AM-associated CPP, 25 women with non-EM/AM CPPS (adhesions, hydrosalpinx, infertility), and 66 women without any chronic pelvic pain. All participants were HPV-negative, had not recently used antibiotics or vaginal products, and were matched for age, gravidity, parity, and contraceptive method to control for confounding variables.
What were the most important findings?
The vaginal microbiome of women with EM/AM-associated CPP exhibited significantly higher alpha diversity than those in the CPPS and healthy control groups. Taxonomic analyses revealed distinct microbial signatures: increased abundance of Clostridium butyricum, Clostridium disporicum, Alloscardovia omnicolens, and Veillonella montpellierensis, alongside a marked depletion of Lactobacillus jensenii, Lactobacillus reuteri, and Lactobacillus iners. These differentially abundant taxa serve as potential microbiome biomarkers.
Diagnostic performance analysis demonstrated that a combination of microbial biomarkers (specifically, a relative abundance of Clostridium disporicum >0.001105% and Lactobacillus reuteri <0.1911349%) yielded 81.08% sensitivity and 52% specificity for identifying EM/AM-associated CPP. When combined with serum CA125 levels, sensitivity increased to 89.19%, although specificity remained unchanged. Functional predictions via PICRUSt revealed enrichment of metabolic pathways such as amino acid metabolism, energy metabolism, and metabolism of cofactors and vitamins in EM/AM patients, along with downregulation of membrane transport and nucleotide metabolism compared to controls. These shifts may reflect microbial contributions to inflammation and pain signaling pathways implicated in EM/AM-associated CPP.
From a microbiome signature standpoint, the enriched taxa—particularly Clostridium disporicum and Alloscardovia omnicolens—emerge as Major Microbial Associations (MMAs) due to their consistent elevation in EM/AM patients. Conversely, Lactobacillus jensenii and L. reuteri, known for their protective, anti-inflammatory properties, are depleted, suggesting their role in maintaining vaginal eubiosis and preventing EM/AM-associated pathogenesis.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This research provides compelling evidence that the vaginal microbiome harbors discriminative microbial signatures capable of differentiating EM/AM-associated CPP from other forms of chronic pelvic pain. The incorporation of specific microbial biomarkers, particularly when paired with serum CA125, may improve non-invasive diagnostic accuracy, enabling earlier and more targeted therapeutic intervention. Clinically, these findings underscore the potential of microbiome-informed diagnostics for gynecological conditions where conventional markers fall short. More broadly, this study suggests that vaginal dysbiosis, characterized by Lactobacillus depletion and enrichment of saccharolytic and anaerobic species, could be causally linked to EM/AM pathogenesis, possibly via inflammatory or metabolic pathways. Future studies incorporating metagenomic or metabolomic analyses are warranted to functionally validate these microbial associations and to explore the feasibility of microbial modulation as a therapeutic strategy.
The Vaginal Microbiome as a Tool to Predict rASRM Stage of Disease in Endometriosis: a Pilot Study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This study identifies the vaginal microbiome as a predictor of endometriosis severity, highlighting microbial shifts that correlate with rASRM staging. Anaerococcus emerged as a key biomarker for advanced disease stages, while CST IV dominance during menstruation suggests inflammatory shifts. Findings support the potential of non-invasive microbiome-based diagnosis for endometriosis.
What Was Studied?
This study investigated the potential use of the vaginal microbiome as a diagnostic tool to predict the stage of disease severity in endometriosis, based on the revised American Society for Reproductive Medicine (rASRM) staging system. Conducted as an observational cross-sectional pilot study, researchers characterized the gut and vaginal microbiome profiles of women with and without endometriosis to explore non-invasive biomarkers for disease staging. A total of 59 women participated, 35 with endometriosis and 24 controls. Rectal and vaginal samples were collected at two different points in the menstrual cycle—the menstrual and follicular phases—to assess the microbial composition's correlation with rASRM stages. Illumina sequencing was utilized to analyze 16S rRNA gene amplicons, with community state types (CSTs) assigned to classify the vaginal microbiota. Random forest-based machine-learning models were constructed to evaluate the predictive power of vaginal microbiota profiles during different menstrual phases.
Who Was Studied?
The study included 35 women with a confirmed diagnosis of endometriosis and 24 control subjects without the disease. Participants were recruited from the University of Sao Paulo and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, with all subjects providing written informed consent. Inclusion criteria required histological confirmation of endometriosis, while controls were women undergoing laparoscopic surgery for other benign gynecological conditions. Key exclusion criteria included recent antibiotic or hormone use, active infections, autoimmune diseases, and any history of sexually transmitted infections. The vaginal and rectal samples were collected during both the follicular and menstrual phases, known to influence microbial community dynamics.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study revealed that the vaginal microbiome's composition significantly differed between endometriosis patients and controls, particularly during the menstrual phase. Classification models built from vaginal microbial profiles during menstruation accurately predicted rASRM stage 1–2 versus stage 3–4 endometriosis. The genus Anaerococcus emerged as the top predictive operational taxonomic unit (OTU) for distinguishing between early and advanced stages of the disease. Notably, the transition of community state types (CSTs) also reflected disease severity. During the menstrual phase, there was a marked increase in CST IV (characterized by anaerobic bacteria dominance) among both endometriosis patients (30%) and controls (25%), with a simultaneous loss of CST II and CST V. CST I, typically dominated by Lactobacillus crispatus, appeared more prevalent in endometriosis patients during menstruation, suggesting an immunomodulatory role that may contribute to the disease's local inflammatory environment. These microbial changes were consistent with differences in local immune response and hormonal fluctuations. This pilot study is the first to demonstrate that vaginal microbiome profiles, particularly the presence of Anaerococcus, may serve as a non-invasive biomarker for endometriosis staging, potentially offering a diagnostic tool that bypasses the need for invasive surgical confirmation.
Microbial Group
Endometriosis Findings
Clinical Implications
Anaerococcus
Increased in rASRM stages III–IV
Marker for advanced disease severity
CST IV (Community State Type)
Dominant during menstruation
Associated with low Lactobacillus and high microbial diversity
Potential for non-invasive staging of endometriosis
Vaginal Microbiome Shifts
Correlated with menstrual cycle phase
Indicates dynamic microbial changes tied to inflammation
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
The findings from this study suggest that the vaginal microbiome, specifically the composition of community state types and the presence of Anaerococcus, may be harnessed as a non-invasive biomarker to predict the stage of endometriosis severity. This has profound implications for clinical practice, as it could reduce the dependency on invasive laparoscopy for disease staging, which is currently the gold standard. If validated in larger cohorts, this approach could facilitate early detection and better stratification of endometriosis patients, enabling more targeted and personalized therapeutic interventions. Furthermore, the study underscores the significance of microbiome-driven inflammation in the pathophysiology of endometriosis, opening avenues for microbiome-targeted therapies as a novel strategy to mitigate disease progression and symptom severity. The integration of vaginal microbiome profiling into clinical diagnostics could revolutionize the early detection and management of endometriosis, addressing a critical unmet need in gynecological health.
Trace Elements and Endometriosis: Insights into Oxidative Stress and Novel Therapies
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This review explores the role of trace elements and oxidative stress in endometriosis, highlighting their potential as therapeutic targets. It underscores the need for further research into the trace elements’ roles in endometriotic lesions.
What was reviewed?
The article reviews the role of trace elements in the pathogenesis and management of endometriosis, a chronic, estrogen-dependent inflammatory disease. It synthesizes existing research on the impact of oxidative stress and environmental exposure to trace elements like zinc, nickel, cadmium, and copper, linking these factors to the formation and proliferation of endometrial-like lesions outside the uterus.
Who was reviewed?
The review focuses on studies involving women with confirmed endometriosis, highlighting environmental and biological factors such as trace element concentrations in blood, urine, and peritoneal fluid. Additionally, it incorporates experimental findings, including animal models, to explore the mechanistic roles of trace elements.
What were the most important findings?
The review emphasizes the link between oxidative stress and endometriosis, with trace elements acting as potential modulators of this process. Zinc, for instance, is identified for its antioxidant and anti-inflammatory roles, with lower levels in endometriosis patients potentially contributing to lesion formation. Nickel, on the other hand, has been implicated in the condition as a metalloestrogen, as further evidenced by improved symptoms following a low-nickel diet. Cadmium and lead, known for inducing oxidative stress, show conflicting associations with endometriosis, though some evidence suggests their presence synergistically exacerbates disease severity. Copper's involvement in angiogenesis and its elevated levels in endometriosis patients suggest a role in lesion proliferation. The review also highlights discrepancies in study findings, emphasizing the need for further research on trace elements within endometriotic implants rather than just systemic fluids.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The review underscores the potential of targeting trace elements and oxidative stress as therapeutic strategies for endometriosis. It calls for more comprehensive research into the specific roles of trace elements within endometriotic tissue, as these could pave the way for novel diagnostic markers and treatments. Additionally, the environmental and dietary implications of trace element exposure warrant further exploration, particularly in the context of prevention and symptom management.
Interplay between enterobactin myeloperoxidase and lipocalin 2 in the inflamed gut
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Escherichia coli (E. coli)
Escherichia coli (E. coli)
Escherichia coli (E. coli) is a versatile bacterium, from gut commensal to pathogen, linked to chronic conditions like endometriosis.
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Aferric enterobactin disables myeloperoxidase, granting E. coli a survival edge in colitis, while lipocalin 2 restores enzyme function and counters colonization.
What was studied?
This study investigated the interplay between enterobactin myeloperoxidase and lipocalin 2 as a determinant of Escherichia coli (E. coli) survival within the inflamed gut. The authors tested whether the catecholate siderophore enterobactin, particularly in its iron-free form, directly inactivates the neutrophil peroxidase system that generates hypohalous acids, and whether host lipocalin 2 reverses this effect. Spectral kinetics using lactoperoxidase as a model readout showed that enterobactin and its monomer 2,3-dihydroxybenzoic acid rapidly drive compound I back to the ferric resting state, thereby aborting oxidant formation. Figures and spectra on page 3 document the immediate reversion of the Soret peak to 412 nm, consistent with suicide substrate behavior.
Who was studied?
The work combined in vitro enzyme assays, bacterial killing assays, and murine models of colitis. Nonpathogenic E. coli K-12 and isogenic siderophore mutants were used, including DfepA (overproduces enterobactin), DaroB and DentC (enterobactin deficient), and DaroB/DfepA. Recombinant human or murine lipocalin 2 was applied to test host countermeasures. In vivo, streptomycin-pretreated Salmonella-induced gastroenteritis and dextran sulfate sodium colitis models quantified cecal and colonic myeloperoxidase activity and E. coli colonization. A schematic on page 8 summarizes the experimental mechanism linking hypoferremia, enterobactin release, myeloperoxidase inactivation, and lipocalin 2 rescue.
Most important findings
Enterobactin, only in its aferric form, potently inhibited myeloperoxidase and lactoperoxidase in a dose- and time-dependent manner, outperforming the reference inhibitor 4-aminobenzoic acid hydrazide. DHBA showed similar but weaker effects. Iron-loaded enterobactin and DHBA failed to inhibit, establishing iron-free specificity. Glycosylated or non-catecholate siderophores, including salmochelin, yersiniabactin, and ferrichrome, did not inhibit at much higher concentrations, implying a catecholate-dependent mechanism. In vivo, DfepA reduced mucosal myeloperoxidase activity and achieved higher fecal and tissue burdens than enterobactin-null mutants in both colitis models, indicating a survival and colonization advantage under inflammation. Preincubation of enterobactin or DHBA with human or mouse lipocalin 2 abolished enzyme inhibition, restoring peroxidase activity. The spectral plots on page 3 and bactericidal assays on pages 5–6 show rapid conversion of compound I to Fe(III) and protection from myeloperoxidase–H2O2 killing, while figure panels on page 7 demonstrate lipocalin 2 reversal. Collectively, these data position enterobactin as a dual-use molecule for iron acquisition and immune evasion, with lipocalin 2 as the host countermeasure.
Finding
Evidence
Aferric enterobactin inhibits MPO
Dose–response and kinetics; spectral reversion to 412 nm within seconds (page 3).
Iron-bound enterobactin inactive
Fe:Ent 3:1 shows no inhibition; 1:1 greatly reduced (page 3).
DHBA inhibits but less potently
Parallel inhibition and spectra similar to enterobactin (pages 3–4).
Salmochelin, yersiniabactin fail
Minimal MPO/LPO inhibition at high doses (page 4).
DfepA gains survival advantage
Lower mucosal MPO and higher colonization in colitis models (pages 5–6).
Lipocalin 2 rescues MPO
Prebinding with human or mouse Lcn2 negates inhibition (page 7).
Key implications
Enterobacteriaceae, particularly E. coli, exploit siderophore chemistry to neutralize neutrophil peroxidase-mediated killing during inflammation. Enterobactin emerges as a mechanistic driver of E. coli blooms in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) by disabling a key oxidative effector, while lipocalin 2 functions as a host rebuttal that can restore peroxidase activity. The failure of salmochelin to inhibit myeloperoxidase, despite its ability to evade lipocalin 2, suggests an evolutionary trade-off that may tune siderophore portfolios across pathotypes and disease niches. Clinically, lipocalin 2 levels, siderophore profiles, and myeloperoxidase activity could serve as coupled biomarkers that stratify inflammatory risk and E. coli overgrowth. Therapeutically, strategies that stabilize peroxidase function, enhance lipocalin 2 binding to catecholate siderophores, or limit aferric enterobactin bioavailability may interrupt the survival advantage documented in this work. The mechanism diagram on page 8 provides a concise translational blueprint for these interventions.
Dietary essential oils improves the growth performance, antioxidant properties and intestinal permeability by inhibiting bacterial proliferation, and altering the gut microbiota of yellow-feather broilers
February 12, 2026
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Essential Oils
Essential Oils
Essential oils are powerful natural substances that can modulate the gut microbiome, offering therapeutic benefits such as enhanced digestion, reduced inflammation, and improved immune function. With antimicrobial properties that selectively target harmful bacteria while promoting beneficial gut microbes, EOs like oregano, tea tree, and peppermint are emerging as effective interventions for optimizing health. However, safe application is crucial to avoid potential risks, including skin irritation and interactions with medications. Understanding the proper use of EOs ensures their effectiveness in supporting a balanced microbiome and overall well-being.
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This study shows how essential oils improve broiler gut health, boost growth, and reshape microbiota, offering a natural antibiotic alternative.
What was studied?
This experimental study investigated the antibacterial properties of essential oils (EOs) and their effects on growth performance, intestinal morphology, antioxidant capacity, and gut microbiota of yellow-feathered broilers. A total of 720 male chicks were divided into four groups receiving different EO doses over 48 days. The study aimed to determine whether EOs could inhibit bacterial proliferation, improve gut health, and enhance overall poultry production performance. The researchers combined in vitro antimicrobial testing with in vivo assessments of intestinal structure, biochemical markers, and gut microbial shifts.
Who was studied?
The study focused on yellow-feathered broiler chickens, which are commonly used in poultry farming. These birds were fed either a control diet or diets supplemented with varying concentrations of EOs, which contained thymol and carvacrol as active ingredients. Their growth, intestinal morphology, antioxidant responses, serum biochemistry, and cecal microbiota were closely monitored. The microbial focus included pathogenic species like E. coli and Salmonella, along with beneficial genera such as Lactobacillus and Faecalibacterium, enabling a clear view of how the EO interventions reshaped gut microbial communities.
What were the most important findings?
The study demonstrated that EOs significantly inhibited the proliferation and biofilm formation of E. coli O78 and Salmonella pullorum, with minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs. In vivo, EO supplementation enhanced average daily gain (ADG) and feed efficiency across multiple growth phases. Antioxidant markers such as superoxide dismutase (SOD) and catalase (CAT) activity improved, while intestinal permeability markers (villus height and tight junction protein expression) were positively affected. Gut microbiota analysis revealed that EO supplementation increased beneficial microbes, particularly Lactobacillus and Faecalibacterium, while reducing harmful genera such as Negativibacillus and Flavonifractor. Notably, the EO400 group showed the highest microbial diversity and upregulated pathways for chemoheterotrophy and fermentation. Correlation analysis linked improved gut microbiota profiles to better growth performance, suggesting that EO-driven microbial shifts were central to the observed production benefits.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study provides robust evidence that essential oils can serve as effective natural alternatives to antibiotic growth promoters (AGPs) in poultry farming. By reducing pathogenic bacteria and fostering beneficial microbiota, EOs improve gut health and production performance while mitigating risks associated with antibiotic resistance. The findings are particularly relevant as global regulations increasingly restrict AGP use. However, the dose-dependent effects and variable long-term impacts highlight the need for precise formulation and further research to optimize EO-based interventions in commercial settings.
Essential Oils, Chemical Compounds, and Their Effects on the Gut Microorganisms and Broiler Chicken Production
February 12, 2026
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Essential Oils
Essential Oils
Essential oils are powerful natural substances that can modulate the gut microbiome, offering therapeutic benefits such as enhanced digestion, reduced inflammation, and improved immune function. With antimicrobial properties that selectively target harmful bacteria while promoting beneficial gut microbes, EOs like oregano, tea tree, and peppermint are emerging as effective interventions for optimizing health. However, safe application is crucial to avoid potential risks, including skin irritation and interactions with medications. Understanding the proper use of EOs ensures their effectiveness in supporting a balanced microbiome and overall well-being.
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This review explores how essential oils enhance broiler chicken health by reshaping gut microbiota, improving growth, and acting as sustainable antibiotic alternatives.
What was reviewed?
This review systematically evaluated the role of essential oils (EOs) in improving broiler chickens' health, gut microbiota, and production outcomes. By analyzing 158 publications, it explored the antimicrobial, antioxidant, and growth-promoting properties of EOs sourced from a wide range of plants such as Origanum, Cymbopogon, Citrus, and Eucalyptus. The focus was on how these plant-derived compounds influence gut microbiota composition, inhibit pathogenic bacteria, and serve as sustainable alternatives to antibiotics in poultry farming. The review also detailed various modes of action, including nutrient absorption enhancement, immune system fortification, and oxidative stress reduction, positioning EOs as a promising tool for sustainable broiler production.
Who was reviewed?
The review focused on studies investigating broiler chickens, specifically those examining the effects of dietary or water supplementation with essential oils. It addressed different microbial communities within the chicken gut, noting common bacterial families such as Lachnospiraceae, Ruminococcaceae, and Veillonellaceae, and pathogens like Escherichia coli, Salmonella spp., and Clostridium perfringens. The review highlighted how EOs influenced these microbiota and the overall health and productivity of broilers.
What were the most important findings?
The review found that essential oils exert significant antimicrobial activity, especially against pathogens like E. coli, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Salmonella spp., and Staphylococcus spp. For example, cinnamaldehyde from cinnamon bark and compounds from Cymbopogon citratus were highly effective in reducing pathogenic bacterial loads, improving intestinal morphology, and promoting a healthier gut environment. Origanum EO not only enhanced gut health but also demonstrated strong antioxidant effects, while Citrus oils showed dual benefits of microbial control and reduction of Eimeria oocysts. Importantly, the use of EOs led to improvements in nutrient absorption through enhanced gut morphology, specifically increasing villi height and enzyme activity, thereby boosting growth performance. These findings emphasize the potential of EOs to rebalance gut microbial populations toward beneficial species like Lactobacillus, reduce pathogenic colonization, and serve as natural growth promoters.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The review underscores that essential oils can act as sustainable and effective alternatives to antibiotics in poultry production. Their ability to reduce pathogenic bacteria while supporting beneficial gut microbiota is critical in addressing antibiotic resistance issues. The implications extend to safer poultry products for consumers and better environmental outcomes. However, the review also highlighted the need for further research to standardize EO formulations, determine optimal dosages, and assess long-term safety for both animals and humans. The findings encourage poultry producers to consider EOs as part of integrated gut health management strategies that align with global moves toward antibiotic-free animal farming.
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Estrogen
Estrogen
Estrogen is a steroid hormone primarily found in women, crucial for reproductive health, secondary sexual characteristics, and various physiological processes. It regulates menstrual cycles, supports pregnancy, and influences bone density and cardiovascular health. Dysregulation of estrogen levels can lead to various disorders and health complications.
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This study examines estrogen’s dual role in breast cancer, focusing on its effects on estrogen receptor-positive cancers and how different therapies, such as SERMs and aromatase inhibitors, mitigate risks while highlighting estrogen metabolism’s role in cancer risk.
What was studied?
The study investigates the relationship between estrogens and the development of breast cancer, focusing on how estrogen exposure impacts cancer risk and progression. The paper reviews various estrogenic compounds, including endogenous estrogens like estradiol and synthetic ones such as those used in hormone replacement therapy (HRT). It examines the molecular mechanisms by which estrogen acts on estrogen receptors (ER) to influence the proliferation of breast cancer cells. The study also evaluates the role of different estrogen metabolites and their involvement in cancer initiation, particularly highlighting the balance between estrogen's beneficial effects on bone and cardiovascular health and its potential carcinogenic effects in breast tissue. The relationship between estrogen receptor-positive (ER+) breast cancer and treatment strategies, including selective estrogen receptor modulators (SERMs) and aromatase inhibitors, is also discussed.
Who was studied?
The research mainly focuses on women, particularly those at risk of breast cancer due to hormonal factors such as early menarche, late menopause, and long-term use of HRT. It also includes studies on postmenopausal women and how the use of estrogen-based therapies (e.g., HRT) affects their cancer risk. Additionally, the study looks at breast cancer survivors who are undergoing treatment with SERMs or aromatase inhibitors, and those at higher risk due to genetic factors such as mutations in the BRCA1/BRCA2 genes. The paper also evaluates how estrogen receptor expression, specifically ER-alpha and ER-beta, plays a critical role in the progression of breast cancer and how treatment strategies can influence this.
Most important findings
The study highlights the dual role of estrogens in breast cancer development. On one hand, estrogen promotes the growth of ER-positive breast cancer cells by binding to estrogen receptors, which triggers cell proliferation and resistance to apoptosis. On the other hand, selective estrogen receptor modulators (SERMs) like tamoxifen and aromatase inhibitors (AIs) like letrozole have shown to significantly reduce estrogen-driven breast cancer risk by either blocking estrogen receptors or lowering estrogen levels in postmenopausal women. The paper emphasizes the importance of timing and type of estrogen exposure in cancer risk. For example, long-term exposure to estrogen (whether endogenous or exogenous) is a major risk factor for the development of breast cancer, whereas early use of SERMs or AIs reduces recurrence and metastasis. Additionally, the study examines the influence of estrogen metabolism, particularly the 16α-hydroxyestrone pathway, which is associated with increased cancer risk, while other pathways like the 2-hydroxyestrone pathway are considered protective. The findings indicate that personalized treatment based on estrogen receptor status, genetic factors, and metabolism is crucial for minimizing the carcinogenic effects of estrogen.
Key implications
Clinicians should recognize the critical role of estrogen exposure in both the prevention and progression of breast cancer, particularly in patients with estrogen receptor-positive (ER+) cancers. The study suggests that timing of estrogen exposure, such as starting hormone therapy early versus late in life, can have significant effects on cancer risk. Selective estrogen receptor modulators (SERMs) and aromatase inhibitors should be considered for postmenopausal women at high risk of breast cancer or those undergoing breast cancer treatment. Understanding estrogen metabolism and genetic predisposition can further guide clinicians in making personalized treatment decisions. Moreover, prolonged estrogen exposure, particularly through HRT, should be carefully monitored in women, with consideration of alternative therapies or reduced estrogen use where appropriate. Future research into estrogen metabolites and their relationship with microbiome-related health may provide additional insights into how estrogen influences breast cancer risk and progression.
Never fear, the gut bacteria are here: Estrogen and gut microbiome-brain axis interactions in fear extinction
February 12, 2026
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Estrogen
Estrogen
Estrogen is a steroid hormone primarily found in women, crucial for reproductive health, secondary sexual characteristics, and various physiological processes. It regulates menstrual cycles, supports pregnancy, and influences bone density and cardiovascular health. Dysregulation of estrogen levels can lead to various disorders and health complications.
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This review examines estrogen’s interplay with the gut microbiome and brain, revealing their collective influence on fear extinction and anxiety disorders, highlighting critical sex differences and the potential for microbiome-targeted therapies.
What was reviewed?
This review article explores the complex interactions between estrogen, the gut microbiome, and the brain, particularly focusing on how these interactions influence fear extinction, a process critical to anxiety and stress-related psychiatric disorders. It synthesizes current knowledge on the bidirectional communication within the gut microbiota-brain axis, emphasizing sex differences, estrogen’s role, and how microbial metabolites and signaling pathways may modulate fear extinction behaviors and related neural circuits.
Who was reviewed?
The review draws on a broad range of preclinical and clinical studies involving human subjects and animal models, primarily rodents. It incorporates findings from microbiome analyses, behavioral neuroscience, endocrinology, and psychiatry literature. Studies examining sex differences in gut microbial composition, estrogen receptor activity, microbial enzymatic metabolism of estrogens (the estrobolome), and gut-brain signaling pathways are integrated to provide a comprehensive picture of estrogen-microbiome-brain interactions relevant to fear and anxiety regulation.
Most important findings
The review highlights that gut microbiota composition and diversity are influenced by sex and fluctuating estrogen levels, with certain bacterial taxa, including Bifidobacterium, Clostridium, and Lactobacillus, capable of metabolizing estrogens via β-glucuronidase activity. This estrobolome function modulates circulating estrogen levels and thus potentially impacts brain regions involved in fear extinction, such as the amygdala, hippocampus, and medial prefrontal cortex. Preclinical models demonstrate that microbiome depletion impairs fear extinction learning, whereas probiotics may enhance it, implicating microbial metabolites and neural pathways, particularly via the vagus nerve, in mediating these effects. Estradiol, acting predominantly through estrogen receptor β (ERβ), facilitates fear extinction memory recall and modifies GABAergic signaling in fear circuits. However, most mechanistic studies focus on males, with a critical lack of female-specific data, especially across hormonal cycles. Human studies are limited but suggest associations between gut microbial taxa and fear-related neural activity. Progesterone’s role remains less clear but may also interact with the gut microbiome to influence anxiety behaviors.
Key implications
This review underscores the need for more sex-specific research into the gut microbiome’s role in neuropsychiatric disorders, particularly anxiety and PTSD, given the higher prevalence in women and estrogen’s modulatory effects on fear extinction. Understanding the estrogen-gut microbiome-brain axis could reveal novel therapeutic targets, including microbiota-based interventions like probiotics or fecal microbiota transplantation, tailored by sex and hormonal status. It also highlights that estrogen’s influence on brain circuits critical for fear learning is potentially mediated or modulated by microbial activity and metabolites, suggesting a new dimension for personalized psychiatry. Future studies must include females, consider hormonal cycles, and employ integrated microbiome and neurobiological approaches to improve mental health outcomes and address sex disparities in psychiatric disease.
Progesterone: The ultimate endometrial tumor suppressor
February 12, 2026
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Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) is one of the most effective treatments for women experiencing the symptoms of menopause, particularly vasomotor symptoms such as hot flashes and night sweats. But its benefits go beyond just symptom management. HRT can also play a key role in improving vaginal health by alleviating dryness and discomfort, which are common complaints among women in menopause. Additionally, it helps prevent bone loss, significantly reducing the risk of osteoporosis and fractures, which are more common after menopause. Despite its many benefits, HRT is not one-size-fits-all; it’s essential to tailor treatment based on individual health profiles, taking into account the risks like breast cancer, blood clots, and heart disease that come with prolonged use.
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Estrogen
Estrogen
Estrogen is a steroid hormone primarily found in women, crucial for reproductive health, secondary sexual characteristics, and various physiological processes. It regulates menstrual cycles, supports pregnancy, and influences bone density and cardiovascular health. Dysregulation of estrogen levels can lead to various disorders and health complications.
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The review defines progesterone endometrial tumor suppressor mechanisms, links receptor biology to therapy response, and outlines immune and barrier changes with clear microbiome relevance despite no direct taxa reporting.
What was reviewed?
This review explains how progesterone endometrial tumor suppressor pathways act through progesterone receptors to restrain estrogen-driven growth, drive differentiation, and shape treatment response in endometrial disease. The authors map the roles of the two receptor isoforms, PRA and PRB, describe crosstalk with estrogen signaling, and outline gene networks that control cell cycle arrest, apoptosis, invasion, and immune tone. They summarize why loss of receptor expression or function limits progestin therapy in advanced cancer and show how epigenetic silencing, miRNA control, SUMOylation, and proteasomal degradation can reduce receptor activity. The review does not report microbiome profiling, yet its immune and barrier findings carry clear microbiome relevance because they alter mucosal defenses that guide microbial ecology in the uterus.
Who was reviewed?
The review centers on women with endometrial hyperplasia, type I endometrioid carcinoma, and aggressive type II tumors, with emphasis on how progesterone receptor status predicts response to therapy. It also draws on preclinical work in human endometrial cancer cell lines, xenografts, and multiple mouse and rat models that clarify receptor biology and downstream signaling. Clinical observations include higher response to progestins in PR-rich tumors and brief benefit in recurrent disease, which aligns with gradual receptor loss under treatment pressure. These populations reflect typical clinic cohorts in whom hormonal therapy can reverse hyperplasia, treat early disease in fertility-sparing settings, and complement targeted strategies when tumors keep or regain receptor expression.
Most important findings
Estrogen promotes epithelial proliferation via ER-driven growth signals, including EGF/EGFR, IGF-1, and proto-oncogenes such as c-fos and c-myc, while non-genomic ER activity engages PI3K/Akt. Progesterone counters these inputs through PR-dependent transcription that decreases proliferation, invasion, and inflammation and that induces differentiation and apoptosis. PRB usually drives stronger transcription; PRA can blunt ER action. Progesterone suppresses AP-1 and NF-κB activity, upregulates cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors p21 and p27, limits c-jun and cyclin D1 promoter activity, and induces Wnt pathway brakes such as DKK1 and FOXO1. Progestin therapy regresses hyperplasia in most cases and treats a subset of primary tumors, yet responses in recurrent disease remain modest. Mechanisms of reduced sensitivity include PRB promoter hypermethylation, miRNA-mediated downregulation, SUMOylation that restrains PR activity, and ligand-triggered MAPK phosphorylation that targets PR for proteasomal degradation.
Key implications
Clinicians can expect the strongest and most durable hormonal responses in PR-expressing, well-differentiated disease and in hyperplasia. You should pair pathology and receptor status with therapy choice, consider fertility-sparing progestin regimens for eligible patients, and anticipate diminishing benefit as receptor expression falls. You should also watch for strategies that restore or enhance PR function, including the use of tamoxifen to induce receptor expression and potential epigenetic approaches to reverse PRB promoter methylation. Because PR signaling quiets AP-1 and NF-κB and strengthens epithelial control of the microenvironment, integration of receptor status with endometrial microbiome sampling could uncover reproducible immune-microbiome signatures for risk stratification and for tracking response during progestin therapy, even though this review offers no direct microbial data.
Association between sex hormone levels and gut microbiota composition and diversity – A Systematic Review
February 12, 2026
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Estrogen
Estrogen
Estrogen is a steroid hormone primarily found in women, crucial for reproductive health, secondary sexual characteristics, and various physiological processes. It regulates menstrual cycles, supports pregnancy, and influences bone density and cardiovascular health. Dysregulation of estrogen levels can lead to various disorders and health complications.
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This systematic review links sex hormone levels with gut microbiota composition and diversity, revealing associations that may underpin sex-specific disease risks and suggesting microbiota modulation as a therapeutic strategy.
What was reviewed?
This systematic review examined the association between sex hormone levels, primarily estrogen and testosterone, and the composition and diversity of the human gut microbiota. The review synthesized findings from 13 observational human studies that employed next-generation sequencing techniques to assess how fluctuations or differences in sex hormones correlate with specific bacterial taxa and microbial diversity indices. The focus was on healthy individuals as well as those with conditions characterized by altered hormone profiles, such as polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) and postmenopausal status.
Who was reviewed?
The review encompassed a total of 812 participants from diverse geographic locations including the USA, China, Poland, South Korea, and Spain. The vast majority of participants were women (91%), with men representing only 9%. The average age across studies was 41 years. Included studies ranged from cross-sectional to case-control designs and involved healthy adults, postmenopausal women, and women with hormone-related conditions such as PCOS and breast cancer. Studies varied in methods of hormone measurement, microbiota sequencing regions, and diversity metrics, reflecting heterogeneity in approaches.
Most important findings
The review found consistent associations between estrogen levels and gut microbial composition and alpha diversity. Higher estrogen was linked to increased abundance of Bacteroidetes and decreased Firmicutes, especially within the Ruminococcaceae family, and a lower Firmicutes:Bacteroidetes ratio, often associated with better gut health. Estrogen positively correlated with genera such as Ruminococcus and inversely with Bacteroides and some Firmicutes genera. In postmenopausal women, estrogen correlated strongly with increased alpha diversity metrics. Testosterone showed positive correlations with genera like Ruminococcus and Acinetobacter in men, while in women with PCOS, altered testosterone levels correlated with increased abundance of Escherichia/Shigella and other taxa. Testosterone was also associated with shifts in alpha diversity, though findings were less consistent than for estrogen. These hormone-microbiota relationships may be mediated by microbial enzymatic activities, such as β-glucuronidase production, which modulates hormone enterohepatic circulation.
Key implications
This review highlights a significant, yet complex, bidirectional interaction between sex hormones and gut microbiota composition and diversity. These interactions may contribute to sex-based differences in disease pathogenesis, particularly in hormone-sensitive conditions like PCOS, breast cancer, osteoporosis, and gastrointestinal disorders. The findings suggest that modulation of the microbiota could represent a novel therapeutic avenue to influence systemic hormone levels and related disease outcomes. However, heterogeneity in study design and population underscores the need for more standardized, longitudinal studies, including male participants, to unravel mechanistic pathways and causal relationships. Ultimately, understanding the sex hormone–microbiota axis may facilitate personalized interventions targeting microbial profiles to optimize hormone-related health.
Fecal Microbiota Transplantation (FMT) involves transferring fecal bacteria from a healthy donor to a patient to restore microbiome balance.
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Fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) has demonstrated high success in treating recurrent Clostridium difficile infection, with potential benefits for other gastrointestinal disorders, including IBD, obesity, and metabolic syndrome. FMT restores microbial diversity,
What was studied?
This study explores fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) as a therapeutic method for various gastrointestinal conditions, with a particular focus on Clostridium difficile infection (CDI). The research provides an overview of FMT's clinical applications, its mechanisms of action, and its potential for treating other conditions such as inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), obesity, metabolic syndrome, and functional gastrointestinal disorders. The study examines how FMT works by altering the gut microbiome and restoring microbial diversity, which may confer therapeutic benefits to patients.
Who was studied?
The study primarily discusses the use of FMT in patients with recurrent Clostridium difficile infection (rCDI), a common and often severe gastrointestinal infection. The patients studied include individuals who have not responded well to traditional antibiotic treatments. The article also explores the role of FMT in other conditions, although these studies are less extensive. Researchers focus on understanding the microbiota's role in these diseases and how its restoration through FMT can lead to clinical improvement. The populations studied also span across various age groups, with some research specifically involving younger patients and those with functional gastrointestinal disorders.
Most important findings
FMT has shown high success rates in treating recurrent Clostridium difficile infection (rCDI), with an average cure rate of 87–90%. The procedure restores gut microbial communities and has been associated with lasting resolution of diarrhea and microbial balance in the gut. The mechanism behind FMT's effectiveness lies in competitive exclusion, where donor microbes outcompete C. difficile for nutrients and space. Additionally, FMT has demonstrated potential benefits in treating inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) and other gastrointestinal conditions. Some studies have reported clinical remission in patients with IBD, especially in younger individuals or those with specific disease characteristics. The paper highlights a few adverse effects of FMT, including mild gastrointestinal discomfort, but emphasizes its safety in the context of rCDI treatment. The literature suggests that FMT may also improve metabolic and immune functions in patients with conditions like obesity and metabolic syndrome by restoring a balanced gut microbiome.
Key implications
FMT presents a promising treatment for conditions linked to dysbiosis, particularly rCDI, which is resistant to conventional antibiotic therapies. Its therapeutic potential in other gastrointestinal diseases, like IBD and functional gastrointestinal disorders, offers hope for new treatment options. The successful restoration of gut microbiota diversity through FMT emphasizes the importance of microbial balance in maintaining gastrointestinal health and opens avenues for further research into its broader applications. However, challenges remain in standardizing FMT procedures and determining its long-term safety, particularly in patients with conditions like IBD. The study advocates for more controlled trials to assess FMT's role in treating various diseases, while also exploring the use of synthetic stool products to reduce potential risks.
Fecal microbiota transplantation and next-generation therapies: A review on targeting dysbiosis in metabolic disorders and beyond
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Fecal Microbiota Transplantation (FMT)
Fecal Microbiota Transplantation (FMT)
Fecal Microbiota Transplantation (FMT) involves transferring fecal bacteria from a healthy donor to a patient to restore microbiome balance.
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The review examines the therapeutic potential of FMT and next-generation microbiome therapies in treating metabolic disorders. It highlights the promising role of FMT in restoring microbial balance and improving conditions like obesity and type 2 diabetes, though challenges remain in optimizing treatment protocols.
What was studied?
The article provides a comprehensive review of fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) and next-generation therapies targeting dysbiosis in metabolic disorders and beyond. It explores the therapeutic potential of FMT in treating conditions such as obesity, type 2 diabetes, and metabolic syndrome by modulating the gut microbiome. The review discusses the mechanisms behind FMT's ability to restore microbial balance, its application in metabolic diseases, and emerging therapies that target the microbiome for better therapeutic outcomes.
Who was studied?
The review summarizes clinical trials, preclinical studies, and emerging therapies involving the use of FMT and other microbiota-targeted interventions in various populations. These studies focus on patients with metabolic disorders such as obesity, type 2 diabetes, non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, and inflammatory bowel diseases. The research evaluates the effects of fecal microbiota from healthy donors on restoring gut microbial diversity and improving metabolic parameters in these patient groups.
Most important findings
FMT has shown promise in restoring microbial diversity and functionality, particularly in metabolic disorders like obesity and type 2 diabetes. Studies revealed that transplanting fecal material from lean, healthy donors to patients with metabolic syndrome could increase gut microbial diversity and improve insulin sensitivity. However, challenges remain, including variability in long-term effectiveness and safety concerns. Next-generation therapies like prebiotics, probiotics, and engineered microbial consortia are emerging as complementary or alternative approaches to FMT, providing more targeted treatments. These therapies aim to modulate the gut microbiome more precisely, enhancing the efficacy of microbiome-based interventions.
Key implications
The findings suggest that FMT and microbiome-targeted therapies hold significant potential in treating metabolic disorders. These approaches offer a more personalized and potentially more effective way to address the underlying microbial imbalances contributing to diseases like obesity and type 2 diabetes. However, further research is necessary to standardize protocols, ensure safety, and identify the best strategies for long-term benefits. The integration of microbiome modulation with other therapeutic modalities could enhance outcomes and reduce the recurrence of metabolic disorders.
The Effects of Toxic Heavy Metals Lead, Cadmium and Copper on the Epidemiology of Male and Female Infertility
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Infertility
Infertility
Infertility is the inability to conceive after 12 months of regular, unprotected sex. It affects both men and women and can be due to various physical, hormonal, or genetic factors. Treatments include medication, surgery, assisted reproductive technologies, and lifestyle changes.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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This review synthesizes evidence linking lead, cadmium, and copper exposure to male and female infertility, detailing mechanisms of reproductive toxicity, epidemiological patterns, and the potential role of microbiome alterations as mediators and biomarkers of reproductive risk.
What was reviewed?
This review comprehensively evaluated the effects of toxic heavy metals on the epidemiology of male and female infertility. The authors systematically searched and synthesized findings from articles published between 1982 and 2021 in databases such as PubMed, Google Scholar, Scopus, and others, focusing on the mechanistic and epidemiological associations between these metals and reproductive dysfunction. The review explores the multifaceted ways that heavy metal exposure, both environmental and occupational, influences reproductive health, including hormonal disruption, impaired gametogenesis, and direct damage to reproductive tissues. Special attention is given to the biochemical mechanisms by which these metals exert toxic effects, such as oxidative stress, enzyme inhibition, and endocrine disruption, all of which are highly relevant to clinicians concerned with environmental determinants of infertility.
Who was reviewed?
The review encompasses a broad range of human and animal studies, including epidemiological research on general populations and occupational groups, as well as controlled laboratory investigations in animal models. Human studies included both men and women from diverse geographic and occupational backgrounds, such as industrial workers, smokers, and populations with high environmental exposure. Animal research provided mechanistic insights, particularly regarding gamete quality, hormonal changes, and reproductive organ pathology following heavy metal exposure. Some studies included in the review also examined the reproductive health of non-human species to elucidate underlying biological processes and to support observed epidemiological trends in humans.
Most important findings
The review identifies strong associations between exposure to lead, cadmium, and copper and increased risk of infertility in both sexes. Cadmium, widely distributed in the environment, is linked to direct damage to the ovaries and testes, reduced sperm count, motility, and viability, as well as impaired oocyte maturation. It acts as a reproductive toxin by replacing zinc in enzymes and altering protein function, leading to oxidative stress and cytotoxicity. Lead exposure disrupts hormonal balance by interfering with calcium-mediated cellular activities and is associated with decreased sperm quality, impaired oocyte development, increased risk of miscarriage, and stunted fetal growth. Occupational and environmental exposures, such as working in lead mines or exposure to cigarette smoke, exacerbate these effects. Elevated copper levels, while copper is essential in trace amounts, are correlated with oxidative damage and sperm dysfunction at higher concentrations. The review highlights the impact of heavy metals on key microbiome-modulated processes (e.g., oxidative stress, inflammation) and notes that heavy metal exposure may alter the host's microbiome, which can further influence reproductive health outcomes.
Key implications
Clinicians should be aware of the significant impact that environmental and occupational exposures to lead, cadmium, and copper can have on reproductive health. The review supports incorporating environmental exposure histories into infertility assessments, particularly for patients with unexplained infertility or those with relevant occupational risks. The evidence also suggests that heavy metal-induced oxidative stress and endocrine disruption might be compounded or modulated by changes in the reproductive tract microbiome, indicating a potential avenue for future diagnostic and therapeutic interventions. Surveillance of heavy metal exposure, coupled with targeted interventions to reduce environmental risk, could improve fertility outcomes and inform public health strategies. Furthermore, the recognition of microbiome–heavy metal interactions opens the door to novel research on microbial biomarkers and microbiota-targeted therapies in infertility management.
POI: Premature Ovarian Insufficiency/Pregnancy or Infertility?
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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This case report describes a young woman with premature ovarian insufficiency who, despite infertility and diagnostic confirmation of POI, experienced spontaneous conception. The case underscores the unpredictable nature of POI and the need for ongoing investigation into its etiologies, including possible microbiome links.
What was studied?
This letter to the editor presents a detailed clinical case of premature ovarian insufficiency (POI) in a young woman, highlighting the diagnostic challenges, clinical course, and a rare instance of spontaneous pregnancy following a POI diagnosis. While primarily focused on the clinical aspects of POI, the article references current understanding of POI etiopathology, noting the associations with autoimmune diseases, chromosomal abnormalities, and environmental factors. The letter underscores the unpredictable nature of ovarian function in POI, stressing the possibility of intermittent ovarian activity and spontaneous conception even after apparent ovarian failure.
Who was studied?
The subject of this report is a 28-year-old woman presenting with primary infertility of 16 months’ duration, with a background of regular menses and no prior relevant medical or surgical history. After unsuccessful attempts at conception via intrauterine insemination (IUI) and in vitro fertilization (IVF), she was diagnosed with POI based on laboratory findings (FSH >65 mIU/mL, low estradiol, and undetectable anti-Müllerian hormone). Despite being listed for oocyte donation, she experienced spontaneous resumption of menses and subsequently conceived, ultimately delivering a healthy child.
Most important findings
The case illustrates several key points regarding POI. First, the diagnosis is often complex, relying on a combination of clinical and laboratory criteria, and is frequently made after failed fertility treatments. The underlying causes of POI remain poorly defined but include genetic, autoimmune, and environmental contributors. The report describes the possibility of spontaneous ovarian function resumption and pregnancy in women previously diagnosed with POI, a phenomenon supported by literature but uncommon in clinical practice. From a microbiome perspective, although this case report does not directly investigate microbial associations, the referenced etiologies (autoimmune mechanisms and environmental triggers) are areas where the microbiome may exert influence, warranting further investigation into the role of gut or reproductive tract microbiota in the pathogenesis or reversibility of POI.
Key implications
Clinically, this case emphasizes the need for ongoing counseling regarding the potential for spontaneous ovarian activity and conception in women with POI, even post-diagnosis. It highlights the limitations of current POI diagnostic criteria and the unpredictable course of the disease. This unpredictability suggests that, in select cases, natural conception remains possible, underscoring the importance of individualized patient management. For future research and microbiome signature databases, the case reinforces the value of investigating immune and environmental factors, including the microbiome, as possible contributors to both POI onset and its occasional reversibility.
Contraceptive potential of Hibiscus rosa-sinensis (Linn.)
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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Hibiscus rosa-sinensis shows potent antifertility effects through antiovulatory, antiimplantation, and antispermatogenic mechanisms in animal studies, supporting its development as a safe, natural contraceptive pending further research.
What was reviewed?
This review article provides a detailed update on the contraceptive potential of Hibiscus rosa-sinensis (Linn.), a widely cultivated ornamental shrub belonging to the Malvaceae family. The article focuses on the pharmacological effects of the plant’s extracts—primarily from flowers, leaves, stems, and roots—with an emphasis on their antifertility properties in both male and female animal models. It consolidates experimental findings on the antiovulatory, antiimplantation, androgenic, and antispermatogenic activities of various extracts and highlights the mechanisms by which H. rosa-sinensis interferes with reproductive processes. The review also discusses traditional medicinal uses of the plant in reproductive health and outlines the need for further research to develop standardized herbal contraceptives.
Who was reviewed?
The review draws on numerous preclinical studies conducted mostly on albino rats and mice, with extracts tested at various doses and routes of administration. Both male and female animals were used to assess the reproductive effects, including spermatogenesis suppression in males and estrous cycle disruption or implantation inhibition in females. Some studies also evaluated effects on reproductive organ weights, hormone levels, and histopathology. Limited clinical data, mainly from small trials or ethnomedical records, were referenced regarding contraceptive efficacy and safety in humans. The review includes research conducted across different seasons and geographical locations to account for phytochemical variation.
Most important findings
Evidence shows that extracts from H. rosa-sinensis flowers and roots possess strong contraceptive activities. In males, flower extracts reduce sperm count and motility, induce testicular degeneration, and modify androgenic parameters, suggesting antispermatogenic and androgenic effects. Female animals treated with flower or root extracts exhibit disrupted estrous cycles, ovarian follicular atresia, and reduced uterine and ovarian weights, consistent with antiovulatory and antiestrogenic actions. Post-coital antifertility effects have been demonstrated by inhibition of blastocyst implantation and luteolysis, accompanied by altered progesterone levels and uterine biochemical changes. The antifertility effects are dose-dependent and reversible, indicating potential for safe contraceptive development. Traditional uses support these pharmacological findings, with historical applications in controlling fertility and gynecological disorders.
Key implications
This updated review reinforces Hibiscus rosa-sinensis as a promising candidate for natural contraceptive development. Its multifaceted antifertility actions affecting both male and female reproductive physiology could address limitations of current synthetic contraceptives by offering fewer side effects and improved acceptability. Nonetheless, significant gaps remain, including the need for standardized extraction methods, identification of active constituents, comprehensive toxicity evaluations, and well-designed human clinical trials. Addressing these areas could enable translation of this plant’s contraceptive potential into practical, safe, and effective herbal contraceptive products, particularly valuable in resource-limited settings.
The Application of Complementary and Alternative Medicine in Polycystic Ovary Syndrome Infertility
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is a common endocrine disorder that affects women of reproductive age, characterized by irregular menstrual cycles, hyperandrogenism, and insulin resistance. It is often associated with metabolic dysfunctions and inflammation, leading to fertility issues and increased risk of type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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This review summarizes clinical and mechanistic evidence for complementary and alternative medicine in PCOS infertility, highlighting TCM, acupuncture, nutrient supplementation, and lifestyle interventions as effective, safe adjunct therapies with potential microbiome-mediated benefits.
What was reviewed?
This comprehensive review article examines the current clinical evidence and mechanistic insights for complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) approaches in the management of infertility associated with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS). The review synthesizes findings from clinical trials, animal studies, and mechanistic research to evaluate the safety, efficacy, and potential mechanisms of traditional Chinese medicine (TCM), acupuncture (including electroacupuncture, moxibustion, and related modalities), nutrient supplementation (vitamins and trace elements), and lifestyle interventions such as diet, exercise, Tai Chi, yoga, and Qigong. The review emphasizes both the clinical outcomes and the biological pathways involved, particularly those relevant to metabolic, endocrine, and inflammatory regulation.
Who was reviewed?
The article analyzes a broad spectrum of studies, including randomized controlled trials (RCTs), cohort studies, and preclinical animal research. The reviewed populations primarily consist of reproductive-age women diagnosed with PCOS and infertility, as well as animal models (mainly rats) induced with PCOS-like phenotypes for mechanistic studies. The included studies span diverse geographic regions, with a heavy emphasis on Chinese clinical practice and research, but also incorporate international evidence on CAM use in PCOS. Subpopulations considered include patients with insulin resistance, obesity, or poor ovarian response, and studies often include comparison groups receiving conventional Western medical therapy.
Most important findings
The review identifies strong evidence that CAM modalities, particularly TCM herbal formulas and acupuncture, can improve reproductive and metabolic outcomes in women with PCOS-related infertility. Key TCM monomers such as berberine, cryptotanshinone, and quercetin, as well as compound prescriptions like Liu Wei Di Huang, Gui Zhi Fu Ling, Shou Tai Pill, and Zi Shen Yu Tai Pill, demonstrate efficacy in clinical trials by improving insulin resistance (IR), regulating sex hormone levels, reducing inflammation, and promoting follicle development. Several studies report that these interventions also modulate the gut microbiome and metabolic pathways (e.g., PI3K/AKT/mTOR, IRS-1/PI3K/GLUT4), suggesting a microbiome-endocrine-immune axis relevant to PCOS pathophysiology.
Notably, some studies link improvements in insulin sensitivity and reduction in inflammatory markers to alterations in the intestinal flora, providing a basis for further microbiome signatures research. Nutrient supplementation (vitamins D, E, and trace elements) and lifestyle modifications (weight loss, exercise, Tai Chi, yoga) also offer measurable benefits in ovulation, metabolic parameters, and psychological well-being.
Key implications
For clinicians, this review supports the integration of CAM as adjuncts to conventional fertility treatments for PCOS, particularly in patients with metabolic disturbances, poor response to ovulation induction, or those seeking alternatives due to adverse reactions to standard therapies. The mechanistic evidence for microbiome involvement highlights new avenues for personalized medicine and database development of microbial signatures associated with improved reproductive outcomes. While the safety profile for most CAM interventions is favorable, the review calls for greater standardization, larger-scale RCTs, and rigorous monitoring of potential adverse effects. Overall, CAM offers a promising, multifaceted approach to improve fertility outcomes and quality of life in PCOS, meriting further clinical adoption and research.
Pelvic inflammatory disease and infertility
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) is a complex interplay between pathogens, immune responses, and microbial communities. As research continues to uncover the microbiome's role in reproductive health, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as probiotics, prebiotics, and transplants are redefining how we prevent and treat PID. This page dives deep into these innovations, offering a glimpse into the future of personalized, biologically informed women’s healthcare.
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This review details the polymicrobial pathogenesis of PID, its major microbial culprits—including both classical STIs and vaginal anaerobes—and underscores the high risk of infertility. Early diagnosis, broad-spectrum treatment, and awareness of microbiome shifts are key to reducing reproductive morbidity.
What was reviewed?
This narrative clinical review discusses the pathogenesis, clinical evaluation, and management of pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) with a dedicated focus on fertility-related long-term sequelae. The article synthesizes current knowledge regarding PID’s microbial etiologies, diagnostic approaches, complications such as tubal infertility, and both medical and surgical management strategies. Special attention is given to the role of the microbiome in PID development and progression, particularly regarding upper genital tract infection by various microorganisms and their contribution to reproductive morbidity.
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesizes data and recommendations relevant to women of reproductive age who are at risk for, or have a history of, PID. It draws on evidence from studies involving women with clinically and laparoscopically diagnosed PID, women undergoing infertility evaluation, and specific population groups with higher reported PID incidence, such as those in developing nations and Indigenous Australian communities. The microbiological data reviewed come from studies isolating pathogens from women with PID and related infertility.
Most important findings
PID is a polymicrobial infection of the upper female genital tract, initiated by pathogens that disrupt the cervicovaginal barrier. Chlamydia trachomatis and Neisseria gonorrhoeae are implicated in 33–50% of cases, but other significant contributors include Mycoplasma genitalium, bacterial vaginosis-associated anaerobes, as well as respiratory and enteric organisms. The progressive ascent of these microbes, facilitated by alterations in the cervicovaginal microenvironment and host factors (e.g., menses, loss of mucus plug), leads to upper tract inflammation and damage. Despite adequate antimicrobial therapy, long-term sequelae are common: infertility (18%), ectopic pregnancy (0.6–2%), and chronic pelvic pain (30%). Tubal infertility, largely attributable to microbial damage and subsequent fibrosis or adhesions, is responsible for 25–35% of female infertility cases, with PID as the primary cause in over half. Notably, risk escalates with recurrent PID episodes and severity of tubal damage. The review underscores that even subclinical PID can have major reproductive consequences, and that the diversity of implicated microbes should be considered in diagnosis and management.
Key implications
For clinicians, this review emphasizes the importance of early suspicion, diagnosis, and treatment of PID to mitigate long-term reproductive sequelae, particularly tubal infertility. The polymicrobial nature of PID, including both classical sexually transmitted pathogens and diverse anaerobic and facultative organisms, highlights the need for comprehensive microbial assessment and broad-spectrum empirical therapy. The findings suggest that a history of PID should prompt early fertility evaluation and counseling, and that public health efforts in STI prevention and early intervention could substantially reduce infertility rates. From a microbiome perspective, the article reinforces the critical role of cervicovaginal microbial communities and their disruption in PID pathogenesis, supporting the inclusion of these microbial signatures in reproductive health databases for risk stratification and targeted interventions.
Potential biomarkers of infertility associated with microbiome imbalances
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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Microbiome dysbiosis and elevated miR-21-5p and miR-155-5p levels are strongly linked to unexplained infertility, suggesting their role as biomarkers. Correcting these microbiome imbalances could enhance fertility treatment success rates.
What was studied?
This study explored the relationship between microbiome imbalances in the vaginal and rectal environments and infertility in women experiencing repeated in vitro fertilization (IVF) failures. Researchers specifically investigated the expression levels of microRNAs (miRNAs), particularly miR-21-5p and miR-155-5p, alongside microbiota composition differences between infertile and fertile women. The study aimed to determine whether these microbiome alterations and miRNA levels could serve as potential biomarkers for unexplained infertility.
Who was studied?
The study included 287 women diagnosed with unexplained infertility who had experienced multiple IVF failures, along with 20 fertile women as controls. The infertile group was characterized by an average age of 40, had a history of at least two unsuccessful IVF attempts, and exhibited normal ovarian and tubal anatomy. The fertile group comprised women who had conceived naturally, were aged between 29 and 38, and had no infertility or autoimmune conditions. Vaginal and rectal swabs were collected for microbiota sequencing and miRNA expression analysis. Blood and saliva samples were also analyzed for immunometabolic markers.
What were the most important findings?
Significant microbiota differences between infertile and fertile groups emerged from this study. Infertile women showed reduced microbial diversity in their rectal microbiome, characterized by an increased ratio of Firmicutes to Bacteroidetes. This imbalance correlated with markers indicative of gut barrier dysfunction. In vaginal samples, infertile women demonstrated a unique microbial pattern, primarily an increased ratio of Lactobacillus brevis to Lactobacillus iners, which contrasts with the typical Lactobacillus dominance associated with healthy reproductive outcomes.
Two miRNAs—miR-21-5p and miR-155-5p—were notably elevated in both vaginal and rectal samples from infertile patients. MiR-21-5p was associated with increased gut permeability, fungal overgrowth, and reduced microbial diversity, whereas miR-155-5p correlated with inflammation and bacterial dysbiosis. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analyses confirmed that elevated levels of these miRNAs could reliably distinguish infertile women from fertile women, demonstrating their potential as effective biomarkers for infertility linked to microbiome imbalances.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The greatest clinical implication is the potential use of microbiome profiling and miRNA expression levels as diagnostic and prognostic tools in managing infertility, especially in cases of unexplained repeated IVF failures. Identifying microbiome dysbiosis and associated inflammatory markers through miRNAs may allow clinicians to personalize treatment plans, potentially involving microbiota-modifying therapies such as probiotics or targeted nutritional interventions. This approach could significantly enhance fertility treatment outcomes by restoring microbiome balance and reducing inflammatory states that adversely affect fertility. Moreover, understanding the link between gut and reproductive tract microbiota suggests that comprehensive evaluation and management of microbiome health should be integral to infertility assessments.
Herbal contraceptives: Evaluation of antifertility potential of Hibiscus rosa-sinensis (Linn.)
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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Hibiscus rosa-sinensis exhibits significant antifertility effects in animal models through antiovulatory, antiimplantation, and spermatogenic disruption mechanisms, highlighting its potential as a safe, reversible herbal contraceptive pending further research.
What was reviewed?
This review article examined the antifertility potential of Hibiscus rosa-sinensis Linn., a plant widely recognized in traditional medicine, with a focus on its possible use as a herbal contraceptive. It synthesized evidence from pharmacological studies, toxicological evaluations, and ethnomedicinal reports assessing the plant’s effects on female reproductive physiology. The review explored the mechanisms by which H. rosa-sinensis extracts influence ovarian function, estrous cycle regulation, implantation, and spermatogenesis, emphasizing the potential for the development of safe and reversible herbal contraceptives.
Who was reviewed?
The review incorporated preclinical data from various animal models, predominantly female albino rats and mice, to investigate the antifertility effects of different H. rosa-sinensis plant parts, including flowers, leaves, roots, and seeds. It covered studies evaluating estrogenic, antiovulatory, antiimplantation, and abortifacient activities through the administration of various extracts (benzene, ethanolic, aqueous) at different doses. Some studies also assessed effects on male reproductive parameters such as spermatogenesis. Human clinical data were limited, but traditional and ethnopharmacological uses of the plant in India and neighboring regions were considered.
Most important findings
The review found consistent evidence that H. rosa-sinensis flower extracts exert significant antifertility effects mediated through multiple pathways. The benzene extract of flowers disrupted estrous cycles by prolonging estrus and metestrus phases, increasing atretic follicles, and preventing the formation of corpora lutea, indicating antiovulatory activity. Estrogenic effects were demonstrated by increased uterine weight and premature vaginal opening in immature mice. Antiimplantation effects were confirmed by failure of blastocyst implantation and biochemical alterations in the endometrium, including changes in oxidative stress markers. Additionally, extracts showed abortifacient activity through progesterone suppression and luteolysis. In males, extracts induced reversible spermatogenic damage and reduced accessory sex organ weights. Importantly, the antifertility effects were dose-dependent and reversible upon discontinuation. Phytochemical analyses identified flavonoids, alkaloids, steroids, and other bioactive compounds as probable mediators. Despite promising pharmacological effects, the review emphasized variability in extract preparation and a lack of standardized formulations.
Key implications
This review highlights Hibiscus rosa-sinensis as a promising source for the development of herbal contraceptives, offering advantages such as reversibility and reduced side effects compared to synthetic drugs. The multifaceted antifertility mechanisms targeting ovarian function, implantation, and male fertility provide a broad basis for contraceptive applications. However, substantial gaps remain, including the need for rigorous toxicological evaluations, standardized extraction methods, clinical trials in humans, and a detailed understanding of molecular targets. Harnessing H. rosa-sinensis could contribute to safer, cost-effective contraceptive options, particularly in settings with limited access to modern pharmaceuticals, but careful research is needed to ensure efficacy, safety, and dosage consistency.
Relationships between female infertility and female genital infections and pelvic inflammatory disease
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) is a complex interplay between pathogens, immune responses, and microbial communities. As research continues to uncover the microbiome's role in reproductive health, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as probiotics, prebiotics, and transplants are redefining how we prevent and treat PID. This page dives deep into these innovations, offering a glimpse into the future of personalized, biologically informed women’s healthcare.
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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A large-scale Taiwanese study found that upper and lower genital tract infections, but not comorbidities or bacterial vaginosis, independently increased infertility risk. PID and lower genital tract inflammation showed the strongest associations, emphasizing the critical role of reproductive tract infections in female infertility.
What was studied?
This population-based nested case-control study investigated the associations between female genital tract infections, selected comorbidities, and infertility using data from the Taiwan National Health Research Database (NHIRD) between 2000 and 2013. The study specifically evaluated whether infections such as pelvic inflammatory disease (PID), bacterial vaginosis (BV), and endometritis, as well as comorbid conditions like obesity, lipid metabolism disorders, and abortion history, were linked to an increased risk of diagnosed infertility. The research leveraged the large scope of the NHIRD, which includes nearly the entire Taiwanese population, to provide robust epidemiological insights. The analysis involved both univariate and multivariate conditional logistic regression to adjust for confounding variables and to isolate the independent associations of different infections and comorbidities with infertility risk in women, stratified by age groups (≤40 and >40 years).
Who was studied?
The study included 18,276 women newly diagnosed with infertility and 73,104 age-matched controls without infertility, all identified from the NHIRD. Controls were matched by age (within three years) and index year and were required to have a history of pregnancy but no prior diagnosis of infertility or use of ovulation stimulants or gonadotropins. Exclusion criteria covered prior hysterectomy, bilateral oophorectomy, cancer, prior chemotherapy or radiotherapy, polycystic ovary syndrome, ovarian failure, endometriosis, adenomyosis, amenorrhea, and Turner syndrome. The mean age of the cohort was 31 years, and the population was predominantly Han Chinese women residing in Taiwan. Patients were further stratified into two age groups (≤40 and >40 years) to assess potential age-related interactions with infertility risk factors.
Most important findings
The most significant finding was a robust association between upper and lower genital tract infections and increased risk of infertility, evident even after controlling for comorbidities and other confounders. Specifically, pelvic inflammatory disease involving the ovary, fallopian tube, pelvic cellular tissue, and peritoneum showed odds ratios (OR) of 4.82 and 6.03 for infertility. Cervical, vaginal, and vulvar inflammation had even higher associations, with ORs of 7.79 and 6.65. Clinicians found that BV and endometritis were associated with infertility in univariate analysis, but multivariate models did not confirm these associations, indicating that other factors or confounders may mediate their effect. Comorbidities such as obesity, lipid disorders, dysthyroidism, and abortion initially showed associations with infertility, but these did not persist after adjustment. Importantly, the study did not examine specific pathogens, but referenced the role of Chlamydia trachomatis, Neisseria gonorrhoeae, Mycoplasma genitalium, Ureaplasma urealyticum, and Trichomonas vaginalis as potential microbial contributors to tubal factor infertility.
Key implications
These findings reinforce the central role of female genital tract infections, particularly upper tract involvement and lower tract inflammation, in the pathogenesis of infertility. The lack of an independent association with bacterial vaginosis and endometritis after adjustment suggests that not all genital infections contribute equally to infertility risk and highlights the importance of distinguishing between associative and causal relationships. For clinicians, this underscores the need for vigilant screening, diagnosis, and management of PID and lower genital tract inflammation as part of infertility workups. The study’s population-based design adds weight to these recommendations, advocating for targeted prevention and early intervention strategies that could mitigate the risk of infertility associated with genital tract infections. These microbiome-related insights are particularly relevant for developing microbiome signatures and risk-stratification tools in reproductive medicine.
Alterations of Vaginal Microbiota in Women With Infertility and Chlamydia trachomatis Infection
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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This study identified vaginal microbiota dysbiosis, marked by Lactobacillus iners dominance, in infertile women infected with Chlamydia trachomatis. Post-antibiotic recovery suggested microbiome restoration could enhance fertility outcomes, highlighting microbiota profiling as a diagnostic tool.
What was studied?
This study investigated alterations in vaginal microbiota among women with infertility who were infected with Chlamydia trachomatis (CT), specifically examining microbiome profiles before and after antibiotic treatment. The researchers performed metagenomic analysis of sequenced 16S rRNA gene amplicons to identify microbiota variations and assess potential microbiome signatures predictive of CT infection in women experiencing tubal infertility.
Who was studied?
The study involved 25 women from Chenzhou, China, categorized into four distinct groups: healthy women without CT (CT-C), infertile women negative for CT (CT-N), infertile women positive for CT (CT-P), and infertile women who were CT-positive but post-treatment with azithromycin (CT-PT). All women were aged 20-49 years, non-pregnant, and had no other sexually transmitted infections at enrollment. Vaginal swabs were taken to perform microbial analyses and measure cytokine levels, providing comprehensive profiles of their vaginal microbiomes and inflammatory status.
What were the most important findings?
The study demonstrated clear differences in vaginal microbiota between infertile women infected with CT and those who were not. Women with infertility and CT infection exhibited significant vaginal microbiota dysbiosis characterized by reduced microbial diversity and distinct microbial profiles. Notably, CT-positive infertile women exhibited vaginal microbiota dominated by Lactobacillus iners, contrasting sharply with the typical Lactobacillus crispatus dominance observed in healthy vaginal environments. Other beneficial microbes, such as Bifidobacterium, Enterobacter, Atopobium, and Streptococcus, were significantly reduced in women infected with CT. Elevated levels of cytokines, particularly interferon (IFN)-γ and interleukin (IL)-10, were also observed, indicating a heightened inflammatory response. Post-treatment analysis revealed a substantial recovery of the vaginal microbiota, characterized by increased Lactobacillus abundance and the disappearance of CT genomic sequences, underscoring the effectiveness of azithromycin therapy.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study's greatest implication is the identification of specific microbiome signatures as predictive markers for CT infection in women experiencing infertility. This insight can enable clinicians to use vaginal microbiome profiles as diagnostic and predictive tools for CT infection, potentially guiding more targeted and personalized treatment strategies. The recovery of a healthy microbiome after antibiotic treatment highlights the possibility of using microbiome modulation (e.g., probiotics or other microbiota-directed therapies) to enhance fertility outcomes and reduce complications associated with CT infections. Such microbiome-based approaches could represent a new frontier in reproductive medicine, specifically targeting women at risk for infertility due to microbial dysbiosis and infections.
Endometriosis-associated infertility: From pathophysiology to tailored treatment
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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This review synthesizes evidence on the multifactorial mechanisms underlying endometriosis-associated infertility, emphasizing inflammatory, hormonal, anatomical, and molecular drivers. It highlights advances in non-invasive diagnostics, individualized treatment, and the clinical promise of integrating molecular and microbiome signatures into care protocols for improved fertility outcomes.
What was reviewed?
This paper is a detailed review of the current knowledge on endometriosis-associated infertility, synthesizing recent advances in understanding the pathophysiology, diagnosis, and management of this complex and multifactorial condition. The review highlights that endometriosis is not only a localized pelvic disease but also a systemic condition with pleiotropic effects on reproductive health. The review scrutinizes the interactions between inflammation, hormonal dysregulation, altered pelvic anatomy, diminished ovarian reserve, impaired endometrial receptivity, and systemic immune changes, all of which collectively contribute to infertility in women with endometriosis. The authors further discuss animal models, molecular mechanisms, including genetic and epigenetic influences, and the role of stem cells and microRNAs in disease pathogenesis and clinical presentation.
Who was reviewed?
The review focuses on women of reproductive age affected by endometriosis, with particular attention to those experiencing infertility. It draws from a heterogeneous population including both clinical and experimental (animal) models, and examines evidence from diverse phenotypes, ranging from women with minimal, mild, or advanced disease to those with specific subtypes such as ovarian, peritoneal, or deep infiltrating endometriosis. The paper also reviews findings from meta-analyses, randomized controlled trials, cohort studies, and basic science research, ensuring a broad and representative scope of current evidence.
What were the most important findings?
Endometriosis-associated infertility is multifactorial, with the most important mechanisms involving a persistent pro-inflammatory microenvironment, hormonal imbalances, particularly estrogen dominance and progesterone resistance, and anatomical disruption from adhesions and fibrosis. The review underscores that only half of women with endometriosis-associated infertility have typical macroscopic lesions, which contributes to underdiagnosis and delays in treatment. A core finding is that chronic inflammation, stemming from elevated cytokines and immune cell dysfunction, distorts the follicular and endometrial microenvironments, ultimately impairing ovulation, fertilization, embryo development, and implantation. Diminished ovarian reserve, especially in women with ovarian endometriomas, is linked to oxidative stress, stromal fibrosis, and accelerated follicular depletion, which can be exacerbated by surgical interventions.
At the molecular level, the review identifies major microbial associations (MMA) and signatures such as dysregulation of specific genes (e.g., HOXA10, PR isoform B), aberrant DNA methylation, and microRNAs that alter gene expression and promote disease progression. The immune signature of the eutopic endometrium in affected women is notably pro-inflammatory, with increased type I macrophages and impaired regulatory T cell function. Stem cell trafficking and inappropriate differentiation play significant roles in lesion formation at both pelvic and extra-pelvic sites. On the diagnostic front, the review highlights promising advances in non-invasive biomarkers, particularly panels of serum-derived miRNAs with high sensitivity and specificity for disease detection. Treatment recommendations are increasingly individualized, combining surgical, medical, and assisted reproductive strategies tailored to disease severity, ovarian reserve, age, and patient preferences. Novel molecular diagnostic tools, such as transcriptomic-based endometrial receptivity assays and BCL6 testing, are emerging as potential game-changers for clinical decision-making.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review has major implications for clinical practice. It clarifies that endometriosis-associated infertility cannot be addressed with a single, uniform approach; rather, it demands individualized, multidisciplinary care informed by an understanding of both systemic and local pathophysiology. The integration of molecular and microbiome signatures into diagnostic and therapeutic protocols holds promise for earlier detection and more precise interventions. The review also calls attention to the significant impact of diagnostic delays, emphasizing the need for validated, non-invasive tests such as miRNA panels for timely diagnosis and intervention. The authors advocate for collaborative, specialized care in referral centers, incorporating both reproductive surgery and assisted reproductive technologies (ART). The review also recognizes the ongoing need for research to further elucidate molecular mechanisms, optimize biomarker panels, and refine therapeutic algorithms, particularly as new insights into the microbiome, genetics, and immune modulation emerge.
Association between heavy metals exposure and infertility among American women aged 20-44 years: A cross-sectional analysis from 2013 to 2018 NHANES data
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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This cross-sectional study in American women found that higher urinary arsenic—and, to a lesser extent, cadmium—were associated with increased infertility risk, with lead exposure linked to infertility in older or overweight women, supporting the need for environmental exposure monitoring in reproductive health.
What was studied?
This original research article investigated the association between exposure to heavy metals, specifically cadmium (Cd), lead (Pb), mercury (Hg), and arsenic (As), and female infertility in a representative sample of American women. Using data from three cycles of the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES, 2013–2018), the study measured blood and urinary levels of these metals and examined their correlation with self-reported infertility. The primary aim was to clarify whether elevated levels of these toxic metals are linked to increased risk of infertility, adjusting for relevant demographic and health covariates.
Who was studied?
The study population consisted of 838 American women aged 20–44 years, selected from NHANES 2013–2018 cycles based on availability of laboratory and questionnaire data. Women with a history of hysterectomy, bilateral oophorectomy, or incomplete data were excluded. Infertility was defined via self-report, using the question: “Have you ever attempted to become pregnant for at least a year, without becoming pregnant?” The cohort was diverse in terms of ethnicity, education, and marital status, with significant differences in age and BMI between infertile and control women.
Most important findings
The study found that urinary arsenic (As) and cadmium (Cd) levels were significantly higher in infertile women compared to controls. After controlling for several covariates, including age, ethnicity, education, marital status, poverty index ratio, BMI, regular menstrual periods, pelvic infection, and smoking history, urinary arsenic remained significantly associated with infertility. Women with higher urinary As levels had a substantially increased risk of infertility. Urinary Cd was also associated with infertility in less-adjusted models, but this association weakened with full adjustment. Blood and urinary Pb levels were not associated with infertility overall, but stratified analyses revealed that both blood and urinary Pb were positively correlated with infertility in women aged 35–44 and in those with BMI ≥25, highlighting age and obesity as effect modifiers. Blood Hg was not significantly associated with infertility in any model.
Key implications
This study highlights the potential reproductive health risks posed by environmental exposure to heavy metals among women of reproductive age. The robust association between urinary arsenic and infertility suggests that arsenic exposure (likely from contaminated water or certain foods) may disrupt female reproductive function, potentially through oxidative stress and endocrine disruption. The findings also indicate that older and overweight/obese women may be more susceptible to the adverse reproductive effects of lead. From a clinical and public health perspective, these results support the need for routine monitoring of heavy metals in at-risk populations and for interventions aimed at reducing environmental exposures, especially in vulnerable subgroups. The study also highlights the value of using urine measurements to assess chronic exposure, as opposed to blood levels that may reflect only recent exposure.
Microbiota and Human Reproduction: The Case of Female Infertility
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Infertility
Infertility
Infertility is the inability to conceive after 12 months of regular, unprotected sex. It affects both men and women and can be due to various physical, hormonal, or genetic factors. Treatments include medication, surgery, assisted reproductive technologies, and lifestyle changes.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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This review summarizes the essential role of balanced reproductive microbiota, particularly Lactobacillus dominance, in fertility and IVF success, linking microbial dysbiosis to infertility and poorer pregnancy outcomes, and highlighting microbiome evaluation as key to improving reproductive health management.
What was reviewed?
This review comprehensively examined current research on the microbiota of the female reproductive system, focusing specifically on its role in infertility and reproductive health. It analyzed literature investigating both the lower reproductive tract (vaginal microbiota) and the upper reproductive tract (uterus, fallopian tubes, and ovaries). The authors reviewed the microbial composition of these regions, highlighting the dominance of Lactobacillus species under normal conditions, and explored how deviations from this balanced microbial community—referred to as dysbiosis—might affect fertility outcomes and influence the success rates of assisted reproductive technologies (ART), particularly in vitro fertilization (IVF).
Who was reviewed?
The review summarized studies involving women across various reproductive statuses, including fertile women, infertile women, and women undergoing ART procedures. Literature assessing microbial differences between fertile and infertile groups, particularly in terms of vaginal and uterine microbiota composition, formed the basis of the review. The authors also incorporated evidence related to microbiome shifts associated with different life stages, hormone fluctuations, lifestyle influences, and environmental exposures, providing clinicians with an extensive view of factors affecting reproductive microbiota dynamics.
What were the most important findings?
The central findings of the review emphasized the critical role of Lactobacillus species in maintaining reproductive health through their dominance in the reproductive tract, particularly in the vagina. Lactobacilli were identified as crucial for creating an acidic environment that inhibits pathogen growth. Dysbiosis, characterized by reduced Lactobacillus abundance and increased prevalence of anaerobic bacteria like Gardnerella vaginalis, Atopobium vaginae, and Ureaplasma spp., was strongly linked to infertility, chronic inflammatory conditions, and notably poorer outcomes in IVF treatments, including lower implantation rates and increased pregnancy complications. The review highlighted a significant continuity of bacterial communities along the reproductive tract, suggesting a microbiological link from the lower to upper regions. Moreover, the potential influence of male partner semen microbiota on female reproductive health was underscored, suggesting that fertility evaluations should also consider the microbiome of the male partner.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The review's greatest clinical implication is that clinicians should consider reproductive microbiota assessment as an integral part of fertility evaluations and infertility treatment strategies. Understanding the link between microbiota and infertility provides an opportunity to enhance reproductive outcomes by diagnosing and correcting microbial dysbiosis through targeted probiotics, lifestyle interventions, and possibly tailored antibiotic treatments. This approach could substantially improve IVF success rates and overall fertility management. Moreover, the identification of microbial signatures associated with fertility may facilitate personalized reproductive healthcare strategies, optimizing conditions not just for conception but also for the long-term reproductive health of couples and their offspring.
Female Infertility Associated with Blood Lead and Cadmium Levels
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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Low blood lead and cadmium levels are linked to significantly increased odds of female infertility in US women of reproductive age, indicating even subclinical environmental exposures may adversely impact reproductive health.
What was studied?
This original research article investigated the association between blood levels of lead and cadmium (two common environmental heavy metals) and self-reported infertility among women in the United States. The study leveraged data from the 2013–2014 and 2015–2016 cycles of the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES), focusing on reproductive-aged women. The researchers measured blood concentrations of lead and cadmium using inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry and compared these levels between women who reported infertility (defined as attempting to conceive for at least one year without success) and women who were currently pregnant. Statistical analyses, including logistic regression adjusted for multiple confounders (age, ethnicity, income, education, marital status, smoking, alcohol use, physical activity, BMI), were performed to evaluate whether higher blood metal levels corresponded to increased odds of infertility.
Who was studied?
The study included 124 sexually experienced women aged 20–39 years who participated in the NHANES 2013–2016 cycles and had complete data on blood lead, cadmium, and relevant covariates. Of these, 82 were classified as “infertile” based on self-report, and 42 were “pregnant” at the time of the survey. Women with a history of hysterectomy or bilateral oophorectomy were excluded to ensure reproductive potential. The sample was demographically diverse, but no significant differences were found between infertile and pregnant groups regarding ethnicity, socioeconomic status, education, marital status, health behaviors, or BMI; the infertile group was, however, significantly older.
Most important findings
The study found that even low levels of blood lead and cadmium were associated with significantly increased odds of infertility. After adjusting for confounders, each two-fold increase in blood lead was associated with a 2.6-fold higher odds of infertility, and each two-fold increase in cadmium was associated with a 1.84-fold higher odds. A dose-response relationship was observed for blood lead, with higher tertiles corresponding to higher infertility odds (adjusted ORs for tertiles 2 and 3 vs. tertile 1: 5.40 and 5.62, respectively). Adjusted mean blood lead and cadmium levels were significantly higher in the infertile group compared to the pregnant group. These findings support the hypothesis that environmental exposure to lead and cadmium, even at low levels, may impair female reproductive function. Although the study primarily focused on heavy metal exposure, it is important to note that heavy metals can alter the gut and systemic microbiome, which may further impact reproductive health, though this was not directly assessed in this study.
Key implications
This study provides important evidence that low-level environmental exposure to lead and cadmium is associated with increased infertility risk among US women of reproductive age. These results challenge current safety thresholds for these metals and highlight the need for further population-based research to clarify reproductive toxicity at low exposure levels. Clinicians should consider environmental exposures, including heavy metals, as contributing factors in unexplained female infertility. While not directly examining microbiome profiles, the study’s findings are relevant to a microbiome signatures database, as heavy metal exposures are known to disrupt microbial communities and reproductive hormone regulation, which can influence fertility outcomes.
Female Fertility and Environmental Pollution
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is a common endocrine disorder that affects women of reproductive age, characterized by irregular menstrual cycles, hyperandrogenism, and insulin resistance. It is often associated with metabolic dysfunctions and inflammation, leading to fertility issues and increased risk of type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease.
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Environmental pollution—including heavy metals, air pollutants, and endocrine disruptors—negatively impacts female fertility through hormonal disruption, oxidative stress, and epigenetic changes. The review emphasizes the clinical need for exposure assessment and mitigation strategies to protect reproductive health.
What was reviewed?
This comprehensive review examined the impact of various environmental pollutants, including heavy metals, air pollutants, and endocrine disruptors, on female fertility. The authors analyzed the mechanisms by which these contaminants disrupt ovarian function, hormonal regulation, and oocyte quality, ultimately leading to reduced fertility. Special attention was given to the fixed, non-renewable nature of the female oocyte pool, which increases vulnerability to environmental insults. The paper also explored how pollution-induced oxidative stress, endocrine disruption, and epigenetic changes can impair oogenesis, follicular development, and embryo viability. Additionally, the review discussed the influence of environmental factors on the placental barrier, fetal development, and the potential for transgenerational effects. The article highlighted emerging concerns such as climate change, thermal stress, and the interaction between pollution and the microbiome as contributors to declining reproductive health.
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesized evidence from human epidemiological studies, animal experiments, and in vitro research. Human data included women of reproductive age, pregnant women, and those undergoing assisted reproduction, as well as population-level studies from polluted regions. Key animal models were referenced to elucidate mechanistic insights not easily obtained in humans. The review also incorporated studies on fetal and placental tissues and, where relevant, included cross-species data to highlight conserved biological responses to pollutants.
Most important findings
The review identified several key mechanisms by which environmental pollutants impair female fertility. Heavy metals such as lead, cadmium, and mercury accumulate in the body and can cross the placental barrier, leading to epigenetic modifications, oxidative stress, and disruption of steroidogenesis. These metals act as endocrine disruptors, affecting the hormonal milieu required for oocyte maturation and ovulation. Air pollution was associated with decreased ovarian reserve, lower rates of fertilization, increased miscarriage, and adverse IVF outcomes. Endocrine disruptors like bisphenol A (BPA) and phthalates were shown to alter gene expression, induce oxidative stress, and interfere with estrogen and androgen receptors, with strong evidence of negative effects on folliculogenesis, embryo development, and increased risk of conditions such as polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS). The review also highlighted the compounding effects of multiple pollutants and the role of the microbiome in modulating susceptibility to environmental toxins—an area of emerging relevance for microbiome signatures databases.
Key implications
For clinicians, this review underscores the critical importance of environmental exposures as modifiable risk factors in the management of female infertility. The findings advocate for thorough patient histories that include environmental, occupational, and lifestyle exposures. There is a strong rationale for patient education on minimizing contact with pollutants, advocating for public health policies that reduce environmental contamination, and counseling regarding timing and mode of assisted reproduction, particularly in high-pollution contexts. The mechanistic links between pollutants and reproductive dysfunction also suggest avenues for biomarker development, including the use of AMH and specific microbial signatures to assess exposure and risk. The review calls for further research on pollutant-microbiome interactions and the cumulative effects of pollutant mixtures, as well as expanded epidemiological studies to inform guidelines and interventions.
Perception prevalence of the relationship between PID and infertility amongst women of reproductive age: A Nigerian study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) is a complex interplay between pathogens, immune responses, and microbial communities. As research continues to uncover the microbiome's role in reproductive health, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as probiotics, prebiotics, and transplants are redefining how we prevent and treat PID. This page dives deep into these innovations, offering a glimpse into the future of personalized, biologically informed women’s healthcare.
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A Nigerian study found only 10% of reproductive-age women recognized the link between PID and infertility, despite high education levels. The findings emphasize the need for improved public health campaigns and highlight the microbial etiology—chiefly Chlamydia trachomatis—behind PID-related infertility.
What was studied?
This cross-sectional study investigated the perception prevalence of the relationship between pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) and infertility among women of reproductive age in Rivers State, Nigeria. The primary aim was to assess awareness and understanding of the established link between PID, an ascending genital tract infection often caused by sexually transmitted infections (STIs) like Chlamydia trachomatis, and infertility, which is recognized globally as a major public health concern. The study evaluated awareness levels regarding PID, infertility, and their interrelationship, with particular interest in how education and age might influence these perceptions. Data were collected from women attending an enlightenment campaign hosted by the Mother and Baby Care Global Foundation and analyzed using SPSS.
Who was studied?
The study population comprised 250 women of reproductive age (20–49 years) who participated in a local health campaign in Port Harcourt, Rivers State, Nigeria. The mean age was 24 ± 4 years, with 46% aged 20–29, 34% aged 30–39, and 20% aged 40–49. Educational attainment was high in this cohort, with 80% holding tertiary qualifications and the remaining 20% having secondary education. All participants provided informed consent, and those under 15 or over 49 years were excluded from the study.
Most important findings
Despite high educational status among participants, only 30% were aware of PID and 45% were aware of infertility. Notably, only 10% recognized the relationship between PID and infertility, a figure that is low given the well-documented association between these conditions. The highest perception prevalence of the PID-infertility link was observed in women aged 30–39 years (6%). Microbiologically, the study reinforces that Chlamydia trachomatis and Neisseria gonorrhoeae are the primary pathogens implicated in PID, with Chlamydia infection alone accounting for up to 45% of tubal infertility in referenced literature. Approximately 85% of PID cases globally are attributable to STIs. The low perception prevalence found here suggests a significant gap in patient awareness, which is critical given the preventable nature of many PID-related infertility cases.
Key implications
The findings highlight an urgent need for targeted public health education and community-based interventions to raise awareness about PID and its reproductive consequences. Despite high levels of formal education, knowledge gaps persist, underlining that educational campaigns must be tailored and recurrent. From a microbiome perspective, recognizing the microbial etiology of PID, especially the role of Chlamydia trachomatis, should inform both clinical practice and public health messaging to improve screening, early diagnosis, and treatment. Enhanced awareness could contribute to reducing infertility rates attributable to PID, particularly in similar populations and settings.
Altered Follicular Fluid Metabolic Pattern Correlates with Female Infertility and Outcome Measures of In Vitro Fertilization
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is a common endocrine disorder that affects women of reproductive age, characterized by irregular menstrual cycles, hyperandrogenism, and insulin resistance. It is often associated with metabolic dysfunctions and inflammation, leading to fertility issues and increased risk of type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This study identified 27 follicular fluid metabolites differentiating infertile from fertile women, developed a predictive Biomarker Score, and demonstrated strong correlations with IVF outcomes, providing a basis for personalized infertility management.
What was studied?
This original research investigated the metabolic profile of follicular fluid (FF) in women undergoing in vitro fertilization (IVF) to determine whether specific biochemical alterations correlate with female infertility and IVF outcomes. Using a targeted metabolomics approach, the study quantified 55 low molecular weight compounds, encompassing energy metabolites, purines, pyrimidines, antioxidants, oxidative/nitrosative stress markers, and amino acids, in FF samples. The research aimed to identify distinct metabolic signatures in infertile women compared to controls (fertile women whose partner’s infertility was the only impediment to conception), and to evaluate the relationship between these metabolic patterns and clinical IVF outcome measures, including oocyte development, embryo quality, and pregnancy rates. A cumulative Biomarker Score, based on deviations in 27 key FF metabolites, was developed to distinguish between fertile and infertile women and to predict IVF success.
Who was studied?
The study cohort consisted of 180 women attending a fertility clinic in Rome, Italy, from 2018 to 2020. The control group (n=35) was composed of women whose infertility was exclusively due to a male factor, ensuring their reproductive competence. The infertile group (n=145) included women diagnosed with endometriosis (n=19), polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS; n=14), age-related reduced ovarian reserve (AR-ROR; n=58), reduced ovarian reserve (ROR; n=29), unexplained infertility (UI; n=14), and genetic infertility (GI; n=11). All participants underwent standardized ovarian stimulation and IVF/ICSI protocols, with FF collected during oocyte retrieval. The study excluded women with mechanical reproductive barriers, cancer history, or premature ovarian failure, and controlled for confounding lifestyle and nutritional factors.
Most important findings
The metabolomic analysis revealed that 27 of 55 measured metabolites significantly differed between infertile and control groups. Infertile women generally exhibited lower FF glucose, higher lactate, elevated purine and pyrimidine catabolites (hypoxanthine, xanthine, uracil, pseudouridine), decreased antioxidants (ascorbic acid, glutathione, vitamin A, vitamin E, coenzyme Q10, carotenoids), increased oxidative/nitrosative stress markers (malondialdehyde, 8-hydroxy-2′-deoxyguanosine, nitrite, nitrate), and reduced levels of several amino acids (notably serine, threonine, arginine, valine, methionine, tryptophan, isoleucine, leucine). These metabolic anomalies were largely consistent across different infertility diagnoses, though some subgroup-specific patterns emerged (e.g., PCOS and GI showed normal FF glucose). The composite Biomarker Score robustly discriminated between control and infertile groups, with scores correlating inversely with key IVF outcomes—number and quality of oocytes/blastocysts, clinical pregnancy, and healthy live birth rates. The Biomarker Score showed high specificity and sensitivity in predicting fertility status and IVF success.
Key implications
This study underscores the central role of FF metabolic composition in female fertility and IVF outcomes. The identification of a 27-metabolite signature and its integration into a Biomarker Score offers a powerful, noninvasive tool for distinguishing fertile from infertile patients and predicting assisted reproduction success. The findings suggest that metabolic profiling of FF could inform personalized interventions to optimize the follicular environment, enhance oocyte quality, and improve IVF success rates. Furthermore, these metabolomic biomarkers could be incorporated into microbiome-multimetabolite databases, facilitating personalized reproductive medicine and potentially guiding future research into the interplay between follicular metabolites, the ovarian microenvironment, and the local microbiome.
The Role of Genital Tract Microbiome in Fertility: A Systematic Review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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This review underscores the importance of genital tract microbiome composition in fertility, particularly Lactobacillus crispatus dominance, which is linked to better fertility outcomes. Dysbiosis and pathogens like Gardnerella are associated with infertility, suggesting microbiome profiling could be key in improving ART success.
What was reviewed?
This systematic review explored the role of the genital tract microbiome in fertility, with a focus on its impact on both natural conception and assisted reproductive treatments (ARTs), such as in vitro fertilization (IVF). The review aimed to consolidate current research on the microbiome's correlation with infertility, discussing how dysbiosis in various areas of the genital tract, such as the vagina, cervix, endometrium, and even the fallopian tubes, affects fertility outcomes. The study involved an analysis of 26 selected articles published until February 2021, using methods like PCR and RNA sequencing to examine microbial diversity and its relationship with infertility.
Who was reviewed?
The review included studies on women and couples with infertility, focusing on those who were either attempting to conceive naturally or undergoing ART treatments. These studies compared the microbiomes of infertile women with those of fertile women and examined the differences in microbial compositions, particularly in the vaginal, cervical, and endometrial environments. Additionally, the review included studies that explored how microbial imbalances could affect ART success rates, such as implantation and pregnancy rates in IVF treatments.
What were the most important findings?
The review highlighted that the genital tract microbiome plays a pivotal role in fertility, particularly the vaginal microbiome. Lactobacillus species, especially Lactobacillus crispatus, were consistently identified as crucial for maintaining a healthy environment conducive to fertility. A Lactobacillus-dominated microbiota was associated with better fertility outcomes, while dysbiosis, characterized by a reduction in Lactobacillus and an overgrowth of pathogens like Gardnerella vaginalis, Ureaplasma species, and other Gram-negative bacteria, was linked to infertility and poor ART outcomes. Notably, the presence of pathogens such as Chlamydia trachomatis and Gardnerella vaginalis was associated with infertility, even in the absence of symptoms like bacterial vaginosis (BV), suggesting that asymptomatic infections still have a significant impact on fertility. The review also discussed how vaginal and endometrial microbiomes could differ, with non-Lactobacillus-dominated endometrial microbiomes correlating with lower rates of implantation and pregnancy in IVF cases. Importantly, no studies were identified that focused on the microbiome of the fallopian tubes, highlighting an area for future research.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The greatest implication of this review is that clinicians should consider the genital tract microbiome as a factor in infertility assessments and treatments. Dysbiosis, particularly a lack of Lactobacillus dominance, could serve as a diagnostic marker for fertility issues, and addressing microbiome imbalances through interventions such as probiotics or antibiotics could improve fertility outcomes. The review also emphasizes the need for standardized microbiome sampling and analysis methods to allow for more consistent and reliable clinical applications. Additionally, the importance of the vaginal microbiome, specifically Lactobacillus crispatus, as a predictor for ART success points to potential personalized treatments based on individual microbiome profiles, enhancing the precision of fertility treatments.
Bacterial vaginosis and its association with infertility, endometritis, and pelvic inflammatory disease
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) is a complex interplay between pathogens, immune responses, and microbial communities. As research continues to uncover the microbiome's role in reproductive health, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as probiotics, prebiotics, and transplants are redefining how we prevent and treat PID. This page dives deep into these innovations, offering a glimpse into the future of personalized, biologically informed women’s healthcare.
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This review details the links between bacterial vaginosis, endometritis, pelvic inflammatory disease, and infertility, highlighting the role of vaginal and endometrial microbiota disruptions and their impact on reproductive outcomes and management strategies.
What was reviewed?
This review article comprehensively examines the associations between bacterial vaginosis (BV), endometritis, pelvic inflammatory disease (PID), and infertility, with a particular focus on the underlying microbiome-related mechanisms. The paper synthesizes current evidence on how disruptions in the vaginal and endometrial microbiota, characterized predominantly by a loss of beneficial lactobacilli and an overgrowth of anaerobic bacteria, contribute to the pathogenesis of these gynecological conditions. The review covers diagnostic criteria, treatment options, recurrence issues, and the role of the vaginal and endometrial microbial signatures in affecting reproductive outcomes, both naturally and in assisted reproduction settings. It also explores potential mechanistic pathways linking these infections to infertility, including inflammation, immune responses, microbial toxin production, and increased susceptibility to sexually transmitted infections (STIs).
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesizes data from a broad range of studies involving women of reproductive age, particularly those diagnosed with BV, endometritis, or PID, as well as women experiencing infertility (including those undergoing fertility treatments such as in vitro fertilization [IVF]). It considers diverse populations, including women with tubal and non-tubal infertility, women with unexplained or idiopathic infertility, and those with recurrent implantation failure or miscarriage. The article also references clinical trials and meta-analyses, drawing on evidence from both symptomatic and asymptomatic women across multiple ethnic groups and geographic regions.
Most important findings
The review highlights that optimal vaginal health is typically characterized by a microbiota dominated by lactobacilli, which produce lactic acid and antimicrobial compounds, conferring protection against pathogenic bacteria. BV is marked by a depletion of these protective lactobacilli and an overgrowth of anaerobes such as Gardnerella vaginalis, Atopobium vaginae, Megasphaera spp., and others. This microbial imbalance is strongly associated with an increased risk of endometritis and PID, both of which are significant causes of infertility. Notably, more than 85% of PID cases are linked to BV-associated bacteria and/or STIs, but fewer than half involve classic pathogens like Neisseria gonorrhoeae or Chlamydia trachomatis, underscoring the importance of the broader vaginal microbiome.
BV increases the risk of acquiring STIs, which further amplify the risk of upper genital tract infections and infertility. Mechanistically, BV-related bacteria can induce genital tract inflammation, alter immune responses, produce enzymes that degrade cervical mucus, and facilitate pathogen ascension to the endometrium and fallopian tubes. Women with BV and non-lactobacillus-dominated endometrial microbiota have lower implantation and pregnancy rates, particularly in IVF settings. Chronic endometritis (CE) is highly prevalent among women with unexplained infertility and recurrent implantation failure, and cure of CE with antibiotics improves reproductive outcomes. Despite these associations, causality between BV and infertility is not fully established due to heterogeneity in diagnostic criteria, patient populations, and study designs.
Key implications
The review underscores the clinical importance of recognizing and treating BV, endometritis, and PID—especially in women with infertility or at risk of reproductive complications. Early diagnosis and appropriate antibiotic treatment for symptomatic BV and CE can improve fertility outcomes, particularly in IVF patients. The findings also call for a more nuanced understanding of the vaginal and endometrial microbiome, advocating for future research to refine the definitions of “normal” versus “abnormal” microbial states and to clarify the mechanisms linking microbial dysbiosis to infertility. Given the high recurrence rates and diagnostic challenges, integrating microbiome-based diagnostics and interventions (including probiotics) into preconceptional and fertility care may offer new avenues for improving women’s reproductive health.
Association between co-exposure to phenols and phthalates mixture and infertility risk in women
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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This study explores the relationship between co-exposure to phenols and phthalates and infertility risk in women of reproductive age, highlighting significant associations with BPA and DEHP metabolites.
What was studied?
This study investigated the combined effects of co-exposure to phenols and phthalates on infertility risk among women of reproductive age. Specifically, it examined whether the mixture of these endocrine-disrupting chemicals (EDCs) is associated with an increased risk of infertility. Data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) 2013–2016 were used, including 857 women aged 18-45 years. The study measured urinary metabolites of phenols and phthalates, along with reproductive health data, to explore their relationships with self-reported infertility.
Who was studied?
The study focused on 857 women of reproductive age (18-45 years) from the NHANES 2013–2016 data set. These women had available information on urinary phenol and phthalate metabolites, reproductive health questionnaires, and relevant covariates. The study excluded pregnant women, those who had undergone hysterectomy or oophorectomy, and those without full data on infertility history or other covariates.
What were the most important findings?
The study found significant associations between the combined exposure to phenols and phthalates and an increased risk of infertility. Higher levels of bisphenol A (BPA) and di(2-ethylhexyl) phthalate (DEHP) metabolites were positively linked to infertility risk. The analysis showed that the DEHP-BPA factor, derived through principal component analysis (PCA), had a strong positive association with infertility. Specifically, women in the higher quartiles of this DEHP-BPA mixture component had a significantly higher likelihood of infertility compared to those in the lower quartiles. Furthermore, the Bayesian kernel machine regression (BKMR) model confirmed that exposure to specific metabolites, including MEOHP, MEHHP, and BPA, significantly contributed to the increased risk of infertility. The study also highlighted that the risk of infertility grew with increasing concentrations of these pollutants, underscoring the cumulative effects of mixed exposures to environmental chemicals. These findings indicate that combined exposure to multiple EDCs, such as phenols and phthalates, rather than individual compounds, has a more profound impact on female fertility.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The most significant implication of this study is the recognition that environmental pollutants have a substantial impact on reproductive health in women. This study suggests that it is crucial to evaluate the combined effects of multiple pollutants, as exposure to these chemicals frequently occurs simultaneously in real-life settings. The findings highlight the need for more comprehensive regulations and preventive measures to reduce exposure to these EDCs, especially for women of reproductive age. Clinicians and researchers should consider the potential cumulative effects of these pollutants when diagnosing and treating infertility. Furthermore, future studies are needed to establish causal links and investigate the underlying biological mechanisms, such as epigenetic changes and hormone disruption, to better understand how these chemicals contribute to infertility.
Endometriosis and Infertility: A review of the pathogenesis and treatment of endometriosis-associated infertility
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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This review details the multifactorial pathogenesis of endometriosis-associated infertility, emphasizing molecular, genetic, and inflammatory mechanisms, and evaluates current and emerging treatments, including IVF and novel regenerative therapies.
What was reviewed?
This comprehensive review explores the pathogenesis of endometriosis and its impact on infertility, focusing on the mechanisms by which endometriosis impairs fertility and the current and emerging treatment modalities. The article synthesizes evidence on the etiology of endometriosis, including retrograde menstruation, coelomic metaplasia, altered immunity, stem cell involvement, and genetics, and details how these factors culminate in altered pelvic anatomy, inflammatory microenvironments, and molecular changes in reproductive tissues. The review also evaluates the effects of endometriosis on gametes, embryo development, fallopian tube function, and endometrial receptivity, and discusses the effectiveness of treatments such as surgery, medical therapy, superovulation with intrauterine insemination (IUI), and in vitro fertilization (IVF). Future directions, including novel medical therapies, immune modulation, and stem cell-based approaches, are also considered.
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesizes data from a broad range of studies involving women of reproductive age, primarily aged 25–35, affected by endometriosis with and without infertility. It references epidemiologic data showing an increased prevalence of endometriosis among infertile women (up to 50%) and discusses animal models, such as baboons and mice, to elucidate mechanisms relevant to human disease. The populations reviewed include women with varying stages of endometriosis (minimal/mild to advanced), including those participating in surgical, medical, and assisted reproductive intervention trials. Data on genetic and stem cell contributions are drawn from both human and animal research.
Most important findings
Endometriosis is confirmed as a multifactorial, estrogen-dependent inflammatory disease with a robust association with infertility. Mechanistically, infertility arises from both mechanical disruption (e.g., adhesions, distorted pelvic anatomy) and complex molecular interactions involving immune dysregulation, increased inflammatory cytokines, altered gene expression (notably HOXA10 and Wnt signaling), and oxidative stress. These disrupt ovulation, gamete quality, embryo viability, tubal transport, and endometrial receptivity. Aberrant microbiome or microbial signatures are not a primary focus, but the inflammatory milieu, rich in cytokines and altered immune cell populations, could suggest potential secondary impacts on local microbial communities. Treatments are stage-dependent; surgery is most beneficial for minimal-moderate disease, while IVF remains the most effective for advanced cases. There is limited benefit from medical suppression unless used adjunctively before ART. Emerging approaches, such as stem cell therapy and immune modulation, hold promise for restoring endometrial function and correcting epigenetic alterations.
Key implications
For clinicians, this review underscores the need for individualized management in endometriosis-associated infertility, integrating disease stage, patient age, and reproductive goals. The multifactorial pathogenesis, including immune, genetic, and molecular disruptions, highlights the complexity of diagnosis and treatment, and supports the exploration of targeted, non-hormonal therapies and regenerative approaches. Recognizing the altered inflammatory and possibly microbial environment in the pelvis may inform future research and therapeutic strategies, especially for developing microbiome-informed diagnostic or treatment tools.
Metabolic risk factors and fertility disorders: A narrative review of the female perspective
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is a common endocrine disorder that affects women of reproductive age, characterized by irregular menstrual cycles, hyperandrogenism, and insulin resistance. It is often associated with metabolic dysfunctions and inflammation, leading to fertility issues and increased risk of type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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This review explores how metabolic risk factors—obesity, the female athlete triad, and oxidative stress—contribute to female infertility, highlighting associations with PCOS, endometriosis, and idiopathic infertility, and calling for improved metabolic assessment and molecular diagnostics in clinical practice.
What was reviewed?
This narrative review comprehensively examined the associations between metabolic risk factors and female fertility disorders, focusing on obesity, the female athlete triad (low energy intake, menstrual dysfunction, decreased bone density), and oxidative stress as potential contributors to infertility. The authors aimed to clarify how these metabolic conditions, alongside major infertility-related disorders such as polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) and endometriosis, impact women's reproductive health. The review synthesized evidence from 50 selected studies published between 2006 and 2020, integrating pathophysiological, genetic, lifestyle, and epidemiological perspectives. It also highlighted the prevalence, mechanisms, and clinical consequences of metabolic risks with female infertility and discussed gaps in current knowledge, especially regarding idiopathic infertility and the need for robust molecular markers.
Who was reviewed?
The review focused on studies involving women of reproductive age experiencing infertility. It included populations affected by PCOS, endometriosis, obesity, and those displaying characteristics of the female athlete triad. The selected studies varied in design but excluded animal research and clinical trials of pharmaceutical treatments. The review encompassed diverse geographic regions and considered women with both known and idiopathic infertility, as well as those undergoing assisted reproductive technology (ART). The aim was to gather data relevant to women at risk for or experiencing infertility due to metabolic and lifestyle factors.
Most important findings
The review established a clear and direct association between obesity and increased risk of female infertility, with obese women exhibiting up to a three-fold higher risk compared to those with normal body mass index (BMI). Obesity was linked to anovulation, reduced ART success rates, and increased miscarriage risk. Mechanistically, excess body fat disrupts ovarian steroidogenesis, induces hyperandrogenism, and promotes chronic low-grade inflammation, all of which impair reproductive function. PCOS was highlighted as a central metabolic-endocrine disorder, often comorbid with obesity, insulin resistance, and increased cardiovascular risk. Endometriosis risk showed a more complex relationship with BMI, with evidence suggesting both inverse and direct associations, possibly due to genetic and hormonal influences. The female athlete triad, though less well-studied in this context, was associated with hypothalamic suppression, menstrual dysfunction, and reduced fertility, primarily through chronic energy deficiency and altered estrogen signaling. Oxidative stress, driven by lifestyle factors (e.g., smoking, alcohol, drug use), was identified as a pervasive mediator, damaging DNA and germ cells, increasing risks for PCOS and endometriosis, and contributing to idiopathic infertility. The review emphasized a lack of large-scale population studies and molecular biomarker research linking metabolic status and infertility.
Key implications
For clinicians, the review underscores the necessity of assessing metabolic risk factors, especially obesity and undernutrition, when addressing female infertility. Interventions targeting weight management, healthy nutrition, and lifestyle modification may improve hormonal balance and reproductive outcomes, particularly in women with PCOS. The review also calls for interdisciplinary collaboration to integrate molecular, metabolic, and psychosocial approaches to infertility. Given the anticipated rise in obesity prevalence among women, proactive metabolic assessment and the development of diagnostic molecular signatures are critical for improving ART outcomes and reducing unexplained infertility. Further, the establishment of consensus definitions and large-scale biobank studies will be pivotal for advancing personalized infertility care.
Characterizing the gut microbiota in females with infertility and preliminary results of a water-soluble dietary fiber intervention study.
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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This study shows gut microbiota differences between fertile and infertile women, highlighting improved fertility outcomes with dietary fiber (PHGG) supplementation that enhances beneficial gut bacteria, suggesting microbiome modulation as a viable strategy for improving reproductive success.
What was studied?
The study characterized the gut microbiota of women experiencing infertility and investigated the impact of supplementation with partially hydrolyzed guar gum (PHGG), a dietary fiber, on gut microbiota and pregnancy outcomes. Researchers compared the microbiota composition of infertile women against fertile controls and assessed changes following the administration of PHGG alongside assisted reproductive technology (ART).
Who was studied?
The study enrolled 36 women: 18 fertile women and 18 women diagnosed with infertility, matched by age. All participants were recruited from HORAC Grand Front Osaka Clinic, Osaka, Japan. Subsequently, 12 of the infertile women agreed to undergo combined treatment involving ART and dietary supplementation with PHGG. The participants' fecal samples were analyzed using 16S rRNA sequencing to determine microbiota composition.
What were the most important findings?
The study identified clear differences in gut microbiota composition between fertile and infertile women. Notably, infertile women exhibited decreased levels of beneficial bacteria such as Stenotrophomonas, Streptococcus, and Roseburia, while showing increased levels of the genera Unclassified [Barnesiellaceae] and Phascolarctobacterium. Additionally, an increased abundance of the phylum Verrucomicrobia was observed among infertile participants. These microbial differences suggest a potential dysbiosis associated with infertility. After dietary supplementation with PHGG, infertile women showed a significant shift in microbiota characterized by increased abundance of beneficial Bifidobacterium, particularly in women who successfully conceived. Predictive microbial signatures identified before treatment included lower levels of Paraprevotella and Blautia, coupled with increased Bifidobacterium abundance. Importantly, 7 out of 12 women (58.3%) who received PHGG supplementation alongside ART achieved pregnancy, indicating that dietary fiber could beneficially modulate the gut microbiome to enhance fertility outcomes.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The greatest implications of this study for clinicians lie in recognizing that gut microbiota dysbiosis is linked to infertility and can potentially be modified through dietary interventions. Supplementing infertile women with dietary fiber, specifically PHGG, may improve fertility outcomes by correcting gut microbiota imbalances. This study highlights the potential for personalized nutritional strategies, emphasizing dietary fiber supplementation to enhance the efficacy of ART. Clinicians should consider evaluating gut microbiota composition in infertility assessments and incorporate dietary interventions aimed at modulating the gut microbiota to improve fertility outcomes. Further large-scale studies are needed to validate these preliminary findings and establish dietary supplementation as a standard adjunct treatment for infertility.
Comparative Effect of Nigella Sativa+ Black Pepper and Letrozole + Tamoxifen on Female Infertility in Women with Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome: A Randomized Clinical Trial
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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A randomized clinical trial found Nigella sativa plus black pepper significantly improved pregnancy rates and reproductive parameters versus letrozole plus tamoxifen in infertile women with PCOS, with comparable safety.
What was studied?
This randomized, double-blind clinical trial investigated the comparative efficacy of a herbal regimen, Nigella sativa (black seed) combined with black pepper, versus standard pharmacological ovulation induction (letrozole plus tamoxifen) in treating infertility among women with polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS). Over three menstrual cycles, participants received either the herbal combination or the pharmaceutical agents during days 3–7 of their cycle. The primary outcomes measured were endometrial thickness, dominant follicle size, and follicle count, as assessed by transvaginal ultrasound. The secondary outcomes included pregnancy rates and incidence of ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome (OHSS). The study aimed to determine whether the herbal regimen could offer a comparable or superior alternative to standard pharmacological treatments, with potential implications for safety, cost, and patient acceptability.
Who was studied?
The study enrolled 90 infertile women with PCOS, aged 18 to 42 years, who were referred to an infertility clinic associated with Jahrom University of Medical Sciences, Iran. Participants were diagnosed with PCOS according to the Rotterdam criteria, requiring two out of three features: oligo/amenorrhea, clinical or biochemical hyperandrogenism, and polycystic ovaries on ultrasound. Exclusion criteria included underlying medical conditions (e.g., endocrine disorders, liver/renal disease), abnormal laboratory results, and prior or ongoing use of fertility medications or relevant surgeries. Rigorous randomization and double-blinding ensured comparability between the intervention (Nigella sativa + black pepper) and control (letrozole + tamoxifen) groups, which were closely matched for age, BMI, and baseline hormonal profiles.
Most important findings
The intervention group (Nigella sativa + black pepper) demonstrated a significantly higher pregnancy rate compared to the letrozole + tamoxifen group. By the 12th day of the menstrual cycle, the herbal group also exhibited greater endometrial thickness and dominant follicle size, as well as increased follicle numbers, all with statistically significant differences. Importantly, the incidence of OHSS did not differ significantly between groups, suggesting that the herbal regimen did not increase the risk of this notable adverse effect. While the study did not directly assess microbiome composition, it is notable that both Nigella sativa and black pepper possess well-documented antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties, which may beneficially influence the metabolic and inflammatory milieu characteristic of PCOS, a condition that has been linked in other research to alterations in the gut and reproductive tract microbiota. The study also noted a significant reduction in serum LH levels in the herbal group, which is relevant given the role of LH/FSH imbalance in PCOS pathogenesis.
Key implications
This study suggests that Nigella sativa combined with black pepper may serve as an effective, low-cost, and low-side-effect alternative to standard pharmaceutical ovulation induction in infertile women with PCOS. The herbal regimen improved pregnancy rates and key reproductive parameters, with a safety profile comparable to conventional agents. The findings support further research into the mechanisms of action, including possible modulation of metabolic and inflammatory pathways relevant to PCOS and potentially mediated by the microbiome. If corroborated by larger and longer-term studies, these results could expand the therapeutic options for PCOS-related infertility, particularly where accessibility, cost, or side-effect profiles limit the use of standard medications.
Protective Roles of Honey in Reproductive Health: A Review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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Honey exerts protective effects in reproductive health by modulating oxidative stress, supporting hormonal balance, and selectively inhibiting pathogens while preserving beneficial microbiota, making it a promising adjunct in fertility support, menopause symptom relief, and vulvovaginal candidiasis management.
What was reviewed?
This comprehensive review synthesized current evidence regarding the protective roles of honey in reproductive health, focusing on both male and female fertility, menopause-related symptoms, reproductive toxicity, and vulvovaginal candidiasis. The review explored honey’s biochemical composition, rich in antioxidants, phytoestrogens, and antimicrobial components, and its traditional and emerging therapeutic applications. Emphasis was placed on honey’s impact on reproductive organ health, hormonal balance, microbial modulation (particularly vaginal microbiota), antioxidant defenses, and its utility as a natural alternative or adjunct to conventional therapies.
Who was reviewed?
The review encompassed a broad range of studies involving both animal models (primarily rats) and humans. Included were in vivo and in vitro experiments, randomized clinical trials, and epidemiological data. The populations reviewed spanned healthy and diseased states: men and women of reproductive age, postmenopausal women, pregnant women, and individuals with vulvovaginal candidiasis. Both traditional and modern clinical contexts were considered, making the findings broadly applicable to diverse patient groups.
Most important findings
Honey demonstrates multifaceted benefits in reproductive health through several mechanisms, many of which intersect with microbiome dynamics. Notably, honey’s antioxidant-rich composition (including flavonoids like quercetin and kaempferol) confers protection against oxidative stress in reproductive tissues, an effect substantiated in animal models exposed to toxins such as bisphenol A and cigarette smoke. Honey has shown efficacy in improving sperm quality, motility, and testosterone levels, and serves as a natural cryoprotectant in semen preservation across multiple species. In females, honey supplementation (notably Tualang and Manuka varieties) mitigates menopausal atrophy of the vagina and uterus, likely due to its phytoestrogenic and prebiotic properties, which help maintain mucosal integrity and possibly support beneficial Lactobacillus populations.
A particularly significant microbiome-related detail is honey’s selective antimicrobial action: it inhibits Candida albicans (the main cause of vulvovaginal candidiasis) without suppressing commensal Lactobacillus, thus preserving or restoring a healthy vaginal microbiota. Clinical trials comparing honey (alone or combined with yogurt) to conventional azole antifungals found similar or superior symptom resolution with honey, and no significant adverse effects. Furthermore, honey’s acidity and osmolarity create an environment unfavorable for pathogenic microbes while supporting microbial homeostasis.
Key implications
For clinicians, this review highlights honey as a promising natural adjunct or alternative for managing reproductive health conditions. Its antioxidant and estrogenic activities suggest utility in mitigating toxin-induced reproductive damage, supporting fertility, and managing menopause-related vaginal symptoms without the risks associated with hormone replacement therapy. Notably, honey’s selective antimicrobial properties make it an attractive candidate for treating recurrent vulvovaginal candidiasis, especially amid growing antifungal resistance. Incorporating honey into clinical practice could support microbial health (especially in the vaginal ecosystem), reduce reliance on pharmaceuticals, and offer patients a well-tolerated, cost-effective therapeutic option. Further research is warranted to establish standardized dosing, identify optimal honey varieties, and elucidate detailed mechanisms of microbiome modulation.
Characterization of the Vaginal Microbiome in Women with Infertility and Its Potential Correlation with Hormone Stimulation during In Vitro Fertilization Surgery
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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This study shows women with secondary infertility have persistently altered, less diverse vaginal microbiomes unresponsive to IVF hormone stimulation. Increased Atopobium and decreased Lactobacillus may hinder IVF success, suggesting microbiome-targeted interventions could benefit infertility care.
What was studied?
This study investigated the composition and diversity of the vaginal microbiome in women experiencing secondary infertility who were undergoing in vitro fertilization and embryo transfer (IVF-ET). The researchers compared the vaginal microbiota of 30 women with secondary infertility to that of 92 healthy, reproductive-age women. They also evaluated whether hormone stimulation during IVF affected the vaginal microbiome in these infertile patients. By analyzing vaginal swab samples using 16S rRNA gene sequencing, the study aimed to clarify how the microbiome’s structure changes in infertile women, its sensitivity to hormonal manipulation, and the potential implications for IVF outcomes.
Who was studied?
The study included 30 Chinese women aged 23–42 years diagnosed with secondary infertility and scheduled for IVF-ET, alongside 92 age-matched healthy women with no history of infertility or reproductive complications. All participants were HIV negative, had regular menstrual cycles, and had not received significant treatments within four weeks prior to enrollment. Vaginal swabs from infertile women were collected both before ovulation induction and after hormone stimulation. Healthy controls provided samples during both the follicular phase and the ovulation period, allowing for assessment of natural cyclic changes versus those observed in infertile women during IVF.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed that women with secondary infertility exhibited significantly reduced vaginal microbiome diversity and richness compared to healthy controls during the follicular phase. The vaginal microbiome of infertile women was notably less dynamic than that of healthy women, who displayed substantial microbial fluctuations during ovulation. Infertile women demonstrated a persistent alteration in their microbiome, with increased abundance of genera such as Atopobium, Aerococcus, and Bifidobacterium, and a decreased presence of protective genera like Lactobacillus and Leuconostoc. In contrast, healthy women experienced predictable microbiome shifts with hormonal changes, particularly an increase in beneficial bacteria during ovulation. Importantly, hormone stimulation with GnRH agonist and r-hCG during IVF had no significant effect on the vaginal microbiome of infertile women, indicating a form of hormone insensitivity. Further correlation analysis suggested that the altered microbiome in infertile patients involves synergistic dysbiotic interactions between various anaerobic bacteria, such as Atopobium, Prevotella, Bifidobacterium, and Megasphaera.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study strongly suggests that a stable, hormone-responsive vaginal microbiome is critical for female reproductive health and successful IVF outcomes. The finding that infertile women’s vaginal microbiota remain dysbiotic and largely unresponsive to hormonal stimulation points to an underlying microbiological barrier to fertility that current IVF protocols may not address. For clinicians, these results highlight the importance of evaluating and potentially modifying the vaginal microbiome in women undergoing IVF, particularly those with a history of secondary infertility. Personalized interventions, such as microbiome modulation through probiotics or targeted antimicrobials, could enhance the effectiveness of ART by restoring a healthy, Lactobacillus-dominated microbiota and improving receptivity to hormonal treatments. This study also underscores the need for future large-scale research to refine microbiome-targeted diagnostics and therapies as adjuncts to conventional infertility treatments.
Post-Coital Antifertility Activity of Hibiscus rosa-sinensis Linn. roots
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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The ethanolic root extract of Hibiscus rosa-sinensis shows potent, reversible post-coital antifertility effects in rats via estrogenic mechanisms, supporting its potential as a safe herbal contraceptive.
What was studied?
This original research study investigated the post-coital antifertility and estrogenic activities of the ethanolic extract of Hibiscus rosa-sinensis Linn. roots. The primary aim was to evaluate the extract's ability to prevent implantation in pregnant rats and to assess its effects on uterine weight, histology, and vaginal cytology, which are indicative of estrogenic activity. The study focused on exploring the potential contraceptive effects of the root extract, an area less studied compared to other parts of the plant, like flowers or leaves.
Who was studied?
The study utilized female albino Wistar rats for antifertility testing and immature ovariectomized female rats for estrogenic activity assessment. Animals were maintained under standard laboratory conditions, and only rats with regular estrous cycles were selected for the experiments. For toxicity evaluation, adult albino mice of both sexes were used. The post-coital antifertility testing involved treating pregnant rats with oral doses of 200 and 400 mg/kg body weight of the ethanolic root extract from day 1 to day 7 of pregnancy, followed by laparotomy to assess implantation on day 10.
Most important findings
The study demonstrated potent post-coital antifertility activity, with the 400 mg/kg dose producing 100% inhibition of implantation, while the 200 mg/kg dose showed partial inhibition (16.66%). No toxic effects or weight changes were observed, and the antifertility effect was reversible as treated rats conceived normally after discontinuation. Estrogenic activity was evident as the 400 mg/kg extract significantly increased uterine weight, uterine diameter, and endometrial thickness compared to controls. Histological analysis revealed uterine inflation, increased epithelial cell proliferation, and fluid accumulation resembling the proestrous/estrous state. Vaginal smears indicated increased cornification, consistent with estrogenic stimulation. Co-administration of the extract with ethinyl estradiol further enhanced these parameters, indicating no antiestrogenic effect. The findings suggest the extract's antifertility action is likely mediated by estrogenic mechanisms, causing anti-implantation effects.
Key implications
This study supports the traditional use of Hibiscus rosa-sinensis roots as a potential herbal contraceptive through anti-implantation and estrogenic effects. The extract's strong and reversible inhibition of implantation with no overt toxicity indicates promise for developing safe, plant-based contraceptive agents. These findings encourage further research into isolation of active phytochemicals, mechanism elucidation, and evaluation of clinical applicability. Given the current challenges with synthetic contraceptives, including side effects and discontinuation, such herbal alternatives could provide safer, more acceptable fertility regulation options, especially in resource-limited settings.
Female Fertility and the Nutritional Approach: The Most Essential Aspects
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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A narrative review examining how dietary patterns, nutrients, and gut microbiota impact female fertility, highlighting the Mediterranean diet’s benefits, the risks of Western diets, key micronutrients, and the clinical importance of individualized nutritional care for women planning pregnancy or experiencing infertility.
What was reviewed?
This comprehensive narrative review focused on the relationship between dietary factors, nutritional supplementation, and female fertility, with an emphasis on how dietary patterns and specific nutrients influence reproductive outcomes. The authors synthesized current evidence regarding the effects of macronutrients (carbohydrates, fats, proteins), micronutrients (vitamins, minerals), phytoestrogens, gluten, antioxidants, caffeine, alcohol, and the gut microbiota on female fertility. Special attention was given to the Mediterranean versus Western-style dietary patterns and their associations with ovulatory health, metabolic disorders such as polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), endometriosis, and assisted reproductive technology (ART) outcomes. The review also detailed how specific nutrients and bioactive food components interact with underlying hormonal, metabolic, and inflammatory pathways relevant to the reproductive system.
Who was reviewed?
The review encompassed a broad population of reproductive-aged women, including those planning pregnancy, experiencing infertility (of both known and idiopathic causes), and those undergoing ART. Studies drawn upon in the review included healthy women, women with metabolic and reproductive disorders (notably PCOS and endometriosis), and subgroups with dietary deficiencies or excesses. The review also referenced evidence regarding women with specific conditions such as celiac disease and those with varying levels of micronutrient status. While primarily focused on the female population, some comparative insights referenced male fertility or lifestyle factors, though male infertility was not the core subject.
Most important findings
The review underscores that dietary patterns have a significant impact on female fertility. Diets high in trans fats, refined carbohydrates, and added sugars are associated with higher risks of ovulatory disorders, insulin resistance, PCOS, and reduced ART success. Conversely, adherence to the Mediterranean diet, rich in dietary fiber, plant-based proteins, omega-3 fatty acids, vitamins, and minerals, is linked to improved ovulatory function, better metabolic profiles, and higher fertility rates, including among women undergoing ART. Micronutrients such as folic acid, vitamin D, iodine, and iron are particularly important, with deficiencies in these linked to impaired fertility, increased time to conception, and adverse pregnancy outcomes. The review highlights inconsistent findings regarding dairy fat, protein sources, and phytoestrogens, noting the need for individualized dietary recommendations. Importantly, the composition of the gut microbiota emerges as a potentially critical mediator of fertility, with Western diets promoting dysbiosis and inflammation, while fiber-rich, plant-based diets foster beneficial microbial shifts (notably increased Bifidobacteria and Prevotella). The review also finds limited evidence for the routine exclusion of gluten in non-celiac women and suggests routine supplementation of folic acid and vitamin D for women planning pregnancy.
Key implications
For clinicians, the review highlights the necessity of a holistic and individualized approach to female fertility, integrating dietary assessment and intervention as core components of preconception and infertility care. The findings support recommending Mediterranean-style dietary patterns, ensuring adequate intake (and, if necessary, supplementation) of key micronutrients such as folic acid, vitamin D, and iodine, and promoting gut health through fiber-rich, plant-based foods. Given the intricate links between diet, metabolic health, reproductive hormones, and the gut microbiome, multidisciplinary collaboration, including the involvement of clinical dietitians, is crucial. The review also suggests the importance of monitoring micronutrient status and considering celiac disease screening in infertile women. Current evidence does not support universal exclusion of gluten, caffeine (within recommended limits), or moderate alcohol prior to conception, but underscores the risks of excess. Future research should focus on clarifying the roles of specific nutrients, gut microbiota signatures, and developing standardized dietary recommendations for women planning pregnancy.
Differential Composition of Vaginal Microbiome Is Associated With Successful Intrauterine Insemination in Couples With Idiopathic Infertility
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Infertility
Infertility
Infertility is the inability to conceive after 12 months of regular, unprotected sex. It affects both men and women and can be due to various physical, hormonal, or genetic factors. Treatments include medication, surgery, assisted reproductive technologies, and lifestyle changes.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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This study links the vaginal microbiome, particularly Lactobacillus crispatus dominance, to successful IUI outcomes in idiopathic infertility. Dysbiosis, with an increase in Bifidobacterium, was associated with IUI failure, suggesting the importance of vaginal microbiome evaluation in fertility treatments.
What was studied?
This study examined the vaginal and seminal microbiomes of couples with idiopathic infertility and their correlation with intrauterine insemination (IUI) outcomes. The researchers sought to determine whether the microbiomes of the vaginal and seminal fluids influence the success rate of IUI. They specifically focused on identifying any differences in the microbiota composition between women with successful and unsuccessful IUI outcomes, particularly in relation to Lactobacillus species, which are considered crucial for maintaining a healthy vaginal environment.
Who was studied?
The study involved 23 couples with idiopathic infertility undergoing their first IUI treatment at the Centro Scienze della Natalità in Milan, Italy. Both female and male partners participated, with vaginal swabs taken from the female participants and seminal fluid samples from the male participants on the day of the IUI procedure. The female participants had a mean age of 33 years, and the male participants were approximately 34 years old. The couples were all Caucasian, and the women underwent a comprehensive clinical evaluation to exclude any other known causes of infertility, such as endometriosis or male factor infertility.
What were the most important findings?
The study found that the vaginal microbiome composition differed significantly between women who achieved pregnancy following IUI and those who did not. Women with successful IUI outcomes had a vaginal microbiome predominantly dominated by Lactobacillus crispatus, which is associated with a healthy and stable vaginal ecosystem. On the other hand, women who experienced IUI failure showed a greater diversity in their vaginal microbiota, including higher levels of Bifidobacterium and other non-Lactobacillus species, indicating a more dysbiotic environment. The presence of Lactobacillus species, especially L. crispatus, was strongly associated with a higher probability of successful pregnancy. Interestingly, no significant differences in the seminal microbiome were observed between men whose partners experienced success or failure in IUI, suggesting that male seminal microbiota might not play as critical a role in IUI success as vaginal microbiota does.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings suggest that the vaginal microbiome, particularly the dominance of Lactobacillus crispatus, could serve as an important biomarker for predicting IUI success in couples with idiopathic infertility. This underscores the potential value of incorporating vaginal microbiome analysis into fertility assessments prior to IUI procedures. Clinicians might consider characterizing the vaginal microbiome in these patients and explore interventions, such as probiotics or other microbiome-targeted therapies, to restore a more optimal microbial balance and improve reproductive outcomes. However, given the study's relatively small sample size, further research with larger cohorts is necessary to confirm these findings and determine the clinical applicability of microbiome-based interventions.
Relationship between risk factors for infertility in women and lead, cadmium, and arsenic blood levels: a cross-sectional study from Taiwan
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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Infertile women in Taiwan showed higher blood lead and arsenic levels than pregnant women, mainly linked to frequent Chinese herbal medicine use. Physical activity may help lower lead accumulation, highlighting the need to evaluate traditional medicine risks in women planning pregnancy.
What was studied?
This cross-sectional study investigated the association between blood concentrations of lead (Pb), cadmium (Cd), and arsenic (As) and risk factors for infertility in women of childbearing age in Taiwan. The study aimed to elucidate whether exposure to these environmental toxic metals, commonly found as contaminants in the environment and traditional Chinese herbal medicines, correlates with infertility. Researchers compared the levels of Pb, Cd, and As in blood samples of infertile and pregnant women and examined how lifestyle factors, including use of Chinese herbal medicine, alcohol consumption, and physical activity, might influence metal body burdens. Additionally, the study assessed possible associations between blood metal levels and reproductive hormone concentrations (FSH, LH) in the infertile group.
Who was studied?
Three hundred and sixty-seven women aged 18–45 years were recruited from the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at Taiwan Adventist Hospital between 2008 and 2010. Of these, 310 infertile women (defined as failing to conceive after one year of regular intercourse) and 57 pregnant women (confirmed by ultrasound in the first trimester) were included after applying exclusion criteria (e.g., excluding women with PCOS, diabetes, IVF pregnancies, and other confounders). Sociodemographic data, lifestyle habits, and reproductive histories were collected via structured interviews. Blood samples for metal and hormone analyses were collected under standardized conditions, ensuring comparability between the groups.
Most important findings
The study found that blood levels of Pb and As, but not Cd, were significantly higher in infertile women compared to pregnant women. Median Pb concentrations were 15.7 μg/L in infertile versus 11.6 μg/L in pregnant women; As levels were also higher in the infertile group. Use of Chinese herbal medicine was more prevalent among infertile women and was associated with higher blood Pb levels in both infertile and pregnant women, with a clear dose-response relationship: more frequent herbal medicine use correlated with greater Pb burden. Alcohol consumption was also higher among infertile women, while regular physical activity was more common in pregnant women. Physical activity showed a trend toward reducing blood Pb accumulation. No significant correlations were observed between blood metal concentrations and reproductive hormone levels in infertile women, potentially due to overall metal exposures being below recognized toxicity thresholds.
Key implications
This study highlights that environmental and lifestyle exposures to heavy metals may contribute to increased Pb body burden in women of childbearing age, potentially impacting fertility. While the absolute metal levels observed were below acute toxicity thresholds, the data support the need for caution regarding the use of herbal preparations that may contain heavy metals, especially for women planning pregnancy. Regular physical activity may have a protective effect against Pb accumulation. Clinicians should consider environmental and cultural factors when assessing infertility and counsel patients on potential risks associated with traditional medicine use. These findings underscore the importance of monitoring metal exposures and integrating environmental health perspectives into reproductive care.
How does chronic endometritis influence pregnancy outcomes in endometriosis associated infertility? A retrospective cohort study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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This study shows chronic endometritis significantly increases pregnancy complications in women with endometriosis-associated infertility. Placenta previa, gestational hypertension, and cesarean sections were notably higher, emphasizing the importance of diagnosing and managing CE effectively for improved reproductive outcomes.
What was studied?
The study examined how chronic endometritis (CE) influences pregnancy outcomes in women experiencing infertility related to endometriosis. Specifically, it evaluated whether the coexistence of CE in these women affected their ability to conceive and carry pregnancies successfully. Researchers explored the incidence of pregnancy complications and live birth outcomes following combined laparoscopic and hysteroscopic surgical treatment.
Who was studied?
The study involved 685 women diagnosed with infertility associated with endometriosis. Among these participants, 318 women were diagnosed with chronic endometritis (CE group), while 367 women did not have CE (non-CE group). A subset consisting of 123 clinically pregnant women from the CE group and 369 from the non-CE group was analyzed in depth. These women underwent combined laparoscopy and hysteroscopy between January 2018 and December 2020. Data was meticulously gathered from medical records and telephone follow-ups over 24 months.
What were the most important findings?
The research revealed that chronic endometritis was highly prevalent (46.42%) in patients with endometriosis-associated infertility. Patients diagnosed with CE had increased rates of pregnancy complications compared to those without CE. Specifically, there was a significantly higher occurrence of placenta previa, gestational hypertension, and cesarean deliveries in the CE group. The cumulative pregnancy rate post-surgery was lower in patients with both EMS and CE compared to those without CE, although this difference was not statistically significant. However, notably, higher Endometriosis Fertility Index (EFI) scores (7-10) correlated strongly with improved pregnancy outcomes in both groups, suggesting that EFI scores remain reliable predictors of fertility success after surgical intervention.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study underscores the importance of identifying and treating chronic endometritis in patients suffering from endometriosis-related infertility. Clinicians should be particularly aware that CE significantly increases the risk of adverse pregnancy outcomes, including placenta previa, gestational hypertension, and higher rates of cesarean deliveries. The findings support incorporating routine diagnostic evaluations and proactive management of CE in fertility treatments. They also emphasize the value of combined hysteroscopic and laparoscopic surgical interventions to potentially improve pregnancy outcomes, with careful monitoring and counseling regarding possible complications post-surgery.
Endometrial microbiota composition is associated with reproductive outcome in infertile patients
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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This study links endometrial microbiota composition to reproductive success in ART, showing that Lactobacillus dominance is associated with better outcomes, while dysbiosis with pathogens like Gardnerella and Klebsiella correlates with infertility. It suggests microbiota analysis as a tool for improving ART success.
What was studied?
This study investigated the association between endometrial microbiota composition and reproductive outcomes in infertile patients undergoing assisted reproductive technologies (ART), including in vitro fertilization (IVF). Researchers specifically aimed to determine whether the presence or absence of specific bacterial taxa in the endometrial microbiota was linked to reproductive success, defined by live birth (LB), biochemical pregnancy (BP), clinical miscarriage (CM), or no pregnancy (NP). The study employed 16S rRNA sequencing to analyze both endometrial fluid and biopsy samples collected prior to embryo transfer.
Who was studied?
The study included 342 infertile women, aged 21 to 49, from 13 reproductive clinics across Europe, America, and Asia. These women were undergoing IVF or ovum donation treatments and had an average age of 36 years. The cohort consisted of patients with a variety of infertility causes, including advanced maternal age, male factor infertility, unexplained infertility, and ovarian pathology. All participants underwent a hormone replacement therapy cycle before embryo transfer, and their endometrial microbiota composition was analyzed to correlate it with reproductive outcomes.
What were the most important findings?
The study found significant differences in the endometrial microbiota composition between patients with successful reproductive outcomes (live birth) and those with unsuccessful outcomes (biochemical pregnancy, clinical miscarriage, or no pregnancy). Lactobacillus spp., particularly dominant in the endometrial microbiota, was consistently enriched in women who achieved live birth. In contrast, patients with unsuccessful outcomes exhibited a dysbiotic microbiota profile, characterized by higher levels of potentially pathogenic bacteria, including Gardnerella, Haemophilus, Klebsiella, Neisseria, Streptococcus, and Atopobium. These dysbiotic profiles were strongly associated with lower pregnancy rates and higher miscarriage rates. The study found that the microbiota composition of endometrial fluid (EF) and endometrial biopsy (EB) samples showed some discrepancies, though both sample types revealed similar associations with reproductive outcomes. The presence of Lactobacillus spp. was inversely correlated with pathogenic bacteria in successful pregnancies, highlighting its potential role in preventing microbial dysbiosis and ensuring a healthy reproductive environment conducive to embryo implantation.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study’s findings emphasize the importance of endometrial microbiota composition as a predictive biomarker for reproductive outcomes in infertility treatments. Clinicians can use this information to assess the microbial health of the endometrium before embryo transfer and potentially identify candidates who may benefit from interventions aimed at restoring a healthy microbiota. This may involve the use of probiotics, antimicrobial therapies, or other microbiome-modulating strategies to enhance the likelihood of a successful pregnancy, particularly in cases of recurrent implantation failure or unexplained infertility. Additionally, the results support the need for further research into the mechanisms by which specific pathogens disrupt implantation and pregnancy, potentially leading to improved diagnostic and treatment protocols for ART patients.
Human genital tracts microbiota: dysbiosis crucial for infertility
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Infertility
Infertility
Infertility is the inability to conceive after 12 months of regular, unprotected sex. It affects both men and women and can be due to various physical, hormonal, or genetic factors. Treatments include medication, surgery, assisted reproductive technologies, and lifestyle changes.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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This review connects genital microbiota dysbiosis to infertility, highlighting the role of Lactobacillus dominance in female fertility and microbial imbalances in seminal fluid affecting male fertility. It suggests personalized treatments targeting microbiome restoration could improve reproductive outcomes, especially in ART settings.
What was reviewed?
This review explored the relationship between genital tract microbiota dysbiosis and infertility in both men and women. It discussed how microbial imbalances in the vaginal, endometrial, seminal, and placental microbiomes can impair fertility, leading to complications such as bacterial vaginosis, poor sperm quality, and pregnancy-related issues like preterm birth. The review also examined how these microbiota imbalances affect reproductive health, suggesting that hormonal influences and microbial exchanges between partners play critical roles in fertility outcomes. The authors aimed to provide insights into how microbiome alterations can be used for better personalization of infertility treatments.
Who was reviewed?
The review primarily focused on studies involving both male and female infertility, including those with unexplained infertility and those undergoing assisted reproductive technologies (ART). It incorporated data on microbial composition from both sexes, specifically examining how dysbiosis in vaginal, endometrial, seminal, and placental microbiota can contribute to infertility and affect the success of treatments like in vitro fertilization (IVF). The review also addressed how microbial imbalances influence reproductive outcomes, drawing from clinical findings related to sperm quality, bacterial vaginosis, and pregnancy complications.
What were the most important findings?
The review highlighted the critical role of Lactobacillus species in maintaining a healthy vaginal microbiome. A dysbiotic vaginal microbiome, characterized by low Lactobacillus dominance and an overgrowth of pathogens such as Gardnerella, Prevotella, Mobiluncus, and Ureaplasma, was strongly associated with infertility, bacterial vaginosis, and adverse pregnancy outcomes. It was noted that female microbiota composition directly impacts pregnancy, with non-Lactobacillus-dominated environments leading to an increased risk of preterm birth and recurrent miscarriage. Similarly, seminal microbiota imbalances, including the overgrowth of bacteria such as Ureaplasma and Enterococcus, negatively influenced sperm quality, including motility and morphology, thereby affecting male fertility. The review also emphasized the concept of microbial trade-off between partners, where microbial dysbiosis in one partner could influence the reproductive microbiota of the other, further complicating fertility issues.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The review's findings suggest that clinicians should consider the role of genital tract microbiota when diagnosing and treating infertility. The identification of dysbiosis, particularly the loss of Lactobacillus dominance, can serve as a useful diagnostic marker for reproductive health. Interventions aimed at restoring a healthy microbiome, such as the use of probiotics or antimicrobial therapies, could improve fertility outcomes and reduce complications during pregnancy. Furthermore, the concept of microbial trade-off between partners indicates that both individuals in a couple should be assessed and treated for microbiome imbalances, enhancing the chances of successful conception. The review calls for further research into microbiome-based diagnostics and therapeutics to offer more personalized and effective treatments for infertility.
A two-sample mendelian randomization analysis investigates associations between gut microbiota and infertility
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Infertility
Infertility
Infertility is the inability to conceive after 12 months of regular, unprotected sex. It affects both men and women and can be due to various physical, hormonal, or genetic factors. Treatments include medication, surgery, assisted reproductive technologies, and lifestyle changes.
•
Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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This study demonstrates a causal link between specific gut microbiota and infertility risks, identifying protective and harmful bacterial taxa in both men and women. It highlights the microbiome's potential role in fertility management through targeted probiotics and lifestyle interventions.
What was studied?
This study utilized a two-sample Mendelian randomization (MR) analysis to investigate the causal relationships between gut microbiota composition and infertility in males and females. Genetic variants associated with specific gut microbiota taxa served as instrumental variables (IVs) to assess their direct influence on the incidence of infertility. The researchers aimed to clarify whether variations in gut bacteria directly contribute to infertility or if these associations are merely correlational due to confounding factors or reverse causation.
Who was studied?
The study analyzed genetic data from the MiBioGen consortium, which included 18,340 participants across 24 international cohorts primarily from European descent. Infertility data came from the FinnGen consortium, with 994 male infertility cases and 100,050 controls, and 9,831 female infertility cases and 94,394 controls. The analysis excluded individuals with unclear sex, high genotype deficiency, excess heterozygosity, or non-Finnish ancestry.
What were the most important findings?
The MR analysis confirmed significant causal relationships between specific gut microbiota and infertility risks. For male infertility, five taxa (Bacteroidaceae, Bacteroides, Enterobacteriales, Romboutsia, Enterobacteriaceae) were associated with a reduced risk, whereas Allisonella genus increased infertility risk. For female infertility, beneficial associations (reduced risk) were found with multiple taxa, including Ruminococcus torques group, Desulfovibrio, Bifidobacterium, Family XIII AD3011 group, Ruminococcaceae NK4A214 group, Holdemania, Bifidobacteriales order, Actinobacteria phylum, Bifidobacteriaceae family, and Actinobacteria class. Conversely, Faecalibacterium was significantly linked to an increased risk of female infertility. The MR analysis was robust and well-supported by sensitivity tests, including Cochran Q and MR-PRESSO analyses, indicating reliable results free from major horizontal pleiotropy or heterogeneity.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study provides strong evidence that gut microbiota directly affects infertility risks in both males and females, highlighting potential microbiome-based targets for diagnostic, preventive, and therapeutic interventions. For clinicians, these findings emphasize the importance of assessing gut microbiota composition when managing infertility. Identifying protective and harmful bacterial taxa offers actionable insights for developing personalized probiotic treatments, nutritional recommendations, and lifestyle modifications aimed at optimizing fertility outcomes.
Probiotics and the envisaged role in treating human infertility
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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This review details how probiotics modulate the human microbiome to support fertility, addressing mechanisms, clinical evidence, and implications for male and female reproductive health, with particular focus on Lactobacillus species and their role in infertility treatment and prevention.
What was reviewed?
This review article comprehensively examines the emerging role of probiotics in the context of human infertility, focusing on both male and female reproductive health. The authors synthesize current evidence on how the human microbiome, particularly the urogenital and gastrointestinal microbiota, influences fertility, and detail the mechanisms by which probiotics, especially strains of Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium, may contribute to fertility restoration. The review covers the historical development of probiotic therapy, the interaction between probiotics and prebiotics (synbiotics), and the multi-faceted ways in which probiotics maintain immune homeostasis, suppress pathogenic bacteria, and support reproductive tract health. Special emphasis is placed on infertility related to bacterial vaginosis, oxidative stress, obesity, hormonal disturbances, and complications during IVF or pregnancy, highlighting the microbiome’s pivotal role in reproductive success.
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesizes studies involving a broad spectrum of populations relevant to infertility: reproductive-age men and women, including those with obesity, advanced age, bacterial vaginosis (BV), polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), and those undergoing assisted reproductive technology (ART) such as IVF. Both human clinical trials and animal model studies are included to elucidate probiotic effects on sperm quality, testicular histopathology, vaginal microbiota balance, pregnancy outcomes, and menopausal infections. The article integrates findings from diverse ethnic, age, and health backgrounds, reflecting the complex interplay between host factors, microbiome composition, and fertility outcomes.
Most important findings
The review highlights that a balanced microbiome, particularly the dominance of Lactobacillus species in the female genital tract, is strongly associated with reproductive health and fertility. In women, disruption of this balance (dysbiosis) and overgrowth of pathogens such as Gardnerella vaginalis are linked to BV, infertility, increased risk of pre-term birth, and complications in ART. Probiotic supplementation demonstrates efficacy in restoring vaginal microbiota, reducing BV recurrence, and promoting favorable reproductive outcomes. In men, probiotics can mitigate the negative effects of obesity and oxidative stress on sperm quality and testosterone levels, potentially enhancing fertility. Notably, animal and human studies show that probiotics can reverse testicular tissue injury, improve sperm parameters, and maintain reproductive hormone levels. Furthermore, probiotics are associated with reduced inflammation in PCOS, improved IVF outcomes, and better management of menopausal vaginal infections. The review underscores the need to identify precise probiotic strains, optimal dosing regimens, and combination strategies for maximal clinical benefit.
Key implications
The findings suggest that probiotics could serve as adjunct or alternative therapies for infertility management in clinical settings, offering a microbiome-targeted approach to both prevention and treatment. For women, maintaining a Lactobacillus-dominant vaginal microbiota may reduce infertility risk, improve ART success, and prevent recurrent BV and related complications. For men, probiotics offer a natural means to counteract infertility associated with metabolic dysfunction and aging. However, the review also notes that further in vivo studies are necessary to standardize administration methods, dosing, strain selection, and combination therapies before widespread clinical adoption. Integration of microbiome analysis into fertility assessments and treatment personalization could significantly advance reproductive medicine.
Effects of vaginal microbiota on in vitro fertilization outcomes in women with different infertility causes
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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This study explores the impact of vaginal microbiota on IVF outcomes in women with infertility. It highlights how specific bacteria like Lactobacillus iners and Pseudomonas spp. can predict IVF success or failure, offering potential insights for personalized ART treatments.
What was studied?
This study investigated the relationship between vaginal microbiota (VMB) composition and the outcomes of in vitro fertilization (IVF) in women with different causes of infertility. The researchers compared the VMB in women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) and tubal factor infertility (TFI) undergoing IVF with that of normal fertile women. The study specifically focused on the VMB structure before embryo transfer (ET) to determine its potential influence on IVF success.
Who was studied?
The study involved 120 women, including 83 infertile women (33 with PCOS and 50 with TFI) who underwent IVF and 37 fertile control women. The infertile group was divided into two subgroups based on IVF outcome: pregnant (PCOS.P and TFI.P) and non-pregnant (PCOS.NP and TFI.NP) women. Vaginal swabs were collected from all participants during the implantation window, 6-8 days after ovulation detection, to assess the VMB composition.
Most important findings
The study found significant differences in the vaginal microbiome between infertile women and fertile controls. Specifically, Lactobacillus iners was more abundant in the non-pregnant groups of both PCOS and TFI subgroups compared to the pregnant groups. The study also observed higher levels of Pseudomonas spp. in both non-pregnant groups, suggesting that this bacterial genus could negatively affect ART outcomes. Additionally, the VMB structure in infertile women was distinct from that of healthy women, with a reduced presence of Lactobacillus and an increased prevalence of pathogens like Prevotella, which are associated with reproductive issues such as spontaneous miscarriage and preterm birth.
Key implications
The findings underscore the potential of vaginal microbiota as a predictive factor for IVF outcomes. Specifically, the abundance of Lactobacillus iners and Pseudomonas spp. before embryo transfer might indicate a higher risk of IVF failure. This study highlights the importance of considering VMB composition when planning ART, suggesting that assessing the vaginal microbiota prior to embryo transfer could help optimize timing and personalize treatments based on infertility type. This approach could improve IVF success rates by addressing microbial imbalances that may hinder pregnancy.
Causal Effects of Gut Microbiota on Female Reproductive Tract Inflammation and Infertility: A Mendelian Randomization Study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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The study confirmed causal links between specific gut microbiota and female reproductive tract inflammation and infertility. Notably, Lachnospiraceae and Ruminococcus increased inflammation risks, while Butyricicoccus provided protection. Faecalibacterium heightened infertility risk, suggesting new targets for microbiome-based diagnostics and interventions.
What was studied?
This study investigated the causal relationships between gut microbiota and female reproductive tract inflammation and infertility, specifically employing Mendelian randomization (MR). MR is a method that utilizes genetic variants to elucidate the causal influence of modifiable exposures, specifically gut microbiota, on specific health outcomes, such as reproductive tract inflammation and infertility.
Who was studied?
The analysis utilized existing genome-wide association study (GWAS) datasets primarily involving individuals of European ancestry. It included genetic data from 18,340 participants in the MiBioGen consortium to analyze microbiome quantitative trait loci, which are host genetic variations influencing gut microbiota composition. The study evaluated causal relationships between 119 bacterial genera and female reproductive conditions using summary data predominantly from the FinnGen biobank, validated by additional datasets from the UK Biobank.
What were the most important findings?
This research provided robust evidence linking specific gut microbiota to female reproductive tract inflammation and infertility. Bacterial genera such as Lachnospiraceae and Ruminococcus were causally linked to an increased risk of pelvic inflammatory disorders. In contrast, Butyricicoccus and Prevotella were associated with a protective effect against inflammation. Detailed analyses further identified associations specific to reproductive organs: Coprococcus and Ruminococcus increased the risks of salpingitis and oophoritis, whereas Coprococcus reduced the risk. Similarly, Eubacterium (Fissicatena group) and Oscillospira increased the risk of uterine inflammation, while Haemophilus decreased the risk of cervical inflammation.
Faecalibacterium was associated with increased infertility risk. Conversely, genera such as Erysipelotrichaceae, Lactococcus, and Ruminococcus (torques group) had protective associations. Detailed subtype analyses revealed bacteria significantly associated with specific infertility types, including anovulation and tubal infertility. The findings were robustly validated through sensitivity analyses, showing no reverse causality, suggesting the microbiota directly influence these conditions rather than being merely correlated.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study’s findings have substantial implications for the diagnosis, prevention, and targeted treatment of reproductive health issues in women. Identifying gut bacteria associated with increased or decreased risks opens pathways for personalized probiotic therapies and nutritional interventions aimed at maintaining or restoring reproductive health. Clinicians can potentially leverage these insights to design preventive strategies tailored to the microbiome profile, thereby reducing the incidence of reproductive tract inflammations and infertility. Further research is encouraged to explore the microbiome's precise mechanisms and clinical applications.
Orange juice neutralizes the proinflammatory effect of a high-fat, high-carbohydrate meal and prevents endotoxin increase and Toll-like receptor expression 1–3
February 12, 2026
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Lipopolysaccharide (LPS)
Lipopolysaccharide (LPS)
Lipopolysaccharide (LPS), a potent endotoxin present in the outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria that causes chronic immune responses associated with inflammation.
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Gram-Negative Bacteria
Gram-Negative Bacteria
Gram-negative bacteria are resilient pathogens with antibiotic resistance, causing infections like UTIs, sepsis, and pneumonia.
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Orange juice with a high-fat meal prevented postprandial inflammation and endotoxemia: no rise in LPS or TLR2/4 expression.
What was studied?
Researchers evaluated whether co-ingesting orange juice with a high-fat, high-carbohydrate (HFHC) meal can neutralize the meal’s proinflammatory and oxidative effects. The study specifically focused on post-meal plasma endotoxin (lipopolysaccharide, LPS) levels and Toll-like receptor (TLR2 and TLR4) expression on immune cells. In this clinical trial, various inflammatory and oxidative stress markers (e.g. reactive oxygen species, cytokine signaling proteins, TLRs, and endotoxin) were measured after an HFHC meal consumed with orange juice, versus with water or a glucose drink.
Who was studied?
The study involved 30 healthy, normal-weight adults (men and women, age 20–40, BMI 20–25) divided into three equal groups. Each group consumed a 900-kcal HFHC meal accompanied by one of three beverages: water, 75 g glucose (300 kcal), or an equivalent 300-kcal orange juiceserving. Blood samples were collected fasting and at 1, 3, and 5 hours post-meal to assess metabolic and inflammatory responses.
Key Findings
Orange juice prevents TLR2/4 upregulation. Only the water- and glucose-drink groups showed significant postprandial increases in mononuclear cell TLR2 and TLR4 mRNA (peaking ~34–87% above baseline), whereas the orange juice (OJ) group had no significant change. Consistently, plasma endotoxin concentrations rose by ~60–70% within hours after the HFHC meal with water or glucose, but this endotoxemia surge was completely prevented when orange juice was co-ingested. Thus, OJ effectively blocked the gut-derived LPS–TLR inflammatory axis underpinning postprandial inflammation.
Orange juice also blunted oxidative stress. The HFHC meal led to a spike in reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation by leukocytes in the water and glucose groups, but co-ingestion of OJ significantly curbed this ROS burstajcn.nutrition.org. For example, at 1 hour post-meal, mononuclear cell ROS production increased by ~62–63% with water or glucose, versus only ~47% with OJajcn.nutrition.org. Likewise, neutrophil ROS rose markedly after the meal + water/glucose, but remained minimal with OJ. Furthermore, OJ abrogated the meal-induced rises in other inflammatory mediators: mononuclear NF-κB–related signals, MMP-9 (matrix metalloproteinase-9) expression and plasma levels, and intracellular MAPK p38 activation were all significantly elevated post-meal with water or glucose, yet virtually unchanged when OJ was included. In short, orange juice neutralized the HFHC meal’s pro-oxidative and proinflammatory impact, preventing increased endotoxin, TLR2/4, and downstream inflammatory signaling that were otherwise observed postprandially.
Clinical Implications
These findings have important clinical implications for metabolic and cardiovascular health. Repeated episodes of postprandial inflammation and metabolic endotoxemia (transient entry of gut bacterial LPS after meals) are thought to contribute to insulin resistance and atherosclerosis. By showing that a polyphenol-rich beverage like orange juice can buffer the inflammatory effects of a high-fat, high-carb meal, this study suggests a practical dietary strategy to mitigate meal-induced inflammatory stress. The orange juice prevented the LPS surge and TLR4 upregulation, thereby interrupting a key microbe-driven inflammatory pathway. Clinically, such an approach could reduce the cumulative burden of inflammation and oxidative stress after unhealthy meals, potentially lowering the risk of metabolic syndrome and cardiovascular events over time. In essence, dietary components can modulate host–microbial interactions: here, orange juice’s flavonoids (like hesperidin) likely counteracted gut-derived endotoxin effects, attenuating postprandial inflammatory responses.
This underscores the need to consider not just macronutrient content but also food combinations and bioactive nutrients that neutralize proinflammatory triggers in the diet. For clinicians, advising the inclusion of polyphenol-rich foods or beverages with indulgent meals might be a stepping stone toward blunting post-meal inflammation and improving metabolic health.
Role of Metabolic Endotoxemia in Systemic Inflammation and Potential Interventions
February 12, 2026
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Lipopolysaccharide (LPS)
Lipopolysaccharide (LPS)
Lipopolysaccharide (LPS), a potent endotoxin present in the outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria that causes chronic immune responses associated with inflammation.
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Gram-Negative Bacteria
Gram-Negative Bacteria
Gram-negative bacteria are resilient pathogens with antibiotic resistance, causing infections like UTIs, sepsis, and pneumonia.
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This review outlines the role of metabolic endotoxemia—gut-derived LPS in circulation—in chronic inflammation and disease. It explores microbial, dietary, and immunological mechanisms underlying endotoxemia and evaluates antimicrobial peptides and microbiome-targeted diets as promising interventions.
What was reviewed?
This review, authored by Mohammad and Thiemermann (2021), comprehensively examines the concept of metabolic endotoxemia, defined as a diet-induced increase in circulating lipopolysaccharide (LPS) levels, and its relationship with systemic inflammation and chronic disease. The paper synthesizes preclinical and clinical findings that connect high-fat diets (HFDs), increased gut permeability ("leaky gut"), translocation of LPS, and the activation of Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4)-mediated inflammatory pathways to the pathogenesis of obesity, type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), and cardiovascular disease. Additionally, it evaluates both pharmacological and dietary interventions, including antimicrobial peptides (AMPs), micronutrient modulation, and microbiome-targeted strategies to mitigate metabolic endotoxemia.
Who was reviewed?
The review draws from a diverse body of literature, including murine models (e.g., TLR4-deficient, ApoE-deficient, and HFD-fed mice), human studies in obese and diabetic individuals, and clinical interventions assessing endotoxemia through LPS or LPS-binding protein (LBP) markers. Special focus is placed on studies employing controlled dietary exposures, AMP assays, knockout models, and microbiome analysis to characterize the drivers and downstream effects of metabolic endotoxemia.
What were the most important findings?
Metabolic endotoxemia results from the translocation of gut-derived lipopolysaccharide (LPS) into systemic circulation, primarily due to dietary disruption of the intestinal epithelial barrier. HFDs induce gut dysbiosis, deplete beneficial taxa such as Bifidobacterium and Eubacterium spp., and reduce tight junction proteins (e.g., occludin, claudins, and ZO-1), resulting in increased intestinal permeability. This "leaky gut" condition facilitates LPS entry into the bloodstream, triggering TLR4/MyD88-mediated signaling cascades and NF-κB activation, thereby promoting systemic low-grade inflammation.
Clinical studies show elevated LBP and LPS levels in individuals with T2DM, atherosclerosis, and NAFLD. These increases correlate with heightened expression of pro-inflammatory cytokines such as TNF-α and IL-6 in adipose tissue and liver, as well as with metabolic parameters like waist-to-hip ratio and serum triglycerides. From a microbiome perspective, endotoxemia is consistently associated with altered gut microbial composition—particularly a decreased Firmicutes-to-Bacteroidetes ratio—and overexpression of TLR2/TLR4 in the intestinal tract.
The review also highlights interventions targeting metabolic endotoxemia. Antimicrobial peptides, such as defensins and LL-37, exhibit both bactericidal and LPS-neutralizing effects. Synthetic AMPs (e.g., Peptide 19-2.5) show potential in attenuating LPS-driven inflammation in sepsis models. Dietary strategies, including prebiotics (inulin, FOS), probiotics (Bifidobacterium, Lactobacillus), and micronutrient supplementation (zinc, vitamin D), offer promising routes to restore tight junction integrity and reduce circulating LPS. However, limitations in endotoxemia detection—primarily due to the unreliability of the LAL assay—complicate conclusions about causality.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review reinforces metabolic endotoxemia as a mechanistic link between diet, gut dysbiosis, and chronic systemic inflammation. It establishes a conceptual foundation for LPS as a biomarker and driver of cardiometabolic disease and supports microbiome-targeted interventions—especially AMP-based and dietary approaches—as plausible therapeutic strategies. However, it also underscores the limitations of current LPS detection methods (e.g., LAL assay) and calls for more robust assays and interventional trials to establish causality. For microbiome researchers, the paper offers microbial targets (Bifidobacterium, Eubacterium) and mechanistic endpoints (tight junction proteins, NF-κB, MyD88) to validate microbiome signatures of endotoxemia and develop microbiome-targeted interventions MBTIs.
Mendelian Randomization Reveals Causal Gut Microbiota Signatures in Six Thyroid Diseases
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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Graves’ Disease (GD)
Graves’ Disease (GD)
OverviewGraves’ Disease (GD) affects approximately 0.5% of the population, predominantly women. First-line treatment options—antithyroid medications, radioactive iodine, and surgery— often result in significant side effects, incomplete remissions, and frequent relapses. Further, current first-line treatment options focus on symptoms management, and reflect an inadequate understanding of the etiology of the condition. However, recent research reveals a […]
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Mendelian‑randomization of 18,340 MiBioGen participants and > 349k FinnGen controls identifies 32 gut genera with causal roles—some protective, others harmful—across six thyroid diseases, highlighting therapeutic microbiome targets.
What was studied?
This original investigation employed a two‑sample Mendelian randomization (MR) framework to test whether genetically predicted variation in gut microbiota (GM) composition exerts causal effects on six thyroid diseases (TDs): nontoxic diffuse goiter (NDG), nontoxic multinodular goiter (NMG), nontoxic single thyroid nodule (NSTN), Graves’ disease (GD), Plummer disease (PD) and thyrotoxicosis with toxic single thyroid nodule (TSTN). Genome‑wide association study (GWAS) summary statistics for 119 genera (1,531 SNPs) served as exposures, while disease outcomes were derived from large population‑based GWAS datasets. IVW was the primary MR method, complemented by weighted median, MR‑Egger, and sensitivity checks for heterogeneity and pleiotropy.
Who was studied?
GM data originated from the MiBioGen consortium (18,340 primarily European participants), and thyroid phenotypes came from FinnGen Release 10 (906–6,699 cases and ≥ 349,000 controls per phenotype, all of European ancestry). Thus, the analytic sample represents adult Europeans with genotyped data and harmonized microbial and thyroid phenotypes.
Most important findings
MR identified 32 genera with putative causal links to TDs. Protective associations included Clostridium innocuum group, Ruminiclostridium 5 and Lachnoclostridium for NDG (OR ≈ 0.59–0.72), Bifidobacterium and Sutterella for NMG (OR ≈ 0.77–0.83), and Ruminiclostridium 9, Victivallis and Butyricimonas for GD (OR ≈ 0.75–0.85). Conversely, taxa such as Alistipes, Methanobrevibacter, Ruminococcaceae UCG014 (NDG), Ruminococcus gauvreauii group and Rikenellaceae RC9 (NMG), Eubacterium rectale group and Desulfovibrio (GD), and Dorea, Eggerthella and Phascolarctobacterium (PD) increased disease risk (OR 1.2–2.3). For TSTN, Parasutterella was protective, whereas Sutterella, Oscillibacter and Clostridium sensu stricto 1 conferred marked risk (OR ~ 2–3.4).
Key implications
These results strengthen the concept of a gut–thyroid axis by demonstrating genus‑level causal effects, not mere correlations. Protective genera often produce short‑chain fatty acids (e.g., butyrate), enhance epithelial barrier integrity and modulate T‑cell differentiation, whereas risk genera have pro‑inflammatory or lipopolysaccharide (LPS)‑rich profiles. Clinically, microbiome‑targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as fiber supplementation, next‑generation probiotics or microbiota‑directed drugs may complement iodine optimisation and immunomodulation for TD prevention or adjunctive therapy. However, the findings pertain to European ancestry and genus‑level resolution; host–microbe–immune interactions and sex‑specific effects warrant validation in multi‑ethnic, mechanistic, and longitudinal cohorts.
Graves’ Disease Gut Microbiota Signature: Key Microbial Changes in Autoimmune Thyroid Disease
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
Graves’ Disease (GD)
Graves’ Disease (GD)
OverviewGraves’ Disease (GD) affects approximately 0.5% of the population, predominantly women. First-line treatment options—antithyroid medications, radioactive iodine, and surgery— often result in significant side effects, incomplete remissions, and frequent relapses. Further, current first-line treatment options focus on symptoms management, and reflect an inadequate understanding of the etiology of the condition. However, recent research reveals a […]
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Graves’ disease patients display a distinct gut microbiota signature, characterized by reduced diversity and altered abundance of key microbial taxa, including increased Bacilli, Prevotella, and Megamonas, and decreased Ruminococcus and Alistipes, suggesting a role for the microbiome in GD pathogenesis.
What was studied?
This study, titled "Intestinal microbiota changes in Graves’ disease: a prospective clinical study," specifically investigated the alterations in gut microbiota composition and diversity in patients with Graves’ disease (GD) compared to healthy controls. Using a cross-sectional design, the researchers employed 16S rRNA gene sequencing of fecal samples to characterize the intestinal microbial profiles. The primary aim was to elucidate whether GD, an autoimmune thyroid disorder, is associated with distinct changes in the gut microbiota. The study explored both alpha and beta diversity metrics, as well as the abundance of specific microbial taxa, to determine key differences that might serve as microbiome signatures for GD. This focus on the "Graves’ disease gut microbiota signature" is crucial for understanding the interplay between thyroid autoimmunity and the intestinal ecosystem.
Who was studied?
The study cohort consisted of 39 patients diagnosed with GD and 17 healthy controls, all recruited from Beijing Haidian Hospital, China, between April and December 2017. Participants were matched for age, sex, and body mass index (BMI) to reduce confounders. GD patients were newly diagnosed, untreated, and had no recent exposure to antibiotics, prebiotics, or medications affecting gut flora. Both groups had no history of gastrointestinal diseases. The GD group included 11 males and 28 females (ages 15–67), while the control group had 6 males and 11 females (ages 13–62). All participants adhered to a light diet prior to sample collection to minimize dietary variation effects on gut microbiota.
Most important findings
The analysis revealed a significant reduction in gut microbial diversity among GD patients compared to healthy controls, as evidenced by lower Chao1 and Shannon indices. Principal coordinate analysis (PCoA), non-metric multidimensional scaling (NMDS), and principal component analysis (PCA) all demonstrated that the overall microbial communities in GD patients were distinctly separated from those of controls, confirming disease-associated dysbiosis.
Crucially, the study identified a unique microbiota signature associated with GD. The relative abundances of several taxa were markedly altered:
Taxa (Genus/Order/Class)
Trend in GD Patients
Bacilli (Class)
Increased
Lactobacillales (Order)
Increased
Prevotella (Genus)
Increased
Megamonas (Genus)
Increased
Veillonella (Genus)
Increased
Ruminococcus (Genus)
Decreased
Rikenellaceae (Family)
Decreased
Alistipes (Genus)
Decreased
Linear discriminant analysis effect size (LEfSe) confirmed these taxa as potential biomarkers, with LDA scores above 3. Notably, increases in Prevotella and Megamonas have been linked to immune modulation and may impact the efficacy of certain therapies. The diminished presence of Ruminococcus, Rikenellaceae, and Alistipes aligns with findings in other autoimmune and inflammatory conditions, suggesting a possible shared microbial mechanism underlying immune dysregulation.
Key implications
This study provides evidence that GD is characterized by a distinct gut microbiota signature, marked by reduced diversity and specific shifts in microbial taxa. The "Graves’ disease gut microbiota signature"—notably increased Bacilli, Lactobacillales, Prevotella, Megamonas, Veillonella, and decreased Ruminococcus, Rikenellaceae, Alistipes—may serve as potential biomarkers for disease presence and progression. These findings highlight the potential utility of gut microbiome profiling in the diagnosis and management of GD, and open avenues for future research into microbiome-targeted interventions. Clinicians should consider that GD-associated dysbiosis may influence disease pathogenesis and responsiveness to treatment. However, causality cannot be inferred due to the study’s cross-sectional design, and results may not be generalizable beyond the Chinese population. The study lays foundational knowledge for integrating microbiome data into precision medicine approaches for autoimmune thyroid diseases.
Intestinal Microbiota Changes in Graves’ Disease: Microbial Signatures and Clinical Impact
February 12, 2026
/
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
Graves’ Disease (GD)
Graves’ Disease (GD)
OverviewGraves’ Disease (GD) affects approximately 0.5% of the population, predominantly women. First-line treatment options—antithyroid medications, radioactive iodine, and surgery— often result in significant side effects, incomplete remissions, and frequent relapses. Further, current first-line treatment options focus on symptoms management, and reflect an inadequate understanding of the etiology of the condition. However, recent research reveals a […]
•
This study found that Graves’ disease is associated with reduced gut microbial diversity and specific increases in Bacilli, Lactobacillales, Prevotella, Megamonas, and Veillonella, alongside decreases in Ruminococcus, Rikenellaceae, and Alistipes, identifying a distinctive intestinal microbiota signature relevant to GD pathogenesis.
What was studied?
This study investigated the intestinal microbiota composition and diversity in patients with Graves’ disease (GD) compared to healthy controls, aiming to identify specific microbial changes associated with GD. The research addresses the knowledge gap regarding how autoimmune thyroid dysfunction may alter gut microbiota, potentially influencing disease pathogenesis and progression. The focus keyphrase, "intestinal microbiota changes in Graves’ disease," is central to the study, as the authors performed high-throughput 16S rRNA gene sequencing on fecal samples to comprehensively profile and compare the gut microbial communities between the two groups. By elucidating these microbial signatures, the study provides foundational data for understanding the interplay between gut bacteria and autoimmune thyroid disease.
Who was studied?
The study included 39 patients with newly diagnosed, untreated Graves’ disease (GD) and 17 healthy controls, all recruited from Beijing Haidian Hospital, China, between April and December 2017. The GD group comprised 11 males and 28 females, aged 15–67 years, while the control group included 6 males and 11 females, aged 13–62 years, and was matched for age, sex, and body mass index. Both groups excluded individuals with a history of gastrointestinal diseases, recent antibiotic or prebiotic use, hormonal medication, Chinese herbal medicine, pregnancy, smoking, or excessive alcohol consumption. All participants adhered to a light diet for one week prior to fecal sampling to minimize dietary confounding. Diagnosis of GD followed established Chinese Society of Endocrinology criteria, ensuring a well-defined study population.
Most important findings
The major findings revealed a marked reduction in microbial diversity (both richness and evenness) in GD patients compared to healthy controls, as assessed by Chao1 and Shannon diversity indices. Beta-diversity analyses (PCoA, NMDS, PCA, and PLS-DA) demonstrated clear separation between the microbiota profiles of GD patients and controls, indicating significant compositional shifts. Linear discriminant analysis effect size (LEfSe) pinpointed specific taxa altered in GD: Bacilli, Lactobacillales, Prevotella, Megamonas, and Veillonella were significantly increased in GD patients, whereas Ruminococcus, Rikenellaceae, and Alistipes were decreased. These taxa changes suggest a dysbiotic state characterized by expansion of potentially pro-inflammatory or immune-modulating bacteria and loss of genera often associated with gut health and metabolic regulation. The increased abundance of Prevotella, in particular, may have implications for immune modulation and drug responsiveness, while decreased Ruminococcus and Alistipes have been linked to other autoimmune and inflammatory conditions. These microbial shifts represent a distinct intestinal microbiota signature for GD, relevant for inclusion in a microbiome signatures database.
Key implications
The study’s findings underscore a significant association between Graves’ disease and gut microbiota dysbiosis, marked by decreased diversity and characteristic alterations in microbial taxa. These changes may contribute to or reflect underlying immune dysregulation in GD and could influence disease activity, response to therapy, or development of comorbidities. The identification of specific bacterial changes provides potential biomarkers for GD diagnosis or monitoring and highlights new avenues for investigating microbiota-targeted interventions, such as probiotics or dietary modification, in autoimmune thyroid disorders. However, as a cross-sectional study, causality cannot be established, and results may be influenced by regional dietary patterns. Further longitudinal and mechanistic studies are needed to clarify the causal links and therapeutic potential of modulating the gut microbiome in GD.
Graves & Crohn: Genetic Evidence for Microbiome-Mediated Crosstalk
February 12, 2026
/
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
Graves’ Disease (GD)
Graves’ Disease (GD)
OverviewGraves’ Disease (GD) affects approximately 0.5% of the population, predominantly women. First-line treatment options—antithyroid medications, radioactive iodine, and surgery— often result in significant side effects, incomplete remissions, and frequent relapses. Further, current first-line treatment options focus on symptoms management, and reflect an inadequate understanding of the etiology of the condition. However, recent research reveals a […]
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Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) is a common gastrointestinal disorder characterized by symptoms such as abdominal pain, bloating, and altered bowel habits. Recent research has focused on the gut microbiota's role in IBS, aiming to identify specific microbial signatures associated with the condition.
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Mendelian-randomization of East-Asian GWAS data shows Crohn disease genetics raise Graves disease risk, while ulcerative colitis genetics are protective, highlighting microbiome-immune pathways linking gut and thyroid autoimmunity.
What was studied?
This original research employed bidirectional two-sample Mendelian randomization (MR) to test for causal relationships between Graves disease (GD) and inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Genome-wide significant single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) for GD were taken from Biobank Japan (BBJ), while SNPs for IBD—including Crohn disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC)—came from the International IBD Genetics Consortium. Multiple MR methods (inverse-variance weighted, MR-Egger, weighted median and MR-PRESSO) were applied to account for heterogeneity and pleiotropy, mimicking a randomized trial at the level of inherited genetic variation.
Who was studied?
The analysis drew on 2176 GD cases and 210 277 controls of East-Asian ancestry from BBJ, and 2824 IBD cases (1690 CD; 1134 UC) plus 3719 controls from East-Asian, Indian and Iranian cohorts within the IIBDGC panel. Mean age at GD diagnosis (not reported) typically peaks at 30-50 years, while mean CD and UC diagnosis ages were 27.6 ± 12.2 and 35.8 ± 13.7 years, respectively. Male representation was 27 % in GD versus 67 % in CD and 50 % in UC, ensuring sex-balanced causal inference.
Most important findings
Direction (Exposure → Outcome)
OR (IVW)
95 % CI
p-value
Interpretation
IBD → GD
1.24
1.01-1.52
0.041
Overall IBD increases GD risk
CD → GD
1.30
1.06-1.59
0.010
Crohn loci elevate GD risk by ~30 %
UC → GD
0.71
0.58-0.86
<0.001
UC loci appear protective
GD → IBD
1.04
0.88-1.23
0.62
No overall reverse causality
GD → CD*
1.33
1.15-1.53
<0.001
GD variants modestly raise CD risk
GD → UC
0.82
0.62-1.09
0.18
No effect on UC
*after exclusion of pleiotropic SNP rs1569723. Forest and leave-one-out plots on pages 4-6 visually confirm these asymmetric effects, with CD-associated SNPs clustering above the null line and UC-associated SNPs below.
Key implications
The asymmetric genetic links suggest shared immune-microbiome pathways between GD and CD, but distinct mechanisms in UC. CD-associated variants intersect with HLA-DRB1, JAK-STAT and PTPN22 loci—genes also tied to microbial sensing and T-helper 17 regulation—supporting the view that dysbiotic Crohn-type microbiota may precipitate thyroid autoimmunity. Conversely, UC-specific variants (e.g., epithelial barrier genes) may foster microbial communities that dampen GD risk. Clinically, heightened vigilance for thyroid dysfunction in CD patients, and consideration of microbiota-targeted or JAK inhibition strategies, could improve interdisciplinary care. The results also provide candidate microbial signatures (e.g., reduced Haemophilus abundance previously noted in CD) for inclusion in microbiome databases tracking autoimmune overlap.
Graves’ Disease Gut Microbiome Signatures: Key Genera and Clinical Implications
February 12, 2026
/
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
Graves’ Disease (GD)
Graves’ Disease (GD)
OverviewGraves’ Disease (GD) affects approximately 0.5% of the population, predominantly women. First-line treatment options—antithyroid medications, radioactive iodine, and surgery— often result in significant side effects, incomplete remissions, and frequent relapses. Further, current first-line treatment options focus on symptoms management, and reflect an inadequate understanding of the etiology of the condition. However, recent research reveals a […]
•
This study reveals distinct gut microbiome alterations in Graves’ disease, identifies 12 key bacterial genera as diagnostic signatures, and shows microbiota recovery after antithyroid therapy, linking dysbiosis to immune regulation and disease pathogenesis.
What was studied?
This prospective study investigated the relationship between gut microbiota composition and the development of Graves’ disease (GD), with a particular focus on identifying distinct microbial signatures and their associations with immune dysregulation. Using 16S rRNA sequencing, the researchers profiled the gut microbiota in newly diagnosed GD patients both before and after antithyroid drug (ATD) therapy, compared to healthy controls. The study aimed to characterize alterations in gut microbial diversity and specific taxa, evaluate their associations with clinical and immune parameters (including cytokines such as IL-17), and assess the impact of standard GD treatment on restoring microbiome balance. Importantly, the study utilized machine learning (random forest analysis) to identify bacterial genera that could distinguish GD patients from healthy individuals with high accuracy, offering potential for diagnostic biomarker development and deeper insight into the gut-immune-thyroid axis.
Who was studied?
The study enrolled 65 newly diagnosed, untreated Graves’ disease patients (18 men, 47 women; median age 30) of Chinese Han ethnicity, treated at the Endocrinology Department of the First Affiliated Hospital of Nanchang University between October 2018 and September 2019. Thirty-seven of these patients completed a 3-month follow-up after receiving methimazole-based ATD therapy. The control group comprised 33 healthy volunteers (10 men, 23 women; median age 27) with no known diseases. All participants provided fecal and blood samples for microbiome and clinical parameter analyses. Strict inclusion and exclusion criteria were applied to avoid confounding factors such as recent antibiotic, probiotic, or prebiotic use, and comorbid autoimmune, gastrointestinal, hepatic, or endocrine diseases. The study also performed a subgroup analysis of GD patients with and without impaired liver function.
Most important findings
The gut microbiota of GD patients exhibited significantly lower richness and diversity compared to healthy controls, indicating marked dysbiosis. At baseline, notable microbial shifts included increased abundance of Bacilli (class), Lactobacillales (order), Streptococcaceae (family), and the genera Streptococcus, Veillonella, and Erysipelatoclostridium, all associated with pro-inflammatory states. In contrast, key short-chain fatty acid (SCFA)-producing and anti-inflammatory taxa—such as Peptostreptococcaceae, Christensenellaceae, Marinifilaceae, Rikenellaceae (families), and Roseburia, Romboutsia, Lachnospira, Eubacterium ventriosum (genera)—were significantly decreased in GD patients. After 3 months of ATD therapy, the microbiota composition of GD patients began to recover toward that of healthy controls, with partial restoration of SCFA-producing taxa and reduction of pro-inflammatory genera. IL-17, a cytokine associated with Th17-mediated immune response, decreased significantly post-treatment, and its levels correlated inversely with SCFA-producing bacteria such as Eubacterium hallii. Random forest analysis identified 12 bacterial genera—including Veillonella, Streptococcus, and Roseburia—that could collectively distinguish GD patients from controls with high diagnostic accuracy (AUC=0.90). Subgroup analysis revealed that reductions in Weissella and Leuconostocaceae were linked to impaired liver function in GD. Overall, the findings support a model where GD is associated with gut dysbiosis characterized by loss of beneficial, anti-inflammatory taxa and enrichment of pro-inflammatory bacteria, contributing to immune imbalance and disease pathogenesis.
Key implications
The study demonstrates that specific gut microbiome signatures are closely associated with Graves’ disease, highlighting dysbiosis as a potential contributor to immune dysregulation and disease progression. The partial recovery of microbiome composition and immune markers following antithyroid therapy suggests that gut microbiota may be both a biomarker and a therapeutic target in GD. The identification of 12 key bacterial genera that robustly differentiate GD from healthy states provides a foundation for future diagnostic tools, potentially enabling earlier detection or risk stratification. Moreover, associations between specific taxa and immune/inflammatory parameters (e.g., Th17/Treg balance, IL-17) lend support to the concept of microbiota-mediated modulation of autoimmune thyroid disease. These findings encourage further exploration of microbiome-targeted interventions—such as probiotics, prebiotics, or fecal microbiota transplantation—to restore microbial balance and improve clinical outcomes in GD. The study also underscores the need for longer-term and larger-scale research to validate and expand upon these results.
Graves’ Disease Gut Microbiota Signatures: Key Microbial Shifts and Clinical Implications
February 12, 2026
/
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
Graves’ Disease (GD)
Graves’ Disease (GD)
OverviewGraves’ Disease (GD) affects approximately 0.5% of the population, predominantly women. First-line treatment options—antithyroid medications, radioactive iodine, and surgery— often result in significant side effects, incomplete remissions, and frequent relapses. Further, current first-line treatment options focus on symptoms management, and reflect an inadequate understanding of the etiology of the condition. However, recent research reveals a […]
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This study reveals that Graves’ disease patients exhibit distinct gut microbiota signatures, with increased Bacteroidetes and Prevotellaceae and decreased Firmicutes and Lachnospiraceae, strongly associated with thyroid function markers. These microbial shifts may play a role in GD pathogenesis and serve as potential clinical biomarkers.
What was studied?
This original research article investigated the alterations in gut microbiota composition among patients with Graves’ disease (GD), a systemic autoimmune thyroid disorder characterized by hyperthyroidism. The study aimed to characterize and compare the gut microbial communities of GD patients and healthy controls using 16S rRNA gene sequencing. It sought to identify specific microbial taxa associated with GD and examine their relationship with clinical parameters of thyroid function, such as free thyroxine (FT4), thyrotropin (TSH), and thyroperoxidase antibody (TPOAb) status. The researchers also evaluated whether microbiome signatures could serve as potential biomarkers to distinguish GD patients from healthy individuals.
Who was studied?
The study population comprised 55 patients previously diagnosed with GD and 48 age-, sex-, and body mass index-matched healthy controls, all recruited from Chang Gung Memorial Hospital in Taiwan between October 2017 and March 2020. GD diagnosis was based on clinical features and laboratory criteria—including symptoms of thyrotoxicosis, diffuse goiter, ophthalmopathy, abnormal thyroid function tests, and positive TSH receptor autoantibodies. The healthy controls had normal thyroid function and no history of thyroid disease. Both groups were screened to exclude confounding conditions (e.g., recent antibiotic use, gastrointestinal disorders, other autoimmune diseases). Fecal samples were collected from all participants for microbiota analysis.
Most important findings
A total of 11.7 million sequencing reads were analyzed, yielding 684 operational taxonomic units (OTUs) in the GD group and 671 in controls, with similar richness and diversity between groups. However, principal coordinate and discriminant analyses revealed significant differences in overall community structure (ANOSIM p < 0.001). Key microbiome shifts in GD patients included a decreased relative abundance of Firmicutes and increased Bacteroidetes and Actinobacteria at the phylum level. Notably, families such as Prevotellaceae and Veillonellaceae and the genus Prevotella_9 were enriched in GD patients, whereas Lachnospiraceae, Ruminococcaceae, Faecalibacterium, and Lachnospira were more abundant in healthy controls. Metagenomic profiling identified 22 significantly altered bacterial taxa. Many GD-enriched taxa, including Prevotella_9, Parabacteroides, Collinsella, and Actinomyces_odontolyticus, showed strong positive correlations with TPOAb and FT4, and negative correlations with TSH. Conversely, taxa enriched in controls, such as Faecalibacterium and Lachnospiraceae NK4A136 group, showed the opposite pattern. A random forest model based on predominant taxa achieved an area under the curve (AUC) of 0.825, indicating these microbial features could effectively differentiate GD patients from controls.
Key implications
This study demonstrates that while overall gut microbial diversity remains unchanged, the taxonomic composition in GD patients is significantly altered, featuring a distinct microbial signature. The enrichment of pro-inflammatory taxa (such as Prevotella_9 and Veillonellaceae) and the reduction of anti-inflammatory butyrate producers (like Faecalibacterium and Lachnospiraceae) suggest a potential role of gut dysbiosis in GD pathogenesis. These findings highlight the gut microbiota as a possible contributor to, or biomarker of, autoimmune thyroid disease. The strong association between specific microbial taxa and thyroid-related clinical parameters underscores the potential for microbiome-based diagnostics or therapeutics in GD. However, causality cannot be established, and further longitudinal and functional studies are warranted to clarify the mechanistic links and clinical utility.
Graves’ Disease Gut Microbiota: Distinct Microbial Signatures and Clinical Associations
February 12, 2026
/
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
Graves’ Disease (GD)
Graves’ Disease (GD)
OverviewGraves’ Disease (GD) affects approximately 0.5% of the population, predominantly women. First-line treatment options—antithyroid medications, radioactive iodine, and surgery— often result in significant side effects, incomplete remissions, and frequent relapses. Further, current first-line treatment options focus on symptoms management, and reflect an inadequate understanding of the etiology of the condition. However, recent research reveals a […]
•
Graves’ disease patients show distinctive gut microbiota profiles, with increased Bacteroidetes and specific pro-inflammatory bacteria, despite no difference in overall diversity. Key taxa correlate with clinical GD parameters, highlighting their potential as diagnostic biomarkers and supporting a role for gut dysbiosis in GD pathogenesis.
What was studied?
This original research article examined alterations in the gut microbiota composition of patients with Graves' disease (GD) compared to healthy controls using 16S rRNA gene sequencing. The primary aim was to characterize the gut microbial communities in GD, assess differences in bacterial diversity and abundance, and explore correlations between specific microbiota and clinical parameters of GD. The study also evaluated the potential of microbiome profiles to serve as discriminative biomarkers for distinguishing GD patients from healthy individuals, thereby contributing to a better understanding of the gut-thyroid axis in autoimmune thyroid disease.
Who was studied?
The study enrolled 55 patients with clinically diagnosed Graves’ disease and 48 age-, sex-, and BMI-matched healthy controls. All GD patients were recruited from the Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism at Chang Gung Memorial Hospital, Taiwan, and had been previously diagnosed and treated with anti-thyroid drugs (propylthiouracil, methimazole, or carbimazole), with an average follow-up of over 45 months. The control group was selected from a health screening center and had no history of thyroid disease, with normal thyroid-related laboratory values. Exclusion criteria included pregnancy, gastrointestinal disorders, concurrent autoimmune diseases, recent antibiotic or probiotic use, hormonal or herbal drug intake, gastrointestinal surgery, and strict vegetarianism. Fecal samples were collected from all participants for gut microbiota analysis.
Most important findings
The study found no statistically significant difference in overall gut microbial richness or diversity between GD patients and healthy controls, as measured by standard alpha diversity indices. However, beta diversity metrics—including principal coordinate analysis (PCoA) and partial least squares-discriminant analysis (PLS-DA)—demonstrated a clear separation in overall microbiota composition between the two groups (ANOSIM, p < 0.001). At the phylum level, GD patients exhibited a decreased abundance of Firmicutes and an increased abundance of Bacteroidetes and Actinobacteria compared to controls. Key microbial signatures in GD included increased levels of the families Prevotellaceae and Veillonellaceae, and the genera Prevotella_9, Parabacteroides, Collinsella, and Actinomyces_odontolyticus. In contrast, healthy controls had higher abundances of Lachnospiraceae, Ruminococcaceae, and the genera Faecalibacterium, Lachnospira, and Lachnospiraceae NK4A136. Notably, 22 bacterial taxa showed statistically significant differences between groups; 18 were increased and 4 decreased in GD patients. Several of these taxa, especially those enriched in GD, were positively correlated with GD-associated clinical parameters such as thyroperoxidase antibody (TPOAb) and free thyroxine (FT4) levels, and negatively correlated with thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH). A machine learning model based on the top 15 discriminant taxa achieved an area under the ROC curve (AUC) of 0.825, indicating strong potential for microbiota-based discrimination of GD status.
Key implications
This study demonstrates that Graves’ disease is associated with a distinct gut microbiota signature, despite similar overall bacterial diversity compared to healthy controls. The shift towards increased Bacteroidetes and Actinobacteria and decreased Firmicutes, as well as the enrichment of specific pro-inflammatory and immunomodulatory taxa (such as Prevotella_9 and Veillonellaceae), supports the hypothesis that gut dysbiosis may contribute to GD pathogenesis via immune modulation. The strong correlation between key microbial taxa and clinical indicators of GD suggests that these bacteria may play a role in disease activity or progression. Moreover, the successful discrimination of GD patients based on gut microbiota profiles suggests potential for developing non-invasive microbial biomarkers for GD diagnosis or monitoring. However, as this was a cross-sectional, single-center study, causality remains undetermined, and larger multi-omics studies are needed to clarify mechanistic pathways and explore therapeutic interventions targeting the gut microbiome in GD.
Alteration in gut microbiota is associated with immune imbalance in Graves’ disease
February 12, 2026
/
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
Graves’ Disease (GD)
Graves’ Disease (GD)
OverviewGraves’ Disease (GD) affects approximately 0.5% of the population, predominantly women. First-line treatment options—antithyroid medications, radioactive iodine, and surgery— often result in significant side effects, incomplete remissions, and frequent relapses. Further, current first-line treatment options focus on symptoms management, and reflect an inadequate understanding of the etiology of the condition. However, recent research reveals a […]
•
This study reveals distinct compositional changes in the gut microbiota of Graves’ disease patients, notably increased Bacteroidetes and Prevotellaceae and decreased Firmicutes and Lachnospiraceae, suggesting potential microbial biomarkers and a role for gut dysbiosis in the disease’s pathogenesis.
What was studied?
This original research study investigated the composition of the gut microbiota in patients with Graves’ disease (GD), an autoimmune thyroid disorder characterized by hyperthyroidism. The focus keyphrase "gut microbiota in Graves’ disease" defines the core of this work, and the study aimed to determine whether there are distinct microbial signatures associated with GD compared to healthy controls. Researchers collected fecal samples from both groups and performed 16S rRNA gene sequencing to analyze the microbial communities present. The study also examined correlations between specific microbial taxa and clinical parameters relevant to GD, such as thyroid hormone levels and autoantibody status, seeking to identify potential microbial biomarkers that could distinguish GD patients from healthy individuals.
Who was studied?
The study population comprised 55 patients with previously diagnosed Graves' disease and 48 age-, sex-, and BMI-matched healthy controls recruited from a health screening center. All GD patients were under routine follow-up and had been treated with standard anti-thyroid drugs. Controls were screened to exclude thyroid disease and matched for relevant demographic and anthropometric factors. Exclusion criteria for both groups included recent antibiotic or probiotic use, presence of other autoimmune diseases, gastrointestinal disorders, recent gastrointestinal surgery, pregnancy, and strict vegetarianism. This careful selection ensured that observed differences in gut microbiota could be attributed primarily to GD status rather than other confounding factors.
Most important findings
The study found that while overall microbial richness and diversity were similar between GD patients and healthy controls, the global composition of the gut microbiota was significantly different, as demonstrated by principal coordinate analysis and partial least squares-discriminant analysis (ANOSIM p < 0.001). Notably, GD patients exhibited a decreased abundance of Firmicutes and an increased abundance of Bacteroidetes and Actinobacteria at the phylum level. At more refined taxonomic levels, GD patients had higher levels of Prevotellaceae, Veillonellaceae, Prevotella_9, Parabacteroides, Collinsella, and Actinomyces_odontolyticus, while healthy controls had higher levels of Lachnospiraceae, Ruminococcaceae, Faecalibacterium, and Lachnospira. Several of these taxa, particularly those enriched in GD, showed strong positive correlations with GD clinical parameters, including TPO antibodies and free T4, and negative correlations with TSH. A random forest classifier using the top 15 most discriminative taxa achieved an AUC of 0.825 for distinguishing GD patients from controls, highlighting the discriminative potential of these gut microbiome signatures.
Key implications
This study provides compelling evidence that the gut microbiota in Graves’ disease is characterized by distinct compositional alterations, despite similar overall diversity compared to healthy individuals. The identification of specific microbial taxa—particularly increased Prevotellaceae, Veillonellaceae, and Prevotella_9, alongside decreased Lachnospiraceae and Faecalibacterium—suggests possible microbial signatures relevant to GD pathogenesis or progression. These findings support the hypothesis that the gut microbiota may influence or reflect immune dysregulation in GD. Clinically, these microbial signatures could potentially serve as non-invasive biomarkers for GD diagnosis or monitoring, and may, in the future, guide the development of microbiota-targeted interventions. Further longitudinal and mechanistic studies are required to elucidate causality and functional consequences.
Graves’ Disease and Depression: Immunity, Hormones & Microbiome Explained
February 12, 2026
/
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
Graves’ Disease (GD)
Graves’ Disease (GD)
OverviewGraves’ Disease (GD) affects approximately 0.5% of the population, predominantly women. First-line treatment options—antithyroid medications, radioactive iodine, and surgery— often result in significant side effects, incomplete remissions, and frequent relapses. Further, current first-line treatment options focus on symptoms management, and reflect an inadequate understanding of the etiology of the condition. However, recent research reveals a […]
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Graves Disease potentiates depression via autoimmune cytokines, hormonal excess and gut‑microbiome shifts. This review consolidates epidemiology and mechanisms, highlighting microbial signatures (Prevotellaceae, SCFA depletion) of translational interest.
What was reviewed?
This narrative review synthesizes epidemiological and mechanistic literature linking Graves’ disease (GD) to depression. The authors searched PubMed/MEDLINE, Cochrane Library and Web of Science up to 22 March 2023, retrieving 11 human population studies (5 cohort, 3 cross‑sectional, 3 case‑control) and multiple basic‑science reports that collectively explore immune, hormonal and microbiome pathways connecting GD and mood disorders.
Who was reviewed?
The clinical evidence base spans >30 000 participants from Asia, Europe, Africa and North America. Cohorts ranged from large national databases (e.g., 20 975 Asian patients; 2 200 000 Swedes) to smaller hospital samples, covering adults, pregnant women and paediatric cases. Collectively, these studies consistently show higher depression risk in overt or sub‑clinical hyperthyroidism compared with euthyroid controls. Key mechanistic papers include rodent models of hyperthyroidism, human cytokine profiling, and microbiota analyses in 263 GD versus 239 healthy controls.
Most important findings
Graves’ disease‑related hyperthyroidism is increasingly recognised as a biological driver of depressive symptoms. The mechanisms converge on immune–neuroendocrine crosstalk and gut‑brain communication, each amplifying neuroinflammation and neurotransmitter dysregulation. The table below delineates the three core pathways and the epidemiological evidence base.
Pathway / Evidence domain
Key mechanistic details and clinical observations
Auto‑immunity & neuroinflammation
Elevated IL‑1β, IL‑6, IL‑17A and TNF‑α degrade tight‑junction proteins, breach the blood–brain barrier and activate microglia. Resultant dopaminergic, serotonergic and glutamatergic imbalances underpin mood disturbances.
Endocrine dysregulation
Excess circulating T₃/T₄ suppress cortical dopamine–norepinephrine signalling, trigger oxidative stress, and promote insulin resistance and sex‑hormone imbalance—each independently linked to depressive phenotypes.
Thyroid‑gut‑microbiome‑brain axis
GD is marked by loss of short‑chain‑fatty‑acid‑producing Bacteroides and enrichment of Prevotella, Veillonella and Lactobacillus. These shifts distort tryptophan‑serotonin metabolism and skew Th17/Treg balance, further fuelling neuroinflammatory cascades.
Epidemiological risk
Across 11 clinical studies (>30 000 participants), GD or hyperthyroidism confers a 1.5‑ to 2‑fold increase in depressive symptoms; untreated disease and high free T₃ correlate with the greatest risk.
Key implications
Recognising GD as an independent driver of depression justifies routine mood screening in endocrine clinics and prompts integrative management. Potential interventions include early antithyroid therapy, β‑blockade, probiotics/synbiotics targeting SCFA restoration, and anti‑cytokine or HPA‑axis‑modulating strategies, though prospective trials remain scarce.
Molecular Alteration Analysis of Human Gut Microbial Composition in Graves’ disease Patients
February 12, 2026
/
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
Graves’ Disease (GD)
Graves’ Disease (GD)
OverviewGraves’ Disease (GD) affects approximately 0.5% of the population, predominantly women. First-line treatment options—antithyroid medications, radioactive iodine, and surgery— often result in significant side effects, incomplete remissions, and frequent relapses. Further, current first-line treatment options focus on symptoms management, and reflect an inadequate understanding of the etiology of the condition. However, recent research reveals a […]
•
This study identified a microbiome signature in Graves’ disease marked by reduced microbial richness and elevated Prevotella_9 and Haemophilus, with losses in Faecalibacterium and Alistipes, supporting a role for gut dysbiosis in GD pathogenesis.
What was studied?
This study investigated alterations in the intestinal microbiota composition of patients with Graves' disease (GD) to explore possible microbiome signatures associated with the condition. The researchers used a combination of denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE), real-time PCR, and high-throughput 16S rRNA gene sequencing (V3–V4 region) to compare microbial diversity, composition, and abundance in GD patients versus healthy controls. The study aimed to evaluate both qualitative and quantitative differences in gut microbiota and determine whether dysbiosis may be implicated in GD pathogenesis.
Who was studied?
The study analyzed fecal samples from 27 GD patients (10 males, 17 females, aged 35–50) and 11 healthy age- and sex-matched controls (4 males, 7 females). All GD patients had a disease duration of 1.5 years and were medication-free for at least six months before sampling. None of the participants had recent antibiotic, probiotic, or prebiotic use. Samples were collected at Xi'an Jiaotong University’s affiliated hospital and processed under strict ethical guidelines.
Most important findings
Graves' disease patients exhibited reduced gut microbial diversity, evidenced by significantly lower richness indices (Observed Species, Chao1, ACE, and Good’s coverage) compared to controls, although Shannon and Simpson indices were not statistically different. The most pronounced alterations were seen in specific taxa:
Real-time PCR confirmed significantly reduced copy numbers of Bifidobacterium and Lactobacillus in GD (P < 0.05), suggesting depletion of beneficial microbes. Meanwhile, Bacteroides vulgatus was slightly increased, and Clostridium leptum slightly reduced, although these changes did not reach significance by q-value correction.The dominant microbial phyla in GD were Bacteroidetes (57.6%) and Firmicutes (32.9%), with GD patients having a lower Firmicutes: Bacteroidetes ratio compared to controls.
Key implications
This study reveals that Graves' disease is associated with a distinct gut microbiota signature characterized by reduced microbial richness and altered abundances of both beneficial and potentially pathogenic taxa. The significant increase in Haemophilus parainfluenzae and Prevotella_9, along with the depletion of Faecalibacterium and Alistipes, suggests immune-related microbial imbalance. These taxa may serve as major microbial associations (MMAs) for GD and could be investigated as microbial targets for microbiome-based interventions. The depletion of Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium also suggests potential for probiotic or prebiotic therapy. While causality remains unresolved, the findings reinforce the need to consider intestinal dysbiosis as a contributing factor in GD pathogenesis and therapy development.
Viral Microbiome Signatures in Graves’ Disease: A Comprehensive Review
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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Graves’ Disease (GD)
Graves’ Disease (GD)
OverviewGraves’ Disease (GD) affects approximately 0.5% of the population, predominantly women. First-line treatment options—antithyroid medications, radioactive iodine, and surgery— often result in significant side effects, incomplete remissions, and frequent relapses. Further, current first-line treatment options focus on symptoms management, and reflect an inadequate understanding of the etiology of the condition. However, recent research reveals a […]
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This review links genetics, hormones, environment and especially viral exposures—EBV and HCV—to the Th1‑centric immunopathology of Graves’ disease, highlighting chemokine signatures relevant to microbiome‑based risk models.
What was reviewed?
This narrative review collates epidemiological data, genetic predisposition, endogenous influences (e.g., oestrogen effects), environmental exposures and—most germane to microbiome‑focused clinicians—viral associations implicated in Graves’ disease (GD). It synthesises findings from population studies, molecular genetics and translational immunology to outline how host genetics (≈79 % of risk) interact with modifiable factors (≈21 %) to precipitate autoimmune hyperthyroidism.
Who was reviewed?
The authors analysed evidence drawn predominantly from adult cohorts in Europe, North America and East Asia, where GD incidence peaks between 30–60 years and exhibits a 5–10‑fold female preponderance. Additional data came from mechanistic studies using primary thyrocytes, B‑cell assays and interferon‑treated hepatitis C virus (HCV) cohorts, enabling integration of clinical and experimental perspectives.
Most important findings
Genomic studies confirm a polygenic architecture enriched for T‑cell regulatory loci (HLA‑DR3, CTLA‑4, PTPN22, CD40) that biases toward a Th1‑skewed response. Endogenous oestrogen signalling, skewed X‑chromosome inactivation and microchimerism further augment female risk. Environmentally, excess iodine, selenium, or vitamin D deficiency, smoking, halogenated pesticides, and dioxin (Agent Orange) exposure modulate disease penetrance. Crucially for microbiome signature databases, the review catalogues viral links: foamy viruses (inconclusive), parvovirus B19 (weak), Epstein–Barr virus (EBV reactivation expands TRAb‑positive B cells) and HCV. Large cohort and meta‑analytic data show that chronic HCV infection elevates thyroid autoantibody prevalence and hypothyroidism, while HCV‑related mixed cryoglobulinaemia markedly increases GD risk. HCV envelope protein E2 binds thyrocyte CD81, triggering IL‑8/CXCL10 production, thereby recruiting CXCR3⁺ Th1 cells and perpetuating autoimmunity. These microbe‑driven inflammatory signatures (CXCL9/10/11 axis) provide candidate biomarkers for a “thyroid‑autoimmunity virome” module within broader microbiome analytics.
Key implications
For clinicians, recognising viral and environmental co‑factors refines risk stratification and informs screening: (i) test thyroid function and antibodies in chronic HCV or EBV reactivation; (ii) counsel on iodine intake, smoking cessation, and micronutrient sufficiency; (iii) anticipate attenuated antithyroid‑drug requirements in interferon‑treated HCV patients. From a translational standpoint, integrating viral chemokine fingerprints into microbiome databases could uncover convergent immune pathways applicable to other organ‑specific autoimmunities and guide targeted immunomodulation.
Microbiome in Graves Disease Hypothyroidism: Insights from Integrated Analysis for Clinicians
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
Graves’ Disease (GD)
Graves’ Disease (GD)
OverviewGraves’ Disease (GD) affects approximately 0.5% of the population, predominantly women. First-line treatment options—antithyroid medications, radioactive iodine, and surgery— often result in significant side effects, incomplete remissions, and frequent relapses. Further, current first-line treatment options focus on symptoms management, and reflect an inadequate understanding of the etiology of the condition. However, recent research reveals a […]
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Integrated microbiome-metabolome study reveals dysbiosis and metabolic shifts in Graves' disease and hypothyroidism, highlighting potential biomarkers like depleted Bacteroides for thyroid disorders.
What was studied?
This original research investigated the gut microbiome in Graves disease hypothyroidism through an integrated analysis of fecal microbiota and metabolome profiles in patients with Graves' disease (GD) and hypothyroidism (HT) compared to healthy controls. Using 16S rRNA gene sequencing for microbial composition and untargeted liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry for metabolomics, the study aimed to identify distinct microbial and metabolic signatures, explore correlations between microbiota, metabolites, and clinical thyroid indicators (e.g., TSH, FT3, FT4, TRAb), and uncover potential pathways linking gut dysbiosis to thyroid dysfunction. Functional predictions via PICRUSt and pathway enrichment with KEGG highlighted microbial roles in metabolism, while OPLS-DA and Spearman correlations elucidated group differences and interactions.
Who was studied?
The study enrolled 90 participants from Shanghai Tenth People's Hospital, including 30 patients with newly diagnosed GD (mean age ~40 years, predominantly female), 30 with HT (similar demographics), and 30 age- and sex-matched healthy controls without thyroid disorders or recent antibiotic use. GD was diagnosed based on hyperthyroidism symptoms, elevated FT3/FT4, suppressed TSH, and positive TRAb; HT by hypothyroidism symptoms, reduced FT3/FT4, elevated TSH, and positive TPOAb/TgAb. Exclusion criteria included pregnancy, other autoimmune diseases, gastrointestinal disorders, or probiotic/antibiotic use within three months to minimize confounders affecting the microbiome.
Most important findings
The gut microbiome in Graves disease hypothyroidism showed reduced alpha diversity (Shannon index) in both GD and HT groups compared to controls, with beta diversity (Bray-Curtis) indicating distinct clustering. At the phylum level, Firmicutes dominated, but Bacteroidetes were depleted in disease groups; genus-level shifts included decreased Bacteroides and Prevotella in GD and HT, increased Enterococcus and Veillonella in GD, and elevated Ruminococcus in HT. These alterations suggest dysbiosis contributing to immune dysregulation, relevant for a microbiome signatures database where depleted Bacteroides (anti-inflammatory, SCFA producers) and enriched Enterococcus (potential pathogens) could serve as markers for GD, while Ruminococcus overabundance might signal HT. Metabolomics identified 120 differential metabolites, with GD showing enriched bile acids (e.g., cholic acid) and amino acids (e.g., L-tryptophan), HT displaying depleted fatty acids (e.g., oleic acid) and increased steroids. Correlations revealed Bacteroides positively linked to anti-inflammatory metabolites like indole-3-acetic acid, negatively to TRAb in GD; network analysis highlighted clusters where microbiota influenced thyroid hormones via metabolic pathways like tryptophan and bile acid metabolism.
Microbial Association
GD Signature
HT Signature
Control
Potential Database Relevance
Bacteroides (genus)
Depleted
Depleted
Abundant
Anti-inflammatory marker; low levels indicate dysbiosis in thyroid autoimmunity
Enterococcus (genus)
Enriched
Normal
Low
Pathogenic shift in GD; associated with increased inflammation
Ruminococcus (genus)
Normal
Enriched
Normal
HT-specific; linked to altered SCFA production
Prevotella (genus)
Depleted
Depleted
Abundant
Common depletion; potential for broad thyroid disorder screening
Key implications
These findings imply that clinicians could use gut microbiome profiling as a non-invasive tool for early detection and monitoring of GD and HT, integrating fecal biomarkers like Bacteroides depletion or bile acid elevation into diagnostic panels to complement thyroid function tests. Therapeutically, targeting dysbiosis via probiotics (e.g., Bacteroides-enriched) or fecal microbiota transplantation might modulate immune responses and metabolic pathways, potentially alleviating symptoms or preventing progression. For clinical practice, this bridges microbiome research by suggesting personalized interventions based on signatures, such as tryptophan supplementation for GD to counteract indole pathway disruptions. Future longitudinal studies should validate causality, perhaps through Mendelian randomization, to refine microbiome-based therapies and expand databases for precision medicine in endocrinology.
Graves’ Disease Gut Microbiome Signature: Key Genera and Clinical Implications
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
Graves’ Disease (GD)
Graves’ Disease (GD)
OverviewGraves’ Disease (GD) affects approximately 0.5% of the population, predominantly women. First-line treatment options—antithyroid medications, radioactive iodine, and surgery— often result in significant side effects, incomplete remissions, and frequent relapses. Further, current first-line treatment options focus on symptoms management, and reflect an inadequate understanding of the etiology of the condition. However, recent research reveals a […]
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This prospective study identifies a unique gut microbiome signature in Graves’ disease, characterized by decreased SCFA-producing bacteria and increased pro-inflammatory taxa, which partially recovers with antithyroid therapy. Twelve genera robustly distinguish GD, offering potential for early diagnosis and microbiome-targeted interventions.
What was studied?
This prospective study evaluated the relationship between gut microbiota (GM) composition and Graves’ disease (GD), an autoimmune thyroid disorder, in newly diagnosed patients. Using 16S rRNA gene sequencing of fecal samples, the researchers profiled and compared the GM of 65 untreated GD patients and 33 healthy controls. They assessed microbiota changes before and after three months of antithyroid drug (ATD) therapy. The investigation aimed to identify specific microbial signatures associated with GD, measure their correlation with clinical parameters, and observe whether GM dysbiosis recovers following treatment. Additionally, a subgroup analysis examined differences in microbiota among GD patients with or without impaired liver function.
Who was studied?
A total of 98 individuals of Chinese Han ethnicity participated: 65 were newly diagnosed, untreated GD patients (18 men, 47 women; median age 30 years), and 33 were healthy volunteers (10 men, 23 women; median age 27 years) recruited from the First Affiliated Hospital of Nanchang University. The GD group met stringent diagnostic criteria (clinical symptoms, thyroid hormone and antibody levels, and ultrasound findings). Exclusion criteria included recent antibiotic/probiotic use, previous ATD therapy, gastrointestinal or other autoimmune diseases, liver disease, or pregnancy. Of the 65 GD patients, 37 completed three months of follow-up on methimazole. A subgroup of GD patients with impaired liver function (GDH) was also analyzed separately from those with normal liver function (GDN).
Most important findings
The study demonstrated that the gut microbiota composition of GD patients is significantly distinct from healthy controls. GD patients exhibited reduced alpha diversity (richness and diversity) of their GM, while beta diversity analyses confirmed a clear separation between groups. Specifically, the GD group showed increased abundance of Bacilli (class), Lactobacillales (order), Streptococcaceae (family), and the genera Streptococcus, Veillonella, and Erysipelatoclostridium. Conversely, there were reductions in families such as Peptostreptococcaceae, Christensenellaceae, Marinifilaceae, and Rikenellaceae, and in genera including Roseburia, Romboutsia, Lachnospira, and Eubacterium ventriosum—all associated with production of short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) and anti-inflammatory effects.
Using a random forest model, 12 genera were identified that could distinguish GD patients from controls with high accuracy (AUC = 0.9021), making them strong candidates for microbiome-based GD biomarkers. Correlations were observed between specific bacterial genera and clinical indicators: for instance, Veillonella abundance was positively correlated with thyroid hormone levels (FT3, FT4) and thyrotrophin receptor antibodies (TRAb), while several SCFA-producing genera showed negative correlations.
After three months of ATD therapy, the GM of GD patients showed partial recovery: the abundance of previously increased taxa (e.g., Streptococcus, Streptococcaceae) decreased, while the abundance of SCFA-producers (e.g., Romboutsia, Lachnospira, Eubacterium ventriosum) increased. However, diversity remained lower compared to controls, and some dysbiosis persisted, indicating incomplete restoration of the microbiome. IL-17 levels, a marker of Th17-mediated immune response, decreased significantly post-treatment and were negatively correlated with Eubacterium hallii group abundance.
In GD patients with impaired liver function, reductions in Weissella and Leuconostocaceae were associated with liver injury markers, supporting a possible gut-liver axis in GD pathophysiology.
Key implications
The study establishes a robust microbiome signature for Graves' disease, linking specific changes in gut microbial composition to disease presence and clinical parameters. The reduction in SCFA-producing, anti-inflammatory genera and the enrichment of pro-inflammatory bacteria suggest that GM dysbiosis may contribute to GD pathogenesis via immune modulation (e.g., Th17/Treg imbalance). Identification of 12 discriminatory genera provides a foundation for developing microbiome-based diagnostics or risk stratification tools for GD—potentially enabling earlier intervention before overt symptoms arise. The observed partial restoration of the GM following antithyroid therapy also suggests therapeutic modulation of the microbiome could complement GD management. The findings emphasize the importance of the gut-thyroid and gut-liver axes in autoimmune endocrine diseases, with implications for personalized medicine and the development of microbiome-targeted interventions.
Correlations between serum cytokines and gut microbiota in patients with Graves’ disease: A case-control study
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
Graves’ Disease (GD)
Graves’ Disease (GD)
OverviewGraves’ Disease (GD) affects approximately 0.5% of the population, predominantly women. First-line treatment options—antithyroid medications, radioactive iodine, and surgery— often result in significant side effects, incomplete remissions, and frequent relapses. Further, current first-line treatment options focus on symptoms management, and reflect an inadequate understanding of the etiology of the condition. However, recent research reveals a […]
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This case–control study demonstrates that Graves’ disease is associated with distinct gut microbiota alterations, closely linked to immune cytokine profiles and thyroid dysfunction, identifying key bacterial genera and microbial-immune correlations relevant for clinical and translational research.
What was studied?
This case–control observational study investigated the associations between peripheral blood cytokine profiles and gut microbiota composition in patients with Graves' disease (GD), the most common autoimmune thyroid disorder. The study aimed to elucidate the interplay between immune dysregulation—specifically changes in cytokines such as interleukin-10 (IL-10), transforming growth factor β (TGF-β), and interleukin-17A (IL-17A)—and alterations in gut microbial communities, potentially contributing to GD pathogenesis. These gut microbiome cytokine associations are pivotal to understanding Graves' disease better. The researchers performed comprehensive profiling using high-resolution 16S rRNA gene sequencing for fecal microbiota and multiplex cytokine arrays for serum immune markers, alongside standard thyroid function testing. The study also included in silico functional prediction of microbial metabolic pathways. Statistical analyses (including alpha and beta diversity, correlation, and discriminant analyses) were employed to identify microbial signatures associated with immune and thyroid dysfunction in GD.
Who was studied?
The study enrolled 30 consecutive, untreated Graves’ disease patients (primarily female, as per GD epidemiology) admitted to the Department of Endocrinology at the Third Affiliated Hospital of Qiqihar Medical University (China) between January and July 2023. Thirty age- and sex-matched healthy controls (HC) were recruited from individuals undergoing routine physical examination in the same period. Exclusion criteria included alternative causes of thyrotoxicosis, autoimmune comorbidities, recent antibiotic/probiotic or immunosuppressive use, pregnancy/lactation, and acute infections, ensuring a focused comparison of GD-specific changes. Both groups were matched for demographic variables, and comprehensive baseline data (age, sex, BMI) were collected.
Most important findings
The study revealed significant gut microbial dysbiosis in Graves’ disease, with lower overall microbial diversity and richness compared to healthy controls. At the phylum level, GD patients exhibited reduced Firmicutes and increased Bacteroidetes. Discriminative analysis identified 19 taxa with altered abundance, most notably: decreased Bifidobacterium and Veillonella (commensals) and increased Prevotella_9 and Megamonas (potential pathobionts). Importantly, cytokine-microbiota correlations showed that anti-inflammatory cytokines (IL-10, TGF-β) were positively associated with Bifidobacterium and Parasutterella, but negatively with Prevotella_9 and Megamonas.
Conversely, the pro-inflammatory cytokine IL-17A was positively correlated with Prevotella_9 and Megamonas and negatively with Bifidobacterium and Veillonella. Key thyroid function indices (TSH, FT3, FT4, TRAb) were also linked to specific bacterial genera, underscoring a multi-layered gut-immune-thyroid axis. Functional predictions indicated upregulation of energy and immune-related pathways in the GD microbiome, alongside downregulation of amino acid metabolism, membrane transport, and xenobiotic degradation.
Key implications
This study provides robust evidence that Graves’ disease is characterized by gut microbial dysbiosis, which is closely intertwined with immune imbalance and thyroid dysfunction. The identification of specific bacterial genera, such as increased Prevotella_9 and Megamonas (linked to pro-inflammatory cytokines and hyperthyroidism), and decreased Bifidobacterium and Veillonella (linked to anti-inflammatory cytokines and thyroid regulation), offers potential microbial biomarkers for GD diagnosis and monitoring. These findings suggest that modulating the gut microbiome or targeting the cytokine-microbiota axis could represent novel therapeutic strategies for GD. Additionally, the study highlights the need for further mechanistic and interventional research to clarify causality and therapeutic potential, as well as validation in larger and more diverse populations.
Targeted Therapies and Microbiome Insights in Graves’ Disease: A Clinical Review
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
Graves’ Disease (GD)
Graves’ Disease (GD)
OverviewGraves’ Disease (GD) affects approximately 0.5% of the population, predominantly women. First-line treatment options—antithyroid medications, radioactive iodine, and surgery— often result in significant side effects, incomplete remissions, and frequent relapses. Further, current first-line treatment options focus on symptoms management, and reflect an inadequate understanding of the etiology of the condition. However, recent research reveals a […]
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Microbiome-Targeted Interventions (MBTIs)
Microbiome-Targeted Interventions (MBTIs)
Microbiome Targeted Interventions (MBTIs) are cutting-edge treatments that utilize information from Microbiome Signatures to modulate the microbiome, revolutionizing medicine with unparalleled precision and impact.
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This review maps the immune‑microbial mechanisms driving Graves’ disease and evaluates next‑generation biologics, small molecules and tolerance‑inducing peptides that may replace conventional ablation therapies.
What was reviewed?
This narrative review collates pre‑clinical and clinical data on Graves’ disease (GD) pathogenesis and evaluates emerging “precision” therapeutics that intervene at discrete immune‑molecular checkpoints—CD20, CD40/CD40L, BAFF, neonatal Fc‑receptor, HLA‑DRβ1‑Arg74—or directly antagonise the thyrotropin receptor (TSHR) via monoclonal antibodies, small‑molecule inverse agonists or CAR‑T strategies. It also summarises complementary insights from genetics, epigenetics and the gut microbiome that refine present pathogenic models and inform candidate drug targets.
Who was reviewed?
The authors executed a PubMed search (no end‑date; English language only) for mechanistic and interventional studies, excluding case reports, letters and abstracts. Included material spans animal models, phase I–II trials, population genetics and multi‑centre microbiome consortia (e.g., INDIGO). Clinical data predominantly involve adult GD patients (with or without orbitopathy), whereas immunobiology derives from both human biospecimens and murine thyroiditis/GD models. Overall, the synthesis integrates evidence from several hundred individuals across Europe and Asia plus complementary in‑vivo platforms.
Most important findings
Immune escape hinges on TSHR‑stimulating antibodies driven by aberrant T‑ and B‑cell costimulation (CD40/CD40L) and BAFF‑mediated survival of autoreactive B cells. Genome‑wide and epigenetic studies highlight HLA‑DR, CTLA‑4, PTPN22 and FOXP3 variants, while single‑cell RNA‑seq reveals expanded memory B‑cell and CD16⁺ NK‑cell compartments. Importantly for microbiome signature databases, GD exhibits a reproducible dysbiosis: reduced α‑diversity and phylum‑level shifts summarised below.
Therapeutically, anti‑CD20 (rituximab) and anti‑CD40 (iscalimab) achieve biochemical remission in 40‑50 % of early GD, especially when baseline TRAb < 20 IU/L. FcRn blockade (batoclimab) rapidly de‑tiers TRAbs; TSHR‑blocking mAb K1‑70 and small molecules (ANTAG‑3, VA‑K‑14, S37) normalise thyroid hormones in murine models. Peptide apitope ATX‑GD‑59 restores tolerance in 50 % of mild GD, and TSHR‑CAR‑T selectively deletes TRAb‑producing B cells in vivo.
Key implications
Targeted immunomodulators promise durable euthyroidism without ablation or life‑long levothyroxine, and microbiome data suggest adjunctive avenues such as microbial metabolite supplementation or dysbiosis‑directed probiotics. Integration of host genetics, microbiota and antigen‑specific therapy could enable precision stratification, minimising exposure to broad immunosuppression and its respective risks.
Effects of Trace Elements on Endocrine Function and Pathogenesis of Thyroid Diseases—A Literature Review
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
Graves’ Disease (GD)
Graves’ Disease (GD)
OverviewGraves’ Disease (GD) affects approximately 0.5% of the population, predominantly women. First-line treatment options—antithyroid medications, radioactive iodine, and surgery— often result in significant side effects, incomplete remissions, and frequent relapses. Further, current first-line treatment options focus on symptoms management, and reflect an inadequate understanding of the etiology of the condition. However, recent research reveals a […]
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This review summarizes current evidence on how trace elements influence thyroid hormone synthesis, metabolism, and the development of thyroid diseases, highlighting mechanistic links, clinical implications, and the interplay with the microbiome.
What was reviewed?
This narrative literature review comprehensively examines the roles of trace elements—including iron (Fe), copper (Cu), cobalt (Co), iodine (I), manganese (Mn), zinc (Zn), silver (Ag), cadmium (Cd), mercury (Hg), lead (Pb), and selenium (Se)—in thyroid physiology, hormone synthesis, and the pathogenesis of thyroid diseases. The review details the molecular mechanisms by which these elements affect thyroid hormone biosynthesis, metabolism, immune function, and oxidative stress within the thyroid gland. It further explores how imbalances in these elements contribute to the development and progression of various thyroid disorders, including Graves’ disease, Hashimoto’s thyroiditis, hypothyroidism, autoimmune thyroiditis, thyroid nodules, thyroid cancer, and postpartum thyroiditis. Special attention is given to the dual role of certain elements as both essential micronutrients and potential endocrine disruptors, and to their emerging roles as therapeutic targets or biomarkers.
Who was reviewed?
This review synthesizes findings from a wide range of studies involving diverse populations—adults and children, both healthy and with thyroid disease, from various geographic regions (including iodine-deficient and iodine-sufficient areas). It includes research on different subgroups such as pregnant women, patients with autoimmune thyroid diseases, those exposed to occupational or environmental heavy metals, and individuals undergoing specific thyroid treatments. Evidence is drawn from human epidemiological studies, clinical trials, animal experiments, and cellular/molecular investigations.
Most important findings
The review highlights that optimal concentrations of Fe, I, Cu, Zn, and Se are critical for healthy thyroid hormone synthesis and metabolism. Deficiencies in Fe, Zn, Se, or I, or toxic exposures to Cd, Hg, and Pb, disrupt thyroid hormone production, immune tolerance, and redox balance, predisposing individuals to hypothyroidism, autoimmune thyroiditis, and thyroid cancer. For example, Fe is essential for thyroperoxidase activity; Cu and Zn are components of antioxidant enzymes; Se is vital for deiodinase function; while both deficiency and excess I impact hormone synthesis through mechanisms such as the Wolff–Chaikoff effect. Heavy metals (Cd, Hg, Pb) promote oxidative stress, immune dysregulation, and oncogenic transformation. The review also notes gender-specific and age-dependent differences in trace element effects, and complex interactions between environmental exposure, genetic susceptibility, and thyroid disease risk. Recent research into ferroptosis and cuproptosis (forms of metal-dependent cell death) suggests potential for novel biomarkers and therapeutic strategies in thyroid cancers.
Key microbial and microbiome associations:
While the review centers on trace elements, it references the gut microbiome’s role in thyroid autoimmunity, especially its impact on trace element absorption (notably Fe and Se) and immune modulation. Dysbiosis may impair micronutrient status, influencing the risk and severity of autoimmune thyroid diseases. This emerging connection between trace element metabolism, the gut microbiome, and thyroid autoimmunity is a promising area for further investigation and may be relevant for microbiome signature databases.
Key implications
Clinical management of thyroid disorders should consider patients’ trace element status, exposure to environmental toxins, and dietary habits. Screening and correcting micronutrient deficiencies (Fe, Zn, Se, I) can help prevent or ameliorate thyroid dysfunction, while minimizing exposure to toxic metals (Cd, Hg, Pb) is crucial for thyroid health. Personalized approaches, considering genetic and microbiome influences, may optimize prevention and treatment. Some trace elements (Se, Fe, Cu) and related molecular pathways (ferroptosis, cuproptosis) hold promise as therapeutic targets or diagnostic/prognostic biomarkers in thyroid cancer and autoimmunity. Integration of trace element assessment into clinical and public health practice, alongside continued research into their interplay with the microbiome, could significantly improve thyroid disease outcomes.
Gut Microbiome Signatures in Graves’ and Hashimoto’s Disease: Microbial Markers and ABC Transporter Pathway Insights
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
Graves’ Disease (GD)
Graves’ Disease (GD)
OverviewGraves’ Disease (GD) affects approximately 0.5% of the population, predominantly women. First-line treatment options—antithyroid medications, radioactive iodine, and surgery— often result in significant side effects, incomplete remissions, and frequent relapses. Further, current first-line treatment options focus on symptoms management, and reflect an inadequate understanding of the etiology of the condition. However, recent research reveals a […]
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This study demonstrates that Graves’ disease and Hashimoto’s thyroiditis patients share distinct gut microbiome signatures—particularly involving Bacillus, Blautia, and Ornithinimicrobium—and a common enrichment of the ABC transporter pathway, supporting a microbiome-driven mechanism in autoimmune thyroid disease pathogenesis.
What was studied?
This study investigated the alterations in gut microbiota composition and function in patients with Graves’ disease (GD) and Hashimoto’s thyroiditis (HT), the two most common forms of autoimmune thyroid disease (AITD). The authors collected fecal samples from patients with GD, HT, and healthy controls, analyzing the gut microbial communities through 16S rRNA sequencing. Thyroid function and autoantibody levels were measured to confirm disease status. Furthermore, the study employed advanced bioinformatics analyses, including LEfSe (Linear Discriminant Analysis Effect Size), random forest modeling, and functional pathway predictions using KEGG (Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes) and COG (Clusters of Orthologous Groups) databases. The primary aim was to identify specific microbial taxa and metabolic pathways associated with GD and HT, and to explore whether common microbial or metabolic signatures could differentiate patients from healthy individuals. The authors also sought to uncover functional shifts in gut microbial metabolism potentially relevant to AITD pathogenesis.
Who was studied?
The study enrolled 70 Han Chinese adults from northeast China: 27 patients with GD, 27 patients with HT, and 16 healthy controls. All patients were newly diagnosed, had not received anti-thyroid or hormone replacement therapy, and were free from other autoimmune diseases, recent antibiotic or probiotic use, metabolic disorders, and significant surgeries affecting the gastrointestinal tract. The control group had normal thyroid function and negative thyroid antibodies. All participants underwent standardized clinical, laboratory, and microbiological assessments. The strict inclusion and exclusion criteria ensured minimal confounding from comorbidities or medication use, and the cohort represents a relatively homogenous ethnic and geographic background, enhancing internal validity though potentially limiting generalizability.
Most important findings
The study revealed that although the overall abundance and diversity of gut microbiota were similar between GD, HT, and healthy controls, the structure and composition of the microbial communities were markedly different in patients with autoimmune thyroid disease. Notably, HT patients had the highest levels of Proteobacteria and Actinobacteria, with these phyla also elevated in GD compared to controls. Both GD and HT groups exhibited increased levels of Erysipelotrichia, Cyanobacteria, and Ruminococcus_2, while Bacillaceae and Megamonas were depleted relative to controls. At the genus level, Prevotella_9, Ruminococcus_2, and Lachnospiraceae_NK4A136_group were elevated in GD, and Enterococcus was elevated in HT, while Megamonas was more abundant in healthy individuals. Random forest analysis identified Bacillus, Blautia, and Ornithinimicrobium as potential biomarkers for distinguishing GD and HT from healthy controls, with high discriminative accuracy (AUC up to 1). Functional prediction analyses indicated that the “ABC transporter” metabolic pathway—a key system for ATP-dependent substrate transport—was enriched in both disease groups, suggesting its involvement in disease pathogenesis. GD and HT patients also showed greater microbial enrichment in carbohydrate transport/metabolism and a reduction in amino acid transport/metabolism. Furthermore, unique and shared bacterial taxa were linked to metabolic pathways such as glutathione, arachidonic acid, purine, and pyrimidine metabolism, implicating these pathways in the autoimmune process.
Key implications
This study provides evidence that patients with GD and HT share a common dysbiotic gut microbiome signature and functional metabolic alterations, particularly involving the ABC transporter pathway and several key bacterial taxa. These findings suggest that gut microbiome changes may contribute to the pathogenesis of AITD through disruption of specific microbial communities and metabolic pathways. Identification of Bacillus, Blautia, and Ornithinimicrobium as potential diagnostic biomarkers could facilitate early detection or risk stratification of AITD based on stool microbiome analysis. The enrichment of the ABC transporter pathway points to potential mechanistic links between gut microbiota metabolism and thyroid autoimmunity and may offer new therapeutic targets. The results support the concept of a “thyroid-gut axis,” where microbial and metabolic profiles are intimately associated with thyroid autoimmunity. However, the study’s limitations, including its single-center design and ethnically/geographically homogenous cohort, highlight the need for larger, diverse, and mechanistic studies to confirm and expand upon these findings.
Comprehensive Review: Genetic Architecture and Clinical Implications in Graves’ Disease
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
Graves’ Disease (GD)
Graves’ Disease (GD)
OverviewGraves’ Disease (GD) affects approximately 0.5% of the population, predominantly women. First-line treatment options—antithyroid medications, radioactive iodine, and surgery— often result in significant side effects, incomplete remissions, and frequent relapses. Further, current first-line treatment options focus on symptoms management, and reflect an inadequate understanding of the etiology of the condition. However, recent research reveals a […]
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A multi‑ethnic review summarising >80 genetic loci underlying Graves’ disease, their clinical correlates and emerging precision‑medicine applications.
What was reviewed?
This narrative review synthesises more than three decades of genetic investigations into Graves’ disease (GD), spanning early candidate‑gene work through contemporary genome‑wide association studies (GWAS). It catalogues >80 susceptibility loci, detailing how immune‑regulatory (e.g., HLA‑DRB1, CTLA4, PTPN22) and thyroid‑specific (TSHR, TG) variants contribute to disease risk and phenotypic diversity. The authors chronologically trace methodological advances—from linkage analyses to large, multi‑ethnic GWAS—highlighting how each step refined our understanding of GD heritability (estimated at 60–80%) and polygenic architecture.
Who was reviewed?
The review aggregates evidence from over 30 000 individuals of European ancestry (Icelandic/UK) and nearly 10 000 East‑Asian participants (Chinese, Japanese, Korean), in addition to smaller Indonesian, Turkish and other cohorts. It contrasts allele frequencies, effect sizes and population‑specific signals (e.g., PTPN22*620W absent in Asians), thereby underscoring genetic heterogeneity and the importance of ancestry‑tailored risk models.
Most important findings
Across populations, the largest effects arise from HLA class II, CTLA4, TSHR and PTPN22, yet most variants confer modest odds ratios (~1.1). Notably, low‑frequency variants in FLT3 and ADCY7 exhibit larger effects (~1.5) and elevate circulating FLT3‑ligand, linking haematopoietic signalling to autoimmunity. The bubble plot on page 4 visually ranks the top 10 loci by odds ratio versus allele frequency, illustrating the inverse relationship between variant rarity and statistical power. Clinically oriented sections dissect genotype–phenotype links: specific CTLA4, HLA and TSHR alleles predict younger onset, larger goitres and higher thyroid‑stimulating antibody titres, while HLA‑B38:02/DRB108:03 mark risk for antithyroid‑drug‑induced agranulocytosis. Although the paper does not directly explore the thyroid microbiome, it foregrounds immune pathways (e.g., T‑cell co‑stimulation, B‑cell activation) that also mediate host–microbe cross‑talk, making these loci prime candidates for future microbiome–genome interaction studies and inclusion in microbiome signature databases.
Key implications
Elucidation of GD’s complex genetic landscape advances precision endocrinology: incorporating genotypes into the “GREAT+” score refines relapse prediction after antithyroid therapy, and CD40/HLA haplotypes may stratify responders to emerging biologics. Integrating genetic risk with environmental modifiers (stress, iodine, smoking) and, prospectively, thyroid‑resident microbiota could enable holistic risk stratification, personalised monitoring and targeted immunomodulation.
Gut Microbiome in Graves’ Disease and Orbitopathy: Distinct Signatures and Clinical Implications
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
Graves’ Disease (GD)
Graves’ Disease (GD)
OverviewGraves’ Disease (GD) affects approximately 0.5% of the population, predominantly women. First-line treatment options—antithyroid medications, radioactive iodine, and surgery— often result in significant side effects, incomplete remissions, and frequent relapses. Further, current first-line treatment options focus on symptoms management, and reflect an inadequate understanding of the etiology of the condition. However, recent research reveals a […]
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This study demonstrates that gut microbiome composition and function differ significantly between Graves’ disease and Graves’ orbitopathy, with specific taxa correlating with thyroid autoimmunity. These findings highlight the potential of gut microbial markers for distinguishing GO from GD and understanding disease mechanisms.
What was studied?
This original research article conducted a comparative assessment of the gut microbial composition and predicted metabolic function in patients with Graves’ disease (GD) and Graves’ orbitopathy (GO), as well as healthy controls. Using 16S rRNA gene sequencing, the authors aimed to identify specific intestinal bacterial taxa and functional signatures associated with GD and GO, in order to better understand the microbiome-related differences between these two clinical phenotypes. The study also explored whether gut microbial features could provide markers to distinguish GO from GD in clinical practice, and how these microbial alterations might relate to disease pathophysiology, particularly autoimmunity.
Who was studied?
The study population consisted of 30 patients with Graves’ disease (GD) without orbitopathy, 33 patients with Graves’ orbitopathy (GO), and 32 healthy control subjects, all recruited from the outpatient department of Beijing Tongren Hospital, Capital Medical University. The three groups were matched for age and sex, and strict inclusion and exclusion criteria were applied, such as age (18-65 years), no recent use of antibiotics, probiotics, hormonal medications, or Chinese herbal medicine, and absence of chronic gastrointestinal disorders, systemic diseases, or other autoimmune conditions. Both GD and GO patients had normalized thyroid hormone levels at the time of sampling, minimizing confounding effects of thyroid dysfunction. GO was diagnosed according to EUGOGO guidelines, and all participants provided informed consent.
Most important findings
The gut microbiota of GD and GO patients showed significant alterations in comparison to healthy controls, with notable differences between the GD and GO groups themselves. Alpha diversity (Shannon index) was significantly reduced in both GD and GO patients relative to controls, indicating lower microbial diversity. At the phylum level, GO patients had a significant decrease in Deinococcus-Thermus and Chloroflexi compared to GD patients. Genus-level analysis revealed that Subdoligranulum and Bilophila were increased, while Blautia, Anaerostipes, Dorea, Butyricicoccus, Romboutsia, Fusicatenibacter, unidentified_Lachnospiraceae, unidentified_Clostridiales, Collinsella, Intestinibacter, and Phascolarctobacterium were decreased in GO relative to GD. Additionally, Prevotella copri was enriched in both GD and GO groups compared to controls.
Random forest modeling identified Deinococcus-Thermus, Cyanobacteria, and Chloroflexi as among the top taxa distinguishing between the groups. Importantly, several microbial taxa—including Subdoligranulum and Lachnospiraceae—showed strong associations with serum thyrotropin receptor antibody (TRAb) levels, a key marker of thyroid autoimmunity, even after adjusting for age and sex. Functional predictions (via KEGG pathways) indicated enhanced nucleotide metabolism, energy metabolism, and enzyme family pathways in GD and GO, with viral protein family enrichment specifically in GD.
Key implications
These findings underscore that distinct gut microbiome signatures characterize GD and GO, supporting the hypothesis that gut dysbiosis may contribute to the development and progression of Graves’ orbitopathy in GD patients. The microbial taxa identified—especially the reduction of butyrate-producing and anti-inflammatory bacteria such as Lachnospiraceae and Blautia in GO—suggest mechanisms linking the microbiome to immune activation and orbital inflammation. The robust association of specific microbes with TRAb levels further highlights the potential of gut microbial markers as adjuncts in diagnosis, risk stratification, or even as therapeutic targets for GO. Functional pathway enrichment, notably in nucleotide and energy metabolism, hints at altered host-microbe metabolic interactions in these autoimmune thyroid conditions. However, larger multicenter studies and mechanistic investigations are needed to confirm causality and clinical utility.
Gut Microbiota in Graves’ Disease and Graves’ Orbitopathy: Distinct Microbial Signatures and Implications
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
Graves’ Disease (GD)
Graves’ Disease (GD)
OverviewGraves’ Disease (GD) affects approximately 0.5% of the population, predominantly women. First-line treatment options—antithyroid medications, radioactive iodine, and surgery— often result in significant side effects, incomplete remissions, and frequent relapses. Further, current first-line treatment options focus on symptoms management, and reflect an inadequate understanding of the etiology of the condition. However, recent research reveals a […]
•
This study identified distinct alterations in gut microbiota composition and function in Graves’ disease and Graves’ orbitopathy patients compared to healthy controls, highlighting specific microbial taxa and metabolic pathways that may contribute to disease mechanisms and serve as future biomarkers.
What was studied?
This original research article investigated the differences in gut microbial composition and predicted microbial metabolic functions between patients with Graves’ disease (GD), those with Graves’ orbitopathy (GO), and healthy controls. Using 16S rRNA gene sequencing, the study sought to identify specific gut microbiota signatures and metabolic pathway alterations associated with each disease state, with the focus keyphrase "gut microbiota in Graves’ disease and Graves’ orbitopathy." The study aimed to enhance understanding of the relationship between the gut microbiome and the pathophysiology of GD and GO, and to explore whether distinct microbial and metabolic profiles could help distinguish GD from GO in clinical practice.
Who was studied?
The study population consisted of 30 patients with GD (without GO), 33 patients with GO, and 32 healthy controls, all recruited from the Department of Endocrinology at Beijing Tongren Hospital, Capital Medical University, China, between 2017 and 2019. Participants were matched for age and sex where possible. Inclusion criteria for GD and GO were based on established clinical guidelines, with GO diagnosed according to the EUGOGO criteria. Participants with recent probiotic or antibiotic use, hormonal medication, gastrointestinal disease, major systemic illness, pregnancy, or substance abuse were excluded. All GD and GO patients were on antithyroid medications and had normal FT3 and FT4 levels at enrollment. The selected cohorts were designed to minimize confounding factors and ensure differences in gut microbiota were attributable to disease status.
Most important findings
The study revealed that both GD and GO patients exhibited significantly reduced gut microbial diversity compared to healthy controls, as shown by the Shannon index, indicating dysbiosis in disease states. Beta-diversity analysis demonstrated distinct clustering of microbial communities among the three groups. At the phylum level, GO patients had a significant decrease in Deinococcus-Thermus and Chloroflexi compared to GD patients, while GO patients also showed increased Bacteroidetes and decreased Firmicutes relative to controls. At the genus level, GO patients exhibited higher levels of Subdoligranulum and Bilophila and lower levels of Blautia, Anaerostipes, Dorea, Butyricicoccus, Romboutsia, Fusicatenibacter, unidentified Lachnospiraceae and Clostridiales, Collinsella, Intestinibacter, and Phascolarctobacterium compared to GD. Several taxa, particularly Subdoligranulum and unidentified Lachnospiraceae, showed strong associations with TRAb levels (thyrotrophin receptor antibody) in both GD and GO, suggesting a potential link between specific gut bacteria and disease immunopathology. Random forest analysis identified Deinococcus-Thermus, Cyanobacteria, and Chloroflexi as top taxa for distinguishing between groups. Functionally, predicted KEGG pathway analysis indicated that both GD and GO patients’ gut microbiota were enriched for nucleotide metabolism, energy metabolism, and enzyme family pathways compared to controls. A unique enrichment of viral protein family pathways was observed in GD compared to GO, aligning with hypotheses about viral triggers in autoimmunity.
Key implications
This study provides robust evidence that the gut microbiota in Graves’ disease and Graves’ orbitopathy is altered in both composition and predicted metabolic function, with distinct microbial signatures for each condition. The identification of specific taxa (e.g., Deinococcus-Thermus, Chloroflexi, Subdoligranulum, and Lachnospiraceae) that differentiate GD from GO and their association with TRAb levels may offer new biomarkers for disease stratification and risk assessment. The functional enrichment of nucleotide and energy metabolism pathways and the unique viral protein family pathway in GD suggest that the gut microbiome may contribute to disease mechanisms and progression. These findings support the potential for microbiome-based diagnostic tools and therapeutic strategies targeting gut microbial modulation in the management of Graves’ disease and its extrathyroidal manifestations.
Gut Microbiota Signatures in Graves’ Disease: Key Associations and Biomarker Potential
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
Graves’ Disease (GD)
Graves’ Disease (GD)
OverviewGraves’ Disease (GD) affects approximately 0.5% of the population, predominantly women. First-line treatment options—antithyroid medications, radioactive iodine, and surgery— often result in significant side effects, incomplete remissions, and frequent relapses. Further, current first-line treatment options focus on symptoms management, and reflect an inadequate understanding of the etiology of the condition. However, recent research reveals a […]
•
This study reveals that Graves’ disease is linked to distinct gut microbiota alterations, particularly increased Ruminococcus and Lactobacillus and decreased Synergistetes and Phascolarctobacterium, which correlate with thyroid autoantibody status and may serve as microbiome-based biomarkers for disease activity and therapeutic response.
What was studied?
The study investigated the associations between gut microbiota composition and thyroidal function status in Chinese patients with Graves’ disease (GD), focusing on how gut microbial profiles relate to clinical characteristics and thyroid autoantibody levels, particularly thyrotropin receptor antibody (TRAb). Using 16S rDNA high-throughput sequencing, the researchers compared the gut microbiota of untreated primary GD patients with healthy controls and further analyzed changes in microbiota after anti-thyroid drug therapy (Methimazole). The study aimed to identify specific microbial signatures linked to GD and the restoration of thyroid function following treatment, and to explore correlations between gut microbial taxa and thyroid autoimmunity markers.
Who was studied?
The study enrolled 15 adult patients (7 males, 8 females) with newly diagnosed, untreated primary GD from Jinling Hospital, Southeast University, Nanjing, China. Fourteen healthy adult volunteers (6 males, 8 females) served as controls. All participants were between 18 and 65 years old, from the same geographic region (Jiangsu Province), and had similar dietary backgrounds. Exclusion criteria included a history of autoimmune, metabolic, gastrointestinal, or genetic diseases, recent antibiotic/probiotic use, special diets, pregnancy, or major organ dysfunction. For the treatment group analysis, 13 GD patients were re-sampled after 3–5 months of Methimazole treatment, once their thyroid function had largely normalized.
Most important findings
The study found that patients with untreated GD exhibited significantly reduced gut microbiota alpha diversity (lower observed OTUs, Shannon, and Simpson indices) compared to healthy controls. The most notable microbial shifts at the genus level included significant increases in Lactobacillus, Veillonella, and Streptococcus in GD patients, with Blautia and Ruminococcus also elevated. Conversely, beneficial genera such as Phascolarctobacterium and Synergistetes were depleted in GD patients. After Methimazole treatment and restoration of thyroid function, gut microbial diversity improved, and the abundance of Blautia, Corynebacterium, Ruminococcus, and Streptococcus decreased, while Phascolarctobacterium increased.
Correlational analysis revealed that TRAb levels were positively associated with the abundance of Lactobacillus and Ruminococcus, and negatively associated with Synergistetes and Phascolarctobacterium. Synergistetes abundance was also negatively correlated with other thyroid autoantibodies (TGAb, TPOAb), suggesting a possibly protective role. Notably, changes in Ruminococcus and Phascolarctobacterium closely tracked changes in TRAb levels before and after treatment. The findings suggest that Ruminococcus and Lactobacillus may serve as novel microbial biomarkers for GD, while Synergistetes and Phascolarctobacterium may exert protective effects against thyroid autoimmunity.
Key implications
This study underscores a strong association between GD and gut microbiota dysbiosis, with specific microbial signatures correlating with disease activity and immune status. The depletion of potentially protective genera (Synergistetes, Phascolarctobacterium) and enrichment of taxa like Ruminococcus and Lactobacillus in GD patients are particularly relevant for microbiome signature databases. Importantly, restoration of euthyroid status partially normalizes the gut microbiota, implying that thyroid function and the gut microbiome are dynamically linked. These findings highlight the potential of targeting the gut microbiota for novel GD biomarkers or therapeutic interventions, though causality remains to be established. Further research with larger cohorts and mechanistic studies is warranted to clarify the role of gut microbes in GD pathogenesis and management.
Graves’ Disease Gut Microbiome Signature: Diagnostic and Pathogenic Insights
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
Graves’ Disease (GD)
Graves’ Disease (GD)
OverviewGraves’ Disease (GD) affects approximately 0.5% of the population, predominantly women. First-line treatment options—antithyroid medications, radioactive iodine, and surgery— often result in significant side effects, incomplete remissions, and frequent relapses. Further, current first-line treatment options focus on symptoms management, and reflect an inadequate understanding of the etiology of the condition. However, recent research reveals a […]
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This cross-sectional study found that Graves’ disease patients have distinctly altered gut microbiota—lower Firmicutes, higher Bacteroidetes, and reduced butyrate-producers—suggesting a role for the microbiome in disease pathogenesis and as a diagnostic biomarker.
What was studied?
This cross-sectional original research article investigated the composition and metabolic functions of the gut microbiota in patients with Graves’ disease (GD) compared to healthy controls. Using high-throughput 16S rRNA gene sequencing of fecal samples, the study aimed to profile differences in microbial diversity, identify specific taxonomic shifts, and examine associations between gut microbiota and thyroid function, autoimmunity, and metabolism. The research further explored whether certain microbial signatures could serve as noninvasive diagnostic biomarkers for GD, and assessed the potential mechanistic links between gut microbiota alterations and the pathogenesis of autoimmune thyroid disease.
Who was studied?
The study population comprised 45 untreated GD patients (12 males, 33 females; ages 16–65, median age 37) and 59 healthy control volunteers (22 males, 37 females; ages 22–71, median age 43). Controls were matched for age and sex, and all participants were recruited from the same hospital in Shanghai, China. Inclusion criteria for GD were based on ATA guidelines and included elevated thyroid hormone levels, decreased TSH, diffuse thyroid enlargement by ultrasonography, and positive TRAB antibodies. All subjects were free from malignancy, gastrointestinal, or other endocrine diseases, and had not used antibiotics, probiotics, or prebiotics for at least one month prior to sampling. Fecal samples were collected after overnight fasting, and comprehensive thyroid function and antibody profiles were measured for all participants.
Most important findings
The most notable microbiome-related findings were a significant reduction in alpha diversity and abundance of specific gut microbiota in GD patients compared to controls. At the phylum level, GD patients exhibited a lower proportion of Firmicutes and a higher proportion of Bacteroidetes. At the genus level, GD patients had increased Bacteroides and Lactobacillus but decreased abundances of Blautia, [Eubacterium]_hallii_group, Anaerostipes, Collinsella, Dorea, unclassified_f_Peptostreptococcaceae, and [Ruminococcus]_torques_group. Subgroup analyses indicated that Lactobacillus may play a key role in the pathogenesis of autoimmune thyroid disease, with higher levels observed in GD patients with concurrent Hashimoto’s thyroiditis. Correlation analyses revealed that Blautia levels positively correlated with TPOAB and TMAB levels, suggesting a possible anti-inflammatory, regulatory function; conversely, Bacteroides levels negatively correlated with these antibodies, and Dorea showed a negative correlation with TPOAB. Functional predictions showed that Blautia was strongly associated with multiple metabolic pathways, implicating its role in energy and immune regulation. A diagnostic model using the top nine discriminative genera achieved an AUC of 0.81, indicating strong potential for microbial biomarkers in GD diagnosis.
Key implications
These findings suggest that gut microbiota dysbiosis—characterized by decreased Firmicutes and butyrate-producers, and increased Bacteroides and Lactobacillus—may contribute to the pathogenesis of Graves’ disease through impaired intestinal barrier function, altered immune regulation, and disrupted metabolic signaling. The identified microbial shifts, particularly the reduction of butyrate-producing bacteria such as Blautia and [Eubacterium]_hallii_group, may diminish regulatory T cell differentiation and promote chronic inflammation and autoimmunity. The strong diagnostic potential of a nine-genera microbiome signature offers a promising, noninvasive approach for distinguishing GD patients from healthy individuals. Clinically, the study highlights the potential for microbiome-based diagnostics and therapeutics in GD, but also underscores the need for further mechanistic and longitudinal research to validate causality and therapeutic targets.
Gut Microbiota in Graves’ Disease: Microbial Signatures and Diagnostic Potential
February 12, 2026
/
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
Graves’ Disease (GD)
Graves’ Disease (GD)
OverviewGraves’ Disease (GD) affects approximately 0.5% of the population, predominantly women. First-line treatment options—antithyroid medications, radioactive iodine, and surgery— often result in significant side effects, incomplete remissions, and frequent relapses. Further, current first-line treatment options focus on symptoms management, and reflect an inadequate understanding of the etiology of the condition. However, recent research reveals a […]
•
This study identified distinctive alterations in gut microbiota in Graves’ disease, including reduced diversity and specific taxonomic shifts. Key microbial signatures correlated with thyroid autoimmunity, highlighting potential diagnostic biomarkers and suggesting that microbiome modulation may offer new therapeutic avenues for Graves’ disease.
What was studied?
This original research article investigated the gut microbiota composition and its metabolic functions in patients with Graves’ disease (GD), an autoimmune thyroid disorder. The study aimed to uncover specific microbial signatures associated with GD, explore correlations between gut microbiota and thyroid function, and evaluate the potential of microbiome profiles as non-invasive diagnostic tools for GD. Using high-throughput 16S rRNA sequencing of fecal samples, the authors compared the microbial diversity, abundance, and structure between untreated GD patients and matched healthy controls. They further analyzed the relationships between specific bacterial genera, thyroid autoantibody levels, and predicted metabolic pathway involvement, with an emphasis on the identification of microbiome-based biomarkers for GD. The focus keyphrase "gut microbiota in Graves’ disease" is central to this investigation, as the study provides new insights into how gut microbial alterations may contribute to the pathogenesis and potential diagnosis of GD.
Who was studied?
The study cohort comprised 45 untreated patients with Graves’ disease (12 males, 33 females; median age 37, range 16–65 years) and 59 healthy controls (22 males, 37 females; median age 43, range 22–71 years), all recruited from the Shanghai Tenth People's Hospital. Controls were matched for age and sex, confirmed to be free of thyroid disease by clinical and laboratory assessment, and none had received antibiotics, probiotics, or prebiotics for at least one month prior to sampling. Subjects with malignancies, gastrointestinal, or other endocrine diseases were excluded. Fecal samples, collected after an overnight fast, were stored at -80°C until analysis. Detailed clinical data, including thyroid function tests (FT3, FT4, TT3, TT4, TSH) and thyroid autoantibodies (TGAB, TPOAB, TMAB, TRAB), were obtained for all participants to facilitate correlation analyses between microbiota and disease phenotypes.
Most important findings
The study revealed a marked reduction in alpha diversity (species richness and evenness) of the gut microbiome in GD patients compared with healthy controls, indicating a less robust and potentially dysbiotic microbial community. At the phylum level, GD patients exhibited significantly lower Firmicutes and higher Bacteroidetes proportions. Notably, at the genus level, GD patients had elevated levels of Bacteroides and Lactobacillus, while beneficial butyrate-producing genera such as Blautia, [Eubacterium]_hallii_group, Anaerostipes, Collinsella, Dorea, unclassified Peptostreptococcaceae, and [Ruminococcus]_torques_group were significantly depleted. Lactobacillus levels were particularly increased in GD patients with concurrent Hashimoto’s thyroiditis, suggesting a role in broader autoimmune thyroid disease (AITD) pathogenesis.
Correlation analyses demonstrated that Blautia levels positively correlated with thyroid autoantibodies (TPOAB, TMAB), while Bacteroides showed inverse associations, and Dorea was negatively correlated with TPOAB. Functional predictions implicated Blautia in key metabolic pathways (lipid, amino acid, and carbohydrate metabolism), hinting that its depletion may disrupt intestinal homeostasis and immune regulation. A diagnostic model using nine genera distinguished GD patients from controls with high accuracy (AUC=0.81). Collectively, the findings support a model where microbial dysbiosis—characterized by loss of butyrate producers and expansion of potentially pathogenic taxa—may impair intestinal barrier integrity, promote systemic inflammation, and trigger or exacerbate thyroid autoimmunity.
Key implications
This study underscores the significant role of gut microbiota in the pathogenesis and potential non-invasive diagnosis of Graves’ disease. The identified microbial signatures—particularly the depletion of butyrate-producing genera and enrichment of Bacteroides and Lactobacillus—may contribute to immune dysregulation and thyroid dysfunction through alterations in intestinal permeability and pro-inflammatory signaling. The strong association between specific genera and thyroid autoantibody levels suggests that microbiota-driven immune mechanisms could be central to GD onset and progression. The diagnostic model based on microbial markers offers a promising, non-invasive adjunct for GD detection. These results open avenues for microbiome-based therapeutic interventions and precision diagnostics in AITD, but further studies are necessary to clarify causality, elucidate underlying mechanisms, and validate these biomarkers in larger, diverse populations.
Alterations of the Gut Microbiota in Hashimoto’s Thyroiditis Patients
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
Hashimoto’s Thyroiditis
Hashimoto’s Thyroiditis
Hashimoto’s Thyroiditis (HT) is an autoimmune disease that progressively damages the thyroid, often causing hypothyroidism and affecting women disproportionately. Research links HT to gut dysbiosis via the gut–thyroid axis and highlights heavy metals like nickel, arsenic, and lead as contributors to oxidative stress and thyroid dysfunction.
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Gut microbiota analysis in Hashimoto’s thyroiditis patients identified significant dysbiosis, with increased pro-inflammatory taxa and reduced beneficial microbes, correlating with thyroid autoantibodies.
What Was Studied?
This study systematically investigated alterations in the gut microbiota composition in patients with Hashimoto’s thyroiditis (HT), an organ-specific autoimmune disease, compared to healthy controls. The researchers used 16S rRNA sequencing to profile and compare the gut microbiota of 50 HT patients and 27 matched healthy controls. The study aimed to identify microbial biomarkers associated with HT and their correlations with clinical parameters, such as thyroid peroxidase antibody (TPO-Ab) and thyroglobulin antibody (TG-Ab) levels.
Who Was Studied?
The study involved two cohorts: an exploration cohort of 28 HT patients and 16 healthy controls, and a validation cohort of 22 HT patients and 11 healthy controls. All participants were of Han Chinese ethnicity, aged between 18 and 65 years, and matched for age, sex, and BMI. Patients included were euthyroid and free from confounding conditions or recent medications that could affect the gut microbiota.
Key Findings
The study revealed significant differences in the gut microbiota composition between HT patients and healthy controls, though overall bacterial diversity and richness were similar. HT patients exhibited a marked increase in Firmicutes and a reduction in Bacteroidetes, with a significantly higher Firmicutes-to-Bacteroidetes (F/B) ratio. At the genus level, the abundances of Blautia, Roseburia, Ruminococcus_torques_group, and Eubacterium_hallii_group were significantly increased in HT patients. In contrast, beneficial genera like Bacteroides, Fecalibacterium, and Prevotella_9 were significantly decreased.
The researchers identified 27 genera with significant differences between HT patients and controls using linear discriminant analysis effect size (LEfSe). Ten genera, including Bacteroides and Fecalibacterium, were highlighted as potential biomarkers, achieving high diagnostic accuracy with AUC values of 0.91 and 0.88 in the exploration and validation cohorts, respectively.
Microbiota changes were correlated with clinical parameters. For instance, increased levels of Blautia and Dorea were positively associated with TPO-Ab and TG-Ab, while reduced levels of Fecalibacterium and Bacteroides correlated inversely with these antibodies.
Greatest Implications
The findings highlight the potential role of gut dysbiosis in the pathogenesis of HT. The observed microbial shifts suggest a loss of anti-inflammatory and barrier-supporting taxa, such as Fecalibacterium, and an increase in pro-inflammatory or mucin-degrading taxa, such as Ruminococcus_torques_group. This dysbiosis may contribute to immune activation and thyroid autoimmunity through mechanisms like increased intestinal permeability and molecular mimicry. Additionally, the identified microbial biomarkers could serve as non-invasive tools for HT diagnosis and disease monitoring. However, longitudinal studies and experimental validation are needed to confirm causality and explore therapeutic interventions targeting the gut microbiota.
Comparative Analysis of Taxonomic and Functional Gut Microbiota Profiles in Relation to Seroconversion of Thyroid Peroxidase Antibodies in Euthyroid Participants.
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
Hashimoto’s Thyroiditis
Hashimoto’s Thyroiditis
Hashimoto’s Thyroiditis (HT) is an autoimmune disease that progressively damages the thyroid, often causing hypothyroidism and affecting women disproportionately. Research links HT to gut dysbiosis via the gut–thyroid axis and highlights heavy metals like nickel, arsenic, and lead as contributors to oxidative stress and thyroid dysfunction.
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This study explored gut microbiota profiles in TPOAb-positive and TPOAb-negative euthyroid individuals. While no significant diversity differences were found, specific taxa like Desulfovibrionaceae were associated with TPOAb presence. Further research is needed to determine their role in autoimmune thyroid disease progression.
What was studied?
This study investigated the taxonomic and functional gut microbiota profiles of euthyroid individuals with and without thyroid peroxidase antibodies (TPOAb), a marker for autoimmune thyroid diseases such as Hashimoto’s thyroiditis. The goal was to assess whether gut microbiota composition differs in individuals with TPOAb before the clinical onset of autoimmune thyroid disease and to evaluate ethnic variations in thyroid biomarkers.
Who was studied?
The study examined 1,468 euthyroid participants aged 35 years and older from the multiethnic HELIUS cohort, including European Dutch, Moroccan, and Turkish individuals. Of these, 159 participants were TPOAb-positive, and 1,309 were TPOAb-negative. Fecal microbiota composition was analyzed using 16S rRNA sequencing.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed no significant differences in global gut microbiota diversity (alpha or beta diversity) between TPOAb-positive and TPOAb-negative individuals. However, 138 microbial taxa were nominally associated with TPOAb presence, with 13 taxa consistently significant across multiple statistical methods. Among the most notable taxa, members of the Desulfovibrionaceae family were positively associated with TPOAb presence, while certain taxa from the Clostridiales vadin BB60 group were negatively associated. Functional pathway analysis indicated reduced abundance of pathways related to D-glucarate degradation, glycolysis, and adenosylcobalamin biosynthesis in TPOAb-positive participants, although none of these associations were statistically significant after correction for multiple testing. Ethnicity emerged as a more significant factor in microbiota variation than TPOAb status, with no ethnic differences in thyroid biomarker levels found.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study underscores the role of gut microbiota in the early stages of autoimmune thyroid disease, suggesting that microbial alterations may not be the primary driver of TPOAb seroconversion. However, the associations between specific taxa and TPOAb presence warrant further investigation to elucidate their potential involvement in disease progression. The lack of robust differences in microbiota composition between groups highlights the need for longitudinal studies to determine causal relationships between gut dysbiosis and autoimmune thyroiditis. Moreover, the findings emphasize the importance of considering ethnic diversity in microbiome research to ensure accurate interpretation of results.
Integrative analysis of gut microbiome and host transcriptome reveal novel molecular signatures in Hashimoto’s thyroiditis
February 12, 2026
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Hashimoto’s Thyroiditis
Hashimoto’s Thyroiditis
Hashimoto’s Thyroiditis (HT) is an autoimmune disease that progressively damages the thyroid, often causing hypothyroidism and affecting women disproportionately. Research links HT to gut dysbiosis via the gut–thyroid axis and highlights heavy metals like nickel, arsenic, and lead as contributors to oxidative stress and thyroid dysfunction.
•
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
This study revealed novel molecular signatures linking gut microbiota and transcriptome in Hashimoto's thyroiditis, advancing diagnostic and therapeutic approaches.
What Was Studied?
Integrative analysis reveals novel gut microbiota-transcriptome signatures for Hashimoto's thyroiditis, aiding early diagnosis and treatment.This study explored the molecular signatures of Hashimoto’s thyroiditis (HT) through an integrative analysis of gut microbiome and host transcriptome (miRNA/mRNA). It aimed to identify novel molecular markers and elucidate the gut-thyroid axis, using data from 31 early HT patients and 30 healthy controls across discovery and validation cohorts. The study sought to uncover interactions between the gut microbiota and host gene expression, providing insights into HT pathogenesis.
Who Was Studied?
Participants included 31 early HT patients and 30 healthy individuals aged 18–65. HT cases were defined by elevated thyroid antibodies (TPOAb/TGAb) and morphological abnormalities while maintaining normal thyroid function. Exclusions included antibiotic or probiotic use, significant dietary changes, or comorbid conditions. Blood and fecal samples were collected for transcriptomic and metagenomic sequencing.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study identified subtle but significant gut microbiota alterations in early HT patients. While alpha diversity was unchanged, beta diversity analysis revealed compositional shifts, including increased Bacillota_A and Spirochaetota at the phylum level and significant differences in 24 genera and 67 species. Beneficial microbes like Barnesiella intestinihominis were reduced, while opportunistic pathogens like Peptostreptococcus were enriched. Host transcriptome analysis identified 1975 downregulated and 1821 upregulated mRNAs, alongside 27 miRNAs. Immune and inflammation-related pathways were enriched, with hsa-miR-548aq-3p and hsa-miR-374a-5p playing key roles. Key molecular signatures included three bacterial species (Salaquimonas_sp002400845, Clostridium_AI_sp002297865, Enterocloster_citroniae) and six RNAs (e.g., GADD45A, IRS2, SMAD6). These integrated signatures demonstrated strong diagnostic potential (AUC=0.95) in distinguishing HT patients from healthy controls.
What Are the Greatest Implications?
This research advances understanding of the gut-thyroid axis and provides a robust framework for early HT diagnosis and treatment. Molecular signatures identified offer potential for targeted therapies, including microbiome modulation. For example, restoring beneficial microbes such as Barnesiella intestinihominis or targeting specific pathogenic species may offer therapeutic benefits. Integration of gut microbiota and transcriptome data sets a precedent for multidimensional biomarker development in autoimmune conditions.
Molecular estimation of alteration in intestinal microbial composition in Hashimoto’s thyroiditis patients
February 12, 2026
/
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
Hashimoto’s Thyroiditis
Hashimoto’s Thyroiditis
Hashimoto’s Thyroiditis (HT) is an autoimmune disease that progressively damages the thyroid, often causing hypothyroidism and affecting women disproportionately. Research links HT to gut dysbiosis via the gut–thyroid axis and highlights heavy metals like nickel, arsenic, and lead as contributors to oxidative stress and thyroid dysfunction.
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This study revealed novel molecular signatures linking gut microbiota and transcriptome in Hashimoto's thyroiditis, advancing diagnostic and therapeutic approaches.
What Was Studied?
This study examined alterations in the gut microbiota composition of patients with Hashimoto's thyroiditis (HT). It aimed to investigate the relationship between intestinal dysbiosis and HT through quantitative and qualitative analysis of gut microbial diversity and composition using techniques such as PCR-DGGE, real-time PCR, and pyrosequencing of 16S rRNA genes.
Who Was Studied?
The study analyzed fecal samples from 29 HT patients and 12 healthy individuals aged 40–60 years. Patients were diagnosed based on elevated thyroid antibodies (TPOAb and TGAb) and other clinical markers, including TSH and T4 levels. Healthy controls had normal thyroid function and no history of antibiotic or probiotic use in the 60 days preceding the study.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study revealed significant gut microbiota dysbiosis in Hashimoto’s thyroiditis (HT) patients compared to healthy controls. HT patients exhibited an increased abundance of inflammatory phyla like Proteobacteria and decreased beneficial phyla such as Firmicutes and Bacteroidetes. At the genus level, Escherichia-Shigella and Parasutterella were elevated, while anti-inflammatory genera such as Prevotella_9 and Dialister were significantly reduced. Escherichia coli was particularly overrepresented, potentially contributing to intestinal barrier disruption and inflammation linked to thyroid autoimmunity.
Real-time PCR showed significant reductions in Bifidobacterium and Lactobacillus, essential for producing immune-regulating SCFAs, while alpha diversity indicated bacterial overgrowth in HT patients. Functional diversity measures showed no significant changes, pointing to microbial imbalance rather than increased functional diversity. Pyrosequencing confirmed these findings, demonstrating a distinct microbial profile in HT patients. These results highlight the role of gut dysbiosis in HT pathogenesis and suggest potential therapeutic strategies targeting microbiome restoration.
What Are the Greatest Implications?
This study highlights gut microbiota dysbiosis as a potential contributor to the pathogenesis of HT. The findings suggest that the overrepresentation of inflammatory and opportunistic pathogens, such as Escherichia coli and Escherichia-Shigella, coupled with the reduction of beneficial microbes like Bifidobacterium and Lactobacillus, may influence immune regulation and thyroid autoimmunity. Restoring microbial balance through probiotics, dietary interventions, or targeted microbiome therapies could serve as novel strategies for managing HT. These results underscore the critical role of gut health in autoimmune diseases and provide a foundation for developing microbiome-targeted interventions.
Molecular estimation of alteration in intestinal microbial composition in Hashimoto’s thyroiditis patients
February 12, 2026
/
Hashimoto’s Thyroiditis
Hashimoto’s Thyroiditis
Hashimoto’s Thyroiditis (HT) is an autoimmune disease that progressively damages the thyroid, often causing hypothyroidism and affecting women disproportionately. Research links HT to gut dysbiosis via the gut–thyroid axis and highlights heavy metals like nickel, arsenic, and lead as contributors to oxidative stress and thyroid dysfunction.
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This study found that gut microbiota in Hashimoto’s thyroiditis patients differs markedly from healthy controls, with enriched Escherichia coli and depleted Prevotella. These microbial shifts support the hypothesis that dysbiosis contributes to autoimmune thyroid inflammation and may offer targets for intervention.
What was studied?
This study evaluated the intestinal microbiota of patients with Hashimoto’s thyroiditis (HT) to determine microbial alterations that may contribute to disease pathogenesis. The authors utilized a combination of PCR-DGGE, real-time PCR, and 16S rRNA V4 region pyrosequencing to assess both the quantitative and qualitative composition of gut microbial communities. Their aim was to characterize differences in microbial diversity, richness, and taxa-specific abundance between HT patients and healthy controls, thereby exploring the hypothesis that gut dysbiosis plays a role in autoimmune thyroid inflammation.
Who was studied?
The study included 29 patients with Hashimoto’s thyroiditis and 12 healthy control participants. HT patients were diagnosed based on clinical criteria and confirmed to have elevated thyroid antibodies. Fecal samples were collected from all participants. From these, 20 samples (10 HT, 10 controls) were randomly selected for pyrosequencing analysis, while the full cohort was used in PCR-DGGE and real-time PCR assays targeting select microbial groups (e.g., Bifidobacterium, Lactobacillus, Clostridium leptum, Bacteroides vulgatus).
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed significant alterations in gut microbial diversity and composition in HT patients compared to controls. At the phylum level, there was an increased relative abundance of Proteobacteria and Actinobacteria, and a decrease in Bacteroidetes and Firmicutes. Family-level analysis showed reduced Prevotellaceae and Veillonellaceae, which are typically associated with anti-inflammatory properties and immune regulation via T regulatory cells. Conversely, Enterobacteriaceae and Alcaligenaceae were elevated in HT. At the genus level, Escherichia-Shigella and Parasutterella were enriched in HT patients, while Prevotella_9 and Dialister were depleted. The species-level analysis indicated a particularly increased abundance of Escherichia coli, reinforcing its potential role as a proinflammatory agent in HT-associated dysbiosis.
Real-time PCR corroborated these findings, showing significantly decreased levels of beneficial genera such as Bifidobacterium and Lactobacillus. Alpha diversity indices (Chao1, ACE, observed species) were significantly higher in HT, suggesting overgrowth rather than loss of diversity, while Good's coverage was better in controls, indicating more stable and predictable microbial communities.
Signifies loss of anti-inflammatory taxa; potential MMA candidates
Species-level Highlight
↑ Escherichia coli
Low E. coli abundance
May act as pathogenic trigger in HT pathology
Functional Markers (PCR)
↓ Bifidobacterium, ↓ Lactobacillus
Normal probiotic levels
Reduced protective flora may increase inflammation and permeability
Alpha Diversity
↑ Observed species, ↑ richness indices
Lower diversity, higher Good’s coverage
Overgrowth with instability in microbial community
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study provides compelling evidence that gut microbiota in Hashimoto’s thyroiditis is significantly dysregulated. The shift toward increased abundance of pathobionts such as Escherichia coli and depletion of immunoregulatory commensals suggests a potential causal role for microbial factors in perpetuating autoimmune thyroid inflammation. The elevation in Proteobacteria—a phylum linked to gut barrier dysfunction and systemic inflammation—further supports this pathophysiological model. These findings highlight several major microbial associations (MMAs) in HT, including increased Escherichia-Shigella and decreased Prevotella and Dialister, which may serve as biomarkers for disease or targets for microbial therapies. Interventions to restore microbial balance, such as probiotics or dietary modulation, warrant exploration as adjunct therapies in HT management. Moreover, this study underscores the value of integrating gut microbiome profiling into endocrine autoimmune diagnostics.
Altered Gut Microbiota in Chronic Heart Failure: A Pathway to New Therapies
February 12, 2026
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Cardiovascular Health
Cardiovascular Health
Recent research has revealed that specific gut microbiota-derived metabolites are strongly linked to cardiovascular disease risk—potentially influencing atherosclerosis development more than traditional risk factors like cholesterol levels. This highlights the gut microbiome as a novel therapeutic target for cardiovascular interventions.
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Heart Failure
Heart Failure
Recent research reveals that the gut microbiome significantly influences heart failure progression, contributing to inflammation and other complications.
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This review emphasizes the significant alterations in gut microbiota in severe chronic heart failure (CHF) patients and suggests that gut microbiota modulation could be a promising avenue for therapeutic intervention. The study provides a foundation for future research aimed at leveraging gut microbiota to improve CHF management and patient health.
What Was Studied?
This original research focused on alterations in the gut microbiota composition of patients with severe chronic heart failure (CHF) using bacterial 16S rRNA gene sequencing. The study aimed to uncover microbial dysbiosis patterns and their potential functional implications in CHF.
Who Was Studied?
The study examined 29 CHF patients classified under New York Heart Association (NYHA) Class III-IV and compared them to 30 healthy controls. These individuals were recruited from Harbin Medical University hospitals in China. Inclusion criteria ensured the absence of confounding variables like recent antibiotic use or gastrointestinal surgery.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study found significant differences in microbial composition and diversity between CHF patients and healthy controls:
Phylum-Level Changes: CHF patients showed a significant decrease in Firmicutes (59.5% vs. 72.4%) and a marked increase in Proteobacteria (21.3% vs. 6.9%), suggesting dysbiosis.
Genus-Level Alterations: Notable reductions in SCFA-producing genera like Ruminococcaceae (UCG-004 and UCG-002), Lachnospiraceae FCS020 group, and Dialister were observed. Conversely, pathogenic genera such as Enterococcus and Klebsiella were elevated.
Diversity Metrics: Alpha diversity (Chao1, PD-whole-tree, Shannon indices) and beta diversity (weighted UniFrac distances) were significantly lower in CHF patients, reflecting reduced microbial richness and altered community structure.
Functional Implications: Predicted microbial functions (using PICRUSt) linked to CHF involved disruptions in pathways like cell cycle control, carbohydrate metabolism, and amino acid metabolism. Dysbiosis is also correlated with reduced SCFA production, potentially exacerbating inflammation and metabolic dysregulation.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
This research highlights a potential gut-heart axis, where microbial dysbiosis in CHF may contribute to systemic inflammation and metabolic disturbances via SCFA deficiencies and increased endotoxins. The findings suggest that targeting gut microbiota through therapeutic interventions could represent a novel strategy for managing severe CHF. Moreover, the identified microbial signatures could guide biomarker development for CHF diagnosis and progression monitoring.
Long-term postmenopausal hormone therapy and endometrial cancer
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) is one of the most effective treatments for women experiencing the symptoms of menopause, particularly vasomotor symptoms such as hot flashes and night sweats. But its benefits go beyond just symptom management. HRT can also play a key role in improving vaginal health by alleviating dryness and discomfort, which are common complaints among women in menopause. Additionally, it helps prevent bone loss, significantly reducing the risk of osteoporosis and fractures, which are more common after menopause. Despite its many benefits, HRT is not one-size-fits-all; it’s essential to tailor treatment based on individual health profiles, taking into account the risks like breast cancer, blood clots, and heart disease that come with prolonged use.
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Long-term use of estrogen and estrogen-progestin therapies significantly increases the risk of endometrial cancer, particularly for women with lower BMI. The risk is dose-dependent, with continuous-combined therapy having complex effects based on body weight.
What was studied?
This study investigates the association between long-term postmenopausal hormone therapy (HT) use and the risk of developing endometrial cancer. Specifically, it examines different HT regimens, including estrogen therapy (ET) and estrogen-progestin therapy (EPT), and how their duration and composition may influence the risk of endometrial cancer. The research uses data from the California Teachers Study (CTS), a large cohort of women, to analyze hormone therapy patterns and their correlation with endometrial cancer incidence.
Who was studied?
The study population consisted of 311 women diagnosed with invasive endometrial cancer and 570 control women, all part of the CTS cohort. The participants were postmenopausal women who had not undergone hysterectomy and were part of an ongoing study of California teachers. The study controlled for factors such as age, race, BMI, reproductive history, and other known endometrial cancer risk factors.
Most important findings
The study found that long-term use (≥10 years) of ET, short-sequential EPT, and continuous-combined EPT (progestin ≥25 days/month) were all associated with a significantly increased risk of endometrial cancer. The risk was most pronounced for women using ET and short-sequential EPT, with odds ratios (ORs) of 4.5 and 4.4, respectively. Continuous-combined EPT was associated with an OR of 2.1 for long-term use. The risk for continuous-combined EPT was higher among women with a BMI < 25 kg/m2, whereas heavier women (BMI ≥ 25 kg/m2) had a reduced or neutral risk. Furthermore, the duration of hormone therapy use showed a dose-dependent relationship with cancer risk, with longer durations significantly elevating the likelihood of endometrial cancer.
Key implications
The findings underscore the importance of considering both the type of hormone therapy and the duration of use when evaluating cancer risks in postmenopausal women. Clinicians should be aware that long-term use of ET or short-sequential EPT, especially in women with a lower BMI, significantly increases endometrial cancer risk. However, continuous-combined EPT may have a more complex risk profile, with its effects potentially modulated by body weight. These results suggest the need for personalized approaches to hormone therapy, where treatment regimens and duration are carefully tailored to minimize cancer risks, particularly in lean women.
Hormone therapy and the risk of stroke: Perspectives ten years after the Women’s Health Initiative trials
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) is one of the most effective treatments for women experiencing the symptoms of menopause, particularly vasomotor symptoms such as hot flashes and night sweats. But its benefits go beyond just symptom management. HRT can also play a key role in improving vaginal health by alleviating dryness and discomfort, which are common complaints among women in menopause. Additionally, it helps prevent bone loss, significantly reducing the risk of osteoporosis and fractures, which are more common after menopause. Despite its many benefits, HRT is not one-size-fits-all; it’s essential to tailor treatment based on individual health profiles, taking into account the risks like breast cancer, blood clots, and heart disease that come with prolonged use.
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This review investigates the stroke risk associated with hormonal therapies in postmenopausal women, comparing oral and transdermal estrogen formulations and highlighting the need for individualized treatment plans based on age and cardiovascular health.
What was studied?
This study reviews the relationship between hormone therapy (HT) and the risk of stroke, with particular emphasis on postmenopausal women who use estrogen-based treatments. It evaluates data from large clinical trials like the Women’s Health Initiative (WHI), focusing on the risks associated with estrogen and progestogen therapies, including both oral and transdermal forms. The paper explores how estrogen therapy affects ischemic stroke risk, outlining the differences between estrogen alone and estrogen-progestogen combinations, as well as the dose-dependent effects on stroke. The study provides a comprehensive look at stroke mechanisms, estrogen's impact on the cardiovascular system, and how these therapies influence hemostasis and vascular health.
Who was studied?
The review primarily examines postmenopausal women from large clinical trials, including those enrolled in the Women’s Health Initiative (WHI), which consisted of women aged 50 to 79 years at baseline. The study also includes data from observational studies and other clinical trials, such as the Heart and Estrogen/progestin Replacement Study (HERS) and the Women’s Estrogen for Stroke Trial (WEST). It focuses on healthy women who were using hormonal therapies for menopause symptom management and those who participated in trials investigating the cardiovascular outcomes of these therapies. The paper also considers the impact of hormone therapy on women with specific risks for stroke, such as those with cardiovascular disease, and the potential for transdermal estrogen as a safer alternative in high-risk groups.
Most important findings
The study reveals estrogen therapy increases the risk of ischemic stroke by about one-third, a finding consistent across multiple clinical trials, including the WHI. The risk appears to be more pronounced in oral estrogen therapies, likely due to first-pass metabolism in the liver, which can alter coagulation pathways and increase thrombosis risk. In contrast, transdermal estrogen does not carry the same degree of risk, likely because it bypasses the liver. The estrogen-progestogen combination therapy showed a similar risk profile to unopposed estrogen in terms of stroke risk, with the addition of progestogen not offering additional protective benefits.
The study suggests that the timing of therapy initiation does not significantly alter stroke risk; both younger women starting hormone therapy soon after menopause and older women starting therapy later have similar stroke risk profiles. Furthermore, lower doses of estrogen, such as those used in transdermal estradiol (≤50μg/day) or low-dose oral conjugated estrogens (0.3 mg/day), were found to have no significant increase in stroke risk. However, the study highlights that stroke risk increases significantly with age, particularly for women aged 60 and older.
Key implications
Clinicians should recognize that while hormone therapy is effective for managing menopausal symptoms, particularly vasomotor symptoms, it also carries an increased risk of ischemic stroke. Transdermal estrogen may be a safer option, especially for women with cardiovascular risk factors, due to its lower association with thrombotic events. The study suggests that oral estrogen therapy should be used cautiously, particularly in older women or those with existing cardiovascular disease. For women aged under 60 or within 10 years of menopause, the absolute risk of stroke is low, but clinicians must still weigh the benefits of symptom relief against the small but real risk of stroke. The study further emphasizes that individualized therapy is critical, considering a patient’s age, cardiovascular health, and genetic predisposition to thrombosis when prescribing hormonal therapies.
Hormone replacement therapy for women previously treated for endometrial cancer
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) is one of the most effective treatments for women experiencing the symptoms of menopause, particularly vasomotor symptoms such as hot flashes and night sweats. But its benefits go beyond just symptom management. HRT can also play a key role in improving vaginal health by alleviating dryness and discomfort, which are common complaints among women in menopause. Additionally, it helps prevent bone loss, significantly reducing the risk of osteoporosis and fractures, which are more common after menopause. Despite its many benefits, HRT is not one-size-fits-all; it’s essential to tailor treatment based on individual health profiles, taking into account the risks like breast cancer, blood clots, and heart disease that come with prolonged use.
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This review highlights the lack of conclusive evidence on the safety of hormone replacement therapy (HRT) in women treated for early-stage endometrial cancer. While a small study found no significant increase in cancer recurrence risk, the low quality of the evidence leaves uncertainty about the benefits and risks of HRT use in these women.
What was studied?
This review investigates the use of hormone replacement therapy (HRT) in women previously treated for endometrial cancer. Specifically, it aims to evaluate the efficacy of HRT in relieving menopausal symptoms, such as hot flashes, night sweats, and vaginal dryness, in these women. The study also explores the potential risks associated with HRT use, particularly whether it might increase the risk of cancer recurrence or the development of new malignancies. The review includes data from randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and evaluates safety and symptom relief outcomes in women who have undergone surgical treatment for early-stage endometrial cancer.
Who was studied?
The review focuses on women who had been treated for endometrial cancer, particularly those with early-stage disease (stage I and II). Participants included in the studies had undergone hysterectomy and bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy (removal of the uterus, fallopian tubes, and ovaries) as part of their treatment. Women in these studies were often experiencing menopausal symptoms, either as a result of early menopause induced by cancer treatment or as a continuation of natural menopause. The review only included studies that addressed HRT use in these women and its potential risks and benefits.
Most important findings
The review identified a single RCT that compared the use of estrogen replacement therapy (ERT) to a placebo in women previously treated for early-stage endometrial cancer. The study showed no significant difference in the risk of tumor recurrence between the two groups, though the risk ratio (RR) was 1.17, indicating a slightly higher risk of recurrence in the HRT group, though this result was not statistically significant. There was no difference in the incidence of new cancers between the groups, although the data on this outcome were limited. The study also found no significant difference in overall survival or progression-free survival between the HRT and placebo groups. The quality of the evidence was considered very low due to the small sample size, risk of bias, and the early termination of the study due to recruitment challenges.
Key implications
The findings suggest that there is currently insufficient evidence to definitively guide clinical decision-making regarding HRT use in women who have been treated for early-stage endometrial cancer. While the single included RCT showed no clear evidence that HRT increases the risk of recurrence, the study was underpowered and had several methodological issues. Consequently, the use of HRT in this context should be individualized, considering the woman's menopausal symptoms, preferences, and the uncertainty surrounding the risks and benefits. More robust trials are needed to clarify whether HRT can be safely used for symptom relief without adversely affecting cancer outcomes in these patients.
Hormone therapy for first-line management of menopausal symptoms: Practical recommendations
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) is one of the most effective treatments for women experiencing the symptoms of menopause, particularly vasomotor symptoms such as hot flashes and night sweats. But its benefits go beyond just symptom management. HRT can also play a key role in improving vaginal health by alleviating dryness and discomfort, which are common complaints among women in menopause. Additionally, it helps prevent bone loss, significantly reducing the risk of osteoporosis and fractures, which are more common after menopause. Despite its many benefits, HRT is not one-size-fits-all; it’s essential to tailor treatment based on individual health profiles, taking into account the risks like breast cancer, blood clots, and heart disease that come with prolonged use.
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This review sets a simple plan for menopausal hormone therapy first-line management, favors transdermal routes when risk exists, and backs local therapy for genitourinary symptoms with clear links to vaginal ecosystem health.
What was reviewed?
This review sets out menopausal hormone therapy as first-line management and gives clear, practical steps for safe symptom control in midlife. The authors explain how to match route, dose, and regimen to a woman’s risks and goals and describe oral, transdermal, and vaginal options and explain when to use each. They outline when to choose sequential or continuous combined regimens and how to time a switch to aim for amenorrhea. The review summarizes updated guidance after the early Women’s Health Initiative results and place strong weight on age and time since menopause. They describe how local vaginal therapy eases genitourinary syndrome of menopause and lowers urinary symptoms.
Who was reviewed?
The paper focuses on symptomatic peri- and postmenopausal women, especially those younger than 60 years or within 10 years of menopause. It covers women with obesity, insulin resistance, dyslipidemia, hypertension, smoking, and a personal or family history of venous thromboembolism. It guides care for women with prior hysterectomy who can use estrogen alone and for women who need a progestogen for endometrial protection. In addition, the review addresses women over 60 who continue therapy after careful review or who may start with local routes. It includes women with premature ovarian insufficiency who need earlier and longer replacement. The review provides steps to assess risk, choose a safe route, and adjust dose over time.
Most important findings
The authors support early initiation near menopause for the best balance of benefit and risk and oppose late initiation for primary prevention alone and favor transdermal estradiol when thrombotic or cerebrovascular risk exists because it avoids first-pass hepatic effects that can raise clot risk. They state that breast cancer risk with hormone therapy remains low in absolute terms and rises most with some combined regimens and longer use, while micronized progesterone or dydrogesterone may show a more favorable profile than medroxyprogesterone acetate. They explain that women with a uterus must receive adequate progestogen and may use a levonorgestrel intrauterine system to protect the lining and steady bleeding, which can help in obesity.
The review suggests sequential regimens in the transition and early postmenopause and a later move to continuous combined regimens to achieve amenorrhea. They advise that women over 60 who start therapy should often begin with transdermal or local routes and that vaginal estrogen or DHEA suits genitourinary syndrome of menopause. These local options improve vaginal dryness, dyspareunia, urgency, and post-coital cystitis and likely support a lactobacillus-dominant state and lower vaginal pH, which links to fewer urinary infections, although the review does not report taxa. They highlight the need for shared decisions, regular review, and lifestyle change alongside therapy.
Key implications
Clinicians should start with the woman’s goals and risks, aim to begin near menopause, and prefer transdermal estradiol when thrombotic, metabolic, or cerebrovascular risks exist and pair estrogen with an appropriate progestogen when the uterus is intact and consider a levonorgestrel intrauterine system for endometrial protection and bleeding control. Clinicians should address genitourinary syndrome of menopause with low-dose vaginal estrogen or DHEA to restore comfort and urinary health and record vaginal symptom relief and urinary tract infection events as proxy microbiome outcomes. These steps align symptom relief, safety, and vaginal ecosystem support in daily practice.
A systematic review of randomised clinical trials – The safety of vaginal hormones and selective estrogen receptor modulators for the treatment of genitourinary menopausal symptoms in breast cancer survivors
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Breast Cancer
Breast Cancer
Traditionally linked to genetic predispositions and environmental exposures, emerging evidence highlights the microbiome as a critical and underappreciated factor influencing breast cancer progression, immune response, and treatment outcomes.
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Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) is one of the most effective treatments for women experiencing the symptoms of menopause, particularly vasomotor symptoms such as hot flashes and night sweats. But its benefits go beyond just symptom management. HRT can also play a key role in improving vaginal health by alleviating dryness and discomfort, which are common complaints among women in menopause. Additionally, it helps prevent bone loss, significantly reducing the risk of osteoporosis and fractures, which are more common after menopause. Despite its many benefits, HRT is not one-size-fits-all; it’s essential to tailor treatment based on individual health profiles, taking into account the risks like breast cancer, blood clots, and heart disease that come with prolonged use.
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This review assesses the safety of vaginal hormones and SERMs in treating genitourinary menopausal symptoms in breast cancer survivors. It finds no significant rise in serum estrogen levels or an increased risk of breast cancer recurrence, but more extensive studies are needed to confirm these findings.
What was studied?
This systematic review focused on the safety of vaginal hormone therapies and selective estrogen receptor modulators (SERMs) for the treatment of genitourinary menopausal symptoms (GMS) in breast cancer survivors. It specifically aimed to evaluate the risks of breast cancer recurrence associated with these treatments, as well as any significant rise in serum estrogen levels following their use. The study assessed randomized clinical trials (RCTs) that tested vaginal estrogen therapies, dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA), and oral SERMs, all of which are used to manage menopausal symptoms, particularly those affecting the genitourinary system. The review also aimed to clarify the clinical safety of these therapies in the context of breast cancer, where concerns about estrogenic effects potentially increasing the risk of cancer recurrence are prevalent.
Who was studied?
The review included breast cancer survivors who were treated with various forms of hormone therapy to manage genitourinary menopausal symptoms. The studies selected for this review specifically focused on postmenopausal women, ages 18 and older, who had previously been diagnosed with breast cancer and were undergoing treatments such as vaginal estrogen therapies (e.g., estriol and estradiol) and dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) gel. Participants in these trials did not have any active breast cancer or recurrence but had been treated for early-stage breast cancer, often receiving tamoxifen or aromatase inhibitors (AIs) as part of their post-cancer endocrine therapy.
Most important findings
The systematic review found that none of the included studies specifically assessed breast cancer recurrence, a critical factor for these patients. However, among the studies observing for serious adverse effects, no increased incidence of breast cancer recurrence was reported. Additionally, studies did not observe a persistent or significant rise in serum estrogen levels following the use of vaginal estrogen products or DHEA gel. The reviewed RCTs demonstrated that while vaginal estrogen may cause transient elevations in estrogen levels, these levels did not remain elevated over time, minimizing the risk of systemic absorption that could impact breast cancer recurrence. One study found transient estrogen rises in serum levels, but no significant long-term effects were noted. The review highlighted the need for larger RCTs with longer follow-up periods to better assess the potential risks of these therapies in breast cancer survivors.
Key implications
The findings suggest that vaginal estrogen and DHEA gel may be viable options for managing genitourinary menopausal symptoms in breast cancer survivors, as long as serum estrogen levels do not rise significantly or persistently. These therapies appear to be relatively safe with regard to breast cancer recurrence, based on current evidence, although more robust clinical trials with longer follow-up are needed. Given the complex relationship between hormonal treatments and cancer recurrence risk, clinicians should consider these findings carefully, especially in patients undergoing aromatase inhibitor therapy. While the review supports the use of vaginal estrogen as a second-line treatment for severe genitourinary symptoms in breast cancer survivors, it calls for more comprehensive trials to provide clearer evidence on long-term safety.
Role of menopausal hormone therapy in the prevention of postmenopausal osteoporosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) is one of the most effective treatments for women experiencing the symptoms of menopause, particularly vasomotor symptoms such as hot flashes and night sweats. But its benefits go beyond just symptom management. HRT can also play a key role in improving vaginal health by alleviating dryness and discomfort, which are common complaints among women in menopause. Additionally, it helps prevent bone loss, significantly reducing the risk of osteoporosis and fractures, which are more common after menopause. Despite its many benefits, HRT is not one-size-fits-all; it’s essential to tailor treatment based on individual health profiles, taking into account the risks like breast cancer, blood clots, and heart disease that come with prolonged use.
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The review shows that menopausal hormone therapy osteoporosis prevention lowers fractures when started near menopause, favors transdermal routes for safety, and maps RANKL–OPG and cytokine shifts with clear microbiome relevance despite no direct microbiota data.
What was reviewed?
This review explains how menopausal hormone therapy for osteoporosis prevention works, which women benefit most, and how dose and route affect safety. The authors summarize evidence that systemic estrogen prevents postmenopausal bone loss and lowers fractures, while risks vary by age, time since menopause, and oral versus transdermal delivery. They describe how estrogen restrains osteoclast activity through the RANKL–OPG axis and reduces inflammatory cytokines that drive bone resorption. They note that benefits often fade after stopping therapy, and that decisions must weigh fracture reduction against rare vascular and breast risks.
Who was reviewed?
The guidance focuses on peri- and early postmenopausal women with vasomotor symptoms who are under 60 years or within 10 years of menopause and have low baseline risks for cardiovascular disease, stroke, thromboembolism, and breast cancer. It also covers women with premature ovarian insufficiency who need longer replacement and women after hysterectomy who can use estrogen alone. The review includes data from large randomized trials and cohort studies, such as Women’s Health Initiative analyses, and it addresses women who use oral or transdermal estradiol with or without a progestogen, as well as users of tibolone or tissue-selective estrogen complexes. The paper emphasizes that fracture reduction appears across baseline bone mineral density strata and progestogen use, while persistence of benefit after discontinuation remains uncertain.
Most important findings
The evidence shows that menopausal hormone therapy increases bone mineral density and reduces hip, vertebral, and other osteoporotic fractures in average-risk postmenopausal women, with a hip fracture reduction of around one-third in a major trial using conjugated equine estrogens plus medroxyprogesterone acetate. Transdermal estradiol avoids first-pass hepatic effects and does not raise venous thromboembolism and stroke risk to the same degree as oral estrogen, which supports transdermal use in women with vascular or metabolic risk. Estrogen restrains osteoclastogenesis by increasing osteoprotegerin and lowering RANKL signaling and by dampening IL-1, IL-6, and TNF activity; these immune shifts align with lower bone resorption and suggest indirect ties to gut microbiome–immune crosstalk, although the review reports no microbial taxa. Bone loss resumes after stopping therapy, yet prior users can retain a higher bone mineral density for some years; the fracture risk benefit may not persist. Lower-dose oral and transdermal regimens improve bone mineral density, but definitive fracture outcomes remain limited. Calcium and vitamin D with hormone therapy further lowers hip fractures versus either alone.
Key implications
Clinicians should consider menopausal hormone therapy for symptomatic women who are younger than 60 years or within 10 years of menopause and who have low baseline vascular and breast risks, with transdermal estradiol preferred when thrombotic risk exists. You should add a progestogen for women with a uterus to protect the endometrium and tailor the dose and route to symptoms and risk. You should not use menopausal hormone therapy as first-line primary prevention in older, asymptomatic women more than a decade past menopause. You should explain that fracture protection wanes after stopping and plan a long-term bone strategy. Because the review maps cytokine and RANKL–OPG shifts, teams building a microbiome signatures database can flag these immune changes as mechanistic links between estrogen status and bone, while noting that this review does not profile microbes.
Rethinking Menopausal Hormone Therapy: For Whom, What, When and How long?
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
•
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) is one of the most effective treatments for women experiencing the symptoms of menopause, particularly vasomotor symptoms such as hot flashes and night sweats. But its benefits go beyond just symptom management. HRT can also play a key role in improving vaginal health by alleviating dryness and discomfort, which are common complaints among women in menopause. Additionally, it helps prevent bone loss, significantly reducing the risk of osteoporosis and fractures, which are more common after menopause. Despite its many benefits, HRT is not one-size-fits-all; it’s essential to tailor treatment based on individual health profiles, taking into account the risks like breast cancer, blood clots, and heart disease that come with prolonged use.
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This review offers updated guidance on the use of menopausal hormone therapy, highlighting its benefits when started early, particularly for women with low cardiovascular risk. It stresses the importance of individualized care and decision-making when considering HT for managing menopausal symptoms.
What was studied?
The review explores the use of menopausal hormone therapy (HT) with a focus on its impact on cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk. It discusses the timing and formulation of HT, examining how these factors influence the safety and efficacy of HT in managing menopausal symptoms such as vasomotor symptoms (VMS). The study includes a thorough examination of evidence from key clinical trials, such as the Women's Health Initiative (WHI), and provides updated guidelines for the use of HT in symptomatic postmenopausal women, particularly those with varying levels of cardiovascular risk.
Who was studied?
The review primarily focuses on postmenopausal women, particularly those experiencing VMS, which include symptoms like hot flashes and night sweats. It also considers women with different levels of cardiovascular risk, including those with low CVD risk, those with established heart disease, and those with comorbid conditions such as obesity, diabetes, hypertension, and dyslipidemia. These women were included in clinical studies that assessed the effects of HT on cardiovascular health and menopausal symptoms.
Most important findings
The study found that HT is highly effective for managing menopausal symptoms, particularly VMS. However, its safety and efficacy are influenced by the timing of initiation and the method of administration. Starting HT early in menopause, particularly before the age of 60 or within 10 years of menopause, appears to have a protective effect on cardiovascular health, reducing risks compared to starting it later. Transdermal HT, which is delivered through the skin, is shown to be safer than oral HT in reducing the risk of venous thromboembolism (VTE) and improving lipid profiles. The benefits of HT on cardiovascular risk are less evident for women who start HT more than 10 years after menopause, and they may face an increased risk of stroke.
Key implications
The findings suggest that HT can be a safe and effective treatment for menopausal symptoms when used in the right population. Early initiation of HT, particularly using transdermal formulations, is crucial for maximizing its benefits and minimizing risks. The review emphasizes the importance of individualized care for menopausal women, particularly those with existing cardiovascular risk factors, and advocates for shared decision-making between clinicians and patients to weigh the potential benefits and risks of HT.
Risks, Benefits, and Treatment Modalities of Menopausal Hormone Therapy: Current Concepts
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
•
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) is one of the most effective treatments for women experiencing the symptoms of menopause, particularly vasomotor symptoms such as hot flashes and night sweats. But its benefits go beyond just symptom management. HRT can also play a key role in improving vaginal health by alleviating dryness and discomfort, which are common complaints among women in menopause. Additionally, it helps prevent bone loss, significantly reducing the risk of osteoporosis and fractures, which are more common after menopause. Despite its many benefits, HRT is not one-size-fits-all; it’s essential to tailor treatment based on individual health profiles, taking into account the risks like breast cancer, blood clots, and heart disease that come with prolonged use.
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The study emphasizes the risks and benefits of menopausal hormone therapy in managing vasomotor symptoms, osteoporosis, and cardiovascular health. It highlights the importance of timing, formulation, and route of administration in optimizing therapy for individual patients.
What was studied?
The study reviewed menopausal hormone therapy (MHT), focusing on the risks, benefits, and treatment modalities related to managing menopausal symptoms like vasomotor symptoms (VMS) and osteoporosis. It evaluated different formulations, routes of administration, and the clinical impact of MHT on cardiovascular health, bone health, and the risk of conditions like breast cancer. The review highlighted how MHT's safety and efficacy vary depending on timing, formulation, and patient health status, particularly in relation to the onset of menopause.
Who was studied?
The research examined women undergoing menopause, particularly those who are experiencing vasomotor symptoms, such as hot flashes and night sweats. The study included women within 10 years of menopause and those under 60 years of age, as this group tends to experience the most favorable outcomes with MHT. It also considered women with specific risks, including those with obesity, hypertension, or cardiovascular concerns, and assessed their response to both estrogen-only and combined estrogen-progestogen therapy. In addition, the study touched on the effects of MHT in older women and in those with a history of breast cancer or other estrogen-sensitive conditions.
Most important findings
The study found that MHT remains the most effective treatment for vasomotor symptoms, with significant improvements in the frequency and severity of hot flashes and night sweats. The review highlighted that early initiation of MHT, particularly within 10 years of menopause, has a favorable impact on cardiovascular health and bone health. The timing hypothesis suggests that initiating MHT closer to menopause may help reduce the risk of coronary artery disease and improve lipid profiles. The risks associated with MHT, including cardiovascular events and breast cancer, tend to increase with age and the duration of hormone use. Notably, transdermal estrogen was found to have a lower risk of venous thromboembolism and stroke compared to oral forms. For women with an intact uterus, progestogen therapy is necessary to prevent endometrial hyperplasia and cancer. The review also examined vaginal estrogen for genitourinary symptoms and found that it is effective for treating vaginal dryness and discomfort, with minimal systemic absorption. The overall benefit-risk profile of MHT is most favorable when it is used early in menopause and for women without contraindications such as a history of estrogen-sensitive cancers.
Key implications
Clinicians should tailor MHT based on the patient's age, timing since menopause, and risk profile. Transdermal estrogen is preferred for women with cardiovascular risks as it avoids first-pass metabolism, reducing the risk of thrombotic events. Progestogen should be added to estrogen therapy in women with a uterus to prevent endometrial cancer. Non-hormonal treatments are an option for women who cannot use hormones or prefer alternatives, and these may include medications like SSRIs/SNRIs and gabapentinoids. Vaginal estrogen remains the most effective treatment for genitourinary symptoms. For women under 60 or within 10 years of menopause, MHT provides substantial benefits in managing symptoms and preventing osteoporosis, while minimizing risks when used appropriately. The clinical decision to start, continue, or discontinue MHT should involve shared decision-making between the clinician and patient, incorporating lifestyle changes and regular monitoring for cardiovascular health and breast cancer risk.
Vasomotor Symptoms During Menopause: A Practical Guide on Current Treatments and Future Perspectives
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
•
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) is one of the most effective treatments for women experiencing the symptoms of menopause, particularly vasomotor symptoms such as hot flashes and night sweats. But its benefits go beyond just symptom management. HRT can also play a key role in improving vaginal health by alleviating dryness and discomfort, which are common complaints among women in menopause. Additionally, it helps prevent bone loss, significantly reducing the risk of osteoporosis and fractures, which are more common after menopause. Despite its many benefits, HRT is not one-size-fits-all; it’s essential to tailor treatment based on individual health profiles, taking into account the risks like breast cancer, blood clots, and heart disease that come with prolonged use.
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The review defines menopause vasomotor symptoms treatment and microbiome relevance, favors timely hormone therapy and transdermal routes, details effective nonhormone options, and highlights neurokinin antagonists for fast relief while separating vasomotor and genitourinary care for microbiome-aware practice.
What was reviewed?
This review explains menopause vasomotor symptoms treatment by summarizing pathophysiology, first-line hormone therapy, effective nonhormone options, and emerging agents. It describes how estrogen withdrawal narrows the hypothalamic thermoregulatory neutral zone through KNDy neuron signaling and how this neurobiology supports both hormone therapy and neurokinin receptor antagonists. It details the efficacy of systemic menopausal hormone therapy for hot flashes and night sweats, the importance of timing near menopause, and the risk differences by route and progestogen choice. In addition, it outlines practical prescribing, including when to choose transdermal estradiol, how to pair progestogen for endometrial protection, and how to handle bleeding and contraindications.
Who was reviewed?
The review focuses on midlife women with bothersome vasomotor symptoms, particularly those under 60 years of age or within 10 years of their final menstrual period. It addresses women with cardiometabolic risks, venous thromboembolism risks, obesity, diabetes, or prior coronary disease, and it highlights when transdermal routes and lower doses fit better. It also considers women with an intact uterus who require a progestogen with systemic estrogen, women after hysterectomy who may use estrogen alone, women with a history of breast cancer who should avoid systemic hormone therapy, and diverse groups who prefer or need nonhormone options such as SSRIs/SNRIs, gabapentin, oxybutynin, clonidine, or mind-body therapies. The review includes evidence that informs care for breast cancer survivors on tamoxifen, in whom paroxetine can interact, while venlafaxine does not.
Most important findings
Hormone therapy remains the most effective treatment for vasomotor symptoms and can reduce frequency and severity by about 90%, with the benefit greatest when initiated before age 60 or within 10 years of menopause. Transdermal estradiol limits first-pass hepatic effects and does not raise venous thromboembolism or ischemic stroke risk to the same degree as oral estrogen, which makes it preferable in women with vascular or metabolic risk. Progestogen choice matters for safety, with micronized progesterone or dydrogesterone showing more favorable thrombosis and breast profiles than several synthetic agents. Low-dose vaginal estrogen treats genitourinary syndrome of menopause but does not treat vasomotor symptoms, which underscores a separation between VMS control and local vaginal care that has downstream microbiome implications, even though this review presents no taxa.
Nonhormone options help many women who avoid or cannot use hormones. Low-dose paroxetine 7.5 mg reduces vasomotor symptom frequency and improves sleep but can inhibit CYP2D6 and interact with tamoxifen, while venlafaxine 75 mg can reduce vasomotor symptoms comparably to low-dose estradiol and lacks that interaction. Gabapentin 900 mg/day reduces hot flash frequency and can help sleep and migraine comorbidity, while oxybutynin improves symptoms but can cause anticholinergic effects, especially in older women. Clonidine provides a modest benefit with frequent side effects. Stellate ganglion block can reduce symptom severity in selected women. Novel neurokinin pathway agents such as fezolinetant produce rapid relief within days, which aligns with KNDy neuron biology and offers a hormone-free path. Estetrol appears promising but remains under study for vasomotor use.
Key implications
Clinicians should start vasomotor symptom therapy near menopause when possible, prefer transdermal estradiol in higher-risk women, and pair estrogen with an appropriate progestogen when the uterus is intact. Clinicians should separate vasomotor care from genitourinary care and recognize that local vaginal estrogen targets genitourinary symptoms rather than vasomotor symptoms, which allows teams to track vaginal outcomes and microbiome-sensitive endpoints in parallel while using systemic or neurokinin-based strategies for hot flashes. This approach aligns symptom relief with safety and prepares a framework to link route, regimen, and mucosal outcomes in a microbiome database, even though the review itself reports no microbial profiling.
Menopausal hormone therapy and menopausal symptoms
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
•
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) is one of the most effective treatments for women experiencing the symptoms of menopause, particularly vasomotor symptoms such as hot flashes and night sweats. But its benefits go beyond just symptom management. HRT can also play a key role in improving vaginal health by alleviating dryness and discomfort, which are common complaints among women in menopause. Additionally, it helps prevent bone loss, significantly reducing the risk of osteoporosis and fractures, which are more common after menopause. Despite its many benefits, HRT is not one-size-fits-all; it’s essential to tailor treatment based on individual health profiles, taking into account the risks like breast cancer, blood clots, and heart disease that come with prolonged use.
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This review emphasizes the benefits and risks of MHT in managing menopause symptoms, including the prevention of long-term conditions. It advocates for individualized treatment plans, especially focusing on the timing of initiation.
What was studied?
The study explored the role of Menopausal Hormone Therapy (MHT) in managing symptoms of menopause, focusing on the use of estrogen and progestogen-based therapies. Specifically, it evaluated the therapeutic effects, the optimization of treatment methods for alleviating symptoms like vasomotor symptoms, and the prevention of long-term health risks such as osteoporosis, heart disease, and colorectal cancer.
Who was studied?
The research involved postmenopausal women, with a particular focus on women transitioning through menopause, both in early and late stages. The subjects were examined for risk factors like obesity, smoking, hypertension, and metabolic disorders, which can influence the outcomes of MHT. A significant number of these participants were in their late 50s and early 60s.
Most important findings
The study's findings revealed the effectiveness of MHT in the management of menopausal symptoms, especially vasomotor symptoms like hot flashes and night sweats. It was also found that MHT significantly reduces the risks of osteoporosis and colorectal cancer. However, the study highlighted the complexities of MHT use, particularly the varying risks associated with the timing of therapy initiation and the types of hormone preparations used. For example, estrogen-only therapy was linked to a reduced risk of breast cancer in certain groups, while combined estrogen-progestogen therapy showed increased risks of coronary heart disease and breast cancer, particularly when started later in life. The study also underscored that personalized MHT approaches, considering individual risk factors and timing, lead to more favorable outcomes.
Key implications
The primary implication is that while MHT offers significant benefits in managing menopausal symptoms and preventing long-term diseases, its risks must be carefully managed. Starting MHT within the “window of opportunity” during perimenopause or early postmenopause reduces cardiovascular and metabolic risks. However, therapy initiation after 60 years or more than 10 years postmenopause may increase the likelihood of adverse outcomes, including cardiovascular events and breast cancer. Hence, individualized treatment plans, based on patient health profiles and risks, are essential for optimizing MHT use.
Optimizing menopausal hormone therapy: For treatment and prevention, menstrual regulation, and reduction of possible risks
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) is one of the most effective treatments for women experiencing the symptoms of menopause, particularly vasomotor symptoms such as hot flashes and night sweats. But its benefits go beyond just symptom management. HRT can also play a key role in improving vaginal health by alleviating dryness and discomfort, which are common complaints among women in menopause. Additionally, it helps prevent bone loss, significantly reducing the risk of osteoporosis and fractures, which are more common after menopause. Despite its many benefits, HRT is not one-size-fits-all; it’s essential to tailor treatment based on individual health profiles, taking into account the risks like breast cancer, blood clots, and heart disease that come with prolonged use.
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This review links menopausal hormone therapy and vaginal microbiome care to safer symptom relief, bleeding control, and prevention. It favors transdermal estradiol and physiologic progestogens, and it highlights estriol plus lactobacilli for urogenital symptoms with minimal systemic exposure.
What was reviewed?
This review explains how menopausal hormone therapy and vaginal microbiome considerations shape modern care for peri- and postmenopausal symptoms, bleeding control, and long-term prevention. The article synthesizes evidence on estrogen and progestogen choices, timing of therapy, and routes of delivery. It highlights that all systemic estrogens relieve vasomotor and genitourinary symptoms to a similar degree, while the route and the paired progestogen drive differences in safety. The authors argue for transdermal estradiol to lower clot risk and for physiologic progesterone or dydrogesterone to limit breast effects. They also discuss estriol for local urogenital symptoms and note an estriol-plus-lactobacilli option that supports a healthy vaginal flora with very low systemic uptake. They frame sequential versus continuous combined regimens as tools to regulate bleeding and protect the endometrium, and they set the “window of opportunity” for starting therapy to enhance cardiometabolic benefit.
Who was reviewed?
The review focuses on symptomatic peri- and postmenopausal women, including those with high thrombotic or cardiovascular risk, and on younger women with premature ovarian insufficiency or surgical menopause who need longer replacement. It also considers women with intact uteri who require progestogen for endometrial protection and those who prefer local therapy for genitourinary syndrome of menopause. The discussion includes patients who need androgenic or antiandrogenic partial effects from chosen progestogens, and women who benefit from a levonorgestrel intrauterine device with transdermal estradiol when contraception and endometrial control matter.
Most important findings
The authors report that estrogen relieves symptoms across preparations, but delivery route changes risk. Transdermal estradiol can lower venous thromboembolism and stroke risk compared with oral forms, which supports it for women with clot or metabolic risk. The progestogen partner shapes breast outcomes; physiologic progesterone and dydrogesterone appear more breast-neutral than several synthetic agents and may lower risk signals seen in older trials that used medroxyprogesterone acetate. The paper links regimen choice to bleeding control: sequential regimens induce predictable withdrawal bleeding and suit perimenopause or early postmenopause, while continuous combined regimens aim for amenorrhea in established postmenopause. For endometrial protection, at least 10–14 days of a progestogen per cycle in sequential therapy, or daily progestogen in continuous therapy, remains essential.
Key implications
Clinicians can improve safety by starting therapy within the first 6–10 years after menopause and by favoring transdermal estradiol when thrombotic or metabolic risk is present. Pair estradiol with progesterone or dydrogesterone to maintain breast and vascular neutrality while protecting the endometrium. Use sequential regimens in the late reproductive transition and early postmenopause to manage bleeding, and move to continuous combined regimens for stable amenorrhea later. For genitourinary syndrome of menopause, consider estriol, and when suitable, use estriol with lactobacilli to support a lactobacillus-dominant vaginal microbiome at a very low estriol dose and with minimal systemic exposure. These points offer clear entries for a microbiome signatures database around lactobacillus-linked symptom relief and dose-sparing local therapy.
Progesterone: The ultimate endometrial tumor suppressor
February 12, 2026
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Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) is one of the most effective treatments for women experiencing the symptoms of menopause, particularly vasomotor symptoms such as hot flashes and night sweats. But its benefits go beyond just symptom management. HRT can also play a key role in improving vaginal health by alleviating dryness and discomfort, which are common complaints among women in menopause. Additionally, it helps prevent bone loss, significantly reducing the risk of osteoporosis and fractures, which are more common after menopause. Despite its many benefits, HRT is not one-size-fits-all; it’s essential to tailor treatment based on individual health profiles, taking into account the risks like breast cancer, blood clots, and heart disease that come with prolonged use.
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Estrogen
Estrogen
Estrogen is a steroid hormone primarily found in women, crucial for reproductive health, secondary sexual characteristics, and various physiological processes. It regulates menstrual cycles, supports pregnancy, and influences bone density and cardiovascular health. Dysregulation of estrogen levels can lead to various disorders and health complications.
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The review defines progesterone endometrial tumor suppressor mechanisms, links receptor biology to therapy response, and outlines immune and barrier changes with clear microbiome relevance despite no direct taxa reporting.
What was reviewed?
This review explains how progesterone endometrial tumor suppressor pathways act through progesterone receptors to restrain estrogen-driven growth, drive differentiation, and shape treatment response in endometrial disease. The authors map the roles of the two receptor isoforms, PRA and PRB, describe crosstalk with estrogen signaling, and outline gene networks that control cell cycle arrest, apoptosis, invasion, and immune tone. They summarize why loss of receptor expression or function limits progestin therapy in advanced cancer and show how epigenetic silencing, miRNA control, SUMOylation, and proteasomal degradation can reduce receptor activity. The review does not report microbiome profiling, yet its immune and barrier findings carry clear microbiome relevance because they alter mucosal defenses that guide microbial ecology in the uterus.
Who was reviewed?
The review centers on women with endometrial hyperplasia, type I endometrioid carcinoma, and aggressive type II tumors, with emphasis on how progesterone receptor status predicts response to therapy. It also draws on preclinical work in human endometrial cancer cell lines, xenografts, and multiple mouse and rat models that clarify receptor biology and downstream signaling. Clinical observations include higher response to progestins in PR-rich tumors and brief benefit in recurrent disease, which aligns with gradual receptor loss under treatment pressure. These populations reflect typical clinic cohorts in whom hormonal therapy can reverse hyperplasia, treat early disease in fertility-sparing settings, and complement targeted strategies when tumors keep or regain receptor expression.
Most important findings
Estrogen promotes epithelial proliferation via ER-driven growth signals, including EGF/EGFR, IGF-1, and proto-oncogenes such as c-fos and c-myc, while non-genomic ER activity engages PI3K/Akt. Progesterone counters these inputs through PR-dependent transcription that decreases proliferation, invasion, and inflammation and that induces differentiation and apoptosis. PRB usually drives stronger transcription; PRA can blunt ER action. Progesterone suppresses AP-1 and NF-κB activity, upregulates cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors p21 and p27, limits c-jun and cyclin D1 promoter activity, and induces Wnt pathway brakes such as DKK1 and FOXO1. Progestin therapy regresses hyperplasia in most cases and treats a subset of primary tumors, yet responses in recurrent disease remain modest. Mechanisms of reduced sensitivity include PRB promoter hypermethylation, miRNA-mediated downregulation, SUMOylation that restrains PR activity, and ligand-triggered MAPK phosphorylation that targets PR for proteasomal degradation.
Key implications
Clinicians can expect the strongest and most durable hormonal responses in PR-expressing, well-differentiated disease and in hyperplasia. You should pair pathology and receptor status with therapy choice, consider fertility-sparing progestin regimens for eligible patients, and anticipate diminishing benefit as receptor expression falls. You should also watch for strategies that restore or enhance PR function, including the use of tamoxifen to induce receptor expression and potential epigenetic approaches to reverse PRB promoter methylation. Because PR signaling quiets AP-1 and NF-κB and strengthens epithelial control of the microenvironment, integration of receptor status with endometrial microbiome sampling could uncover reproducible immune-microbiome signatures for risk stratification and for tracking response during progestin therapy, even though this review offers no direct microbial data.
Treatment of Symptoms of the Menopause: An Endocrine Society Clinical Practice Guideline
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
•
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) is one of the most effective treatments for women experiencing the symptoms of menopause, particularly vasomotor symptoms such as hot flashes and night sweats. But its benefits go beyond just symptom management. HRT can also play a key role in improving vaginal health by alleviating dryness and discomfort, which are common complaints among women in menopause. Additionally, it helps prevent bone loss, significantly reducing the risk of osteoporosis and fractures, which are more common after menopause. Despite its many benefits, HRT is not one-size-fits-all; it’s essential to tailor treatment based on individual health profiles, taking into account the risks like breast cancer, blood clots, and heart disease that come with prolonged use.
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This guideline on menopausal symptom treatment prioritizes early initiation of hormone therapy, safe routes like transdermal estradiol, and vaginal care for genitourinary symptoms. It promotes a tailored approach considering cardiovascular and breast cancer risks.
What was studied?
This guideline reviews the treatment of menopausal symptoms, focusing on vasomotor symptoms (VMS) such as hot flashes and night sweats, as well as the genitourinary syndrome of menopause (GSM). The paper provides recommendations on managing these symptoms through menopausal hormone therapy (MHT) and non-hormonal treatments. It emphasizes the importance of individualizing therapy based on patient-specific risks and preferences, including the choice between oral, transdermal, and vaginal estrogen routes. The guideline also discusses the safety and efficacy of various therapies, including estrogen-progestogen combinations, and addresses issues like cardiovascular risk, venous thromboembolism, and breast cancer risk.
Who was studied?
The guideline focuses on postmenopausal women, specifically those who are experiencing troublesome vasomotor symptoms, genitourinary issues, and other climacteric symptoms. It addresses women under 60 years or within 10 years of menopause who are generally healthy but may have specific risks, such as cardiovascular concerns or breast cancer history. The document also includes considerations for women with a uterus who need progestogen therapy alongside estrogen and those with a history of breast cancer who need alternative, non-hormonal treatments. The focus is on personalizing treatment based on the severity of symptoms, health status, and patient preference.
Most important findings
The guideline emphasizes that menopausal hormone therapy (MHT) is the most effective treatment for vasomotor symptoms, particularly when initiated early (before age 60 or within 10 years of menopause). Estrogen therapy (ET) significantly reduces hot flashes and night sweats, while estrogen-progestogen therapy (EPT) is recommended for women with a uterus to protect the endometrium. The guideline favors transdermal estrogen over oral forms for women with cardiovascular risks due to lower thrombotic risks. Non-hormonal therapies, such as SSRIs, SNRIs, gabapentin, and clonidine, are recommended for women who cannot use hormones or prefer alternatives. Vaginal estrogen, including low-dose preparations, is recommended for genitourinary symptoms like vaginal dryness and dyspareunia, with benefits that likely extend to vaginal microbiome health, though microbial data is not provided in the guideline. The use of vaginal moisturizers and lubricants is also suggested for symptom relief in women not opting for hormone therapy. The paper underscores the need for regular screening for breast cancer and cardiovascular risks before initiating MHT and stresses that shared decision-making is crucial to managing menopausal symptoms effectively.
Key implications
Clinicians should initiate MHT for vasomotor symptom relief in women under 60 or within 10 years of menopause, taking into account individual risk factors like cardiovascular health and breast cancer risk. Transdermal estradiol should be prioritized for women with higher cardiovascular risks. For women with an intact uterus, a progestogen must be used to protect the endometrium. Non-hormonal alternatives should be considered for those who prefer not to use hormones or have contraindications. Clinicians should also prioritize vaginal estrogen for women suffering from genitourinary symptoms and consider vaginal lubricants and moisturizers as adjunctive treatments. While the guideline does not focus on the microbiome, the vaginal health benefits of estrogen may support a more favorable vaginal microbiome, emphasizing the importance of managing both symptoms and vaginal ecosystem health concurrently. These considerations should be incorporated into personalized treatment plans for optimal outcomes.
The 2020 Menopausal Hormone Therapy Guidelines
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
•
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) is one of the most effective treatments for women experiencing the symptoms of menopause, particularly vasomotor symptoms such as hot flashes and night sweats. But its benefits go beyond just symptom management. HRT can also play a key role in improving vaginal health by alleviating dryness and discomfort, which are common complaints among women in menopause. Additionally, it helps prevent bone loss, significantly reducing the risk of osteoporosis and fractures, which are more common after menopause. Despite its many benefits, HRT is not one-size-fits-all; it’s essential to tailor treatment based on individual health profiles, taking into account the risks like breast cancer, blood clots, and heart disease that come with prolonged use.
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The guideline links menopausal hormone therapy guidelines and vaginal microbiome care to safer symptom control, better GSM outcomes, and lower UTI risk through local estrogen, with timing and route choices that manage vascular and endometrial risk.
What was reviewed?
This guideline review explains how menopausal hormone therapy guidelines and vaginal microbiome evidence guide modern care across symptoms, prevention, and safety. The document defines baseline evaluation, sets clear indications and contraindications, and compares routes, doses, and combinations. It favors individualized therapy by symptom burden and risk, supports transdermal estradiol to limit thrombotic and metabolic effects, and links timing of initiation to cardiovascular outcomes. It also details care for genitourinary syndrome of menopause, notes that low-dose vaginal estrogen restores flora and acidity with minimal systemic absorption, and shows that systemic estrogen does not prevent recurrent urinary tract infections. The guidance stresses shared decisions, regular review, and careful oncologic input when breast cancer history or aromatase inhibitors are present.
Who was reviewed?
The guideline targets peri- and postmenopausal women with vasomotor symptoms, sleep and mood complaints, and genitourinary syndrome of menopause, including patients who need contraception or menstrual control during the transition. It covers women at higher risk of venous thromboembolism, stroke, or cardiometabolic disease who may benefit from transdermal estradiol, and women with premature ovarian insufficiency who need longer replacement. It also addresses women with prior breast cancer who require non-estrogen first-line options and those with recurrent UTIs who need local therapy that restores the vaginal ecosystem rather than systemic estrogen.
Most important findings
The guideline confirms that systemic menopausal hormone therapy remains the most effective treatment for vasomotor symptoms and improves menopause-specific and global quality of life. It supports the “window of opportunity” in which starting therapy before age 60 or within 10 years of menopause lowers all-cause and cardiovascular mortality, while later starts raise vascular risk. It advises that stroke and venous thromboembolism risks rise with age and oral routes, and it therefore prefers transdermal estradiol or lower doses when risk accumulates, with absolute stroke risk in younger starters remaining very low. For the endometrium, the guidance requires adequate progestogen exposure in women with a uterus and allows levonorgestrel IUS with systemic estrogen to control bleeding and protect the lining during the transition.
In GSM, the guideline states that topical vaginal estrogen (cream, tablet, ring) restores lactobacillus-dominant flora, increases epithelial maturation, and lowers vaginal pH, which eases dryness, dyspareunia, urgency, and recurrent UTIs. It notes minimal systemic absorption with low-dose vaginal estrogen but urges oncologist input for women on aromatase inhibitors. Additionally, It adds that systemic estrogen does not prevent recurrent UTIs, while local estrogen does, and it supports DHEA and ospemifene when estrogen is not suitable. It also observes that moisturizers and lubricants help symptoms yet do not rebuild the internal environment, which reinforces a microbiome-directed role for local estrogen. These points provide concrete microbiome-linked signatures: lactobacillus recovery with local estrogen, sustained acidic pH, and reduced UTI risk without systemic exposure.
Key implications
Clinicians should match route and regimen to risk, favor transdermal estradiol in women with vascular or metabolic risk, and ensure consistent endometrial protection with progestogen or levonorgestrel IUS. You should start therapy near menopause for vascular safety and avoid starting late for primary prevention alone. In GSM and recurrent UTIs, you should prioritize local estrogen to restore a lactobacillus-dominant vaginal microbiome, reserve systemic estrogen for broader symptoms, and consider DHEA or ospemifene when estrogen is unsuitable. You should involve oncology for women on aromatase inhibitors, monitor bleeding patterns, and reassess dose and route regularly. These steps align symptom relief, safety, and vaginal microbiome health in daily care.
Menopausal hormone therapy increases the risk of gallstones: Health Insurance Database in South Korea (HISK)-based cohort study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) is one of the most effective treatments for women experiencing the symptoms of menopause, particularly vasomotor symptoms such as hot flashes and night sweats. But its benefits go beyond just symptom management. HRT can also play a key role in improving vaginal health by alleviating dryness and discomfort, which are common complaints among women in menopause. Additionally, it helps prevent bone loss, significantly reducing the risk of osteoporosis and fractures, which are more common after menopause. Despite its many benefits, HRT is not one-size-fits-all; it’s essential to tailor treatment based on individual health profiles, taking into account the risks like breast cancer, blood clots, and heart disease that come with prolonged use.
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This study shows that menopausal hormone therapy increases the risk of gallstones, especially with topical estrogen and tibolone. However, no increased risk for gallbladder cancer was found. These findings underscore the need for caution in prescribing hormone therapy, particularly for women with higher gallstone risk factors.
What was studied?
The study examined whether menopausal hormone therapy (MHT) increases the risk of developing gallstones and gallbladder cancer. It utilized data from the Korea National Health Insurance Corporation between 2002 and 2019. Participants were divided into MHT and non-MHT groups, and MHT users were further subdivided based on the type of hormone therapy they received, including tibolone, combined estrogen plus progestin, oral estrogen alone, and topical estrogen. The primary outcomes measured were the incidence of gallstones and gallbladder cancer in these groups.
Who was studied?
The study included over 1.3 million women, with 381,711 women using MHT and 1,004,034 women in the non-MHT group. Participants were aged 40 years or older and had undergone menopause by the time of inclusion. Women who had a history of gallbladder disease, cancer, or who had undergone a cholecystectomy were excluded from the analysis. The study followed these women for an average period of 11 to 13 years to determine the risk of gallstones and gallbladder cancer associated with different types of MHT.
Most important findings
The study found that all types of MHT, including tibolone, increased the risk of gallstones, with hazard ratios (HR) ranging from 1.146 to 1.602 for different hormone therapies. The highest risk was observed in the topical estrogen group (HR: 1.602). Tibolone, which had not been extensively studied in previous research, was also found to increase the risk of gallstones. No significant increase in the risk of gallbladder cancer was observed across any hormone therapy group. Furthermore, age, obesity, and smoking were significant factors that influenced the risk of gallstones, with higher risks observed in older women, those with a higher body mass index (BMI), and current smokers.
Key implications
The findings of this large-scale cohort study suggest that all types of MHT, including tibolone and various estrogen formulations, significantly increase the risk of gallstones. This highlights the importance of considering these risks when prescribing hormone therapy, particularly for women with risk factors such as obesity or older age. While the study did not find an increased risk of gallbladder cancer associated with MHT, the relationship between sex hormones and gallbladder cancer warrants further investigation. Clinicians should exercise caution when prescribing MHT, especially in women at higher risk for gallstones, and consider alternatives or closer monitoring for these patients.
Hormonal therapies and venous thrombosis: Considerations for prevention and management
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) is one of the most effective treatments for women experiencing the symptoms of menopause, particularly vasomotor symptoms such as hot flashes and night sweats. But its benefits go beyond just symptom management. HRT can also play a key role in improving vaginal health by alleviating dryness and discomfort, which are common complaints among women in menopause. Additionally, it helps prevent bone loss, significantly reducing the risk of osteoporosis and fractures, which are more common after menopause. Despite its many benefits, HRT is not one-size-fits-all; it’s essential to tailor treatment based on individual health profiles, taking into account the risks like breast cancer, blood clots, and heart disease that come with prolonged use.
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This review explores the thrombosis risks of hormonal therapies, comparing various estrogen formulations and progestins. It emphasizes the need for personalized treatment based on thrombophilic risk factors, highlighting the safer options such as transdermal estrogen and progestin-only therapies.
What was studied?
This study reviews the risk of venous thrombosis associated with various hormonal therapies, including those used for contraception, hormone replacement therapy (HRT), and gender transition. It explores the thrombogenic effects of estrogen-containing therapies and how different estrogen doses and formulations (such as oral, transdermal, and injectable) influence the likelihood of developing venous thromboembolism (VTE). The paper also discusses the impact of progestins when used in combination with estrogen, highlighting how various types of progestins, particularly third-generation progestins, contribute to thrombotic risk. In addition, the study considers patient-specific factors such as age, obesity, and genetic predispositions (e.g., Factor V Leiden mutation), which may modify the risk of thrombosis during hormonal therapy use.
Who was studied?
The review focuses on a broad group of individuals, including women using hormonal contraception, postmenopausal women on HRT, and transgender women undergoing gender-affirming hormone therapy. The study emphasizes the use of combined oral contraceptives (COCs), hormonal replacement therapies (both systemic and transdermal), and progestin-only contraceptives. It also covers the gender transition population, with particular attention to transgender women receiving estrogen therapy and the associated thrombotic risks. The study identifies individual risk factors such as age, family history of thrombosis, and the presence of inherited thrombophilias that increase susceptibility to thrombotic events when using hormonal therapies.
Most important findings
The study highlights key findings regarding venous thrombosis risk in users of hormonal therapies. It reveals that the risk of thrombosis increases with higher estrogen doses. For example, ethinyl estradiol (EE) in combined oral contraceptives has a significantly higher thrombosis risk compared to lower-dose formulations like estradiol valerate (E2V), which was shown to reduce VTE risk. Third-generation progestins (e.g., desogestrel and gestodene) are associated with an increased thrombosis risk compared to second-generation progestins like levonorgestrel. Transdermal estrogen has been found to carry a lower thrombosis risk than oral estrogen, likely due to its bypass of the liver and reduced effect on coagulation factors. Progestin-only contraceptives, such as the levonorgestrel intrauterine device (IUD), have no increased thrombosis risk, making them a safer option for women with a history of thrombosis or high thrombotic risk. The review also points to a higher risk of thrombosis in individuals with pre-existing conditions such as obesity and genetic thrombophilias, including Factor V Leiden.
Key implications
The primary implication of the study is that clinicians must carefully tailor hormonal therapy based on individual risk profiles, particularly for patients with a history of thrombosis or those at increased risk. The use of transdermal estrogen is recommended over oral estrogen for individuals at high risk of thrombosis, especially those with cardiovascular or coagulation disorders. For patients using combined oral contraceptives, the type of progestin should be considered, as third-generation progestins are associated with a higher risk of VTE. In transgender women, the use of oral estrogen should be approached with caution, especially in those with additional thrombophilic risk factors, and transdermal estrogen may be preferred. Progestin-only contraceptives and IUDs offer lower thrombosis risk and are optimal for women with a history of thrombosis or thrombophilia. The review also underscores the importance of patient counseling and shared decision-making when choosing hormonal therapies, taking into account factors such as age, body mass index (BMI), and genetic risks.
Remission of Endometriosis by Hyperbaric Oxygen Treatment in Rats
February 12, 2026
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Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT)
Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT)
Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT) involves breathing pure oxygen in a pressurized chamber, which increases the amount of oxygen dissolved in the blood and delivered to tissues.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This study demonstrates hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT) achieves complete remission of endometriotic lesions in a rat model by reducing hypoxia, inflammation, and TNF-α levels. While HBOT shows potential as a non-invasive therapy for endometriosis, further studies are needed to validate its impact on microbiome modulation.
What Was Studied?
This study, conducted by Aydin et al., investigated the effects of long-term hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT) on experimentally induced endometriosis in a rat model. The primary objective was to assess whether HBOT could lead to remission of endometriotic lesions and alleviate inflammation by modulating peritoneal cytokine levels, particularly tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α). The study evaluated the volume, histopathological changes, and proliferation markers (Ki-67) of endometriotic implants after six weeks of HBOT.
Who Was Studied?
The study was performed on 40 non-pregnant, female Wistar-Albino rats. After surgical induction of endometriosis using an autotransplantation technique, the rats were divided into two groups: one receiving HBOT (20 rats) and a control group (19 rats) without treatment. HBOT was administered for 2 hours daily at 2.5 atm for six weeks. Both groups underwent multiple laparotomies to evaluate lesion volume, histopathological scores, and cytokine levels before and after treatment.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study demonstrated that HBOT resulted in complete remission of endometriotic lesions in a rat model. Significant reductions were observed in lesion volume, histopathological scores, Ki-67 proliferation markers, and TNF-α levels in the peritoneal fluid of the HBOT-treated group compared to controls. Specifically, the mean lesion volume decreased by 29.5% (57.4 ± 12.5 mm³ in the HBOT group vs. 94.6 ± 17.2 mm³ in controls). TNF-α levels were significantly lower in the HBOT group (5.33 ± 1.02 pg/mL vs. 8.16 ± 1.76 pg/mL in controls). Reduced Ki-67 staining indicated diminished cellular proliferation within endometriotic lesions. The findings suggest that HBOT alleviates endometriosis-associated inflammation by suppressing NFκB-mediated pro-inflammatory pathways and reducing TNF-α levels, key drivers of inflammation and angiogenesis in endometriosis.
From a microbiome perspective, while the study did not directly assess microbial changes, the reduction in hypoxia and inflammation could indirectly modulate microbial communities. Hypoxia-driven dysbiosis, favoring facultative anaerobes like E. coli and GBS, is a known contributor to endometriosis pathogenesis. By restoring oxygen levels and dampening inflammation, HBOT may reduce the selective advantage for these pathogens, potentially rebalancing the peritoneal microbiome.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
The study positions HBOT as a potential non-invasive therapeutic strategy for endometriosis, with demonstrated efficacy in reducing lesion size and inflammation. By targeting hypoxia and pro-inflammatory cytokines, HBOT addresses two critical drivers of endometriosis pathophysiology. This has implications for both clinical management and microbiome research, suggesting that HBOT could indirectly modulate microbial dysbiosis in endometriosis. However, the absence of direct microbial analyses leaves a critical gap in validating HBOT as a microbiome-targeted intervention (MBTI). Further studies incorporating microbiome sequencing and metabolomics are essential to establish a direct link between HBOT and microbiome modulation.
The Effects of Toxic Heavy Metals Lead, Cadmium and Copper on the Epidemiology of Male and Female Infertility
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Infertility
Infertility
Infertility is the inability to conceive after 12 months of regular, unprotected sex. It affects both men and women and can be due to various physical, hormonal, or genetic factors. Treatments include medication, surgery, assisted reproductive technologies, and lifestyle changes.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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This review synthesizes evidence linking lead, cadmium, and copper exposure to male and female infertility, detailing mechanisms of reproductive toxicity, epidemiological patterns, and the potential role of microbiome alterations as mediators and biomarkers of reproductive risk.
What was reviewed?
This review comprehensively evaluated the effects of toxic heavy metals on the epidemiology of male and female infertility. The authors systematically searched and synthesized findings from articles published between 1982 and 2021 in databases such as PubMed, Google Scholar, Scopus, and others, focusing on the mechanistic and epidemiological associations between these metals and reproductive dysfunction. The review explores the multifaceted ways that heavy metal exposure, both environmental and occupational, influences reproductive health, including hormonal disruption, impaired gametogenesis, and direct damage to reproductive tissues. Special attention is given to the biochemical mechanisms by which these metals exert toxic effects, such as oxidative stress, enzyme inhibition, and endocrine disruption, all of which are highly relevant to clinicians concerned with environmental determinants of infertility.
Who was reviewed?
The review encompasses a broad range of human and animal studies, including epidemiological research on general populations and occupational groups, as well as controlled laboratory investigations in animal models. Human studies included both men and women from diverse geographic and occupational backgrounds, such as industrial workers, smokers, and populations with high environmental exposure. Animal research provided mechanistic insights, particularly regarding gamete quality, hormonal changes, and reproductive organ pathology following heavy metal exposure. Some studies included in the review also examined the reproductive health of non-human species to elucidate underlying biological processes and to support observed epidemiological trends in humans.
Most important findings
The review identifies strong associations between exposure to lead, cadmium, and copper and increased risk of infertility in both sexes. Cadmium, widely distributed in the environment, is linked to direct damage to the ovaries and testes, reduced sperm count, motility, and viability, as well as impaired oocyte maturation. It acts as a reproductive toxin by replacing zinc in enzymes and altering protein function, leading to oxidative stress and cytotoxicity. Lead exposure disrupts hormonal balance by interfering with calcium-mediated cellular activities and is associated with decreased sperm quality, impaired oocyte development, increased risk of miscarriage, and stunted fetal growth. Occupational and environmental exposures, such as working in lead mines or exposure to cigarette smoke, exacerbate these effects. Elevated copper levels, while copper is essential in trace amounts, are correlated with oxidative damage and sperm dysfunction at higher concentrations. The review highlights the impact of heavy metals on key microbiome-modulated processes (e.g., oxidative stress, inflammation) and notes that heavy metal exposure may alter the host's microbiome, which can further influence reproductive health outcomes.
Key implications
Clinicians should be aware of the significant impact that environmental and occupational exposures to lead, cadmium, and copper can have on reproductive health. The review supports incorporating environmental exposure histories into infertility assessments, particularly for patients with unexplained infertility or those with relevant occupational risks. The evidence also suggests that heavy metal-induced oxidative stress and endocrine disruption might be compounded or modulated by changes in the reproductive tract microbiome, indicating a potential avenue for future diagnostic and therapeutic interventions. Surveillance of heavy metal exposure, coupled with targeted interventions to reduce environmental risk, could improve fertility outcomes and inform public health strategies. Furthermore, the recognition of microbiome–heavy metal interactions opens the door to novel research on microbial biomarkers and microbiota-targeted therapies in infertility management.
Lactobacilli–lactoferrin interplay in Chlamydia trachomatis infection
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Infertility
Infertility
Infertility is the inability to conceive after 12 months of regular, unprotected sex. It affects both men and women and can be due to various physical, hormonal, or genetic factors. Treatments include medication, surgery, assisted reproductive technologies, and lifestyle changes.
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Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) is a complex interplay between pathogens, immune responses, and microbial communities. As research continues to uncover the microbiome's role in reproductive health, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as probiotics, prebiotics, and transplants are redefining how we prevent and treat PID. This page dives deep into these innovations, offering a glimpse into the future of personalized, biologically informed women’s healthcare.
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The study found a potent inhibitory effect against Chlamydia trachomatis infection using Lactobacillus brevis combined with lactoferrin, notably reducing bacterial adhesion, invasion, and inflammation. This indicates significant therapeutic potential in preventing chronic complications from genital infections.
What was studied?
This research study examined the interaction of two specific Lactobacillus strains (Lactobacillus brevis and Lactobacillus crispatus) and lactoferrin in the context of a genital infection caused by Chlamydia trachomatis. The researchers aimed to understand how lactobacilli and lactoferrin, individually and in combination, impact the infection process of C. trachomatis in cervical epithelial cells, specifically evaluating their effects on bacterial adhesion, invasion, intracellular replication, and the inflammatory response induced by infection.
Who was studied?
The study used an in vitro cell culture model involving human cervical epithelial HeLa cells. These cells were infected with Chlamydia trachomatis and exposed to either Lactobacillus brevis, Lactobacillus crispatus, bovine lactoferrin, or combinations thereof. This experimental setup simulated the genital environment, allowing the investigators to measure interactions and inflammatory responses directly relevant to human female genital tract infections.
What were the most important findings?
The most significant outcome was that the combination of Lactobacillus brevis and bovine lactoferrin showed the strongest inhibitory effect against C. trachomatis infection, especially during the early phases of bacterial adhesion and invasion into host cells. This combination notably reduced the formation of infectious bacterial units (IFUs), indicating a substantial decrease in bacterial load. Individually, Lactobacillus brevis was more effective than Lactobacillus crispatus in preventing chlamydial adhesion, while bovine lactoferrin significantly hindered bacterial internalization. Lactobacilli displayed effective co-aggregation with C. trachomatis elementary bodies (EBs), reducing bacterial infectivity. The study also highlighted that this combined treatment dramatically reduced levels of inflammatory cytokines IL-6 and IL-8, thus suggesting a potent anti-inflammatory effect beneficial in preventing chronic inflammation and subsequent tissue damage associated with persistent chlamydial infections.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study carries important clinical implications. The synergy between Lactobacillus brevis and bovine lactoferrin points towards a promising non-antibiotic strategy to prevent and manage genital infections caused by Chlamydia trachomatis. Given the rising concern of antibiotic resistance and chronic inflammation linked to persistent chlamydial forms, employing probiotics combined with lactoferrin could offer a safer, more sustainable method to maintain genital tract health. Moreover, the significant anti-inflammatory impact indicates potential utility in reducing the chronic complications of C. trachomatis infections, such as pelvic inflammatory disease and infertility. Translating these findings into clinical interventions, including topical probiotics and lactoferrin formulations, could notably enhance the current therapeutic approaches for sexually transmitted infections and associated inflammatory conditions.
Microbiota and Human Reproduction: The Case of Female Infertility
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Infertility
Infertility
Infertility is the inability to conceive after 12 months of regular, unprotected sex. It affects both men and women and can be due to various physical, hormonal, or genetic factors. Treatments include medication, surgery, assisted reproductive technologies, and lifestyle changes.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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This review summarizes the essential role of balanced reproductive microbiota, particularly Lactobacillus dominance, in fertility and IVF success, linking microbial dysbiosis to infertility and poorer pregnancy outcomes, and highlighting microbiome evaluation as key to improving reproductive health management.
What was reviewed?
This review comprehensively examined current research on the microbiota of the female reproductive system, focusing specifically on its role in infertility and reproductive health. It analyzed literature investigating both the lower reproductive tract (vaginal microbiota) and the upper reproductive tract (uterus, fallopian tubes, and ovaries). The authors reviewed the microbial composition of these regions, highlighting the dominance of Lactobacillus species under normal conditions, and explored how deviations from this balanced microbial community—referred to as dysbiosis—might affect fertility outcomes and influence the success rates of assisted reproductive technologies (ART), particularly in vitro fertilization (IVF).
Who was reviewed?
The review summarized studies involving women across various reproductive statuses, including fertile women, infertile women, and women undergoing ART procedures. Literature assessing microbial differences between fertile and infertile groups, particularly in terms of vaginal and uterine microbiota composition, formed the basis of the review. The authors also incorporated evidence related to microbiome shifts associated with different life stages, hormone fluctuations, lifestyle influences, and environmental exposures, providing clinicians with an extensive view of factors affecting reproductive microbiota dynamics.
What were the most important findings?
The central findings of the review emphasized the critical role of Lactobacillus species in maintaining reproductive health through their dominance in the reproductive tract, particularly in the vagina. Lactobacilli were identified as crucial for creating an acidic environment that inhibits pathogen growth. Dysbiosis, characterized by reduced Lactobacillus abundance and increased prevalence of anaerobic bacteria like Gardnerella vaginalis, Atopobium vaginae, and Ureaplasma spp., was strongly linked to infertility, chronic inflammatory conditions, and notably poorer outcomes in IVF treatments, including lower implantation rates and increased pregnancy complications. The review highlighted a significant continuity of bacterial communities along the reproductive tract, suggesting a microbiological link from the lower to upper regions. Moreover, the potential influence of male partner semen microbiota on female reproductive health was underscored, suggesting that fertility evaluations should also consider the microbiome of the male partner.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The review's greatest clinical implication is that clinicians should consider reproductive microbiota assessment as an integral part of fertility evaluations and infertility treatment strategies. Understanding the link between microbiota and infertility provides an opportunity to enhance reproductive outcomes by diagnosing and correcting microbial dysbiosis through targeted probiotics, lifestyle interventions, and possibly tailored antibiotic treatments. This approach could substantially improve IVF success rates and overall fertility management. Moreover, the identification of microbial signatures associated with fertility may facilitate personalized reproductive healthcare strategies, optimizing conditions not just for conception but also for the long-term reproductive health of couples and their offspring.
Differential Composition of Vaginal Microbiome Is Associated With Successful Intrauterine Insemination in Couples With Idiopathic Infertility
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Infertility
Infertility
Infertility is the inability to conceive after 12 months of regular, unprotected sex. It affects both men and women and can be due to various physical, hormonal, or genetic factors. Treatments include medication, surgery, assisted reproductive technologies, and lifestyle changes.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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This study links the vaginal microbiome, particularly Lactobacillus crispatus dominance, to successful IUI outcomes in idiopathic infertility. Dysbiosis, with an increase in Bifidobacterium, was associated with IUI failure, suggesting the importance of vaginal microbiome evaluation in fertility treatments.
What was studied?
This study examined the vaginal and seminal microbiomes of couples with idiopathic infertility and their correlation with intrauterine insemination (IUI) outcomes. The researchers sought to determine whether the microbiomes of the vaginal and seminal fluids influence the success rate of IUI. They specifically focused on identifying any differences in the microbiota composition between women with successful and unsuccessful IUI outcomes, particularly in relation to Lactobacillus species, which are considered crucial for maintaining a healthy vaginal environment.
Who was studied?
The study involved 23 couples with idiopathic infertility undergoing their first IUI treatment at the Centro Scienze della Natalità in Milan, Italy. Both female and male partners participated, with vaginal swabs taken from the female participants and seminal fluid samples from the male participants on the day of the IUI procedure. The female participants had a mean age of 33 years, and the male participants were approximately 34 years old. The couples were all Caucasian, and the women underwent a comprehensive clinical evaluation to exclude any other known causes of infertility, such as endometriosis or male factor infertility.
What were the most important findings?
The study found that the vaginal microbiome composition differed significantly between women who achieved pregnancy following IUI and those who did not. Women with successful IUI outcomes had a vaginal microbiome predominantly dominated by Lactobacillus crispatus, which is associated with a healthy and stable vaginal ecosystem. On the other hand, women who experienced IUI failure showed a greater diversity in their vaginal microbiota, including higher levels of Bifidobacterium and other non-Lactobacillus species, indicating a more dysbiotic environment. The presence of Lactobacillus species, especially L. crispatus, was strongly associated with a higher probability of successful pregnancy. Interestingly, no significant differences in the seminal microbiome were observed between men whose partners experienced success or failure in IUI, suggesting that male seminal microbiota might not play as critical a role in IUI success as vaginal microbiota does.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings suggest that the vaginal microbiome, particularly the dominance of Lactobacillus crispatus, could serve as an important biomarker for predicting IUI success in couples with idiopathic infertility. This underscores the potential value of incorporating vaginal microbiome analysis into fertility assessments prior to IUI procedures. Clinicians might consider characterizing the vaginal microbiome in these patients and explore interventions, such as probiotics or other microbiome-targeted therapies, to restore a more optimal microbial balance and improve reproductive outcomes. However, given the study's relatively small sample size, further research with larger cohorts is necessary to confirm these findings and determine the clinical applicability of microbiome-based interventions.
Human genital tracts microbiota: dysbiosis crucial for infertility
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Infertility
Infertility
Infertility is the inability to conceive after 12 months of regular, unprotected sex. It affects both men and women and can be due to various physical, hormonal, or genetic factors. Treatments include medication, surgery, assisted reproductive technologies, and lifestyle changes.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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This review connects genital microbiota dysbiosis to infertility, highlighting the role of Lactobacillus dominance in female fertility and microbial imbalances in seminal fluid affecting male fertility. It suggests personalized treatments targeting microbiome restoration could improve reproductive outcomes, especially in ART settings.
What was reviewed?
This review explored the relationship between genital tract microbiota dysbiosis and infertility in both men and women. It discussed how microbial imbalances in the vaginal, endometrial, seminal, and placental microbiomes can impair fertility, leading to complications such as bacterial vaginosis, poor sperm quality, and pregnancy-related issues like preterm birth. The review also examined how these microbiota imbalances affect reproductive health, suggesting that hormonal influences and microbial exchanges between partners play critical roles in fertility outcomes. The authors aimed to provide insights into how microbiome alterations can be used for better personalization of infertility treatments.
Who was reviewed?
The review primarily focused on studies involving both male and female infertility, including those with unexplained infertility and those undergoing assisted reproductive technologies (ART). It incorporated data on microbial composition from both sexes, specifically examining how dysbiosis in vaginal, endometrial, seminal, and placental microbiota can contribute to infertility and affect the success of treatments like in vitro fertilization (IVF). The review also addressed how microbial imbalances influence reproductive outcomes, drawing from clinical findings related to sperm quality, bacterial vaginosis, and pregnancy complications.
What were the most important findings?
The review highlighted the critical role of Lactobacillus species in maintaining a healthy vaginal microbiome. A dysbiotic vaginal microbiome, characterized by low Lactobacillus dominance and an overgrowth of pathogens such as Gardnerella, Prevotella, Mobiluncus, and Ureaplasma, was strongly associated with infertility, bacterial vaginosis, and adverse pregnancy outcomes. It was noted that female microbiota composition directly impacts pregnancy, with non-Lactobacillus-dominated environments leading to an increased risk of preterm birth and recurrent miscarriage. Similarly, seminal microbiota imbalances, including the overgrowth of bacteria such as Ureaplasma and Enterococcus, negatively influenced sperm quality, including motility and morphology, thereby affecting male fertility. The review also emphasized the concept of microbial trade-off between partners, where microbial dysbiosis in one partner could influence the reproductive microbiota of the other, further complicating fertility issues.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The review's findings suggest that clinicians should consider the role of genital tract microbiota when diagnosing and treating infertility. The identification of dysbiosis, particularly the loss of Lactobacillus dominance, can serve as a useful diagnostic marker for reproductive health. Interventions aimed at restoring a healthy microbiome, such as the use of probiotics or antimicrobial therapies, could improve fertility outcomes and reduce complications during pregnancy. Furthermore, the concept of microbial trade-off between partners indicates that both individuals in a couple should be assessed and treated for microbiome imbalances, enhancing the chances of successful conception. The review calls for further research into microbiome-based diagnostics and therapeutics to offer more personalized and effective treatments for infertility.
A two-sample mendelian randomization analysis investigates associations between gut microbiota and infertility
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Infertility
Infertility
Infertility is the inability to conceive after 12 months of regular, unprotected sex. It affects both men and women and can be due to various physical, hormonal, or genetic factors. Treatments include medication, surgery, assisted reproductive technologies, and lifestyle changes.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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This study demonstrates a causal link between specific gut microbiota and infertility risks, identifying protective and harmful bacterial taxa in both men and women. It highlights the microbiome's potential role in fertility management through targeted probiotics and lifestyle interventions.
What was studied?
This study utilized a two-sample Mendelian randomization (MR) analysis to investigate the causal relationships between gut microbiota composition and infertility in males and females. Genetic variants associated with specific gut microbiota taxa served as instrumental variables (IVs) to assess their direct influence on the incidence of infertility. The researchers aimed to clarify whether variations in gut bacteria directly contribute to infertility or if these associations are merely correlational due to confounding factors or reverse causation.
Who was studied?
The study analyzed genetic data from the MiBioGen consortium, which included 18,340 participants across 24 international cohorts primarily from European descent. Infertility data came from the FinnGen consortium, with 994 male infertility cases and 100,050 controls, and 9,831 female infertility cases and 94,394 controls. The analysis excluded individuals with unclear sex, high genotype deficiency, excess heterozygosity, or non-Finnish ancestry.
What were the most important findings?
The MR analysis confirmed significant causal relationships between specific gut microbiota and infertility risks. For male infertility, five taxa (Bacteroidaceae, Bacteroides, Enterobacteriales, Romboutsia, Enterobacteriaceae) were associated with a reduced risk, whereas Allisonella genus increased infertility risk. For female infertility, beneficial associations (reduced risk) were found with multiple taxa, including Ruminococcus torques group, Desulfovibrio, Bifidobacterium, Family XIII AD3011 group, Ruminococcaceae NK4A214 group, Holdemania, Bifidobacteriales order, Actinobacteria phylum, Bifidobacteriaceae family, and Actinobacteria class. Conversely, Faecalibacterium was significantly linked to an increased risk of female infertility. The MR analysis was robust and well-supported by sensitivity tests, including Cochran Q and MR-PRESSO analyses, indicating reliable results free from major horizontal pleiotropy or heterogeneity.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study provides strong evidence that gut microbiota directly affects infertility risks in both males and females, highlighting potential microbiome-based targets for diagnostic, preventive, and therapeutic interventions. For clinicians, these findings emphasize the importance of assessing gut microbiota composition when managing infertility. Identifying protective and harmful bacterial taxa offers actionable insights for developing personalized probiotic treatments, nutritional recommendations, and lifestyle modifications aimed at optimizing fertility outcomes.
A More Diverse Cervical Microbiome Associates with Better Clinical Outcomes in Patients with Endometriosis: A Pilot Study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Infertility
Infertility
Infertility is the inability to conceive after 12 months of regular, unprotected sex. It affects both men and women and can be due to various physical, hormonal, or genetic factors. Treatments include medication, surgery, assisted reproductive technologies, and lifestyle changes.
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This study links cervical microbiome diversity with endometriosis severity. Findings reveal microbial imbalances, particularly in advanced stages, correlate with pain, infertility, and inflammatory pathways. The cervical microbiome may serve as a diagnostic and therapeutic target for improving outcomes in endometriosis, highlighting its role in reproductive health and disease progression.
What Was Studied?
This pilot study investigated the cervical microbiome in patients with endometriosis and its association with clinical outcomes. The research focused on the microbial diversity, composition, and functional roles in cervical mucus, analyzed using 16S rRNA sequencing. The study included healthy women and patients diagnosed with endometriosis to compare microbial profiles and explore the connection between microbiome alterations, disease progression, and associated symptoms like pain, CA125 levels, and infertility.
Who Was Studied?
The study involved 33 women: 10 healthy controls and 23 patients diagnosed with endometriosis (classified by severity into stages I-II and III-IV). The cervical microbiome was analyzed to assess its correlation with clinical features, such as deep infiltrating endometriosis (DIE), CA125 biomarker levels, pain severity, and infertility.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study revealed that cervical microbiome diversity is significantly associated with clinical outcomes in endometriosis patients. Specifically, a higher microbial diversity was linked to better outcomes, while notable microbial imbalances characterized advanced disease stages and severe symptoms. Patients with advanced stages of endometriosis exhibited a microbial shift, with an increase in Firmicutes and a decrease in Actinobacteria and Bacteroidetes. Unique microbial profiles were observed, such as elevated Lactobacillus jensenii and Streptococcus agalactiae (GBS), alongside reduced Atopobium vaginae in patients with advanced stages.
Patients presenting severe symptoms, including elevated CA125 biomarker levels, infertility, and higher pain scores, showed significantly reduced microbial richness and diversity. Infertility, a common complication of endometriosis, was associated with an increased Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes ratio. Notably, infertility treatments appeared to reverse these imbalances, restoring microbial diversity and community structure to resemble that of fertile individuals. Additionally, deep infiltrating endometriosis (DIE), a severe form of the condition, was correlated with an overrepresentation of Streptococcus and Prevotella at the genus level.
The study’s functional analyses provided insight into the role of the cervical microbiome in disease progression. Pathways associated with microbial alterations, such as signal transduction, secondary bile acid biosynthesis, and nutrient metabolism, were identified. These pathways may contribute to inflammation, immune dysregulation, and potentially malignancy in severe cases. Such findings underscore the intricate relationship between cervical microbial composition and the pathophysiology of endometriosis. This research positions the cervical microbiome as a critical factor in both the diagnosis and management of endometriosis, offering potential for therapeutic interventions targeting microbial imbalances.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
The findings suggest that cervical microbiome diversity may serve as a biomarker for diagnosing and monitoring endometriosis progression and complications. The research highlights the therapeutic potential of targeting microbial imbalances to improve clinical outcomes, particularly in infertility. It also underscores the potential link between microbiome alterations and malignancy risks in severe cases, paving the way for preventive and precision medicine approaches in endometriosis management.
Iron Overload and Endometriosis: Mechanisms, Implications, and Therapeutic Targets
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Endometriomas
Endometriomas
An endometrioma is a type of ovarian cyst filled with old blood, arising from endometrial tissue outside the uterus, typically causing pain and potentially impacting fertility.
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Infertility
Infertility
Infertility is the inability to conceive after 12 months of regular, unprotected sex. It affects both men and women and can be due to various physical, hormonal, or genetic factors. Treatments include medication, surgery, assisted reproductive technologies, and lifestyle changes.
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Iron overload in endometriosis contributes to oxidative stress, inflammation, and tissue damage, driving lesion persistence and subfertility. Ferroptosis resistance and dysregulated iron metabolism highlight therapeutic opportunities using iron chelators and modulators.
What Was Reviewed?
This systematic review evaluated the role of iron in the pathophysiology of endometriosis. The review synthesized findings from 53 studies, including both human and animal research, to provide a comprehensive understanding of how excess iron contributes to oxidative stress, inflammation, and tissue damage in endometriosis. It also explored iron-related mechanisms such as ferroptosis and the implications for subfertility, symptom severity, and potential malignant transformation.
Who Was Reviewed?
The review included a total of 53 studies: 47 human studies involving 3,556 participants and 6 animal studies. The human studies primarily examined women diagnosed with endometriosis, and the included research utilized various bio-samples such as ovarian endometriomas, peritoneal fluid, and ectopic endometrial lesions. Animal studies focused on endometriosis models to explore systemic and local iron mechanics.
Key Findings
Iron overload is consistently found in endometriotic tissues and peritoneal fluid but not in systemic circulation. This localized iron accumulation stems from repeated bleeding within lesions, leading to oxidative stress and inflammation that perpetuates the ectopic growth of endometrial tissue. Dysregulated iron transport and the failure of homeostatic mechanisms contribute to this pathology, with increased expression of proteins such as divalent metal transporter-1 (DMT1) and decreased ferroportin expression in affected tissues.
Markers of oxidative stress, including lipid peroxidation and DNA damage, were significantly elevated in endometriotic lesions. Aberrant resistance to ferroptosis, an iron-dependent form of cell death, was identified as a key mechanism supporting lesion persistence. Additionally, iron-induced ferroptosis was linked to the production of pro-inflammatory and angiogenic factors like IL-8 and VEGFA, exacerbating inflammation and lesion vascularization.
Iron overload was implicated in subfertility, as higher iron concentrations in ovarian follicles and endometriomas were associated with impaired oocyte quality and development. These findings suggest that iron mechanics might influence folliculogenesis and embryo viability. Importantly, the review highlighted the therapeutic potential of iron chelators and ferroptosis modulators for managing endometriosis.
Implications of the Review
This review underscores the central role of aberrant iron metabolism in the pathogenesis of endometriosis, providing a mechanistic basis for its persistence, progression, and associated complications such as subfertility and chronic pain. Iron-related oxidative stress emerges as a critical driver of inflammation and tissue damage, making it a promising target for therapeutic intervention. Future research should explore the efficacy of iron-targeted treatments, such as chelators, and further elucidate the role of ferroptosis in endometriosis. These insights could lead to novel strategies for mitigating symptom severity and improving fertility outcomes in affected women.
The role of gut and genital microbiota and the estrobolome in endometriosis, infertility and chronic pelvic pain
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Chronic Pelvic Pain (CPP)
Chronic Pelvic Pain (CPP)
Chronic Pelvic Pain (CPP) is persistent pain in the pelvic region lasting six months or longer, often multifactorial, impacting physical and emotional well-being, and associated with various medical conditions.
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Infertility
Infertility
Infertility is the inability to conceive after 12 months of regular, unprotected sex. It affects both men and women and can be due to various physical, hormonal, or genetic factors. Treatments include medication, surgery, assisted reproductive technologies, and lifestyle changes.
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This review highlights the gut and genital microbiome's roles in estrogen-driven conditions like endometriosis, infertility, and CPP, emphasizing dysbiosis' impact on inflammation and estrogen metabolism.
What was reviewed?
The reviewed manuscript explored the intricate relationship between the gut and genital microbiomes, the estrobolome, and their roles in the pathophysiology of endometriosis, infertility, and chronic pelvic pain (CPP). The authors critically examined 28 clinical and six preclinical studies to understand microbial dysbiosis's contributions to estrogen metabolism, inflammation, and symptomatology in these conditions. This review also identified methodological gaps in microbiome studies and proposed strategies to improve future research.
Who was reviewed?
The review included human and animal studies, examining women diagnosed with endometriosis, infertility, and CPP, alongside healthy controls. Specific focus was placed on microbial associations in the gut, cervicovaginal, and endometrial microbiomes, with emphasis on bacterial vaginosis-associated bacteria, Lactobacillus depletion, and microbial influences on estrogen-driven mechanisms.
What were the most important findings?
Key findings highlighted that dysbiosis in the gut microbiome disrupts the estrobolome, an essential modulator of estrogen metabolism. This disruption contributes to heightened systemic and local inflammation, potentially exacerbating endometriosis symptoms and infertility. Many studies noted an association between bacterial vaginosis-related bacteria and a reduction in Lactobacillus dominance in the cervicovaginal microbiome with the prevalence of endometriosis and infertility. Additionally, the review underscored a bidirectional relationship between gut microbiota and endometriosis progression in animal models, emphasizing the role of gut dysbiosis in increasing b-glucuronidase activity, leading to elevated circulating estrogen levels.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review underscores the need for rigorous, standardized methodologies to better delineate causal relationships between microbiota and gynecological conditions like endometriosis and CPP. The findings of this review suggest that targeting the microbiome could lead to novel diagnostics and therapeutics for estrogen-driven diseases. The review also highlights the potential of leveraging microbiome-based biomarkers for non-invasive diagnostics and monitoring of endometriosis progression, bridging a critical translational gap in gynecological health.
Role of Fungi in Tumorigenesis: Promises and Challenges
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Intratumoural Microbiota
Intratumoural Microbiota
With the growing understanding of the intratumoral microbiota’s influence on cancer progression, the next frontier in cancer therapy is microbiota-targeted interventions. By introducing beneficial microbes or altering existing microbial populations within tumors, therapies can be designed to modulate the immune system, promote tumor suppression, and improve drug efficacy. However, challenges remain in deciphering the complex relationships between microbes, tumor cells, and the immune system, necessitating more refined research methods and standardized approaches to translate these discoveries into clinical practice.
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This review explores the role of fungi in cancer progression, highlighting their impact on tumor development and immune responses. It emphasizes the potential for mycobiome-based cancer diagnostics and therapies, though challenges remain in understanding the exact mechanisms at play.
What was studied?
This review article focuses on the role of fungi in tumorigenesis, specifically examining the mycobiome’s involvement in cancer development and progression. The study explores how fungi, a lesser-studied component of the human microbiome, can impact cancer pathogenesis. The article delves into how fungal species interact with the immune system, influence inflammation, and contribute to various cancers such as colorectal, pancreatic, and head and neck cancers. The research highlights how fungi could both promote and inhibit tumor growth depending on the context, such as their presence in the tumor microenvironment and their interactions with bacteria.
Who was studied?
The article synthesizes findings from various studies, including those focused on tumor tissues from cancer patients across different cancer types. It reviews the microbiomes of individuals with colorectal cancer, pancreatic cancer, and head and neck cancer, analyzing the presence of fungal species within the tumors and their potential role in cancer progression. The studies included in the review examine microbial profiles using advanced sequencing methods to identify fungal species and analyze their correlation with tumor characteristics and immune responses.
Most important findings
The review outlines several critical findings related to the role of fungi in cancer. Fungal species like Candida albicans, Malassezia, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, and Aspergillus were identified in various tumor tissues, with their presence being associated with inflammation, immune modulation, and cancer progression. A key observation is that fungi, like Malassezia, can contribute to tumor progression by activating pro-inflammatory pathways that enhance tumor growth. Moreover, the study found that certain fungi could influence the tumor immune microenvironment, either by promoting immune tolerance or by interacting with bacteria to trigger specific immune responses. Additionally, the review highlights the dysbiosis of the mycobiome in cancer patients, where specific fungal species become more abundant, which may exacerbate tumor progression. For example, a higher abundance of Candida species was linked to stomach and colorectal cancers, while other fungi like Aspergillus and Saccharomyces were found to correlate with pancreatic cancer progression.
Key implications
The review suggests that the mycobiome can serve as both a diagnostic and therapeutic target for cancer treatment. Fungal signatures in tumor tissues could potentially be used as biomarkers for early cancer detection and prognosis. Targeting the mycobiome could also become a novel therapeutic strategy, either through antifungal treatments or by modifying the gut and tumor-associated fungi. The potential to manipulate the mycobiome through diet, prebiotics, probiotics, or antifungal agents could lead to personalized cancer therapies. However, the study also underscores the need for more research to establish causal relationships between fungal dysbiosis and cancer, as well as the mechanisms through which fungi influence tumor progression. Additionally, there are challenges in standardizing fungal sequencing methods and identifying reliable fungal biomarkers across different cancer types.
Spatial Heterogeneity of Intratumoral Microbiota: A New Frontier in Cancer Immunotherapy Resistance
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Intratumoural Microbiota
Intratumoural Microbiota
With the growing understanding of the intratumoral microbiota’s influence on cancer progression, the next frontier in cancer therapy is microbiota-targeted interventions. By introducing beneficial microbes or altering existing microbial populations within tumors, therapies can be designed to modulate the immune system, promote tumor suppression, and improve drug efficacy. However, challenges remain in deciphering the complex relationships between microbes, tumor cells, and the immune system, necessitating more refined research methods and standardized approaches to translate these discoveries into clinical practice.
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This review investigates the spatial heterogeneity of intratumoral microbiota and its impact on cancer immunotherapy resistance. It highlights how microbial distribution within tumors influences immune responses and treatment efficacy, suggesting new strategies to overcome resistance and improve cancer therapy outcomes.
What was studied?
This review article focuses on the spatial heterogeneity of intratumoral microbiota and its role in cancer immunotherapy resistance. It explores how microbial communities within tumors are unevenly distributed across different tumor regions, influencing immune responses, tumor progression, and therapeutic resistance. The study investigates how variations in microbial composition, metabolic products, and immune interactions within different regions of the tumor microenvironment (TME) contribute to differential responses to immunotherapy. It emphasizes the importance of understanding the spatial distribution of intratumoral microbiota for developing novel therapeutic strategies to overcome resistance to immunotherapy, particularly immune checkpoint inhibitors.
Who was studied?
The article reviews data from clinical and preclinical studies investigating intratumoral microbiota in various cancer types, including colorectal, breast, pancreatic, and oral cancers. The studies highlighted the presence of specific microbial species in different tumor regions, their interaction with immune cells, and their impact on cancer progression and treatment outcomes. These studies include investigations on how bacterial, fungal, and viral populations within the TME are influenced by tumor-specific factors, such as vascularity, hypoxia, and immune cell infiltration. The research also examines the implications of microbial spatial heterogeneity on therapeutic responses, particularly focusing on immune checkpoint inhibitors and chemotherapy.
Most important findings
The review highlights several key findings related to the spatial heterogeneity of intratumoral microbiota. It identifies how microbial communities differ significantly between various regions of the tumor, such as the tumor core, invasive margins, and immune-exclusion zones. This heterogeneity is influenced by factors like tumor anatomy, local immune status, and treatment interventions. Specific bacteria, such as Fusobacterium nucleatum, Bacteroides fragilis, and Malassezia, were found to be enriched in certain tumor areas, influencing immune cell infiltration and immune checkpoint expression. For instance, Fusobacterium nucleatum is shown to thrive in hypoxic regions of colorectal cancer, where it contributes to immune evasion by interacting with immune cells like T cells and myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSCs). Additionally, microbial metabolites, such as short-chain fatty acids and lactate, establish spatial gradients within tumors that affect immune cell function and contribute to therapeutic resistance. These findings suggest that the spatial distribution of microbiota within tumors can significantly modulate immune responses and impact the efficacy of immunotherapy.
Key implications
The findings of this review underscore the potential of targeting the spatial heterogeneity of intratumoral microbiota to improve cancer treatment outcomes. By understanding the microbial composition and spatial distribution within the TME, clinicians could develop more personalized and precise treatment strategies, potentially enhancing the effectiveness of immunotherapy. The review suggests that therapeutic interventions targeting the microbiota, such as engineered bacteria, probiotics, or bacteriophage therapy, could help reshape the TME and overcome resistance to immune checkpoint inhibitors. However, challenges remain in developing strategies to precisely manipulate microbial populations within tumors, as well as in understanding the full range of microbial interactions and their impact on tumor progression and immune responses. Further research is needed to refine these approaches and explore their clinical applicability.
The intratumoral microbiota: A new horizon in cancer immunology
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Intratumoural Microbiota
Intratumoural Microbiota
With the growing understanding of the intratumoral microbiota’s influence on cancer progression, the next frontier in cancer therapy is microbiota-targeted interventions. By introducing beneficial microbes or altering existing microbial populations within tumors, therapies can be designed to modulate the immune system, promote tumor suppression, and improve drug efficacy. However, challenges remain in deciphering the complex relationships between microbes, tumor cells, and the immune system, necessitating more refined research methods and standardized approaches to translate these discoveries into clinical practice.
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This review explores the role of intratumoral microbiota in cancer progression and immunity. It discusses how microbiota influence tumor behavior and therapy outcomes, suggesting potential therapeutic strategies and biomarkers for cancer treatment.
What was reviewed?
This review examines the evolving role of the intratumoral microbiota in cancer immunology. It provides insights into how the microbiota within tumors, including bacteria, fungi, and viruses, interacts with the immune system to influence tumor progression and the efficacy of cancer therapies. The study highlights recent advancements in understanding the microbiota's role in shaping the tumor microenvironment (TME), including its impact on immune modulation and immunotherapy outcomes. A key focus is on how intratumoral microbiota contribute to both the promotion and suppression of tumor immunity, affecting immune surveillance and the response to cancer treatments like immune checkpoint inhibitors.
Who was reviewed?
The review draws from numerous studies that investigate the microbiota within cancerous tissues. It synthesizes findings from diverse cancer types such as colorectal, breast, lung, and pancreatic cancers, focusing on how intratumoral microbiota influence tumor behavior. Studies on microbiota-derived metabolites and their role in immune regulation are highlighted, along with research on microbial-induced inflammatory responses. The review also covers clinical trials and laboratory studies that explore microbiota interactions with immune cells and the potential therapeutic strategies involving microbiota modulation.
Most important findings
The review outlines several crucial findings regarding the role of intratumoral microbiota in cancer. A significant point is the observation that microbial communities within tumors exhibit distinct profiles from those in healthy tissues, with bacteria such as Fusobacterium nucleatum and Bacteroides fragilis playing a major role in cancer progression. These microorganisms can promote tumor growth by inducing inflammatory responses or by modulating host immune functions through various signaling pathways. For instance, F. nucleatum in colorectal cancer has been linked to immune evasion by activating immune checkpoint pathways, leading to the suppression of T-cell activity. Furthermore, the microbiota can impact the efficacy of cancer therapies, including immunotherapy. The presence of specific bacteria has been shown to enhance the effectiveness of treatments like immune checkpoint inhibitors by improving immune cell infiltration and activation within the TME. However, other microbial populations can exacerbate resistance to treatment by promoting immunosuppressive environments.
Key implications
The findings discussed in this review have important clinical implications. Understanding the relationship between intratumoral microbiota and immune responses opens new avenues for cancer treatment. Modulating the tumor microbiome could enhance immunotherapy efficacy, as some microbes have been identified as facilitators of immune checkpoint blockade therapies. Targeted interventions, such as using probiotics or antibiotics to modify the microbiota, could potentially be integrated into personalized treatment regimens for cancer patients. Additionally, microbiota signatures within tumors could serve as prognostic biomarkers, aiding in the prediction of patient responses to treatment and overall prognosis. The ability to manipulate the microbiome in the TME could be crucial in developing more effective and tailored cancer therapies in the future.
The microbial landscape of tumors: A deep dive into intratumoral microbiota
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Intratumoural Microbiota
Intratumoural Microbiota
With the growing understanding of the intratumoral microbiota’s influence on cancer progression, the next frontier in cancer therapy is microbiota-targeted interventions. By introducing beneficial microbes or altering existing microbial populations within tumors, therapies can be designed to modulate the immune system, promote tumor suppression, and improve drug efficacy. However, challenges remain in deciphering the complex relationships between microbes, tumor cells, and the immune system, necessitating more refined research methods and standardized approaches to translate these discoveries into clinical practice.
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This review examines the role of intratumoral microbiota in cancer progression, immune modulation, and therapy resistance. It highlights microbial species involved in tumor growth and discusses the potential of microbiome-based treatments to improve cancer therapies.
What was studied?
This review focuses on the role of intratumoral microbiota in cancer biology. The study investigates how microbial populations within tumor tissues contribute to the initiation, progression, and metastasis of various cancers. It also examines the impact of intratumoral microbiota on cancer treatment outcomes, particularly in chemotherapy, immunotherapy, and radiotherapy. By analyzing the microbial composition within tumors, the review uncovers how microorganisms influence the tumor microenvironment (TME) and interact with immune cells, promoting or inhibiting tumor growth.
Who was studied?
The review includes findings from studies on various cancer types, such as colorectal, pancreatic, breast, and oral cancers, analyzing microbial species present within tumor tissues. The studies examined tumor biopsies, adjacent tissues, and the broader TME, exploring how the presence and abundance of certain microbes influence cancer progression and immune responses. Key microbial species such as Fusobacterium nucleatum, Escherichia coli, and Bacteroides fragilis were discussed, with a focus on how their presence in tumors contributes to cancer development, metastasis, and resistance to treatment.
Most important findings
The review identifies significant microbial species that contribute to tumor initiation, immune modulation, and therapeutic resistance. The review highlights how microbial metabolites, including short-chain fatty acids, bile acids, and lipopolysaccharides, play key roles in shaping the TME by modulating immune responses and promoting tumor growth. In some cases, microbes such as Bacteroides fragilis can activate oncogenic signaling pathways like Wnt/β-catenin, contributing to cancer metastasis and progression. The review also underscores the complex interaction between tumor-resident microbes and host immune cells, suggesting that intratumoral microbiota can both enhance and suppress immune responses, thus influencing therapeutic outcomes.
Key implications
The review suggests that intratumoral microbiota may serve as biomarkers for early cancer detection, prognosis, and treatment response. The findings highlight the potential of microbiome-based therapies, including probiotics, antibiotics, or engineered bacterial strains, to modulate the TME and improve the effectiveness of immunotherapy and chemotherapy. However, it is clear that more research is needed to better understand the complex relationship between intratumoral microbiota and cancer biology. Identifying specific microbial signatures could allow for personalized treatment plans, optimizing therapeutic efficacy while minimizing side effects. The review also points to the need for advanced techniques in profiling tumor-associated microbiota and developing targeted therapeutic strategies that leverage microbiome modulation to improve cancer treatment outcomes.
Unveiling the intratumoral microbiota within cancer landscapes
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Intratumoural Microbiota
Intratumoural Microbiota
With the growing understanding of the intratumoral microbiota’s influence on cancer progression, the next frontier in cancer therapy is microbiota-targeted interventions. By introducing beneficial microbes or altering existing microbial populations within tumors, therapies can be designed to modulate the immune system, promote tumor suppression, and improve drug efficacy. However, challenges remain in deciphering the complex relationships between microbes, tumor cells, and the immune system, necessitating more refined research methods and standardized approaches to translate these discoveries into clinical practice.
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The review highlights the role of intratumoral microbiota in cancer initiation, progression, and therapy. It discusses the dual effects of these microbiota on immune responses, emphasizing their potential as diagnostic biomarkers and therapeutic targets in cancer treatment.
What was studied?
The review investigates the emerging concept of intratumoral microbiota, which refers to microbial populations within tumor tissues. Historically, tumors were considered sterile environments, but advancements in sequencing technologies have uncovered the presence of bacteria, viruses, fungi, and other microorganisms within various cancer types. The article explores the role these intratumoral microbes play in cancer progression, immune system modulation, and therapeutic outcomes. It discusses how intratumoral microbiota contribute to carcinogenesis, tumor metastasis, and response to cancer therapies, particularly immunotherapy. The study emphasizes the diversity and complexity of intratumoral microbiota across different cancer types and tumor subtypes.
Who was studied?
The study focused on intratumoral microbiota found in various cancer types, highlighting their varying compositions and effects on the tumor microenvironment (TME). The research includes tumors from organs such as the gastrointestinal tract, skin, lung, and other epithelial cancers. It examines both the microbial species that directly colonize the tumors and those that may contribute indirectly, such as via hematogenous spread or through mucosal breaches. The review further considers the interaction between tumor cells and immune cells in the TME, influenced by microbial presence. This interaction plays a critical role in both the immune system's ability to fight cancer and the success of cancer treatments, particularly immunotherapies.
Most important findings
The key findings reveal that the intratumoral microbiota can have both pro-tumor and anti-tumor effects. On one hand, certain bacteria and fungi can promote cancer development by inducing genomic instability, inflammatory responses, and immune suppression, enhancing tumor progression and metastasis. On the other hand, specific microbial species have been found to activate anti-tumor immunity by stimulating immune cells such as T and NK cells, activating the STING signaling pathway, and enhancing antigen presentation. This dual role of intratumoral microbiota in modulating cancer immunity offers new insights into tumor biology and therapeutic efficacy.
Moreover, the review highlights the heterogeneity of the intratumoral microbiota across different cancer types and even within subtypes of the same cancer, making it a critical variable in understanding cancer pathogenesis and therapy outcomes. For example, certain bacteria like Fusobacterium nucleatum and Bacteroides fragilis are more abundant in colorectal cancer tissues, where they may influence both tumor progression and the local immune response.
Key implications
The findings of this review underscore the potential of targeting intratumoral microbiota in cancer therapy. Modulating the intratumoral microbiota could improve immunotherapy outcomes, enhance chemotherapy efficacy, and reduce treatment resistance. Intratumoral microbiota may serve as novel biomarkers for cancer diagnosis and prognosis, providing a deeper understanding of tumor heterogeneity. Additionally, therapeutic strategies, such as probiotics, antibiotics, or microbiome-targeted therapies, are emerging as promising adjuncts to traditional cancer treatments. However, challenges remain in fully understanding the molecular mechanisms through which microbiota influence tumorigenesis and therapy responses, necessitating further research in this rapidly developing field.
Intratumoral Microbiota: Insights from Anatomical, Molecular, and Clinical Perspectives
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Intratumoural Microbiota
Intratumoural Microbiota
With the growing understanding of the intratumoral microbiota’s influence on cancer progression, the next frontier in cancer therapy is microbiota-targeted interventions. By introducing beneficial microbes or altering existing microbial populations within tumors, therapies can be designed to modulate the immune system, promote tumor suppression, and improve drug efficacy. However, challenges remain in deciphering the complex relationships between microbes, tumor cells, and the immune system, necessitating more refined research methods and standardized approaches to translate these discoveries into clinical practice.
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This review explores how intratumoral microbiota influence cancer development and therapeutic responses. It examines microbial roles in tumorigenesis, immune modulation, and treatment resistance, suggesting microbiome-based interventions as a promising strategy to improve cancer therapies.
What was studied?
This review article explores the role of intratumoral microbiota in cancer initiation, progression, and therapeutic responses. It highlights the complex interactions between microbial communities and the tumor microenvironment (TME) in various cancers, including colorectal, breast, pancreatic, and lung cancers. The review investigates how the presence of specific microbes within tumor tissues influences carcinogenesis, immune response, and metastasis. It also discusses the impact of these microbes on cancer treatment efficacy, including chemotherapy, immunotherapy, and other targeted therapies. The study focuses on the mechanisms by which microbes promote or inhibit tumor growth, including DNA damage, inflammation, immune suppression, and oncogenic pathway activation.
Who was studied?
The article synthesizes data from clinical studies and animal models investigating the presence of microorganisms within tumor tissues. The review includes research on various cancer types, with a particular focus on gastrointestinal, breast, and pancreatic cancers. Studies examining microbial profiles in tumor biopsies and adjacent tissues are considered, along with research on the role of specific microbes, such as Fusobacterium nucleatum, Escherichia coli, and Bacteroides fragilis, in tumorigenesis. Additionally, the review looks at the influence of microbial populations on the immune response and their potential to modulate the TME to either promote or suppress tumor progression.
Most important findings
The review identifies several critical findings regarding the role of intratumoral microbiota in cancer. It demonstrates that tumor tissues, previously thought to be sterile, actually contain distinct microbial communities. These microbes can influence tumorigenesis by causing DNA damage, inducing inflammation, and modulating immune responses. For example, Fusobacterium nucleatum is associated with colorectal cancer progression through immune suppression and activation of pro-inflammatory pathways. The review also points to the role of microbes in shaping the TME, where certain bacteria promote tumor growth by enhancing immune evasion, while others contribute to therapeutic resistance. The presence of specific bacteria, such as Bacteroides fragilis and Escherichia coli, in tumors is linked to altered immune cell activity and resistance to chemotherapy. Furthermore, the article emphasizes that microbial dysbiosis, or imbalances in microbial populations, can contribute to cancer progression and may serve as a potential biomarker for early detection and prognosis.
Key implications
The findings have significant implications for cancer diagnostics, treatment, and prognosis. The presence of specific microbial signatures in tumors could serve as biomarkers for cancer detection and to predict treatment outcomes. The manipulation of intratumoral microbiota offers a promising therapeutic strategy to enhance the efficacy of cancer treatments, particularly immunotherapies. Targeting microbial populations within the TME, either through probiotics, antibiotics, or other microbiome-based therapies, could help in restoring immune function and improving patient responses to treatment. However, more research is needed to fully understand the mechanisms by which intratumoral microbiota influence tumor progression and to develop reliable clinical strategies for microbiome-based interventions in cancer therapy.
The role of the microscopic world: Exploring the role and potential of intratumoral microbiota in cancer immunotherapy
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
•
Intratumoural Microbiota
Intratumoural Microbiota
With the growing understanding of the intratumoral microbiota’s influence on cancer progression, the next frontier in cancer therapy is microbiota-targeted interventions. By introducing beneficial microbes or altering existing microbial populations within tumors, therapies can be designed to modulate the immune system, promote tumor suppression, and improve drug efficacy. However, challenges remain in deciphering the complex relationships between microbes, tumor cells, and the immune system, necessitating more refined research methods and standardized approaches to translate these discoveries into clinical practice.
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This review explores the complex role of intratumoral microbiota in cancer, emphasizing their influence on immune responses and the potential for microbiome-based therapies in cancer immunotherapy. It discusses how specific microbes affect tumor progression and therapy resistance, offering insights into new treatment strategies.
What was studied?
This review investigates the role of intratumoral microbiota in cancer immunotherapy, focusing on how microbial components within tumors can influence cancer progression and therapeutic outcomes. The study covers the various ways intratumoral microbiota can interact with the immune system, either enhancing or suppressing antitumor immune responses. It explores the mechanisms through which specific microorganisms, such as Fusobacterium nucleatum and Bacteroides fragilis, modulate the tumor microenvironment (TME) and affect immune checkpoint therapy, highlighting their potential to be leveraged as therapeutic targets. The review also examines the origins of these intratumoral microbes, categorizing them into mucosal sites, normal adjacent tissues, and hematogenous spread, and how these sources contribute to microbial colonization within the TME.
Who was studied?
The review synthesizes findings from studies on various cancer types, including colorectal, breast, and pancreatic cancers. It specifically focuses on tumors that exhibit microbial colonization and how these microbes impact immune cells within the TME. The studies reviewed examine the presence of intratumoral bacteria, viruses, and fungi, as well as their relationship with immune cells such as T cells, NK cells, macrophages, and myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSCs). The research also discusses how specific microorganisms, including Fusobacterium nucleatum, Bacteroides fragilis, and Clostridium species, influence tumor progression and therapy responses by modulating immune checkpoints, inflammatory pathways, and the immune microenvironment.
Most important findings
The review highlights the dual role of intratumoral microbiota in cancer immunotherapy. On one hand, some microorganisms can stimulate immune responses and improve the efficacy of immunotherapy by enhancing T cell activation, promoting the formation of tertiary lymphoid structures (TLS), and facilitating antigen presentation. On the other hand, certain microbes contribute to immune suppression by increasing reactive oxygen species (ROS), promoting an inflammatory microenvironment, and inducing T cell inactivation, all of which facilitate cancer progression. The presence of Fusobacterium nucleatum in colorectal cancer, for instance, has been linked to immune suppression in microsatellite-unstable tumors, suggesting that intratumoral microbiota’s impact varies based on tumor type and immune status.
Key implications
The findings suggest that understanding the role of intratumoral microbiota could lead to innovative therapeutic strategies in cancer immunotherapy. Targeting specific microbial species or their metabolites could enhance the effectiveness of immune checkpoint inhibitors and other cancer treatments. The review also suggests that manipulating the intratumoral microbiota through interventions such as probiotics, antibiotics, or engineered bacteria could reshape the tumor microenvironment, promote immune activation, and overcome immune evasion mechanisms. However, the complex and condition-dependent effects of microbiota on cancer progression and immune response highlight the need for personalized treatment strategies. Future research should focus on identifying the precise microbial signatures in different cancers and determining how these signatures interact with the host immune system to guide therapeutic interventions.
Intratumoral microbiome: Implications for immune modulation and innovative therapeutic strategies in cancer
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
•
Intratumoural Microbiota
Intratumoural Microbiota
With the growing understanding of the intratumoral microbiota’s influence on cancer progression, the next frontier in cancer therapy is microbiota-targeted interventions. By introducing beneficial microbes or altering existing microbial populations within tumors, therapies can be designed to modulate the immune system, promote tumor suppression, and improve drug efficacy. However, challenges remain in deciphering the complex relationships between microbes, tumor cells, and the immune system, necessitating more refined research methods and standardized approaches to translate these discoveries into clinical practice.
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This review explores the dual role of the intratumoral microbiome in cancer, highlighting its impact on immune modulation and its potential as a target for innovative therapeutic strategies, including enhancing immunotherapy efficacy.
What was studied?
This review article explores the role of the intratumoral microbiome in immune modulation and its potential for cancer therapy. It delves into how bacteria within the tumor microenvironment (TME) influence both tumor progression and immune responses, highlighting their dual roles in either supporting tumor growth or promoting immune-mediated destruction of cancer cells. The review also emphasizes the need for innovative therapeutic strategies aimed at harnessing the microbiome’s impact on immunotherapy, with particular focus on identifying microbial signatures that could be used to predict treatment outcomes and enhance therapeutic efficacy.
Who was studied?
The review synthesizes findings from multiple preclinical studies conducted on animal models, primarily focusing on various cancers such as colorectal cancer (CRC), melanoma, and esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC). These studies examine the impact of bacterial species like Fusobacterium nucleatum, Bacteroides fragilis, and Helicobacter pylori on tumor growth and the immune response within the TME. Additionally, the review integrates findings from human clinical studies, where the presence of specific microbial communities within tumors correlates with variations in immune cell infiltration, tumor growth, and responses to immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs).
Most important findings
The review reveals that the intratumoral microbiome can modulate immune responses in both pro-tumor and anti-tumor directions. Some microbes, such as Fusobacterium nucleatum, promote tumor growth by inhibiting the activity of immune cells like T cells and natural killer (NK) cells, while others, such as Akkermansia muciniphila and Lactobacillus reuteri, enhance the anti-tumor immune response by stimulating T cell activity and cytokine production. These microbes either directly influence immune cells or indirectly modulate the immune microenvironment by affecting the recruitment of immune cells to the tumor site or modifying immune checkpoint expression. The review also emphasizes how the interaction between intratumoral bacteria and host immune cells can either drive immune tolerance or induce anti-tumor immunity, particularly when combined with therapies like immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs).
Key implications
The findings have significant implications for cancer treatment, particularly in enhancing the efficacy of immunotherapies. Understanding the intricate interplay between intratumoral microbiota and immune cells could lead to novel therapeutic strategies that not only target the tumor itself but also reshape the immune landscape to favor anti-tumor immunity. The article advocates for the integration of microbiome research into clinical practice, suggesting that manipulating the intratumoral microbiome through the use of probiotics, antibiotics, or engineered bacteria may offer a new avenue for improving treatment outcomes. However, the review also highlights the challenges of tumor-specific microbiome identification, the variability in microbial compositions across patients, and the need for personalized approaches in microbiome-targeted therapies.
Intratumoral microbiota: Roles in cancer initiation, development and therapeutic efficacy
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
•
Intratumoural Microbiota
Intratumoural Microbiota
With the growing understanding of the intratumoral microbiota’s influence on cancer progression, the next frontier in cancer therapy is microbiota-targeted interventions. By introducing beneficial microbes or altering existing microbial populations within tumors, therapies can be designed to modulate the immune system, promote tumor suppression, and improve drug efficacy. However, challenges remain in deciphering the complex relationships between microbes, tumor cells, and the immune system, necessitating more refined research methods and standardized approaches to translate these discoveries into clinical practice.
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This review explores how intratumoral microbiota influence cancer initiation, progression, and therapy. It highlights their roles in immune modulation, tumor growth, and therapeutic resistance, suggesting microbiome manipulation as a potential therapeutic strategy.
What was reviewed?
This review article discusses the emerging role of intratumoral microbiota in cancer initiation, development, and therapeutic efficacy. It explores how microorganisms within the tumor microenvironment (TME), including bacteria, fungi, and viruses, contribute to the biology of tumors. The review delves into the mechanisms through which these microorganisms influence tumor growth, including genomic instability, immune modulation, and metabolic changes. Additionally, the article covers how intratumoral microbiota can impact the effectiveness of cancer therapies, particularly immunotherapies, by altering immune responses and influencing tumor sensitivity to treatments. The review highlights the potential for microbiome-targeted interventions, including the modulation of the TME to improve clinical outcomes in cancer patients.
Who was reviewed?
The article synthesizes findings from studies that have examined the presence and role of microbiota in various types of cancer. It reviews research on how specific microbial communities within tumors contribute to carcinogenesis and the progression of cancers such as colorectal, breast, pancreatic, and lung cancer. The studies reviewed include investigations into the microbial composition of tumor tissues, their effects on immune responses, and their interactions with cancer therapies. By drawing from both preclinical models and clinical studies, the review provides a comprehensive look at the diversity of microorganisms in the TME and their implications for cancer therapy.
Most important findings
The review identifies several key findings regarding the role of intratumoral microbiota in cancer. A critical discovery is that tumors, once thought to be sterile, host diverse microbial communities that vary across different cancer types. Specific bacteria, such as Fusobacterium nucleatum in colorectal cancer and Helicobacter pylori in gastric cancer, are linked to cancer initiation and progression through mechanisms like promoting inflammation, inducing DNA damage, and affecting immune responses. The microbiota within the TME can enhance or suppress the immune system, playing a significant role in tumor immune evasion and influencing the success of immunotherapies. The presence of certain bacteria has been shown to enhance the effectiveness of immune checkpoint inhibitors by stimulating immune cells within the TME. However, other microbes, such as those in pancreatic and breast cancer, may contribute to therapy resistance by creating an immunosuppressive environment. Microbial metabolites, such as short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs), can impact epigenetic modifications and alter tumor metabolism, further influencing cancer progression and therapeutic outcomes.
Key implications
The review emphasizes the potential for utilizing intratumoral microbiota as both diagnostic and therapeutic tools. Understanding the microbiota present in tumors could lead to the identification of microbial biomarkers that predict cancer progression and therapeutic response. Modulating the intratumoral microbiota may become a novel strategy to improve the efficacy of cancer treatments, particularly immunotherapies. Interventions targeting the TME, such as using probiotics, antibiotics, or microbiome-based vaccines, could enhance the immune response, reduce inflammation, and increase the sensitivity of tumors to treatments. However, the review also acknowledges the challenges in this field, including the complexity of microbial interactions in the TME and the need for more research to determine the most effective microbiome-based therapies for different cancer types.
Intratumoural microbiota: a new frontier in cancer development and therapy
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
•
Intratumoural Microbiota
Intratumoural Microbiota
With the growing understanding of the intratumoral microbiota’s influence on cancer progression, the next frontier in cancer therapy is microbiota-targeted interventions. By introducing beneficial microbes or altering existing microbial populations within tumors, therapies can be designed to modulate the immune system, promote tumor suppression, and improve drug efficacy. However, challenges remain in deciphering the complex relationships between microbes, tumor cells, and the immune system, necessitating more refined research methods and standardized approaches to translate these discoveries into clinical practice.
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This review discusses how intratumoral microbiota influence cancer progression and therapy. It explores their roles in immune modulation, inflammation, and treatment resistance, and suggests microbiota manipulation as a potential therapeutic strategy for enhancing cancer treatment outcomes.
What was reviewed?
This review article explores the emerging role of intratumoral microbiota in cancer development and therapy. It focuses on the concept that tumor tissues, once thought to be sterile, actually host a variety of microorganisms, including bacteria, fungi, and viruses. These microorganisms are an integral part of the tumor microenvironment (TME) and significantly influence tumor behavior. The review addresses the potential sources of intratumoral microbiota, including mucosal invasion, adjacent tissue migration, and hematogenous spread. It examines how these microbial populations contribute to tumor initiation, progression, and metastasis through mechanisms such as genomic instability, inflammation, immune evasion, and altered metabolism. Additionally, the article discusses how manipulating the intratumoral microbiota may offer new strategies for cancer therapy, particularly in the context of immunotherapy.
Who was reviewed?
The article synthesizes research on the microbiota found in various cancers, providing an overview of studies that have identified specific microbial communities within tumor tissues. It reviews studies involving a range of cancer types, including lung, colorectal, liver, gastric, and pancreatic cancers. The focus is on how these microorganisms interact with host cells to influence tumor biology, immune responses, and treatment outcomes. Key microbial species, such as Fusobacterium nucleatum, Enterotoxigenic Bacteroides fragilis, and Helicobacter pylori, are discussed for their roles in carcinogenesis. The review also includes research on how microbial signatures in tumors can be used for cancer prognosis and how microbial interventions might be integrated into current therapeutic strategies.
Most important findings
The review highlights several critical findings on the role of intratumoral microbiota in cancer. Tumor tissues host distinct microbial populations, which vary by cancer type and stage. Bacteria like Fusobacterium nucleatum and Bacteroides fragilis have been linked to colorectal cancer and are shown to promote tumor growth by inducing DNA damage and inflammation. Additionally, the microbiota within tumors can influence the immune environment, often promoting immune evasion and inflammation that aids in cancer progression. Certain microbes, such as F. nucleatum, actively contribute to immune suppression by activating immune checkpoints or inducing immune cell dysfunction. The presence of specific microorganisms also affects the response to cancer treatments, particularly immunotherapy, with some microbiota enhancing the efficacy of therapies while others contribute to resistance. The review also emphasizes the potential of using microbiota manipulation as a therapeutic approach, with early-stage studies showing promise in targeting microbial communities to improve cancer outcomes.
Key implications
The review presents several important clinical implications for cancer treatment. Understanding the role of intratumoral microbiota could lead to new diagnostic biomarkers that predict cancer progression and therapy response based on microbial signatures. Moreover, interventions aimed at modifying the tumor microbiota, such as using probiotics, antibiotics, or immunotherapies targeting microbial populations, could become part of personalized cancer treatment regimens. Targeting the microbiota within the tumor microenvironment, particularly through immune modulation, could enhance the effectiveness of existing therapies, such as immune checkpoint inhibitors. However, further research is needed to fully understand the complex interactions between intratumoral microbiota and the host immune system, as well as the long-term effects of microbiota-targeted therapies in cancer patients.
Tumour-resident oncolytic bacteria trigger potent anticancer effects through selective intratumoural thrombosis and necrosis
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
•
Intratumoural Microbiota
Intratumoural Microbiota
With the growing understanding of the intratumoral microbiota’s influence on cancer progression, the next frontier in cancer therapy is microbiota-targeted interventions. By introducing beneficial microbes or altering existing microbial populations within tumors, therapies can be designed to modulate the immune system, promote tumor suppression, and improve drug efficacy. However, challenges remain in deciphering the complex relationships between microbes, tumor cells, and the immune system, necessitating more refined research methods and standardized approaches to translate these discoveries into clinical practice.
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This study demonstrates the potent anticancer effects of a tumor-resident bacterial consortium in both immunocompetent and immunocompromised mice. The consortium induces tumor remission through selective thrombosis, necrosis, and biofilm formation, offering a promising drug-free strategy for cancer therapy with potential applications in treating solid tumors.
What was studied?
The study explores the use of a tumor-resident bacterial consortium composed of Proteus mirabilis (A-gyo) and Rhodopseudomonas palustris (UN-gyo) for oncolytic therapy. This bacterial combination, administered in a specific 3:97 ratio, demonstrated potent anticancer effects through mechanisms like selective intratumoral thrombosis, necrosis, and biofilm formation. The consortium’s action was independent of immune cell infiltration and was shown to induce complete tumor remission and prolonged survival in both immunocompetent and immunocompromised mouse models. The study investigates the bacterial consortium’s safety profile, molecular characteristics, and therapeutic potential in treating various types of solid tumors.
Who was studied?
The study involved several mouse models, including immunocompetent BALB/c mice, as well as immunocompromised mice such as SCID (severe combined immunodeficiency) and NOD-SCID (non-obese diabetic SCID) mice. These mice were implanted with different types of tumors, including colon cancer (Colon26), and received intravenous injections of the bacterial consortium. The effects of varying bacterial doses and their interaction with the immune system were also analyzed, with a focus on the tumor-targeting efficacy and safety of the AUN bacterial consortium.
Most important findings
The AUN bacterial consortium, administered intravenously, showed remarkable anticancer efficacy in mouse models, including tumor remission and increased survival without causing systemic toxicity or cytokine release syndrome. The bacterial consortium induced tumor-specific thrombosis, leading to vascular collapse and necrosis, which contributed to tumor regression. Additionally, the combination of A-gyo and UN-gyo exhibited biocompatibility and enhanced safety, as UN-gyo helped suppress the biogenic activity of A-gyo, reduced pathogenicity, and increased cancer-specific cytotoxicity. The study also revealed that the bacteria proliferated within tumors, formed biofilms, and caused selective tumor destruction. This natural synergy between the bacteria was achieved without genetic engineering, highlighting its potential as a safe, tumor-targeted therapeutic strategy.
Key implications
The use of a bacterial consortium for oncolytic therapy presents a novel, drug-free strategy for cancer treatment. The findings suggest that bacteria can be harnessed to selectively target and destroy tumors through natural processes like thrombosis and necrosis. This approach could be particularly useful in treating cancers that are difficult to target with traditional therapies or immunotherapies. However, the study also raised concerns about the potential risks of using live bacteria, such as infection or resistance, that would need to be carefully managed in clinical applications. Further research into optimizing bacterial formulations, understanding their long-term effects, and ensuring patient safety is necessary before these therapies can be widely applied in clinical practice.
Plasma Iron Infection Risk: Role of TSAT and HFE C282Y in Immune Defense
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Iron (Fe)
Iron (Fe)
OverviewIron is a pivotal nutrient at the host–pathogen interface. Virtually all microbes (with rare exceptions like Borrelia) require iron for processes from DNA synthesis to respiration. [1] In human hosts, free iron is vanishingly scarce due to “nutritional immunity,” wherein iron is locked up in hemoproteins or tightly bound by transport proteins.[2] This metal tug-of-war […]
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This review summarizes evidence that both low and high plasma iron increase infection risk, particularly in individuals with HFE C282Y homozygosity. Maintaining stable transferrin saturation is vital for immune function, with implications for managing hemochromatosis and iron deficiency to prevent infections and support microbiome health.
What was reviewed?
This commentary by Drakesmith and Zoller provides an expert synthesis of recent findings linking plasma iron status, hemochromatosis genotypes, and infection risk, with a particular focus on a large Danish cohort study by Mottelson et al. The paper critically reviews evidence that both hypoferremia (low plasma iron) and hyperferremia (high plasma iron), as well as homozygosity for the hemochromatosis-associated HFE C282Y mutation, are independently associated with increased risk of infections. The review places these findings in the context of iron metabolism, genetic determinants of iron homeostasis, and their effects on immune function. It also discusses the nuances of iron compartmentalization, particularly emphasizing the role of transferrin saturation (TSAT) as a key risk marker rather than total body iron stores. The review further explores the implications of these associations for clinical management and emerging therapeutic strategies, and highlights gaps in understanding the mechanistic links between iron status, immune competence, and susceptibility to specific pathogens.
Who was reviewed?
The commentary draws upon data from a variety of populations, but most prominently from a cohort of over 140,000 Danish individuals analyzed by Mottelson et al., which included genetic, biochemical, and clinical outcome data. Among these, a significant subgroup consisted of individuals homozygous for the HFE p.Cys282Tyr mutation, the primary genetic cause of hereditary hemochromatosis in European populations. The review also references findings from the UK Biobank, which includes middle-aged and older adults, and other population-based and genetic studies relevant to iron metabolism and infection risk. The referenced studies collectively span diverse patient groups, including those with iron deficiency, iron overload (hemochromatosis), and the general population, as well as some subgroups with comorbidities such as liver disease, diabetes, or heart failure.
Most important findings
The review highlights a U-shaped relationship between plasma iron status and infection risk, wherein both low and high TSAT are associated with increased susceptibility to infections, particularly pneumonia, sepsis, and skin infections. Notably, the infection risk is more closely linked to plasma iron (as measured by TSAT) than to ferritin (reflecting total body iron stores), suggesting that the circulating iron pool is most relevant for pathogen proliferation and immune function. Homozygosity for HFE p.Cys282Tyr is shown to increase infection risk, even in the absence of overt iron overload or comorbidities, indicating a primary effect of iron dysregulation rather than simply iron excess. The commentary also notes that high TSAT (>45–50%) is associated with adverse outcomes and that iron parameters remain relatively stable over time in most individuals, consistent with a strong genetic influence. Importantly, both impaired iron delivery to immune cells (in deficiency) and increased iron availability to pathogens (in overload) can disrupt host-pathogen balance. Emerging data suggest that the control of plasma iron fluxes—rather than static iron levels—is critical for maintaining immune competence and preventing infections.
Key implications
Clinically, these findings underscore the importance of maintaining plasma iron homeostasis within a normal range to minimize infection risk. For patients with hemochromatosis, this supports a shift in management focus from simply reducing iron stores to actively regulating TSAT—potentially through new therapies such as hepcidin mimetics or gene editing. Conversely, correcting iron deficiency is necessary not only to prevent anemia but also to support immune defense. The review also emphasizes the need for further research to clarify the immunological consequences of low TSAT, including which immune pathways are affected and which pathogens are most relevant. More broadly, the commentary advocates for a paradigm shift in the classification and management of iron disorders, highlighting the centrality of hepcidin deficiency and plasma iron dysregulation rather than just iron overload per se. Given the microbiome’s reliance on host iron availability, these findings have direct implications for understanding microbial signature shifts in iron-related conditions and designing interventions that balance host defense with microbiome stability.
Citation
Drakesmith H, Zoller H. The iron curve: infection at both ends. Comment on Mottelson et al, page 693. Blood. 2024;144(7):679-680. https://doi.org/10.1182/blood.2024025259
Iron Supplementation and Infant Gut Microbiota: Meta-Analysis Reveals Bifidobacterium Loss
February 12, 2026
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Metal Homeostasis
Metal Homeostasis
Transition metals like iron, zinc, copper, and manganese are crucial for the enzymatic machinery of organisms, but their imbalance can foster pathogenic environments within the gastrointestinal tract.
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Iron (Fe)
Iron (Fe)
OverviewIron is a pivotal nutrient at the host–pathogen interface. Virtually all microbes (with rare exceptions like Borrelia) require iron for processes from DNA synthesis to respiration. [1] In human hosts, free iron is vanishingly scarce due to “nutritional immunity,” wherein iron is locked up in hemoproteins or tightly bound by transport proteins.[2] This metal tug-of-war […]
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Iron supplementation in infants reduces Bifidobacterium abundance by 6.37%, as confirmed by meta-analysis. While critical for anemia prevention, oral iron may disrupt the infant gut microbiota, potentially supporting pathogen growth. Prebiotic co-administration could mitigate adverse effects.
What was reviewed?
This systematic review and meta-analysis examined the effects of oral iron supplementation or fortification on the composition of gut microbiota in infants up to 12 months of age. The authors specifically evaluated changes in microbial taxa—particularly beneficial versus potentially pathogenic bacteria—in response to iron interventions. The review focused on randomized controlled trials (RCTs) comparing infants who received per os (oral) iron supplementation or iron-fortified foods versus controls who did not receive supplemental iron. The primary outcome was the alteration in gut microbiota, particularly shifts in the abundance of Bifidobacterium and Lactobacillus spp., as well as enteropathogens like Escherichia coli, Clostridium, and Shigella.
Who was reviewed?
Six RCTs met the inclusion criteria, involving healthy neonates and infants (≤12 months old) across various geographic locations—two studies in Africa, two in Europe, one in Canada, and one in the USA. Most infants were exclusively or predominantly breastfed at baseline, and interventions typically began around 6 months of age. Across studies, microbiome profiling methods varied but largely relied on 16S rRNA sequencing of the V1–V4 hypervariable regions, although one early study (1985) used bacterial culturing methods.
Most important findings
The meta-analysis focused on Bifidobacterium due to limited compatible data across studies for other taxa. Four studies provided sufficient quantitative data to evaluate changes in Bifidobacterium abundance:
Comparison Group
Mean Reduction in Bifidobacterium
95% CI
p-value
Iron Group
-10.3%
-15.0% to -5.55%
Non-Iron Group
-2.96%
Total Difference
-6.37%
-10.16% to -25.8%
0.02
The next table summarizes key microbial findings from the systematic review and meta-analysis on oral iron supplementation in infants. Across all included studies, Bifidobacterium was consistently reduced following iron exposure. Lactobacillus spp. remained relatively stable, though data were insufficient for quantitative synthesis. Several pathogenic taxa, including Escherichia/Shigella and Clostridium, increased in certain iron groups, but inter-study variability prevented pooled analysis. A quality appraisal using the RoB2 tool showed that most studies were at low risk of bias, while two presented methodological concerns related to blinding and analysis planning.
Category
Summary
Bifidobacterium
Consistently reduced in iron-supplemented groups across all studies.
Lactobacillus spp.
Generally stable or modestly decreased; insufficient data for inclusion in meta-analysis.
Pathogenic Taxa
Escherichia/Shigella and Clostridium increased in iron supplemented groups. However, data was too heterogeneous to pool.
Key implications
Iron supplementation or fortification in infancy, while clinically important for preventing iron deficiency anemia, may reduce beneficial taxa such as Bifidobacterium, which play crucial roles in infant gut maturation, immune development, and metabolic regulation. This reduction was statistically significant across pooled studies. Although not all studies observed an increase in pathogenic bacteria, prior research outside this meta-analysis (e.g., Jaeggi et al., 2015; Paganini et al., 2017) suggests that iron may support the bloom of enteropathogens and increase the risk of inflammation or diarrhea. Given that Bifidobacterium dominance in infancy is associated with protection against allergic disease, gastrointestinal infection, and potentially neurodevelopmental resilience, these findings reinforce the importance of optimizing iron formulation. Iron interventions should be cautiously balanced—favoring strategies like co-administration with prebiotics (e.g., galacto-oligosaccharides) to preserve microbiome health without compromising hematologic outcomes.
The review underscores a clinical paradox: iron is vital for neurodevelopment, yet excessive or poorly absorbed iron in the colon may create an unfavorable gut environment. Further studies are needed to determine the safest formulations and dosing schedules that mitigate microbiota disruption while effectively correcting iron deficiency.
Role of Iron in Bacterial Pathogenesis: Clinical Takeaways from an Editorial
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Iron (Fe)
Iron (Fe)
OverviewIron is a pivotal nutrient at the host–pathogen interface. Virtually all microbes (with rare exceptions like Borrelia) require iron for processes from DNA synthesis to respiration. [1] In human hosts, free iron is vanishingly scarce due to “nutritional immunity,” wherein iron is locked up in hemoproteins or tightly bound by transport proteins.[2] This metal tug-of-war […]
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This editorial distills how iron availability shapes bacterial virulence, host nutritional immunity, and therapeutic vulnerabilities, spanning siderophores, Feo, Fur and ExrR control, hepcidin dynamics, and heme analog antimicrobials, with clear implications for infection risk in iron overload and for iron-targeted interventions across clinical contexts.
What was reviewed?
This editorial synthesizes evidence on the role of iron in bacterial pathogenesis, emphasizing how iron scarcity and host nutritional immunity shape virulence, metabolic strategy, and antibiotic tolerance across diverse pathogens. Mechanisms covered include siderophore production and piracy, heme acquisition, ferrous iron uptake via Feo, and regulatory circuitry such as Fur and the newly identified ExrR. Therapeutic concepts such as heme analog antimetabolites are highlighted alongside host responses that restrict iron bioavailability. The focus is translational, linking molecular iron handling to clinical outcomes and potential interventions relevant to the role of iron in bacterial pathogenesis.
Who was reviewed?
The editorial curates contributions spanning extracellular and intracellular pathogens and multiple host contexts. Examples include Yersinia pestis toggling between yersiniabactin and Feo according to oxygen tension, fish pathogens Vibrio anguillarum and Photobacterium damselae, the Burkholderia cepacia complex in cystic fibrosis, Francisella tularensis with TonB-independent rhizoferrin uptake, and FupA-mediated Fe²⁺ transport. Regarding the role of iron in bacterial pathogenesis, Pseudomonas aeruginosa targeted by gallium–protoporphyrin IX, Ehrlichia ruminantium with ExrR-linked T4SS induction under iron depletion, Riemerella anatipestifer with Fur-dependent virulence, Mycobacterium tuberculosis exploiting surface GAPDH to bind host lactoferrin, and Salmonella Typhimurium where hepcidin-driven hypoferremia and iron overload modulate bacterial burden in vivo.
Most important findings
Across taxa, iron limitation is a cue that upregulates iron-acquisition systems and virulence programs. Pathogens flexibly switch among siderophores, xenosiderophore uptake, heme receptors, and Feo transport depending on oxygen, pH, and niche, which highlights how the role of iron in bacterial pathogenesis varies. Host nutritional immunity responds with hemopexin, transferrin, and hepcidin to curtail extracellular and dietary iron, yet pathogens often co-opt these same host proteins. Clinically relevant signals emerge: genetic or dietary iron overload increases susceptibility, lactoferrin can become an inadvertent iron source for M. tuberculosis via GAPDH, and heme analogs such as GaPPX can pharmacologically exploit bacterial heme receptors. Iron storage proteins (bacterioferritin and ferritin) may intersect with drug resistance networks, nominating novel targets like Rv1877.
Pathogen
Highlighted iron strategy or host interaction
Yersinia pestis
Aerobic yersiniabactin vs microaerobic Feo; Fur repression context dependent
Vibrio anguillarum
Multiple siderophores including anguibactin and vanchrobactin; xenosiderophore use
Photobacterium damselae
Citrate secreted as a minimalist siderophore linking core metabolism to iron uptake
Burkholderia spp.
Ornibactins, cepaciachelin, pyochelin, malleobactin plus heme and Feo uptake
Francisella tularensis
Rhizoferrin uptake without TonB; Fe²⁺ import via FupA
Pseudomonas aeruginosa
Heme receptors permit uptake of GaPPX, inhibiting growth under iron limitation
Ehrlichia ruminantium
Iron depletion activates ExrR, upregulating the T4SS and virulence genes
Riemerella anatipestifer
Fur regulates virulence; deletion attenuates infection in vivo
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
Surface GAPDH binds lactoferrin to pirate iron with high affinity
Salmonella Typhimurium
Infection induces hepcidin and hypoferremia; iron overload increases bacterial load
Key implications
For clinicians, iron status is integral to infectious risk and therapeutic planning. Avoid unnecessary iron enrichment during active infection or in iron-overload phenotypes given evidence that excess iron augments pathogen biomass. Consider host-directed strategies that modulate hepcidin or leverage lactoferrin while recognizing that certain pathogens directly exploit these proteins. Notably, the role of iron in bacterial pathogenesis can guide pathogen-directed opportunities, including blocking siderophore systems, inhibiting Feo transport in microaerobic niches, and targeting heme receptors with analogs like GaPPX. From a microbiome-signatures perspective, iron tension is a cross-cutting ecological driver that selects for organisms with efficient iron piracy; mapping siderophore families, heme receptor repertoires, and Feo presence can refine microbial associations tied to iron-rich or iron-restricted niches. Iron storage and regulatory proteins intersect with antimicrobial resistance, suggesting combinatorial regimens that pair conventional antibiotics with iron-pathway disruptors.
Commensal iron acquisition and nutritional immunity during Salmonella infection
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Iron (Fe)
Iron (Fe)
OverviewIron is a pivotal nutrient at the host–pathogen interface. Virtually all microbes (with rare exceptions like Borrelia) require iron for processes from DNA synthesis to respiration. [1] In human hosts, free iron is vanishingly scarce due to “nutritional immunity,” wherein iron is locked up in hemoproteins or tightly bound by transport proteins.[2] This metal tug-of-war […]
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Nutritional Immunity
Nutritional Immunity
Nutritional immunity restricts metal access to pathogens, leveraging sequestration, transport, and toxicity to control infections and immunity.
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XusB in Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron binds enterobactin in OMVs, sustains commensal fitness, and creates a lipocalin 2 resistant iron pool that Salmonella can recapture, redefining commensal-iron-acquisition-and-nutritional-immunity during colitis.
What was studied?
This study interrogates commensal iron acquisition and nutritional immunity during Salmonella infection, focusing on how the gut commensal Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron captures xenosiderophores to sustain fitness and inadvertently modulates host defenses against pathogens. The authors identify XusB, a secreted, surface-anchored lipoprotein that binds ferric enterobactin with high affinity and is enriched in outer membrane vesicles. They combine structural biology, biochemistry, bacterial genetics, and murine infection models to show that XusB-bound enterobactin resists sequestration by host lipocalin 2, can be re-acquired by Salmonella via FepA or IroN, and thereby alters the effective pool of iron chelators available under inflammatory iron restriction. The graphical abstract on page 2 schematically depicts enterobactin crossfeeding, OMV packaging of XusB, and reduced lipocalin 2 access, framing commensal iron acquisition as a third axis in nutritional immunity beyond host and pathogen.
Who was studied?
Experiments used B. thetaiotaomicron VPI-5482 and isogenic mutants lacking xusB or harboring an enterobactin-binding deficient XusB, along with Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium strains, including wild type, entB deficient, ΔfepA iroN double mutant, and ΔiroB lacking salmochelin synthesis. Escherichia coli BW25113 mutants from the Keio collection informed receptor requirements for XusB-bound siderophore uptake. In vivo work involved antibiotic-pretreated conventional C57BL/6 mice for competitive infection and colonization studies, and gnotobiotic Swiss Webster mice to measure XusB in luminal OMV fractions without confounding microbes. Figures 4 and 7 detail competitive indices for Salmonella in mice colonized with B. thetaiotaomicron variants or administered OMVs, while supplementary analyses confirm comparable inflammation readouts across conditions.
Most important findings
XusB is a surface-exposed, OMV-enriched lipoprotein required for B. thetaiotaomicron utilization of catecholate xenosiderophores. Structural work shows XusB forms a seven-bladed beta propeller with a positively charged central calyx that accommodates Fe-enterobactin; docking and mutagenesis identify key contact residues, and binding affinity is in the low-nanomolar range near 148 nM. In vitro, OMV-associated or recombinant XusB preloaded with Fe-enterobactin fuels growth of B. thetaiotaomicron under iron chelation, elevates cellular iron by ICP-MS, and supports growth of Salmonella entB mutants and E. coli via TonB-dependent enterobactin receptors FepA and IroN. In species with distinct XusB homologs, XusB-bound siderophores can be “selfish,” restricting access to closely related Bacteroides while remaining accessible to Enterobacteriaceae.
Crucially, XusB changes the competitive landscape in the presence of host lipocalin 2. When lipocalin 2 is added with an iron chelator, XusB increases the competitive index of wild-type Salmonella over the ΔfepA iroN mutant, indicating that XusB-bound enterobactin constitutes an exploitable pool despite host sequestration of free enterobactin. In mice, XusB confers a resilience advantage to B. thetaiotaomicron during Salmonella colitis and increases Salmonella fitness when animals are colonized with XusB-positive B. thetaiotaomicron or given XusB-bearing OMVs. Page 34 visualizes the XusB architecture and calyx electrostatics, pages 39 to 41 depict in vitro and in vivo competition assays that demonstrate altered siderophore accessibility and pathogen advantage.
Key implications
For microbiome signatures, B. thetaiotaomicron emerges as a context-dependent facilitator of pathogen iron access under inflammation, linking a commensal siderophore-binding system to Salmonella expansion. B. thetaiotaomicron with XusB-mediated xenosiderophore capture and Salmonella Typhimurium with enterobactin or salmochelin utilization. Clinically, strategies that modulate iron availability or deploy siderophore-binding therapeutics must account for commensal OMV cargo that can buffer host sequestration and inadvertently aid pathogens. Targeting XusB-like systems may represent a translational lever to restore nutritional immunity without broadly disrupting commensals.
The battle for iron between bacterial pathogens and hosts: clinical microbiome implications
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Iron (Fe)
Iron (Fe)
OverviewIron is a pivotal nutrient at the host–pathogen interface. Virtually all microbes (with rare exceptions like Borrelia) require iron for processes from DNA synthesis to respiration. [1] In human hosts, free iron is vanishingly scarce due to “nutritional immunity,” wherein iron is locked up in hemoproteins or tightly bound by transport proteins.[2] This metal tug-of-war […]
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This review maps the battle for iron between bacterial pathogens and hosts, detailing nutritional immunity, bacterial siderophores and heme uptake, siderocalin defense, stealth siderophores, and clinical implications for infection risk, vaccines, and microbiome-informed care.
What was reviewed?
This narrative review synthesizes the battle for iron between bacterial pathogens and hosts, focusing on vertebrate nutritional immunity and the microbial countermeasures that enable infection despite iron scarcity. It explains how vertebrates sequester iron intracellularly in ferritin and within heme, bind extracellular iron with high-affinity transferrin, and mop up free hemoglobin and heme via haptoglobin and hemopexin, thereby rendering free iron essentially unavailable to invaders. The article also details how pathogens sense iron limitation through regulators such as Fur and DtxR, and how they respond by deploying iron acquisition systems. The figure on page 2 visualizes this “iron battlefield” in health versus infection, highlighting host ligands, neutrophil lactoferrin release during inflammation, and bacterial receptors for transferrin, lactoferrin, hemoglobin, and hemophores.
Who was reviewed?
The review integrates host factors and representative pathogens across taxa. On the host side, it covers transferrin with an association constant near 10^36 for ferric iron, ferritin, lactoferrin from neutrophil granules, and hemopexin and haptoglobin that capture heme and hemoglobin. On the pathogen side, it describes Neisseria and Pasteurellaceae that express transferrin and lactoferrin receptors, Staphylococcus aureus that uses the Isd heme uptake machinery, Bacillus anthracis that produces the stealth siderophore petrobactin, Salmonella Typhimurium that produces salmochelin to evade siderocalin, and Borrelia burgdorferi which uniquely substitutes manganese to minimize iron dependence. The review also notes that individuals with iron overload, such as in hemochromatosis, are unusually susceptible to pathogens like Vibrio vulnificus, underscoring the clinical relevance of host iron status.
Most important findings
The central insight is that vertebrates practice nutritional immunity by withholding iron, while pathogens have evolved layered, high-affinity systems to overcome this barrier. In health, iron remains intracellular or tightly liganded, and transferrin renders free extracellular iron effectively insoluble; during infection, tissue damage and hemolysis increase the availability of hemoproteins, while inflammation releases lactoferrin, yet bacteria still require dedicated uptake systems to compete. Bacterial strategies fall into three principal categories: siderophore systems with subnanomolar to femtomolar iron-binding affinity that strip iron from transferrin or ferritin, heme acquisition through surface receptors and hemophores followed by cytosolic heme oxygenase or reverse ferrochelatase processing, and direct receptor-mediated removal of iron from transferrin and lactoferrin.
The host counters siderophore piracy with siderocalin (NGAL), which binds catecholate siderophores such as enterobactin and prevents their uptake. Bacteria, in turn, produce stealth siderophores like petrobactin and salmochelin that evade siderocalin binding, restoring iron access and virulence fitness. Human challenge data indicate that expression of both lactoferrin and transferrin receptors confers a selective advantage to Neisseria gonorrhoeae, reinforcing the concept that iron receptors are in vivo fitness determinants. Collectively, these mechanisms provide a coherent framework for linking microbial iron acquisition to virulence and for understanding how host iron status modulates pathogen selection pressures, with implications for microbiome signatures where enterobactin-dependent Enterobacteriaceae may be disadvantaged in high siderocalin states.
Key implications
Clinically, iron availability is a modifiable ecological variable that shapes pathogen success and likely influences community structure in infected niches. Elevated iron exposure, whether iatrogenic or from overload disorders, can reduce the effectiveness of nutritional immunity and favor siderophore-competent pathogens, which argues for extremely judicious iron administration during active infection and careful interpretation of transferrin saturation and ferritin in at-risk patients. Because iron uptake receptors and heme transporters are surface-exposed and induced during infection, they represent tractable vaccine antigens and therapeutic targets. Host effectors such as siderocalin highlight the feasibility of boosting endogenous nutritional immunity, while the emergence of stealth siderophores underscores the need for therapeutics that neutralize both classical and modified siderophores. For microbiome-informed practice, linking disease-associated pathogen blooms to iron handling, lactoferrin dynamics, and siderophore ecology can guide targeted interventions that either limit iron availability or block specific acquisition pathways.
Iron Supplementation and Microbiome in Preterm Infants: Risks of Dysbiosis and Pathogen Enrichment
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Iron (Fe)
Iron (Fe)
OverviewIron is a pivotal nutrient at the host–pathogen interface. Virtually all microbes (with rare exceptions like Borrelia) require iron for processes from DNA synthesis to respiration. [1] In human hosts, free iron is vanishingly scarce due to “nutritional immunity,” wherein iron is locked up in hemoproteins or tightly bound by transport proteins.[2] This metal tug-of-war […]
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High-dose enteral iron supplementation in VLBW infants was associated with reduced microbial diversity, Proteus enrichment, and increased microbial potential for ferroptosis and epithelial invasion, highlighting risks of intestinal dysbiosis.
What was studied?
This longitudinal observational study investigated how different enteral iron supplementation (EIS) dosages affect the intestinal microbiome of very low birth weight (VLBW) preterm infants. Infants were stratified into groups receiving 3–3.9, 4–4.9, 5–5.9, or ≥6 mg/kg/day of elemental iron. Using 16S rRNA V4 gene sequencing, bacterial taxonomy and predicted functional pathways were analyzed from stool samples collected before and after EIS initiation. The study also employed the Piphillin software to infer functional capacities such as ferroptosis and epithelial invasion from the microbiome. Linear mixed-effects models were used to determine associations between EIS dose and microbial parameters, adjusting for multiple clinical covariates.
Who was studied?
The study cohort comprised 80 VLBW infants (average gestational age: 28.1 ± 2.4 weeks; average birth weight: 1103 ± 210 g) from a single tertiary academic center. A total of 342 stool samples were collected over the first two months of life, including 105 samples before and 237 after EIS initiation. Inclusion criteria restricted the cohort to infants under 1500 g birth weight without major anomalies, and all received iron supplementation as per clinical protocols. Infants varied in sex, mode of delivery, feeding type (maternal breast milk, formula, or mixed), and antibiotic exposure.
Most important findings
Infants receiving higher EIS doses (≥6 mg/kg/day) exhibited a statistically significant increase in the abundance of Proteus spp. and Bifidobacterium, and a reduction in alpha diversity (Shannon index) compared to lower-dose groups. These alterations are indicative of gut dysbiosis. Notably, Proteus enrichment was associated with formula feeding, earlier initiation of EIS, and female sex. Predicted functional potential using KEGG pathway analysis revealed a higher abundance of pathways related to ferroptosis and bacterial epithelial invasion, particularly in the highest dose group two weeks after iron initiation. This finding aligns with mechanistic literature suggesting that iron-rich environments enhance bacterial pathogenicity. These microbial alterations occurred despite adjustments for confounding factors, including gestational age, antibiotic use, anemia, feeding mode, and maternal BMI.
Microbial/Functional Marker
EIS Dose Effect (Group 6 vs. others)
Statistical Significance
Proteus abundance
Significantly increased
p < 0.001
Bifidobacterium
Also increased (vs. group 3)
p = 0.028
Shannon Index (diversity)
Significantly reduced
p < 0.001
Ferroptosis pathways
Increased in high-dose group
Inferred via KEGG pathways
Epithelial invasion genes
Enriched in high-dose group (week 2 post-EIS)
Inferred via KEGG pathways
Key implications
This study provides compelling evidence that high-dose enteral iron supplementation may disrupt microbial homeostasis in VLBW infants, contributing to intestinal dysbiosis marked by reduced diversity and pathogenic enrichment. The enrichment of Proteus—a known opportunistic pathogen—and functional potentials for epithelial invasion underscore potential risks for enteric inflammation or sepsis in this vulnerable population. These findings advocate for caution in the upper dosing range of EIS and suggest the need for individualized dosing regimens. They also emphasize the importance of integrating microbiome considerations into neonatal nutritional protocols, especially where pathogen proliferation and barrier integrity are clinical concerns.
Staphylococcus aureus Metal Acquisition and Nutritional Immunity: Virulence Insights
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Iron (Fe)
Iron (Fe)
OverviewIron is a pivotal nutrient at the host–pathogen interface. Virtually all microbes (with rare exceptions like Borrelia) require iron for processes from DNA synthesis to respiration. [1] In human hosts, free iron is vanishingly scarce due to “nutritional immunity,” wherein iron is locked up in hemoproteins or tightly bound by transport proteins.[2] This metal tug-of-war […]
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Zinc
Zinc
Zinc is an essential trace element vital for cellular functions and microbiome health. It influences immune regulation, pathogen virulence, and disease progression in conditions like IBS and breast cancer. Pathogens exploit zinc for survival, while therapeutic zinc chelation can suppress virulence, rebalance the microbiome, and offer potential treatments for inflammatory and degenerative diseases.
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This review outlines how Staphylococcus aureus overcomes host nutritional immunity by acquiring iron, manganese, and zinc, underscoring the critical role of metal transport systems in virulence and immune evasion.
What was reviewed?
This review article critically evaluates the mechanisms by which Staphylococcus aureus acquires essential transition metals—specifically iron, manganese, and zinc—despite host-imposed nutritional immunity. The paper also explores host strategies that limit bacterial access to these metals as part of the innate immune response, and how these interactions shape bacterial virulence. It further assesses the physiological and molecular basis of metal ion acquisition, storage, transport, and detoxification systems in S. aureus, with emphasis on their contribution to pathogenicity across various infection models.
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesizes a comprehensive body of work involving both in vitro molecular studies and in vivo animal models, particularly murine abscess and systemic infection models, to elucidate how S. aureus exploits siderophores, heme acquisition systems, and high-affinity metal transporters. Studies involving genetically modified bacterial strains (e.g., mutants lacking isd, mntABC, mntH, or hrtAB) and host knockout models (e.g., calprotectin-deficient mice or Nramp1-deficient mice) are also central to the review’s analysis.
Most Important Findings
Understanding how Staphylococcus aureus circumvents nutritional immunity reveals key mechanistic nodes underpinning its virulence. The organism’s capacity to acquire essential transition metals—iron, manganese, zinc, and copper—via specialized systems allows it to evade host-imposed metal sequestration, enabling persistence in inflamed or nutrient-deprived tissue microenvironments such as abscesses. The host counters this with dynamic sequestration strategies, including proteinaceous chelators like calprotectin and localized oxidative stress. These metal-dependent virulence strategies are not only essential to S. aureus pathogenesis but also shape its metallomic and microbiome signature within infected tissues. Below is a structured summary of these host-pathogen interactions.
Category
Key Findings
Iron Acquisition
S. aureus synthesizes two siderophores—staphyloferrin A and staphyloferrin B—that chelate iron and are imported via HtsABC and SirABC, respectively. Preferential iron acquisition from heme occurs through the Isd system, which involves surface receptors (IsdB, IsdH), membrane transporters (IsdDEF), and cytoplasmic heme oxygenases (IsdG, IsdI). IsdB demonstrates high specificity for human hemoglobin.
Manganese Acquisition
High-affinity manganese uptake is mediated by MntABC (ABC-type) and MntH (Nramp-type) transporters. Manganese is essential for the activity of superoxide dismutases (SodA, SodM), which protect S. aureus against reactive oxygen species.
Zinc and Copper Interactions
Calprotectin sequesters both manganese and zinc in abscesses. While S. aureus zinc importers remain unidentified, export is mediated by CzrAB and plasmid-encoded CadA. Host-derived copper toxicity is countered by S. aureus through CopA (efflux pump) and CopZ (chaperone), regulated by the CsoR repressor.
Host-Microbe Competition
The vertebrate immune system enforces nutritional immunity through sequestration of iron (transferrin, lactoferrin, ferritin), manganese, and zinc (calprotectin). Imaging mass spectrometry and LA-ICPMS confirm localized depletion of manganese and zinc in abscess cores.
Microbiome-Relevant Insights
The tug-of-war between calprotectin and S. aureus defines a manganese- and zinc-centric virulence axis, contributing to microbial persistence and shaping microbiome signatures. The non-redundant roles of IsdG and IsdI across tissue sites suggest adaptive metallomic specialization that could serve as a basis for microbial stratification in disease-specific microbiome signatures.
Key implications
The review underscores that transition metal acquisition is not ancillary but foundational to S. aureus pathogenesis, especially within abscesses where nutritional immunity is most intense. These findings highlight new avenues for antimicrobial strategies, such as siderophore inhibitors, calprotectin mimetics, or vaccines targeting IsdA/IsdB. Furthermore, the dependency on specific metal ions offers microbiome signature implications: differential abundance or gene expression of metal transporters (e.g., mntA, isdB) could serve as microbial biomarkers of invasive staphylococcal disease. Imaging mass spectrometry emerges as a critical tool in microbial metallomics for both diagnostic and therapeutic development.
Graves & Crohn: Genetic Evidence for Microbiome-Mediated Crosstalk
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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Graves’ Disease (GD)
Graves’ Disease (GD)
OverviewGraves’ Disease (GD) affects approximately 0.5% of the population, predominantly women. First-line treatment options—antithyroid medications, radioactive iodine, and surgery— often result in significant side effects, incomplete remissions, and frequent relapses. Further, current first-line treatment options focus on symptoms management, and reflect an inadequate understanding of the etiology of the condition. However, recent research reveals a […]
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Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) is a common gastrointestinal disorder characterized by symptoms such as abdominal pain, bloating, and altered bowel habits. Recent research has focused on the gut microbiota's role in IBS, aiming to identify specific microbial signatures associated with the condition.
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Mendelian-randomization of East-Asian GWAS data shows Crohn disease genetics raise Graves disease risk, while ulcerative colitis genetics are protective, highlighting microbiome-immune pathways linking gut and thyroid autoimmunity.
What was studied?
This original research employed bidirectional two-sample Mendelian randomization (MR) to test for causal relationships between Graves disease (GD) and inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Genome-wide significant single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) for GD were taken from Biobank Japan (BBJ), while SNPs for IBD—including Crohn disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC)—came from the International IBD Genetics Consortium. Multiple MR methods (inverse-variance weighted, MR-Egger, weighted median and MR-PRESSO) were applied to account for heterogeneity and pleiotropy, mimicking a randomized trial at the level of inherited genetic variation.
Who was studied?
The analysis drew on 2176 GD cases and 210 277 controls of East-Asian ancestry from BBJ, and 2824 IBD cases (1690 CD; 1134 UC) plus 3719 controls from East-Asian, Indian and Iranian cohorts within the IIBDGC panel. Mean age at GD diagnosis (not reported) typically peaks at 30-50 years, while mean CD and UC diagnosis ages were 27.6 ± 12.2 and 35.8 ± 13.7 years, respectively. Male representation was 27 % in GD versus 67 % in CD and 50 % in UC, ensuring sex-balanced causal inference.
Most important findings
Direction (Exposure → Outcome)
OR (IVW)
95 % CI
p-value
Interpretation
IBD → GD
1.24
1.01-1.52
0.041
Overall IBD increases GD risk
CD → GD
1.30
1.06-1.59
0.010
Crohn loci elevate GD risk by ~30 %
UC → GD
0.71
0.58-0.86
<0.001
UC loci appear protective
GD → IBD
1.04
0.88-1.23
0.62
No overall reverse causality
GD → CD*
1.33
1.15-1.53
<0.001
GD variants modestly raise CD risk
GD → UC
0.82
0.62-1.09
0.18
No effect on UC
*after exclusion of pleiotropic SNP rs1569723. Forest and leave-one-out plots on pages 4-6 visually confirm these asymmetric effects, with CD-associated SNPs clustering above the null line and UC-associated SNPs below.
Key implications
The asymmetric genetic links suggest shared immune-microbiome pathways between GD and CD, but distinct mechanisms in UC. CD-associated variants intersect with HLA-DRB1, JAK-STAT and PTPN22 loci—genes also tied to microbial sensing and T-helper 17 regulation—supporting the view that dysbiotic Crohn-type microbiota may precipitate thyroid autoimmunity. Conversely, UC-specific variants (e.g., epithelial barrier genes) may foster microbial communities that dampen GD risk. Clinically, heightened vigilance for thyroid dysfunction in CD patients, and consideration of microbiota-targeted or JAK inhibition strategies, could improve interdisciplinary care. The results also provide candidate microbial signatures (e.g., reduced Haemophilus abundance previously noted in CD) for inclusion in microbiome databases tracking autoimmune overlap.
Low-Nickel Diet in Endometriosis: Symptom Relief and Nickel Mucositis Evidence
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) is a common gastrointestinal disorder characterized by symptoms such as abdominal pain, bloating, and altered bowel habits. Recent research has focused on the gut microbiota's role in IBS, aiming to identify specific microbial signatures associated with the condition.
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Nickel allergic contact mucositis was identified in over 90% of endometriosis patients with IBS-like symptoms. A low-nickel diet significantly reduced gastrointestinal, extra-intestinal, and gynecological symptoms, revealing nickel sensitivity as a key driver of endometriosis symptomatology.
What was studied?
This open-label pilot study evaluated the prevalence of nickel-related allergic contact mucositis in women with endometriosis who reported irritable bowel syndrome (IBS)-like symptoms, and whether a low-nickel diet in endometriosis alleviates gastrointestinal, extra-intestinal, and gynecologic symptoms. Participants underwent a nickel oral mucosa patch test (omPT), then followed a three-month low-nickel diet that excluded high-nickel foods such as legumes, whole grains, cocoa, and tomatoes as summarized in Table 1 on page 4. Symptom burden was quantified with a modified Gastrointestinal Symptom Rating Scale at baseline and after the dietary intervention, and pre-post differences were analyzed with Wilcoxon signed-rank tests.
Who was studied?
Eighty-three women with imaging or laparoscopically confirmed endometriosis were screened; 51 met symptom criteria, four were excluded for celiac disease or wheat allergy, and 16 dropped out, leaving 31 women (mean age 33.5 years) who completed the protocol. Clinical characteristics and sites of disease are detailed in Table 2 on pages 7–8. Notably, 28 of 31 completers (90.3 percent) had a positive omPT and were diagnosed with nickel allergic contact mucositis, whereas 3 of 31 were omPT-negative.
Most important findings
After three months of the low-nickel diet, all 15 gastrointestinal symptoms showed statistically significant reductions in intensity, including abdominal pain, bloating, reflux, altered bowel habits, and urgency. The bar charts on page 9 (Figure 3) illustrate consistent downward shifts across domains. Extra-intestinal symptoms such as headache, fatigue, brain fog, and dermatitis also declined significantly, as did gynecologic symptoms central to endometriosis care, including dysmenorrhea, dyspareunia, and chronic pelvic pain; these trends are shown on page 10 (Figure 4). Collectively, the data suggest that nickel exposure may trigger a low-grade mucosal inflammatory state that phenocopies IBS and amplifies pelvic pain symptomatology in a substantial subset of patients with endometriosis. From a microbiome-relevant perspective, the authors frame nickel as a metalloestrogen and environmental factor that can interact with mucosal immunity and symptom generation; the IBS-like phenotype of nickel allergic contact mucositis aligns with clinical entities frequently linked to gut dysbiosis, offering a plausible interface for future microbiome signatures work even though microbial taxa were not directly assayed in this study. The high positivity rate of omPT in this endometriosis cohort, combined with the broad symptom relief on a targeted elimination diet, positions nickel sensitivity as a potential major association for inclusion in a microbiome-signatures database focused on environmental and host-mucosal interactions.
Key implications
Clinically, routine consideration of nickel sensitivity is warranted in endometriosis patients who report IBS-like symptoms or refractory pelvic pain. The omPT offers a practical diagnostic adjunct, and a supervised low-nickel diet is a reasonable, time-limited therapeutic trial when omPT is positive. For translational research, these findings motivate integration of nickel exposure assessment and nickel-responsive symptom phenotyping into microbiome studies of endometriosis. Although the trial is limited by its small sample size, single-center design, and open-label methodology with notable dietary adherence challenges, the magnitude and breadth of symptom improvement across gastrointestinal, extra-intestinal, and gynecologic domains indicate that nickel allergic contact mucositis may be a clinically meaningful, modifiable driver of symptom burden in endometriosis. Future controlled studies should incorporate objective dietary nickel exposure metrics and mucosal or fecal biomarkers to map nickel-linked inflammatory pathways to microbial community features and to identify major microbial associations that co-vary with nickel-sensitive phenotypes.
Beneficial Effects of a Low-Nickel Diet on Relapsing IBS-Like and Extraintestinal Symptoms of Celiac Patients during a Proper Gluten-Free Diet: Nickel Allergic Contact Mucositis in Suspected Non-Responsive Celiac Disease
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
•
Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) is a common gastrointestinal disorder characterized by symptoms such as abdominal pain, bloating, and altered bowel habits. Recent research has focused on the gut microbiota's role in IBS, aiming to identify specific microbial signatures associated with the condition.
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A study of celiac patients revealed that persistent symptoms during gluten-free eating may stem from nickel allergic contact mucositis. A low-nickel diet significantly improved gastrointestinal and systemic symptoms.
What was studied?
This study examined how a low-nickel diet influences persistent gastrointestinal and extraintestinal symptoms in celiac patients who remain symptomatic despite full serologic and histologic remission on a gluten-free diet. Because a gluten-free diet often increases dietary nickel exposure—especially from foods like corn—the investigators explored whether nickel allergic contact mucositis (ACM) contributes to symptom relapse in patients who would otherwise be considered to have non-responsive celiac disease. Nickel sensitivity was evaluated using an oral mucosa patch test, and symptom changes were assessed through a modified Gastrointestinal Symptom Rating Scale.
Who was studied?
A total of 102 adults with celiac disease adhering to a strict gluten-free diet for at least 12 months were screened. After excluding individuals with lactose intolerance, Helicobacter pylori infection, inflammatory bowel disease, cancer, or insufficient symptom severity, 20 women aged 23–65 completed the study. All participants were in confirmed serologic and histologic remission yet reported relapsing gastrointestinal or systemic symptoms. Each underwent nickel oral mucosa patch testing and subsequently followed a low-nickel diet for three months in addition to their gluten-free diet.
Most important findings
The study revealed consistent nickel sensitivity among the final cohort: all 20 participants exhibited positive findings on the oral mucosa patch test, indicating nickel ACM. Symptomatic patterns showed three distinct phases. Symptoms initially improved with gluten withdrawal but then recurred during prolonged gluten-free eating, suggesting increasing dietary nickel load from nickel-rich gluten-free staples. After initiation of the low-nickel regimen, patients experienced marked improvement across both gastrointestinal and systemic symptoms. The trend was evident in symptom trajectory graphs, where nickel-related symptoms such as bloating, loose stools, dermatitis, headache, and fatigue demonstrated a clear rise during prolonged gluten-free eating and an equally clear drop after nickel restriction. Table 1 summarizes symptom directionality, showing more than 80% of symptoms improving after the diet change.
Finding
Observation
Prevalence of nickel ACM
100% of final cohort positive on oral mucosa patch test
Symptom relapse during prolonged GFD
83.3% of symptoms worsened
Symptom improvement on a low-nickel diet
83.4% of symptoms improved
Significant improvements
10 of 24 symptoms reached statistical significance
Key implications
This study highlights nickel ACM as an underrecognized contributor to persistent symptoms in celiac patients on long-term gluten-free diets. Since many gluten-free foods are naturally high in nickel, dietary nickel exposure becomes a potential trigger for IBS-like and systemic manifestations. The findings support incorporating nickel sensitivity evaluation into the workup for non-responsive celiac disease once gluten exposure and villous damage are excluded. Clinically, a structured low-nickel diet may reduce symptoms substantially and prevent misclassification of nickel sensitivity as refractory celiac disease or unexplained IBS-like relapse. The work also underscores broader dietary-microbial interactions: nickel-sensitive mucosal inflammation likely alters microbial ecology, contributing to symptom generation and emphasizing the relevance of nickel-associated microbial signatures in clinical microbiome frameworks.
Alterations in composition and diversity of the intestinal microbiota in patients with diarrhea-predominant irritable bowel syndrome
February 12, 2026
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Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) is a common gastrointestinal disorder characterized by symptoms such as abdominal pain, bloating, and altered bowel habits. Recent research has focused on the gut microbiota's role in IBS, aiming to identify specific microbial signatures associated with the condition.
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The study investigated gut microbiota in diarrhea-predominant irritable bowel syndrome (D-IBS), revealing distinct microbial shifts, including increased Enterobacteriaceae and reduced Faecalibacterium populations, indicating potential inflammatory mechanisms
What was studied?
The study examined the composition and diversity of the gut microbiota in patients with diarrhea-predominant irritable bowel syndrome (D-IBS) compared to healthy controls. Using 16S rRNA gene sequencing, the researchers evaluated microbial populations, community structure, and specific taxonomic shifts associated with D-IBS, aiming to understand the microbial dysbiosis that may underlie the pathophysiology of this condition.
Who was studied?
The study included 23 patients diagnosed with diarrhea-predominant irritable bowel syndrome (D-IBS) and 23 healthy controls (HC). All participants were recruited from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and were screened to exclude other gastrointestinal conditions.
What were the most important findings?
The analysis revealed significant dysbiosis in the gut microbiota of D-IBS patients compared to healthy controls. Key findings included a substantial increase in the family Enterobacteriaceae, particularly unclassified genera, which are known to encompass pathogenic species. Conversely, the beneficial genus Faecalibacterium, particularly F. prausnitzii, was significantly reduced in D-IBS patients. Faecalibacterium is recognized for its anti-inflammatory properties and is generally considered protective for gut health. This reduction may indicate an underlying pro-inflammatory state within the gut microbiota of D-IBS patients. Additionally, D-IBS patients exhibited lower microbial diversity (α-diversity) and greater variability in microbial community composition (β-diversity), suggesting an imbalance in microbial homeostasis. The study also identified specific increases in Enterococcus, Fusobacterium, and unclassified members of Lactobacillaceae and Veillonella, which were largely undetectable in healthy individuals. These shifts point towards a microbial environment that may exacerbate gut inflammation and motility disturbances characteristic of D-IBS.
Elevated Enterobacteriaceae includes potentially pathogenic species
Inflammatory Indicators
Loss of F. prausnitzii, a known anti-inflammatory bacterium
Microbial Dysbiosis
Imbalanced harmful and beneficial bacteria, indicating gut inflammation
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings underscore the significant role of gut microbiota in the pathophysiology of D-IBS, marked by a distinct microbial signature that includes elevated Enterobacteriaceae and diminished Faecalibacterium populations. These microbial alterations reflect potential mechanisms driving gut inflammation and motility disorders. Importantly, the study suggests that microbial dysbiosis could serve as both a biomarker for diagnosing D-IBS and a potential target for therapeutic interventions aimed at restoring microbial balance. Future strategies may include microbiome-targeted therapies such as probiotics or prebiotics aimed at re-establishing beneficial bacterial populations and mitigating pro-inflammatory species.
Altered Gut Microbiota in Irritable Bowel Syndrome and Its Association with Food Components
February 12, 2026
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Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) is a common gastrointestinal disorder characterized by symptoms such as abdominal pain, bloating, and altered bowel habits. Recent research has focused on the gut microbiota's role in IBS, aiming to identify specific microbial signatures associated with the condition.
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This study explores the altered gut microbiota in IBS and its association with caffeine and dietary fiber. Findings indicate that high caffeine intake is linked to increased microbial diversity and altered gut microbiome composition in IBS patients, offering insights into dietary strategies for symptom modulation.
What Was Studied?
This study investigated the altered gut microbiota in irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) and its association with specific food components, primarily focusing on the impact of dietary patterns and food intake on the microbial diversity and composition in IBS patients compared to healthy controls (HC). The study aimed to understand how specific nutrients, particularly caffeine and dietary fiber, influence gut microbiome patterns in IBS, contributing to symptom modulation and microbiota alterations.
Who Was Studied?
The study was conducted on 80 young adults diagnosed with IBS based on Rome III or IV criteria, alongside 21 healthy controls. Participants were surveyed for food consumption using a food frequency questionnaire, and fecal samples were collected for microbiome analysis through 16S rRNA Illumina sequencing. The participants were primarily students, which may have influenced dietary habits and lifestyle factors.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study found significant differences in gut microbiota composition and diversity between IBS patients and healthy controls, despite similar dietary patterns. Notably, caffeine intake was significantly higher in IBS patients (246.42 mg/d) compared to controls (82.93 mg/d), with high caffeine consumption (>400 mg/d) correlating with increased alpha diversity and alterations in microbiome structure. IBS patients showed a higher abundance of Verrucomicrobia, Coriobacteriia, Bacilli, and Erysipelotrichia at the class level, and Coriobacteriaceae, Porphyromonadaceae, Verrucomicrobiaceae, Lachnospiraceae, and Erysipelotrichaceae at the family level. Genera such as Parabacteroides, Blautia, Lachnospiraceae-unclassified, Veillonella, Oscillibacter, Flavonifractor, and Akkermansia were more abundant in IBS patients, whereas Prevotella was higher in controls. Interestingly, higher microbial diversity and abundance were observed in IBS patients with high caffeine intake, suggesting a potential modulatory role of caffeine on gut microbiota. The study also demonstrated significant correlations between dietary fiber intake and microbial diversity in the IBS group, reinforcing the role of dietary components in gut microbiome dynamics.
High caffeine intake (>400 mg/d) linked to increased microbial diversity; dietary fiber associated with higher alpha diversity
Symptom Relevance
Altered microbial composition correlated with IBS symptom modulation
Therapeutic Implication
Dietary modulation of caffeine and fiber intake could influence gut microbiome and symptoms in IBS
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
The study's findings underscore the influence of specific food components—particularly caffeine and dietary fiber—on gut microbiome diversity and structure in IBS patients. These results suggest that dietary modulation could be a viable strategy for managing IBS symptoms, particularly through the regulation of caffeine and fiber intake. The observation of increased microbial diversity and specific microbial alterations in high-caffeine consumers points to potential therapeutic or dietary adjustments that could improve gut health in IBS patients. Furthermore, the identification of specific microbial taxa enriched in IBS provides a potential avenue for biomarker development for diagnostic and therapeutic purposes.
Altered profiles of intestinal microbiota and organic acids may be the origin of symptoms in irritable bowel syndrome
February 12, 2026
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Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) is a common gastrointestinal disorder characterized by symptoms such as abdominal pain, bloating, and altered bowel habits. Recent research has focused on the gut microbiota's role in IBS, aiming to identify specific microbial signatures associated with the condition.
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This study reveals that altered microbiota and elevated organic acids in IBS patients correlate with increased symptom severity, poorer quality of life, and heightened negative emotions. The findings suggest that microbial shifts leading to increased acetic and propionic acid production play a critical role in the pathophysiology of IBS.
What was studied?
This study investigated the profiles of intestinal microbiota and organic acids in patients diagnosed with Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) compared to healthy controls. The researchers hypothesized that the gut microbiota of IBS patients is disrupted, contributing to elevated levels of organic acids, which may be linked to the manifestation of gastrointestinal (GI) symptoms. To evaluate this, the study analyzed fecal samples for microbial populations using quantitative real-time PCR and culture methods, as well as organic acid concentrations through high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). Abdominal gas was also measured via X-ray imaging to determine if microbial fermentation contributed to bloating and discomfort commonly reported by IBS patients.
Who was studied?
The study involved 26 patients diagnosed with IBS according to the Rome II criteria, further confirmed by the Rome III modular questionnaire. The cohort was composed of 11 patients with constipation-predominant IBS (IBS-C), 8 with diarrhea-predominant IBS (IBS-D), and 7 with mixed IBS (IBS-M). Twenty-six age- and sex-matched healthy controls were also included for comparison. All participants underwent comprehensive medical evaluations, including physical exams, lab tests, and radiological assessments to exclude any organic GI diseases or systemic health issues.
What were the most important findings?
IBS patients demonstrated significant alterations in their gut microbiota and organic acid levels compared to healthy controls. Notably, the study found higher counts of Veillonella (p = 0.046) and Lactobacillus (p = 0.031) in IBS patients, two bacterial groups known for their role in organic acid production. Correspondingly, fecal analysis revealed that IBS patients exhibited significantly elevated levels of acetic acid (p = 0.049), propionic acid (p = 0.025), and total organic acids (p = 0.014). These organic acids are byproducts of microbial fermentation and have been implicated in gut motility and sensory processing.
Importantly, patients with high levels of acetic or propionic acid experienced more severe GI symptoms, poorer quality of life (QOL), and greater levels of negative emotions compared to those with lower acid concentrations. This correlation suggests that microbial shifts favoring Veillonella and Lactobacillus may drive acid production, which in turn exacerbates abdominal discomfort and impacts psychological well-being. Interestingly, despite the elevated organic acid levels, there were no significant differences in abdominal gas volume between IBS patients and controls, indicating that symptom severity may be driven more by microbial metabolites than gas accumulation.
Microbial Group
IBS Patients
Healthy Controls
Statistical Significance
Associated Effects
Veillonella
Increased
Normal levels
p = 0.046
Linked to increased acetic and propionic acid production
Lactobacillus
Increased
Normal levels
p = 0.031
Associated with organic acid elevation
Acetic Acid
Elevated
Normal levels
p = 0.049
Correlates with abdominal pain and bloating
Propionic Acid
Elevated
Normal levels
p = 0.025
Linked to worse GI symptoms and negative emotions
Total Organic Acids
Elevated
Normal levels
p = 0.014
Higher levels linked to symptom severity
Abdominal Gas Volume
No significant change
Normal levels
Not significant
Symptoms not driven by gas volume but microbial metabolites
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study's findings provide compelling evidence that microbial imbalances and organic acid overproduction are critical components of IBS symptomatology. Elevated levels of Veillonella and Lactobacillus are linked to increased acetic and propionic acid production, which correlates with symptom severity, reduced QOL, and heightened negative emotional states. These findings support the concept that IBS may not be merely a functional disorder but is mechanistically influenced by microbial fermentation and its metabolic byproducts. Understanding these microbial and metabolic interactions opens the door for targeted probiotic, prebiotic, or dietary interventions aimed at modulating organic acid production, potentially offering novel therapeutic avenues for IBS management.
Alternation of the gut microbiota in irritable bowel syndrome: an integrated analysis based on multicenter amplicon sequencing data
February 12, 2026
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Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) is a common gastrointestinal disorder characterized by symptoms such as abdominal pain, bloating, and altered bowel habits. Recent research has focused on the gut microbiota's role in IBS, aiming to identify specific microbial signatures associated with the condition.
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This study explores the alteration of the gut microbiota in IBS patients, revealing distinct microbial shifts linked to IBS subtypes. Findings highlight potential for microbiome-based therapies and personalized intervention strategies to alleviate symptoms and restore gut health in IBS-D, IBS-C, and IBS-M patients.
What Was Studied?
This study focused on the alteration of the gut microbiota in patients with Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) through an integrated analysis of multicenter amplicon sequencing data. Researchers aimed to elucidate specific microbial changes associated with IBS pathophysiology and its subtypes, including IBS-D (diarrhea-predominant), IBS-C (constipation-predominant), and mixed-type IBS (IBS-M). Utilizing 16S rRNA data from the GMrepo database, the study analyzed microbial diversity, composition, and co-occurrence networks to identify key taxa and potential microbial biomarkers linked to IBS symptomatology and gut dysbiosis.
Who Was Studied?
The study analyzed 708 individuals, with 354 diagnosed with IBS (subcategorized into IBS-D, IBS-C, and IBS-M) and 354 matched healthy controls. Data was retrieved from multicenter cohorts to ensure a diverse representation across age, sex, BMI, and geographical regions. The participants were selected using a propensity score matching (PSM) algorithm to reduce confounding variables and ensure balanced comparisons.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study revealed significant alterations in the gut microbiota composition of IBS patients compared to healthy controls. At the phylum level, IBS patients showed a marked reduction in Firmicutes, Euryarchaeota, Cyanobacteria, Acidobacteria, and Lentisphaerae, while Proteobacteria and Bacteroidetes were notably enriched. Interestingly, the Firmicutes/Proteobacteria ratio was significantly decreased in IBS patients, indicative of microbial imbalance. At the family level, the study found an enrichment of Enterobacteriaceae, Moraxellaceae, and Sphingobacteriaceae in IBS patients, while Ruminococcaceae and Bifidobacteriaceae were significantly reduced. Genus-level analysis highlighted increases in Streptococcus, Bacillus, Enterocloster, Sphingobacterium, Holdemania, and Acinetobacter among IBS cohorts. Conversely, Faecalibacterium, Bifidobacterium, and Ruminococcus were substantially depleted, suggesting a loss of anti-inflammatory and SCFA-producing microbiota. Network analysis identified Faecalibacterium prausnitzii, Bifidobacterium longum, and Bifidobacterium breve as key hub species with strong positive interactions, indicating their potential role in maintaining gut homeostasis. Subgroup analysis for IBS-D and IBS-C further revealed distinct microbial signatures, such as the enrichment of Streptococcus in both subtypes, while Faecalibacterium and Ruminococcus were consistently depleted. These findings suggest that microbial dysbiosis in IBS is subtype-specific, potentially influencing disease symptoms and progression through microbial interactions and metabolic shifts.
Parameter
Findings in IBS-D
Findings in IBS-C
Findings in IBS-M
Bacterial Diversity
Reduced diversity with enrichment of Proteobacteria and Bacteroidetes
Altered diversity with reductions in Firmicutes and Euryarchaeota
Mixed microbial shifts with increased Bacteroidetes and Proteobacteria
Phylum-Level Changes
Decreased Firmicutes, Euryarchaeota, Cyanobacteria, Acidobacteria, Lentisphaerae; increased Proteobacteria and Bacteroidetes
Reduced Firmicutes and Euryarchaeota, with moderate increases in Proteobacteria
Increased Bacteroidetes and Proteobacteria, reduced Cyanobacteria
Key Genera
Enrichment of Streptococcus, Bacillus, Enterocloster, Sphingobacterium, Holdemania, Acinetobacter
Enrichment of Streptococcus; depletion of Faecalibacterium and Ruminococcus
Mixed representation of Streptococcus and Bacillus
Metabolic Pathways
Elevated pathways linked to hydrogen sulfide production and bile acid metabolism
Altered short-chain fatty acid (SCFA) production pathways
Mixed shifts in SCFA production and bile acid metabolism
Inflammatory Associations
Linked to increased gut permeability and pro-inflammatory markers
Associated with constipation-related dysbiosis and inflammation
Mixed inflammatory markers reflecting both diarrhea and constipation
Diagnostic Potential
Identification of Streptococcus and Enterobacteriaceae as microbial markers
Faecalibacterium and Ruminococcus as indicators of microbial imbalance
Mixed indicators with potential microbial biomarkers for symptom fluctuation
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
This study emphasizes the critical role of gut microbiota alterations in IBS pathogenesis, with distinct microbial imbalances linked to different IBS subtypes. The identification of specific IBS-exclusive genera like Enterobacteriaceae and the depletion of protective species such as Faecalibacterium prausnitzii highlights potential targets for microbiome-based interventions. The findings suggest that personalized therapeutic strategies could be developed based on microbial profiling, potentially leveraging probiotics, dietary modifications, or fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) to restore microbial balance and alleviate symptoms. The study also underscores the importance of further research into microbial biomarkers for IBS diagnosis and treatment stratification, particularly in distinguishing between IBS-D and IBS-C through targeted microbiome modulation.
Association of aberrant brain network dynamics with gut microbial composition uncovers disrupted brain-gut-microbiome interactions in irritable bowel syndrome: Preliminary findings
February 12, 2026
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Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) is a common gastrointestinal disorder characterized by symptoms such as abdominal pain, bloating, and altered bowel habits. Recent research has focused on the gut microbiota's role in IBS, aiming to identify specific microbial signatures associated with the condition.
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This study identifies disrupted brain-gut-microbiome interactions in IBS patients, revealing altered brain network dynamics and microbial shifts linked to symptom severity and cognitive dysfunction. These findings highlight the potential for targeted therapies addressing both brain connectivity and gut microbiota to improve IBS management.
What was studied?
This study explored the association between brain network dynamics and gut microbial composition in patients with Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS), highlighting disrupted brain–gut–microbiome (BGM) interactions as a contributing factor to IBS pathophysiology. The research integrated neuroimaging data, specifically resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (rs-fMRI), with gut microbiota profiling through 16S rRNA gene sequencing. Dynamic functional connectivity (DFC) analysis was employed to identify temporal changes in brain networks, while microbial diversity and community composition were assessed in fecal samples. This dual analysis aimed to bridge the gap between neural dysfunction and microbial imbalances in IBS patients.
Who was studied?
The study included 33 IBS patients (23 with diarrhea-predominant IBS, 4 with constipation-predominant IBS, and 6 with mixed IBS) and 32 healthy controls, all right-handed and matched for age and gender. Participants were recruited from Lanzhou University Second Hospital, and all met the Rome IV criteria for IBS. Neuroimaging and fecal sampling were performed to analyze both brain network dynamics and gut microbial composition. Exclusion criteria included the use of probiotics or antibiotics within one month of the study, as well as a history of neurological, psychiatric, or significant gastrointestinal disorders.
What were the most important findings?
The study identified significant alterations in both brain network dynamics and gut microbial diversity in IBS patients. In the DFC analysis, four distinct connectivity states were identified, with IBS patients exhibiting prolonged fraction and mean dwell times in State 4—a state associated with weak brain connectivity linked to self-focused thinking and emotional dysregulation. Furthermore, reduced transitions from State 3 to State 1 were noted, indicating impaired cognitive flexibility, a hallmark of IBS symptomatology. Temporal variability of functional connectivity was also disrupted, particularly within the cognitive control network (CCN) and the sensorimotor network (SMN), implicating these brain regions in IBS-related cognitive and sensory processing abnormalities.
In parallel, gut microbiome analysis revealed decreased alpha diversity and altered beta diversity in IBS patients. Notably, IBS patients showed higher abundances of Anaerostipes, Streptococcus, and Ruminococcus, along with elevated levels of Erysipelotrichaceae. These microbial shifts were associated with symptom severity, depression, and anxiety scores. Correlation analysis demonstrated that specific microbial abundances corresponded to changes in brain network connectivity, suggesting a mechanistic link between gut dysbiosis and brain dysfunction in IBS.
Finding
IBS Patients
Clinical Implications
Brain State 4 (DFC Analysis)
Prolonged dwell time
Associated with emotional dysregulation and self-focused rumination
Linked to cognitive and sensory processing deficits
Alpha Diversity (Microbiota)
Decreased
Indicative of microbial dysbiosis
Beta Diversity (Microbiota)
Altered
Reflects community structure changes in IBS
Anaerostipes, Streptococcus, Ruminococcus
Increased
Linked to symptom severity, depression, anxiety
Erysipelotrichaceae
Increased
Associated with IBS-specific gut dysfunction
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings underscore the critical role of brain-gut-microbiome interactions in IBS pathophysiology, highlighting dynamic brain network disruptions alongside distinct microbial imbalances. Prolonged dwell time in weakly connected brain states and altered microbiota composition suggest that IBS symptomatology is driven by both central neural dysregulation and peripheral microbial alterations. These insights open avenues for targeted therapies aimed at modulating both brain connectivity and gut microbiota to alleviate IBS symptoms. The study also establishes a foundational framework for future investigations into BGM axis interventions as a therapeutic strategy for IBS.
Differences in gut microbial composition correlate with regional brain volumes in irritable bowel syndrome
February 12, 2026
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Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) is a common gastrointestinal disorder characterized by symptoms such as abdominal pain, bloating, and altered bowel habits. Recent research has focused on the gut microbiota's role in IBS, aiming to identify specific microbial signatures associated with the condition.
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This study identified two distinct IBS subgroups based on gut microbiome profiles, revealing correlations with regional brain volumes. The findings highlight the role of gut dysbiosis in structural brain alterations, offering potential biomarkers for subtype classification.
What was studied?
The study explored the correlation between gut microbial composition and regional brain structural changes in patients with Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS). Specifically, it aimed to identify distinct subgroups of IBS patients based on gut microbial profiles and examine how these subgroups correlated with structural brain alterations, particularly in sensory integration and salience network regions. This study is the first of its kind to demonstrate a direct association between gut microbiota composition and brain architecture in IBS, offering insights into the gut-brain axis and its potential implications in IBS pathophysiology.
Who was studied?
The study included 29 adult IBS patients and 23 healthy controls (HCs). Among the IBS patients, distinct subgroups were identified: IBS1, which showed a unique gut microbial signature, and HC-like IBS, whose microbial composition resembled that of healthy controls. These participants underwent stool sample analysis for microbial profiling and structural brain imaging to assess regional brain volumes and correlating microbial taxa.
What were the most important findings?
The study identified two primary subgroups within the IBS population (IBS1 and HC-like IBS) based on gut microbial composition. The IBS1 subgroup exhibited significant differences in the relative abundance of certain microbial taxa, including higher levels of Clostridia and reduced levels of Bacteroidia, which were strongly associated with structural brain changes. Notably, IBS1 showed increased volumes in sensory and motor brain regions while experiencing reduced volumes in the insula and prefrontal cortices. These changes correlated with microbial diversity and the relative abundance of Firmicutes and Bacteroidetes, suggesting that distinct microbial clusters may influence sensory processing and brain structure in IBS patients. Furthermore, the findings indicated that early life trauma and long-standing symptoms were more prevalent in the IBS1 subgroup, hinting at the potential role of gut microbial metabolites in altering brain development and sensory integration pathways. The study suggests that IBS subgroups defined by microbial signatures, rather than traditional clinical classifications, could improve the personalization of therapeutic interventions.
Parameter
Findings in IBS1 Group
Microbial Diversity
Higher alpha diversity and richness compared to HCs
Firmicutes and Bacteroidetes
Increased Firmicutes (Clostridia) and decreased Bacteroidetes (Bacteroidia)
Brain Structural Changes
Enlarged sensory and motor regions, reduced volumes in insula and prefrontal cortices
Sensory Integration Regions
Correlated with Clostridia abundance
Salience Network Regions
Altered structural changes linked to microbial composition
Early Life Trauma
More common in IBS1, potentially linked to gut-brain axis alterations
Therapeutic Implications
Suggests targeted microbial-based therapies for distinct IBS subtypes
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study's findings underscore the potential for redefining IBS subtypes based on gut microbial composition rather than solely clinical characteristics. This microbial stratification could enable more targeted interventions, such as diet modification, prebiotics, probiotics, and antibiotic therapies, specifically tailored to the microbiome of the IBS1 subgroup. Additionally, the observed brain structural changes in sensory and salience-related regions support the hypothesis that gut microbiota play a role in the neurobiological mechanisms underlying IBS symptoms. These insights also point towards the gut-brain axis as a therapeutic target, where modulation of microbial communities could influence not only gastrointestinal symptoms but also associated neurological outcomes.
Fecal Microbiota in Patients with Irritable Bowel Syndrome Compared with Healthy Controls Using Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction: An Evidence of Dysbiosis
February 12, 2026
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Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) is a common gastrointestinal disorder characterized by symptoms such as abdominal pain, bloating, and altered bowel habits. Recent research has focused on the gut microbiota's role in IBS, aiming to identify specific microbial signatures associated with the condition.
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The study identifies significant fecal microbiota dysbiosis in IBS patients, marked by increased Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Bacteroides thetaiotamicron, highlighting their potential as microbial biomarkers for IBS subtypes.
What was studied?
This study investigated fecal microbiota dysbiosis in patients with Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) compared to healthy controls (HC) using quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (qPCR). The research aimed to identify specific microbial shifts that characterize different subtypes of IBS, including constipation-predominant (IBS-C), diarrhea-predominant (IBS-D), and unclassified IBS (IBS-U), highlighting the potential role of microbial imbalance in the pathophysiology of IBS.
Who was studied?
The study included 47 patients with IBS, diagnosed using the Rome III criteria, and 30 healthy controls. Among the IBS patients, 20 were classified as IBS-C, 20 as IBS-D, and 7 as IBS-U. Participants were recruited from a gastroenterology outpatient clinic in northern India. Exclusion criteria included recent use of antibiotics, probiotics, or prokinetics, as well as a history of gastrointestinal surgery, inflammatory bowel disease, or celiac disease.
What were the most important findings?
The study found significant microbial shifts in the fecal samples of IBS patients compared to healthy controls. Notably, the abundance of beneficial microbes like Bifidobacterium and Lactobacillus species was reduced, while pathogenic and opportunistic bacteria such as Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Bacteroides thetaiotamicron, Veillonella, Ruminococcus productus, and Gram-negative bacteria were significantly elevated in IBS patients. Among IBS subtypes, P. aeruginosa was found in 97.9% of IBS cases compared to only 33.3% of healthy controls, indicating its potential role as a microbial marker for IBS. Additionally, Bacteroides thetaiotamicron and segmented filamentous bacteria (SFB) were more abundant in IBS-D than in IBS-C, while Veillonella was elevated specifically in IBS-C patients. Abdominal distension and bloating were associated with increased numbers of Bacteroides thetaiotamicron, Clostridium coccoides, and P. aeruginosa, suggesting that microbial dysbiosis might contribute to symptom severity. Principal component analysis further confirmed distinct microbial profiles across IBS subtypes, supporting the hypothesis that gut microbiota composition is intrinsically linked to symptom manifestation in IBS.
Parameter
Findings in IBS Patients
Microbial Diversity
Reduced abundance of Bifidobacterium and Lactobacillus species
Pseudomonas aeruginosa prevalent in 97.9% of IBS cases; Veillonella elevated in IBS-C, SFB in IBS-D
Symptom Associations
Abdominal distension and bloating correlated with Bacteroides thetaiotamicron, Clostridium coccoides, P. aeruginosa
Principal Component Analysis
Clear microbial separation between IBS subtypes and healthy controls
Diagnostic Implications
Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Bacteroides thetaiotamicron as potential biomarkers for IBS diagnosis
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study strongly supports the hypothesis that gut microbiota dysbiosis is associated with IBS and its subtypes. The pronounced presence of Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Bacteroides thetaiotamicron in IBS patients, especially those with diarrhea-predominant symptoms, suggests that these bacteria could serve as microbial biomarkers for IBS. Furthermore, the differential microbial patterns observed between IBS-C and IBS-D imply that targeted microbial therapies could be developed to address specific dysbiotic signatures. Importantly, the study highlights the role of gut dysbiosis in driving clinical symptoms such as bloating and abdominal distension, reinforcing the need for microbiome-targeted interventions as part of a comprehensive therapeutic strategy for IBS.
Functional dysbiosis within the gut microbiota of patients with constipated-irritable bowel syndrome
February 12, 2026
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Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) is a common gastrointestinal disorder characterized by symptoms such as abdominal pain, bloating, and altered bowel habits. Recent research has focused on the gut microbiota's role in IBS, aiming to identify specific microbial signatures associated with the condition.
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The study highlights functional dysbiosis in constipated-irritable bowel syndrome, with increased sulfate-reducing bacteria and disrupted SCFA profiles.
What was studied?
This study investigated the functional dysbiosis in the gut microbiota of women diagnosed with constipated-irritable bowel syndrome (C-IBS) compared to healthy controls. Unlike previous studies that focused predominantly on phylogenetic composition, this research employed a function-based approach to analyze metabolic capabilities and the presence of specific functional microbial groups. The primary objective was to identify shifts in microbial populations linked to fermentation processes, short-chain fatty acid (SCFA) production, and hydrogen metabolism that may contribute to the pathophysiology of C-IBS.
Who was studied?
The study included 14 women diagnosed with C-IBS according to Rome II criteria and 12 sex-matched healthy controls. All participants were assessed for gastrointestinal symptoms and underwent fecal sampling to analyze microbial populations and fermentation capabilities. None of the participants had taken antibiotics, probiotics, or experienced gastrointestinal infections for at least two months prior to sampling to minimize confounding microbial shifts.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed a distinct microbial dysbiosis in the gut microbiota of C-IBS patients characterized by significant shifts in fermentation pathways and hydrogen metabolism. The abundance of beneficial lactate-producing bacteria such as Bifidobacterium and Lactobacillus was markedly reduced in C-IBS patients. In contrast, sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB) populations were elevated by 100-fold compared to healthy controls. This shift was associated with enhanced hydrogen sulfide (H2S) production, a gas implicated in gut motility disturbance and visceral hypersensitivity. Additionally, methanogenic archaea and reductive acetogens, crucial for hydrogen consumption, were significantly lower in C-IBS patients. The decrease in butyrate-producing bacteria like the Roseburia–E. rectale group further disrupted SCFA profiles, potentially impairing anti-inflammatory and gut barrier functions. In vitro starch fermentation assays demonstrated that C-IBS microbiota produced significantly more hydrogen and sulfides, but less butyrate compared to controls. This altered fermentative output underscores the role of functional dysbiosis in generating gastrointestinal symptoms characteristic of C-IBS, such as bloating, constipation, and abdominal pain.
Parameter
Findings in C-IBS Patients
Microbial Diversity
Reduced abundance of lactate-producing Bifidobacterium and Lactobacillus
Sulfate-Reducing Bacteria (SRB)
100-fold increase compared to healthy controls
Hydrogen Metabolism
Decreased methanogens and reductive acetogens, increased hydrogen production
Butyrate Production
Lower production due to reduced Roseburia–E. rectale populations
Short-Chain Fatty Acid (SCFA) Profile
Less butyrate, more hydrogen sulfide (H2S)
In Vitro Fermentation
C-IBS microbiota produced more hydrogen and sulfides, less butyrate
Pathophysiological Implications
Linked to bloating, constipation, and abdominal pain through H2S toxicity
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study underscores the importance of functional dysbiosis in the pathogenesis of C-IBS. The enhanced presence of sulfate-reducing bacteria and the resulting increase in hydrogen sulfide production point to a mechanistic link between microbial metabolism and the gastrointestinal symptoms of C-IBS. These findings suggest that targeting SRB populations and restoring lactate- and butyrate-producing bacteria may offer therapeutic benefits in mitigating symptom severity. Furthermore, this research supports the need for microbiome-targeted interventions that focus not only on microbial composition but also on metabolic functionality to effectively manage C-IBS.
Gastrointestinal microbiome signatures of pediatric patients with irritable bowel syndrome
February 12, 2026
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Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) is a common gastrointestinal disorder characterized by symptoms such as abdominal pain, bloating, and altered bowel habits. Recent research has focused on the gut microbiota's role in IBS, aiming to identify specific microbial signatures associated with the condition.
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This study identifies distinct microbiome signatures in pediatric IBS, revealing unique microbial imbalances linked to disease subtypes.
What was studied?
This study examined the gastrointestinal microbiome signatures in pediatric patients with Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) compared to healthy controls. Using advanced 16S ribosomal RNA (rRNA) gene sequencing and PhyloChip microarray analyses, the researchers aimed to identify specific microbial patterns associated with IBS subtypes in children. The primary goal was to determine how microbial dysbiosis in pediatric IBS differs from that of healthy children and whether specific bacterial taxa are indicative of disease subtypes.
Who was studied?
The study involved 22 pediatric patients diagnosed with IBS based on the Pediatric Rome III criteria and 22 age-matched healthy controls. The participants, aged 7 to 12 years, were recruited from a large healthcare network in the Houston metropolitan area. Stool samples were collected and analyzed using high-resolution sequencing techniques, including 454 pyrosequencing and PhyloChip hybridization, which enabled the identification of thousands of bacterial taxa and their relative abundances.
What were the most important findings?
The analysis revealed significant microbial differences between pediatric IBS patients and healthy controls. Notably, the microbiomes of IBS patients showed a marked increase in the abundance of α-Proteobacteria, particularly Haemophilus parainfluenzae, which was significantly elevated in IBS patients compared to healthy children (0.89% vs. 0.07%, p < 0.05). At the genus level, Dorea and Veillonella were also more prevalent in IBS patients, while Eubacterium and Anaerovorax were reduced. Interestingly, the study identified a novel Ruminococcus-like organism linked specifically to IBS, suggesting potential undiscovered microbial contributors to the condition.
Subgroup analysis further distinguished IBS subtypes, with the microbiomes of IBS-C (constipation-predominant) and IBS-U (unsubtyped IBS) showing distinct bacterial profiles. For example, Bacteroides vulgatus was less abundant in IBS patients, whereas Alistipes, Akkermansia, and Parabacteroides were found to be more abundant in those with higher pain frequency. These findings highlight the possibility of using microbiome signatures to not only diagnose IBS in children but also potentially classify its subtypes with high accuracy.
Microbial Group
IBS Patients
Healthy Controls
Statistical Significance
Subtype Specificity
α-Proteobacteria
Increased
Low prevalence
p < 0.05
General IBS
Haemophilus parainfluenzae
Increased
Absent or low
p < 0.05
General IBS
Dorea
Increased
Normal levels
p < 0.05
General IBS
Veillonella
Increased
Normal levels
p < 0.05
General IBS
Eubacterium
Decreased
High prevalence
p < 0.05
General IBS
Anaerovorax
Decreased
High prevalence
p < 0.05
General IBS
Bacteroides vulgatus
Decreased
Normal levels
p < 0.05
IBS-C and IBS-U
Alistipes
Increased
Normal levels
p < 0.05
High pain frequency
Akkermansia
Increased
Normal levels
p < 0.05
High pain frequency
Parabacteroides
Increased
Normal levels
p < 0.05
High pain frequency
Ruminococcus-like organism
Increased
Not present
p < 0.01
General IBS
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study's findings underscore the critical role of gut microbial composition in pediatric IBS, identifying specific bacterial signatures that correlate with disease presence and subtype classification. The enrichment of α-Proteobacteria, Haemophilus parainfluenzae, and Veillonella in IBS patients, along with the depletion of Eubacterium and Anaerovorax, suggests that microbial dysbiosis contributes to the pathophysiology of IBS. These microbial patterns could serve as biomarkers for diagnosing pediatric IBS and differentiating its subtypes, providing a non-invasive diagnostic tool for clinicians. Moreover, the identification of novel microbes associated with IBS points toward new therapeutic targets that could be explored to restore microbial balance and alleviate symptoms in pediatric patients.
Global and deep molecular analysis of microbiota signatures in fecal samples from patients with irritable bowel syndrome
February 12, 2026
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Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) is a common gastrointestinal disorder characterized by symptoms such as abdominal pain, bloating, and altered bowel habits. Recent research has focused on the gut microbiota's role in IBS, aiming to identify specific microbial signatures associated with the condition.
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This study identifies global microbiota signatures in IBS patients, revealing distinct microbial imbalances that differentiate them from healthy controls. Key findings include a 2-fold increase in the Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes ratio, reduced Bifidobacterium and Faecalibacterium populations, and significant shifts in methanogens. These alterations suggest potential diagnostic markers and therapeutic targets for IBS.
What was studied?
This study conducted a global and deep molecular analysis of microbiota signatures in fecal samples from patients diagnosed with Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS). The primary aim was to comprehensively identify microbial populations that distinguish IBS patients from healthy individuals and correlate these microbial profiles with IBS symptom severity. The study employed high-throughput phylogenetic microarrays and quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) to achieve high-resolution profiling of the fecal microbiota, allowing for in-depth assessment of species-level differences and community shifts associated with IBS.
Who was studied?
The study included 62 primary care IBS patients and 46 healthy controls, recruited from the Helsinki area in Finland. Participants met the Rome I criteria for IBS diagnosis and were subdivided into three IBS subtypes: diarrhea-predominant (IBS-D), constipation-predominant (IBS-C), and alternating IBS (IBS-A). Healthy controls were age-matched and confirmed to have no history of gastrointestinal disorders. Fecal samples were collected, frozen, and analyzed using the Human Intestinal Tract Chip (HITChip) microarray and qPCR to characterize microbial composition and abundance.
What were the most important findings?
The analysis revealed distinct microbial imbalances in IBS patients compared to healthy controls. Most notably, there was a 2-fold increased Firmicutes to Bacteroidetes ratio in IBS patients, driven by a significant rise in Dorea, Ruminococcus, and Clostridium spp., alongside a marked reduction in Bacteroidetes (p < 0.0001). Additionally, Bifidobacterium and Faecalibacterium species were notably decreased (p < 0.05), reflecting disruptions in populations typically associated with gut health and anti-inflammatory properties. The study also observed a dramatic reduction in methanogens, with a 4-fold lower average number in IBS patients compared to controls (p < 0.003), which was particularly pronounced in IBS-C patients.
Correlation analyses linked these microbial shifts to IBS symptom scores, suggesting that increased levels of Firmicutes and Proteobacteria may exacerbate gut symptoms through mechanisms like mucosal barrier dysfunction and inflammation. Moreover, redundancy analysis showed that IBS patients consistently clustered separately from healthy controls based on their microbial profiles, underscoring the potential for microbiota-based diagnostics.
Microbial Group
IBS Patients
Healthy Controls
Statistical Significance
Subtype Specificity
Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes Ratio
Increased 2-fold
Normal levels
p < 0.0002
General IBS
Dorea, Ruminococcus, Clostridium spp.
Elevated
Normal levels
p < 0.005
General IBS
Bacteroidetes
Decreased
Normal levels
p < 0.0001
General IBS
Bifidobacterium spp.
Decreased
Normal levels
p < 0.05
General IBS
Faecalibacterium spp.
Decreased
Normal levels
p < 0.05
General IBS
Methanogens
Reduced 4-fold
Normal levels
p < 0.003
Most reduced in IBS-C
Proteobacteria
Increased
Normal levels
p < 0.05
Linked to higher symptom severity
Ruminococcus torques
Increased
Low prevalence in controls
p < 0.01
Associated with higher IBS symptom scores
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings highlight the potential of global microbiota signatures as diagnostic markers for IBS and suggest that specific microbial imbalances could serve as therapeutic targets. The elevated Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes ratio, alongside reductions in Bifidobacterium and Faecalibacterium, indicates that IBS is characterized by dysbiotic shifts that may drive symptomatology through immune modulation and disrupted gut barrier function. Furthermore, the substantial reduction in methanogens points to altered fermentation pathways in IBS, potentially contributing to gas production and bowel irregularities. These insights suggest that restoring microbial balance through targeted therapies may be an effective strategy for managing IBS symptoms.
Gut microbiome signatures reflect different subtypes of irritable bowel syndrome
February 12, 2026
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Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) is a common gastrointestinal disorder characterized by symptoms such as abdominal pain, bloating, and altered bowel habits. Recent research has focused on the gut microbiota's role in IBS, aiming to identify specific microbial signatures associated with the condition.
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This study explores gut microbiome signatures across IBS subtypes, highlighting distinct microbial and metabolic shifts. Findings reveal subtype-specific dysbiosis, with implications for personalized dietary interventions and microbiome-targeted therapies for IBS-D, IBS-C, and IBS-U patients.
What Was Studied?
This study investigated the gut microbiome signatures across different subtypes of Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS), specifically IBS-Diarrhea (IBS-D), IBS-Constipation (IBS-C), and unclassified IBS (IBS-U). Researchers aimed to determine distinct microbiota compositions and their functional implications, linking these microbial patterns to clinical features such as inflammation, depression, and dietary habits. A cohort of 942 IBS patients was deeply phenotyped and matched with 942 non-IBS controls based on age, gender, BMI, geography, and dietary patterns. The study utilized 16S rRNA sequencing data to analyze microbial compositions, and MetaCyc pathway analysis to evaluate functional metabolic shifts across subtypes.
Who Was Studied?
The study involved 942 patients diagnosed with IBS, categorized into three subtypes: IBS-D (302 subjects), IBS-C (180 subjects), and IBS-U (460 subjects). These patients were matched with 942 non-IBS controls using strict criteria to minimize confounding factors like age, gender, BMI, geography, and dietary habits. Microbiome samples were collected and analyzed to compare taxonomic and functional compositions between IBS subtypes and healthy controls.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study identified distinct gut microbiome signatures across the three IBS subtypes, highlighting significant differences in bacterial diversity and composition. Patients with IBS-D and IBS-U exhibited reduced bacterial diversity (Shannon index; p < .01), while IBS-C showed no significant difference in diversity compared to controls. At the phylum level, IBS-D and IBS-U were characterized by a reduction in Firmicutes, Actinobacteriota, Verrucomicrobiota, and Campilobacterota, alongside an enrichment of Proteobacteria. IBS-C, in contrast, displayed an increased abundance of Verrucomicrobiota and Desulfobacterota. Functional pathway analysis revealed that hydrogen sulfide production pathways (SO4ASSIM) were elevated in IBS-D and IBS-U, potentially linking microbial metabolism to symptom severity. IBS-C showed an increase in palmitoleate biosynthesis pathways, which may contribute to stool hardness through the production of calcium palmitate. Notably, Escherichia/Shigella populations were consistently elevated across all IBS subtypes, while beneficial genera such as Bifidobacterium, Sutterella, and Butyricimonas were depleted, particularly in IBS patients with comorbid depression. The presence of these pathogens, coupled with reductions in short-chain fatty acid (SCFA) production pathways, suggests a disruption in anti-inflammatory microbial activity. Moreover, the study found that specific dietary factors, such as lactose consumption, influenced microbial compositions differently across IBS subtypes, indicating the potential for diet-based modulation of gut microbiota in therapeutic strategies.
Parameter
Findings in IBS-D
Findings in IBS-C
Findings in IBS-U
Bacterial Diversity
Reduced diversity (Shannon index; p < .01)
No significant difference compared to controls
Reduced diversity (Shannon index; p < .01)
Phylum-Level Changes
Decreased Firmicutes, Actinobacteriota, Verrucomicrobiota, and Campilobacterota; increased Proteobacteria
Increased Verrucomicrobiota and Desulfobacterota
Decreased Firmicutes, Actinobacteriota, Verrucomicrobiota, and Campilobacterota; increased Proteobacteria
Key Genera
Elevated Escherichia/Shigella; reduced Bifidobacterium, Sutterella, and Butyricimonas
This study underscores the subtype-specific microbial signatures in IBS, linking gut dysbiosis to distinct metabolic and inflammatory pathways. The identification of hydrogen sulfide production in IBS-D and IBS-U suggests microbial-driven exacerbation of diarrhea symptoms, while palmitoleate biosynthesis in IBS-C provides insights into constipation mechanisms. Importantly, the findings emphasize that personalized microbiome modulation, possibly through dietary interventions or targeted probiotics, could offer therapeutic benefits tailored to IBS subtype. Additionally, the association of Escherichia/Shigella overgrowth with inflammation and depression highlights a potential microbiome-targeted approach for addressing psychiatric comorbidities in IBS patients. These findings propose a precision medicine approach, leveraging gut microbiome signatures for individualized treatment strategies in IBS.
Gut microbiota composition and functional prediction in diarrhea-predominant irritable bowel syndrome
February 12, 2026
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Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) is a common gastrointestinal disorder characterized by symptoms such as abdominal pain, bloating, and altered bowel habits. Recent research has focused on the gut microbiota's role in IBS, aiming to identify specific microbial signatures associated with the condition.
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This study reveals that gut microbiota in IBS-D patients is characterized by reduced Firmicutes, Fusobacteria, and Actinobacteria, alongside elevated Proteobacteria. Functional predictions indicate disrupted metabolism and increased inflammatory pathways, suggesting microbiome-targeted interventions may benefit IBS-D symptom management.
What was studied?
This study investigated the gut microbiota composition and functional prediction in patients with diarrhea-predominant irritable bowel syndrome (IBS-D) compared to healthy controls in Nanchang, China. It aimed to identify differences in microbial diversity, composition, and functional metabolic pathways using 16S rRNA sequencing and PICRUSt analysis. The study included 30 IBS-D patients and 30 healthy controls and examined the relative abundance of various microbial taxa, alpha and beta diversity measures, and predicted functional capabilities of the microbiome.
Who was studied?
The study focused on 30 patients diagnosed with diarrhea-predominant IBS (IBS-D) based on Rome IV criteria, alongside 30 healthy controls. Participants ranged in age from 20 to 64 years and were recruited from Nanchang, China. All participants were screened to exclude conditions like inflammatory bowel disease, peptic ulcer, and recent antibiotic or probiotic use to avoid confounding factors.
What were the most important findings?
The study found that gut microbiota richness, but not diversity, was decreased in IBS-D patients compared to healthy controls. At the phylum level, there was a significant decrease in Firmicutes, Fusobacteria, and Actinobacteria, alongside an increase in Proteobacteria in IBS-D patients. At the genus level, Enterobacteriaceae significantly increased, while Alloprevotella and Fusobacterium significantly decreased. Functional predictions using PICRUSt analysis showed up-regulation in pathways associated with cofactor and vitamin metabolism, xenobiotics biodegradation, and metabolism, while environmental adaptation, cell growth, and death pathways were down-regulated. These shifts suggest that microbial imbalances in IBS-D patients may contribute to inflammation, altered metabolism, and disrupted gut barrier function. Additionally, Proteobacteria, identified as a potential microbial signature of disease, was notably elevated, indicating a possible role in driving inflammation in the gut of IBS-D patients.
↑ Metabolism of cofactors, vitamins, and xenobiotics; ↓ Environmental adaptation, cell growth, and death
Microbial Signature
Elevated Proteobacteria linked to inflammation
Inflammatory Markers
Associated with increased Proteobacteria
Therapeutic Implications
Potential for microbiome-targeted therapy and dietary interventions
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings underscore the significant role of microbiome alterations in the pathogenesis of IBS-D, highlighting Proteobacteria as a potential microbial marker of disease activity. The functional predictions suggest that dysbiosis in IBS-D is not limited to microbial composition but extends to metabolic and detoxification pathways, which may exacerbate symptoms and chronic inflammation. These insights open avenues for microbiome-targeted therapies, such as probiotics, prebiotics, and dietary modifications, aimed at restoring microbial balance and improving patient outcomes. Furthermore, the study emphasizes the need for region-specific microbiome analyses due to geographical variations in gut flora.
IBS-associated phylogenetic unbalances of the intestinal microbiota are not reverted by probiotic supplementation
February 12, 2026
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Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) is a common gastrointestinal disorder characterized by symptoms such as abdominal pain, bloating, and altered bowel habits. Recent research has focused on the gut microbiota's role in IBS, aiming to identify specific microbial signatures associated with the condition.
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This study found that while probiotics may relieve IBS symptoms, they do not revert the gut microbiota imbalances associated with the disorder.
What was studied?
This study investigated the phylogenetic unbalances of the intestinal microbiota in individuals diagnosed with Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) and evaluated whether these imbalances could be reverted through daily probiotic supplementation with a novel yogurt containing Bifidobacterium animalis subsp. lactis Bb12 and Kluyveromyces marxianus B0399. The primary goal was to determine if the probiotic intervention would modulate the gut microbiota composition in a way that counteracts the dysbiosis observed in IBS patients.
Who was studied?
Nineteen individuals with clinically diagnosed IBS (10 with diarrhea-predominant IBS, 5 with mixed bowel habits, and 4 with constipation-predominant IBS) participated in a monocentric trial. Their gut microbiota profiles were compared with a control cohort of 24 healthy subjects, matched for age and sex, and previously characterized using the same methodologies.
What were the most important findings?
The study demonstrated that the gut microbiota of IBS patients is significantly different from that of healthy individuals, showing distinct phylogenetic imbalances. The IBS-associated microbiota was characterized by an increased abundance of Lactobacilli, Bacillus cereus, Bacillus clausii, Bifidobacteria, Clostridium cluster IX, and Eubacterium rectale, alongside a marked depletion of the Bacteroides/Prevotella group and the Veillonella genus. Notably, several bacterial groups previously defined as pathobionts, such as members of the Enterobacteriaceae family, Enterococcus faecium, Clostridium difficile, and Campylobacter spp., were enriched in IBS patients.
Despite these findings, the probiotic intervention with B. animalis subsp. lactis Bb12 and K. marxianus B0399 did not significantly alter the microbiota composition in IBS patients. After four weeks of daily consumption, the microbial profiles of the participants showed no major shifts, with high inter-individual diversity persisting. Hierarchical clustering of microarray fingerprints before and after supplementation indicated that most samples remained largely unchanged. Additionally, measures of microbial diversity, such as Shannon and richness indices, were not impacted by the probiotic treatment. This indicates that while the probiotics may provide symptomatic relief, they do not appear to correct the underlying microbial imbalances associated with IBS.
Microbial Group
IBS Patients
Healthy Controls
Statistical Significance
Effect of Probiotics
Lactobacilli
Increased
Normal levels
p < 0.05
No significant change observed
Bacillus cereus
Increased
Low prevalence
p < 0.001
No significant change observed
Bacillus clausii
Increased
Low prevalence
p < 0.001
No significant change observed
Bifidobacteria
Increased
Normal levels
p < 0.001
No significant change observed
Clostridium cluster IX
Increased
Normal levels
p < 0.001
No significant change observed
Eubacterium rectale
Increased
Normal levels
p < 0.01
No significant change observed
Bacteroides/Prevotella
Decreased
High prevalence
p < 0.01
No significant change observed
Veillonella genus
Decreased
Normal levels
p < 0.05
No significant change observed
Enterobacteriaceae
Increased
Low prevalence
p < 0.001
No significant change observed
Enterococcus faecium
Increased
Low prevalence
p < 0.001
No significant change observed
Clostridium difficile
Increased
Low prevalence
p < 0.01
No significant change observed
Campylobacter spp.
Increased
Low prevalence
p < 0.05
No significant change observed
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings suggest that the therapeutic benefits of probiotic supplementation in IBS may not be attributed to substantial shifts in the gut microbiota composition. The persistence of phylogenetic unbalances despite intervention implies that the mechanisms of probiotic efficacy in IBS might be independent of direct compositional changes, possibly involving modulation of immune responses or gut barrier function instead. This challenges the traditional view that microbiota normalization is a key pathway for probiotic effectiveness in IBS treatment and underscores the necessity for mechanistic studies focused on functional, rather than purely compositional, microbiota changes.
Increase in fecal primary bile acids and dysbiosis in patients with diarrhea-predominant irritable bowel syndrome
February 12, 2026
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Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) is a common gastrointestinal disorder characterized by symptoms such as abdominal pain, bloating, and altered bowel habits. Recent research has focused on the gut microbiota's role in IBS, aiming to identify specific microbial signatures associated with the condition.
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The study identified significant shifts in fecal bile acid composition and gut microbiota in IBS-D patients. Elevated primary bile acids and dysbiosis were linked to stool frequency and consistency, suggesting bile acid modulation as a potential therapeutic target for symptom management.
What was studied?
This study examined the alterations in fecal bile acid (BA) composition and gut microbiota dysbiosis in patients with diarrhea-predominant irritable bowel syndrome (IBS-D) compared to healthy subjects. The research aimed to identify how shifts in primary and secondary bile acid levels correlate with symptoms of diarrhea, stool frequency, and microbial changes that could influence bile acid metabolism
Who was studied?
The study included 14 patients diagnosed with diarrhea-predominant IBS (IBS-D) and 18 healthy subjects (HS) as controls. All participants were evaluated for clinical symptoms, and stool samples were collected for analysis of bile acid composition and gut microbiota profiling using quantitative PCR (qPCR) and high-performance liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry (HPLC-MS/MS).
What were the most important findings?
The study uncovered a significant increase in primary bile acids (BA) in the feces of IBS-D patients compared to healthy subjects, with a corresponding decrease in secondary bile acids. Primary bile acids, particularly cholic acid (CA) and chenodeoxycholic acid (CDCA), were markedly elevated, contributing to looser stool consistency and higher stool frequency. These elevations in primary BA were positively correlated with the Bristol Stool Scale score and the frequency of bowel movements. In contrast, secondary bile acids such as deoxycholic acid (DCA) were significantly reduced in IBS-D patients, suggesting impaired microbial transformation. Dysbiosis within the gut microbiota was also evident, characterized by a significant increase in Escherichia coli and a marked decrease in Bifidobacterium and members of the Leptum group. These microbial shifts indicate a reduction in the bacteria responsible for bile acid dehydroxylation, further exacerbating the accumulation of primary BA. The study postulates that this microbial imbalance not only alters bile acid metabolism but may also promote mucosal permeability and colonic motility, contributing to the pathophysiology of diarrhea in IBS-D patients.
Parameter
IBS-D Patients
Primary Bile Acids
Significantly elevated (CA, CDCA)
Secondary Bile Acids
Markedly reduced (DCA)
Gut Microbiota Imbalance
Increase in Escherichia coli
Microbial Reductions
Bifidobacterium and Leptum groups
Stool Frequency
Increased; correlated with primary BA levels
Stool Consistency
Looser; linked to higher primary BA levels
Microbial Transformation
Impaired conversion from primary to secondary BA
Inflammatory Implications
Suggestive of increased mucosal permeability and motility changes
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study underscores the critical role of bile acid dysbiosis in the pathogenesis of diarrhea-predominant IBS. The findings suggest that the elevated primary bile acids, linked to microbial dysbiosis, could serve as both biomarkers and therapeutic targets for IBS-D. The observed reduction in secondary bile acids, typically resulting from microbial transformation, highlights the importance of gut microbiota in maintaining bile acid homeostasis. This disruption in bile acid metabolism not only influences stool consistency and motility but may also contribute to chronic gut inflammation. Therapeutic interventions that aim to modulate bile acid levels or restore microbial balance may hold promise for symptom relief in IBS-D patients.
Irritable Bowel Syndrome and Nickel Allergy:What Is the Role of the Low Nickel Diet?
February 12, 2026
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Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) is a common gastrointestinal disorder characterized by symptoms such as abdominal pain, bloating, and altered bowel habits. Recent research has focused on the gut microbiota's role in IBS, aiming to identify specific microbial signatures associated with the condition.
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A low-nickel diet significantly improved gastrointestinal symptoms and physical well-being in IBS patients with nickel allergy, despite persistent intestinal permeability. Findings suggest nickel-induced immune activation as a therapeutic target in IBS.
What was studied?
This pilot study evaluated the prevalence of nickel (Ni) allergy in individuals diagnosed with irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) and investigated the clinical efficacy of a low-nickel diet (LNiD) in this population. Specifically, the authors assessed the impact of the dietary intervention on gastrointestinal symptoms, intestinal permeability, quality of life, and psychological status in Ni-sensitized IBS patients. It also analyzed how the severity of allergic skin reactions and IBS subtypes might influence changes in gut permeability during LNiD intervention.
Who was studied?
Twenty patients fulfilling Rome III criteria for IBS and exhibiting Ni sensitization (confirmed by positive patch test) were enrolled. These individuals had undergone a thorough exclusion process to rule out other organic gastrointestinal disorders, infections, or metabolic dysfunctions. The sample predominantly consisted of females, with most presenting the diarrhea-predominant (IBS-D) subtype. After baseline evaluation of intestinal permeability, psychological wellbeing, and gastrointestinal symptoms, participants followed a low-Ni diet for three months. Compliance was monitored via dietary diaries. Post-intervention assessments included repeated clinical questionnaires and permeability testing using ⁵¹Cr-EDTA for patients with initially elevated intestinal permeability. A control group of healthy subjects matched by age, sex, and socioeconomic background was included for comparison in permeability analysis.
What were the most important findings?
A strikingly high prevalence of nickel allergy was found among IBS patients, particularly in females. The LNiD significantly alleviated gastrointestinal symptoms (except vomiting) and improved general well-being scores (notably bodily pain and physical functioning). Despite improvements in symptoms, all participants continued to show elevated intestinal permeability post-intervention, suggesting persistent barrier dysfunction possibly due to chronic mucosal immune activation. Interestingly, intestinal permeability changes (Δ⁵¹Cr-EDTA) varied by IBS subtype and allergic response severity. Patients with stronger Ni skin reactivity (++/+++) were more likely to experience worsened barrier function, while those with IBS-M or IBS-U subtypes exhibited improvement. Psychometric testing revealed widespread psychological distress, especially anxiety, supporting the established association between IBS and affective dysregulation. These findings reinforce the concept of systemic nickel allergy syndrome (SNAS) as a relevant comorbidity in IBS and point toward immune-mediated mechanisms involving CD4+ T cell infiltration and Th2 cytokines as underlying contributors to both gastrointestinal and systemic symptoms.
From a microbiome perspective, although the study did not directly assess microbial composition, its findings implicate Ni-induced barrier dysfunction as a potential facilitator of microbial dysbiosis. The interplay between metal exposure, gut immune activation, and barrier integrity represents a critical axis in microbiome-host interaction and warrants further microbial profiling in future studies.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study identifies a potentially overlooked driver of IBS symptoms—nickel hypersensitivity—and provides preliminary but compelling evidence for dietary nickel restriction as a therapeutic intervention in select IBS patients. Its implications extend to redefining subgroups within IBS, informing personalized nutrition strategies, and advancing the study of metal-induced gut dysfunction as a contributor to microbial dysbiosis. Moreover, it highlights the need for integrative care models that address metal exposure, gut permeability, immune status, and psychological health concurrently. Given that low-Ni diets do not restrict FODMAPs, this study also challenges prevailing dietary paradigms in IBS management by introducing a non-FODMAP, immune-targeted approach with mechanistic plausibility.
Lower Bifidobacteria counts in both duodenal mucosa-associated and fecal microbiota in irritable bowel syndrome patients
February 12, 2026
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Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) is a common gastrointestinal disorder characterized by symptoms such as abdominal pain, bloating, and altered bowel habits. Recent research has focused on the gut microbiota's role in IBS, aiming to identify specific microbial signatures associated with the condition.
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This study reveals that IBS patients have significantly lower bifidobacteria counts in both fecal and duodenal samples compared to healthy controls. The marked reduction in Bifidobacterium catenulatum levels suggests a critical link to gut dysbiosis, impaired mucosal integrity, and potential contributions to symptom severity in IBS subtypes.
What was studied?
This study investigated the levels of bifidobacteria in both duodenal mucosa-associated and fecal microbiota of patients with Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) compared to healthy controls. The primary goal was to identify whether IBS patients exhibited significant reductions in bifidobacteria populations, which could play a role in gut dysbiosis and symptom expression. To achieve this, the researchers employed molecular-based techniques including Fluorescent In Situ Hybridization (FISH) and real-time PCR analysis to quantify bifidobacterial species in both fecal and duodenal samples.
Who was studied?
The study cohort consisted of 41 IBS patients meeting the Rome II criteria and 26 healthy subjects without GI symptoms or major abdominal surgery. The IBS group included patients with diarrhea-predominant (IBS-D), constipation-predominant (IBS-C), and alternating subtypes (IBS-A). Samples of fecal matter and duodenal mucosa were collected for microbial analysis, with careful exclusion of participants who had used probiotics, antimicrobials, or other medications known to influence gut flora composition.
What were the most important findings?
The analysis revealed that IBS patients had significantly lower levels of bifidobacteria in both fecal and duodenal mucosa-associated samples compared to healthy controls. FISH analysis demonstrated a 2-fold decrease in bifidobacteria levels in fecal samples of IBS patients (4.2 ± 1.3%) versus healthy subjects (8.3 ± 1.9%, p < 0.01). In particular, Bifidobacterium catenulatum levels were markedly reduced in IBS patients, with concentrations of 6 ± 0.6% compared to 19 ± 2.5% in healthy controls (p < 0.001). The disparity was consistent across all IBS subtypes, indicating a broad-spectrum deficiency rather than subtype-specific microbial shifts.
The study also highlighted that while overall bifidobacteria counts were lower, other major bacterial groups did not show significant differences between IBS patients and healthy subjects, suggesting a targeted disruption rather than widespread microbial imbalance. This finding underscores the potential role of bifidobacteria depletion in IBS pathophysiology, possibly through mechanisms involving mucosal integrity, anti-inflammatory activity, and short-chain fatty acid production.
Microbial Group
IBS Patients
Healthy Controls
Statistical Significance
Associated Effects
Total Bifidobacteria (Fecal)
4.2 ± 1.3%
8.3 ± 1.9%
p < 0.01
Reduced short-chain fatty acid production, disrupted gut barrier
Bifidobacterium catenulatum
6 ± 0.6%
19 ± 2.5%
p < 0.001
Potential role in symptom expression through gut dysbiosis
Total Bifidobacteria (Duodenal)
Reduced
Normal levels
p < 0.01
Suggests mucosal disruption in IBS patients
Other Major Bacterial Groups
No significant change
Normal levels
Not significant
Indicates targeted depletion rather than widespread dysbiosis
FISH Detection Coverage
32%
44%
p < 0.05
Lower overall detection in IBS samples
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The results strongly suggest that reduced bifidobacteria populations, particularly Bifidobacterium catenulatum, may contribute to IBS symptomatology through impaired mucosal protection and altered gut homeostasis. This finding is crucial as bifidobacteria are known to produce lactic and acetic acids that lower gut pH, inhibit pathogenic bacteria, and support barrier function. Therapeutic strategies that restore bifidobacteria levels—such as targeted probiotics or prebiotic interventions—may offer novel approaches for symptom management in IBS patients. These insights pave the way for more microbiome-focused therapeutic strategies aimed at recalibrating microbial populations in the gut.
Molecular analysis of the luminal- and mucosal-associated intestinal microbiota in diarrhea-predominant irritable bowel syndrome
February 12, 2026
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Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) is a common gastrointestinal disorder characterized by symptoms such as abdominal pain, bloating, and altered bowel habits. Recent research has focused on the gut microbiota's role in IBS, aiming to identify specific microbial signatures associated with the condition.
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This study reveals that diarrhea-predominant IBS (D-IBS) is linked to reduced microbial diversity and niche-specific dysbiosis in the gut.
What was studied?
This study investigated the molecular composition of the luminal- and mucosal-associated intestinal microbiota in individuals with diarrhea-predominant irritable bowel syndrome (D-IBS) compared to healthy controls. Using terminal-restriction fragment length polymorphism (T-RFLP) fingerprinting of the bacterial 16S rRNA gene, researchers aimed to uncover compositional differences and biodiversity shifts in both fecal and colonic mucosal niches. The study's objective was to determine whether D-IBS is associated with distinct microbial communities that could explain its pathogenesis and symptomatology.
Who was studied?
The study population consisted of 16 patients diagnosed with D-IBS according to the Rome III criteria and 21 healthy controls. The participants were recruited from the general population of Chapel Hill, NC, and the University of North Carolina Hospitals outpatient clinics. All subjects underwent fecal and colonic mucosal sampling for microbial analysis. Inclusion criteria ensured that participants had no history of GI tract surgery (except appendectomy or cholecystectomy), no other GI disorders, and had not taken antibiotics, anti-inflammatory agents, or probiotics for at least two months prior to sampling.
What were the most important findings?
The analysis revealed significant differences in the composition and biodiversity of the intestinal microbiota between D-IBS patients and healthy controls. The fecal samples of D-IBS patients demonstrated a 1.2-fold reduction in microbial biodiversity compared to healthy subjects (p = 0.008). Interestingly, while fecal samples showed decreased diversity, mucosal samples did not exhibit the same trend, suggesting niche-specific microbial alterations in D-IBS. The study identified a distinct reduction in Clostridiales and Planctomycetaceae in D-IBS fecal samples, two groups previously associated with gut health and immune modulation. Conversely, certain terminal-restriction fragments (T-RFs) were detected in D-IBS patients but not in controls, indicating shifts toward a more pathogenic or dysbiotic microbial environment.
Multivariate analysis of T-RFLP profiles highlighted clear distinctions between luminal and mucosal communities in both groups, with D-IBS patients showing a higher degree of microbial dissimilarity in fecal samples compared to mucosal ones. This niche-specific differentiation underscores the complexity of D-IBS-associated dysbiosis, where luminal disturbances are more pronounced than mucosal alterations.
Microbial Group
D-IBS Patients
Niche-Specific Effect
Clostridiales
Decreased (p < 0.05)
Significant reduction in fecal samples
Planctomycetaceae
Decreased (p < 0.01)
Reduced in fecal, not mucosal samples
T-RFs unique to D-IBS
Increased (p < 0.01)
Luminal-specific dysbiosis
Microbial Biodiversity
Reduced by 1.2-fold (p < 0.008)
Significant only in fecal samples
Mucosal Microbial Diversity
No significant change
Biodiversity unchanged in mucosal samples
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings support the hypothesis that D-IBS is linked to significant dysbiosis, particularly within the fecal microbiota. The reduced biodiversity and shifts in specific microbial populations such as Clostridiales suggest that microbial depletion and overrepresentation of dysbiotic species could contribute to gut barrier dysfunction, immune activation, and symptomatic expression in D-IBS. Moreover, the difference in microbial composition between luminal and mucosal niches indicates that therapeutic strategies may need to be niche-specific to effectively target the underlying microbiota imbalances in D-IBS patients. These insights could pave the way for targeted microbiome-based interventions that are specifically designed to restore biodiversity and recalibrate pathogenic imbalances in D-IBS patients.
More than constipation – bowel symptoms in Parkinson’s disease and their connection to gut microbiota
February 12, 2026
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Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) is a common gastrointestinal disorder characterized by symptoms such as abdominal pain, bloating, and altered bowel habits. Recent research has focused on the gut microbiota's role in IBS, aiming to identify specific microbial signatures associated with the condition.
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IBS-like symptoms in Parkinson's disease are linked to distinct gut microbiota changes, particularly Prevotella depletion, implicating the microbiota-gut-brain axis in non-motor symptoms.
What was studied?
The study explored the correlation between bowel symptoms, particularly IBS-like symptoms, and gut microbiota composition in patients with Parkinson's disease (PD). The primary objective was to assess whether IBS-like symptoms in PD patients were linked to distinct microbial signatures, specifically focusing on alterations in gut bacteria such as Prevotella. The study also aimed to evaluate the broader gastrointestinal dysfunction in PD beyond mere constipation, investigating the microbiota-gut-brain axis's role in non-motor symptoms.
Who was studied?
The study included 74 patients with Parkinson's disease (PD) and 75 healthy controls. Participants were assessed for bowel symptoms using the Rome III criteria, and microbiota analysis was performed on fecal samples using 16S rRNA sequencing. The study specifically focused on identifying differences in microbial communities between PD patients with IBS-like symptoms and those without.
What were the most important findings?
The study found that IBS-like symptoms were significantly more prevalent in PD patients (24.3%) compared to controls (5.3%). Importantly, PD patients with IBS-like symptoms exhibited distinct gut microbiota compositions, characterized by a marked reduction in Prevotella and related taxa, which are typically involved in the maintenance of gut barrier integrity and mucosal immunity. In contrast, the genus Bacteroides remained relatively stable. The microbial dysbiosis observed in IBS+ PD patients correlated with more severe non-motor symptoms, such as pain and gastrointestinal distress, which are commonly associated with dysregulation of the gut-brain axis. The results suggest that the gut microbial environment may exacerbate gastrointestinal and non-motor symptoms in PD, providing potential biomarkers for stratification and targeted therapy.
The study also revealed that the presence of IBS-like symptoms in PD patients correlated with a broader spectrum of non-motor symptoms, including increased pain and dysautonomia. These symptoms may reflect a more complex gut-brain axis disruption in PD, where microbial shifts contribute to both local gut dysfunction and central nervous system alterations.
Potential biomarker for identifying at-risk patients
Therapeutic Implications
Suggests microbiome-targeted therapies for symptom relief
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings suggest that microbial profiling of PD patients could serve as a diagnostic tool for identifying those at risk of severe gastrointestinal dysfunction and non-motor symptoms. Furthermore, the association between Prevotella depletion and IBS-like symptoms highlights the potential for microbiome-targeted interventions to alleviate both bowel symptoms and broader non-motor manifestations in PD. This supports a growing body of evidence that the microbiota-gut-brain axis plays a significant role in the pathophysiology of Parkinson's disease, extending beyond motor symptoms to include gut dysbiosis-driven complications. The study advocates for integrating microbiome analysis into PD management to tailor dietary, probiotic, and therapeutic interventions that restore microbial balance and potentially improve patient outcomes.
Multi-omics profiles of the intestinal microbiome in irritable bowel syndrome and its bowel habit subtypes
February 12, 2026
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Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) is a common gastrointestinal disorder characterized by symptoms such as abdominal pain, bloating, and altered bowel habits. Recent research has focused on the gut microbiota's role in IBS, aiming to identify specific microbial signatures associated with the condition.
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This study explores multi-omics profiles of the intestinal microbiome in IBS subtypes, revealing distinct microbial and metabolic signatures. Findings highlight potential for microbiome-based diagnostics and targeted dietary interventions in IBS-D, IBS-C, and IBS-M, enhancing personalized therapeutic strategies.
What Was Studied?
This study investigated the multi-omics profiles of the intestinal microbiome in Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) and its bowel habit subtypes. The researchers aimed to uncover distinct microbial compositions and functional differences in patients with IBS-D (diarrhea-predominant), IBS-C (constipation-predominant), and IBS-M (mixed), compared to healthy controls. This study utilized 16S rRNA sequencing, metatranscriptomics, and untargeted metabolomics to capture both compositional and functional microbial changes. A cohort of 318 IBS patients and 177 healthy controls provided fecal samples, which were analyzed for microbial taxa, gene expression, and metabolic products.
Who Was Studied?
The study included 318 IBS patients, categorized into IBS-D, IBS-C, and IBS-M, alongside 177 healthy controls. These participants were recruited from diverse backgrounds and matched by age, gender, BMI, diet, and anxiety levels to minimize confounding factors. The study used comprehensive multi-omics approaches to investigate microbiome signatures, functional gene expression, and metabolic profiles in these individuals.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study identified distinct multi-omics microbial signatures in IBS patients compared to healthy controls. IBS-D patients exhibited increased levels of Bacteroides dorei, alterations in succinate and mannose metabolism, and elevated polyamine synthesis, which are associated with diarrhea severity. Meanwhile, IBS-C patients showed distinct upregulation of butyrate-producing pathways and enrichment in Verrucomicrobiota. The metatranscriptomics analysis revealed heightened expression of genes involved in fructose and polyol metabolism across all IBS subtypes, suggesting a microbiome-driven enhancement of fermentable carbohydrate utilization. Additionally, metabolomic profiling showed increased tyramine, gentisate, and hydrocinnamate in IBS patients, suggesting disruptions in aromatic amino acid metabolism. The multi-omics classifier developed from these findings demonstrated high accuracy (AUC 0.82) in distinguishing IBS patients from healthy controls. Further subclassification models effectively differentiated IBS-D from IBS-C with 86% accuracy, highlighting the role of bile acids, polyamines, and SCFA pathways in bowel habit variability.
Parameter
Findings in IBS-D
Findings in IBS-C
Findings in IBS-M
Bacterial Diversity
Altered diversity with increased Bacteroides dorei
Elevated Verrucomicrobiota and butyrate-producing pathways
Mixed microbial shifts with no clear dominant phylum
Key Genera
Enrichment of Bacteroides dorei, reduction in anti-inflammatory taxa
Increased Verrucomicrobiota and SCFA producers
Variable populations of Firmicutes and Bacteroidetes
Metabolic Pathways
Enhanced succinate and mannose metabolism; elevated polyamine synthesis
Upregulation of butyrate-producing pathways
Mixed shifts in carbohydrate fermentation and SCFA production
Metatranscriptomics Analysis
Higher expression of genes involved in fructose and polyol metabolism
Butyrate synthesis pathways more prominent
Elevated expression of pathways linked to bile acid metabolism
Metabolomic Shifts
Increased levels of tyramine, gentisate, and hydrocinnamate
Elevated levels of butyrate and palmitoleate
Mixed aromatic amino acid metabolism alterations
Inflammatory Associations
Linked to diarrhea severity through succinate and bile acid dysregulation
Linked to constipation through lipid metabolism
Mixed inflammation markers reflective of both diarrhea and constipation
Diagnostic Potential
Multi-omics classifier with 86% accuracy in distinguishing IBS-D
Effective biomarker profiles for IBS-C
Subtype differentiation through SCFA and bile acid pathways
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
This study's findings underscore the role of gut microbiome dysbiosis in IBS pathophysiology, driven by specific metabolic and transcriptional shifts. The identification of subtype-specific microbial signatures highlights the potential for personalized microbiome-based diagnostics and targeted dietary interventions. Notably, the association between fermentable carbohydrate metabolism and symptom severity suggests that dietary modifications—such as low-FODMAP or specific carbohydrate restriction—could be effective therapeutic strategies. Additionally, the development of a multi-omics classifier with high diagnostic accuracy presents a promising non-invasive approach for IBS diagnosis and subtype differentiation.
Overlap Between Irritable Bowel Syndrome Diagnosis and Endometriosis in Adolescents
February 12, 2026
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) is a common gastrointestinal disorder characterized by symptoms such as abdominal pain, bloating, and altered bowel habits. Recent research has focused on the gut microbiota's role in IBS, aiming to identify specific microbial signatures associated with the condition.
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The study links endometriosis with a fivefold increased risk of IBS in adolescents, emphasizing the role of acyclic pelvic pain severity and inflammation as shared mechanisms. Early screening for IBS and microbiome-targeted interventions could improve outcomes in this group.
What Was Studied?
The study investigated the association between endometriosis and irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) in adolescent females. Specifically, it aimed to determine the prevalence of IBS in those with and without surgically confirmed endometriosis and to explore how pelvic pain severity and other comorbidities influenced this relationship.
Who Was Studied?
The study analyzed data from 323 adolescent females under 21 years of age who participated in the "Women’s Health Study: Adolescence to Adulthood," a longitudinal cohort. Participants were grouped based on the presence or absence of surgically confirmed endometriosis and whether they met the diagnostic criteria for IBS, as defined by Rome IV guidelines or self-reported clinician diagnoses.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study found that adolescents with endometriosis were five times more likely to have IBS than those without endometriosis (adjusted odds ratio [aOR], 5.26). Among participants with endometriosis, the odds of IBS increased with the severity of acyclic pelvic pain, with each 1-point increase in pain severity raising the odds by 31% (aOR, 1.31). A significant overlap in pain-related comorbidities, including migraines, sleep disturbances, and urinary symptoms, was observed in individuals with both conditions. Moreover, central pain sensitization, driven by visceral hypersensitivity and alterations in the peripheral and central nervous systems, was identified as a potential shared mechanism between endometriosis and IBS. This study's microbiome associations highlight the role of inflammatory processes in both conditions. Low-grade mucosal inflammation and mast cell activation, often linked to microbiome dysbiosis, were implicated as contributing factors to the development of IBS in the context of endometriosis.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
This research underscores the need for integrated screening and management strategies for adolescents presenting with endometriosis and/or IBS. Identifying overlapping symptoms early could reduce diagnostic delays and improve patient outcomes. Furthermore, the findings suggest potential pathways for therapeutic interventions targeting the microbiome and immune regulation, such as central sensitization and inflammation. Clinicians should consider IBS in the differential diagnosis for adolescents with severe acyclic pelvic pain, even in the absence of endometriosis.
The microbiome of the oral mucosa in irritable bowel syndrome
February 12, 2026
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Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) is a common gastrointestinal disorder characterized by symptoms such as abdominal pain, bloating, and altered bowel habits. Recent research has focused on the gut microbiota's role in IBS, aiming to identify specific microbial signatures associated with the condition.
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The study identified distinct oral microbiome profiles in IBS patients, particularly in those overweight, highlighting its potential as a non-invasive diagnostic tool for visceral pain severity and symptom progression.
What was studied?
The study examined the microbiome composition of the oral mucosa in patients with irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) compared to healthy controls. Specifically, it aimed to determine if distinct microbial shifts in the oral cavity could serve as non-invasive biomarkers for IBS diagnosis and symptom severity, particularly visceral pain. The researchers analyzed the buccal mucosal microbiome using PhyloChip microarrays to profile microbial richness, diversity, and composition.
Who was studied?
The study included 38 participants, comprising individuals diagnosed with IBS and healthy controls. Within the IBS group, participants were further classified based on body weight to explore associations between microbial diversity and symptom severity. Overweight IBS participants exhibited the most pronounced microbial shifts, highlighting the impact of both IBS and obesity on the oral microbiome.
What were the most important findings?
The study identified significant alterations in the oral microbiome of IBS patients, with particular emphasis on those who were overweight. Overweight IBS participants demonstrated decreased richness in the phylum Bacteroidetes and the genus Bacillus, while microbial diversity analyses revealed significant shifts in community structure. Analysis of β-diversity indicated a clear separation in microbial composition between overweight IBS patients and other groups. The oral microbiome of IBS participants showed marked increases in Enterobacteriaceae, Streptococcus, Corynebacterium, Pseudomonas, and Flavobacterium, with a strong correlation between these microbial changes and visceral pain severity. Notably, visceral pain in IBS patients was robustly associated with 60 operational taxonomic units (OTUs), 4 genera, 5 families, and 4 orders of bacteria. These correlations suggest that microbial perturbations in the oral cavity reflect systemic dysbiosis linked to symptom severity. Overweight IBS participants, in particular, exhibited a distinct oral microbial profile resembling dysbiosis patterns seen in both gastrointestinal and obesity-related conditions. The findings propose that the oral mucosa could serve as a practical, non-invasive substrate for diagnosing IBS and assessing symptom severity. Moreover, the stability of the oral microbiome compared to the gut highlights its potential as a reliable source for microbial information in IBS diagnostics.
Increased pain severity correlated with 60 OTUs, 4 genera, 5 families, and 4 orders
Diagnostic Implications
Oral microbiome as a potential non-invasive biomarker for IBS severity and visceral pain
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study's findings underscore the diagnostic potential of the oral microbiome in IBS, particularly in overweight patients. By identifying distinct microbial signatures linked to visceral pain, the research suggests that oral mucosal sampling could serve as a non-invasive method for diagnosing IBS and monitoring symptom progression. Unlike the gut microbiome, which can be influenced by various transient factors, the oral microbiome remains relatively stable, offering a consistent reflection of systemic microbial changes. This makes it an ideal candidate for longitudinal studies and patient monitoring. Furthermore, the study opens pathways for personalized therapeutic interventions targeting microbial imbalances in IBS patients, particularly those with weight-related symptom exacerbation. Future research could expand on these findings by exploring targeted microbial therapies and correlating oral dysbiosis with specific clinical outcomes
Understanding of the Site-Specific Microbial Patterns towards Accurate Identification for Patients with Diarrhea-Predominant Irritable Bowel Syndrome
February 12, 2026
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Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) is a common gastrointestinal disorder characterized by symptoms such as abdominal pain, bloating, and altered bowel habits. Recent research has focused on the gut microbiota's role in IBS, aiming to identify specific microbial signatures associated with the condition.
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This study identifies site-specific microbial patterns in IBS-D patients, highlighting Bacteroides, Prevotella, and Oscillospira in the rectal mucosa as biomarkers. Findings suggest that rectal mucosa sampling may enhance diagnostic accuracy, paving the way for personalized microbiome-based treatments for IBS-D.
What Was Studied?
This study focused on understanding the site-specific microbial patterns within the intestinal tract of patients with diarrhea-predominant irritable bowel syndrome (IBS-D). Unlike traditional studies that primarily use fecal samples, this research employed a multi-site sampling strategy to analyze microbial communities at the duodenal mucosa (DM), duodenal lumen (DL), rectal mucosa (RM), and rectal lumen (RL) of IBS-D patients and healthy controls. The primary objective was to identify microbial biomarkers and site-specific microbial signatures that could enhance diagnostic accuracy for IBS-D.
Who Was Studied?
The study included 74 IBS-D patients and 20 healthy controls. A total of 283 samples were collected from four distinct intestinal sites (DM, DL, RM, RL), allowing for a comprehensive evaluation of microbial composition and diversity along the gastrointestinal tract. This site-specific sampling enabled the detection of unique microbial biomarkers that are potentially indicative of IBS-D pathology.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study revealed substantial microbial dysbiosis in IBS-D patients, characterized by site-specific microbial alterations that were not evident in healthy controls. In the duodenum, IBS-D patients exhibited higher abundances of Pseudomonas, Streptococcus, and Acinetobacter, whereas Burkholderia and Bacillus were dominant in healthy subjects. Rectal mucosa (RM) samples from IBS-D patients were particularly enriched with Bacteroides, Prevotella, and Oscillospira, which served as potential biomarkers for IBS-D. Notably, these site-specific microbial shifts were associated with symptom severity, including abdominal pain and bloating. The rectal mucosa community (RM) demonstrated a high predictive power for distinguishing IBS-D from healthy controls, with a Random Forest model achieving an AUC of 97.36%. Additionally, the co-abundance network analysis revealed decreased microbial connectivity in IBS-D patients, suggesting a loss of beneficial microbial interactions. The study concluded that rectal mucosa sampling is more diagnostically valuable than fecal samples for identifying IBS-D-specific microbial dysbiosis. This indicates that traditional fecal sampling may not adequately capture the microbial changes occurring within specific gut niches of IBS-D patients.
Intestinal Site
Microbial Findings in IBS-D Patients
Duodenal Mucosa (DM)
Increased abundances of Pseudomonas, Streptococcus, and Acinetobacter. Reduced levels of Burkholderia and Bacillus compared to healthy controls.
Duodenal Lumen (DL)
Elevated levels of Enterococcus and Streptococcus, indicating localized dysbiosis in the small intestine.
Rectal Mucosa (RM)
Significant enrichment of Bacteroides, Prevotella, and Oscillospira, identified as potential biomarkers for IBS-D.
Rectal Lumen (RL)
Altered community structure with increases in pathogenic genera like Fusobacterium and reductions in Faecalibacterium.
Rectal mucosa samples showed high predictive power for IBS-D diagnosis with an AUC of 97.36% in Random Forest models.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
The findings of this study underscore the critical importance of site-specific microbial sampling for the accurate diagnosis and characterization of IBS-D. The discovery of RM-specific biomarkers (Bacteroides, Prevotella, Oscillospira) suggests that diagnostic approaches could be significantly enhanced by targeting microbial signatures from the rectal mucosa rather than relying solely on fecal samples. This site-specific understanding opens the door for more precise microbiome-based diagnostics and targeted therapeutic strategies. The study also emphasizes the need for personalized medicine approaches that consider regional microbiota variability along the gastrointestinal tract, which could lead to better symptom management and improved patient outcomes.
Lactoferrin and Derived Peptides: Antifungal Mechanisms, Azole Synergy, and Links to Microbial Metallomics
February 12, 2026
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Microbial Metallomics
Microbial Metallomics
Microbial Metallomics is the study of how microorganisms acquire, use, regulate, and transform metals in any biological or environmental context.
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Lactoferrin
Lactoferrin
Lactoferrin (LF) is a naturally occurring iron-binding glycoprotein classified as a postbiotic with immunomodulatory, antimicrobial, and prebiotic-like properties.
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Lactoferrin and its peptides exhibit broad antifungal activity through membrane disruption, immunomodulation, and iron sequestration, with documented synergy with azoles. Lactoferricin B is potent against dermatophytes, including Microsporum canis, and exemplifies how antimicrobial peptides can pair metallomic deprivation with rapid candidacidal effects.
What was reviewed?
This mini-review synthesizes evidence on the antifungal activity of lactoferrin and its derived peptides, detailing spectrum of activity, mechanisms, and drug synergy across yeasts and molds. It covers intact lactoferrin, lactoferricin, lactoferrampin, and Lf(1–11), and summarizes structure–function determinants relevant to fungal killing and adjuvancy.
Who was reviewed?
The paper surveys in vitro and mechanistic studies across clinically important fungi, including multiple Candida spp., Cryptococcus spp., Aspergillus fumigatus, dermatophytes such as Trichophyton spp. and Microsporum canis, plant-pathogenic molds, and model yeasts, incorporating data generated with human, bovine, porcine, and recombinant lactoferrin or peptides thereof.
Most important findings and microbiome-relevant interpretation
Lactoferrin is a multifunctional iron-binding glycoprotein with broad antifungal activity that operates through membrane disruption, immunomodulation, and metal sequestration. Evidence shows that apo-lactoferrin restricts fungal growth by chelating Fe³⁺, a cornerstone of nutritional immunity, while many candidacidal effects are iron-independent and result from direct perturbation of fungal membranes, ionic leakage, mitochondrial dysfunction, and apoptosis-like death. The review documents synergy with azoles such as fluconazole, itraconazole, clotrimazole, and ketoconazole across wild-type and resistant Candida strains, with additional interactions reported for amphotericin B and nystatin in selected species. The peptide derivatives exhibit greater potency than the intact protein. Lactoferricin B is rapidly internalized, collapses proton gradients, forms pores, and shows wide activity, including against dermatophytes; importantly for Microsporum canis, Table 1 reports a minimum inhibitory concentration of 40 μg/ml for lactoferricin B. Lactoferrampin and Lf(1–11) also permeabilize membranes and display synergistic killing with fluconazole under specific dosing sequences.
These mechanisms connect directly to microbial metallomics. Lactoferrin and its domains bind Fe³⁺ with high affinity and can also bind Cu²⁺, Zn²⁺, and Mn²⁺, situating these molecules at the interface of metal trafficking, fungal metal homeostasis, and host defense. By altering extracellular iron availability and engaging fungal membranes, lactoferrin-based interventions perturb metal-dependent respiratory and redox processes in pathogens, while derived peptides provide metal-agnostic membrane disruption that complements metallomic deprivation. This dual leverage on metal limitation and membrane damage supports their use as microbiome-targeted antifungals that both reduce pathogen fitness and lessen the likelihood of resistance emergence.
Greatest implications of the review
For microbiome-signature frameworks, lactoferrin and its peptides offer a mechanistically coherent class of interventions that align with metal-centric host–pathogen competition and immunologic containment. Clinically, they are promising adjuvants to azoles for azole-refractory candidiasis and plausible candidates for dermatophyte management, including M. canis, where peptide potency and synergy may reduce required azole exposures. The structure–activity insights summarized here further indicate that rational sequence optimization can tune charge, hydrophobicity, and helicity to maximize antifungal performance while preserving metallomic mechanisms related to iron sequestration. Translational priorities include standardized potency assays across species, peptide pharmacokinetics and safety, and in vivo confirmation of metallomic pathway engagement during therapy.
Citation
Fernandes KE, Carter DA. The Antifungal Activity of Lactoferrin and Its Derived Peptides: Mechanisms of Action and Synergy with Drugs against Fungal Pathogens. Front Microbiol. 2017;8:2. https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2017.00002
Prenatal Lead Exposure is Negatively Associated with the Gut Microbiome in Childhood
February 12, 2026
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Lead (Pb)
Lead (Pb)
Lead exposure has a profound effect on the microbiome, disrupting microbial diversity, immune responses, and contributing to the development of antimicrobial resistance (AMR). Understanding how Pb interacts with microbial communities and impacts host-pathogen dynamics is essential for clinicians to mitigate long-term health risks and improve treatment strategies.
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Clinician summary of prenatal lead exposure and gut microbiome links at age 9–11 in PROGRESS: negative mixture effects, trimester-specific taxa shifts, and a potential second-trimester sensitivity window.
What was studied?
This study investigated prenatal lead exposure and gut microbiome relationships in late childhood, testing whether maternal blood lead measured in the second and third trimesters predicts gut microbial composition, diversity, and functions in children aged 9–11 years. Maternal whole-blood lead was quantified by ICP-MS, and child stool underwent shotgun metagenomic sequencing (MetaPhlAn2/StrainPhlAn for taxonomy; HUMAnN2 for pathways). Analyses included Shannon alpha diversity, Bray–Curtis beta diversity via PERMANOVA, weighted quantile sum (WQS) regression with repeated holdouts to model “mixture” effects across taxa, taxa-wide association (TWAS) for individual species, and pathway summaries. Models adjusted for child sex/age, maternal age, BMI, socioeconomic status, and sequencing batch.
Who was studied?
Participants were 123 children from the Mexico City PROGRESS prospective birth cohort (49 female, 74 male) who provided stool at 9–11 years. Mean prenatal maternal blood lead was 33.6 µg/L (second trimester) and 34.9 µg/L (third trimester). Families were generally low-to-middle SES; SES skewed toward higher lead quartiles, and batch indicators were included to mitigate processing heterogeneity. Stool samples were collected at home/clinic, rapidly refrigerated, processed with the FAST protocol, and stored at −70 °C before sequencing.
Most important findings
Across methods, associations were directionally consistent and predominantly negative. Alpha diversity showed small, non-significant inverse associations with prenatal lead in adjusted linear models, whereas beta diversity was near-null for second-trimester lead but trended for third-trimester lead (adjusted R²≈1.1%, p=0.066). In WQS mixture analysis, both trimesters showed similar negative overall effects on the gut microbiome (β≈−0.17 for second and third trimesters; 88–89% of repeated holdouts below zero), with the negative-direction model strongly favored. Taxa repeatedly carrying high weights in the negative mixture included Ruminococcus gnavus, Bifidobacterium longum, Bifidobacterium bifidum, Alistipes indistinctus, and Bacteroides caccae.
TWAS supported trimester-specific patterns: for the second-trimester lead, inverse associations were observed for Alistipes putredinis, R. gnavus, B. caccae, B. intestinalis, Coprococcus catus, and A. indistinctus, while B. coprocola was positively associated; for the third trimester, B. bifidum, B. longum, and A. indistinctus were inversely associated, with positive associations for B. coprocola, Eubacterium eligens, and B. finegoldii. Pathway analysis of highly weighted taxa indicated that shared (“core”) pathways were enriched for nucleic acid biosynthesis/essential functions, while trimester-specific sets more often involved amino-acid biosynthesis and specialized metabolism, suggesting potential functional reprogramming windows. Collectively, results point to a modest but consistent adverse shift in community structure and key taxa linked to mucin utilization (R. gnavus), early-life colonization and carbohydrate metabolism (Bifidobacterium spp.), fiber degradation (B. caccae), and variable health signals within Alistipes.
Key implications
For clinicians, these pilot data support that prenatal lead may imprint the child's gut microbiome years later, with the second trimester emerging as a plausible sensitive window. Microbiome-signature curation for metal exposure should therefore record timing (2T vs 3T), exposure magnitude, and co-determinants (SES, diet, antibiotics) when interpreting taxa such as Bifidobacterium (often beneficial early colonizers), R. gnavus (mucin degrader linked to dysbiosis contexts), B. caccae (fiber degrader with mixed health effects), and A. indistinctus (reports of both protective and adverse roles). Important caveats include small sample size, two sequencing batches (addressed analytically), WQS role-reversal of outcome/exposures (association-seeking), and maternal blood as a proxy for fetal lead. Nonetheless, the convergence of negative directions across diversity, mixture, and taxa-level analyses suggests clinically meaningful, exposure-timing-aware microbiome alterations that could inform risk stratification, surveillance of developmental cohorts, and future interventional studies.
Oral Supplementation of Lead-Intolerant Intestinal Microbes Protects Against Lead (Pb) Toxicity in Mice
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Lead (Pb)
Lead (Pb)
Lead exposure has a profound effect on the microbiome, disrupting microbial diversity, immune responses, and contributing to the development of antimicrobial resistance (AMR). Understanding how Pb interacts with microbial communities and impacts host-pathogen dynamics is essential for clinicians to mitigate long-term health risks and improve treatment strategies.
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This review discusses the detrimental effects of lead (Pb) exposure on gut microbiota, metabolism, and homeostasis, highlighting its role in metabolic and systemic disorders. It suggests interventions such as probiotics and dietary supplementation for mitigating Pb toxicity.
What was studied?
The study examined the impact of lead (Pb) exposure on gut homeostasis, microbiota composition, and metabolites, exploring how these factors contribute to systemic toxicity. It also delved into the interrelationship between gut microbiota, microbial metabolites, and overall health, emphasizing the importance of the gastrointestinal (GI) tract as a primary site for Pb absorption and the subsequent disruption of gut microbiota balance.
Who was studied?
The study primarily focused on animal models, including rats, mice, zebrafish, and flies, to investigate the effects of Pb exposure. The research also referenced population-based studies that correlated Pb levels with microbiota changes in children, highlighting the impact of prenatal and postnatal exposure. The study aimed to understand how Pb exposure affects gut microbiota across different species and how it influences overall health outcomes, especially in relation to metabolic, immune, and neurological functions.
Most important findings
Pb exposure leads to significant alterations in gut microbiota composition, particularly by reducing microbial diversity and shifting the community structure. For instance, exposure to Pb decreased the abundance of beneficial microbes such as Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium, while increasing harmful bacteria like Pseudomonas in zebrafish. Pb exposure was also associated with the disruption of key metabolic pathways, including amino acid metabolism, bile acid production, and the short-chain fatty acid (SCFA) production, which is crucial for gut health. Notably, chronic Pb exposure induces gut dysbiosis, which leads to the development of fatty liver disease, glucose metabolism disorders, and increased intestinal permeability, facilitating the translocation of harmful molecules into the systemic circulation.
Key implications
The study underscores the significant health risks associated with Pb exposure, particularly in the context of its impact on gut microbiota. Pb exposure not only disrupts gut microbial diversity but also impairs critical metabolic pathways, leading to systemic effects like metabolic disorders and liver damage. The findings suggest that interventions such as probiotics and dietary supplementation may mitigate some of the toxic effects of Pb exposure by restoring gut homeostasis and microbial balance. This emphasizes the need for more research into therapeutic strategies targeting the microbiota to prevent or alleviate Pb-induced toxicity, especially in vulnerable populations such as children and those exposed to environmental Pb.
Update of the Blood Lead Reference Value — United States, 2021
February 12, 2026
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Lead (Pb)
Lead (Pb)
Lead exposure has a profound effect on the microbiome, disrupting microbial diversity, immune responses, and contributing to the development of antimicrobial resistance (AMR). Understanding how Pb interacts with microbial communities and impacts host-pathogen dynamics is essential for clinicians to mitigate long-term health risks and improve treatment strategies.
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CDC lowered the pediatric BLRV to 3.5 µg/dL, enabling earlier action, clarifying disparities, and setting exposure tiers that should guide microbiome signature curation at contemporary low BLLs.
What was reviewed?
This CDC policy update evaluated the scientific and public health basis for revising the U.S. pediatric blood lead reference value and microbiome-relevant exposure tiers, lowering the blood lead reference value (BLRV) for children aged 1–5 years from 5.0 to 3.5 µg/dL. The BLRV is set at the 97.5th percentile of blood lead levels (BLLs) from the two most recent NHANES cycles (2015–2016 and 2017–2018) and is intended to guide clinical/environmental follow-up and population prioritization; it is not a toxicity threshold. The report details LEPAC’s recommendation, CDC/HHS concurrence, and implementation guidance for laboratories, clinicians, and health departments, including targeted screening and confirmatory venous testing.
Who was reviewed?
The update draws on nationally representative NHANES data for U.S. children aged 1–5 years and summarizes long-term exposure trends and disparities. Geometric mean BLLs in this age group declined from 15.2 µg/dL (1976–1980) to 0.83 µg/dL (2011–2016), yet 2.5% of children still meet or exceed the new 3.5 µg/dL BLRV. Risk remains concentrated among those living in pre-1978 housing, non-Hispanic Black children, Medicaid-enrolled children, and families in higher-poverty areas; sources include paint/dust, contaminated soil, plumbing, and certain consumer products. Universal testing is recommended where local risk-based plans are absent; Medicaid requires testing at 12 and 24 months (or 24–72 months if missed).
Most important findings
Lowering the BLRV to 3.5 µg/dL enables earlier intervention for children previously below action thresholds, with guidance to confirm capillary results via venous sampling, take environmental histories, provide exposure-reduction counseling, and link families to services. The BLRV functions as a population marker to prioritize prevention and evaluate program effectiveness, not as an individually health-based “safe level.” Despite dramatic declines in average BLLs, the report underscores persistent structural inequities: exposure is unevenly distributed and closely tied to older housing, poverty, and race/ethnicity. Laboratory readiness is crucial at this lower action point—programs may need to reduce reporting limits, strengthen contamination controls, validate methods with tighter proficiency criteria, and manage increased repeat/confirmatory testing; importantly, contemporary laboratory methods can accurately quantify BLLs near 3.5 µg/dL.
Key implications
Clinically, adopt the 3.5 µg/dL BLRV to trigger earlier assessment and prevention, confirm via venous draws, and emphasize source elimination, nutrition, and developmental surveillance. Public health should target high-risk neighborhoods for primary prevention and maintain universal testing where risk-based plans are lacking. For microbiome signature curation, align effect-size expectations with today’s low exposure range, stratify by BLRV-anchored tiers, and capture structural risk factors (housing age, Medicaid status, poverty) in metadata.
Organophosphorus pesticide chlorpyrifos intake promotes obesity and insulin resistance through impacting gut and gut microbiota
February 12, 2026
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Lipopolysaccharide (LPS)
Lipopolysaccharide (LPS)
Lipopolysaccharide (LPS), a potent endotoxin present in the outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria that causes chronic immune responses associated with inflammation.
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Chronic chlorpyrifos exposure induces obesity and insulin resistance by altering gut microbiota, increasing gut permeability, and driving inflammation.
What was studied?
This study investigated how chronic exposure to the organophosphorus pesticide chlorpyrifos contributes to obesity and insulin resistance (IR) through its impact on gut microbiota and gut barrier integrity. Using C57Bl/6 and CD-1 (ICR) mice fed either normal-fat or high-fat diets, researchers evaluated the effects of chlorpyrifos on gut permeability, microbiota composition, inflammatory responses, and metabolic outcomes such as insulin sensitivity and glucose homeostasis.
Who was studied?
The study utilized male C57Bl/6 and CD-1 (ICR) mice, chosen to represent genetic and dietary variability. Mice were divided into groups based on diet (normal-fat or high-fat) and exposure to chlorpyrifos. Antibiotic treatment and microbiota transplantation were performed to further explore the role of chlorpyrifos-induced microbiota changes in metabolic dysregulation.
What were the most important findings?
Chronic chlorpyrifos exposure disrupted the gut barrier by reducing the expression of tight junction proteins (e.g., occludin, ZO-1), leading to increased intestinal permeability. This facilitated the entry of lipopolysaccharides (LPS) into circulation, promoting low-grade inflammation. Chlorpyrifos exposure altered the gut microbiota composition, with increased Proteobacteria (a source of LPS) and decreased Bacteroidetes—microbial changes commonly associated with obesity. Antibiotic treatment reversed chlorpyrifos-induced obesity and insulin resistance, confirming that microbiota changes played a key role in these outcomes. Mice transplanted with chlorpyrifos-altered microbiota exhibited increased fat accumulation, impaired glucose tolerance, and insulin resistance, highlighting the causal role of microbiota alterations.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study underscores the potential role of environmental pollutants like chlorpyrifos in driving the global obesity epidemic by altering gut microbiota and promoting systemic inflammation. These findings suggest that pesticide exposure should be critically evaluated in public health policies and safety assessments. Furthermore, the study provides insights into the gut microbiota as a therapeutic target for metabolic disorders induced by environmental factors.
Orange juice neutralizes the proinflammatory effect of a high-fat, high-carbohydrate meal and prevents endotoxin increase and Toll-like receptor expression 1–3
February 12, 2026
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Lipopolysaccharide (LPS)
Lipopolysaccharide (LPS)
Lipopolysaccharide (LPS), a potent endotoxin present in the outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria that causes chronic immune responses associated with inflammation.
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Gram-Negative Bacteria
Gram-Negative Bacteria
Gram-negative bacteria are resilient pathogens with antibiotic resistance, causing infections like UTIs, sepsis, and pneumonia.
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Orange juice with a high-fat meal prevented postprandial inflammation and endotoxemia: no rise in LPS or TLR2/4 expression.
What was studied?
Researchers evaluated whether co-ingesting orange juice with a high-fat, high-carbohydrate (HFHC) meal can neutralize the meal’s proinflammatory and oxidative effects. The study specifically focused on post-meal plasma endotoxin (lipopolysaccharide, LPS) levels and Toll-like receptor (TLR2 and TLR4) expression on immune cells. In this clinical trial, various inflammatory and oxidative stress markers (e.g. reactive oxygen species, cytokine signaling proteins, TLRs, and endotoxin) were measured after an HFHC meal consumed with orange juice, versus with water or a glucose drink.
Who was studied?
The study involved 30 healthy, normal-weight adults (men and women, age 20–40, BMI 20–25) divided into three equal groups. Each group consumed a 900-kcal HFHC meal accompanied by one of three beverages: water, 75 g glucose (300 kcal), or an equivalent 300-kcal orange juiceserving. Blood samples were collected fasting and at 1, 3, and 5 hours post-meal to assess metabolic and inflammatory responses.
Key Findings
Orange juice prevents TLR2/4 upregulation. Only the water- and glucose-drink groups showed significant postprandial increases in mononuclear cell TLR2 and TLR4 mRNA (peaking ~34–87% above baseline), whereas the orange juice (OJ) group had no significant change. Consistently, plasma endotoxin concentrations rose by ~60–70% within hours after the HFHC meal with water or glucose, but this endotoxemia surge was completely prevented when orange juice was co-ingested. Thus, OJ effectively blocked the gut-derived LPS–TLR inflammatory axis underpinning postprandial inflammation.
Orange juice also blunted oxidative stress. The HFHC meal led to a spike in reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation by leukocytes in the water and glucose groups, but co-ingestion of OJ significantly curbed this ROS burstajcn.nutrition.org. For example, at 1 hour post-meal, mononuclear cell ROS production increased by ~62–63% with water or glucose, versus only ~47% with OJajcn.nutrition.org. Likewise, neutrophil ROS rose markedly after the meal + water/glucose, but remained minimal with OJ. Furthermore, OJ abrogated the meal-induced rises in other inflammatory mediators: mononuclear NF-κB–related signals, MMP-9 (matrix metalloproteinase-9) expression and plasma levels, and intracellular MAPK p38 activation were all significantly elevated post-meal with water or glucose, yet virtually unchanged when OJ was included. In short, orange juice neutralized the HFHC meal’s pro-oxidative and proinflammatory impact, preventing increased endotoxin, TLR2/4, and downstream inflammatory signaling that were otherwise observed postprandially.
Clinical Implications
These findings have important clinical implications for metabolic and cardiovascular health. Repeated episodes of postprandial inflammation and metabolic endotoxemia (transient entry of gut bacterial LPS after meals) are thought to contribute to insulin resistance and atherosclerosis. By showing that a polyphenol-rich beverage like orange juice can buffer the inflammatory effects of a high-fat, high-carb meal, this study suggests a practical dietary strategy to mitigate meal-induced inflammatory stress. The orange juice prevented the LPS surge and TLR4 upregulation, thereby interrupting a key microbe-driven inflammatory pathway. Clinically, such an approach could reduce the cumulative burden of inflammation and oxidative stress after unhealthy meals, potentially lowering the risk of metabolic syndrome and cardiovascular events over time. In essence, dietary components can modulate host–microbial interactions: here, orange juice’s flavonoids (like hesperidin) likely counteracted gut-derived endotoxin effects, attenuating postprandial inflammatory responses.
This underscores the need to consider not just macronutrient content but also food combinations and bioactive nutrients that neutralize proinflammatory triggers in the diet. For clinicians, advising the inclusion of polyphenol-rich foods or beverages with indulgent meals might be a stepping stone toward blunting post-meal inflammation and improving metabolic health.
Role of Metabolic Endotoxemia in Systemic Inflammation and Potential Interventions
February 12, 2026
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Lipopolysaccharide (LPS)
Lipopolysaccharide (LPS)
Lipopolysaccharide (LPS), a potent endotoxin present in the outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria that causes chronic immune responses associated with inflammation.
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Gram-Negative Bacteria
Gram-Negative Bacteria
Gram-negative bacteria are resilient pathogens with antibiotic resistance, causing infections like UTIs, sepsis, and pneumonia.
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This review outlines the role of metabolic endotoxemia—gut-derived LPS in circulation—in chronic inflammation and disease. It explores microbial, dietary, and immunological mechanisms underlying endotoxemia and evaluates antimicrobial peptides and microbiome-targeted diets as promising interventions.
What was reviewed?
This review, authored by Mohammad and Thiemermann (2021), comprehensively examines the concept of metabolic endotoxemia, defined as a diet-induced increase in circulating lipopolysaccharide (LPS) levels, and its relationship with systemic inflammation and chronic disease. The paper synthesizes preclinical and clinical findings that connect high-fat diets (HFDs), increased gut permeability ("leaky gut"), translocation of LPS, and the activation of Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4)-mediated inflammatory pathways to the pathogenesis of obesity, type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), and cardiovascular disease. Additionally, it evaluates both pharmacological and dietary interventions, including antimicrobial peptides (AMPs), micronutrient modulation, and microbiome-targeted strategies to mitigate metabolic endotoxemia.
Who was reviewed?
The review draws from a diverse body of literature, including murine models (e.g., TLR4-deficient, ApoE-deficient, and HFD-fed mice), human studies in obese and diabetic individuals, and clinical interventions assessing endotoxemia through LPS or LPS-binding protein (LBP) markers. Special focus is placed on studies employing controlled dietary exposures, AMP assays, knockout models, and microbiome analysis to characterize the drivers and downstream effects of metabolic endotoxemia.
What were the most important findings?
Metabolic endotoxemia results from the translocation of gut-derived lipopolysaccharide (LPS) into systemic circulation, primarily due to dietary disruption of the intestinal epithelial barrier. HFDs induce gut dysbiosis, deplete beneficial taxa such as Bifidobacterium and Eubacterium spp., and reduce tight junction proteins (e.g., occludin, claudins, and ZO-1), resulting in increased intestinal permeability. This "leaky gut" condition facilitates LPS entry into the bloodstream, triggering TLR4/MyD88-mediated signaling cascades and NF-κB activation, thereby promoting systemic low-grade inflammation.
Clinical studies show elevated LBP and LPS levels in individuals with T2DM, atherosclerosis, and NAFLD. These increases correlate with heightened expression of pro-inflammatory cytokines such as TNF-α and IL-6 in adipose tissue and liver, as well as with metabolic parameters like waist-to-hip ratio and serum triglycerides. From a microbiome perspective, endotoxemia is consistently associated with altered gut microbial composition—particularly a decreased Firmicutes-to-Bacteroidetes ratio—and overexpression of TLR2/TLR4 in the intestinal tract.
The review also highlights interventions targeting metabolic endotoxemia. Antimicrobial peptides, such as defensins and LL-37, exhibit both bactericidal and LPS-neutralizing effects. Synthetic AMPs (e.g., Peptide 19-2.5) show potential in attenuating LPS-driven inflammation in sepsis models. Dietary strategies, including prebiotics (inulin, FOS), probiotics (Bifidobacterium, Lactobacillus), and micronutrient supplementation (zinc, vitamin D), offer promising routes to restore tight junction integrity and reduce circulating LPS. However, limitations in endotoxemia detection—primarily due to the unreliability of the LAL assay—complicate conclusions about causality.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review reinforces metabolic endotoxemia as a mechanistic link between diet, gut dysbiosis, and chronic systemic inflammation. It establishes a conceptual foundation for LPS as a biomarker and driver of cardiometabolic disease and supports microbiome-targeted interventions—especially AMP-based and dietary approaches—as plausible therapeutic strategies. However, it also underscores the limitations of current LPS detection methods (e.g., LAL assay) and calls for more robust assays and interventional trials to establish causality. For microbiome researchers, the paper offers microbial targets (Bifidobacterium, Eubacterium) and mechanistic endpoints (tight junction proteins, NF-κB, MyD88) to validate microbiome signatures of endotoxemia and develop microbiome-targeted interventions MBTIs.
High Prevalence of Nickel Allergy in an Overweight Female Population: A Microbial Metallomics Commentary
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Microbial Metallomics
Microbial Metallomics
Microbial Metallomics is the study of how microorganisms acquire, use, regulate, and transform metals in any biological or environmental context.
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Low‑Nickel Diet (LNiD)
Low‑Nickel Diet (LNiD)
A low-nickel diet (LNiD) is a therapeutic dietary intervention that eliminates high-nickel foods, primarily plant-based sources such as legumes, nuts, whole grains, and cocoa, to reduce systemic nickel exposure. It is clinically validated for managing systemic nickel allergy syndrome (SNAS) and nickel-induced eczema. Its relevance is well-established in microbiome modulation, with studies demonstrating clinical benefits in conditions such as endometriosis, fibromyalgia, irritable bowel syndrome, and GERD.
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Overweight women show high rates of nickel allergy and benefit metabolically from a low-nickel diet. The study suggests a role for nickel-selective microbes and metallomic drivers of obesity and inflammation, particularly in perimenopausal women with metabolic syndrome.
What was studied?
This pilot observational analysis examined the high prevalence of nickel allergy in overweight adults and the potential impact of a low-nickel diet on body mass index (BMI) and waist circumference. The focus keyphrase nickel allergy in overweight females appears directly in this section, as the study centers on metabolic and inflammatory profiles in individuals with elevated BMI who exhibit delayed hypersensitivity to nickel. Drawing from patch-test results, metabolic data, and dietary intervention outcomes, the investigators evaluated whether nickel-sensitive overweight subjects—especially women—display a distinctive clinical pattern. The study connects systemic nickel exposure not only to dermatologic and gastrointestinal symptoms but also to metabolic derangements and potential microbiome-related mechanisms, including the role of nickel-dependent bacteria such as Helicobacter pylori (page 6), which may promote inflammation and alter gut energy extraction.
Who was studied?
Eighty-seven overweight adults (BMI >26 kg/m²) were consecutively enrolled at an Italian Red Cross preventive health program. The population was predominantly female (72 of 87; 82.8%), enabling more detailed analysis in women. Laboratory, anthropometric, and metabolic assessments were collected for all participants, including liver enzymes, glucose, insulin, lipid profile, and HOMA-IR (page 4). Patch testing for nickel sulfate identified 45 nickel-allergic individuals, with the overwhelming majority being women (43 of 45). Among nickel-allergic participants, 43 women and 2 men initiated a low-nickel diet. Twenty-four women completed the 24-week follow-up, permitting analysis of longitudinal anthropometric outcomes.
Most important findings
In this cohort, nickel allergy appeared substantially more common in overweight women than in the general population, and higher still when metabolic syndrome and hepatic steatosis were present. Individuals adhering to a low-nickel diet demonstrated clinically relevant reductions in BMI, waist circumference, and body fat. Mechanistically, the study highlights intersecting inflammatory and microbiome pathways: IL-17–driven immune activity, menopausal immune shifts, and nickel-dependent bacteria such as H. pylori, which may collectively intensify metabolic dysfunction. The findings suggest that excess dietary nickel may amplify systemic inflammation and alter gut microbial composition, thereby contributing to obesity-associated phenotypes.
Domain
Condensed Insight
Nickel allergy prevalence
Overweight women showed a 59.7% nickel allergy rate versus 12.5% in the general female population. Prevalence increased to 61.1% in those with metabolic syndrome and liver steatosis.
Anthropometric response to low-nickel diet
After 24 weeks, nickel-allergic overweight women experienced a mean BMI reduction of 4.2 ± 0.5 kg/m² and a waist decrease of 11.7 ± 0.6 cm, with parallel declines in body fat percentage.
Inflammatory mechanisms
Obesity and nickel allergy both upregulate IL-17; menopausal estrogen decline further enhances Th17 activity, potentially intensifying systemic inflammation in nickel-sensitive women.
Microbiome-related effects
Nickel supports growth of specific bacteria, including H. pylori. High dietary nickel may favor nickel-dependent gut microbes, promoting inflammation and metabolic imbalance; low-nickel diets may aid eradication.
Key implications
This study suggests that nickel allergy may be substantially more common in overweight females than in the general population, and that reducing dietary nickel could meaningfully improve anthropometric outcomes in nickel-sensitive individuals. The combination of inflammatory pathways, estrogen-related shifts in IL-17 biology, and nickel-dependent microbial ecology positions nickel exposure as a possible modifiable factor in obesity and metabolic dysfunction. Although preliminary and limited by sample size and lack of control group, these findings imply that clinicians addressing unexplained weight gain, metabolic syndrome, gastrointestinal symptoms, or systemic inflammation—especially in perimenopausal women—may consider evaluating nickel sensitivity and dietary nickel intake.
Life-course origins of the ages at menarche and menopause
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menarche
Menarche
Menarche marks the first occurrence of menstruation, signaling a pivotal moment in a young girl's transition to womanhood. Understanding this process helps to shed light on the hormonal, physical, and emotional changes that accompany puberty. Explore the importance of menarche, factors that influence its timing, and how it shapes women's health throughout their lives.
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A comprehensive review of evidence on the determinants and health implications of ages at menarche and menopause, highlighting their complex, independent origins and the influence of life-course genetic, environmental, and socioeconomic factors. No consistent direct association was found between the timing of menarche and menopause.
What was reviewed?
This comprehensive review examined the life-course origins and determinants of the ages at menarche (onset of first menstruation) and menopause (end of reproductive function) in women. The authors synthesized evidence from developmental biology, epidemiology, nutrition, demography, sociology, and psychology to explore the patterns, trends, and associations between these two reproductive milestones. The review particularly focused on the possible relationship between the timing of menarche and menopause, and considered the influence of genetic, epigenetic, hormonal, environmental, socioeconomic, nutritional, and psychosocial factors across a woman’s life course. The article also discussed implications for chronic disease risk, quality of life, and public health, and highlighted methodological challenges and recommendations for future research.
Who was reviewed?
The review encompassed a wide array of studies, including population-based cohorts, cross-sectional surveys, and case-control studies from diverse geographic regions and ethnic groups. The included literature spanned women of varying ages, racial and ethnic backgrounds (notably non-Hispanic whites, non-Hispanic blacks, Hispanics, Asians, and others), and socioeconomic strata. Research subjects ranged from girls in childhood and adolescence to postmenopausal women, including special populations exposed to unique environmental or hormonal influences (e.g., women exposed to diethylstilbestrol in utero or those affected by famine). While the majority of genetic studies focused on non-Hispanic white women, the review also highlighted studies involving minority or underserved groups, though it noted a general lack of data for these populations.
Most important findings
The review found that both early and late ages at menarche and menopause are associated with significant health and psychosocial outcomes. Early menarche is linked to increased risks for premature death, breast and endometrial cancers, depression, cardiovascular and metabolic diseases, and adverse psychosocial outcomes (e.g., early smoking, early sexual activity, and teenage pregnancy). Late menarche is associated with depression and reduced bone mineral density. Early menopause confers higher risks for cardiovascular disease, osteoporosis, and premature mortality, whereas late menopause is associated with increased risks for hormone-related cancers but longer life expectancy. Crucially, the review reported no consistent or robust association between age at menarche and age at menopause. Among 36 studies, only ten found a significant direct relationship, two found an inverse relationship, and the remainder reported null findings. Genetic heritability estimates for both menarche and menopause are moderate (44–72%), but known genetic variants explain only a small fraction of the variance. Environmental, socioeconomic, and psychosocial factors, such as childhood nutrition, body mass index, early-life adversity, breastfeeding, and stress, exert significant influence on the timing of both events, but their effects are complex and often population-specific.
Emerging evidence suggests that early-life exposures, such as in utero hormonal disruptions, rapid postnatal growth, and adverse socioeconomic conditions, may set developmental trajectories affecting reproductive aging. Obesity, both in childhood and adulthood, is associated with earlier menarche and later menopause. Socioeconomic status (SES) impacts both menarche and menopause, but the direction and strength of these associations can differ by race/ethnicity and across life stages. Psychosocial stress, especially in childhood, may accelerate both menarche and menopause, potentially through endocrine and epigenetic mechanisms.
Key implications
For clinicians, this review underscores the importance of considering a woman’s full life-course context when evaluating reproductive aging and related health risks. The lack of a strong or consistent association between age at menarche and age at menopause suggests that these events are influenced by partly independent mechanisms, with cumulative exposures over the life course playing critical roles. Interventions aimed at optimizing early-life nutrition, reducing childhood adversity, and addressing obesity and socioeconomic disadvantage may favorably influence reproductive health. For microbiome research, the review highlights potential links between metabolic states (e.g., obesity), inflammation, and reproductive timing, suggesting that microbial signatures associated with chronic inflammation or metabolic dysfunction could be relevant in mapping reproductive aging trajectories. However, direct microbiome associations remain unaddressed in the current literature, pointing to an important area for future research.
Interpretation of reproductive hormones before, during and after the pubertal transition—identifying health and disordered puberty
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menarche
Menarche
Menarche marks the first occurrence of menstruation, signaling a pivotal moment in a young girl's transition to womanhood. Understanding this process helps to shed light on the hormonal, physical, and emotional changes that accompany puberty. Explore the importance of menarche, factors that influence its timing, and how it shapes women's health throughout their lives.
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A comprehensive review of the hormonal regulation of puberty, diagnostic markers for distinguishing healthy from disordered puberty, and the implications for clinical practice, with emphasis on the endocrine framework relevant to future microbiome research.
What was reviewed?
This review article comprehensively examines the endocrine mechanisms governing puberty. It details the hypothalamic–pituitary–gonadal (HPG) axis and the dynamic hormonal changes that characterize healthy pubertal development, as well as the biochemical and clinical markers distinguishing normal puberty from pathological conditions such as precocious, delayed, or disordered puberty. The review systematically covers the roles of key hormones (GnRH, LH, FSH, sex steroids, inhibin B, AMH, INSL3), feedback mechanisms, and the diagnostic challenges in evaluating pubertal disorders. It also addresses the utility and limitations of various biochemical assays and stimulation tests in the context of clinical endocrinology, providing a critical framework for interpreting reproductive hormones in adolescents.
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesizes findings from a wide spectrum of studies involving healthy children and adolescents (both male and female) across different stages of pubertal development, as well as patients presenting with disorders of puberty. It draws upon clinical and biochemical data from cohorts with typical development, individuals with constitutional delay, and those with specific genetic, functional, or acquired causes of pubertal disorders (e.g., Klinefelter syndrome, Turner syndrome, congenital hypogonadotropic hypogonadism, PCOS, and others). The populations referenced include diverse pediatric and adolescent groups evaluated in both research and clinical practice settings, with a particular focus on those undergoing assessment for early, delayed, or otherwise atypical pubertal progression.
Most important findings
The review elucidates the intricate hormonal orchestration of puberty, emphasizing the central role of pulsatile GnRH secretion as a trigger for downstream gonadotropin (LH, FSH) and gonadal hormone production. It details how the amplitude and frequency of GnRH and LH pulses increase at pubertal onset, initiating a cascade that leads to sex steroid synthesis and secondary sexual development. Key microbial associations are less direct in this review, as the main focus is endocrine; however, the interplay between endocrine signals and potential external modulators (which may include microbiome influences on hormonal metabolism, though not directly discussed) is a growing area of interest.
Key implications
Clinicians must interpret reproductive hormone profiles within the broader context of clinical features, growth patterns, imaging, and, where necessary, genetic findings. Biochemical thresholds for puberty are assay-dependent and should be corroborated with clinical progression. The review underscores the importance of dynamic testing and longitudinal monitoring, given the limitations of single-point measurements in differentiating constitutional delay from pathological conditions. Advances in stimulation testing (e.g., kisspeptin) and the integration of novel biomarkers (inhibin B, AMH) offer enhanced diagnostic precision. While the review does not directly address the microbiome, it provides a robust endocrine framework onto which future research can map microbial associations influencing puberty and reproductive health.
Physiology of pubertal development in females
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Menarche
Menarche
Menarche marks the first occurrence of menstruation, signaling a pivotal moment in a young girl's transition to womanhood. Understanding this process helps to shed light on the hormonal, physical, and emotional changes that accompany puberty. Explore the importance of menarche, factors that influence its timing, and how it shapes women's health throughout their lives.
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This review elucidates the hormonal and physiological mechanisms underpinning female puberty, detailing HPG and HPA axis activation, pubertal milestones, and regulatory factors, and discusses implications for clinical assessment and future microbiome research integration.
What was reviewed?
This review article provides a comprehensive overview of the hormonal, physiological, and anatomical changes that occur during female puberty. The authors detail the sequential events, from the activation of neuroendocrine axes to the emergence of secondary sexual characteristics, and discuss the regulatory factors influencing pubertal onset and progression. Special emphasis is placed on the roles of the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal (HPG) and hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axes, the development and maturation of the reproductive system, and the clinical assessment using the Tanner staging system. The review highlights the multifactorial control of puberty, with genetic, hormonal, nutritional, and environmental contributions, and underscores how deviations from normal physiology can manifest as disorders of pubertal timing.
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesizes data from a broad range of studies and clinical observations involving female children and adolescents, primarily in the United States but with recognition of international and ethnic variations. The summary incorporates findings from large population-based cohorts, such as the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES III), and references clinical and laboratory research on hormonal assays and physical development. The populations discussed include females across the entire pediatric age spectrum, from fetal life through adolescence, and stratify findings by ethnicity and body mass index (BMI) to account for known differences in pubertal timing and progression.
Most important findings
The review delineates the orchestrated activation of the HPG axis as the fundamental driver of female puberty, marked by the pulsatile release of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH), subsequent increases in luteinizing hormone (LH) and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), and ovarian maturation. Menarche is the culminating event, signifying reproductive maturity but not necessarily full ovulatory cycles initially. The HPA axis independently mediates adrenarche, manifested by increased adrenal androgen production leading to pubic and axillary hair, sweat gland maturation, and acne. The timing of pubertal milestones, such as thelarche, pubarche, growth spurt, and menarche, varies by ethnicity and BMI; higher BMI is associated with earlier puberty onset, and non-Hispanic black and Mexican American females may experience thelarche and menarche earlier than non-Hispanic white females. The review establishes Tanner staging as the clinical standard for assessing secondary sexual development.
Notably, the article summarizes the hormonal interplay: LH stimulates theca cells to produce androgens, FSH stimulates granulosa cells to convert androgens to estrogens, and estrogen is pivotal for breast development, endometrial growth, and bone maturation. The review also addresses the impact of estrogen on epiphyseal closure and bone mineral density, linking delayed menarche to increased fracture risk. The regulatory cascade involves excitatory neuropeptides (like kisspeptin and glutamate) and inhibitory neurotransmitters (such as GABA) that modulate GnRH release. While the review does not focus on the microbiome, it provides a critical physiological background for interpreting how emerging research on the gut and vaginal microbiota might intersect with pubertal development, particularly regarding hormonal regulation and metabolic changes.
Key implications
For clinicians, this review underscores the importance of understanding normative pubertal physiology to accurately identify and manage disorders of puberty, such as precocious or delayed puberty. The nuanced discussion of population differences in pubertal timing and the role of BMI highlights the need for individualized assessment. The physiological framework described herein is essential for integrating future research on microbiome signatures and their impact on pubertal progression, hormone metabolism, and disease risk. Recognizing the hormonal and developmental milestones enables clinicians to better counsel patients and families, promote healthy development, and anticipate complications arising from abnormal pubertal trajectories, including impacts on bone health and psychosocial well-being.
Variations in the age of onset of menarche among inhabitants of rural and urban areas in Delta State, South-South Nigeria
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menarche
Menarche
Menarche marks the first occurrence of menstruation, signaling a pivotal moment in a young girl's transition to womanhood. Understanding this process helps to shed light on the hormonal, physical, and emotional changes that accompany puberty. Explore the importance of menarche, factors that influence its timing, and how it shapes women's health throughout their lives.
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This study identifies significant differences in age of menarche between rural and urban Nigerian girls, highlighting the influence of socioeconomic status and residence. Findings have implications for understanding pubertal timing and its potential links to the microbiome and long-term health risks.
What was studied?
This original research study investigated the variations in the age of onset of menarche among female adolescents living in rural and urban areas of Delta State, South-South Nigeria. The primary objective was to determine the average age of menarche in the population and to ascertain whether place of residence (urban vs. rural) and socioeconomic status significantly influence the timing of menarche. The study also sought to establish baseline data for age at menarche in this specific region and compare these findings with previously reported data from other regions, thereby contributing to the understanding of environmental and demographic influences on female pubertal development. Although the research did not directly assess the microbiome, the focus keyphrase "age of menarche and microbiome associations" is relevant, as emerging literature increasingly links pubertal timing with the composition and function of the gut and reproductive tract microbiomes.
Who was studied?
The study population comprised 510 female students from six junior secondary schools (JSS 1–3), aged 8 to 16 years, in Ughelli Local Government Area, Delta State, Nigeria. Participants were selected through random sampling, with 85 students from each school. All participants were age-matched and met inclusion criteria that required consent and the ability to recall their age at menarche. Of the total, 243 students had already attained menarche, 130 from urban and 113 from rural settings. The socioeconomic status of each participant was classified into five classes based on a modified Oyedeji scale, accounting for parental occupation and education, among other factors.
Most important findings
The key finding was a statistically significant difference in the mean age of menarche between urban and rural dwellers. The mean age of menarche for the overall cohort was 12.68 ± 1.37 years. Urban girls experienced menarche earlier compared to their rural counterparts, with a p-value < 0.05 indicating significance. In both settings, the most frequent age of menarche differed: 12 years in urban areas and 13 years in rural areas. Socioeconomic status also had a notable impact. Girls from higher socioeconomic classes (Upper Class I and II) reached menarche earlier than those from lower classes, a trend more pronounced in urban areas. For instance, in urban Upper Class I, mean age at menarche was 11.45 years, while in urban Middle Class III it was 12.76 years. Analysis of variance confirmed significant differences in menarcheal age across socioeconomic strata in both urban and rural cohorts.
Key implications
The study’s findings have important clinical and public health implications. Earlier menarche in urban and higher socioeconomic groups may signal underlying shifts in nutritional status, environmental exposures, and possibly microbiome composition, all of which are risk factors for various chronic diseases later in life, including breast cancer, cardiovascular disease, and metabolic syndromes. For clinicians, recognizing these demographic trends is crucial for anticipatory guidance, risk assessment, and targeted education regarding reproductive health and disease prevention. This data also underscores the importance of further research into the role of the microbiome in pubertal timing, as changes in diet, environment, and socioeconomic status may influence both the microbiome and the endocrine system, contributing to observed variations in menarcheal age.
Prevalence of hot flushes and night sweats around the world: a systematic review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal hot flashes are one of the most common and disruptive symptoms that women experience during the transition to menopause. Characterized by sudden sensations of heat, sweating, and flushing, hot flashes can significantly affect a woman’s quality of life, causing sleep disturbances, mood swings, and even long-term health consequences. Understanding the complex mechanisms behind hot flashes, as well as the role of microbiome-targeted therapies, offers new avenues for improving menopausal health.
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This systematic review explores the global prevalence of hot flashes and night sweats, revealing significant cultural and regional variations. It emphasizes the need for personalized, region-specific healthcare strategies to address these common menopausal symptoms.
What was studied?
This systematic review examines the global prevalence of hot flashes and night sweats, two of the most common vasomotor symptoms associated with menopause. The authors aimed to understand how these symptoms vary across different cultures, geographic regions, and menopausal stages. A total of 66 studies were included, with a focus on identifying prevalence patterns for hot flashes and night sweats in women from various continents, including North America, Europe, East Asia, Southeast Asia, Australia, Latin America, South Asia, the Middle East, and Africa. The studies also explored factors influencing symptom variation, such as lifestyle, diet, cultural attitudes, and climate.
Who was studied?
The studies included in the review involved women between the ages of 40 and 65 years, across different stages of menopause, including perimenopause, postmenopause, and those who underwent surgical menopause. The women were from diverse ethnic backgrounds, representing various global regions, including Caucasian, African-American, Hispanic, Asian, and Middle Eastern populations. Data was derived from large-scale studies, such as the Study of Women’s Health Across the Nation (SWAN), along with smaller cohort studies, offering insights into the cultural and regional differences in symptom prevalence and severity.
Most important findings
The review found that the prevalence of hot flashes and night sweats varied significantly across regions and ethnic groups. In North America, particularly among African-American women, the prevalence was notably high, with 46% reporting symptoms, while in Japan, it was much lower at around 18%. The study also highlighted how factors like ethnicity, culture, diet, and even climate influenced symptom reporting. For instance, women in colder climates or those with diets rich in soy were found to experience fewer symptoms. Additionally, lifestyle factors, such as smoking and alcohol consumption, were associated with higher rates of vasomotor symptoms. This variability emphasizes the need for region-specific healthcare strategies to manage menopause-related symptoms effectively.
Key implications
This review underscores the importance of considering cultural and regional factors when addressing menopausal symptoms, particularly hot flashes and night sweats. It suggests that healthcare providers should not only consider the global prevalence of these symptoms but also the unique cultural attitudes toward menopause that may influence symptom reporting and treatment-seeking behavior. Tailored interventions, including diet modifications and lifestyle adjustments, could potentially alleviate symptoms based on regional characteristics. Moreover, recognizing the diverse experiences of menopause globally can lead to better, more personalized care for women during the menopausal transition.
User Outcomes for an App-Delivered Hypnosis Intervention for Menopausal Hot Flashes: Retrospective Analysis.
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal hot flashes are one of the most common and disruptive symptoms that women experience during the transition to menopause. Characterized by sudden sensations of heat, sweating, and flushing, hot flashes can significantly affect a woman’s quality of life, causing sleep disturbances, mood swings, and even long-term health consequences. Understanding the complex mechanisms behind hot flashes, as well as the role of microbiome-targeted therapies, offers new avenues for improving menopausal health.
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The study assessed the effectiveness of the Evia app, a smartphone-based hypnotherapy intervention, in reducing hot flash frequency and severity in menopausal women.
What was studied?
The study aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of an app-delivered hypnosis intervention, specifically the Evia app, for reducing the frequency and severity of hot flashes in menopausal women. Participants used the app, which included a five-week program of daily tasks such as educational readings, hypnotic inductions, and hot flash tracking. The app utilized audio-recorded hypnosis with imagery to induce a feeling of coolness, targeting both daytime and nighttime hot flashes. The study focused on the impact of this non-hormonal, non-pharmacological approach in improving hot flash outcomes.
Who was studied?
The study involved 410 women who downloaded and used the Evia app between November 6, 2021, and February 5, 2024. Participants were required to report experiencing at least three daily hot flashes at baseline and to complete at least one hot flash diary log. The women were divided into two groups: one group reported both daily hot flashes and night sweats, while the second group reported only daily hot flashes. These women varied in their menopausal stage, with some using hormone therapy and others not, providing a diverse sample to assess the efficacy of the app.
Most important findings
The results showed a significant reduction in the frequency of hot flashes. Among the women who experienced both hot flashes and night sweats, 76.3% reported a clinically significant reduction of at least 50% in daily hot flashes. In the group with only daily hot flashes, 56.8% of participants experienced a similar reduction. Additionally, both groups showed a significant decrease in hot flash severity. The study highlighted that the more frequently participants used the Evia app, the greater the reduction in hot flash frequency, although this correlation was small.
Key implications
The findings suggest that app-delivered hypnosis can be an effective, non-hormonal alternative for managing menopausal hot flashes, providing a promising tool for women who prefer non-pharmacological treatments. This approach increases access to hypnotherapy, especially for those who face barriers to in-person therapy, such as geographical limitations, cost, or time constraints. While further randomized controlled trials are needed to confirm these results, the study demonstrates the potential for mobile health interventions to improve women's quality of life during menopause.
Severe hot flashes are associated with chronic insomnia
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal hot flashes are one of the most common and disruptive symptoms that women experience during the transition to menopause. Characterized by sudden sensations of heat, sweating, and flushing, hot flashes can significantly affect a woman’s quality of life, causing sleep disturbances, mood swings, and even long-term health consequences. Understanding the complex mechanisms behind hot flashes, as well as the role of microbiome-targeted therapies, offers new avenues for improving menopausal health.
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This study links severe hot flashes to chronic insomnia in perimenopausal and postmenopausal women, suggesting that managing hot flashes could improve sleep quality and reduce the health risks associated with insomnia.
What was studied?
The study investigated the relationship between hot flashes and chronic insomnia in midlife women. Researchers assessed the prevalence of hot flashes and the severity of insomnia in a population of women across different menopausal stages. The study focused on the association between severe hot flashes and the presence of chronic insomnia symptoms, including difficulty initiating sleep, maintaining sleep, and experiencing nonrestorative sleep. Additionally, it explored other factors such as chronic pain and health status that could influence the prevalence of insomnia among perimenopausal and postmenopausal women.
Who was studied?
The study included 982 women aged 35 to 65 years, representing a population in California, categorized into three menopausal groups: premenopause (57.2%), perimenopause (22.3%), and postmenopause (20.5%). The participants were asked about their hot flash experiences and insomnia symptoms, with chronic insomnia defined by persistent sleep disturbances for at least six months. The study also considered various demographic factors such as age, marital status, occupation, race/ethnicity, and health status, as well as the severity of hot flashes, to explore their relationship to insomnia.
Most important findings
The study found a significant association between the severity of hot flashes and the prevalence of chronic insomnia. Among women experiencing severe hot flashes, over 80% reported symptoms of chronic insomnia, including difficulty initiating sleep and nonrestorative sleep. Additionally, insomnia symptoms were more common in perimenopausal and postmenopausal women, with a substantial increase in insomnia as the severity of hot flashes increased. Other factors like chronic pain, poor health, and sleep apnea also contributed to the likelihood of chronic insomnia, but severe hot flashes remained a strong predictor.
Key implications
The study highlights the need for healthcare providers to systematically assess hot flash severity in women with insomnia, as addressing hot flashes could improve sleep quality. Given the high prevalence of both hot flashes and insomnia in midlife women, the findings suggest that targeting hot flashes in treatment plans could help reduce the negative impacts of chronic insomnia, improving overall health and well-being for perimenopausal and postmenopausal women.
What’s in a name: are menopausal “hot flashes” a symptom of menopause or a manifestation of neurovascular dysregulation?
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal hot flashes are one of the most common and disruptive symptoms that women experience during the transition to menopause. Characterized by sudden sensations of heat, sweating, and flushing, hot flashes can significantly affect a woman’s quality of life, causing sleep disturbances, mood swings, and even long-term health consequences. Understanding the complex mechanisms behind hot flashes, as well as the role of microbiome-targeted therapies, offers new avenues for improving menopausal health.
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The article redefines menopausal hot flashes as signs of underlying neurovascular dysregulation, linking them to chronic conditions like cardiovascular disease and cognitive decline. It advocates for more targeted, personalized treatments and further research into the physiological mechanisms behind these symptoms.
What was studied?
This article examines the concept of menopausal hot flashes and night sweats, proposing that they should not simply be viewed as "symptoms of menopause" but rather as manifestations of underlying pathophysiological processes, particularly autonomic neurovascular dysregulation. The authors review evidence linking these vasomotor disturbances to broader health concerns, such as cardiovascular disease, cognitive decline, and sleep disturbances, suggesting that hot flashes may reflect deeper issues related to autonomic regulation and vascular health.
Who was studied?
The review focuses on studies of women in the menopausal transition, specifically those experiencing hot flashes and night sweats across different geographical regions, including Australia, Great Britain, and the United States. The article highlights the variation in hot flash patterns based on factors like timing, severity, and duration, and discusses how these symptoms are linked to the risk of chronic conditions such as cardiovascular diseases and cognitive decline. The review also notes genetic factors and hormonal changes that may influence the presence and severity of these symptoms.
Most important findings
The article identifies four distinct patterns of vasomotor disturbances observed globally, suggesting that these patterns are not solely attributable to cultural or socioeconomic factors. It emphasizes the link between the severity and timing of hot flashes and the risk of chronic conditions such as cardiovascular diseases, osteoporosis, and mood disorders. The authors argue that hot flashes should be considered a manifestation of neurovascular dysregulation, potentially driven by hormonal changes during menopause. Genetic factors related to estrogen metabolism also appear to influence the severity and onset of these symptoms, underscoring the need for personalized treatment approaches.
Key implications
This review calls for a shift in how menopausal hot flashes are perceived and treated. By reframing hot flashes as manifestations of underlying autonomic neurovascular dysregulation, the article suggests that they should not merely be seen as symptoms to be tolerated but as early indicators of potential chronic health conditions. The authors advocate for further investigation into the pathophysiological mechanisms behind these symptoms, particularly concerning autonomic function and vascular health, to develop more effective, targeted treatments. This research could lead to personalized hormone therapy (MHT) regimens based on genetic profiles, improving outcomes for women in menopause.
The Effect of Salvia Officinalis on Hot Flashes in Postmenopausal Women
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal hot flashes are one of the most common and disruptive symptoms that women experience during the transition to menopause. Characterized by sudden sensations of heat, sweating, and flushing, hot flashes can significantly affect a woman’s quality of life, causing sleep disturbances, mood swings, and even long-term health consequences. Understanding the complex mechanisms behind hot flashes, as well as the role of microbiome-targeted therapies, offers new avenues for improving menopausal health.
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This systematic review and meta-analysis found that Salvia officinalis significantly reduces the frequency of hot flashes in postmenopausal women, making it a promising non-hormonal alternative.
What was studied?
This systematic review and meta-analysis focused on the effect of Salvia officinalis (sage) on hot flashes in postmenopausal women. The study aimed to evaluate the impact of Salvia officinalis on the frequency, severity, and duration of hot flashes by analyzing four randomized controlled trials (RCTs). The data was pooled to assess the overall efficacy of this herbal remedy compared to a placebo. The researchers included studies published between 1990 and 2023, utilizing multiple databases to ensure comprehensive results.
Who was studied?
The study involved 310 postmenopausal women, aged 45 to 65, who were experiencing moderate to severe hot flashes. Participants had been postmenopausal for at least 12 months and reported at least three hot flashes per day. The trials included in the meta-analysis utilized different doses of Salvia officinalis extract, ranging from 100 mg to 280 mg daily. Participants were randomly assigned to either the intervention group (Salvia officinalis) or a placebo group, with some studies using a double-blind or triple-blind methodology to minimize bias.
Most important findings
The meta-analysis revealed that Salvia officinalis significantly reduced the frequency of hot flashes, with an effect size of −1.12, indicating a moderate to large reduction. However, it had no significant effect on the severity of hot flashes, with an effect size of −2.05, which was not statistically significant. Only one study examined the effect on the duration of hot flashes, but the data was insufficient to make conclusive findings. Overall, Salvia officinalis was found to be more effective than placebo in reducing hot flash frequency, but its impact on severity and duration was less clear.
Key implications
The findings suggest that Salvia officinalis may offer a non-hormonal, herbal alternative for managing hot flashes in postmenopausal women, particularly for those who cannot or prefer not to use hormone replacement therapy. While its effect on the severity and duration of hot flashes requires further investigation, the significant reduction in frequency supports its potential as a treatment option. Healthcare providers may consider recommending Salvia officinalis as a natural remedy, though more extensive studies are needed to solidify these findings and assess long-term safety and efficacy.
The effect of dietary intake on hot flashes in menopausal women
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal hot flashes are one of the most common and disruptive symptoms that women experience during the transition to menopause. Characterized by sudden sensations of heat, sweating, and flushing, hot flashes can significantly affect a woman’s quality of life, causing sleep disturbances, mood swings, and even long-term health consequences. Understanding the complex mechanisms behind hot flashes, as well as the role of microbiome-targeted therapies, offers new avenues for improving menopausal health.
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This study examines how dietary intake affects hot flash frequency in postmenopausal women. It finds that stable blood glucose levels, achieved through regular meals, reduce hot flash occurrences, suggesting dietary modifications as a potential treatment for menopausal symptoms.
What was studied?
This study examines the relationship between dietary intake and the frequency of hot flashes in postmenopausal women. The research investigates how blood glucose levels fluctuate before and after meals, and how these fluctuations correlate with the occurrence and severity of hot flashes. Two different studies, a controlled experimental design and an observational study, were used to explore this connection. The controlled study involved blood glucose manipulation in postmenopausal women, while the observational study required participants to document their food intake and hot flash occurrences over a 24-hour period.
Who was studied?
The study included postmenopausal women, aged 40 to 55, who were symptomatic and experienced daily hot flashes. The controlled study had a smaller sample of 10 participants, while the observational study had 21 participants. The women were selected based on specific inclusion criteria, including their daily experience of hot flashes, absence of hormone therapy use, and a lack of smoking history. Most participants were between 50-54 years of age, and the majority were Caucasian, with a few African American women included. The controlled study was performed in a clinical research center, while the observational study was conducted in a community setting.
Most important findings
The study found that hot flashes were more frequent when participants' blood glucose levels were lower, particularly in the 30 minutes before meals. In the controlled study, hot flashes were observed less frequently after meals, when blood glucose levels were higher. The observational study reinforced these findings, showing that the frequency of hot flashes increased as the time between meals grew longer. The results support the hypothesis that low blood glucose levels contribute to the occurrence of hot flashes, suggesting that maintaining stable blood glucose levels through regular meals could help reduce the frequency and severity of hot flashes.
Key implications
The study provides evidence that dietary intake, particularly maintaining stable blood glucose levels, may help alleviate the frequency and severity of hot flashes in postmenopausal women. This finding presents an opportunity for healthcare providers to focus on dietary interventions as an alternative or supplement to hormone therapy for managing hot flashes. Future research should explore dietary recommendations that can help stabilize blood glucose levels throughout the day, as well as the potential role of lifestyle changes such as meal timing and nutrient selection.
Urinary phthalate metabolite concentrations and hot flashes in women from an urban convenience sample of midlife women
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal hot flashes are one of the most common and disruptive symptoms that women experience during the transition to menopause. Characterized by sudden sensations of heat, sweating, and flushing, hot flashes can significantly affect a woman’s quality of life, causing sleep disturbances, mood swings, and even long-term health consequences. Understanding the complex mechanisms behind hot flashes, as well as the role of microbiome-targeted therapies, offers new avenues for improving menopausal health.
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The study links urinary phthalate metabolite levels with increased risk and frequency of hot flashes in midlife women, suggesting environmental exposure as a contributing factor. Associations varied by menopause status, BMI, race/ethnicity, and depressive symptoms.
What was studied?
This study investigated the relationship between urinary phthalate metabolite concentrations and hot flash experiences in midlife women. Researchers focused on four key hot flash outcomes, including the frequency, severity, and recent occurrence of hot flashes. The study evaluated whether phthalate exposure, derived from personal care products and plastics, was linked to a higher likelihood of experiencing hot flashes. By analyzing multiple phthalate metabolites in urine, the researchers sought to understand how common exposure to these chemicals might influence menopausal symptoms in women.
Who was studied?
The study included 728 premenopausal and perimenopausal women aged 45-54 from an urban convenience sample in Baltimore. The participants were diverse, comprising multiple racial/ethnic backgrounds, including Caucasian and African American women. Data was gathered via questionnaires on hot flash experiences, and urinary phthalate metabolite levels were measured from pooled samples over several weeks to assess exposure levels. Stratified analyses were performed to determine if associations differed by menopausal status, body mass index (BMI), race/ethnicity, and depressive symptoms.
Most important findings
The study found that higher levels of phthalate metabolites, particularly those from plastics, were significantly associated with a higher likelihood of experiencing hot flashes in the past 30 days, as well as with more frequent daily/weekly hot flashes. Specifically, higher concentrations of DEHP metabolites and phthalate mixtures from plastics (ΣPlastic) were linked to a 23-38% increase in the odds of daily or weekly hot flashes. Interestingly, associations varied by menopause status, with stronger links observed in perimenopausal women, and by race/ethnicity, where non-Hispanic white women exhibited stronger associations with certain phthalates. Furthermore, depressive symptoms influenced how phthalate exposure related to hot flash experiences, with women showing more depressive symptoms having stronger associations with personal care product phthalates.
Key implications
This study suggests that phthalates, especially those found in plastics and personal care products, may play a significant role in the onset and severity of hot flashes in midlife women. Given that phthalates are ubiquitous in the environment, this finding has important public health implications. It highlights the potential value of reducing exposure to phthalates to mitigate menopausal symptoms, particularly for women at higher risk, such as those with depressive symptoms or certain BMI levels. Further research is needed to explore the underlying mechanisms and to evaluate interventions aimed at reducing exposure.
Menopausal hot flashes: mechanisms, endocrinology, treatment
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
•
Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal hot flashes are one of the most common and disruptive symptoms that women experience during the transition to menopause. Characterized by sudden sensations of heat, sweating, and flushing, hot flashes can significantly affect a woman’s quality of life, causing sleep disturbances, mood swings, and even long-term health consequences. Understanding the complex mechanisms behind hot flashes, as well as the role of microbiome-targeted therapies, offers new avenues for improving menopausal health.
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The review explores the physiological mechanisms behind menopausal hot flashes, including thermoregulatory changes, sympathetic nervous activation, and estrogen depletion. It also examines treatments such as clonidine and behavioral therapies.
What was studied?
The review examines the physiological mechanisms behind menopausal hot flashes (HFs), which are characterized by rapid and exaggerated heat dissipation responses, such as sweating, peripheral vasodilation, and intense internal heat sensations. The study focuses on how small elevations in core body temperature trigger these responses, particularly within a reduced thermoneutral zone. The review also explores the involvement of estrogen depletion at menopause and its contribution to hot flashes, while addressing how the sympathetic nervous system and norepinephrine play key roles in the process.
Who was studied?
The review encompasses research on women experiencing menopausal hot flashes, particularly those in the climacteric period, as well as women undergoing surgical menopause or those treated with GnRH agonists for conditions like breast cancer. Studies comparing symptomatic and asymptomatic women, as well as cross-cultural studies on the prevalence of hot flashes in different ethnic groups, such as Caucasian, Japanese, and Chinese women, are also discussed. Additionally, the paper explores the effects of androgen depletion on men undergoing treatments for prostate cancer, providing a broader understanding of hot flashes across different populations.
Most important findings
The review identifies key mechanisms underlying the occurrence of hot flashes, including the narrowing of the thermoneutral zone due to elevated sympathetic activation, particularly through α2-adrenergic receptors. While estrogen depletion is essential for the onset of hot flashes, it is not the sole cause, as other factors like norepinephrine play a significant role. The review also highlights the effectiveness of clonidine, an α2-adrenergic agonist, in widening the thermoneutral zone and reducing hot flash frequency. Brain imaging studies reveal that areas such as the insula and anterior cingulate cortex are involved in the phenomenological experience of hot flashes, while circadian rhythms influence the timing of their occurrence.
Key implications
The findings suggest that hot flashes are a complex physiological phenomenon influenced by hormonal, neuroendocrine, and circadian factors. The narrowing of the thermoneutral zone due to elevated norepinephrine, in conjunction with estrogen withdrawal, forms the basis of their occurrence. Personalized treatment approaches, such as adrenergic modulation with clonidine or other therapies targeting norepinephrine, may offer more effective management strategies. Additionally, understanding genetic, cultural, and circadian differences in hot flash experiences can lead to better-tailored interventions, improving the quality of life for women experiencing this common menopausal symptom.
Dietary advanced glycation end-products and postmenopausal hot flashes
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal hot flashes are one of the most common and disruptive symptoms that women experience during the transition to menopause. Characterized by sudden sensations of heat, sweating, and flushing, hot flashes can significantly affect a woman’s quality of life, causing sleep disturbances, mood swings, and even long-term health consequences. Understanding the complex mechanisms behind hot flashes, as well as the role of microbiome-targeted therapies, offers new avenues for improving menopausal health.
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This study shows that reducing dietary advanced glycation end-products (AGEs) through a plant-based diet significantly reduces hot flashes in postmenopausal women, offering a non-hormonal alternative for managing menopausal symptoms.
What was studied?
This study investigates the effects of dietary advanced glycation end-products (AGEs) on postmenopausal hot flashes. It specifically explores the impact of a low-fat, plant-based diet, including daily soybean consumption, on the frequency and severity of hot flashes in postmenopausal women. The analysis is a post-hoc analysis from a 12-week randomized clinical trial, in which participants were assigned to either the intervention group (following the plant-based diet) or the control group (maintaining their usual diet). Dietary AGEs were estimated based on participants' food intake, and the correlation between AGEs and hot flash frequency and severity was analyzed.
Who was studied?
The study involved 84 postmenopausal women aged 40 to 65 who reported at least two moderate-to-severe hot flashes daily. Participants were randomly assigned to either the intervention group or the control group. The intervention group followed a low-fat, plant-based diet that included 1/2 cup of cooked soybeans daily, while the control group maintained their usual dietary habits. Of the 84 women, 71 completed the entire study, and 63 provided complete hot flash and dietary data for the AGEs analysis. Participants were monitored for dietary adherence and changes in hot flash frequency and severity over the 12 weeks.
Most important findings
The study found that the intervention group experienced a 73% reduction in dietary AGEs, which was associated with significant reductions in hot flash severity and frequency. Specifically, severe hot flashes decreased by 92%, and moderate-to-severe hot flashes decreased by 88%. The correlation between dietary AGEs reduction and hot flash severity was significant, even after adjusting for changes in energy intake and body mass index. The findings suggest that the reduction in dietary AGEs through a plant-based diet plays a crucial role in alleviating menopausal vasomotor symptoms, independently of weight loss or other lifestyle factors.
Key implications
The results suggest that dietary AGEs may contribute to the pathogenesis of hot flashes in postmenopausal women, and reducing dietary AGEs through a plant-based diet may be an effective non-hormonal intervention. The study supports the use of diet as a tool for managing menopausal symptoms and highlights the importance of dietary modifications in reducing the risk of associated health conditions like cardiovascular disease and diabetes. This study suggests that a plant-based diet, low in AGEs, could be a sustainable and effective strategy for alleviating hot flashes and improving overall health in postmenopausal women.
Phthalate metabolite levels and menopausal hot flashes in midlife women
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal hot flashes are one of the most common and disruptive symptoms that women experience during the transition to menopause. Characterized by sudden sensations of heat, sweating, and flushing, hot flashes can significantly affect a woman’s quality of life, causing sleep disturbances, mood swings, and even long-term health consequences. Understanding the complex mechanisms behind hot flashes, as well as the role of microbiome-targeted therapies, offers new avenues for improving menopausal health.
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This study links higher levels of phthalate metabolites, particularly from personal care products, to an increased risk and severity of hot flashes in midlife women, suggesting that phthalate exposure could influence menopausal symptoms.
What was studied?
This study explores the association between urinary phthalate metabolite levels and the occurrence and severity of hot flashes in midlife women. Researchers specifically examined the metabolites of phthalates, chemicals commonly found in personal care products, and their potential link to the onset and frequency of menopausal hot flashes. The study focused on women aged 45 to 54 years, measuring phthalate metabolites such as MEP, MEHP, MEHHP, and others, to determine whether these metabolites were associated with a higher risk of experiencing hot flashes, including their severity and frequency.
Who was studied?
The study included 195 women aged 45 to 54 years, primarily Caucasian and African American, recruited from Baltimore city and its surrounding counties. The participants were selected from the Midlife Women's Health Study and included both women who had experienced hot flashes and those who had not. Women were classified based on their menopausal status (pre, peri, or postmenopausal) and their history of hot flashes. Urine samples were collected to measure phthalate metabolite levels, while detailed questionnaires assessed the frequency, severity, and duration of hot flashes.
Most important findings
The study found a significant association between higher urinary levels of phthalate metabolites, particularly those from personal care products (Sum PCP), and an increased risk of ever experiencing hot flashes. The findings revealed that higher levels of certain metabolites like MEP and MECPP were significantly linked to a higher likelihood of experiencing hot flashes in the past 30 days, as well as more frequent daily hot flashes. Specifically, the Sum PCP variable, which reflects exposure to phthalates in personal care products, was positively associated with both the occurrence and severity of hot flashes, including the most frequent (daily) occurrences.
Key implications
The findings suggest that exposure to phthalates, particularly from personal care products, may increase the likelihood and severity of hot flashes in midlife women. This adds to the growing body of evidence that phthalates, which have endocrine-disrupting properties, could potentially accelerate menopausal symptoms or exacerbate their intensity. Given the widespread use of phthalates in personal care products, these results imply that reducing exposure to these chemicals could be a potential strategy for mitigating hot flashes in susceptible women. Further research is needed to better understand the mechanisms by which phthalates may influence menopausal symptoms.
The effect of herbal tea capsule on menopause hot flashes
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal hot flashes are one of the most common and disruptive symptoms that women experience during the transition to menopause. Characterized by sudden sensations of heat, sweating, and flushing, hot flashes can significantly affect a woman’s quality of life, causing sleep disturbances, mood swings, and even long-term health consequences. Understanding the complex mechanisms behind hot flashes, as well as the role of microbiome-targeted therapies, offers new avenues for improving menopausal health.
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This study demonstrates that herbal tea capsules significantly reduce the frequency, duration, and severity of hot flashes in postmenopausal women, offering a promising natural alternative to hormone therapy for managing menopausal symptoms.
What was studied?
This study investigates the effect of herbal tea capsules on reducing hot flashes in postmenopausal women. Researchers conducted a randomized clinical trial with 82 women experiencing hot flashes. One group received 450 mg of herbal tea capsules daily, while the other group received placebo capsules. The study measured the severity, duration, and frequency of hot flashes before, 4 weeks after, and 8 weeks after the intervention to assess the effectiveness of the herbal tea in alleviating menopausal symptoms.
Who was studied?
The study involved 82 women, aged 45 to 60, who had been experiencing hot flashes for at least three months. Participants were randomly assigned to two groups: one receiving herbal tea capsules and the other receiving placebo capsules. The inclusion criteria required participants to have frequent hot flashes, with at least three occurrences per day, and no recent use of hormone therapy or other treatments for menopausal symptoms.
Most important findings
The study found that women who took the herbal tea capsules experienced a significant reduction in the frequency, duration, and severity of their hot flashes compared to the placebo group. After 4 weeks of intervention, the herbal tea group showed a notable improvement in hot flash symptoms, and by the 8-week mark, the reductions were even more significant. The severity and frequency of hot flashes in the herbal tea group decreased dramatically, while the placebo group showed little to no change. These results suggest that herbal tea capsules may be an effective and non-invasive alternative for managing hot flashes in postmenopausal women.
Key implications
The findings of this study highlight the potential of herbal remedies, particularly herbal tea, as a safe, cost-effective, and non-invasive treatment for hot flashes in postmenopausal women. Given the widespread acceptance of herbal products and the concerns about the side effects of hormone therapy, this study provides evidence supporting the use of herbal tea capsules for managing menopausal symptoms. Healthcare providers may consider recommending herbal supplements like these to women seeking natural alternatives for alleviating hot flashes and improving their quality of life during menopause.
Circulating interleukin-8 and tumor necrosis factor-α are associated with hot flashes in healthy postmenopausal women
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
•
Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal hot flashes are one of the most common and disruptive symptoms that women experience during the transition to menopause. Characterized by sudden sensations of heat, sweating, and flushing, hot flashes can significantly affect a woman’s quality of life, causing sleep disturbances, mood swings, and even long-term health consequences. Understanding the complex mechanisms behind hot flashes, as well as the role of microbiome-targeted therapies, offers new avenues for improving menopausal health.
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This study shows that the severity of hot flashes in postmenopausal women correlates with increased levels of pro-inflammatory cytokines, particularly IL-8 and TNF-α. These findings suggest a connection between hot flashes and systemic inflammation, which may contribute to chronic diseases in this population.
What was studied?
This study investigates the relationship between hot flashes and circulating pro-inflammatory cytokines, specifically interleukin-8 (IL-8) and tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α), in healthy postmenopausal women. Researchers aimed to understand whether the intensity of hot flashes correlates with levels of these inflammatory markers, which are associated with systemic inflammation. The study measured cytokine levels and leukocyte numbers across different severity groups of hot flashes, ranging from none to severe, to examine potential inflammatory links.
Who was studied?
The study included 202 healthy postmenopausal women aged 45 to 60 years, with participants divided into four groups based on their hot flash severity: none (Group N), mild (Group m), moderate (Group M), and severe (Group S). The women were selected based on specific inclusion criteria, including having no significant chronic systemic diseases and a BMI between 18 and 30 kg/m². The study controlled for factors such as age, body mass index (BMI), menopausal duration, and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) levels to focus on the association between hot flash severity and cytokine levels.
Most important findings
The study found significant associations between the severity of hot flashes and elevated levels of IL-8 and TNF-α. Specifically, women with severe hot flashes had 37.19% higher IL-8 and 51.27% higher TNF-α levels compared to those with no hot flashes, indicating a positive relationship between hot flash severity and these pro-inflammatory cytokines. Mild and moderate hot flash groups did not show significant differences in cytokine levels. The results suggest that hot flashes may be linked to low-grade systemic inflammation, which could contribute to the development of cardiovascular disease and other systemic conditions in postmenopausal women.
Key implications
The study's findings suggest that hot flashes could be a marker for systemic inflammation in postmenopausal women, potentially increasing the risk of developing chronic diseases such as cardiovascular issues and insulin resistance. The elevated levels of IL-8 and TNF-α associated with severe hot flashes highlight the need for targeted treatments to manage both the symptoms of hot flashes and the underlying inflammatory process. Understanding the inflammatory mechanisms behind hot flashes could lead to more effective interventions, potentially improving the overall health outcomes for postmenopausal women.
High Physical Activity Level May Reduce Menopausal Symptoms
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal hot flashes are one of the most common and disruptive symptoms that women experience during the transition to menopause. Characterized by sudden sensations of heat, sweating, and flushing, hot flashes can significantly affect a woman’s quality of life, causing sleep disturbances, mood swings, and even long-term health consequences. Understanding the complex mechanisms behind hot flashes, as well as the role of microbiome-targeted therapies, offers new avenues for improving menopausal health.
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This study reveals that higher levels of physical activity, especially during leisure time, are linked to reduced severity of menopausal symptoms, particularly urogenital and somato-vegetative issues. It suggests incorporating physical activity into the management plan for menopausal women, particularly postmenopausal women.
What was studied?
This study explored the relationship between physical activity (PA) and the severity of menopausal symptoms in women, focusing on the effects of PA in different domains: leisure time, household activities, work, and transportation. The study aimed to identify how varying levels of PA during different activities relate to the frequency and intensity of menopausal symptoms, particularly vasomotor, urogenital, somato-vegetative, and psychological symptoms. The researchers also investigated whether women with higher PA levels reported less severe menopausal symptoms, in comparison to those with lower activity levels.
Who was studied?
The study involved 305 women aged 40-65, recruited from women’s health clinics in Silesia, Poland. The participants were categorized into three groups based on their menopausal status: premenopausal, perimenopausal, and postmenopausal. The women had no history of serious illness, psychiatric disorders, or hormonal therapy use in the prior 3 months. The study focused on women with varying levels of physical activity, which were assessed using the International Physical Activity Questionnaire (IPAQ). These women were also assessed for the severity of their menopausal symptoms using the Menopause Rating Scale (MRS).
Most important findings
The study found that physical activity during leisure time was significantly associated with less severe menopausal symptoms, particularly urogenital symptoms. Postmenopausal women with higher levels of PA during leisure time were less likely to report severe urogenital and somato-vegetative symptoms compared to those with lower PA levels. Specifically, 59.66% of postmenopausal women reported high levels of PA, and fewer of these women experienced severe symptoms compared to those with low PA levels. The results also indicated that moderate to high PA levels were linked with less severe menopausal symptoms overall. However, no significant differences were found for symptoms in the psychological domain. Interestingly, women who had low PA levels at work reported more severe somato-vegetative symptoms.
Key implications
The study suggests that engaging in physical activity, particularly during leisure time, is beneficial for reducing the severity of menopausal symptoms. This finding is crucial for menopausal women, especially those who are postmenopausal or experiencing symptoms related to menopause. Clinicians should consider recommending physical activity as part of a holistic approach to managing menopausal symptoms, particularly for those who cannot or prefer not to use hormone replacement therapy (HRT). Additionally, promoting higher PA levels at work could help mitigate somato-vegetative symptoms such as joint pain and muscle discomfort. The lack of significant findings for psychological symptoms suggests that further research is needed to explore whether specific types or intensities of physical activity might impact mood and mental well-being during menopause.
Menopause hot flashes and molecular mechanisms modulated by food-derived nutrients
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
•
Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal hot flashes are one of the most common and disruptive symptoms that women experience during the transition to menopause. Characterized by sudden sensations of heat, sweating, and flushing, hot flashes can significantly affect a woman’s quality of life, causing sleep disturbances, mood swings, and even long-term health consequences. Understanding the complex mechanisms behind hot flashes, as well as the role of microbiome-targeted therapies, offers new avenues for improving menopausal health.
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This review discusses how food-derived nutrients modulate molecular mechanisms related to hot flashes in menopause, identifying dietary compounds that may offer effective, natural alternatives to hormonal treatments.
What was studied?
This review examines the molecular mechanisms underlying hot flashes during menopause, with a focus on how food-derived nutrients can modulate these mechanisms. It explores the role of various molecular pathways and genetic factors involved in hot flashes, including the kisspeptin-GnRH pathway, aryl hydrocarbon receptor signaling, and the effects of inflammatory biomarkers, oxidative stress, and glucose availability. The authors also analyze how specific food components, such as polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs), flavonoids, and carotenoids, may influence these pathways to alleviate hot flashes.
Who was studied?
The review synthesizes findings from numerous studies involving both human populations and animal models. It references genome-wide association studies (GWAS) of menopausal women and animal studies on the effects of food-derived compounds. The review also draws from research involving the impact of dietary nutrients on gene expression and cell signaling in neuronal and hypothalamic models, focusing on women experiencing menopausal symptoms such as hot flashes.
Most important findings
The study found that certain food-derived nutrients, such as equol, genistein, and docosahexaenoic acid (DHA), can modulate pathways that affect hot flashes, like the kisspeptin-GnRH pathway and oxidative stress. Nutrients such as curcumin and vitamin E have shown promising effects in reducing inflammation and oxidative stress, which are believed to play a role in the occurrence of hot flashes. The research also highlights the potential for compounds like quercetin, resveratrol, and apigenin to activate enzymes that may help mitigate symptoms by affecting estrogen metabolism and signaling pathways. The review suggests that these compounds could offer a natural alternative for managing menopausal symptoms, including hot flashes.
Key implications
The findings suggest that dietary interventions, particularly those focused on specific nutrients, could serve as effective natural treatments for managing hot flashes during menopause. By modulating key molecular pathways and cell signaling mechanisms, food-derived nutrients can provide a non-hormonal alternative to alleviate symptoms associated with menopausal transition.
Neurokinin 3 receptor antagonism as a novel treatment for menopausal hot flushes
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal hot flashes are one of the most common and disruptive symptoms that women experience during the transition to menopause. Characterized by sudden sensations of heat, sweating, and flushing, hot flashes can significantly affect a woman’s quality of life, causing sleep disturbances, mood swings, and even long-term health consequences. Understanding the complex mechanisms behind hot flashes, as well as the role of microbiome-targeted therapies, offers new avenues for improving menopausal health.
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This study demonstrates that MLE4901, an NK3R antagonist, significantly reduces hot flash frequency, severity, and interference in menopausal women, offering a non-hormonal treatment alternative.
What was studied?
The study investigates the use of an oral neurokinin 3 receptor (NK3R) antagonist (MLE4901) as a treatment for menopausal hot flashes. A randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover design was used to assess the effectiveness of MLE4901 in reducing the frequency, severity, and interference of hot flashes in menopausal women. The primary outcome measured was the total number of hot flashes during the final week of the treatment period, with secondary outcomes including the severity, bother, and interference caused by hot flashes.
Who was studied?
The study involved 37 healthy menopausal women aged 40–62 years, all of whom experienced seven or more hot flashes per day, with some being severe or bothersome. Participants had not menstruated for at least 12 months and were not on any medications for menopausal symptoms in the preceding eight weeks. The study population was randomized to receive either MLE4901 or placebo, followed by a washout period and then the alternate treatment. A total of 28 participants completed both treatment periods and were included in the per-protocol analysis.
Most important findings
The administration of MLE4901 significantly reduced the total weekly number of hot flashes by 45% compared to the placebo group. Additionally, MLE4901 reduced the severity, bother, and interference caused by hot flashes, with improvements in hot flash-related interference, severity, and psychosocial symptoms such as fatigue and irritability. The study also observed that treatment with MLE4901 resulted in a decrease in hot flash frequency by 73%, compared to a 28% reduction with placebo. The treatment was well tolerated, with only mild, transient increases in liver enzymes in a small subgroup of participants.
Key implications
This study provides strong evidence that NK3R antagonism, specifically through the use of MLE4901, could be a novel and effective treatment for managing menopausal hot flashes. The ability to reduce hot flashes without the need for estrogen exposure addresses a significant gap in non-hormonal treatment options. Given the potential side effects of hormone replacement therapy, NK3R antagonists like MLE4901 represent a promising alternative for women who seek non-hormonal relief from menopausal symptoms. Larger-scale, long-term studies are needed to further establish the safety and efficacy of this treatment approach.
SSRIs for hot flashes: a systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized trials.
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal hot flashes are one of the most common and disruptive symptoms that women experience during the transition to menopause. Characterized by sudden sensations of heat, sweating, and flushing, hot flashes can significantly affect a woman’s quality of life, causing sleep disturbances, mood swings, and even long-term health consequences. Understanding the complex mechanisms behind hot flashes, as well as the role of microbiome-targeted therapies, offers new avenues for improving menopausal health.
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This meta-analysis reveals that SSRIs are effective in reducing hot flashes in menopausal women, with escitalopram showing the highest efficacy. These results support SSRIs as a non-hormonal alternative to hormone therapy.
What was studied?
This systematic review and meta-analysis evaluates the effectiveness of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) for treating hot flashes in peri- and postmenopausal women. The study aimed to summarize evidence from randomized controlled trials (RCTs) regarding the impact of SSRIs like paroxetine, fluoxetine, escitalopram, and sertraline on hot flash frequency, severity, and associated quality of life. The analysis pooled data from 11 trials, including a total of 2,069 women, to determine the overall effect of SSRIs compared to placebo and other treatment options.
Who was studied?
The study reviewed 11 randomized controlled trials involving peri- and postmenopausal women aged 36 to 76 years who experienced moderate to severe hot flashes. The trials included women who had been menopausal for a range of 2.3 to 6.6 years and excluded those on hormone replacement therapy or selective estrogen receptor modulators. The participants had varying levels of baseline hot flash frequency and severity, with follow-up periods ranging from 1 to 9 months. The women were assigned to receive SSRIs or placebo for treatment, with several trials assessing different SSRIs like paroxetine, fluoxetine, and escitalopram.
Most important findings
The analysis found that SSRIs were significantly effective in reducing both the frequency and severity of hot flashes when compared to placebo. The pooled data showed a modest reduction in the number of daily hot flashes (−0.93, 95% CI −1.46 to −0.37) and in hot flash severity scores (−0.34, 95% CI −0.59 to −0.10). Among SSRIs, escitalopram demonstrated the greatest efficacy. While SSRIs did not show a higher incidence of serious adverse effects compared to placebo, they were associated with a slight increase in common side effects such as nausea, dry mouth and decreased libido, which were generally mild and transient.
Key implications
SSRIs present a viable non-hormonal option for managing hot flashes, especially for women who cannot use or prefer to avoid hormone replacement therapy. Despite the modest effect size, SSRIs may offer an acceptable alternative with fewer severe side effects compared to traditional hormonal treatments. Clinicians should consider SSRIs as a first-line treatment option for managing vasomotor symptoms, particularly for women with contraindications to hormone therapy. However, further studies with longer follow-up periods are needed to establish the long-term efficacy and safety of SSRIs for this purpose.
Diet quality, body weight, and postmenopausal hot flashes: a secondary analysis of a randomized clinical trial
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal hot flashes are one of the most common and disruptive symptoms that women experience during the transition to menopause. Characterized by sudden sensations of heat, sweating, and flushing, hot flashes can significantly affect a woman’s quality of life, causing sleep disturbances, mood swings, and even long-term health consequences. Understanding the complex mechanisms behind hot flashes, as well as the role of microbiome-targeted therapies, offers new avenues for improving menopausal health.
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This study suggests that a low-fat vegan diet, particularly one supplemented with soybeans, significantly reduces hot flashes in postmenopausal women, with improvements linked to higher plant-based diet scores.
What was studied?
This study investigates how dietary quality, body weight, and the consumption of plant-based foods affect postmenopausal hot flashes. It specifically examines the relationship between hot flash severity and frequency and dietary patterns as measured by three dietary indices: plant-based diet index (PDI), healthful plant-based diet index (hPDI), and unhealthful plant-based diet index (uPDI). The research aimed to assess the effect of a low-fat vegan diet, supplemented with soybeans, on the reduction of hot flashes, comparing it with a control group that maintained their usual diet.
Who was studied?
The study included 84 postmenopausal women aged 40 to 65, who reported at least two moderate-to-severe hot flashes per day. Participants were randomly assigned to either a vegan group, which followed a low-fat vegan diet supplemented with soybeans, or a control group that maintained their usual diet. Participants were excluded if they had specific health conditions like eating disorders, were on weight-loss medications, or had a body mass index (BMI) under 18.5 kg/m². The study was conducted over 12 weeks, with regular measurements of hot flash severity, frequency, and body weight.
Most important findings
The study found that participants in the vegan group experienced a significant reduction in hot flash severity and frequency compared to the control group. Severe hot flashes in the vegan group decreased by 92%, from 1.3 to 0.1 per day, while the control group showed no significant change. The plant-based diet, particularly the reduction in animal products and oils, positively influenced the reduction of hot flashes and body weight. Additionally, higher PDI and hPDI scores were negatively associated with changes in body weight and hot flash severity, even after adjusting for changes in body mass index (BMI). These findings suggest that dietary quality, specifically plant-based food consumption, plays a crucial role in managing menopausal symptoms.
Key implications
The results suggest that adopting a plant-based diet, particularly one low in fats and supplemented with soybeans, could be an effective strategy for alleviating hot flashes in postmenopausal women. This approach could serve as a non-hormonal alternative for managing menopausal symptoms, particularly for women seeking lifestyle changes or alternatives to hormone therapy. The study highlights the importance of focusing on the healthfulness of plant-based foods, rather than categorizing them as simply "healthy" or "unhealthy," as the findings show that both healthful and unhealthful plant foods contributed to positive changes in hot flash frequency and severity.
Diagnosis of the menopause: NICE guidance and quality standards
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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NICE guidance recommends diagnosing menopause in women over 45 clinically, not with lab tests, while FSH measurement is reserved for suspected POI in women under 40, streamlining care and reducing unnecessary testing in clinical biochemistry laboratories.
What was reviewed?
This editorial summarizes and contextualizes the 2017 National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) guidelines and quality standards regarding the diagnosis of menopause and premature ovarian insufficiency (POI). The guidance, based on systematic reviews, critically evaluates the diagnostic utility of clinical indicators, ultrasound, and biochemical tests (particularly FSH, AMH, oestrogen, inhibin A and B), emphasizing appropriate diagnostic strategies for different age groups and clinical scenarios. The article also discusses the cost-saving implications and practical recommendations for clinical biochemistry laboratories in the UK, focusing on reducing unnecessary biochemical testing and streamlining diagnostic pathways.
Who was reviewed?
The review draws on evidence synthesized for NICE guideline development, including systematic reviews of studies involving perimenopausal and menopausal women, as well as those at risk for or suspected of POI. The population includes women over 45 presenting with menopausal symptoms, women aged 40–45 with possible menopausal features, and women under 40 with suspected POI, such as those with a history of cancer treatment or genetic syndromes like Turner syndrome. The referenced studies include a range of clinical cohorts and laboratory assessments across these age groups.
Most important findings
The NICE guideline, as summarized in this editorial, asserts that menopause in women over 45 should be diagnosed clinically—based on symptoms like vasomotor instability and menstrual irregularity—without reliance on laboratory or imaging tests. The evidence indicates that no single symptom or biochemical marker (including FSH, AMH, oestrogen, or inhibins) is sufficiently reliable in isolation for diagnosing menopause in this group. FSH is particularly unreliable due to its physiological fluctuations and interference from hormonal therapies. However, FSH measurement retains a role in diagnosing POI in women under 40, where elevated levels (>30 mIU/mL on two occasions) support the diagnosis, though a single test is inadequate due to hormonal variability. The review also emphasizes that AMH, despite its use as a marker of ovarian reserve, is not recommended for routine POI diagnosis due to assay variability and insufficient evidence for its diagnostic accuracy in this context.
Key implications
For clinical practice, the NICE guidance recommends diagnosing menopause in women over 45 based on symptoms alone, which reduces unnecessary and uninformative laboratory testing. This has significant resource-saving implications for healthcare systems. In women under 40 with suspected POI, FSH testing is appropriate, but diagnosis should be based on persistent elevations in FSH and compatible symptoms. Laboratories and clinicians should align their practice with these guidelines, minimizing inappropriate FSH testing in older women and focusing resources where diagnostic yield is greatest. This approach is expected to improve patient care, expedite appropriate referrals, and enhance long-term health outcomes while maximizing cost-effectiveness. The editorial provides actionable advice for laboratories, including audit and educational interventions to reduce unwarranted testing.
Prevalence of hot flushes and night sweats around the world: a systematic review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
•
Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal hot flashes are one of the most common and disruptive symptoms that women experience during the transition to menopause. Characterized by sudden sensations of heat, sweating, and flushing, hot flashes can significantly affect a woman’s quality of life, causing sleep disturbances, mood swings, and even long-term health consequences. Understanding the complex mechanisms behind hot flashes, as well as the role of microbiome-targeted therapies, offers new avenues for improving menopausal health.
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This systematic review explores the global prevalence of hot flashes and night sweats, revealing significant cultural and regional variations. It emphasizes the need for personalized, region-specific healthcare strategies to address these common menopausal symptoms.
What was studied?
This systematic review examines the global prevalence of hot flashes and night sweats, two of the most common vasomotor symptoms associated with menopause. The authors aimed to understand how these symptoms vary across different cultures, geographic regions, and menopausal stages. A total of 66 studies were included, with a focus on identifying prevalence patterns for hot flashes and night sweats in women from various continents, including North America, Europe, East Asia, Southeast Asia, Australia, Latin America, South Asia, the Middle East, and Africa. The studies also explored factors influencing symptom variation, such as lifestyle, diet, cultural attitudes, and climate.
Who was studied?
The studies included in the review involved women between the ages of 40 and 65 years, across different stages of menopause, including perimenopause, postmenopause, and those who underwent surgical menopause. The women were from diverse ethnic backgrounds, representing various global regions, including Caucasian, African-American, Hispanic, Asian, and Middle Eastern populations. Data was derived from large-scale studies, such as the Study of Women’s Health Across the Nation (SWAN), along with smaller cohort studies, offering insights into the cultural and regional differences in symptom prevalence and severity.
Most important findings
The review found that the prevalence of hot flashes and night sweats varied significantly across regions and ethnic groups. In North America, particularly among African-American women, the prevalence was notably high, with 46% reporting symptoms, while in Japan, it was much lower at around 18%. The study also highlighted how factors like ethnicity, culture, diet, and even climate influenced symptom reporting. For instance, women in colder climates or those with diets rich in soy were found to experience fewer symptoms. Additionally, lifestyle factors, such as smoking and alcohol consumption, were associated with higher rates of vasomotor symptoms. This variability emphasizes the need for region-specific healthcare strategies to manage menopause-related symptoms effectively.
Key implications
This review underscores the importance of considering cultural and regional factors when addressing menopausal symptoms, particularly hot flashes and night sweats. It suggests that healthcare providers should not only consider the global prevalence of these symptoms but also the unique cultural attitudes toward menopause that may influence symptom reporting and treatment-seeking behavior. Tailored interventions, including diet modifications and lifestyle adjustments, could potentially alleviate symptoms based on regional characteristics. Moreover, recognizing the diverse experiences of menopause globally can lead to better, more personalized care for women during the menopausal transition.
Black cohosh (Cimicifuga spp.) for menopausal symptoms.
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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This review finds insufficient evidence that black cohosh effectively reduces menopausal symptoms. Hormone therapy outperforms black cohosh, which appears safe but needs further study for efficacy and impact on quality of life.
What was reviewed?
This Cochrane systematic review comprehensively assessed the clinical effectiveness and safety of black cohosh (Cimicifuga spp.) preparations for treating menopausal symptoms. The review synthesized data from randomized controlled trials comparing black cohosh to placebo, hormone therapy, red clover, fluoxetine, or other controls. It aimed to determine whether black cohosh reduces the frequency and severity of vasomotor symptoms (hot flushes, night sweats), vulvovaginal symptoms, and improves menopausal symptom scores, while evaluating its safety profile in perimenopausal and postmenopausal women.
Who was reviewed?
The review included sixteen randomized controlled trials involving a total of 2,027 women aged mostly between 50 and 56 years, all experiencing menopausal symptoms. Participants were perimenopausal or postmenopausal women recruited across various clinical and geographical settings, including the US, Germany, China, and Europe. Trials used oral monopreparations of black cohosh at doses ranging from 8 to 160 mg daily, over durations from 4 to 52 weeks. Control interventions included placebo, hormone therapy, red clover, fluoxetine, and other comparators.
Most important findings
Pooled evidence showed no statistically significant benefit of black cohosh over placebo in reducing the frequency or intensity of hot flushes or night sweats. Meta-analysis of five trials demonstrated a negligible mean difference in daily hot flush frequency and menopausal symptom scores. Comparisons of black cohosh with hormone therapy consistently favored hormone therapy, which significantly reduced vasomotor symptoms and menopausal scores. Trials comparing black cohosh to red clover or fluoxetine yielded inconclusive results due to limited data and heterogeneity. Safety data indicated no significant difference in adverse events between black cohosh and placebo, although reporting was incomplete. Data on secondary outcomes such as bone health, sexuality, quality of life, and cost-effectiveness were insufficient for conclusive analysis.
Key implications
Current evidence from randomized controlled trials does not support black cohosh as an effective treatment for menopausal vasomotor symptoms compared to placebo or hormone therapy. However, the overall quality of the evidence is moderate to low due to methodological limitations and heterogeneity among trials. Current safety data show that people generally tolerate black cohosh well, but researchers need to report findings more rigorously. Given the widespread use of black cohosh as a complementary therapy, researchers should conduct further high-quality, well-designed studies to clarify its efficacy, safety, and impact on quality of life and other clinically relevant outcomes. Understanding potential interactions with the microbiome and its influence on symptom modulation could enrich future investigations and help guide more targeted therapies for menopause.
Drugs for the treatment of menopausal symptoms.
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Estrogen therapy remains the most effective treatment for menopausal symptoms, with transdermal delivery preferred for safety. Non-hormonal options offer moderate relief; emerging therapies like SERMs and androgens show promise but require cautious use.
What was reviewed?
This review article comprehensively evaluates the current pharmacological treatments for menopausal symptoms, focusing on hormone replacement therapy (HRT), non-hormonal options, and emerging therapies. It addresses the efficacy, safety, and mechanisms of various estrogen, progestogen, androgen, selective estrogen receptor modulators (SERMs), and alternative compounds used to manage vasomotor symptoms, urogenital atrophy, bone loss, mood disorders, and sexual dysfunction in perimenopausal and postmenopausal women.
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesizes evidence from randomized controlled trials, observational studies, and meta-analyses involving diverse populations of menopausal women across clinical settings globally. It includes women experiencing a spectrum of menopausal symptoms such as hot flushes, night sweats, sleep disturbance, mood changes, urogenital atrophy, and metabolic complications. The review integrates findings on standard populations as well as subgroups with comorbidities affecting treatment decisions and outcomes.
Most important findings
The review confirms that estrogen therapy remains the most effective treatment for vasomotor and urogenital symptoms associated with menopause. It emphasizes the differential pharmacokinetics and safety profiles of oral versus transdermal estrogen, highlighting that non-oral routes tend to have fewer thromboembolic risks and more physiological hormone metabolism. Progestogens are necessary alongside estrogen in women with an intact uterus to prevent endometrial hyperplasia, though choice of progestogen influences side effects and tolerability. Non-hormonal agents such as gabapentin, clonidine, and selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) provide moderate relief for vasomotor symptoms, especially in women who cannot undergo HRT. Phytoestrogens and black cohosh lack consistent evidence for efficacy, and safety concerns remain, particularly hepatotoxicity with black cohosh. Newer therapies include tibolone, a synthetic steroid with tissue-selective effects, showing benefit for sexual function and bone health but with some cardiovascular risks in older women.
The review also touches on androgen therapy, particularly testosterone, which shows promise in treating hypoactive sexual desire disorder in surgically menopausal women, though concerns regarding breast cancer risk and cardiovascular effects necessitate cautious use. Emerging selective estrogen receptor modulators (SERMs) such as raloxifene and bazedoxifene offer fracture prevention and reduced breast cancer risk but may worsen vasomotor symptoms.
Key implications
Clinicians should tailor menopausal symptom management based on individual risk profiles, symptom severity, and patient preferences. Estrogen therapy remains first-line for significant symptoms but must be balanced against risks of thromboembolism and cancer, emphasizing the benefits of transdermal over oral routes when feasible. Non-hormonal alternatives offer options for those contraindicated for HRT but generally provide less symptom relief. The heterogeneity of menopause symptoms and comorbidities calls for personalized approaches, including consideration of novel SERMs and androgens. Further research into the interaction between menopausal therapies and the microbiome may enhance understanding of systemic effects and optimize treatment strategies. Safety monitoring, especially for long-term hormone use, remains paramount.
Mindfulness, cognitive behavioural and behaviour‐based therapy for natural and treatment‐induced menopausal symptoms: A systematic review and meta‐analysis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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This review and meta-analysis demonstrate that psychological interventions, such as CBT, MBT, and BT, can significantly reduce hot flash bother and menopausal symptoms. These findings are especially relevant for breast cancer survivors, offering a safe, non-hormonal alternative to HRT.
What was studied?
This systematic review and meta-analysis investigated the effectiveness of psychological interventions, specifically mindfulness-based therapy (MBT), cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), and behavior therapy (BT), in reducing vasomotor symptoms in women experiencing natural or treatment-induced menopause. The primary outcomes measured were the frequency and severity of hot flashes (referred to as "hot flush bother"), overall menopausal symptoms, and sexual functioning. The study included randomized controlled trials (RCTs) that assessed the impact of these psychological therapies compared to control groups, which typically consisted of waiting lists or general lifestyle advice.
Who was studied?
The review included data from twelve randomized controlled trials involving a total of 1,016 women. The participants were divided into two groups: those experiencing natural menopause and those with treatment-induced menopause, including survivors of breast cancer. These women were aged between 40 and 65 and had experienced hot flashes or other menopausal symptoms such as night sweats, vaginal discomfort, and sexual dysfunction. The women studied had varying baseline health conditions, including some who had undergone breast cancer treatments that induced early menopause.
Most important findings
The results of the meta-analysis revealed a significant reduction in hot flash bother, both in the short-term (less than 20 weeks) and medium-term (20 weeks or more), following psychological interventions. The standard mean difference (SMD) for hot flash bother was -0.54 for the short-term and -0.38 for the medium-term, indicating moderate reductions in the severity of hot flashes. The interventions also led to a reduction in overall menopausal symptoms (SMD = -0.34, short-term), but no significant effect was observed on hot flash frequency. The psychological therapies were particularly effective in the breast cancer survivor subgroup, who experience more severe and longer-lasting hot flashes than women undergoing natural menopause. No adverse effects were reported from these therapies, and sexual functioning was not significantly impacted by the interventions, though the data on sexual outcomes were limited.
Key implications
The findings suggest that mindfulness-based therapy, cognitive behavioral therapy, and behavior therapy can effectively reduce the severity and bother of hot flashes and overall menopausal symptoms, especially in women who cannot use hormone replacement therapy (HRT), such as breast cancer survivors. These therapies offer a promising non-hormonal treatment option and may improve the quality of life for women experiencing menopause, particularly for those with treatment-induced menopause. Although sexual functioning was not significantly improved in the studies, further research targeting this outcome could provide valuable insights. Clinicians should consider offering these psychological interventions to women seeking relief from menopausal symptoms, particularly those contraindicated for HRT. However, further studies with longer follow-up periods and a focus on sexual outcomes are needed to strengthen the evidence base.
Ospemifene for the treatment of menopausal vaginal dryness, a symptom of the genitourinary syndrome of menopause
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Ospemifene is an effective and safe treatment for menopausal vaginal dryness and dyspareunia, particularly in women with contraindications for estrogen therapy. It improves vaginal health without significantly affecting systemic hormone levels, providing an alternative treatment for genitourinary syndrome of menopause.
What was studied?
This article reviews the efficacy and safety of ospemifene for treating menopausal vaginal dryness, a symptom of the genitourinary syndrome of menopause (GSM). Ospemifene, a selective estrogen receptor modulator (SERM), has been shown to improve vaginal atrophy symptoms, particularly dryness and dyspareunia, in postmenopausal women. The article also highlights the benefits of ospemifene over other treatment options, including vaginal estrogen therapies and non-hormonal lubricants. Ospemifene's role in improving the quality of life for women suffering from GSM symptoms is examined, focusing on its impact on vaginal pH, cell composition, and sexual function.
Who was studied?
The study involved postmenopausal women suffering from moderate to severe symptoms of vulvovaginal atrophy (VVA) as part of the broader genitourinary syndrome of menopause (GSM). Participants were typically aged between 50 and 65 years and were recruited for several clinical trials. Women who participated in the studies had reported moderate to severe vaginal dryness, discomfort, and dyspareunia, all of which are prevalent symptoms of VVA. The study population included those with or without a uterus, and the trials focused on the safety and efficacy of ospemifene in improving these symptoms. The trials also included a variety of demographic factors such as body mass index (BMI) and hormonal therapy use.
Most important findings
The clinical trials assessed ospemifene's effects on several key symptoms of VVA, including vaginal dryness and dyspareunia. In the studies, ospemifene at doses of 60 mg daily demonstrated significant improvement in vaginal moisture and reduction in vaginal pH, which is often elevated in VVA. The treatment led to a dose-dependent increase in superficial vaginal epithelial cells and a reduction in parabasal cells, indicating a positive impact on vaginal health. Compared to placebo, ospemifene was found to significantly alleviate symptoms of vaginal dryness and dyspareunia, with patients reporting a marked improvement in sexual function, measured using the Female Sexual Function Index (FSFI). The most common side effects associated with ospemifene included hot flashes and urinary tract infections, but these were reported at lower frequencies than in placebo-treated groups.
Key implications
Ospemifene presents a promising alternative to traditional estrogen therapies for managing VVA in postmenopausal women, especially for those unable to use systemic or vaginal estrogen due to contraindications like breast cancer. This SERM offers localized treatment that targets the vaginal epithelium without significantly affecting systemic estrogen levels, making it a safer option for many women. Its efficacy in improving both objective and subjective measures of vaginal health is a significant advantage over non-hormonal therapies, such as moisturizers, which only offer temporary symptom relief. Given its favorable safety profile, including the absence of endometrial or breast cancer risks, ospemifene could become a standard treatment option for women with GSM symptoms, improving their quality of life. However, further studies examining the long-term effects and safety of ospemifene are necessary, particularly in populations with varying medical histories.
Hormone therapy for first-line management of menopausal symptoms: Practical recommendations
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) is one of the most effective treatments for women experiencing the symptoms of menopause, particularly vasomotor symptoms such as hot flashes and night sweats. But its benefits go beyond just symptom management. HRT can also play a key role in improving vaginal health by alleviating dryness and discomfort, which are common complaints among women in menopause. Additionally, it helps prevent bone loss, significantly reducing the risk of osteoporosis and fractures, which are more common after menopause. Despite its many benefits, HRT is not one-size-fits-all; it’s essential to tailor treatment based on individual health profiles, taking into account the risks like breast cancer, blood clots, and heart disease that come with prolonged use.
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This review sets a simple plan for menopausal hormone therapy first-line management, favors transdermal routes when risk exists, and backs local therapy for genitourinary symptoms with clear links to vaginal ecosystem health.
What was reviewed?
This review sets out menopausal hormone therapy as first-line management and gives clear, practical steps for safe symptom control in midlife. The authors explain how to match route, dose, and regimen to a woman’s risks and goals and describe oral, transdermal, and vaginal options and explain when to use each. They outline when to choose sequential or continuous combined regimens and how to time a switch to aim for amenorrhea. The review summarizes updated guidance after the early Women’s Health Initiative results and place strong weight on age and time since menopause. They describe how local vaginal therapy eases genitourinary syndrome of menopause and lowers urinary symptoms.
Who was reviewed?
The paper focuses on symptomatic peri- and postmenopausal women, especially those younger than 60 years or within 10 years of menopause. It covers women with obesity, insulin resistance, dyslipidemia, hypertension, smoking, and a personal or family history of venous thromboembolism. It guides care for women with prior hysterectomy who can use estrogen alone and for women who need a progestogen for endometrial protection. In addition, the review addresses women over 60 who continue therapy after careful review or who may start with local routes. It includes women with premature ovarian insufficiency who need earlier and longer replacement. The review provides steps to assess risk, choose a safe route, and adjust dose over time.
Most important findings
The authors support early initiation near menopause for the best balance of benefit and risk and oppose late initiation for primary prevention alone and favor transdermal estradiol when thrombotic or cerebrovascular risk exists because it avoids first-pass hepatic effects that can raise clot risk. They state that breast cancer risk with hormone therapy remains low in absolute terms and rises most with some combined regimens and longer use, while micronized progesterone or dydrogesterone may show a more favorable profile than medroxyprogesterone acetate. They explain that women with a uterus must receive adequate progestogen and may use a levonorgestrel intrauterine system to protect the lining and steady bleeding, which can help in obesity.
The review suggests sequential regimens in the transition and early postmenopause and a later move to continuous combined regimens to achieve amenorrhea. They advise that women over 60 who start therapy should often begin with transdermal or local routes and that vaginal estrogen or DHEA suits genitourinary syndrome of menopause. These local options improve vaginal dryness, dyspareunia, urgency, and post-coital cystitis and likely support a lactobacillus-dominant state and lower vaginal pH, which links to fewer urinary infections, although the review does not report taxa. They highlight the need for shared decisions, regular review, and lifestyle change alongside therapy.
Key implications
Clinicians should start with the woman’s goals and risks, aim to begin near menopause, and prefer transdermal estradiol when thrombotic, metabolic, or cerebrovascular risks exist and pair estrogen with an appropriate progestogen when the uterus is intact and consider a levonorgestrel intrauterine system for endometrial protection and bleeding control. Clinicians should address genitourinary syndrome of menopause with low-dose vaginal estrogen or DHEA to restore comfort and urinary health and record vaginal symptom relief and urinary tract infection events as proxy microbiome outcomes. These steps align symptom relief, safety, and vaginal ecosystem support in daily practice.
Compositional and functional features of the female premenopausal and postmenopausal gut microbiota
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Menopause is linked to reduced gut microbiome diversity, loss of beneficial Firmicutes and Roseburia, and increased risk-associated taxa and metabolic pathways. These changes may contribute to higher metabolic and immune disease risk, highlighting the microbiome's potential as a therapeutic and biomarker target.
What was studied?
This original research article investigated compositional and functional differences in the gut microbiota between premenopausal and postmenopausal women using a metagenome-wide association study (MWAS). Shotgun metagenomic sequencing of fecal samples enabled the authors to compare not only the taxonomic diversity and abundance of gut microbes but also the metabolic modules and biochemical pathways associated with the gut microbiome in each group. The study aimed to clarify how menopause and the associated decline in endogenous estrogen affect the gut microbiome and its potential implications for metabolic and immune health risks in postmenopausal women. The research also explored how specific microbial taxa and their metabolic activities might contribute to disease risk profiles characteristic of postmenopausal status.
Who was studied?
The study cohort comprised 24 premenopausal and 24 postmenopausal women, carefully matched for age and body mass index (BMI) to control for confounding variables. All postmenopausal individuals experienced natural menopause and had not used antibiotics for at least one month prior to sample collection. Additional exclusion criteria included a history of chronic or current infection, malignancy, or recent antibiotic use. Clinical data collected included bone mineral density (BMD), blood lipid profiles, lifestyle, diet, and exercise habits. No significant differences were observed between the groups in these clinical and lifestyle factors, ensuring that the observed microbiome differences could be attributed primarily to menopausal status.
Most important findings
Postmenopausal women exhibited significantly reduced gut microbiome richness and diversity at the gene, species, and genus levels, as measured by Shannon index and taxon counts. Taxonomic shifts included depletion of Firmicutes and Roseburia species and enrichment of Bacteroidetes and the toluene-producing genus Tolumonas in postmenopausal women. Functionally, the pentose phosphate pathway, a key source of cellular antioxidant capacity, was more prevalent in premenopausal women, while metabolic modules involved in homocysteine and cysteine biosynthesis, glycolysis, and amino acid degradation were enriched in postmenopausal women. Notably, Tolumonas negatively correlated with BMD, suggesting a potential link with osteoporosis risk. The study also highlighted that higher homocysteine biosynthesis in the postmenopausal gut microbiome may contribute to increased cardiovascular risk. These compositional and functional shifts suggest that menopause leads to a gut microbial environment less supportive of antioxidant defense and potentially more conducive to metabolic and immune dysfunction.
Key implications
The findings underscore menopause-associated gut microbiome alterations as potential contributors to increased risks of metabolic, cardiovascular, and bone diseases in postmenopausal women. Reduced microbial diversity and depletion of beneficial taxa such as Roseburia may compromise host metabolism and immune function, while enrichment of taxa and pathways linked to harmful metabolites (e.g., homocysteine, toluene) may exacerbate disease risk. These insights suggest that the gut microbiome represents a promising therapeutic target for interventions (e.g., specific probiotics, dietary modulation, or fecal microbiota transplantation) aimed at improving metabolic and immune health outcomes in postmenopausal women. Moreover, identified microbial and functional signatures may serve as valuable biomarkers for risk stratification or monitoring of menopause-related disease progression.
The gut microbiota in menopause: Is there a role for prebiotic and probiotic solutions?
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Menopause alters gut microbiota composition and estrogen metabolism, contributing to symptoms and disease risks. Prebiotic and probiotic interventions show promise for symptom relief and metabolic health improvement.
What was reviewed?
This review article explores the role of the gut microbiota in menopause and evaluates the potential of prebiotic and probiotic interventions as therapeutic strategies for managing menopausal symptoms. It summarizes current evidence on how the menopausal transition influences gut microbial diversity and composition, especially with sex hormone fluctuations, and how these microbial changes may contribute to common menopause-related conditions such as metabolic disorders, osteoporosis, inflammation, and cognitive decline.
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesizes data from a wide range of studies, including human observational cohorts, animal models, and clinical trials involving peri- and postmenopausal women. It covers studies investigating the gut microbiota composition across different menopausal stages and examines interventions with prebiotics and probiotics designed to modulate the microbiome in menopausal populations. Additionally, it includes mechanistic insights from rodent models and discusses potential translational applications for human health.
Most important findings
Menopause induces significant shifts in gut microbiota characterized by decreased diversity and a shift towards a composition resembling that of age-matched men, including reductions in beneficial bacteria like Roseburia and Lachnospira and increases in potentially detrimental taxa such as Bacteroidetes and Tolumonas. These microbial changes correlate with altered estrogen metabolism through the estrobolome, a collection of bacterial genes encoding β-glucuronidase and sulfatase enzymes that reactivate estrogens, impacting systemic estrogen levels and menopausal symptoms.
Emerging evidence indicates that gut dysbiosis during menopause may play a significant role in driving increased intestinal permeability, chronic systemic inflammation, and metabolic disturbances. Various prebiotic fibers, such as flaxseed and soybean fiber, and specific probiotic strains, including Lactobacillus acidophilus, L. gasseri, and L. rhamnosus, have demonstrated potential in alleviating menopausal symptoms. These interventions appear to work by enhancing gut microbial diversity, strengthening intestinal barrier function, modulating systemic inflammatory responses, and influencing estrogen metabolism. Collectively, these findings suggest that targeting the gut microbiota may offer a promising adjunct or alternative approach to managing menopause-associated health challenges.
Key implications
This review highlights the gut microbiota as an important and potentially modifiable factor influencing a wide range of menopause-associated health challenges. Accumulating evidence suggests that targeted modulation of the gut microbiome through prebiotic and probiotic interventions offers a promising non-hormonal therapeutic strategy to alleviate menopausal symptoms and manage related metabolic, inflammatory, and psychological conditions. However, to translate these findings into effective clinical practice, future research should prioritize elucidating the underlying causal mechanisms linking gut microbial alterations to menopausal health outcomes. In addition, there is a critical need to identify specific microbial strains, functional pathways, or metabolites that mediate these beneficial effects. Developing personalized, evidence-based microbiome-targeted therapies could ultimately enhance long-term health, reduce disease risk, and improve the overall quality of life for menopausal women.
Comparison of Gabapentin with Estrogen for treatment of hot flashes in post-menopausal women
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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This study demonstrates that gabapentin 300 mg/day is as effective as estrogen 0.625 mg/day for reducing hot flashes in post-menopausal women. It provides a viable non-hormonal alternative with fewer side effects, making it a good option for women unable or unwilling to take estrogen.
What was studied?
This study aimed to compare the effectiveness of gabapentin and estrogen in reducing the frequency and severity of hot flashes in post-menopausal women. The research included a clinical trial that randomized 100 post-menopausal women to receive either 100 mg/day or 300 mg/day of gabapentin, or 0.625 mg/day of conjugated estrogen for 12 weeks. The study measured the frequency and severity of hot flashes at baseline, 4 weeks, and 12 weeks of treatment to determine which treatment provided the greatest reduction in symptoms. The trial also assessed the side effects associated with each treatment, including gastrointestinal discomfort and other adverse effects.
Who was studied?
The study included 100 post-menopausal women between the ages of 45 and 65, all of whom had experienced moderate to severe hot flashes for at least 2 months. The women were recruited from outpatient clinics at Isfahan University Hospitals between April 2008 and February 2009. Exclusion criteria included a history of cardiovascular, neurological, liver, gallbladder, or chronic renal diseases, as well as those who had been on estrogen or gabapentin therapy in the previous 3 months. The study population was homogenous, consisting of white, married, non-smoking women with no concurrent non-hormonal treatments for hot flashes.
Most important findings
The study found that both gabapentin 300 mg/day and conjugated estrogen 0.625 mg/day were equally effective in significantly reducing both the frequency and severity of hot flashes. After 12 weeks of treatment, the group receiving gabapentin 300 mg/day showed a 64.7% reduction in hot flash frequency and a 62.2% reduction in severity, while the estrogen group showed a 62.4% reduction in frequency and a 67.3% reduction in severity. In contrast, the group receiving gabapentin 100 mg/day showed only a 38.5% reduction in frequency and a 23.9% reduction in severity, which was significantly lower than both the higher dose of gabapentin and estrogen. The side effects were minimal in both gabapentin groups, with only mild gastrointestinal discomfort reported in 8% of patients in each gabapentin group.
Key implications
The findings suggest that gabapentin 300 mg/day is an effective alternative to estrogen for managing hot flashes in post-menopausal women, particularly for those who cannot take hormone therapy due to contraindications or preference. While estrogen remains the most commonly used and effective treatment for hot flashes, gabapentin offers a non-hormonal alternative with fewer severe side effects. The study supports the use of gabapentin for those who do not respond to other non-hormonal treatments or prefer to avoid estrogen, but it also highlights the need for further research to determine the long-term efficacy and safety of gabapentin at different dosages. Clinicians should consider starting with a low dose of gabapentin (300 mg/day) and carefully monitor for adverse effects, particularly in patients with a history of dizziness or other neurological symptoms.
Complementary and Alternative Medicine for Menopause
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Mind-body therapies like hypnosis effectively reduce menopausal hot flashes; natural products and whole-system CAM approaches show mixed evidence. More high-quality research is needed.
What was reviewed?
This comprehensive critical review examined the effectiveness and safety of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) interventions for managing menopausal symptoms. It focused on mind-body practices, natural products, and whole-system approaches such as traditional Chinese medicine and acupuncture. The review synthesized evidence from randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and systematic reviews published through early 2017, aiming to clarify CAM's role in alleviating vasomotor symptoms (VMS), mood disturbances, sexual dysfunction, sleep problems, and other common menopausal complaints.
Who was reviewed?
The review encompassed a diverse cohort of menopausal and postmenopausal women, including healthy individuals and breast cancer survivors, drawn from multiple RCTs across various countries. Participants typically experienced vasomotor symptoms, mood disorders, sleep disruption, and quality-of-life impairments. The literature included trials with sample sizes ranging from small pilot studies to larger RCTs, focusing on CAM modalities used either as standalone treatments or adjuncts to conventional therapies.
Most important findings
The review identified that mind-body interventions, particularly hypnosis, consistently demonstrated clinically significant reductions in hot flash frequency and severity, with some studies showing up to 74% reduction in subjective hot flashes. Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) and relaxation techniques showed potential benefits in reducing distress and improving quality of life but were less effective in decreasing hot flash frequency. Mindfulness-based stress reduction and yoga may alleviate psychological symptoms and improve sleep quality but lack strong evidence for vasomotor symptom reduction.
Among natural products, evidence was mixed and inconclusive. Black cohosh showed inconsistent benefits, with some studies indicating no significant effect on menopausal symptoms, while combined preparations with other herbs appeared more promising. Phytoestrogens (soy, red clover) displayed variable results, often failing to achieve clinically meaningful improvements in vasomotor symptoms. Other supplements like vitamin E and evening primrose oil lacked robust evidence for efficacy.
Key implications
This review supports the use of mind-body interventions, especially hypnosis, as effective and safe CAM options for managing vasomotor and psychological menopausal symptoms. Other CAM therapies show potential but require further rigorous trials with standardized protocols to establish efficacy and safety. Healthcare providers should actively discuss CAM use with patients to provide integrative care and reduce risks from unregulated treatments. Incorporating microbiome-focused research may enhance understanding of CAM mechanisms and guide personalized therapeutic strategies for menopause.
Onset of natural menopause in African American women
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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This prospective study of 17,070 African American women found smoking most strongly predicts earlier menopause, while higher BMI and oral contraceptive use are protective. Perceived racism showed suggestive but inconsistent associations with menopause timing, underscoring the need for further research on psychosocial stressors and reproductive aging.
What was studied?
This large prospective cohort study investigated predictors of the onset of natural menopause among African American women, with particular attention to the potential role of perceived experiences of racism. The researchers aimed to clarify how demographic, reproductive, lifestyle, and psychosocial factors, including experiences of racism, affect the timing of natural menopause. Data were drawn from the Black Women’s Health Study, with baseline and follow-up information (including exposures and outcomes) collected by mailed questionnaires between 1995 and 1999. Using Cox proportional hazards regression, the study evaluated associations between various risk factors (smoking, body mass index [BMI], oral contraceptive use, parity, education, physical activity, age at menarche, unilateral oophorectomy, and perceived racism) and the incidence of natural menopause over a four-year period.
Who was studied?
The analytic sample included 17,070 African American women in the United States who were aged 35 to 55 years and premenopausal at baseline in 1995. Participants were drawn from the broader Black Women’s Health Study, which initially enrolled 64,500 women via mailed questionnaires. Inclusion criteria for this analysis required premenopausal status at baseline and completion of at least one follow-up questionnaire in 1997 or 1999. The cohort was well-educated, with the majority having completed high school or higher education, making the results particularly applicable to similarly educated African American women in the U.S. Generalizability to women with less education or lower socioeconomic status may be limited.
Most important findings
The study found that current smoking was the strongest predictor of earlier natural menopause, with a hazard ratio of 1.43 for current smokers and 1.21 for ex-smokers compared to never smokers. There was a clear dose-response relationship between smoking intensity (pack years) and risk of earlier menopause. Higher BMI was inversely associated with risk: women with a BMI ≥30 had a 22% lower risk compared to those with a BMI of 20–24. Use of oral contraceptives for at least one year also delayed menopause. Other reproductive factors and education were not significantly associated with menopause onset. Unilateral oophorectomy was associated with earlier menopause only among younger women. For perceived racism, most hazard ratios were elevated, but few reached statistical significance. The most notable was a 32% increased risk for women who experienced being treated as "not intelligent" monthly and a 23% increased risk for those thinking about their race daily.
Key implications
This study underscores that similar to White women, smoking is the most consistent and modifiable risk factor for earlier menopause among African American women, with implications for counseling and preventive health. Higher BMI and oral contraceptive use appear protective against early menopause. The findings regarding racism are suggestive but not definitive; while some associations were present, they were generally modest and inconsistent, indicating a need for further research on psychosocial stressors and reproductive aging in this population. Clinicians should be aware of these factors when discussing reproductive health and menopause timing with African American women but should recognize that current evidence does not support strong, actionable links between perceived racism and menopause onset.
Assessing the Impact of (Poly)phenol-Rich Foods on Cardiometabolic Risk in Postmenopausal Women
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Dietary intake of (poly)phenol-rich foods modestly improves cardiometabolic risk factors and reduces oxidative stress in postmenopausal women, with gut microbiome variability influencing outcomes.
What was studied?
This study conducted a dietary intervention to evaluate the effects of daily consumption of (poly)phenol-rich foods on cardiometabolic risk biomarkers in postmenopausal women. Over two months, participants supplemented their diets with specific foods rich in (poly)phenols, 85% cocoa dark chocolate, green tea, and a fruit juice blend (pomegranate, orange, and berries), to assess impacts on oxidative stress, inflammation, lipid profiles, blood pressure, and endothelial function.
Who was studied?
The study recruited 25 postmenopausal women aged 45 to 65 years from Murcia, Spain, with at least 12 months of amenorrhea, overweight or obesity, and at least one cardiometabolic risk marker such as high body fat or waist-to-hip ratio. Participants followed their usual Mediterranean-based diet during the trial and were free from endocrine, hepatic, or other severe pathologies. Smoking and restrictive diet users were excluded to avoid confounders.
Most important findings
The intervention provided a daily total of 1226 µmol (poly)phenols, mainly flavan-3-ols, hydrolyzable tannins, flavanones, anthocyanins, and phenolic acids, with dark chocolate contributing the most antioxidant capacity. After two months, participants showed slight but consistent improvements in multiple cardiometabolic parameters, including reduced systolic and diastolic blood pressure, decreased triglycerides and very-low-density lipoprotein cholesterol, and improvements in insulin resistance indices (HOMA-IR). Oxidative stress biomarker thiobarbituric acid-reacting substances (TBARs) significantly decreased, indicating a lowered oxidative burden. Additionally, improvements were observed in endothelial function biomarkers (sICAM-1, sVCAM-1) and anti-inflammatory adiponectin, though these changes were modest and subject to high inter-individual variability. The gut microbiome’s role is implicated as a key factor influencing (poly)phenol metabolism, affecting the bioavailability and subsequent health benefits of these compounds.
Key implications
This study supports the potential of dietary (poly)phenol-rich foods to ameliorate cardiometabolic risk factors during menopause by reducing oxidative stress and improving vascular and inflammatory markers. Given the variability in response linked to gut microbiome activity, personalized nutrition approaches that consider microbiome composition may optimize therapeutic effects. These findings highlight the importance of non-pharmacological, diet-based interventions as adjuncts or alternatives to hormone replacement therapy for managing menopause-associated cardiometabolic risk.
Interaction of metals, menopause and COVID-19: A review of the literature
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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This review details how environmental metal exposures influence menopause onset, symptoms, and COVID-19 outcomes, emphasizing the potential for trace mineral supplementation and the need for monitoring heavy metal and micronutrient status in menopausal women.
What was reviewed?
This review article comprehensively examines the interplay between metal exposures, menopause, and COVID-19. The authors synthesize current evidence on how environmental and dietary exposure to metals, including heavy metals such as arsenic, cadmium, mercury, and lead, influences the onset and course of menopause and, in turn, how these factors may impact susceptibility to and outcomes from COVID-19. The review highlights the hormonal, metabolic, and immunological changes during menopause and how these are modulated by metal exposures, with a particular focus on trace minerals’ role in immune competence and the severity of SARS-CoV-2 infection.
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesizes data from epidemiological studies, clinical research, and mechanistic investigations involving women at various menopausal stages across diverse populations exposed to environmental metals. While some cited studies focus on the general female population, others investigate specific cohorts such as women in polluted regions, those with occupational metal exposure, or patients with COVID-19. Both human and relevant animal studies are included to elucidate pathogenic mechanisms, and supporting data from male and pediatric populations are referenced for context.
Most important findings
The review identifies several key microbiome-relevant associations and signatures. High blood levels of heavy metals, including arsenic, cadmium, lead, and mercury, are linked to disruptions in endocrine function, earlier or altered onset of menopause, and increased risk of age-related diseases such as osteoporosis and cardiovascular disease. For instance, arsenic exposure is associated with an earlier menopause, while cadmium can mimic estrogenic effects but also disrupt ovarian function and the timing of menopause. In postmenopausal women, mobilization of bone lead increases blood lead levels, potentially exacerbating toxic effects. Metal exposures are further implicated in modulating the immune response to SARS-CoV-2, with higher levels of toxic metals correlating with impaired respiratory function and more severe COVID-19 outcomes. Conversely, deficiencies in essential trace elements are associated with increased COVID-19 severity and poorer recovery. The review notes potential benefits of supplementation with zinc, magnesium, and selenium, especially in postmenopausal women, to support both immune function and mitigate the toxic effects of heavy metals.
Key implications
For clinicians, these findings underscore the importance of monitoring metal exposures and trace element status in menopausal and postmenopausal women, particularly in the context of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. Screening for and addressing deficiencies in zinc, selenium, and magnesium may be warranted to reduce vulnerability to severe COVID-19 and counteract the deleterious effects of heavy metals. The review also suggests that environmental and occupational history should be part of menopausal risk assessment, and that hormone replacement therapy may have added benefits in supporting immune resilience during viral infections. The need for further research into the interaction between environmental pollutants, metal metabolism, menopausal transition, and the gut microbiome is highlighted, especially for the development of personalized interventions and microbiome-informed risk stratification.
Rethinking Menopausal Hormone Therapy: For Whom, What, When and How long?
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
•
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) is one of the most effective treatments for women experiencing the symptoms of menopause, particularly vasomotor symptoms such as hot flashes and night sweats. But its benefits go beyond just symptom management. HRT can also play a key role in improving vaginal health by alleviating dryness and discomfort, which are common complaints among women in menopause. Additionally, it helps prevent bone loss, significantly reducing the risk of osteoporosis and fractures, which are more common after menopause. Despite its many benefits, HRT is not one-size-fits-all; it’s essential to tailor treatment based on individual health profiles, taking into account the risks like breast cancer, blood clots, and heart disease that come with prolonged use.
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This review offers updated guidance on the use of menopausal hormone therapy, highlighting its benefits when started early, particularly for women with low cardiovascular risk. It stresses the importance of individualized care and decision-making when considering HT for managing menopausal symptoms.
What was studied?
The review explores the use of menopausal hormone therapy (HT) with a focus on its impact on cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk. It discusses the timing and formulation of HT, examining how these factors influence the safety and efficacy of HT in managing menopausal symptoms such as vasomotor symptoms (VMS). The study includes a thorough examination of evidence from key clinical trials, such as the Women's Health Initiative (WHI), and provides updated guidelines for the use of HT in symptomatic postmenopausal women, particularly those with varying levels of cardiovascular risk.
Who was studied?
The review primarily focuses on postmenopausal women, particularly those experiencing VMS, which include symptoms like hot flashes and night sweats. It also considers women with different levels of cardiovascular risk, including those with low CVD risk, those with established heart disease, and those with comorbid conditions such as obesity, diabetes, hypertension, and dyslipidemia. These women were included in clinical studies that assessed the effects of HT on cardiovascular health and menopausal symptoms.
Most important findings
The study found that HT is highly effective for managing menopausal symptoms, particularly VMS. However, its safety and efficacy are influenced by the timing of initiation and the method of administration. Starting HT early in menopause, particularly before the age of 60 or within 10 years of menopause, appears to have a protective effect on cardiovascular health, reducing risks compared to starting it later. Transdermal HT, which is delivered through the skin, is shown to be safer than oral HT in reducing the risk of venous thromboembolism (VTE) and improving lipid profiles. The benefits of HT on cardiovascular risk are less evident for women who start HT more than 10 years after menopause, and they may face an increased risk of stroke.
Key implications
The findings suggest that HT can be a safe and effective treatment for menopausal symptoms when used in the right population. Early initiation of HT, particularly using transdermal formulations, is crucial for maximizing its benefits and minimizing risks. The review emphasizes the importance of individualized care for menopausal women, particularly those with existing cardiovascular risk factors, and advocates for shared decision-making between clinicians and patients to weigh the potential benefits and risks of HT.
Menopausal Changes in the Microbiome—A Review Focused on the Genitourinary Microbiome
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Menopause alters the gut, vaginal, and urinary microbiomes, decreasing Lactobacillus and increasing microbial diversity. These changes contribute to GSM, rUTI, and urinary symptoms. Hormone therapy and probiotics partially restore healthy microbiota, offering new avenues for genitourinary symptom management in postmenopausal women.
What was reviewed?
This article presents a comprehensive review of the effects of menopause on the female microbiome, with a specific focus on the genitourinary microbiome, encompassing the gut, vaginal, and urinary microbial communities. The review synthesizes evidence from recent clinical studies, observational data, and randomized controlled trials to elucidate the interplay between hormonal changes during menopause and alterations in these microbiomes. It particularly emphasizes the urinary microbiome, a relatively underexplored area, and its potential associations with common postmenopausal conditions such as genitourinary syndrome of menopause (GSM), recurrent urinary tract infections (rUTI), and lower urinary tract symptoms.
Who was reviewed?
The review includes data and findings from studies involving premenopausal and postmenopausal women of varying ages and ethnic backgrounds. The populations studied encompass healthy women, women with menopause-related symptoms, and those with urinary tract disorders, including rUTI, overactive bladder (OAB), interstitial cystitis/bladder pain syndrome (IC/BPS), and GSM. Subjects in the included studies range from healthy controls to those receiving hormone therapy, probiotics, or other microbiome-targeted interventions. The review draws on both cross-sectional and longitudinal analyses, as well as clinical trials from diverse geographic locations.
Most important findings
Menopause induces significant shifts in the gut, vaginal, and urinary microbiomes, largely driven by estrogen decline. In the gut, although phylum-level changes are inconsistent, postmenopausal women show increased Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes ratios, higher abundance of genera like Lachnospira, Roseburia, and Bilophila, and changes in short-chain fatty acid (SCFA) profiles. The vaginal microbiome becomes less dominated by Lactobacillus species post-menopause, with increased prevalence of anaerobes such as Gardnerella, Prevotella, Atopobium, and Finegoldia. Notably, hormone therapy and probiotic interventions can partially restore Lactobacillus dominance and lower vaginal pH—benefits linked to symptom improvement.
The urinary microbiome also undergoes notable changes: postmenopausal women exhibit increased alpha diversity and reduced Lactobacillus abundance, with more Gardnerella, Prevotella, and Mobiluncus. The review highlights a substantial overlap between vaginal and urinary microbiomes, underscoring the interconnectedness of these sites. Both local estrogen therapy and specific probiotic administration have shown promise in restoring a healthier microbiome and reducing infection risk.
Key implications
Understanding menopause-related microbiome alterations is critical for developing targeted strategies to manage genitourinary health in postmenopausal women. The decline in Lactobacillus and increased diversity in the urinary and vaginal niches underpin higher rates of GSM, rUTI, and urinary symptoms. Interventions such as hormone therapy and probiotics can beneficially modulate the microbiome, alleviate symptoms, and lower infection risk. Clinicians should recognize the interdependence of the gut, vaginal, and urinary microbiomes in postmenopausal women and consider microbiome-focused therapies as adjuncts to conventional management. Further research into the urinary microbiome’s role in disease and its manipulation remains an urgent clinical need.
Socioeconomic and Lifestyle Factors Affecting Age at Natural Menopause: Global Systematic Review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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This systematic review and meta-analysis reveals clear links between socioeconomic status, smoking, and age at natural menopause, with significant regional variation. These factors should inform clinical and microbiome research on menopausal timing and its health implications.
What was reviewed?
This systematic review and meta-analysis synthesized data from 46 community-based studies across 24 countries, assessing the influence of socioeconomic position (SEP) and lifestyle factors on age at natural menopause (ANM). The review sought to determine overall mean ANM globally, compare regional differences, and quantify the impact of SEP (education, occupation, income) and modifiable lifestyle factors (smoking, body mass index [BMI], and physical activity) on menopausal timing. The meta-analyses incorporated both published and previously unpublished results from the Australian Longitudinal Study on Women’s Health (ALSWH), applying rigorous inclusion criteria and harmonizing variable definitions to maximize comparability.
Who was reviewed?
The review included a diverse range of women from 46 population-based cohorts across six continents, with total sample sizes in the tens of thousands. Study populations varied in age, ethnicity, and region (Africa, Asia, Australia, Europe, Latin America, Middle East, USA). All included studies excluded women with surgical menopause and largely defined natural menopause according to World Health Organization criteria. Most studies were cross-sectional, with some prospective cohorts; ethnic details were inconsistently reported. The ALSWH sample (n≈7,500) contributed prospective, nationally representative data from Australia.
Most important findings
The pooled mean age at natural menopause was 48.8 years, but substantial regional variation was noted: ANM was lowest in African, Latin American, Asian, and Middle Eastern countries, and highest in Europe, Australia, and the USA. Socioeconomic indicators showed a clear, dose-response association with ANM. Higher education and occupation levels were significantly associated with later menopause, and these effects were more pronounced in developed regions. Smoking was robustly associated with earlier menopause, advancing ANM by nearly one year, with a stronger effect in developed regions. Overweight status and moderate to high physical activity were weakly associated with later ANM, but findings were inconsistent and attenuated after adjustment for confounders. No consistent association was observed between income and ANM. Importantly, the review highlights that region, SEP, and lifestyle factors together explained a substantial portion of the observed heterogeneity in menopausal timing.
Key implications
This review confirms that ANM is not only regionally variable but also socially and behaviorally patterned. Lower education and occupation levels and smoking are associated with earlier menopause, suggesting that modifiable social and lifestyle factors substantially influence reproductive aging and may affect long-term health risks (e.g., osteoporosis, cardiovascular disease). These findings underscore the importance of incorporating SEP and lifestyle factors in clinical risk stratification for postmenopausal health. For microbiome research and clinical databases, the strong associations of SEP and smoking with ANM suggest these variables should be considered key contextual factors when interpreting or designing studies on menopausal microbiome signatures. The inconclusive associations for BMI and physical activity highlight the need for further, harmonized investigations, ideally using pooled individual-level data from prospective cohorts.
Risks, Benefits, and Treatment Modalities of Menopausal Hormone Therapy: Current Concepts
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
•
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) is one of the most effective treatments for women experiencing the symptoms of menopause, particularly vasomotor symptoms such as hot flashes and night sweats. But its benefits go beyond just symptom management. HRT can also play a key role in improving vaginal health by alleviating dryness and discomfort, which are common complaints among women in menopause. Additionally, it helps prevent bone loss, significantly reducing the risk of osteoporosis and fractures, which are more common after menopause. Despite its many benefits, HRT is not one-size-fits-all; it’s essential to tailor treatment based on individual health profiles, taking into account the risks like breast cancer, blood clots, and heart disease that come with prolonged use.
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The study emphasizes the risks and benefits of menopausal hormone therapy in managing vasomotor symptoms, osteoporosis, and cardiovascular health. It highlights the importance of timing, formulation, and route of administration in optimizing therapy for individual patients.
What was studied?
The study reviewed menopausal hormone therapy (MHT), focusing on the risks, benefits, and treatment modalities related to managing menopausal symptoms like vasomotor symptoms (VMS) and osteoporosis. It evaluated different formulations, routes of administration, and the clinical impact of MHT on cardiovascular health, bone health, and the risk of conditions like breast cancer. The review highlighted how MHT's safety and efficacy vary depending on timing, formulation, and patient health status, particularly in relation to the onset of menopause.
Who was studied?
The research examined women undergoing menopause, particularly those who are experiencing vasomotor symptoms, such as hot flashes and night sweats. The study included women within 10 years of menopause and those under 60 years of age, as this group tends to experience the most favorable outcomes with MHT. It also considered women with specific risks, including those with obesity, hypertension, or cardiovascular concerns, and assessed their response to both estrogen-only and combined estrogen-progestogen therapy. In addition, the study touched on the effects of MHT in older women and in those with a history of breast cancer or other estrogen-sensitive conditions.
Most important findings
The study found that MHT remains the most effective treatment for vasomotor symptoms, with significant improvements in the frequency and severity of hot flashes and night sweats. The review highlighted that early initiation of MHT, particularly within 10 years of menopause, has a favorable impact on cardiovascular health and bone health. The timing hypothesis suggests that initiating MHT closer to menopause may help reduce the risk of coronary artery disease and improve lipid profiles. The risks associated with MHT, including cardiovascular events and breast cancer, tend to increase with age and the duration of hormone use. Notably, transdermal estrogen was found to have a lower risk of venous thromboembolism and stroke compared to oral forms. For women with an intact uterus, progestogen therapy is necessary to prevent endometrial hyperplasia and cancer. The review also examined vaginal estrogen for genitourinary symptoms and found that it is effective for treating vaginal dryness and discomfort, with minimal systemic absorption. The overall benefit-risk profile of MHT is most favorable when it is used early in menopause and for women without contraindications such as a history of estrogen-sensitive cancers.
Key implications
Clinicians should tailor MHT based on the patient's age, timing since menopause, and risk profile. Transdermal estrogen is preferred for women with cardiovascular risks as it avoids first-pass metabolism, reducing the risk of thrombotic events. Progestogen should be added to estrogen therapy in women with a uterus to prevent endometrial cancer. Non-hormonal treatments are an option for women who cannot use hormones or prefer alternatives, and these may include medications like SSRIs/SNRIs and gabapentinoids. Vaginal estrogen remains the most effective treatment for genitourinary symptoms. For women under 60 or within 10 years of menopause, MHT provides substantial benefits in managing symptoms and preventing osteoporosis, while minimizing risks when used appropriately. The clinical decision to start, continue, or discontinue MHT should involve shared decision-making between the clinician and patient, incorporating lifestyle changes and regular monitoring for cardiovascular health and breast cancer risk.
Primary ovarian insufficiency: Update on clinical and genetic findings
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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This review explores the genetic and clinical factors contributing to primary ovarian insufficiency (POI), highlighting key genes and the importance of early diagnosis, fertility preservation, and hormone replacement therapy.
What was studied?
This review investigates the clinical and genetic aspects of primary ovarian insufficiency (POI), a condition in which the ovarian follicles fail to function properly before the age of 40. The study focuses on the genetic background of POI, including its heritable nature and the various genes involved in both syndromic and non-syndromic forms of the condition. The research also examines the various factors that influence ovarian reserve depletion and dysfunction, such as the impact of genetic mutations in X-linked and autosomal genes. Additionally, the study looks at the increasing importance of POI as women delay conception and highlights the challenges it poses to women’s fertility and general health.
Who was studied?
The review focuses on the genetic causes and clinical presentation of POI in women under the age of 40. It includes both idiopathic and genetically predisposed cases, with a focus on women experiencing primary amenorrhea or secondary amenorrhea due to ovarian dysfunction. The study highlights the role of genetic factors, particularly X chromosome-linked defects, and examines the prevalence of POI in women with familial histories of early menopause. The research also covers the rising incidence of POI in younger women, which is becoming an increasingly important clinical challenge.
Most important findings
The review highlights the significant genetic contribution to POI, with many cases being heritable and associated with mutations in specific genes. X-linked defects, including the FMR1 premutation, are commonly linked to POI, especially in familial cases. The study identifies key genes involved in folliculogenesis, such as FIGLA, BMP15, and GDF9, which play crucial roles in ovarian development. Other genetic factors, such as mutations in the SYCE1 and NR5A1 genes, also contribute to POI. Additionally, the review discusses the clinical presentation of POI, which varies widely, and emphasizes the need for early diagnosis and effective management. Fertility preservation strategies and hormone replacement therapy (HRT) are important for managing the condition and improving quality of life.
Key implications
Clinicians must be aware of the multifactorial nature of POI, with a strong genetic component influencing its development. The identification of key genes responsible for POI provides a pathway for early genetic screening and diagnosis, enabling targeted treatment plans. Fertility preservation is a key concern, as many women with POI face challenges with conception. Early intervention with HRT can mitigate some of the long-term health effects, including cardiovascular disease and osteoporosis. Moreover, understanding the genetic basis of POI can improve counseling for women at risk and guide personalized treatment approaches.
Estrogenic Plants: to Prevent Neurodegeneration and Memory Loss and Other Symptoms in Women After Menopause
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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This review details the estrogenic activity, neuroprotective effects, and clinical relevance of medicinal plants for menopausal women, highlighting their potential to prevent cognitive decline and neurodegeneration via microbiome-associated mechanisms.
What was reviewed?
This comprehensive review synthesized current evidence on medicinal plants and natural compounds with estrogenic activity, focusing on their potential to prevent neurodegeneration, memory loss, and other menopause-related symptoms in women. The authors conducted an extensive literature search using SCOPUS, PubMed, and ScienceDirect, focusing on plants with established estrogenic activity. The paper details the pharmacological effects of these plants and their phytoestrogenic constituents, highlighting mechanisms involving estrogen receptor modulation, antioxidant, and anti-inflammatory actions. Special emphasis is placed on the potential of these compounds to alleviate cognitive deficits during menopause and aging, as well as their roles in preventing or treating neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's and Parkinson's disease.
Who was reviewed?
The review encompassed a wide range of studies, including preclinical research in cellular and animal models, as well as clinical trials and meta-analyses involving postmenopausal women. The included studies span healthy female and male subjects, women undergoing hormone replacement therapy (HRT), postmenopausal women, and patients with neurodegenerative conditions. The botanical scope was global, drawing on traditional medicinal plants from Europe, Asia, and the Americas, with particular focus on species commonly used in traditional Chinese medicine and Western herbalism.
Most important findings
The review identifies a diverse array of estrogenic plants, such as soy, red clover, black cohosh, sage (Salvia officinalis), ginger, and others, that contain phytoestrogens capable of binding to and modulating estrogen receptors. These plants offer cognitive and neuroprotective benefits through multiple mechanisms: selective estrogen receptor modulation, antioxidant effects, and anti-inflammatory actions. For instance, soy isoflavones, red clover, and Lespedeza bicolor have demonstrated memory-enhancing effects and reduction of amyloid-beta pathology in animal models of Alzheimer's disease. Some clinical trials report improvement in menopausal symptoms, quality of life, and cognitive performance with phytoestrogen supplementation, although results are sometimes inconsistent.
Key implications
The findings underscore the promise of estrogenic plants as safer, potentially effective alternatives to conventional HRT for managing menopausal symptoms and reducing neurodegenerative disease risk. Their selective activity on estrogen receptors, along with concurrent antioxidant and anti-inflammatory effects, positions them as multi-target interventions for aging-related cognitive decline. Importantly for clinical practice, these botanicals may offer neuroprotection without the increased risk of cancer and cardiovascular disease associated with conventional HRT, especially when used early in menopause. The review highlights the need for further high-quality, long-term clinical trials to clarify efficacy, optimal timing, and safety.
What’s in a name: are menopausal “hot flashes” a symptom of menopause or a manifestation of neurovascular dysregulation?
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal hot flashes are one of the most common and disruptive symptoms that women experience during the transition to menopause. Characterized by sudden sensations of heat, sweating, and flushing, hot flashes can significantly affect a woman’s quality of life, causing sleep disturbances, mood swings, and even long-term health consequences. Understanding the complex mechanisms behind hot flashes, as well as the role of microbiome-targeted therapies, offers new avenues for improving menopausal health.
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The article redefines menopausal hot flashes as signs of underlying neurovascular dysregulation, linking them to chronic conditions like cardiovascular disease and cognitive decline. It advocates for more targeted, personalized treatments and further research into the physiological mechanisms behind these symptoms.
What was studied?
This article examines the concept of menopausal hot flashes and night sweats, proposing that they should not simply be viewed as "symptoms of menopause" but rather as manifestations of underlying pathophysiological processes, particularly autonomic neurovascular dysregulation. The authors review evidence linking these vasomotor disturbances to broader health concerns, such as cardiovascular disease, cognitive decline, and sleep disturbances, suggesting that hot flashes may reflect deeper issues related to autonomic regulation and vascular health.
Who was studied?
The review focuses on studies of women in the menopausal transition, specifically those experiencing hot flashes and night sweats across different geographical regions, including Australia, Great Britain, and the United States. The article highlights the variation in hot flash patterns based on factors like timing, severity, and duration, and discusses how these symptoms are linked to the risk of chronic conditions such as cardiovascular diseases and cognitive decline. The review also notes genetic factors and hormonal changes that may influence the presence and severity of these symptoms.
Most important findings
The article identifies four distinct patterns of vasomotor disturbances observed globally, suggesting that these patterns are not solely attributable to cultural or socioeconomic factors. It emphasizes the link between the severity and timing of hot flashes and the risk of chronic conditions such as cardiovascular diseases, osteoporosis, and mood disorders. The authors argue that hot flashes should be considered a manifestation of neurovascular dysregulation, potentially driven by hormonal changes during menopause. Genetic factors related to estrogen metabolism also appear to influence the severity and onset of these symptoms, underscoring the need for personalized treatment approaches.
Key implications
This review calls for a shift in how menopausal hot flashes are perceived and treated. By reframing hot flashes as manifestations of underlying autonomic neurovascular dysregulation, the article suggests that they should not merely be seen as symptoms to be tolerated but as early indicators of potential chronic health conditions. The authors advocate for further investigation into the pathophysiological mechanisms behind these symptoms, particularly concerning autonomic function and vascular health, to develop more effective, targeted treatments. This research could lead to personalized hormone therapy (MHT) regimens based on genetic profiles, improving outcomes for women in menopause.
What’s in a name: are menopausal ‘hot flashes’ a symptom of menopause or a manifestation of neurovascular dysregulation?
February 12, 2026
/
Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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This review challenges the labeling of hot flashes as mere menopausal symptoms, proposing they signal underlying neurovascular dysregulation linked to chronic disease risk, and calls for new clinical and research approaches.
What was reviewed?
This narrative review critically examines the conventional framing of hot flashes and night sweats, collectively termed vasomotor symptoms (VMS), as mere symptoms of menopause. The authors argue for a paradigm shift, proposing that these phenomena are better understood as manifestations of underlying autonomic neurovascular dysregulation. The review synthesizes epidemiological, genetic, and mechanistic evidence to explore the etiological complexity of VMS, emphasizing associations with neurological (sleep, mood, cognition) and cardiovascular conditions. Drawing on large-scale longitudinal studies from Australia, the UK, and the US, the authors identify four consistent patterns of vasomotor disturbances and discuss their possible biological and genetic bases, independent of cultural or socioeconomic factors. The review also addresses the limitations of current research, including the lack of objective monitoring tools and standard terminology, and highlights emerging insights from genetic studies and neurobiological pathways (notably the hypothalamic KNDy neurons and neurokinin B signaling). The authors call for robust mechanistic research and advocate for the reclassification of VMS to better inform clinical practice and research strategies.
Who was reviewed?
The review considers data from diverse populations of women undergoing the menopausal transition, as reported in prominent longitudinal cohort studies such as the Australian Longitudinal Study of Women’s Health (ALSWH), the 1946 British birth cohort, and the Study of Women Across the Nation (SWAN, USA). These cohorts encompass women from multiple geographic, cultural, and socioeconomic backgrounds, allowing the review to draw generalizable conclusions about the universality of VMS patterns. The reviewed studies include women experiencing natural or surgical menopause (e.g., following bilateral oophorectomy), and incorporate genetic sub-studies examining variants related to estrogen metabolism, estrogen receptors, and neurotransmitter pathways. The focus is on midlife and older women, typically in the peri- and postmenopausal stages, and the analysis extends to those with and without VMS, as well as those with related comorbidities such as sleep disorders and cardiovascular disease.
Most important findings
The review’s central finding is that VMS, hot flashes, and night sweats are likely not merely transient symptoms of hormonal withdrawal, but rather indicators of underlying neurovascular dysregulation that may predispose women to chronic conditions of aging. Across countries, four distinct patterns of VMS (varying by onset, severity, and duration) recur, suggesting a biological underpinning rather than cultural artifacts. Notably, severe or persistent VMS are associated with increased risks for sleep disturbances (e.g., insomnia, obstructive sleep apnea), mood and cognitive disorders, and cardiovascular conditions such as endothelial dysfunction and coronary artery calcification. Genetic studies implicate variants in genes governing estrogen synthesis, metabolism, and signaling, as well as noradrenergic and serotonergic pathways, as contributors to individual susceptibility and symptom patterns. Evidence points toward disruption in hypothalamic KNDy neuron signaling and altered autonomic outflow (both sympathetic and parasympathetic) as mechanistic drivers. Pharmacological interventions targeting neurokinin B receptors, and established therapies such as menopausal hormone therapy (MHT), show variable efficacy depending on individual neurovascular profiles. The review highlights the limitations of self-reported symptom scales and the need for objective, standardized assessment tools.
Key implications
Reframing VMS as signs of autonomic neurovascular dysregulation rather than simply menopausal symptoms has pivotal clinical and research implications. It advocates for a more nuanced, mechanism-based approach to assessing and managing midlife women, particularly in stratifying risk for chronic diseases like cardiovascular disease, dementia, and osteoporosis. This perspective supports the development of personalized interventions, potentially informed by genetic and autonomic profiling, and underscores the need for investment in objective monitoring technologies and longitudinal studies.
Ospemifene, a novel selective estrogen receptor modulator for treating dyspareunia associated with postmenopausal vulvar and vaginal atrophy
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Ospemifene (60 mg/day) significantly reduces dyspareunia and improves vaginal health in postmenopausal women with vulvar and vaginal atrophy. It offers a non-estrogenic treatment option, especially for women who cannot use traditional hormone therapies.
What was studied?
The study investigated the efficacy, safety, and tolerability of ospemifene, a selective estrogen receptor modulator (SERM), for treating vulvar and vaginal atrophy (VVA) in postmenopausal women with moderate to severe dyspareunia (pain during sexual intercourse). This multicenter phase 3 study compared ospemifene (60 mg/day) with a placebo over a 12-week treatment period. The study assessed multiple efficacy endpoints, including vaginal cytology (percentage of parabasal and superficial cells) and vaginal pH, along with the severity of dyspareunia. The goal was to determine if ospemifene could alleviate VVA symptoms without causing significant systemic estrogenic effects, especially in the context of breast cancer survivors who cannot use estrogen-based treatments.
Who was studied?
The study involved 605 postmenopausal women, aged 40 to 80 years, who reported moderate to severe dyspareunia associated with VVA. These women were diagnosed with VVA, as defined by having less than 5% superficial cells in the vaginal smear and a vaginal pH higher than 5. They were randomized to receive either ospemifene 60 mg/day (303 participants) or a placebo (302 participants) for 12 weeks. Participants were excluded if they had certain health conditions, such as high blood pressure, significant gynecological disorders, or any history of estrogen-sensitive cancers. The study participants were primarily white (90%) and had body mass index (BMI) values ranging from 16.7 to 37.1 kg/m².
Most important findings
The study found that ospemifene significantly improved the key endpoints compared to placebo. After 12 weeks of treatment, the ospemifene group showed a 40.2% decrease in the percentage of parabasal cells and a 12.3% increase in superficial cells, whereas the placebo group showed no significant changes. Additionally, vaginal pH decreased by 0.94 in the ospemifene group, compared to just a 0.07 reduction in the placebo group. The most critical outcome, dyspareunia severity, was significantly reduced in the ospemifene group, with a decrease of 1.5 points on the severity scale, compared to a 1.2-point reduction in the placebo group. Furthermore, more women in the ospemifene group reported improvement in vaginal pain, with 38% experiencing no vaginal pain or mild pain after 12 weeks, compared to 28% in the placebo group. The safety profile of ospemifene was generally favorable, with hot flushes being the most reported treatment-related adverse event (6.6% vs 3.6% in the placebo group).
Key implications
The findings suggest that ospemifene is an effective treatment option for alleviating symptoms of VVA, particularly dyspareunia, in postmenopausal women. This is particularly important for women with estrogen-sensitive conditions who cannot use traditional estrogen therapies. Ospemifene offers a non-estrogenic alternative that targets the vaginal tissues and reduces the severity of VVA without inducing significant systemic estrogen effects, which could potentially harm breast or uterine tissue. The study also suggests that ospemifene could reduce reliance on vaginal lubricants, offering women an effective, long-term solution for managing vaginal dryness and discomfort. However, further research is necessary to fully assess the long-term safety of ospemifene, especially concerning its potential impact on the endometrium and breast tissue.
Premenopausal Bone Health: Osteoporosis in Premenopausal Women
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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This review outlines the evaluation and management of osteoporosis in premenopausal women, emphasizing secondary causes, appropriate BMD interpretation, and tailored treatment—highlighting the importance of individualized care and cautious pharmacotherapy in this population.
What was reviewed?
This review article comprehensively addresses the diagnosis, evaluation, and management of osteoporosis in premenopausal women, emphasizing the unique considerations in this population compared to postmenopausal women. The authors discuss the significance of low-trauma fractures and low bone mineral density (BMD) in premenopausal women, the limitations of using standard BMD diagnostic thresholds (T-scores), and recommend the use of age-matched Z-scores for assessment. The review explores special circumstances, such as pregnancy- and lactation-associated osteoporosis, and highlights the rarity but clinical importance of idiopathic osteoporosis (IOP) in younger women. The article also provides an extensive overview of secondary causes of osteoporosis in this population, including endocrine disorders, inflammatory diseases, nutritional deficiencies, and medication effects, as well as detailing appropriate laboratory evaluations and management strategies, both non-pharmacological and pharmacological.
Who was reviewed?
The review covers premenopausal women, particularly those presenting with low-trauma fractures and/or low BMD, as well as subgroups affected by unique physiological states like pregnancy and lactation. The article references studies involving diverse cohorts of premenopausal women, including those with idiopathic osteoporosis, women with secondary causes of bone loss (such as glucocorticoid excess, anorexia nervosa, estrogen deficiency, and celiac disease), and women exposed to risk-modifying medications. Certain referenced studies focus on women with specific conditions, but the review synthesizes findings broadly applicable to the general premenopausal female population at risk for or diagnosed with osteoporosis.
Most important findings
The review underscores that osteoporosis in premenopausal women is uncommon and often secondary to underlying conditions rather than being primary. The most frequent secondary causes include glucocorticoid excess, anorexia nervosa, estrogen deficiency, and celiac disease, all of which can disrupt bone formation and turnover through mechanisms such as chronic inflammation, malnutrition, hormonal derangements, and malabsorption. The article notes that low-trauma fractures in premenopausal women are strong predictors of future fracture risk, but the direct relationship between BMD (measured by DXA) and fracture risk in this group is less clear than in postmenopausal women. For diagnosis, the review recommends using Z-scores (not T-scores), with a Z-score below −2.0 indicating bone density below the expected range for age. Management should focus on treating underlying causes, optimizing nutrition and lifestyle, and reserving pharmacological therapy for women with major or multiple fractures or ongoing bone loss. Limited data support the use of bisphosphonates and teriparatide in select high-risk cases, but caution is warranted due to potential risks, especially regarding future pregnancies. The review also lists a broad array of secondary causes and outlines a structured laboratory assessment to identify them.
Key implications
For clinicians, the review highlights the importance of a thorough diagnostic workup to uncover secondary causes of osteoporosis in premenopausal women, as management often hinges on addressing these root issues. The findings justify a conservative approach to pharmacotherapy in most cases, with primary reliance on lifestyle modification, nutritional support, and targeted treatment of underlying conditions. The recommendations emphasize individualized care and caution regarding medication use in women of childbearing potential, given the possible long-term skeletal and fetal risks. Recognizing and managing secondary causes not only improves bone health but may also address broader metabolic and reproductive health concerns. The review provides practical guidance for clinical evaluation, risk stratification, and safe management, bridging the gap between research findings and day-to-day clinical practice.
Veozah (Fezolinetant): A Promising Non‐Hormonal Treatment for Vasomotor Symptoms in Menopause
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Veozah (fezolinetant) is an effective non-hormonal treatment for menopause-related vasomotor symptoms. It works by targeting the neurokinin 3 receptor and offers a promising alternative to estrogen therapy with minimal side effects, making it suitable for women with contraindications to hormone treatments.
What was studied?
The article explores the efficacy of Veozah (fezolinetant), a neurokinin 3 (NK3) receptor antagonist, as a non-hormonal treatment for vasomotor symptoms (VMS) associated with menopause. The review examines clinical trial data from the SKYLIGHT 1, SKYLIGHT 2, and SKYLIGHT 4 trials, which evaluated fezolinetant's ability to reduce the frequency and severity of hot flashes and night sweats in menopausal women. The article emphasizes the drug's innovative mechanism of action, as it modulates thermoregulation via the brain’s neuropeptide signaling, providing an alternative to traditional estrogen therapies.
Who was studied?
The studies reviewed involved postmenopausal women experiencing moderate to severe vasomotor symptoms. These women were aged 40 to 64 years and had been diagnosed with menopause. They participated in phase 3 clinical trials (SKYLIGHT 1, SKYLIGHT 2, and SKYLIGHT 4) that tested the effects of fezolinetant. The trials also included individuals with varying baseline characteristics, such as ethnicity and comorbidities, to ensure a broad understanding of the drug's effectiveness and safety across diverse populations.
Most important findings
Fezolinetant (Veozah) was found to be highly effective in reducing the frequency and severity of hot flashes in menopausal women. In the SKYLIGHT trials, it demonstrated a statistically significant reduction in hot flash frequency and severity compared to placebo, with no significant adverse effects. Fezolinetant works by targeting the neurokinin 3 receptor, which is involved in thermoregulation, and does not rely on estrogen. This makes it a promising non-hormonal alternative to traditional hormone replacement therapy (HRT). The most common side effects were mild gastrointestinal symptoms, such as abdominal pain and diarrhea. In the long-term SKYLIGHT 4 trial, fezolinetant showed continued efficacy and safety for up to 12 months, with a low incidence of serious adverse events. Unlike estrogen therapies, it does not affect steroid hormone levels, which makes it a safer option for women with contraindications to hormone-based treatments.
Key implications
Fezolinetant represents a breakthrough in menopause management, particularly for women who cannot or prefer not to use hormone-based therapies. It provides an effective, non-hormonal option for reducing VMS, with minimal side effects. This drug offers an important alternative for women with contraindications to estrogen therapy, such as those with a history of breast cancer or those who are concerned about estrogen’s associated risks. The ease of oral administration makes it accessible and convenient, expanding treatment options for women worldwide. Further studies, especially long-term trials, are needed to confirm its broader safety profile and long-term benefits. Clinicians should consider this option for women experiencing moderate to severe hot flashes who seek non-hormonal therapies.
Spotlight on the gut microbiome in menopause: current insights
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Menopause reduces gut microbiome diversity and shifts composition toward a male-like profile, likely due to declining estrogen and progesterone. These changes may impact postmenopausal health and disease risk, highlighting the gut microbiome as a promising therapeutic target.
This review article synthesized the current evidence on the interplay between menopause, female sex hormones, and the gut microbiome in humans. The authors critically examined studies addressing how menopause, a period marked by drastic declines in estrogen and progesterone, affects gut microbiome diversity, composition, and function. Focus was given to the bi-directional relationship between sex hormones and the gut microbiota, including the concept of the “estrobolome” (the collection of microbial genes capable of metabolizing estrogens). The review also explored how menopause-associated hormonal changes may impact gut barrier integrity, increase microbial translocation, and potentially influence the risk of chronic diseases common in postmenopausal women, such as cardiovascular disease, metabolic syndrome, and osteoporosis. The article further discussed gaps in knowledge, including the influence of hormone therapy on the gut microbiome and the need for future longitudinal and mechanistic studies.
Who was reviewed?
The review encompassed human studies that compared premenopausal and postmenopausal women, often with age and BMI-matched men as additional comparison groups. Study populations varied in geography (including the US, Spain, China, Korea, and Austria), ethnicity (with some large studies focusing on Hispanic/Latino women), and health status (including women with and without HIV, and women with premature ovarian insufficiency). Sample sizes ranged from small (n<20 per group) to large-scale cohorts exceeding 1,000 participants. Some studies also included measurements of circulating sex hormones (estrogens and progesterone), allowing more direct assessment of hormonal-microbiome relationships.
Most important findings
Menopause is consistently associated with decreased gut microbiome diversity and a compositional shift that makes the microbiome of postmenopausal women more similar to that of men. Across studies, taxa such as Firmicutes (including Ruminococcus), Akkermansia muciniphila, and [Clostridium] lactatifermentans tend to decrease post-menopause, while Bacteroides, Prevotella, Dorea, Sutterella, and Butyricimonas often increase. Several studies link lower estrogen and progesterone levels with reduced microbial diversity and lower abundance of beneficial short-chain fatty acid-producing genera, while higher diversity and certain taxa (e.g., Ruminococcus, Clostridia) are associated with higher urinary or plasma estrogens. Moreover, the gut microbiome’s estrobolome potential is reduced after menopause, potentially limiting enterohepatic recycling of estrogens and progestins. Experimental and limited clinical data suggest declines in sex hormones may also impair gut barrier function, facilitating microbial translocation and systemic inflammation. However, findings are sometimes inconsistent, likely due to differences in study design, population, and sample size.
Key implications
This review highlights that menopause-induced hormonal changes are linked to reduced gut microbiome diversity, altered microbial composition, and lower estrobolome activity, collectively reflecting a shift toward a more “male-like” microbiome. These changes may contribute to increased risk of metabolic, cardiovascular, and bone diseases in postmenopausal women, although causality and underlying mechanisms remain to be clarified. The modifiable nature of the gut microbiome makes it a promising target for interventions aimed at improving menopause-related health outcomes. There is a pressing need for larger, longitudinal studies, and for research into the effects of menopausal hormone therapy on the gut microbiome. Understanding these relationships could open new avenues for personalized medicine in peri- and postmenopausal women.
Vasomotor Symptoms During Menopause: A Practical Guide on Current Treatments and Future Perspectives
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) is one of the most effective treatments for women experiencing the symptoms of menopause, particularly vasomotor symptoms such as hot flashes and night sweats. But its benefits go beyond just symptom management. HRT can also play a key role in improving vaginal health by alleviating dryness and discomfort, which are common complaints among women in menopause. Additionally, it helps prevent bone loss, significantly reducing the risk of osteoporosis and fractures, which are more common after menopause. Despite its many benefits, HRT is not one-size-fits-all; it’s essential to tailor treatment based on individual health profiles, taking into account the risks like breast cancer, blood clots, and heart disease that come with prolonged use.
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The review defines menopause vasomotor symptoms treatment and microbiome relevance, favors timely hormone therapy and transdermal routes, details effective nonhormone options, and highlights neurokinin antagonists for fast relief while separating vasomotor and genitourinary care for microbiome-aware practice.
What was reviewed?
This review explains menopause vasomotor symptoms treatment by summarizing pathophysiology, first-line hormone therapy, effective nonhormone options, and emerging agents. It describes how estrogen withdrawal narrows the hypothalamic thermoregulatory neutral zone through KNDy neuron signaling and how this neurobiology supports both hormone therapy and neurokinin receptor antagonists. It details the efficacy of systemic menopausal hormone therapy for hot flashes and night sweats, the importance of timing near menopause, and the risk differences by route and progestogen choice. In addition, it outlines practical prescribing, including when to choose transdermal estradiol, how to pair progestogen for endometrial protection, and how to handle bleeding and contraindications.
Who was reviewed?
The review focuses on midlife women with bothersome vasomotor symptoms, particularly those under 60 years of age or within 10 years of their final menstrual period. It addresses women with cardiometabolic risks, venous thromboembolism risks, obesity, diabetes, or prior coronary disease, and it highlights when transdermal routes and lower doses fit better. It also considers women with an intact uterus who require a progestogen with systemic estrogen, women after hysterectomy who may use estrogen alone, women with a history of breast cancer who should avoid systemic hormone therapy, and diverse groups who prefer or need nonhormone options such as SSRIs/SNRIs, gabapentin, oxybutynin, clonidine, or mind-body therapies. The review includes evidence that informs care for breast cancer survivors on tamoxifen, in whom paroxetine can interact, while venlafaxine does not.
Most important findings
Hormone therapy remains the most effective treatment for vasomotor symptoms and can reduce frequency and severity by about 90%, with the benefit greatest when initiated before age 60 or within 10 years of menopause. Transdermal estradiol limits first-pass hepatic effects and does not raise venous thromboembolism or ischemic stroke risk to the same degree as oral estrogen, which makes it preferable in women with vascular or metabolic risk. Progestogen choice matters for safety, with micronized progesterone or dydrogesterone showing more favorable thrombosis and breast profiles than several synthetic agents. Low-dose vaginal estrogen treats genitourinary syndrome of menopause but does not treat vasomotor symptoms, which underscores a separation between VMS control and local vaginal care that has downstream microbiome implications, even though this review presents no taxa.
Nonhormone options help many women who avoid or cannot use hormones. Low-dose paroxetine 7.5 mg reduces vasomotor symptom frequency and improves sleep but can inhibit CYP2D6 and interact with tamoxifen, while venlafaxine 75 mg can reduce vasomotor symptoms comparably to low-dose estradiol and lacks that interaction. Gabapentin 900 mg/day reduces hot flash frequency and can help sleep and migraine comorbidity, while oxybutynin improves symptoms but can cause anticholinergic effects, especially in older women. Clonidine provides a modest benefit with frequent side effects. Stellate ganglion block can reduce symptom severity in selected women. Novel neurokinin pathway agents such as fezolinetant produce rapid relief within days, which aligns with KNDy neuron biology and offers a hormone-free path. Estetrol appears promising but remains under study for vasomotor use.
Key implications
Clinicians should start vasomotor symptom therapy near menopause when possible, prefer transdermal estradiol in higher-risk women, and pair estrogen with an appropriate progestogen when the uterus is intact. Clinicians should separate vasomotor care from genitourinary care and recognize that local vaginal estrogen targets genitourinary symptoms rather than vasomotor symptoms, which allows teams to track vaginal outcomes and microbiome-sensitive endpoints in parallel while using systemic or neurokinin-based strategies for hot flashes. This approach aligns symptom relief with safety and prepares a framework to link route, regimen, and mucosal outcomes in a microbiome database, even though the review itself reports no microbial profiling.
A dietary intervention for postmenopausal hot flashes: A potential role of gut microbiome
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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A plant-based diet with soy reduces hot flashes in postmenopausal women, potentially by modulating gut bacteria linked to inflammation and estrogen metabolism.
What was studied?
This exploratory study investigated the impact of a low-fat, plant-based dietary intervention including daily cooked soybeans on the frequency and severity of postmenopausal hot flashes, with a particular focus on the role of the gut microbiome. The study aimed to identify microbial changes associated with symptom improvements, especially changes in bacteria known to influence estrogen metabolism and inflammation.
Who was studied?
The study enrolled 84 postmenopausal women aged 40–65 years experiencing at least two moderate-to-severe hot flashes per day. Participants were randomly assigned either to follow the dietary intervention or to continue their usual diets for 12 weeks. Gut microbiome analyses using deep shotgun metagenomic sequencing were conducted on stool samples from a subset of 11 women from the intervention group, collected before and after the dietary period.
Most important findings
The dietary intervention resulted in a dramatic 95% reduction in total hot flashes and a 96% decrease in moderate-to-severe hot flashes. Significant decreases were observed in both daytime and nighttime hot flashes. Although overall microbial diversity (alpha and beta diversity) did not change significantly, specific taxa exhibited changes in relative abundance. Notably, decreases in Porphyromonas and Prevotella corporis correlated with reductions in severe daytime hot flashes, and decreases in Clostridium asparagiforme correlated with reductions in total severe and severe nighttime hot flashes. These bacteria are linked to inflammatory pathways and estrogen metabolism. Increases in genera such as Erysipelatoclostridium, Fusicatenibacter, and Holdemanella, known for anti-inflammatory effects and fiber fermentation, were also observed. The plant-based diet rich in fiber and soy isoflavones likely modulated the microbiome to reduce systemic inflammation and improve estrogen receptor-mediated signaling, contributing to symptom relief. However, after correction for multiple testing, these associations were not statistically significant, highlighting the exploratory nature of the findings.
Key implications
This study provides preliminary evidence linking dietary modulation of the gut microbiome to reductions in menopausal vasomotor symptoms. The findings suggest that plant-based diets with soy may beneficially alter gut bacteria involved in inflammation and estrogen metabolism, offering a potential non-hormonal therapeutic avenue for hot flash management. Larger, controlled studies are necessary to confirm these microbiome-symptom relationships and to explore personalized dietary strategies targeting gut microbiota for menopausal symptom relief.
Urinary metals and metal mixtures and timing of natural menopause in midlife women
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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The study links higher urinary arsenic and lead concentrations to earlier menopause, suggesting that exposure to these metals accelerates ovarian aging. Women with higher environmental risk scores (ERS) experienced menopause earlier, emphasizing the role of metal mixtures in reproductive health.
What was studied?
The study investigated the relationship between urinary metal concentrations and the timing of natural menopause in midlife women, using data from the Study of Women’s Health Across the Nation (SWAN). It specifically examined 15 urinary metals, including arsenic, lead, cadmium, copper, mercury, and zinc, to assess how these metals, both individually and in mixtures, influenced the onset of menopause. The research aimed to fill the knowledge gap regarding the impact of environmental metal exposure on ovarian aging and the timing of menopause, a critical factor linked to various long-term health risks.
Who was studied?
The study population consisted of 1,082 premenopausal women, aged 45–56, from multiple racial and ethnic groups, including White, Black, Chinese, and Japanese women. The participants were enrolled in the SWAN study, a large, community-based, prospective cohort. These women were followed for an average of 4.1 years, during which they provided regular urine samples for analysis of metal concentrations. The study aimed to explore how various environmental exposures, specifically metals, affect the timing of natural menopause and associated health risks.
Most important findings
The study found that higher urinary concentrations of arsenic and lead were significantly associated with earlier natural menopause. Specifically, women in the highest quartile of urinary arsenic had an average menopause age 1.6 years earlier compared to those in the lowest quartile. Similarly, higher lead concentrations also correlated with earlier menopause. This suggests that exposure to certain metals may accelerate ovarian aging. Additionally, the study used an Environmental Risk Score (ERS) to quantify the cumulative effect of multiple metal exposures, showing that women with higher ERS values experienced menopause earlier, further emphasizing the role of metal mixtures in accelerating the menopausal transition. The study also observed no significant association with other metals like cadmium or mercury but highlighted the potential cumulative effects of metal mixtures on menopause timing.
Key implications
The study's findings emphasize that environmental exposure to heavy metals, such as arsenic and lead, may have significant public health implications by influencing the timing of natural menopause. Since earlier menopause is linked to various health risks such as cardiovascular diseases, osteoporosis, and cognitive decline, understanding the role of environmental toxins in this process could inform public health interventions aimed at reducing exposure to harmful metals. This research underscores the importance of considering both individual and combined exposures to metals in future epidemiological studies and public health policies.
Exposure to heavy metals and hormone levels in midlife women
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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This study links urinary heavy metal exposure (arsenic, cadmium, mercury, lead) to altered sex hormone levels in midlife women, with stronger effects during the perimenopausal transition. It suggests that metal exposure may accelerate ovarian aging and impact long-term health outcomes.
What was studied?
This study examined the associations between urinary heavy metals, including arsenic, cadmium, mercury, and lead, and the levels of key sex hormones (estradiol, follicle-stimulating hormone, testosterone, and sex hormone-binding globulin) in midlife women. The research used data from the Study of Women's Health Across the Nation (SWAN), a multi-ethnic cohort of women aged 45-56 years, followed over several years. The focus was on understanding how environmental exposures to heavy metals might influence hormone profiles during the menopausal transition, a critical period of reproductive aging, which can have long-term health implications for women, including cardiovascular disease, osteoporosis, and metabolic disorders.
Who was studied?
The study included 1,355 women from the SWAN cohort, representing a diverse range of racial and ethnic groups, including White, Black, Chinese, and Japanese women. Participants were aged 45-56 years at baseline (1999-2000). The analysis focused on midlife women who were followed through their menopausal transition, with hormone levels repeatedly measured up until 2017. Urinary metal concentrations were assessed at baseline, and serum hormone levels were measured annually. The cohort included women from different geographic locations across the U.S., providing insights into how environmental exposures affect sex hormone levels across various populations.
Most important findings
The study found that exposure to heavy metals significantly influenced hormone levels in midlife women. Specifically, a doubling in urinary mercury and lead concentrations was associated with lower estradiol (E2) levels by 2.2% and 3.6%, respectively. Additionally, higher lead concentrations were associated with higher follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) levels, by 3.4%. Cadmium exposure was linked to increased levels of sex hormone-binding globulin (SHBG) by 3.6%. However, no significant association was found between metals and testosterone levels. The joint effects of metal mixtures showed a negative association with E2 and a positive association with FSH. The study also noted that the associations were stronger in early and late perimenopausal stages.
Key implications
The findings of this study highlight the significant role that environmental heavy metals can play in altering sex hormone levels during midlife, a crucial period for women’s health. The associations between higher lead and mercury concentrations with reduced estradiol levels and increased follicle-stimulating hormone levels suggest that metal exposure may accelerate ovarian aging, a factor that could impact menopause timing and related health risks, such as cardiovascular diseases and osteoporosis. The study emphasizes the need for public health strategies to minimize heavy metal exposure and further underscores the importance of monitoring environmental toxins as part of women’s healthcare during midlife.
Menopausal hormone therapy and menopausal symptoms
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) is one of the most effective treatments for women experiencing the symptoms of menopause, particularly vasomotor symptoms such as hot flashes and night sweats. But its benefits go beyond just symptom management. HRT can also play a key role in improving vaginal health by alleviating dryness and discomfort, which are common complaints among women in menopause. Additionally, it helps prevent bone loss, significantly reducing the risk of osteoporosis and fractures, which are more common after menopause. Despite its many benefits, HRT is not one-size-fits-all; it’s essential to tailor treatment based on individual health profiles, taking into account the risks like breast cancer, blood clots, and heart disease that come with prolonged use.
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This review emphasizes the benefits and risks of MHT in managing menopause symptoms, including the prevention of long-term conditions. It advocates for individualized treatment plans, especially focusing on the timing of initiation.
What was studied?
The study explored the role of Menopausal Hormone Therapy (MHT) in managing symptoms of menopause, focusing on the use of estrogen and progestogen-based therapies. Specifically, it evaluated the therapeutic effects, the optimization of treatment methods for alleviating symptoms like vasomotor symptoms, and the prevention of long-term health risks such as osteoporosis, heart disease, and colorectal cancer.
Who was studied?
The research involved postmenopausal women, with a particular focus on women transitioning through menopause, both in early and late stages. The subjects were examined for risk factors like obesity, smoking, hypertension, and metabolic disorders, which can influence the outcomes of MHT. A significant number of these participants were in their late 50s and early 60s.
Most important findings
The study's findings revealed the effectiveness of MHT in the management of menopausal symptoms, especially vasomotor symptoms like hot flashes and night sweats. It was also found that MHT significantly reduces the risks of osteoporosis and colorectal cancer. However, the study highlighted the complexities of MHT use, particularly the varying risks associated with the timing of therapy initiation and the types of hormone preparations used. For example, estrogen-only therapy was linked to a reduced risk of breast cancer in certain groups, while combined estrogen-progestogen therapy showed increased risks of coronary heart disease and breast cancer, particularly when started later in life. The study also underscored that personalized MHT approaches, considering individual risk factors and timing, lead to more favorable outcomes.
Key implications
The primary implication is that while MHT offers significant benefits in managing menopausal symptoms and preventing long-term diseases, its risks must be carefully managed. Starting MHT within the “window of opportunity” during perimenopause or early postmenopause reduces cardiovascular and metabolic risks. However, therapy initiation after 60 years or more than 10 years postmenopause may increase the likelihood of adverse outcomes, including cardiovascular events and breast cancer. Hence, individualized treatment plans, based on patient health profiles and risks, are essential for optimizing MHT use.
Menopausal hot flashes: mechanisms, endocrinology, treatment.
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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This review elucidates the neuroendocrine and thermoregulatory mechanisms of menopausal hot flashes, evaluating objective measurement and treatment strategies, with a focus on central sympathetic activation and the limited role of the microbiome or estrogen alone in HF etiology.
What was reviewed?
This comprehensive review synthesizes the current understanding of the mechanisms, endocrinology, and treatment options for menopausal hot flashes (HFs), emphasizing their physiological, neuroendocrine, and thermoregulatory underpinnings. The review details the characteristic clinical features of HFs, sudden intense warmth, sweating, and peripheral vasodilation, and investigates their temporal association with small core body temperature (Tc) elevations within a markedly narrowed thermoneutral zone. Freedman discusses the role of estrogen withdrawal, central sympathetic activation (particularly through α2-adrenergic receptors), and the complex neuroendocrine interactions involving norepinephrine (NE), serotonin (5-HT), and other neurotransmitters. The review also evaluates objective measurement techniques for HFs, including skin conductance and ambulatory monitors, and synthesizes findings from imaging studies exploring brain activation patterns during HFs. Treatment modalities, both hormonal and nonhormonal, including behavioral interventions, clonidine, serotonergic agents, isoflavones, and gabapentin, are critically reviewed in terms of efficacy and underlying mechanisms.
Who was reviewed?
The review encompasses findings from diverse populations: primarily peri- and postmenopausal women experiencing natural or surgical menopause, with some comparisons to asymptomatic women and men undergoing androgen deprivation for prostate cancer. Epidemiological data highlight racial and ethnic differences in HF prevalence (Caucasian women highest, Japanese and Chinese women lowest). Key physiological, endocrinological, and neuroimaging studies included both symptomatic and asymptomatic women, as well as breast cancer survivors who often experience treatment-induced HFs. Clinical trials of various treatments involved postmenopausal women with frequent HFs, including those with sleep complaints, and studies of objective HF measurement extended to men receiving GnRH agonists. The review thus offers a broad perspective, integrating findings from clinical, laboratory, and ambulatory settings across multiple demographic groups.
Most important findings
Menopausal hot flashes are characterized by a rapid, exaggerated heat dissipation response, sweating, vasodilation, and a feeling of internal heat, triggered by minimal Tc elevations within a greatly reduced thermoneutral zone. This narrowing is not solely attributable to estrogen depletion: while estrogen therapy effectively eliminates HFs, estrogen levels do not robustly correlate with HF presence or frequency, and additional factors must contribute. Elevated central sympathetic activity, mediated by α2-adrenergic receptors, appears critical in narrowing the thermoneutral zone; pharmacologic manipulation directly affects HF incidence. Objective monitoring via skin conductance and novel ambulatory devices provides reliable HF measurement, overcoming biases of self-reporting. Imaging studies demonstrate that the insular cortex, anterior cingulate, and brainstem are sequentially activated during HFs, linking physiological events to subjective experience. Treatment reviews show hormone therapy as the most effective, but nonhormonal options like paced respiration and clonidine are substantiated; SSRIs/SNRIs have mixed efficacy, and the role of serotonin is increasingly questioned. Botanical therapies show inconsistent benefit. Gabapentin exhibits moderate efficacy with known side effects. The review does not identify direct microbial associations or microbiome signatures related to HFs, and the role of the microbiome remains unaddressed in this context.
Key implications
For clinicians, this review underscores the multifactorial etiology of menopausal hot flashes, with central neuroregulatory dysfunction, rather than estrogen deficiency alone, being paramount. Treatments targeting central sympathetic tone (e.g., clonidine, behavioral relaxation) are rational, especially for women unwilling or unable to use hormone therapy. Objective monitoring methods, including skin conductance and ambulatory devices, may improve both diagnosis and evaluation of treatment response. The findings support individualized treatment, emphasize the need for thorough sleep disorder assessment in symptomatic women, and highlight areas for future research, particularly regarding central neuroregulatory pathways and novel therapeutic targets.
Menopausal hot flashes: mechanisms, endocrinology, treatment
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal hot flashes are one of the most common and disruptive symptoms that women experience during the transition to menopause. Characterized by sudden sensations of heat, sweating, and flushing, hot flashes can significantly affect a woman’s quality of life, causing sleep disturbances, mood swings, and even long-term health consequences. Understanding the complex mechanisms behind hot flashes, as well as the role of microbiome-targeted therapies, offers new avenues for improving menopausal health.
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The review explores the physiological mechanisms behind menopausal hot flashes, including thermoregulatory changes, sympathetic nervous activation, and estrogen depletion. It also examines treatments such as clonidine and behavioral therapies.
What was studied?
The review examines the physiological mechanisms behind menopausal hot flashes (HFs), which are characterized by rapid and exaggerated heat dissipation responses, such as sweating, peripheral vasodilation, and intense internal heat sensations. The study focuses on how small elevations in core body temperature trigger these responses, particularly within a reduced thermoneutral zone. The review also explores the involvement of estrogen depletion at menopause and its contribution to hot flashes, while addressing how the sympathetic nervous system and norepinephrine play key roles in the process.
Who was studied?
The review encompasses research on women experiencing menopausal hot flashes, particularly those in the climacteric period, as well as women undergoing surgical menopause or those treated with GnRH agonists for conditions like breast cancer. Studies comparing symptomatic and asymptomatic women, as well as cross-cultural studies on the prevalence of hot flashes in different ethnic groups, such as Caucasian, Japanese, and Chinese women, are also discussed. Additionally, the paper explores the effects of androgen depletion on men undergoing treatments for prostate cancer, providing a broader understanding of hot flashes across different populations.
Most important findings
The review identifies key mechanisms underlying the occurrence of hot flashes, including the narrowing of the thermoneutral zone due to elevated sympathetic activation, particularly through α2-adrenergic receptors. While estrogen depletion is essential for the onset of hot flashes, it is not the sole cause, as other factors like norepinephrine play a significant role. The review also highlights the effectiveness of clonidine, an α2-adrenergic agonist, in widening the thermoneutral zone and reducing hot flash frequency. Brain imaging studies reveal that areas such as the insula and anterior cingulate cortex are involved in the phenomenological experience of hot flashes, while circadian rhythms influence the timing of their occurrence.
Key implications
The findings suggest that hot flashes are a complex physiological phenomenon influenced by hormonal, neuroendocrine, and circadian factors. The narrowing of the thermoneutral zone due to elevated norepinephrine, in conjunction with estrogen withdrawal, forms the basis of their occurrence. Personalized treatment approaches, such as adrenergic modulation with clonidine or other therapies targeting norepinephrine, may offer more effective management strategies. Additionally, understanding genetic, cultural, and circadian differences in hot flash experiences can lead to better-tailored interventions, improving the quality of life for women experiencing this common menopausal symptom.
Menopause-Induced Metabolic Shifts: Implications for Cardiovascular and Metabolic Risk
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Cardiovascular Health
Cardiovascular Health
Recent research has revealed that specific gut microbiota-derived metabolites are strongly linked to cardiovascular disease risk—potentially influencing atherosclerosis development more than traditional risk factors like cholesterol levels. This highlights the gut microbiome as a novel therapeutic target for cardiovascular interventions.
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This study reveals that menopause induces significant metabolic changes, including shifts in amino acid and lipid metabolism, which contribute to the increased cardiovascular and metabolic risks in postmenopausal women.
What was studied?
The study examined the metabolic changes that occur during menopause, focusing on how menopause modulates circulating metabolites in midlife women. Researchers specifically analyzed 94 charged metabolites, including amino acids, fatty acids, and other small molecules, to assess how these metabolic changes correlate with the increased risk of chronic diseases, such as cardiovascular disease and diabetes, that affect postmenopausal women. The goal was to understand the broader metabolic shifts that occur during menopause and their potential implications for long-term health risks.
Who was studied?
The study involved 1,193 women from the Tsuruoka Metabolomics Cohort Study, a community-based cohort of Japanese women aged between 40 and 60 years. The participants were divided into three groups based on their menopausal status: premenopausal, menopausal transition, and postmenopausal. To ensure that the results were not influenced by factors such as hormone replacement therapy (HRT), participants with certain health conditions or who had recently used HRT were excluded. The cohort was selected from Tsuruoka City, Japan, and included a diverse group of women across various stages of menopause, allowing for a comprehensive analysis of the metabolic changes associated with this life stage.
Most important findings
The study revealed that menopause is associated with significant shifts in the metabolic profile of women, particularly in metabolites linked to cardiovascular and metabolic risks. As women transitioned from premenopausal to postmenopausal status, several metabolites, including those involved in the urea cycle, TCA cycle, and homocysteine metabolism, showed elevated levels. This included an increase in metabolites like ornithine, taurine, glutamine, and carnitine, which are connected to cardiovascular health risks, such as arteriosclerosis. These metabolic shifts could explain the heightened risk of cardiovascular diseases observed in postmenopausal women. Additionally, higher levels of amino acids such as glutamine and lysine were found, which are often associated with insulin resistance and increased risk for metabolic disorders like diabetes. The study also observed a shift in lipid metabolism, as certain lipid metabolites showed patterns similar to changes seen in traditional lipid markers like total cholesterol and LDL cholesterol, which also change during menopause. These findings suggest that menopause accelerates metabolic changes that may contribute to the development of chronic diseases.
Key implications
The implications of this study are significant for clinical practice, as they suggest that menopause is not only a time of hormonal changes but also a pivotal period for metabolic health. The findings highlight the need for clinicians to monitor metabolic markers in women during the menopausal transition, as these shifts may predict long-term health outcomes such as cardiovascular disease and diabetes. Clinicians should consider metabolic profiling as a tool for identifying women at higher risk for these conditions and may need to implement early interventions, such as lifestyle modifications, to mitigate these risks. Moreover, the results emphasize the importance of personalized prevention strategies, particularly in postmenopausal women, as metabolic changes become more pronounced during this stage.
Pause menopause with Rhodiola rosea, a natural selective estrogen receptor modulator
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Rhodiola rosea shows promise as a natural selective estrogen receptor modulator, offering neuroprotective, cardiovascular, and bone health benefits for menopausal women with fewer risks than conventional therapies.
What was studied?
This study explored the potential of Rhodiola rosea (R. rosea), a natural selective estrogen receptor modulator (SERM), as a treatment for menopause symptoms and health risks. The authors reviewed molecular mechanisms by which R. rosea could mitigate cognitive decline, mood disturbances, cardiovascular disease, osteoporosis, and cancer associated with estrogen decline during menopause. Emphasis was placed on the neuroprotective, cardioprotective, anti-inflammatory, and anti-oxidative properties of R. rosea extracts, particularly focusing on the bioactive constituent salidroside and its interaction with estrogen receptors. The paper also presented a clinical case illustrating improvements in cognitive function and mood with R. rosea treatment in a menopausal woman.
Who was studied?
The study synthesized findings from in vitro, animal, and limited human clinical studies examining R. rosea extracts and salidroside effects on estrogen receptor modulation and menopause-related pathologies. These included ovariectomized rodent models simulating estrogen deficiency, human clinical trials assessing cognitive and mood improvements in stressed or fatigued adults, and case reports from menopausal women. The study focused on women in menopausal transition and postmenopause, at increased risk for neurocognitive, cardiovascular, and bone-related disorders due to estrogen decline.
Most important findings
Rhodiola rosea acts as a natural SERM with tissue-specific modulation of estrogen receptors, showing agonistic effects on brain, bone, and cardiovascular tissues while lacking uterotrophic or pro-carcinogenic activity. Salidroside demonstrated neuroprotective effects by enhancing synaptic function, memory, and executive function, partly via ERβ activation and anti-inflammatory pathways such as NF-κB inhibition. Cardiovascular benefits arose from improved endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) activity, enhanced nitric oxide production, and antioxidant protection reducing oxidative stress. Osteoprotective effects included inhibition of oxidative stress-induced osteoblast dysfunction, preventing bone loss in estrogen-deficient models. Importantly, R. rosea showed anti-cancer potential by inhibiting proliferation and inducing apoptosis in estrogen receptor-positive and -negative breast cancer cell lines without stimulating tumor growth. Clinically, R. rosea improved cognitive function, reduced anxiety, depression, and fatigue in menopausal and stressed individuals with minimal side effects, suggesting a favorable safety profile compared to synthetic SERMs and hormone replacement therapy (HRT).
Key implications
This review highlights Rhodiola rosea as a promising natural alternative to conventional HRT and synthetic SERMs for managing menopause-associated cognitive decline, mood disorders, cardiovascular risk, osteoporosis, and cancer risk. Its multi-targeted estrogen receptor modulation and anti-inflammatory, antioxidant mechanisms address critical pathways affected by estrogen loss. Unlike HRT, R. rosea may confer these benefits without increasing risks of cancer or thrombosis. However, clinical trials specifically in menopausal women are necessary to validate efficacy, optimal dosing, and long-term safety. The compound’s favorable side effect profile and neuroprotective properties make it a potential adjunct or alternative therapy, aligning well with growing patient interest in botanical and non-hormonal menopause treatments.
Estrogen and Thrombosis: A Bench to Bedside Review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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This study explores estrogen's effects on thrombosis risk in hormonal contraceptives and HRT, highlighting mechanisms of action, the role of different estrogen doses, and the importance of individualized risk assessments in preventing thromboembolic events.
What was studied?
The study reviewed estrogen's role in thrombosis, particularly focusing on how estrogen therapy, used in hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and contraception, affects the risk of thrombosis, including venous thromboembolism (VTE) and arterial thrombosis. It explored the mechanisms by which estrogen influences hemostasis and coagulation pathways, contributing to a prothrombotic environment. The paper also discussed estrogen's effects on various hemostatic and fibrinolytic variables, platelets, von Willebrand factor (vWF), and the coagulation cascade, providing a thorough overview of how estrogen administration, whether endogenous or exogenous, impacts thrombosis risk. The research emphasizes the clinical relevance of assessing individual risks when prescribing estrogen-based therapies, including in specific populations like transgender women and women with a high risk of thrombosis.
Who was studied?
The study focuses on women of reproductive age using hormonal contraceptives, postmenopausal women undergoing HRT, and those at a higher risk for thromboembolic events. The research also includes transgender women using estrogen therapy for gender-affirming care. It emphasizes populations using different estrogen formulations, such as combined oral contraceptives (COCs) and HRT containing either estrogen alone or combined with progestin. The study draws on data from animal models, clinical trials, and epidemiological studies that explore the effects of estrogen therapy across different age groups, health conditions, and genetic backgrounds, particularly those predisposed to thrombosis.
Most important findings
The study identifies estrogen's prothrombotic effects, notably its influence on the coagulation cascade, platelet function, and fibrinolysis. Estrogen significantly alters hemostatic factors, increasing plasma levels of procoagulant proteins such as factor II, factor VII, factor VIII, and fibrinogen, while reducing levels of protein S and tissue factor pathway inhibitor. These changes contribute to an increased risk of thrombosis, particularly in women using oral contraceptives or combined hormone replacement therapy (HRT). The study also highlights the dose-dependent effects of estrogen, noting that higher doses (e.g., early formulations of COCs with 150 µg of estrogen) are linked to a significantly higher risk of thromboembolic events compared to lower-dose formulations. Transdermal estrogen, which avoids the first-pass effect through the liver, was found to have a lower associated risk of thrombosis compared to oral estrogen. Additionally, the review discusses the role of progestins in exacerbating thrombosis risk, particularly with third and fourth-generation progestins, which further increase the risk when combined with estrogen. Finally, emerging data suggest that individualized risk assessments are essential, particularly for populations such as transgender women, who may have unique estrogen exposure patterns.
Key implications
The findings underscore the importance of individualized treatment plans for patients using estrogen-containing therapies. Clinicians should assess thrombosis risk in patients before initiating estrogen therapy, particularly those with pre-existing cardiovascular or clotting risks. The route of administration (oral vs. transdermal) plays a critical role in determining the level of risk, with transdermal estrogen being the safer option for women with cardiovascular concerns. For women with an intact uterus, the addition of progestin is necessary to prevent endometrial hyperplasia, but careful consideration should be given to the type of progestin used due to its potential contribution to thrombosis risk. Low-dose oral contraceptives and HRT formulations with estrogen alone may be appropriate for postmenopausal women who do not have contraindications, but long-term use should be carefully monitored. For high-risk women, such as those with a history of thrombosis or BRCA1/2 mutations, the study suggests alternative therapies or non-hormonal treatments may be warranted to minimize thrombosis risk.
The Gut Microbiome Is Altered in Postmenopausal Women With Osteoporosis and Osteopenia.
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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This study identifies distinct gut microbiome and functional gene signatures associated with osteoporosis and osteopenia in postmenopausal women, highlighting key microbial taxa and metabolic pathways that may influence bone health and serve as potential targets for clinical intervention.
What was studied?
This research article investigated how the gut microbiome is altered in postmenopausal women with osteoporosis and osteopenia compared to healthy controls. The study aimed to characterize microbial diversity, taxonomic composition, and functional gene potential using shotgun metagenomic sequencing of fecal samples. Researchers sought to identify specific microbial taxa and metabolic pathways associated with bone health status, focusing on elucidating microbial signatures and potential mechanisms linking gut microbiota with bone metabolism in postmenopausal women.
Who was studied?
The study cohort consisted of 86 postmenopausal women aged 54 to 81 years, all at least 5 years post-menopause, recruited from the "Bugs’n’Bones" study at Massey University, New Zealand. Exclusion criteria included any systemic disease, gut-impacting food intolerances, smoking, high alcohol intake, recent antibiotic use, or significant weight change in the prior year. None were receiving medical treatment for osteoporosis or osteopenia. Based on WHO bone mineral density (BMD) T-score criteria, participants were classified as healthy (n=26), osteopenic (n=42), or osteoporotic (n=18).
Most important findings
The study found that both osteoporotic and osteopenic women had significantly different gut microbial taxonomic compositions compared to healthy controls, although their alpha diversity (Shannon and Simpson indices) did not differ. Beta diversity analyses and PERMANOVA confirmed significant community composition differences between healthy and diseased groups. Notably, healthy women showed higher abundances of unclassified Clostridia and methanogenic archaea (Methanobacteriaceae), including Methanobrevibacter smithii, while Bacteroides was more prevalent in osteoporotic and osteopenic groups. Other taxa such as Parabacteroides distasonis, Bacteroides uniformis, and Roseburia intestinalis were more abundant in osteopenic women, while Betaproteobacteria, Bacteroides stercoris, and Adlercreutzia were elevated in osteoporosis. Functional metagenomic analysis revealed that pathways related to carbohydrate metabolism, biosynthesis of secondary metabolites, phenylpropanoid and cyanoamino acid metabolism were enriched in osteoporotic and osteopenic groups, whereas replication and repair pathways were more prominent in healthy women. These results suggest a shift in the gut microbiome from health to osteopenia and osteoporosis, with specific microbial and functional signatures.
Key implications
This study provides the first shotgun metagenomic evidence that osteoporosis and osteopenia in postmenopausal women are associated with distinct gut microbiome signatures, both taxonomically and functionally. The findings highlight increased Bacteroides and decreased Clostridia and methanogenic archaea as potential microbial markers of bone loss, with functional shifts toward increased carbohydrate metabolism and secondary metabolite biosynthesis. These alterations may influence bone metabolism through mechanisms involving immune modulation, estrogen metabolism, and short-chain fatty acid production. The results underscore the potential for developing microbiome-based biomarkers and microbiome-targeted interventions targeting gut microbial communities to support bone health in postmenopausal women.
Associations of the fecal microbiome with urinary estrogens and estrogen metabolites in postmenopausal women
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Greater fecal microbiome diversity in postmenopausal women correlates with urinary estrogen metabolite profiles linked to lower breast cancer risk. Specific taxa, notably Clostridiales, are associated with beneficial estrogen metabolism signatures.
What was studied?
This original research article investigated the relationship between the diversity and composition of the fecal microbiome and urinary estrogen profiles in postmenopausal women. The study specifically aimed to determine whether urinary concentrations of estrogens and their metabolites, which are known to influence breast cancer risk, were associated with measures of gut microbial diversity and the relative abundance of specific microbial taxa. The researchers used 16S rRNA gene pyrosequencing to profile the fecal microbiome and liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry to quantify urinary estrone, estradiol, and 13 hydroxylated estrogen metabolites. Statistical analyses assessed associations between microbiome diversity metrics, microbial taxa, and various estrogen metabolite ratios that have been linked to breast cancer risk in prior studies, adjusting for confounders such as age, body mass index (BMI), and study design factors.
Who was studied?
The study population comprised 60 healthy postmenopausal women aged 55–69 years, randomly selected from members of Kaiser Permanente Colorado. Key exclusion criteria included current or recent use of antibiotics or hormone therapy, and any history of cancer or gastrointestinal disease. The participants were predominantly white (91%) and non-Hispanic (95%), with a median age of 64 years and a median BMI of 27, reflecting an overweight to obese cohort. All had received a recent normal screening mammogram and had not taken medications or had conditions likely to impact gut microbiota or systemic hormone levels. Fecal and urine samples were collected, shipped, and analyzed under standardized conditions.
Most important findings
The study found a statistically significant positive association between whole-tree phylogenetic diversity of the fecal microbiome and the urinary ratio of estrogen metabolites to parent estrogens. This ratio, as well as pathway-specific ratios, has been previously associated with a reduced risk of postmenopausal breast cancer. The relative abundance of the order Clostridiales (especially the family Ruminococcaceae) was directly correlated with the metabolites-to-parent estrogen ratio, while the genus Bacteroides was inversely correlated. These associations persisted after adjusting for age, BMI, sample collection variables, and study design. Notably, overall measures of microbial diversity, rather than the abundance of dominant phyla (Firmicutes or Bacteroidetes), were most strongly linked to favorable estrogen metabolite profiles.
Key implications
This study provides evidence that greater gut microbial diversity is associated with estrogen metabolite profiles considered protective against breast cancer in postmenopausal women. The findings suggest that the gut microbiota, particularly the diversity and specific taxa such as Clostridiales and Ruminococcaceae, may modulate systemic estrogen metabolism, possibly through deconjugation and enterohepatic recycling of estrogens. These data support the hypothesis that manipulation of the gut microbiome could influence estrogen homeostasis and, by extension, breast cancer risk. However, due to the cross-sectional design and small sample size, causality cannot be established, and findings regarding specific microbial associations should be considered exploratory. Further research with larger cohorts and longitudinal designs is warranted to confirm these associations and elucidate underlying mechanisms.
Treatment of Symptoms of the Menopause: An Endocrine Society Clinical Practice Guideline
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
•
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) is one of the most effective treatments for women experiencing the symptoms of menopause, particularly vasomotor symptoms such as hot flashes and night sweats. But its benefits go beyond just symptom management. HRT can also play a key role in improving vaginal health by alleviating dryness and discomfort, which are common complaints among women in menopause. Additionally, it helps prevent bone loss, significantly reducing the risk of osteoporosis and fractures, which are more common after menopause. Despite its many benefits, HRT is not one-size-fits-all; it’s essential to tailor treatment based on individual health profiles, taking into account the risks like breast cancer, blood clots, and heart disease that come with prolonged use.
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This guideline on menopausal symptom treatment prioritizes early initiation of hormone therapy, safe routes like transdermal estradiol, and vaginal care for genitourinary symptoms. It promotes a tailored approach considering cardiovascular and breast cancer risks.
What was studied?
This guideline reviews the treatment of menopausal symptoms, focusing on vasomotor symptoms (VMS) such as hot flashes and night sweats, as well as the genitourinary syndrome of menopause (GSM). The paper provides recommendations on managing these symptoms through menopausal hormone therapy (MHT) and non-hormonal treatments. It emphasizes the importance of individualizing therapy based on patient-specific risks and preferences, including the choice between oral, transdermal, and vaginal estrogen routes. The guideline also discusses the safety and efficacy of various therapies, including estrogen-progestogen combinations, and addresses issues like cardiovascular risk, venous thromboembolism, and breast cancer risk.
Who was studied?
The guideline focuses on postmenopausal women, specifically those who are experiencing troublesome vasomotor symptoms, genitourinary issues, and other climacteric symptoms. It addresses women under 60 years or within 10 years of menopause who are generally healthy but may have specific risks, such as cardiovascular concerns or breast cancer history. The document also includes considerations for women with a uterus who need progestogen therapy alongside estrogen and those with a history of breast cancer who need alternative, non-hormonal treatments. The focus is on personalizing treatment based on the severity of symptoms, health status, and patient preference.
Most important findings
The guideline emphasizes that menopausal hormone therapy (MHT) is the most effective treatment for vasomotor symptoms, particularly when initiated early (before age 60 or within 10 years of menopause). Estrogen therapy (ET) significantly reduces hot flashes and night sweats, while estrogen-progestogen therapy (EPT) is recommended for women with a uterus to protect the endometrium. The guideline favors transdermal estrogen over oral forms for women with cardiovascular risks due to lower thrombotic risks. Non-hormonal therapies, such as SSRIs, SNRIs, gabapentin, and clonidine, are recommended for women who cannot use hormones or prefer alternatives. Vaginal estrogen, including low-dose preparations, is recommended for genitourinary symptoms like vaginal dryness and dyspareunia, with benefits that likely extend to vaginal microbiome health, though microbial data is not provided in the guideline. The use of vaginal moisturizers and lubricants is also suggested for symptom relief in women not opting for hormone therapy. The paper underscores the need for regular screening for breast cancer and cardiovascular risks before initiating MHT and stresses that shared decision-making is crucial to managing menopausal symptoms effectively.
Key implications
Clinicians should initiate MHT for vasomotor symptom relief in women under 60 or within 10 years of menopause, taking into account individual risk factors like cardiovascular health and breast cancer risk. Transdermal estradiol should be prioritized for women with higher cardiovascular risks. For women with an intact uterus, a progestogen must be used to protect the endometrium. Non-hormonal alternatives should be considered for those who prefer not to use hormones or have contraindications. Clinicians should also prioritize vaginal estrogen for women suffering from genitourinary symptoms and consider vaginal lubricants and moisturizers as adjunctive treatments. While the guideline does not focus on the microbiome, the vaginal health benefits of estrogen may support a more favorable vaginal microbiome, emphasizing the importance of managing both symptoms and vaginal ecosystem health concurrently. These considerations should be incorporated into personalized treatment plans for optimal outcomes.
The effect of herbal tea capsule on menopause hot flashes
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
•
Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal hot flashes are one of the most common and disruptive symptoms that women experience during the transition to menopause. Characterized by sudden sensations of heat, sweating, and flushing, hot flashes can significantly affect a woman’s quality of life, causing sleep disturbances, mood swings, and even long-term health consequences. Understanding the complex mechanisms behind hot flashes, as well as the role of microbiome-targeted therapies, offers new avenues for improving menopausal health.
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This study demonstrates that herbal tea capsules significantly reduce the frequency, duration, and severity of hot flashes in postmenopausal women, offering a promising natural alternative to hormone therapy for managing menopausal symptoms.
What was studied?
This study investigates the effect of herbal tea capsules on reducing hot flashes in postmenopausal women. Researchers conducted a randomized clinical trial with 82 women experiencing hot flashes. One group received 450 mg of herbal tea capsules daily, while the other group received placebo capsules. The study measured the severity, duration, and frequency of hot flashes before, 4 weeks after, and 8 weeks after the intervention to assess the effectiveness of the herbal tea in alleviating menopausal symptoms.
Who was studied?
The study involved 82 women, aged 45 to 60, who had been experiencing hot flashes for at least three months. Participants were randomly assigned to two groups: one receiving herbal tea capsules and the other receiving placebo capsules. The inclusion criteria required participants to have frequent hot flashes, with at least three occurrences per day, and no recent use of hormone therapy or other treatments for menopausal symptoms.
Most important findings
The study found that women who took the herbal tea capsules experienced a significant reduction in the frequency, duration, and severity of their hot flashes compared to the placebo group. After 4 weeks of intervention, the herbal tea group showed a notable improvement in hot flash symptoms, and by the 8-week mark, the reductions were even more significant. The severity and frequency of hot flashes in the herbal tea group decreased dramatically, while the placebo group showed little to no change. These results suggest that herbal tea capsules may be an effective and non-invasive alternative for managing hot flashes in postmenopausal women.
Key implications
The findings of this study highlight the potential of herbal remedies, particularly herbal tea, as a safe, cost-effective, and non-invasive treatment for hot flashes in postmenopausal women. Given the widespread acceptance of herbal products and the concerns about the side effects of hormone therapy, this study provides evidence supporting the use of herbal tea capsules for managing menopausal symptoms. Healthcare providers may consider recommending herbal supplements like these to women seeking natural alternatives for alleviating hot flashes and improving their quality of life during menopause.
Intermittent Fasting and Weight Management at Menopause
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Intermittent fasting improves weight, insulin sensitivity, and cardiovascular health in postmenopausal women, offering a promising non-pharmacological strategy for managing metabolic disorders.
What was studied?
This review assessed the impact of intermittent fasting (IF) on weight management and overall health in postmenopausal women. It focused on how different IF protocols, such as time-restricted feeding, alternate-day fasting, and the 5:2 method, affect metabolic health, weight control, insulin sensitivity, hormonal balance, and inflammation in women post-menopause. The review aimed to evaluate the potential benefits of IF in managing menopause-associated conditions, particularly metabolic syndrome, cardiovascular risk, and obesity, which are prevalent in postmenopausal women.
Who was studied?
The review consolidated findings from various studies involving postmenopausal women, typically aged between 45 and 65 years, who are at a heightened risk of developing metabolic conditions due to hormonal changes that occur during and after menopause. These women often experience significant weight gain, insulin resistance, and an increased risk of cardiovascular disease, making them a key demographic for evaluating non-pharmacological interventions like intermittent fasting. The studies included clinical trials and observational studies that explored the effects of IF protocols on metabolic health, specifically in postmenopausal women.
Most important findings
The review demonstrated that intermittent fasting (IF) could provide significant metabolic benefits for postmenopausal women, particularly in managing weight gain and improving insulin sensitivity. Studies indicated that IF could help reduce visceral fat and overall body weight, with improvements in metabolic biomarkers such as glucose levels, insulin sensitivity, and lipid profiles. Additionally, IF was found to influence hormonal levels, potentially reducing insulin and cortisol spikes, which are crucial for managing menopause-related metabolic disturbances. The positive impact of IF extended to cardiovascular health, where improvements in blood pressure and lipid profiles were observed. Furthermore, preliminary evidence suggested that IF could enhance cognitive function by improving brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), supporting neuronal health. Although promising, the review also highlighted the need for further research into the long-term effects of IF on bone health and its interaction with hormone replacement therapy (HRT), as these aspects were not comprehensively studied.
Key implications
The findings of this review suggest that intermittent fasting may be a beneficial non-pharmacological intervention for managing menopause-related metabolic and cardiovascular risks in women. IF provides a promising strategy to address obesity, insulin resistance, and other metabolic disorders without relying on medication. Its ability to improve hormonal balance, reduce inflammation, and potentially enhance cognitive function makes it a valuable tool for postmenopausal women. However, the review also emphasizes the need for individualized approaches to IF, as its effectiveness may vary based on the woman’s health status and adherence levels. Further research is required to explore its long-term impact, particularly regarding bone health, and to determine how it interacts with other therapeutic options such as HRT.
Menopausal Hot Flashes: A Concise Review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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This review synthesizes current evidence on menopausal hot flashes, focusing on neuroendocrine mechanisms, genetic factors, and a stepwise, personalized treatment approach, emphasizing new targets such as the KNDy neuronal system and CGRP for future therapies.
What was reviewed?
This comprehensive review article synthesizes current knowledge on menopausal hot flashes (HFs), focusing on epidemiology, pathophysiology, risk factors, and a stepwise approach to management. The review covers a spectrum of treatment options, including hormonal, nonhormonal, and alternative therapies, and highlights recent research on neuropeptides and genetic factors. Special emphasis is placed on the neuroendocrine mechanisms underlying HFs, such as the roles of estrogen deficiency, serotonin, norepinephrine, and the kisspeptin-neurokinin B-dynorphin (KNDy) neuronal system, alongside the potential involvement of calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP). The review integrates findings from epidemiological studies, clinical trials, and mechanistic research, providing clinicians with an updated framework for understanding and managing HFs.
Who was reviewed?
The article synthesizes findings from numerous population-based studies, meta-analyses, clinical trials, and basic science investigations involving peri- and postmenopausal women worldwide. The review draws on data from diverse geographic populations, including Indian, Turkish, Australian, European, North American, South American, and Asian cohorts, to frame the global prevalence and heterogeneity of HFs. Evidence is also incorporated from genetic association studies, neuroendocrine research in both human and animal models, and clinical trials assessing pharmacologic and nonpharmacologic treatments. Special consideration is given to subgroups such as women with breast cancer and those with specific contraindications to hormone replacement therapy.
Most important findings
Hot flashes affect approximately 85% of menopausal women, with duration and severity varying widely by geography, genetics, and lifestyle. Obesity, African descent, lower socioeconomic status, premenstrual syndrome, sedentary lifestyle, and smoking are consistently associated risk factors. Genetic variants, particularly in the tachykinin receptor 3 (NK3R) gene, have emerged as key contributors to vasomotor symptom susceptibility, offering potential targets for personalized therapy. The pathophysiology of HFs centers on hypothalamic thermoregulatory dysfunction, with estrogen deficiency, altered serotonin and norepinephrine signaling, and activation of the KNDy neuronal system (notably neurokinin B) all implicated. The review highlights the role of CGRP, a potent vasodilator, in mediating peripheral symptoms of HFs, underlining the complex neuropeptide interplay. Standard management prioritizes hormonal replacement therapy (HRT) for moderate-to-severe HFs, with selective serotonin and norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs/SNRIs) as effective nonhormonal alternatives. Gabapentin and other agents are reserved for specific scenarios or refractory cases. Novel therapies under investigation include neurokinin 3 receptor antagonists and stellate ganglion block. While alternative therapies (such as acupuncture and plant-based treatments) show promise in small studies, robust evidence remains limited.
Key implications
The review underscores the multifactorial, neuroendocrine basis of menopausal hot flashes, highlighting opportunities for targeted interventions beyond conventional HRT. The emerging roles of neuropeptides such as neurokinin B and CGRP, as well as genetic susceptibility loci, provide fertile ground for future research and development of individualized therapies. Clinicians are advised to adopt a stepwise, patient-centered approach to management, balancing symptom severity, comorbidities, and patient preferences. The integration of nonhormonal and alternative therapies may further expand treatment options, especially for women with contraindications to HRT. For microbiome researchers and clinicians, the article’s neuroendocrine focus suggests indirect but important avenues for exploring gut-brain axis and microbial modulation of neuropeptide pathways in menopausal symptomatology.
The 2020 Menopausal Hormone Therapy Guidelines
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
•
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) is one of the most effective treatments for women experiencing the symptoms of menopause, particularly vasomotor symptoms such as hot flashes and night sweats. But its benefits go beyond just symptom management. HRT can also play a key role in improving vaginal health by alleviating dryness and discomfort, which are common complaints among women in menopause. Additionally, it helps prevent bone loss, significantly reducing the risk of osteoporosis and fractures, which are more common after menopause. Despite its many benefits, HRT is not one-size-fits-all; it’s essential to tailor treatment based on individual health profiles, taking into account the risks like breast cancer, blood clots, and heart disease that come with prolonged use.
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The guideline links menopausal hormone therapy guidelines and vaginal microbiome care to safer symptom control, better GSM outcomes, and lower UTI risk through local estrogen, with timing and route choices that manage vascular and endometrial risk.
What was reviewed?
This guideline review explains how menopausal hormone therapy guidelines and vaginal microbiome evidence guide modern care across symptoms, prevention, and safety. The document defines baseline evaluation, sets clear indications and contraindications, and compares routes, doses, and combinations. It favors individualized therapy by symptom burden and risk, supports transdermal estradiol to limit thrombotic and metabolic effects, and links timing of initiation to cardiovascular outcomes. It also details care for genitourinary syndrome of menopause, notes that low-dose vaginal estrogen restores flora and acidity with minimal systemic absorption, and shows that systemic estrogen does not prevent recurrent urinary tract infections. The guidance stresses shared decisions, regular review, and careful oncologic input when breast cancer history or aromatase inhibitors are present.
Who was reviewed?
The guideline targets peri- and postmenopausal women with vasomotor symptoms, sleep and mood complaints, and genitourinary syndrome of menopause, including patients who need contraception or menstrual control during the transition. It covers women at higher risk of venous thromboembolism, stroke, or cardiometabolic disease who may benefit from transdermal estradiol, and women with premature ovarian insufficiency who need longer replacement. It also addresses women with prior breast cancer who require non-estrogen first-line options and those with recurrent UTIs who need local therapy that restores the vaginal ecosystem rather than systemic estrogen.
Most important findings
The guideline confirms that systemic menopausal hormone therapy remains the most effective treatment for vasomotor symptoms and improves menopause-specific and global quality of life. It supports the “window of opportunity” in which starting therapy before age 60 or within 10 years of menopause lowers all-cause and cardiovascular mortality, while later starts raise vascular risk. It advises that stroke and venous thromboembolism risks rise with age and oral routes, and it therefore prefers transdermal estradiol or lower doses when risk accumulates, with absolute stroke risk in younger starters remaining very low. For the endometrium, the guidance requires adequate progestogen exposure in women with a uterus and allows levonorgestrel IUS with systemic estrogen to control bleeding and protect the lining during the transition.
In GSM, the guideline states that topical vaginal estrogen (cream, tablet, ring) restores lactobacillus-dominant flora, increases epithelial maturation, and lowers vaginal pH, which eases dryness, dyspareunia, urgency, and recurrent UTIs. It notes minimal systemic absorption with low-dose vaginal estrogen but urges oncologist input for women on aromatase inhibitors. Additionally, It adds that systemic estrogen does not prevent recurrent UTIs, while local estrogen does, and it supports DHEA and ospemifene when estrogen is not suitable. It also observes that moisturizers and lubricants help symptoms yet do not rebuild the internal environment, which reinforces a microbiome-directed role for local estrogen. These points provide concrete microbiome-linked signatures: lactobacillus recovery with local estrogen, sustained acidic pH, and reduced UTI risk without systemic exposure.
Key implications
Clinicians should match route and regimen to risk, favor transdermal estradiol in women with vascular or metabolic risk, and ensure consistent endometrial protection with progestogen or levonorgestrel IUS. You should start therapy near menopause for vascular safety and avoid starting late for primary prevention alone. In GSM and recurrent UTIs, you should prioritize local estrogen to restore a lactobacillus-dominant vaginal microbiome, reserve systemic estrogen for broader symptoms, and consider DHEA or ospemifene when estrogen is unsuitable. You should involve oncology for women on aromatase inhibitors, monitor bleeding patterns, and reassess dose and route regularly. These steps align symptom relief, safety, and vaginal microbiome health in daily care.
Menopausal Hot Flashes: A Review of Physiology and Biosociocultural Perspective on Methods of Assessment
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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The review explores the physiological and cultural complexities of menopausal hot flashes, highlighting genetic, dietary, and cultural factors. It discusses emerging research areas like brain imaging and genetic polymorphisms, which could lead to better-targeted treatments.
What was reviewed?
The article presents a detailed review of menopausal hot flashes, examining both the physiological and biosociocultural factors that contribute to this common menopausal symptom. It highlights the lack of clarity regarding the exact causes and mechanisms of hot flashes, despite decades of research. The paper discusses how the understanding of hot flashes has expanded to include sociocultural aspects, such as the influence of diet and cultural perceptions, in addition to the biological factors like hormone levels. The review also addresses the various methods used in hot flash research, including neuroimaging and genetic studies.
Who was reviewed?
The paper primarily focuses on studies of menopausal women from both Western and Asian populations. It compares the prevalence of hot flashes in these groups, noting that women in Western countries, particularly the U.S., report more frequent symptoms than those in Asian countries like Japan. The review also considers how cultural factors affect the reporting of hot flashes, as well as how genetic variations, such as the ability to metabolize soy isoflavones into equol, contribute to the experience of hot flashes. Women from different cultural backgrounds, as well as those undergoing treatments like hormone therapy, are central to the studies reviewed.
Most important findings
The review finds that hot flash prevalence varies significantly across cultures, with Asian women, particularly in Japan, reporting fewer hot flashes than their Western counterparts. Dietary factors, such as higher soy intake in Japan, appear to play a role in this difference, as soy isoflavones have estrogen-like effects. Genetic factors also contribute to hot flash variability, with some women being "equol producers" who metabolize soy into a biologically active form that may help reduce hot flashes. Emerging research using neuroimaging and genetic analysis is shedding light on the brain mechanisms and genetic polymorphisms that could influence the severity and occurrence of hot flashes.
Key implications
The review underscores the need for more nuanced research into hot flashes that considers both biological and cultural influences. It suggests that treatments for hot flashes should be personalized, taking into account cultural differences in symptom reporting and the role of diet. The development of better research tools, including neuroimaging and genetic studies, is crucial for uncovering the mechanisms behind hot flashes. Such advancements could lead to more targeted and effective treatments, especially in light of the complexities involved in how hot flashes are experienced and managed across different populations.
Circulating interleukin-8 and tumor necrosis factor-α are associated with hot flashes in healthy postmenopausal women
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
•
Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal hot flashes are one of the most common and disruptive symptoms that women experience during the transition to menopause. Characterized by sudden sensations of heat, sweating, and flushing, hot flashes can significantly affect a woman’s quality of life, causing sleep disturbances, mood swings, and even long-term health consequences. Understanding the complex mechanisms behind hot flashes, as well as the role of microbiome-targeted therapies, offers new avenues for improving menopausal health.
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This study shows that the severity of hot flashes in postmenopausal women correlates with increased levels of pro-inflammatory cytokines, particularly IL-8 and TNF-α. These findings suggest a connection between hot flashes and systemic inflammation, which may contribute to chronic diseases in this population.
What was studied?
This study investigates the relationship between hot flashes and circulating pro-inflammatory cytokines, specifically interleukin-8 (IL-8) and tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α), in healthy postmenopausal women. Researchers aimed to understand whether the intensity of hot flashes correlates with levels of these inflammatory markers, which are associated with systemic inflammation. The study measured cytokine levels and leukocyte numbers across different severity groups of hot flashes, ranging from none to severe, to examine potential inflammatory links.
Who was studied?
The study included 202 healthy postmenopausal women aged 45 to 60 years, with participants divided into four groups based on their hot flash severity: none (Group N), mild (Group m), moderate (Group M), and severe (Group S). The women were selected based on specific inclusion criteria, including having no significant chronic systemic diseases and a BMI between 18 and 30 kg/m². The study controlled for factors such as age, body mass index (BMI), menopausal duration, and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) levels to focus on the association between hot flash severity and cytokine levels.
Most important findings
The study found significant associations between the severity of hot flashes and elevated levels of IL-8 and TNF-α. Specifically, women with severe hot flashes had 37.19% higher IL-8 and 51.27% higher TNF-α levels compared to those with no hot flashes, indicating a positive relationship between hot flash severity and these pro-inflammatory cytokines. Mild and moderate hot flash groups did not show significant differences in cytokine levels. The results suggest that hot flashes may be linked to low-grade systemic inflammation, which could contribute to the development of cardiovascular disease and other systemic conditions in postmenopausal women.
Key implications
The study's findings suggest that hot flashes could be a marker for systemic inflammation in postmenopausal women, potentially increasing the risk of developing chronic diseases such as cardiovascular issues and insulin resistance. The elevated levels of IL-8 and TNF-α associated with severe hot flashes highlight the need for targeted treatments to manage both the symptoms of hot flashes and the underlying inflammatory process. Understanding the inflammatory mechanisms behind hot flashes could lead to more effective interventions, potentially improving the overall health outcomes for postmenopausal women.
Menopause Alters Gut Microbiome and Increases Cardiometabolic Risk in Hispanic Women
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Menopause in Hispanic/Latina women is linked to distinctive gut microbiome and estrobolome alterations, resembling those in men, and these microbial changes are associated with increased cardiometabolic risk. The study identifies specific microbiome signatures potentially mediating menopause-related metabolic effects.
What was studied?
The study explored how menopause affects the gut microbiome and estrobolome (the subset of gut bacteria involved in metabolizing sex hormones), and how these changes may relate to cardiometabolic risk factors. Using a large, well-characterized sample from the Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos (HCHS/SOL), researchers performed shotgun metagenomic sequencing on stool samples from about 2300 participants, including premenopausal women, postmenopausal women, and age-matched men. A subset also underwent serum metabolomics to assess sex hormone metabolites. The primary aims were to assess whether menopause alters gut microbiome diversity and composition, to identify specific microbial taxa and functions associated with menopausal status, and to investigate the relationship between these microbiome features, circulating sex hormone metabolites, and cardiometabolic risk profiles.
Who was studied?
Participants were drawn from the HCHS/SOL, a large, diverse cohort of Hispanic/Latino adults in the US. The analytic sample included 295 premenopausal women, 1,027 postmenopausal women, and 978 men (divided into groups age-matched to pre-and postmenopausal women). Exclusion criteria included cancer and insufficient sequencing data. Menopausal status was based on self-report and further refined to exclude women with surgical menopause, hormone therapy, or ambiguous menopausal status. Men were matched to women by age, BMI, Hispanic/Latino background, and nativity to control for confounders. Cardiometabolic risk factors and detailed demographic and lifestyle data were collected for all participants. Serum metabolomics data were available for a subset of 346 women.
Most important findings
Postmenopausal women exhibited lower gut microbiome diversity and a composition more similar to men than to premenopausal women, even after adjusting for age and confounders. Specific taxa enriched in postmenopausal women included Bacteroides sp. strain Ga6A1, Prevotella marshii, and Sutterella wadsworthensis, while Escherichia coli-Shigella spp., Oscillibacter sp., Akkermansia muciniphila, Clostridium lactatifermentans, Parabacteroides johnsonii, and Veillonella seminalis were depleted. Functionally, postmenopausal women had increased microbial sulfate transport systems and decreased abundance of β-glucuronidase, a key estrobolome enzyme, suggesting reduced microbial deconjugation of sex steroid hormones. Correlations between gut microbial features and serum progestin metabolites in postmenopausal women indicate active microbial participation in sex hormone retention. Menopause-related microbiome changes, especially the loss of beneficial species like C. lactatifermentans, were associated with adverse cardiometabolic profiles, including higher waist circumference, lower HDL, and higher blood pressure.
Key implications
The findings suggest that menopause-induced hormonal changes drive a shift in the gut microbiome toward a less diverse, more male-like composition, with reductions in both beneficial bacteria and estrobolome activity. These microbial shifts may reduce the potential for microbial reactivation of sex steroid hormones, potentially exacerbating the hormonal deficiency of menopause. The observed associations between menopause-related microbiome alterations and adverse cardiometabolic risk factors underscore the gut microbiome’s potential role in mediating increased metabolic risk after menopause. These results highlight the need for further research on microbiome-targeted interventions or hormone therapies to mitigate postmenopausal metabolic risk and suggest that microbiome signatures could be useful biomarkers for menopausal status and related health risks.
A metabolic view on menopause and ageing
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Cardiovascular Health
Cardiovascular Health
Recent research has revealed that specific gut microbiota-derived metabolites are strongly linked to cardiovascular disease risk—potentially influencing atherosclerosis development more than traditional risk factors like cholesterol levels. This highlights the gut microbiome as a novel therapeutic target for cardiovascular interventions.
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This study reveals significant metabolic changes in postmenopausal women, including a pro-atherogenic lipid profile and increased amino acids linked to cardiovascular and metabolic risk, emphasizing menopause as a key factor in long-term health risks.
What was studied?
The study focused on the impact of menopause on metabolic changes, particularly the effects of menopause on lipid and amino acid profiles, and their contribution to future cardiovascular and metabolic risks. It analyzed the metabolomic data from 26,065 individuals of Northern European ancestry, examining how menopause alters a broad spectrum of 135 serum metabolites, including lipoproteins, fatty acids, amino acids, and small molecules related to energy metabolism. The study aimed to assess the systemic metabolic shifts associated with menopause, considering not only traditional lipid measures but also detailed lipid subclass measurements and amino acid concentrations, which are emerging as key players in cardiovascular disease (CVD) and metabolic disorders.
Who was studied?
The study involved a large cohort of 26,065 participants, consisting of 16,107 Finnish individuals and 9,958 Estonian individuals. Participants were from a range of ages, predominantly from 40 to 75 years, with the analysis particularly focused on women in the menopausal transition (ages 40-55 years). The study excluded individuals using hormone replacement therapy (HRT), those with diabetes or on lipid-lowering medications, and pregnant women, to focus on natural metabolic shifts associated with menopause. The cohort was racially and ethnically homogenous, primarily consisting of individuals of Northern European descent, which may limit generalizability to other populations.
Most important findings
Postmenopausal women showed significantly higher concentrations of total cholesterol, esterified cholesterol, and lipoprotein subclasses, alongside higher concentrations of apoB and smaller, denser HDL particles. These changes align with increased cardiovascular risk. Higher levels of amino acids such as glutamine, tyrosine, and isoleucine were observed in postmenopausal women, which are linked to increased risk for metabolic diseases like Type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular diseases. Postmenopausal women exhibited increased levels of monounsaturated fatty acids and omega-7 and omega-9 fatty acids, which are associated with lipid metabolism and may influence CVD risk pathways. The study also found that a rapid increase in atherogenic lipid measures occurred between the ages of 45 and 50, coinciding with the onset of menopause, highlighting menopause's role in altering lipid metabolism and contributing to long-term metabolic and cardiovascular risks.
Key implications
The findings from this study underline menopause as a pivotal factor influencing metabolic shifts that increase the risk of cardiovascular and metabolic diseases. The changes in lipid and amino acid profiles suggest that menopause accelerates a shift towards a pro-atherogenic state, which can predispose women to conditions like heart disease and type 2 diabetes. These insights are crucial for clinicians as they highlight the need for early monitoring of metabolic health during the menopausal transition. The study also emphasizes the importance of considering metabolic profiling, including lipoprotein subclass and amino acid measures, as potential biomarkers for future cardiovascular risk in postmenopausal women. Additionally, the role of menopause in influencing fatty acid metabolism suggests that interventions targeting diet and lifestyle may be necessary to mitigate these risks.
Menopause-Associated Lipid Metabolic Disorders and Foods Beneficial for Postmenopausal Women
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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This review synthesizes evidence on menopause-related lipid metabolic disorders, emphasizing estrogen deficiency, dietary interventions, and the role of probiotics and microbiome modulation in improving metabolic health among postmenopausal women.
What was reviewed?
This comprehensive review examined the relationship between menopause-associated changes in lipid metabolism and the increased risk of metabolic disorders in postmenopausal women. It addressed the physiological changes underlying menopause and their impact on fat distribution, lipid profiles, and the development of metabolic syndrome, obesity, and cardiovascular disease (CVD). The authors also critically reviewed dietary recommendations and beneficial compounds, including vitamin D, omega-3 fatty acids, antioxidants, phytochemicals, and probiotics, that may help manage or mitigate abnormal lipid metabolism in this population.
Who was reviewed?
The review focused on postmenopausal women, typically aged 45–55 years and older, representing a significant and growing portion of the global female population. The authors synthesized data from a wide range of studies, including large cohort and longitudinal studies such as the Study of Women’s Health Across the Nation (SWAN), as well as clinical trials, animal models (notably ovariectomized mice), and cross-sectional analyses. The population included healthy women, as well as those with obesity, metabolic syndrome, and related comorbidities.
Most important findings
The review highlights important associations between estrogen deficiency and changes in adipokines, such as increased leptin and resistin and decreased adiponectin and ghrelin, which collectively exacerbate insulin resistance and metabolic dysfunction. Notably, the review discusses the role of gut microbiota and probiotics, referencing emerging evidence that multistrain probiotics improve endothelial function and insulin resistance in obese postmenopausal women. Dietary interventions were shown to be effective: higher protein intake helps preserve lean mass and prevent sarcopenia, traditional diets rich in fish, seaweeds, vegetables, and fruits lower triglycerides and improve HDL-C, and supplementation with vitamin D and omega-3 fatty acids is associated with lower adiposity, improved lipid profiles, and reduced inflammation. Antioxidants and phytochemicals from plant foods, as well as probiotics, provide additional cardiometabolic protection.
Key implications
Understanding the interplay between menopause, lipid metabolism, and metabolic disorders is essential for developing preventive and therapeutic strategies in clinical practice. The review underscores the importance of dietary patterns and nutrients, particularly vitamin D, omega-3 fatty acids, antioxidants, phytochemicals, and probiotics, in improving lipid profiles, reducing inflammation, and supporting metabolic health in postmenopausal women. From a microbiome perspective, the documented benefits of probiotics and dietary modulation of gut flora suggest a promising avenue for personalized interventions to mitigate menopause-associated metabolic risk.
The Importance of Nutrition in Menopause and Perimenopause—A Review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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This review underscores the importance of nutrition in managing menopausal symptoms and preventing chronic diseases. It highlights key nutrients such as calcium, vitamin D, and protein and promotes a balanced diet and regular physical activity as integral parts of menopausal health management.
What was studied?
The article provides a review on the importance of nutrition during perimenopause and menopause. It focuses on the role of diet in managing menopausal symptoms and preventing chronic diseases such as cardiovascular disease, osteoporosis, and diabetes, which are commonly observed during this life stage. The review outlines the dietary strategies for managing weight gain, metabolic changes, and addressing nutrient deficiencies, while also highlighting key nutrients like vitamin D, calcium, and protein, which play vital roles in the health of menopausal women. It emphasizes the significance of a balanced diet and personalized nutrition counseling to improve health outcomes during this phase of life.
Who was studied?
The review discussed studies involving women in the perimenopausal and menopausal stages, primarily those aged 40 to 60 years, experiencing typical menopausal symptoms such as hot flashes, night sweats, and weight gain. These women were observed for their nutritional intake and the impact of dietary changes on their health, particularly focusing on obesity, cardiovascular risks, osteoporosis, and type 2 diabetes. The review also considered women with specific conditions, including hormone-sensitive breast cancer, to explore dietary recommendations that help reduce symptom severity and disease progression in this demographic.
Most important findings
The review found that dietary modifications play a crucial role in managing the symptoms of menopause. Increased physical activity combined with a balanced diet can reduce the risk of chronic conditions like cardiovascular disease and osteoporosis. Key nutrients, particularly vitamin D, calcium, B vitamins, and protein, were found to be essential for bone health and maintaining muscle mass. The Mediterranean diet, rich in vegetables, fruits, and healthy fats, was highlighted as particularly beneficial in reducing the risk of metabolic syndrome, controlling weight, and improving overall menopausal health. The review also stressed that proper hydration, including adequate fluid intake, is critical for maintaining metabolic functions, regulating heat balance, and supporting overall health. Additionally, it was noted that reducing calorie intake and incorporating fiber-rich foods, such as legumes and whole grains, help manage weight and support metabolic processes.
Key implications
The findings suggest that nutrition plays a pivotal role in alleviating menopausal symptoms and preventing associated chronic conditions. Clinicians should incorporate nutritional counseling into the management of menopausal women, emphasizing the importance of a balanced diet rich in key vitamins and minerals. Since obesity and metabolic disorders are prevalent during this period, dietary interventions targeting weight management, such as reducing caloric intake and increasing fiber, are crucial. Furthermore, ensuring adequate intake of calcium and vitamin D can help prevent osteoporosis and other bone-related issues. Women in menopause should be encouraged to adopt a holistic lifestyle approach, combining a healthy diet, regular physical activity, and adequate sleep to optimize their health and quality of life.
Menopause hot flashes and molecular mechanisms modulated by food-derived nutrients
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal hot flashes are one of the most common and disruptive symptoms that women experience during the transition to menopause. Characterized by sudden sensations of heat, sweating, and flushing, hot flashes can significantly affect a woman’s quality of life, causing sleep disturbances, mood swings, and even long-term health consequences. Understanding the complex mechanisms behind hot flashes, as well as the role of microbiome-targeted therapies, offers new avenues for improving menopausal health.
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This review discusses how food-derived nutrients modulate molecular mechanisms related to hot flashes in menopause, identifying dietary compounds that may offer effective, natural alternatives to hormonal treatments.
What was studied?
This review examines the molecular mechanisms underlying hot flashes during menopause, with a focus on how food-derived nutrients can modulate these mechanisms. It explores the role of various molecular pathways and genetic factors involved in hot flashes, including the kisspeptin-GnRH pathway, aryl hydrocarbon receptor signaling, and the effects of inflammatory biomarkers, oxidative stress, and glucose availability. The authors also analyze how specific food components, such as polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs), flavonoids, and carotenoids, may influence these pathways to alleviate hot flashes.
Who was studied?
The review synthesizes findings from numerous studies involving both human populations and animal models. It references genome-wide association studies (GWAS) of menopausal women and animal studies on the effects of food-derived compounds. The review also draws from research involving the impact of dietary nutrients on gene expression and cell signaling in neuronal and hypothalamic models, focusing on women experiencing menopausal symptoms such as hot flashes.
Most important findings
The study found that certain food-derived nutrients, such as equol, genistein, and docosahexaenoic acid (DHA), can modulate pathways that affect hot flashes, like the kisspeptin-GnRH pathway and oxidative stress. Nutrients such as curcumin and vitamin E have shown promising effects in reducing inflammation and oxidative stress, which are believed to play a role in the occurrence of hot flashes. The research also highlights the potential for compounds like quercetin, resveratrol, and apigenin to activate enzymes that may help mitigate symptoms by affecting estrogen metabolism and signaling pathways. The review suggests that these compounds could offer a natural alternative for managing menopausal symptoms, including hot flashes.
Key implications
The findings suggest that dietary interventions, particularly those focused on specific nutrients, could serve as effective natural treatments for managing hot flashes during menopause. By modulating key molecular pathways and cell signaling mechanisms, food-derived nutrients can provide a non-hormonal alternative to alleviate symptoms associated with menopausal transition.
Actaea racemosa L. Is More Effective in Combination with Rhodiola rosea L. for Relief of Menopausal Symptoms
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Combining Rhodiola rosea and Actaea racemosa extracts significantly improves menopausal symptoms and quality of life, outperforming black cohosh alone with good safety.
What was studied?
This randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial evaluated the efficacy and safety of a novel herbal preparation, Menopause Relief EP® (RR-BC), combining extracts of Actaea racemosa (black cohosh, BC) and Rhodiola rosea (RR), in relieving menopausal symptoms. The study compared this combination against two doses of black cohosh alone and placebo over 12 weeks. The primary outcomes were improvements in menopausal symptom severity assessed by the Kupperman Menopausal Index (KMI) and Menopause Rating Scale (MRS), with secondary endpoints including quality of life (QoL) measured by the Utian Quality of Life (UQOL) scale. Safety and adverse events (AEs) were also monitored.
Who was studied?
The study enrolled 220 menopausal women aged 40–82 years (median 52 years) diagnosed with menopausal complaints confirmed by elevated FSH and low estradiol levels. Participants were randomized evenly into four groups (RR-BC combination, low-dose BC, high-dose BC, and placebo). Patients had moderate menopausal symptoms as measured by baseline KMI and MRS scores. Women with hormone therapy, psychological disorders, or other conditions likely to interfere with outcomes were excluded. Ninety percent completed the study per protocol, with treatment compliance exceeding 90% across groups.
Most important findings
The RR-BC combination significantly reduced menopausal symptom severity, as shown by a 71.2% decrease in KMI scores after 12 weeks, outperforming both low-dose and high-dose BC groups and placebo. Similarly, MRS scores decreased by 67.7% with RR-BC versus 49.9% and 60.0% for the BC groups. Quality of life, particularly in emotional and physical health domains, improved significantly more with RR-BC than with BC or placebo. The RR-BC group also experienced significant improvements in sexual activity. Safety analysis showed no significant difference in adverse event frequency or severity between groups, with no serious adverse events reported. The data support a synergistic or additive effect of Rhodiola when combined with black cohosh, enhancing relief from psychological and somatic menopausal symptoms. Although the study did not directly assess microbiome changes, both plants have known adaptogenic and neuroprotective properties that may indirectly influence microbiome-associated inflammation and hormonal regulation, which are relevant to menopause symptomatology.
Key implications
This trial demonstrates that combining Rhodiola rosea with Actaea racemosa provides superior symptom relief and quality of life improvements for menopausal women compared to black cohosh alone, with excellent safety and tolerability. The combination’s enhanced effect on emotional health and sexual function suggests it addresses neuropsychological symptoms effectively, likely via adaptogenic and estrogen-modulating mechanisms. These findings encourage further investigation of combined botanical therapies in menopause, including exploration of their impact on the microbiome and inflammatory pathways. This approach offers a promising alternative or adjunct to hormone replacement therapy, especially for women seeking non-hormonal, plant-based interventions with favorable safety profiles.
Do SSRIs and SNRIs reduce the frequency and/or severity of hot flashes in menopausal women
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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This review confirms that SSRIs and SNRIs, particularly paroxetine and venlafaxine, are effective for managing hot flashes in menopausal women. These therapies provide an alternative to hormone replacement therapy, with minimal side effects and considerations for women with specific health concerns, like hypertension or a history of breast cancer.
What was studied?
This review article focused on the use of SSRIs and SNRIs to reduce the frequency and severity of hot flashes in menopausal women. The study assessed various SSRIs and SNRIs, including paroxetine, escitalopram, venlafaxine, and desvenlafaxine, to determine their effectiveness as alternatives to hormone replacement therapy (HRT) in treating vasomotor symptoms (VMS), particularly hot flashes. It explored the evidence from multiple randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and systematic reviews to evaluate the efficacy, safety, and side effects of these non-hormonal treatments for managing menopausal symptoms in women who either cannot use HRT or prefer non-hormonal options due to health concerns.
Who was studied?
The studies reviewed included menopausal, perimenopausal, and postmenopausal women aged 18 years and older who experienced frequent or severe vasomotor symptoms, such as hot flashes. The review focused on women who were seeking relief from these symptoms using non-hormonal pharmaceutical treatments. It also considered studies that involved women who had contraindications to hormone therapy, such as a history of breast cancer, or those who simply preferred non-hormonal treatments for managing their menopausal symptoms. The review also assessed the use of SSRIs and SNRIs in women with varying baseline health conditions, such as hypertension or a history of breast cancer, to understand their safety and effectiveness in different populations.
Most important findings
The review found that SSRIs and SNRIs, particularly paroxetine, escitalopram, and venlafaxine, were effective in reducing the frequency and severity of hot flashes in menopausal women. Paroxetine (Paxil) was particularly noted for its significant effectiveness at a low dose (7.5 mg), which is the only FDA-approved SSRI for treating hot flashes. Venlafaxine (Effexor XR) was highlighted as a first-line SNRI option, although it was associated with higher rates of side effects, such as nausea and constipation. The review found that SSRIs reduced hot flashes by 10% to 64%, with the greatest effectiveness seen in paroxetine. Escitalopram and citalopram were also effective, although their effects were less pronounced than paroxetine.
The most common side effects included nausea, fatigue, and dry mouth, but these were generally mild and subsided after the first week. The review emphasized that SNRIs, particularly venlafaxine, may increase blood pressure and therefore should be used cautiously in hypertensive patients. The evidence also suggested that SSRIs and SNRIs can be considered a reasonable alternative to HRT for women who wish to avoid estrogen-related risks.
Key implications
The review suggests that SSRIs and SNRIs are viable options for reducing hot flashes in menopausal women who are unable or unwilling to use HRT. Paroxetine, escitalopram, and venlafaxine are particularly effective and should be considered as first-line therapies for managing vasomotor symptoms. The review also highlights the need for careful monitoring of blood pressure in patients using venlafaxine, particularly those with a history of hypertension. Furthermore, the review advises against using SSRIs in women who are taking tamoxifen, as SSRIs can inhibit the CYP2D6 enzyme, which is necessary for tamoxifen metabolism. SNRIs like venlafaxine and desvenlafaxine are safer alternatives for women taking tamoxifen. The findings support the use of SSRIs and SNRIs in clinical practice, particularly in populations where hormone therapy is not recommended or preferred. However, the review also calls for further studies to evaluate the long-term risks, benefits, and dosing regimens of these non-hormonal treatments.
Systemic and local effects of vaginal dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA): NCCTG N10C1 (Alliance)
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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This study supports the use of vaginal DHEA for alleviating vaginal symptoms in postmenopausal women, particularly those with a history of breast or gynecologic cancer. It improves vaginal tissue health without affecting systemic hormones or bone biomarkers, making it a safe alternative to estrogen therapy.
What was studied?
This study examined the systemic and local effects of vaginal dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) in postmenopausal women, particularly those with a history of breast or gynecologic cancer. It evaluated the impact of vaginal DHEA on hormone concentrations, markers of bone formation, and vaginal cytology, including pH and maturation index. The study aimed to assess the efficacy of two different doses (3.25 mg and 6.5 mg) of vaginal DHEA compared to a plain moisturizer (PM) as a control for women experiencing vaginal dryness or dyspareunia, while considering the effects on systemic hormone levels, vaginal health, and bone biomarkers.
Who was studied?
The study included 345 postmenopausal women with a history of breast or gynecologic cancer, who reported moderate to severe vaginal symptoms. These women were enrolled in a randomized, controlled trial and were either on tamoxifen or aromatase inhibitors (AIs). They were randomly assigned to one of three groups: vaginal DHEA at 3.25 mg, vaginal DHEA at 6.5 mg, or a plain moisturizer (PM) control group. Eligibility criteria included women who had completed curative treatment for their cancer and were not using any oral or transdermal hormonal products except for tamoxifen or AIs.
Most important findings
The study found that vaginal DHEA led to a dose-dependent increase in circulating DHEA-S and testosterone levels. Estradiol levels were significantly higher in the 6.5 mg DHEA group, but not in the 3.25 mg DHEA group, compared to the control group. Despite the increase in estradiol, levels remained in the postmenopausal range. There was no significant effect on estrone or bone biomarkers such as osteocalcin and bone alkaline phosphatase, indicating that vaginal DHEA did not have "off-target" effects on bone health. Regarding vaginal cytology, both DHEA doses led to improvements in the vaginal maturation index, with more women experiencing cell maturation compared to the control group. Vaginal pH also decreased significantly in the DHEA treatment groups, indicating improved vaginal health. Women using DHEA also experienced fewer vaginal symptoms, suggesting that DHEA improved vaginal tissue health without systemic estrogenic effects, particularly beneficial for women on aromatase inhibitors (AIs), who cannot use systemic estrogen.
Key implications
Vaginal DHEA presents a promising treatment for managing vaginal symptoms related to menopause, especially for cancer survivors on aromatase inhibitors, for whom traditional estrogen therapy is contraindicated. The study suggests that DHEA is effective in improving vaginal cytology and reducing vaginal pH, thus alleviating dryness and dyspareunia. These findings support the use of vaginal DHEA as a safe and effective alternative to systemic estrogen therapies for women with hormone-sensitive cancers. Clinicians may consider recommending vaginal DHEA for postmenopausal women with vaginal symptoms, especially those with a history of cancer, as it provides local effects without significantly impacting systemic hormone levels or bone health. Further research is needed to confirm long-term safety, particularly regarding its use in women on AIs.
Insights into estrogen impact in oral health & microbiome in COVID-19
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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This study examined the impact of estrogen on oral health and microbiome composition in COVID-19 patients, showing that postmenopausal women and men experience poorer oral health, which correlates with elevated proinflammatory cytokines and lower ACE2 expression, potentially influencing COVID-19 outcomes.
What was studied?
The study explored the effects of estrogen on oral health, microbiome composition, and cytokine profiles in premenopausal, postmenopausal women, and men with COVID-19. It aimed to understand how hormonal differences, particularly estrogen levels, impact oral health, ACE2 expression, and the inflammatory environment in the oral cavity, with a focus on COVID-19 outcomes.
Who was studied?
The study involved 60 non-vaccinated subjects, divided into three groups: 20 premenopausal women, 18 postmenopausal women, and 22 men. All participants were diagnosed with SARS-CoV-2 infection and underwent detailed oral health evaluations, including swabs for ACE2 expression, saliva cytokine measurements, and 16S rRNA sequencing to analyze the oral microbiome. The study considered variables such as age, oral health status, comorbidities, and hormonal status.
Most important findings
The study found that postmenopausal women and men had a poorer oral health status, characterized by higher oral proinflammatory cytokine levels. Postmenopausal women exhibited a significantly lower expression of ACE2 in oral cells compared to premenopausal women, which could imply a compromised protective mechanism against SARS-CoV-2. Additionally, salivary estrogen levels were negatively correlated with viral load, suggesting estrogen's potential protective role in mitigating viral infection. The oral microbiome in premenopausal women was enriched with commensal species like Prevotella melaninogenica, whereas postmenopausal women had higher levels of pathogenic species such as Leptotrichia and Tannerella. These differences were linked to variations in oral health indices, with poor oral health associated with a dysbiotic microbiome and increased proinflammatory cytokine profiles.
Key implications
This study highlights the influence of estrogen on oral health and immune responses, particularly in the context of COVID-19. It suggests that postmenopausal women, due to hormonal changes, may experience worsened oral health and increased vulnerability to respiratory infections, such as COVID-19. Estrogen's role in modulating ACE2 expression and inflammatory cytokines indicates its potential as a protective factor in managing viral infections, making it an important consideration in postmenopausal health management. These findings underscore the need for further studies to explore hormonal therapies and microbiome interventions as potential strategies to improve oral health and mitigate the effects of COVID-19 in postmenopausal women.
The relationship between menopausal syndrome and gut microbes
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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This study found that menopausal syndrome is linked to gut microbiota dysbiosis, with reduced Bifidobacterium animalis and altered metabolic pathways, suggesting microbiome-targeted interventions may benefit menopausal women.
What was studied?
This original research article investigated the relationship between menopausal syndrome (MPS) and gut microbiota in women. Specifically, the study compared the gut microbial composition and predicted microbial functions between women experiencing MPS and healthy menopausal women. The research utilized 16S rRNA gene sequencing to profile gut microbiota from fecal samples, assessed clinical and hormonal parameters (including estradiol, FSH, and LH), and applied bioinformatics tools to characterize microbial signatures and pathway enrichment associated with MPS.
Who was studied?
The study enrolled 101 women aged 40–60 years from Guangzhou, China, between June 2020 and October 2021. Of these, 77 women were diagnosed with menopausal syndrome (MPS group), and 24 were healthy menopausal controls (H group). Diagnosis of MPS required the presence of menopausal symptoms, menstrual irregularities, and a modified Kupperman index (KI) score >15, while controls had a KI score <15 and no hot flashes. Exclusion criteria included recent use of sex hormones or antibiotics, severe chronic disease, and age outside the 40–60-year range. Groups were matched for age, BMI, and metabolic comorbidities to minimize confounding factors.
Most important findings
The study identified significant gut microbiota dysbiosis in women with MPS compared to healthy controls. While overall microbial diversity did not differ significantly, 14 microbial species showed differential abundance. Notably, Aggregatibacter segnis, Bifidobacterium animalis, and Acinetobacter guillouiae were enriched in healthy controls and positively correlated with estradiol levels, while their abundance was reduced in MPS and inversely correlated with FSH and LH. Bifidobacterium animalis, known for its probiotic and metabolic benefits, was highlighted as particularly depleted in MPS. Functional prediction analysis revealed that women with MPS had gut microbiota enriched in pathways related to cardiovascular disease and carbohydrate metabolism, suggesting a microbiota-mediated predisposition to metabolic and cardiovascular risk post-menopause.
Key implications
These findings underscore the existence of distinct gut microbiota signatures associated with MPS and hormonal status in menopausal women. The depletion of beneficial species, especially Bifidobacterium animalis, and enrichment of pathways linked to metabolic and cardiovascular diseases suggest that gut microbiota may modulate both menopausal symptoms and long-term health risks. Clinically, the results support the potential for microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) (e.g., probiotics, dietary modulation) to alleviate MPS symptoms and reduce comorbidities. However, the study’s cross-sectional design and modest sample size warrant further longitudinal and interventional research to clarify causality and therapeutic potential.
Study on gut microbiota and metabolomics in postmenopausal women
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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This study reveals how FSH-driven changes in perimenopausal women associate with distinct gut microbiota and metabolomic profiles, linking specific bacteria and metabolic pathways to symptoms like bone pain and mental disturbances, with implications for personalized management strategies.
What was studied?
This research investigated the interplay between gut microbiota composition, fecal metabolites, and clinical symptoms in perimenopausal women, with a particular focus on the influence of follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) levels. Using 16S rRNA gene sequencing and untargeted metabolomic profiling, the study analyzed stool samples from 44 women experiencing perimenopausal symptoms to determine differences in microbial diversity, specific microbial taxa, and metabolic pathways associated with varying FSH levels. The research aimed to elucidate how fluctuations in reproductive hormones, particularly FSH, are linked with changes in the gut microbiome and metabolic signatures, and how these biological variations correspond to clinical manifestations such as hot flashes, bone pain, and mental disturbances.
Who was studied?
The study cohort comprised 44 outpatient perimenopausal women, divided into two groups based on FSH levels: Group 1 (G1, n=16) had FSH <40 IU/L (indicative of declining ovarian reserve), and Group 2 (G2, n=28) had FSH >40 IU/L (indicative of premature ovarian failure). Demographic and hormonal profiles were similar between groups except for differences in FSH, LH, E2, and progesterone levels. Symptoms were categorized and quantified using the K-score. The G1 group experienced more mental disorders (anxiety, insomnia, depression), while the G2 group had a higher prevalence of hot flashes and bone pain. Age, testosterone, and prolactin did not differ significantly between the groups, minimizing confounding effects from these variables.
Most important findings
The study found no significant difference in overall microbial diversity (alpha or beta diversity) between the two FSH-defined groups. However, there were notable shifts in the relative abundance of specific bacterial taxa. At the genus level, Faecalibacterium, Subdoligranulum, Agathobacter, and Roseburia were more abundant in G1, while Bacteroides, Escherichia-Shigella, Bifidobacterium, and Blautia were more abundant in G2. Importantly, Bacteroides implicated in bone health was higher in G2, which also had a greater prevalence of bone pain. Bifidobacterium, associated with mitigating mental disorders, was also elevated in G2, where mental symptoms were less common. Spearman correlation analyses revealed that FSH was negatively correlated with Subdoligranulum and Agathobacter, while estradiol was positively correlated with Faecalibacterium and unclassified Lachnospiraceae. Metabolomic analysis revealed significant upregulation of metabolites involved in tyrosine metabolism, alpha-linolenic acid metabolism, and other lipid pathways in G2, which aligns with emerging evidence linking lipid metabolism disorders to postmenopausal osteoporosis. Several metabolites showed strong correlations with specific bacterial genera, highlighting potential microbiome-metabolite axes relevant to symptomatology.
Key implications
This study adds to the growing evidence linking perimenopausal hormonal changes, particularly elevated FSH, with specific alterations in the gut microbiome and fecal metabolome. The observed associations between certain bacterial taxa (e.g., Bacteroides, Bifidobacterium, Faecalibacterium, Blautia) and clinical symptoms suggest that the gut microbiota may modulate the risk or severity of common perimenopausal manifestations such as bone pain, hot flashes, and mental disorders. The enrichment of lipid and amino acid metabolism pathways in women with higher FSH and more pronounced bone pain supports the potential utility of microbiome and metabolome profiling in risk stratification and therapeutic targeting. While the study is limited by its small sample size, the findings indicate that microbiome signatures could serve as biomarkers for symptom phenotyping and inspire novel interventions, such as targeted probiotics or dietary modifications, to improve quality of life in perimenopausal women.
Health disorders in menopausal women: microbiome alterations, associated problems, and possible treatments
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Menopause disrupts multiple microbiomes, elevating risks for infections, metabolic and cardiovascular diseases, and osteoporosis. Targeted interventions including probiotics, diet, and hormone therapy improve health outcomes.
What was reviewed?
This comprehensive review systematically examines the multifaceted health disorders associated with menopause, focusing on microbiome alterations and their implications across various body sites, including the vaginal, gut, urethral, oral, and duodenal microbiomes. It explores the interplay between declining estrogen levels during menopause and disruptions in microbial communities, the consequent impact on disease risks, ranging from reproductive disorders, metabolic syndrome, cardiovascular diseases, bone health, mental health, and other systemic conditions, and discusses current and emerging interventions including dietary modifications, hormone therapy, probiotics, plant extracts, and traditional therapies.
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesizes findings from a wide range of human observational and interventional studies involving peri- and postmenopausal women, alongside relevant animal models and mechanistic research. It includes clinical and molecular studies examining microbiome compositional changes, microbial metabolic functions, immune modulation, and symptom relief strategies. It also incorporates data on socioeconomic and lifestyle factors influencing menopausal health outcomes.
Most important findings
Menopause triggers a decline in estrogen that profoundly alters microbial communities, particularly the depletion of Lactobacillus in the vaginal and urethral microbiomes, increasing susceptibility to infections and genitourinary syndrome of menopause (GSM). Gut microbiota diversity decreases with shifts in Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes ratios, leading to reduced production of beneficial metabolites like short-chain fatty acids, impairing intestinal barrier integrity and immune regulation. Duodenal microbiome alterations, such as increased Proteobacteria and decreased Bacteroidetes, associate with elevated cardiovascular risk, influenced further by hormone therapy. Oral microbiota imbalances increase periodontal disease risk, while microbial dysbiosis broadly correlates with metabolic disorders like obesity and type 2 diabetes, osteoporosis, and mental health disturbances. Interventions including dietary fiber, soy isoflavones, probiotic supplementation, menopausal hormone therapy (MHT), and plant extracts (black cohosh, red clover, soybean) show promise in modulating these microbiomes, improving symptoms, and reducing disease risks.
Key implications
This review highlights the critical role of microbiome dysbiosis in menopause-associated health disorders and supports integrative intervention strategies that target microbial balance alongside hormonal and lifestyle factors. It advocates for personalized medicine approaches combining diet, probiotics, hormone therapy, and traditional treatments to optimize menopausal health. Future research should prioritize mechanistic studies, synergistic interventions, and psychosocial factors to enhance disease prevention, diagnosis, and management in menopausal women.
Gut microbiota signatures and fecal metabolites in postmenopausal women with osteoporosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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This study demonstrates significant alterations in gut bacteria, fungi, and metabolites in postmenopausal women with osteoporosis, revealing microbial and metabolic signatures closely linked to bone mineral density and providing a basis for early diagnosis and targeted interventions.
What was studied?
This original research investigated the gut microbiota signatures and fecal metabolite profiles in postmenopausal women with and without osteoporosis (PMO and non-PMO, respectively). The study aimed to elucidate the specific changes in both bacterial and fungal components of the intestinal microbiota, as well as associated fecal metabolites, that correlate with bone mineral density (BMD) in this population. Using 16S rRNA gene sequencing for bacteria, ITS sequencing for fungi, and LC-MS for metabolomics, the study comprehensively evaluated the compositional and functional alterations in the gut ecosystem of postmenopausal women stratified by osteoporosis status. The researchers also applied machine learning models to assess whether these microbial and metabolic signatures could serve as early diagnostic indicators for PMO.
Who was studied?
A total of 98 postmenopausal women aged 50–70 years were enrolled, divided into two groups based on BMD: 40 women with postmenopausal osteoporosis (PMO) and 58 women without osteoporosis (non-PMO). All participants were recruited from Zhongshan Hospital of Xiamen University, with strict inclusion and exclusion criteria to eliminate confounding factors such as organ dysfunction, recent antibiotic use, gastrointestinal diseases, and secondary causes of osteoporosis. For model validation, an independent cohort of 23 women (10 non-PMO, 13 PMO) from Xinyu People’s Hospital was included. Clinical data, serological markers, and BMD measurements were obtained alongside fecal samples for multi-omics analysis.
Most important findings
The study revealed marked differences in both bacterial and fungal gut communities between PMO and non-PMO women. Bacterial α-diversity (measured by Chao1, ACE, and Shannon indices) was significantly reduced in the PMO group, while fungal diversity changes were even more pronounced at the β-diversity level, indicating a distinct fungal signature in osteoporosis. Key bacterial genera enriched in PMO included Veillonella, Parabacteroides, and Harryflintia, while Prevotella and Enterobacterium were more abundant in non-PMO. Fungal genera such as Eurotium and Penicillium were elevated in PMO, whereas Pichia and Auricularia were enriched in non-PMO. Metabolomics identified higher levels of metabolites like levulinic acid and N-acetylneuraminic acid in PMO, with significant pathway alterations including alpha-linolenic acid and selenocompound metabolism. Correlation analysis showed that specific bacteria (e.g., Fusobacterium), fungi (e.g., Devriesia), and metabolites (e.g., L-pipecolic acid) were significantly associated with BMD. Machine learning models based on these microbial signatures distinguished PMO from non-PMO with high accuracy, underscoring their diagnostic potential.
Key implications
This study provides compelling evidence that gut microbial and metabolic profiles are closely tied to bone health in postmenopausal women. The identification of distinct bacterial, fungal, and metabolite signatures associated with osteoporosis advances our understanding of the gut-bone axis, suggesting potential mechanisms involving immune modulation and metabolic pathways. The robust diagnostic models highlight the clinical utility of gut microbiota analysis as a non-invasive tool for early PMO detection. The findings suggest that microbiome-targeted interventions, such as probiotics or dietary modifications, could be developed to prevent or mitigate osteoporosis in at-risk women, paving the way for personalized therapeutic strategies.
The Effects of Environmental Contaminant Exposure on Reproductive Aging and the Menopause Transition
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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This study explores how exposure to environmental contaminants like PFAS, BPA, and phthalates accelerates reproductive aging and leads to early menopause, with significant health risks.
What was studied?
This study examines how exposure to environmental endocrine-disrupting chemicals (EDCs) accelerates reproductive aging and contributes to the earlier onset of menopause. The research specifically focuses on common EDCs, such as phthalates, bisphenol A (BPA), polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), and perfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), and their impact on ovarian health, hormonal changes, and the timing of menopause. The study also investigates the physiological mechanisms by which these chemicals disrupt reproductive aging.
Who was studied?
The review considers data from human epidemiological studies and animal models, primarily rodents. It includes information on women exposed to environmental contaminants, looking at populations exposed to high levels of pollutants due to lifestyle factors, occupation, or environmental proximity to contaminated areas. In addition to human data, rodent studies are referenced to understand the biological mechanisms through which these chemicals impact reproductive processes.
Most important findings
The study reveals that exposure to endocrine-disrupting chemicals, especially PFAS, phthalates, and BPA, is linked to earlier onset of menopause and accelerated reproductive aging. Higher levels of PFAS, such as PFOA and PFOS, are associated with a shorter time to natural menopause in some populations. Additionally, exposure to phthalates, particularly DEHP metabolites, disrupts hormonal balance, leading to earlier menopause and worsened vasomotor symptoms like hot flashes. BPA exposure is found to diminish ovarian reserve and contribute to early menopause, likely through oxidative stress and hormonal disruptions. These associations are supported by both human studies and rodent experiments, confirming that environmental contaminants can negatively affect female fertility and hormonal regulation.
Key implications
The findings highlight a significant public health concern, as early menopause not only reduces a woman’s reproductive window but also increases the risk of cardiovascular disease, osteoporosis, and other health complications. Understanding how environmental contaminants accelerate menopause suggests that interventions aimed at reducing exposure to harmful chemicals could be crucial in protecting women’s reproductive health. The study emphasizes the need for further research to uncover the exact biological mechanisms involved and to establish guidelines for reducing exposure to endocrine-disrupting chemicals in daily life.
Connecting microbiome and menopause for healthy ageing
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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This review details how menopause-driven hormonal changes alter the vaginal and gut microbiome, emphasizing the clinical implications for symptoms and therapies, and advocating for more inclusive, microbiome-informed interventions to support healthy aging in women.
What was reviewed?
This comprehensive review article explores the interplay between the gut and vaginal microbiome and menopause, focusing on implications for healthy aging in women. The authors synthesize recent research, highlighting how hormonal changes during menopause reshape the vaginal ecosystem, particularly through the decline of Lactobacillus dominance and increased prevalence of anaerobes and pathobionts. The review examines clinical and mechanistic studies addressing the association between microbial shifts and menopausal symptoms, such as genitourinary syndrome of menopause (GSM), recurrent urinary tract infections (UTIs), and vasomotor and neuropsychiatric symptoms. The authors also discuss the potential for microbiome-targeting interventions, including hormone replacement, probiotics, and emerging interventions like vaginal microbiota transplantation, summarizing evidence for their safety, efficacy, and effects on the vaginal microbiota during and after menopause.
Who was reviewed?
The review encompasses research conducted predominantly on peri- and postmenopausal women, with most clinical studies involving primarily Caucasian populations. The included studies span a range of sample sizes, from small longitudinal cohorts to larger randomized controlled trials, as well as cross-sectional analyses. The authors note a significant gap in research involving women of diverse racial, ethnic, and socioeconomic backgrounds, despite evidence that these factors influence microbiome composition. The reviewed literature also references women receiving various menopausal therapies (e.g., hormone replacement, DHEA, ospemifene) and those experiencing surgical or therapy-induced menopause (e.g., after oophorectomy or aromatase inhibitor use).
Most important findings
A key finding is the strong correlation between declining estrogen levels during menopause and a shift from a Lactobacillus-dominated vaginal microbiome to one characterized by increased diversity, including anaerobes (Gardnerella, Prevotella, Anaerococcus, Peptoniphilus, Peptostreptococcus) and pathobionts (Escherichia, Enterococcus, Streptococcus, Corynebacterium, Staphylococcus). This microbial shift is linked to elevated vaginal pH, atrophic changes, and increased susceptibility to GSM and UTIs. While some studies show that Lactobacillus depletion correlates with more severe genitourinary symptoms, others find no such association, underscoring the need for further research. Therapeutic interventions, such as local estrogen therapy, DHEA, and ospemifene, generally restore Lactobacillus dominance and lower vaginal pH, improving symptoms. Probiotics and live biotherapeutics show promise but lack robust data in postmenopausal women. Emerging concepts like precision probiotics and vaginal microbiota transplantation represent future avenues for tailored microbiome restoration.
Key implications
The review underscores the clinical relevance of the microbiome in menopausal health, advocating for more inclusive, mechanistic, and longitudinal research to clarify microbial contributions to symptoms and treatment responses. Restoration of Lactobacillus dominance in the vaginal niche—via hormone therapy, novel probiotics, or microbiota transplantation—may directly impact genitourinary and systemic health in menopausal women. The authors call for precision approaches and greater representation of diverse populations in future studies. Ultimately, microbiome-informed interventions could improve quality of life, reduce adverse health outcomes post-menopause, and move toward personalized medicine in women’s health.
Menopausal shift on women’s health and microbial niches
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Menopause drives profound shifts in the oral, gut, and vaginal microbiome, decreasing protective species and increasing disease risk. Understanding these hormone-microbe interactions is crucial for developing personalized interventions to improve women’s health during and after the menopausal transition.
What was reviewed?
This narrative review comprehensively examines how the menopausal transition in women, marked by a decline in estrogen and other sex hormones, leads to profound changes in the microbiome across key body sites: oral, intestinal (gut), and urogenital (vaginal and urinary). The review reveals the bidirectional interplay between hormonal shifts and the microbiome, illustrating how menopause-induced hormonal changes alter the composition, richness, and function of microbial communities. Key topics include the impact of estrogen and progesterone fluctuations on microbial diversity, the concept of the “menopause paradox” (where dominance of protective microbes decreases while overall diversity increases), and the role of the microbiome in mediating disease risk and symptomatology during menopause. The review further discusses the microbial metabolism of sex hormones, highlighting how certain microbes can influence hormone availability and, in turn, host physiology and health outcomes.
Who was reviewed?
The reviewed literature encompasses studies of women across the menopausal transition, including premenopausal, perimenopausal, and postmenopausal women, with particular focus on changes in oral, gut, and vaginal microbial communities. The review references diverse cohorts and methodologies, with most primary data derived from studies of women aged 40–59 (the typical age range for menopause). However, the authors note a significant overrepresentation of Western populations in existing research, with limited inclusion of non-Western, African, Asian, or Latin American cohorts, which may affect global generalizability of findings. The review also considers relevant animal models and in vitro studies that inform understanding of hormone-microbe interactions.
Most important findings
The review highlights that menopause is associated with a marked reduction in estrogen and progesterone, which drives systemic changes in multiple mucosal tissues and their resident microbiota. In the oral cavity, menopause can lead to decreased salivary flow and pH, increased risk of periodontal disease, and shifts in microbial composition, such as increased Prevotella copri and reduced Veillonella tobetsuensis. Periodontal pathogens like Porphyromonas gingivalis and Tannerella forsythia become more prominent, while certain commensals (e.g., Bifidobacterium dentium) may offer protective effects. Fungal dysbiosis, particularly candidiasis, is also more common. In the gut, menopause is linked to reduced microbial diversity and altered abundance of taxa, including increased Bacteroides, Prevotella, Veillonella, and Sutterella, and decreased Ruminococcus (a beneficial butyrate-producer). The gut microbiome’s ability to metabolize estrogens (the “estrobolome”) becomes especially relevant, influencing circulating hormone levels and potentially affecting cardiovascular, metabolic, and autoimmune risk.
The vaginal microbiome undergoes the “menopause paradox”: a decrease in Lactobacillus dominance and a rise in overall microbial richness, favoring colonization by anaerobic taxa such as Prevotella, Gardnerella, and Atopobium. This microbial shift is associated with increased vaginal pH, atrophy, dryness, and susceptibility to infections (bacterial vaginosis, candidiasis) and may contribute to higher risk of malignancy and urogenital symptoms. The review also describes the capacity of some oral and gut microbes to metabolize sex steroids, thus influencing systemic hormone availability and potentially modulating menopause-related symptoms.
Key implications
For clinicians, this review underscores the importance of considering the menopause-induced microbiome shift as a significant factor in women’s health, beyond hormonal changes alone. The interplay between declining estrogen/progesterone and microbial community structure increases the risk for oral disease, gut dysbiosis, and urogenital infections. Microbial signatures such as reduced Lactobacillus in the vagina or increased periodontal pathogens could inform risk stratification, early detection, and the development of targeted interventions. Personalized therapies incorporating diet, probiotics, hormone replacement, or microbiome-targeted interventions may help restore microbial balance, alleviate symptoms, and reduce disease risk in menopausal women. Importantly, the review calls for more geographically and ethnically diverse research to ensure findings are globally applicable.
Menopause modulates the circulating metabolome: Evidence from a prospective cohort study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Menopause is linked to significant metabolic shifts, including a proatherogenic lipid profile and altered amino acid levels, which may increase cardiovascular and metabolic disease risks in women. The study highlights the importance of monitoring metabolic health during menopause.
What was studied?
The study focused on the metabolic changes associated with menopause, specifically the hormonal shifts that occur as women transition from perimenopause to early postmenopause. It explored the changes in the circulating metabolome, including alterations in lipoproteins, amino acids, and other metabolites, and examined the relationship between these changes and hormone levels, particularly estradiol (E2) and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH). The research was conducted using longitudinal data collected from a cohort of Finnish women and utilized nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) metabolomics to quantify a wide array of metabolites, providing insights into how menopause affects the broader metabolic profile and influences cardiovascular and metabolic health.
Who was studied?
The study involved 218 Finnish women, aged 47 to 55, who were followed longitudinally from perimenopause through early postmenopause. These women were part of the Estrogenic Regulation of Muscle Apoptosis (ERMA) cohort. Participants were assessed for menopausal status, hormonal changes, and their metabolic profiles over an average follow-up period of 14 months. A subset of the women (15%) began menopausal hormone therapy (MHT) during the follow-up. The cohort was selected to minimize the influence of aging and included only women without conditions affecting hormone profiles or metabolic health.
Most important findings
Postmenopausal women showed an increase in apoB-containing lipoprotein particles, and lipid levels such as triglycerides and cholesterol in these particles. This shift towards a proatherogenic lipid profile could increase cardiovascular disease risk. The study found increased levels of leucine, tyrosine, and other branched-chain amino acids, which are linked to insulin resistance and higher cardiovascular risk. A shift in fatty acid profile from polyunsaturated to saturated fats was observed, which may indicate an increased risk for type 2 diabetes. Glycerol levels increased, while ketone bodies like 3-hydroxybutyrate decreased, suggesting deteriorating insulin sensitivity. Decreased citrate levels were noted, which may be linked to reduced bone health in postmenopausal women.
Key implications
The findings highlight menopause as a critical period for cardiovascular and metabolic health, marked by significant alterations in the circulating metabolome. The observed shifts in lipoproteins, fatty acids, and amino acids suggest a proatherogenic and insulin-resistant state, which could predispose postmenopausal women to increased risks of cardiovascular diseases and type 2 diabetes. The study emphasizes the need for clinicians to monitor these metabolic markers in menopausal women and consider interventions, including lifestyle modifications or menopausal hormone therapy, to mitigate these risks. Further research on the specific molecular mechanisms underlying these metabolic shifts and their long-term effects on women’s health is also essential.
1H NMR- based metabolomics approaches as non-invasive tools for diagnosis of endometriosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Metabolomic Signature
Metabolomic Signature
Metabolomic signatures are unique metabolite patterns linked to specific biological conditions, identified through metabolomics. They reveal underlying biochemical activities, aiding in disease diagnosis, biomarker development, and personalized medicine. The microbiome significantly affects these signatures, influencing health and disease outcomes through metabolic interactions.
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This study demonstrates the potential of ¹H-NMR metabolomics to diagnose endometriosis non-invasively by identifying metabolic biomarkers and disrupted pathways. Quadratic Discriminant Analysis outperformed Artificial Neural Networks in diagnostic accuracy.
What was studied?
This study investigated the application of metabolomics, specifically through proton nuclear magnetic resonance (¹H-NMR) spectroscopy, to identify non-invasive biomarkers for diagnosing endometriosis. The researchers developed computational models using Quadratic Discriminant Analysis (QDA) and Artificial Neural Networks (ANNs) to analyze metabolic changes in serum samples and assess their utility in early diagnosis of the disease.
Who was studied?
The study analyzed serum samples from 31 infertile women diagnosed with stage II or III endometriosis confirmed via laparoscopy and 15 healthy women without any signs of endometriosis. The participants were aged 22–44 years and were recruited from an infertility center in Iran. Exclusion criteria included recent medical or hormonal treatments, prior gynecological surgeries, or other pelvic inflammatory conditions.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed significant metabolic differences between women with endometriosis and healthy controls. Key findings included elevated levels of 2-methoxyestrone, 2-methoxyestradiol, androstenedione, aldosterone, dehydroepiandrosterone, and deoxycorticosterone in the endometriosis group, alongside decreased cholesterol and primary bile acids. These metabolic changes are linked to disruptions in steroid hormone biosynthesis and bile acid metabolism, indicating underlying hyperestrogenism and impaired hepatic estrogen clearance. The QDA model achieved a correct classification rate of 76%, with 71% positive predictive value and 78% negative predictive value, outperforming the ANN model, which had lower sensitivity and specificity. Metabolic pathway analyses highlighted altered steroid hormone and bile acid biosynthesis, which are critical in the pathophysiology of endometriosis.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study underscores the potential of ¹H-NMR-based metabolomics as a minimally invasive diagnostic tool for endometriosis, reducing reliance on invasive laparoscopy. The identification of specific biomarkers and disrupted pathways could facilitate earlier diagnosis, improved patient stratification, and targeted therapeutic interventions. The findings also demonstrate the utility of computational modeling, particularly QDA, in translating complex metabolomics data into clinically actionable insights. This approach represents a significant advancement in bridging diagnostic gaps for endometriosis.
A metabonomics approach as a means for identification of potentialbiomarkers for early diagnosis of endometriosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Metabolomic Signature
Metabolomic Signature
Metabolomic signatures are unique metabolite patterns linked to specific biological conditions, identified through metabolomics. They reveal underlying biochemical activities, aiding in disease diagnosis, biomarker development, and personalized medicine. The microbiome significantly affects these signatures, influencing health and disease outcomes through metabolic interactions.
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This study used 1H-NMR metabonomics to identify serum biomarkers for early endometriosis diagnosis. Elevated lactate, alanine, and reduced glucose levels highlight metabolic disruptions, offering a minimally invasive diagnostic tool.
What was studied?
This study investigated the identification of predictive biomarkers for early diagnosis of endometriosis using a minimally invasive, serum-based approach. The researchers utilized proton nuclear magnetic resonance (1H-NMR) metabonomics to analyze serum samples, aiming to distinguish endometriosis patients from healthy controls. The study particularly focused on differences in metabolite profiles to identify markers indicative of the condition.
Who was studied?
The study included 45 women aged under 40, divided into two groups. The first group comprised 22 women diagnosed with early-stage endometriosis (Stages I–II) via laparoscopy, while the control group consisted of 23 age- and BMI-matched healthy women with normal menstrual cycles and proven fertility. Participants with recent hormone therapy or irregular menstrual cycles were excluded. Serum samples were collected during the secretory phase of the menstrual cycle.
What were the most important findings?
The study identified several metabolites with significantly altered levels in women with endometriosis compared to controls. Increased levels of lactate, 3-hydroxybutyrate, alanine, leucine, valine, threonine, lysine, glycerophosphatidylcholine, succinic acid, and 2-hydroxybutyrate were observed in the serum of endometriosis patients, while glucose, isoleucine, arginine, and lipid levels were decreased. Multivariate analysis using Partial Least Squares-Discriminant Analysis (PLS-DA) demonstrated strong sensitivity (81.8%) and specificity (91.3%) in distinguishing endometriosis from controls, with an area under the ROC curve of 0.96. Pathway analysis highlighted arginine and proline metabolism disruptions, glycine, serine, and threonine metabolism, pyruvate metabolism, and lysine biosynthesis and degradation. These findings provide a potential non-invasive diagnostic framework and insights into the metabolic disturbances in endometriosis.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study offers a promising step toward non-invasive diagnostic methods for endometriosis, reducing reliance on invasive laparoscopy. The identification of metabolite alterations linked to the disease enhances the understanding of its pathophysiology, emphasizing oxidative stress, anaerobic glycolysis, and metabolic reprogramming similar to malignancies. These findings could lead to better clinical tools for early diagnosis and a deeper understanding of the metabolic underpinnings of endometriosis.
Metabolomics reveals perturbations in endometrium and serum of minimal and mild endometriosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Metabolomic Signature
Metabolomic Signature
Metabolomic signatures are unique metabolite patterns linked to specific biological conditions, identified through metabolomics. They reveal underlying biochemical activities, aiding in disease diagnosis, biomarker development, and personalized medicine. The microbiome significantly affects these signatures, influencing health and disease outcomes through metabolic interactions.
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This study highlights metabolic alterations in endometrial tissue and serum of minimal and mild endometriosis patients, identifying amino acid biomarkers with diagnostic potential. A combined serum panel demonstrated 100% sensitivity and 83% specificity for Stage II diagnosis, offering a promising step toward non-invasive early detection of endometriosis.
What Was Studied?
This study investigated the metabolic perturbations in eutopic endometrial tissue and serum of women with minimal and mild endometriosis (Stages I and II) using ^1H Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR)-based metabolomics. The researchers aimed to identify specific metabolites that could be potential biomarkers for the early, non-invasive diagnosis of endometriosis. The study included multivariate and univariate analyses to identify metabolite changes and their diagnostic potential.
Who Was Studied?
The study included 95 women diagnosed with endometriosis (staged using the revised American Society for Reproductive Medicine criteria) and 24 healthy fertile controls. The participants were recruited from Eastern India and Bangladesh, with exclusion criteria ensuring no confounding conditions such as ovarian tumors or pelvic inflammatory disease. Blood and eutopic endometrial tissue samples were collected during the mid-secretory phase of the menstrual cycle.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
Women with minimal and mild endometriosis exhibited significant metabolic alterations, particularly in amino acids. Alanine, lysine, leucine, proline, and phenylalanine levels were notably dysregulated in serum, with tissue samples showing lower levels of these metabolites, except for proline, which positively correlated with serum levels. Alanine alone demonstrated diagnostic potential for Stage I endometriosis, with 90% sensitivity and 58% specificity.
For Stage II, phenylalanine achieved 100% sensitivity but had lower specificity, while a combined panel of metabolites improved diagnostic accuracy, reaching 100% sensitivity and 83% specificity.
In advanced stages, elevated taurine and myo-inositol levels were linked to increased cell proliferation and angiogenesis, highlighting similarities with tumorigenic processes. These findings underscore the critical role of metabolic shifts in endometriosis progression, particularly involving amino acids and nucleotide synthesis, and suggest their utility in early detection and non-invasive diagnostics.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
This study underscores the potential of metabolomic signatures in elucidating the pathophysiology of endometriosis and developing non-invasive diagnostic tools, especially for early stages where traditional biomarkers like CA-125 are less effective. By identifying a panel of serum metabolites, the research provides a foundation for improving diagnostic accuracy and reducing the need for invasive laparoscopy. Additionally, the observed metabolic similarities between endometriosis and malignancies could inspire further exploration of shared mechanisms, potentially broadening therapeutic targets.
Iron Supplementation and Infant Gut Microbiota: Meta-Analysis Reveals Bifidobacterium Loss
February 12, 2026
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Metal Homeostasis
Metal Homeostasis
Transition metals like iron, zinc, copper, and manganese are crucial for the enzymatic machinery of organisms, but their imbalance can foster pathogenic environments within the gastrointestinal tract.
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Iron (Fe)
Iron (Fe)
OverviewIron is a pivotal nutrient at the host–pathogen interface. Virtually all microbes (with rare exceptions like Borrelia) require iron for processes from DNA synthesis to respiration. [1] In human hosts, free iron is vanishingly scarce due to “nutritional immunity,” wherein iron is locked up in hemoproteins or tightly bound by transport proteins.[2] This metal tug-of-war […]
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Iron supplementation in infants reduces Bifidobacterium abundance by 6.37%, as confirmed by meta-analysis. While critical for anemia prevention, oral iron may disrupt the infant gut microbiota, potentially supporting pathogen growth. Prebiotic co-administration could mitigate adverse effects.
What was reviewed?
This systematic review and meta-analysis examined the effects of oral iron supplementation or fortification on the composition of gut microbiota in infants up to 12 months of age. The authors specifically evaluated changes in microbial taxa—particularly beneficial versus potentially pathogenic bacteria—in response to iron interventions. The review focused on randomized controlled trials (RCTs) comparing infants who received per os (oral) iron supplementation or iron-fortified foods versus controls who did not receive supplemental iron. The primary outcome was the alteration in gut microbiota, particularly shifts in the abundance of Bifidobacterium and Lactobacillus spp., as well as enteropathogens like Escherichia coli, Clostridium, and Shigella.
Who was reviewed?
Six RCTs met the inclusion criteria, involving healthy neonates and infants (≤12 months old) across various geographic locations—two studies in Africa, two in Europe, one in Canada, and one in the USA. Most infants were exclusively or predominantly breastfed at baseline, and interventions typically began around 6 months of age. Across studies, microbiome profiling methods varied but largely relied on 16S rRNA sequencing of the V1–V4 hypervariable regions, although one early study (1985) used bacterial culturing methods.
Most important findings
The meta-analysis focused on Bifidobacterium due to limited compatible data across studies for other taxa. Four studies provided sufficient quantitative data to evaluate changes in Bifidobacterium abundance:
Comparison Group
Mean Reduction in Bifidobacterium
95% CI
p-value
Iron Group
-10.3%
-15.0% to -5.55%
Non-Iron Group
-2.96%
Total Difference
-6.37%
-10.16% to -25.8%
0.02
The next table summarizes key microbial findings from the systematic review and meta-analysis on oral iron supplementation in infants. Across all included studies, Bifidobacterium was consistently reduced following iron exposure. Lactobacillus spp. remained relatively stable, though data were insufficient for quantitative synthesis. Several pathogenic taxa, including Escherichia/Shigella and Clostridium, increased in certain iron groups, but inter-study variability prevented pooled analysis. A quality appraisal using the RoB2 tool showed that most studies were at low risk of bias, while two presented methodological concerns related to blinding and analysis planning.
Category
Summary
Bifidobacterium
Consistently reduced in iron-supplemented groups across all studies.
Lactobacillus spp.
Generally stable or modestly decreased; insufficient data for inclusion in meta-analysis.
Pathogenic Taxa
Escherichia/Shigella and Clostridium increased in iron supplemented groups. However, data was too heterogeneous to pool.
Key implications
Iron supplementation or fortification in infancy, while clinically important for preventing iron deficiency anemia, may reduce beneficial taxa such as Bifidobacterium, which play crucial roles in infant gut maturation, immune development, and metabolic regulation. This reduction was statistically significant across pooled studies. Although not all studies observed an increase in pathogenic bacteria, prior research outside this meta-analysis (e.g., Jaeggi et al., 2015; Paganini et al., 2017) suggests that iron may support the bloom of enteropathogens and increase the risk of inflammation or diarrhea. Given that Bifidobacterium dominance in infancy is associated with protection against allergic disease, gastrointestinal infection, and potentially neurodevelopmental resilience, these findings reinforce the importance of optimizing iron formulation. Iron interventions should be cautiously balanced—favoring strategies like co-administration with prebiotics (e.g., galacto-oligosaccharides) to preserve microbiome health without compromising hematologic outcomes.
The review underscores a clinical paradox: iron is vital for neurodevelopment, yet excessive or poorly absorbed iron in the colon may create an unfavorable gut environment. Further studies are needed to determine the safest formulations and dosing schedules that mitigate microbiota disruption while effectively correcting iron deficiency.
Metallomic signatures of brain tissues distinguishes between cases of dementia with Lewy bodies, Alzheimer’s disease, and Parkinson’s disease dementia
February 12, 2026
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Parkinson’s Disease
Parkinson’s Disease
Parkinson’s disease is increasingly recognized as a systemic disorder involving coordinated disturbances across the gut–brain axis, rather than a condition confined to dopaminergic neurodegeneration alone. Converging evidence implicates gut dysbiosis, altered microbial metabolites, impaired intestinal barrier integrity, and metal dyshomeostasis as upstream drivers of neuroinflammation and alpha-synuclein pathology. These interconnected microbiome, metabolomic, and metallomic signals provide a mechanistic framework for understanding disease initiation, progression, and therapeutic targeting beyond the central nervous system.
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Alzheimer’s Dementia
Alzheimer’s Dementia
OverviewAlzheimer’s disease (AD) is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder characterized by amyloid-beta (Aβ) plaques, neurofibrillary tangles, neuroinflammation, and metabolic dysfunction, ultimately leading to cognitive decline and dementia. Emerging research highlights the microbiota-gut-brain axis as a crucial factor in AD pathogenesis, with gut dysbiosis contributing to neuroinflammation, immune dysregulation, and blood-brain barrier permeability. Microbial metabolites, such as […]
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Metallomic Signatures
Metallomic Signatures
A metallomic signature is the condition-specific profile of trace metals and metal-binding molecules that reflects disrupted metal homeostasis.
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Dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) brains show widespread copper depletion and region-specific sodium, manganese, iron, and selenium alterations. While copper loss is common to AD and PDD, DLB presents a distinct metallomic fingerprint, enabling disease differentiation via PCA. Metallomic profiling may aid in diagnosing overlapping dementias and reveals unique pathophysiological signatures.
What was studied?
This original research study investigated whether the metallomic signature of dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) differs from Alzheimer’s disease (AD) and Parkinson’s disease dementia (PDD). The study sought to determine if post-mortem changes in elemental concentrations—particularly in essential metals—could help differentiate these often-overlapping neurodegenerative conditions. Using Inductively Coupled Plasma–Mass Spectrometry (ICP-MS), the authors quantified concentrations of nine elements (Na, Mg, K, Ca, Mn, Fe, Cu, Zn, and Se) across 10 brain regions from DLB patients and age-/sex-matched controls. These findings were directly compared to previously published metallomic profiles for AD and PDD, produced using identical methodologies. Multivariate analyses (PCA and PLS-DA) were employed to assess the potential for disease discrimination based on metal signatures.
Who was studied?
The study analyzed post-mortem brain tissue from 23 DLB patients and 20 controls, collected across ten distinct brain regions. Comparative analyses included prior datasets from similarly matched AD and PDD patient cohorts.
What were the most important findings?
In this study, region-specific metallomic signatures profiling revealed distinct trace element alterations in Dementia with Lewy Bodies (DLB). Copper (Cu) levels were consistently decreased in five of ten DLB brain regions, including the cingulate gyrus (CG), middle temporal gyrus (MTG), primary visual cortex (PVC), substantia nigra (SN), and putamen (PUT), suggesting a widespread Cu deficiency. Sodium (Na) was elevated in four regions—medulla (MED), cerebellum (CB), MTG, and CG—while more localized changes were observed for other metals. Iron (Fe) levels were increased in the motor cortex (MCX) and CG, whereas manganese (Mn) was decreased in both the PVC and MED. Calcium (Ca) was specifically reduced in the hippocampus, and selenium (Se) was also decreased in the PVC.
No significant differences in magnesium, potassium, or zinc levels were observed between DLB and control brains. Multivariate analyses, including Principal Component Analysis (PCA) and Partial Least Squares-Discriminant Analysis (PLS-DA), demonstrated that DLB could be distinctly separated from Alzheimer’s disease (AD) and Parkinson’s disease dementia (PDD) based on metallomic signatures. Specifically, CG, MTG, and PVC profiles enabled discrimination between DLB and AD, while the PVC alone differentiated DLB from PDD. Notably, copper depletion emerged as the only common alteration across DLB, AD, and PDD, underscoring its potential central role in the pathogenesis of neurodegenerative diseases. The authors propose that these metallomic signatures in dementia may reflect disease-specific mechanisms, including variations in oxidative stress, protein aggregation, and mitochondrial dysfunction.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study provides compelling evidence that distinct metallomic signatures exist across DLB, AD, and PDD, despite shared pathology such as copper depletion. It strengthens the emerging concept that trace metal dysregulation is disease-specific, rather than a general byproduct of neurodegeneration. The findings support the idea that metallomic signatures profiling—potentially via cerebrospinal fluid or advanced imaging in living patients—could improve differential diagnosis of dementia with overlapping clinical features. Furthermore, the study reinforces the hypothesis that metal dyshomeostasis, particularly copper depletion, may be a contributing pathogenic mechanism, impairing antioxidant defenses and mitochondrial function. These findings could inform new diagnostic tools and therapeutic targets.
Citation
Scholefield M, Church SJ, Xu J, Cooper GJS. Metallomic analysis of brain tissues distinguishes between cases of dementia with Lewy bodies, Alzheimer's disease, and Parkinson's disease dementia. Front Neurosci. 2024 Jun 26;18:1412356. doi: 10.3389/fnins.2024.1412356.
Factors affecting the absorption and excretion of lead in the rat
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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An in vivo radiotracer study defines lead absorption and excretion in the rat: duodenal, bile-modulated uptake; competition with Fe/Zn/Ca; iron deficiency–enhanced absorption; erythrocyte transport; early renal–hepatic handling; biliary plus urinary clearance; and bone storage.
What was studied?
This original experimental study examined lead absorption and excretion in the rat, quantifying where and how inorganic lead enters and leaves the body and which physiological and dietary variables modulate flux. Using radiotracers and whole-body counting, the authors mapped intestinal uptake (with surgical isolation of gut segments, bile-duct ligation when needed), characterized red-cell versus plasma transport, and measured renal, hepatic, osseous, and fecal/urinary clearance over minutes to weeks. The central mechanistic questions were whether uptake saturates at the mucosa, how bile and luminal chemistry shape bioavailability, and whether body burden feeds back to limit further absorption.
Who was studied?
Pathogen-free male Wistar rats (∼200–250 g) were fasted for standardized intervals and received defined intraluminal or intravenous lead doses while under ether or pentobarbital anesthesia. Intestinal segments (stomach, duodenum, jejunum, ileum, colon) were tested in vivo; some experiments manipulated bile flow, dietary protein, iron status (deficient, replete, iron-loaded), and co-administered solubilizing ligands (ascorbate; sulfur-containing amino acids) or competing cations (Fe, Zn, Ca). Serial sampling quantified carcass retention, organ deposition, and excretion in urine and stool.
Most important findings
Duodenum was the principal absorption site; radioautography localized lead to villus mucosal epithelial cells, and bile enhanced uptake, implicating enterohepatic factors in luminal bioavailability. Absorption showed a relative mucosal “block”: as intraluminal dose rose 100-fold, fractional uptake fell, yet absolute absorbed lead still increased—evidence for limited receptor/acceptor capacity rather than a hard ceiling. Co-ingested solubilizers (ascorbate; methionine/cysteine/cystine) increased absorption by maintaining lead in an absorbable state at neutral pH, whereas equimolar Fe, Zn, and Ca reduced absorption without altering solubility, consistent with competition for shared mucosal transport pathways. Physiologic status mattered: iron deficiency and rapid growth increased absorption; prolonged starvation and iron loading decreased it; total body lead burden did not down-regulate uptake, indicating no effective feedback limiter at the gut interface.
After intravenous dosing, lead cleared rapidly from plasma and associated predominantly with erythrocytes (transit pool), then redistributed to kidneys and liver early, with bone becoming the long-term reservoir. Excretion was biphasic, substantial early urinary and fecal loss (with bile an important fecal route) followed by slow elimination (∼months half-time), explaining cumulative skeletal storage despite active excretory pathways. Mechanistically, these data position the small-intestinal mucosa, bile, erythrocyte shuttling, and renal–hepatic handling as the principal determinants of whole-body kinetics.
Key implications
Lead absorption and excretion in the rat are dominated by duodenal uptake modulated by bile chemistry and by competitive interactions with essential cations. Iron deficiency emerges as a high-risk state for exaggerated uptake, supporting iron repletion as a protective strategy. Because body burden fails to curb further absorption, exposure reduction remains paramount. Biliary excretion returns lead to the intestinal lumen, so enterohepatic cycling may prolong gut exposure even after systemic dosing. The erythrocyte-centric transport and the kidney–liver early handling, with bone as a long-term sink, align with biomonitoring patterns and underscore why chelation must consider both rapidly exchangeable pools and slowly mobilized skeletal stores.
Cadmium transport in blood serum
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study explores how cadmium binds to human serum transferrin, albumin, and citrate, revealing key insights into cadmium transport and bioavailability in the bloodstream. It also highlights the potential clinical implications for understanding cadmium toxicity and therapeutic interventions.
What was studied?
This study investigated the transport and binding kinetics of cadmium (Cd²⁺) in human serum, specifically focusing on its interaction with human serum transferrin (HSTF). The authors aimed to understand how cadmium binds to HSTF at physiological conditions and how this binding affects cadmium's ability to be transported in the bloodstream. The study also analyzed the competitive binding of cadmium with other metal ions, including iron (Fe³⁺), and the role of other plasma components like albumin and citrate in cadmium binding. The research used uv spectrophotometry to measure the binding properties of cadmium to transferrin at various concentrations and pH levels.
Who was studied?
The study primarily focused on human serum proteins, specifically human serum transferrin (HSTF), human serum albumin (HSA), and citrate. These proteins and their interactions with cadmium were analyzed through in vitro experiments using purified proteins. The study did not involve human subjects or animals but relied on laboratory analysis of protein solutions and metal ions. The analysis used a combination of human serum transferrin (HSTF) and other components that naturally occur in plasma to simulate the conditions under which cadmium is transported in the bloodstream.
Most important findings
The study found that human serum transferrin (HSTF) plays a critical role in cadmium binding and transport. The apparent association constants for cadmium binding to HSTF were found to be pH-dependent, reducing as the pH increased or decreased from 7.4. At physiological pH, approximately 50% of cadmium was bound to HSTF, 37% to albumin, and the remainder to citrate. The research showed that cadmium competes with iron for binding sites on HSTF, but it cannot displace iron from the transferrin binding sites under typical physiological conditions. Competitive assays also showed that albumin and citrate bind cadmium but with lower affinity than transferrin. The study revealed that while transferrin is the primary carrier of cadmium in the blood, significant amounts of cadmium also bind to albumin and citrate, which could influence its bioavailability and toxicity.
Key implications
The findings suggest that understanding cadmium's binding to serum proteins is crucial for evaluating its toxicity and transport in the body. The study highlights transferrin's primary role in cadmium transport but also reveals the importance of albumin and citrate in modulating cadmium bioavailability. This has implications for understanding cadmium’s toxicological effects, especially in relation to diseases like kidney and liver dysfunction, where cadmium accumulation is problematic. The results could also inform therapeutic approaches, such as the use of chelating agents to displace cadmium from transferrin and reduce its harmful effects. Additionally, the study suggests that modifying the levels of albumin or citrate could alter cadmium’s transport and distribution in the body, potentially influencing its clinical outcomes in cases of heavy metal poisoning.
TRANSPORT OF INORGANIC MERCURY AND METHYLMERCURY IN TARGET TISSUES AND ORGANS
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review explains how inorganic mercury and methylmercury enter the gut, kidney, liver, brain, and placenta by binding to thiols and mimicking nutrients that use amino acid and organic anion transporters, which helps predict where mercury accumulates and how chelators enhance excretion.
What was reviewed?
This review summarizes how mercury moves through the body by “hitchhiking” on normal nutrient-transport pathways, which helps explain why mercury accumulates in organs such as the intestine, kidney, liver, brain, and placenta. The authors emphasized that mercury rarely circulates as a free ion; instead, it binds tightly to sulfhydryl-containing molecules such as glutathione and cysteine, forming thiol S-conjugates that behave like molecular mimics of endogenous amino acids or peptides and therefore gain access to cells via established membrane transporters.
Who was reviewed?
The paper reviewed mechanistic evidence from toxicology, physiology, and transporter biology rather than a single clinical cohort, integrating animal experiments, cell-based transport models, membrane vesicle studies, and Xenopus oocyte expression systems that isolate specific transport proteins. It also incorporated environmental context by noting that microorganisms in soil and water can methylate inorganic mercury into methylmercury, which then enters food webs and becomes the most common organic mercury form ingested by humans through contaminated fish.
What were the most important findings?
The review identified a unifying transport theme: mercury–thiol complexes cross membranes by exploiting amino acid, peptide, organic anion, and multidrug resistance transport systems, with organ specificity shaped by which transporters dominate each tissue. In the intestine, Hg²⁺ absorption appears limited and ligand-dependent, but the authors proposed that amino acid and peptide transporters can import Hg²⁺ thiol conjugates, while export pathways likely involve multidrug resistance-associated proteins; methylmercury absorbs more efficiently and may enter enterocytes after glutathione catabolism yields cysteine-linked forms that resemble small nutrients. In the kidney, the authors highlighted the proximal tubule as the main accumulation site and described strong evidence that Cys-S-Hg-S-Cys mimics cystine to enter via system b0,+ at the apical membrane, while basolateral uptake of mercuric thiol conjugates relies heavily on organic anion transporters, especially OAT1 and OAT3; they also explained that MRP2 can export chelator–mercury complexes into urine during DMPS or DMSA therapy. For methylmercury, they described molecular mimicry at the blood–brain barrier, where CH₃Hg-S-Cys mimics methionine and uses system L (LAT1/LAT2), and they extended this transporter-centered framework to hepatic canalicular export and placental transfer as clinically important but incompletely defined processes.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
For clinicians, this review clarifies that mercury toxicity depends not only on dose but also on biochemistry and transporter access, which can differ across organs and exposure contexts, making target-organ risk more predictable when you consider thiol binding and transporter expression. For microbiome-informed care, the key translational point is that the microbiome can set exposure form upstream by converting inorganic mercury to methylmercury in environmental reservoirs, while host gut and renal handling then determines systemic delivery and retention; this supports pairing exposure assessment with mechanistic biomarkers that reflect thiol status and transporter-relevant physiology rather than assuming uniform tissue uptake. The review also strengthens the rationale for chelation strategies that deliberately form transportable mercury complexes and leverage renal export systems such as MRP2, while underscoring that gaps remain in fully mapping intestinal, hepatic sinusoidal, and placental transport pathways that likely influence interindividual susceptibility.
Assessing Acute and Chronic Risks of Human Exposure to Arsenic
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study assessed acute and chronic arsenic exposure in an Ethiopian population, finding significant health risks associated with contaminated groundwater and cigarette smoking. Biomarkers like urine and nail arsenic levels were key in understanding exposure.
What was studied?
This research focused on assessing the acute and chronic risks of human exposure to arsenic in a rural Ethiopian population. The study examined how arsenic contamination in groundwater, a major source of exposure, correlated with health risks. The researchers utilized biomarkers, particularly arsenic concentrations in urine and nails, to evaluate exposure levels and determine associations with health outcomes.
Who was studied?
The study population consisted of 200 randomly selected residents from the Adami Tulu Jido Kombolcha District in Ethiopia. This district was chosen due to its reliance on groundwater sources, which are contaminated with arsenic. The study specifically targeted individuals from both urban and rural areas to determine how arsenic exposure varied across different groups within the population.
Most important findings
The results highlighted significant levels of arsenic exposure among the study participants. The mean arsenic concentration in urine was found to be 16.02 μg/L, with a range from undetectable to 126.13 μg/L. In nail samples, the mean arsenic concentration was 1.01 μg/g, with values ranging from undetectable to 2.54 μg/g. Notably, the study found a significant positive correlation between arsenic concentrations in urine and nail samples and groundwater arsenic levels. The analysis revealed that groundwater sources and cigarette smoking were significant factors associated with both acute and chronic arsenic exposure. In particular, the frequency of taking showers was identified as a contributing factor to chronic arsenic exposure.
Key implications
The findings of this study emphasize the widespread nature of both acute and chronic arsenic exposure in the study area. It underlines the importance of addressing arsenic contamination in drinking water sources, especially in rural areas, to prevent long-term health issues such as cancers, skin lesions, and other non-cancer-related diseases like cardiovascular problems and diabetes. Additionally, the correlation between smoking and arsenic exposure presents a compounded risk for residents, highlighting the need for comprehensive public health interventions to reduce both groundwater arsenic contamination and tobacco use. The study's results also suggest the utility of biomarkers, particularly urinary and nail arsenic concentrations, in tracking exposure and potential health risks. These biomarkers are useful tools for early detection and intervention, providing critical information to mitigate the public health impact of arsenic exposure.
Cysteine coordination of Pb(II) is involved in the PbrR-dependent activation of the lead-resistance promoter, PpbrA, from Cupriavidus metallidurans CH34
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study sheds light on the molecular mechanisms through which Cupriavidus metallidurans CH34 regulates lead resistance, highlighting the role of the PbrR protein and its interaction with the PpbrA promoter in response to Pb(II).
What was studied?
The study primarily focused on understanding how the PbrR protein regulates the PpbrA promoter and the overall gene expression of lead (Pb) resistance in Cupriavidus metallidurans CH34. The authors explored the mechanisms by which PbrR senses Pb(II) and controls the transcription of the genes in the pbr operon, including the PbrA efflux pump. The regulation process was analyzed through various molecular biology techniques such as mutagenesis, gel retardation assays, and DNAse I protection assays, which helped elucidate the critical role of cysteine residues in PbrR for the Pb(II)-induced activation of the lead resistance pathway.
Who was studied?
The research focused on the bacterium Cupriavidus metallidurans CH34, a well-known model organism for studying heavy metal resistance. The strain has the pMOL30 plasmid, which harbors the pbr operon responsible for lead resistance. The study utilized genetically modified versions of C. metallidurans with mutations in the PbrR protein to analyze how different cysteine residues in PbrR affect its ability to sense and respond to Pb(II). The experiments also involved the use of E. coli strains for cloning and expression of PbrR, as well as β-galactosidase assays to measure promoter activity.
Most important findings
The study found that the PbrR protein binds to the PpbrA promoter, initiating the expression of the lead resistance genes in response to Pb(II). Pb(II) reduces the binding affinity of PbrR to the PpbrA promoter, indicating a complex regulatory mechanism. The research also demonstrated that several cysteine residues (C14, C79, C134) in PbrR are essential for the activation of PpbrA in the presence of Pb(II), as these mutants showed a loss of Pb(II)-induced transcriptional activation. The study further identified that altering the DNA sequence of the PpbrA promoter, particularly the −10 region, could influence the promoter’s strength and responsiveness to Pb(II), suggesting that fine-tuning of the promoter’s activity is necessary for optimal Pb resistance.
Key implications
The findings from this study have important implications for understanding how bacteria resist heavy metal toxicity, specifically lead, through metal-responsive transcription factors like PbrR. The detailed molecular mechanisms of Pb(II) sensing by PbrR and its impact on gene expression offer insights into bacterial adaptation to metal stress. These insights could help in designing strategies to manipulate metal resistance in industrial and environmental microbiology applications. Additionally, understanding the structural requirements of PbrR, especially the cysteine residues crucial for Pb sensing, could guide the development of inhibitors or enhancers of metal resistance pathways, which could have implications for bioremediation or in combating metal toxicity in humans and other organisms.
GPX4 in cell death, autophagy, and disease
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review explores the essential roles of GPX4 in various forms of cell death, emphasizing its involvement in ferroptosis, autophagy, and its implications in diseases like cancer and neurodegeneration. Understanding GPX4’s mechanisms offers new avenues for targeted therapies in oxidative stress-related conditions.
What Was Studied?
The research paper reviewed the roles of GPX4 (Glutathione Peroxidase 4) in cell death, particularly focusing on its function in ferroptosis, autophagy, and disease. GPX4, a key selenoenzyme, plays a pivotal role in mitigating lipid peroxidation, thus protecting cells from oxidative stress and various forms of regulated cell death (RCD). The study explores GPX4’s different isoforms (cytosolic, mitochondrial, and nuclear), their distinct functions, and how mutations in GPX4 impact disease processes, particularly in cancer, neurodegeneration, and inflammation.
Who Was Reviewed?
The paper reviews existing studies on GPX4's functions across different types of cell death (apoptosis, necroptosis, pyroptosis, ferroptosis, and parthanatos). It also discusses the molecular mechanisms that underlie GPX4’s involvement in autophagy and its regulation of metabolic processes like lipid peroxidation. The paper reviews animal models, specifically mice with different GPX4 knockout or knockout variants, to understand its broader impact on health, including its roles in embryonic development, tumorigenesis, neurodegeneration, and immune system regulation.
Most Important Findings
GPX4 was found to play a critical role in multiple cell death pathways, especially ferroptosis, which is a form of non-apoptotic, iron-dependent cell death triggered by lipid peroxidation. The study emphasizes that the loss of GPX4 results in massive oxidative damage, leading to cellular dysfunction and death, which can exacerbate diseases like cancer, neurodegenerative disorders, and inflammation. The research also highlights the dual role of GPX4 in cancer: it can both prevent tumorigenesis by inhibiting ferroptosis and contribute to inflammation that supports tumor growth. Additionally, mutations in GPX4 (such as R152H) have been implicated in rare genetic diseases like Sedaghatian-type spinal metaphyseal dysplasia (SSMD).
The study discusses GPX4’s regulatory role in autophagy, particularly how autophagic degradation can influence its activity and ferroptosis. Autophagic pathways targeting GPX4, such as the role of TMEM164, and autophagy-mediated GPX4 degradation in response to oxidative stress, were also identified as significant. Furthermore, the research found that the proper functioning of GPX4 is essential for sperm development and male fertility, with deficits leading to infertility.
Greatest Implications
The findings of this review have significant implications for both therapeutic and diagnostic applications. Understanding GPX4’s diverse roles across different forms of cell death and its connection to diseases could lead to novel strategies for treating oxidative stress-related diseases. In cancer, for example, GPX4 inhibitors might enhance the efficacy of chemotherapy and radiotherapy by promoting ferroptosis. Conversely, enhancing GPX4 activity could be a therapeutic approach for diseases where ferroptosis is detrimental, such as neurodegenerative disorders. Moreover, GPX4’s involvement in immune responses suggests potential for targeting it to modulate inflammation and immune system dysfunction in diseases like autoimmune conditions and sepsis.
Increasing the copper sensitivity of microorganisms by restricting iron supply, a strategy for bio‐management practices
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Restricting iron import makes bacteria far more sensitive to copper, enabling strong antimicrobial effects at lower doses and revealing gene and enzyme signatures that inform microbiome-aware control strategies.
What was studied?
This study tested increasing the copper sensitivity of microorganisms by restricting iron supply as a way to lower the copper dose needed to control bacteria. The authors mapped how copper overload damages iron–sulfur enzymes, triggers an iron-starvation signal, and drives bacteria to import iron to rebuild damaged clusters. They then asked whether blocking iron uptake would remove this safety valve and make cells far more sensitive to copper or cadmium. The work linked copper stress to induction of iron transport genes, shifts in superoxide dismutase activity, and markers of porphyrin pathway damage, and it framed a practical bio-management strategy that pairs low copper with iron limitation.
Who was studied?
The primary model was the purple bacterium Rubrivivax gelatinosus carrying targeted defects in copper or cadmium efflux pumps (CopA or CadA) and in iron import systems (FbpABC and the Ftr pathway). The team validated the concept in Vibrio cholerae by combining a copA deletion with loss of the periplasmic iron-binding protein FbpA, and they profiled Escherichia coli efflux mutants to track superoxide dismutase responses to copper or cadmium. These species span environmental and enteric pathogens and capture microbiome-relevant traits such as siderophore use and oxidative stress control.
Most important findings
Limiting iron uptake sharply increased copper or cadmium killing. In R. gelatinosus, disrupting fbpA or fbpBC in efflux-defective strains caused growth arrest with copper concentrations that the parent strains tolerated, and combining fbpA and ftrA defects heightened sensitivity further. Copper stress induced fbpA and ftrA expression and reduced cellular iron in efflux mutants, which shows that cells perceive iron lack during metal overload. Release of coproporphyrin III signaled copper injury to iron–sulfur enzymes, and Fe-S repair demands likely drove the iron-uptake response. In V. cholerae, the copA fbpA double mutant showed stronger copper sensitivity than either single mutant, confirming the role of iron import in defense. In E. coli, copper or cadmium accumulation shifted superoxide dismutase activity from Fe-Sod to Mn-Sod, consistent with iron dysregulation under metal stress.
Key implications
Clinicians and agronomists can pair copper exposure with iron limitation to lower required copper, reduce environmental load, and still suppress target microbes. For microbiome tracking, expect decreased survival of Enterobacterales and Vibrio-like taxa when iron import is constrained under copper pressure, with gene signatures that include downshifted fbpABC or ftr transcripts and stress markers such as sodB upregulation. This work also echoes host nutritional immunity, which withholds iron while flooding phagosomes with copper; therapeutics that inhibit siderophore uptake or Fbp/Ftr transporters could potentiate host copper defenses without raising metal doses. Because heavy metals can co-select antibiotic resistance, strategies that achieve control with less copper are desirable. These data provide a mechanistic basis and specific microbial targets to build microbiome-aware, metal-sparing interventions.
Metal‐regulated antibiotic resistance and its implications for antibiotic therapy
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study investigates how metals like copper, zinc, and iron regulate antibiotic resistance in bacteria through co-resistance, cross-resistance, and co-regulation. It highlights how metal ions act as signals to trigger resistance mechanisms and offers new strategies for combating antibiotic resistance.
What was studied?
This study examined the role of metals in regulating antibiotic resistance in bacteria, particularly focusing on how metals, such as copper, zinc, and iron, can induce resistance mechanisms against antibiotics. The research explored various mechanisms like co-resistance, cross-resistance, and co-regulation, shedding light on how metal ions act as signals to induce antibiotic resistance and how these metals interact with resistance genes.
Who was studied?
The study focused on bacterial species such as Escherichia coli, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and Salmonella. These bacteria were used to understand how metal ions, like copper and zinc, influence resistance to a wide range of antibiotics. The study also reviewed evidence from multiple microbial species to demonstrate the broader applicability of metal-induced antibiotic resistance.
What were the most important findings?
The most significant findings of the study highlight the complex role of metals in inducing antibiotic resistance. The researchers found that metals like copper, zinc, and iron can influence antibiotic resistance through three main mechanisms: co-resistance, cross-resistance, and co-regulation. Co-resistance occurs when metal resistance genes are physically linked to antibiotic resistance genes, often located on mobile genetic elements, allowing for the simultaneous spread of resistance. Cross-resistance happens when a single gene or system confers resistance to both metals and antibiotics, such as efflux pumps. The study also emphasized co-regulation, where metal ions act as signals to induce the expression of both metal and antibiotic resistance genes via regulatory pathways. For example, copper activates the MarR system in Escherichia coli to increase resistance to multiple antibiotics. Furthermore, metals like zinc and iron were found to regulate various resistance pathways, including changes in the bacterial cell membrane, biofilm formation, and reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation, all of which play critical roles in bacterial survival under antibiotic pressure.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings underscore the role of metals as crucial contributors to antibiotic resistance, beyond the traditional understanding of antibiotics themselves. The implications are vast, as the study suggests that metal ions could be targeted to disrupt bacterial resistance pathways, potentially offering new therapeutic strategies. By understanding how metals influence bacterial resistance, it may be possible to develop adjuvants or drugs that block metal-induced resistance mechanisms, enhancing the efficacy of existing antibiotics. Additionally, the study highlights the importance of managing metal exposure in environments such as hospitals, agriculture, and industrial settings, where metal contamination can exacerbate the spread of antibiotic resistance.
Elevated levels of whole blood nickel in a group of Sri Lankan women with endometriosis: a case control study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study identified elevated blood nickel levels in women with endometriosis, suggesting a potential role of nickel as a metalloestrogen in its pathogenesis.
What was studied?
This study investigated blood nickel and endometriosis by examining whether circulating levels of three metalloestrogens—nickel, cadmium, and lead—were associated with the presence of endometriosis in reproductive-age Sri Lankan women. The researchers aimed to determine whether elevated concentrations of these metals in whole blood might reflect an exposure pattern contributing to the accumulation of metals previously detected in ectopic endometrial tissue. Using highly sensitive analytic techniques, including Total Reflection X-ray Fluorescence and graphite furnace atomic absorption spectroscopy, the study quantified blood metal concentrations and evaluated their statistical relationship to surgically confirmed endometriosis. This work expands on prior findings showing these metals embedded in endometriotic lesions and attempts to clarify whether systemic metal burden may play a mechanistic or exposure-related role.
Who was studied?
The study enrolled 100 women of reproductive age undergoing laparoscopy or laparotomy at a major Sri Lankan hospital. Fifty women with visually confirmed endometriosis formed the case group, and fifty age-matched women without endometriosis served as controls. None were current smokers, minimising confounding from tobacco-related cadmium exposure. Both groups were similar in age and BMI, and indications for surgery among controls included dysmenorrhea, chronic pelvic pain, subfertility, or ovarian masses. All participants provided preoperative venous blood samples, which were processed under tightly controlled laboratory conditions with rigorous quality assurance to ensure high-precision trace metal measurement.
Most important findings
The key discovery was a significantly elevated geometric mean whole blood nickel concentration in women with endometriosis compared with controls. Nickel levels in cases averaged 2.6 μg/L, more than triple the 0.8 μg/L observed in controls. Cadmium and lead levels did not differ significantly, although cases showed slightly lower cadmium and slightly higher lead concentrations. Notably, blood nickel levels reported here fell within ranges considered nontoxic in general populations, yet the consistent elevation in cases suggests biologically relevant exposure or altered handling of nickel in affected women. Nickel’s known ability to activate estrogen receptors in vitro underscores its potential role as a metalloestrogen influencing ectopic tissue survival.
Metal
Cases (μg/L)
Controls (μg/L)
Statistical Significance
Nickel
2.6
0.8
Significant (P=0.016)
Cadmium
0.7
0.8
Not significant
Lead
11.0
6.9
Not significant
Interpretation
Elevated in endometriosis
Baseline levels
Nickel shows clear association
Key implications
These findings suggest that nickel exposure or retention may be associated with endometriosis, potentially through estrogen receptor activation or other endocrine-disrupting mechanisms. Although causality cannot be established from this study, the elevated systemic nickel burden aligns with the presence of nickel in ectopic lesions and contributes to the hypothesis that environmental metals may influence disease development. Future work should explore exposure sources, dose–response relationships, and mechanistic pathways linking trace metals to estrogen-dependent inflammatory disease.
Microbial Diversity of Mer Operon Genes and Their Potential Rules in Mercury Bioremediation and Resistance
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review explains how mer operon genes drive microbial mercury detoxification and how mercury exposure can co-select antibiotic resistance through mobile genetic elements. It links mercury cycling, microbial methylation pathways, and bioremediation strategies to real-world exposure routes relevant to clinical risk.
What was reviewed?
This review explained how mercury cycles through air, water, and soil and how microbes control key steps that change mercury toxicity. It focused on mercury-resistant bacteria and the mer operon as a practical framework for understanding detoxification and resistance. The authors also compared physical and chemical cleanup approaches with biologic approaches, arguing that bioremediation can reduce mercury hazards more sustainably when it targets the forms of mercury that actually move through food webs and reach humans.
Who was reviewed?
The authors reviewed findings from environmental and host-associated microbial studies rather than a single clinical cohort. They synthesized evidence from mercury-impacted soils, sediments, aquatic systems, and industrially influenced environments, and they also discussed microbiology relevant to oral and intestinal communities in the context of mercury exposure sources such as dental amalgams and diet. Their goal was to connect microbial genes and pathways to real exposure pathways that matter for human health risk.
What were the most important findings?
The review emphasized that the mer operon is the core microbial “signature” of mercury resistance and detoxification, with merA enabling reduction of Hg2+ to volatile Hg0 and merB enabling cleavage of carbon–mercury bonds in organomercurials so the remaining Hg2+ can be reduced by MerA. It highlighted transport and handling genes (such as merP and merT and alternative transporters like merC, merE, merF, and merH) that move Hg into the cell and traffic it toward detox enzymes, plus regulatory genes (merR and merD) that control expression based on mercury availability. It also clarified that microbial methylation of Hg2+ depends on hgcA and hgcB in anaerobic settings, and it noted that these methylation genes are reported across anaerobic environments but are not expected features of typical human and mammalian microbiomes, which shifts clinical attention toward exposure and detox capacity rather than gut-based methylation.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
For clinicians, the review supports a functional, gene-based lens for mercury-related microbiome risk: environments or exposures that enrich mer genes can also enrich antibiotic resistance because mercury resistance genes often travel on mobile elements that carry antibiotic resistance genes. This provides a plausible pathway by which mercury exposure can shape resistance patterns in oral and gut communities, especially when exposure is chronic and selection pressure persists. The review also frames bioremediation as a double-edged tool: merA-driven detox can reduce Hg2+ but may release Hg0 back into the environment unless paired with strategies that capture or sequester mercury. Clinically, the strongest takeaway is that mercury exposure can act as a resistance co-selector, so exposure history may matter when patients show recurrent infections or unexpected resistance patterns.
The Extracellular Metallometabolome: Metallophores, Metal Ionophores, and Other Chelating Agents as Natural Products
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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The extracellular metallometabolome links secreted metallophores and ionophores to metal control at mucosa, explaining microbiome shifts, pathogen fitness, and host defense, with clear genomic markers for clinical use.
What was reviewed?
This review introduces the extracellular metallometabolome, the suite of secreted metallophores, metal ionophores, and other chelators that shape metal availability outside cells and drive outcomes at the host–microbe interface. It explains how microbes and hosts use these small molecules to acquire needed metals, withhold them from rivals, or intoxicate invaders, and shows how this chemistry steers colonization, inflammation, and virulence across human niches relevant to the microbiome.
Who was reviewed?
The article surveys bacteria, fungi, and plants that secrete metal-binding natural products and the human host proteins that counter them. It details chalkophores such as methanobactins, broad-spectrum opine metallophores like staphylopine in Staphylococcus aureus and pseudopaline in Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and siderophores that moonlight as zincophores or chalkophores, including yersiniabactin used by uropathogenic Escherichia coli. It also covers fungal zincophores (Pra1 from Candida albicans and Aspf2 from Aspergillus fumigatus) and host defenses such as lipocalin-2 interception of siderophores and calprotectin sequestration of zinc and manganese. The review emphasizes how local pH and inflamed mucosa tune metal speciation and ligand selectivity in the gut, urinary tract, and airway.
Most important findings
The review shows that secreted metal ligands act as precise ecological tools that feed, starve, or poison microbes, and that many “siderophores” function as general metallophores whose metal choice depends on niche chemistry. Yersiniabactin illustrates this plasticity: it binds copper and zinc in addition to iron, helps Enterobacterales withstand copper stress in the urinary tract, and supports colonization in the inflamed gut where calprotectin restricts zinc. Staphylopine helps S. aureus overcome zinc starvation imposed by calprotectin, yet because it can also carry copper, it can turn into a liability under copper stress. Methanobactins exemplify high-affinity chalkophores that reduce Cu(II) to Cu(I) and deliver it for enzyme function, while frankobactins show that some “siderophores” primarily detoxify copper rather than acquire iron. The host counters with nutritional immunity, raising copper and withholding iron and zinc; lipocalin-2 traps classic siderophores, while stealth forms such as salmochelins evade it.
Across niches, pH shifts alter metal selectivity of ligands and thus rewire uptake hierarchies, explaining why the same metallophore can favor different metals in the stomach, small bowel, or bladder. For a microbiome signatures database, the paper highlights actionable markers: presence of yersiniabactin or salmochelin loci in Enterobacterales, staphylopine/pseudopaline operons in S. aureus/P. aeruginosa, fungal zincophore genes (PRA1/ASPF2), and host factors such as calprotectin or lipocalin-2 that gate metal flows and remodel community structure.
Key implications
Clinicians can use metallophore and ionophore biology to interpret and influence dysbiosis and infection risk. Genomic detection of yersiniabactin or staphylopine modules suggests metal-adaptive traits that support persistence under inflammation and predict niche preference, while elevated calprotectin or alkaline pH signals a shift toward zinc scarcity and altered ligand selectivity. Careful copper or zinc modulation, topical or systemic, may tilt control toward the host but must avoid collateral mucosal injury. Therapeutic ideas include ligand-decoy strategies that block uptake, lipocalin-2–sensitizing approaches for non-stealth siderophores, and timed metal modulation that exploits broad-spectrum metallophores’ liabilities during copper stress. Embedding these loci and host biomarkers in microbiome reports can refine risk stratification for recurrent UTI, candidiasis, and airway infections and guide metal-aware stewardship.
ZntA maintains zinc and cadmium homeostasis and promotes oxidative stress resistance and virulence in Vibrio parahaemolyticus
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study investigates the role of ZntA in zinc and cadmium homeostasis, oxidative stress resistance, and virulence in Vibrio parahaemolyticus. ZntA protects against metal toxicity and promotes bacterial survival under stressful conditions, highlighting its importance in bacterial pathogenesis.
What was studied?
This study explored the role of ZntA, a metal-transporting ATPase, in maintaining zinc (Zn) and cadmium (Cd) homeostasis and its involvement in oxidative stress resistance and virulence in Vibrio parahaemolyticus. The research focused on understanding how ZntA mediates metal homeostasis and contributes to bacterial survival and pathogenicity under various environmental stresses.
Who was studied?
The study used the Vibrio parahaemolyticus strain RIMD2210633, a gram-negative bacterium known for causing gastroenteritis in humans and acute hepatopancreatic necrosis in shrimp. Mutant strains were created, including the zntA deletion mutant (ΔzntA) and complemented strains, to assess the role of ZntA in metal homeostasis, oxidative stress resistance, and virulence.
Most important findings
The research showed that ZntA plays a critical role in maintaining metal homeostasis, particularly for zinc and cadmium. ZntA was found to be induced by several metals, including Zn, Cu, Co, Ni, and Cd, but not by Fe or Mn. The absence of ZntA in the ΔzntA mutant significantly impaired the growth of V. parahaemolyticus under excess Zn, Ni, and Cd conditions. In contrast, the growth of the wild-type (WT) and complemented strains was not affected under these conditions. ZntA was also essential for the bacteria's ability to resist oxidative stress induced by hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), and its deletion led to reduced virulence in zebrafish models. Additionally, the study demonstrated that ZntR, a transcriptional regulator, positively regulates zntA expression in response to metal stresses, with zntA being upregulated in the presence of excess metals.
Key implications
This study highlights the essential role of ZntA in bacterial survival under metal stress, particularly in maintaining Zn and Cd homeostasis. The findings suggest that ZntA's involvement in oxidative stress resistance and virulence could have important implications for developing strategies to manage V. parahaemolyticus infections. Understanding the mechanisms behind metal homeostasis and oxidative stress resistance in pathogenic bacteria could lead to new therapeutic approaches aimed at disrupting metal regulation, potentially enhancing the effectiveness of antimicrobial treatments. Moreover, the study underscores the importance of metalloregulation in bacterial pathogenicity and survival, offering insights into how V. parahaemolyticus adapts to hostile environments within the host.
Potential role of Mercury pollutants in the success of Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus USA300 in Latin America
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study shows that trace mercury exposure can favor the USA300-LV MRSA lineage in South America. Mercury reverses the fitness cost of COMER, helps USA300-LV outcompete other strains, and increases expression of major virulence genes under sub-inhibitory mercury.
What was studied?
This study tested whether low-level mercury pollution can help explain why the USA300 Latin American variant of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (USA300-LV) became dominant in parts of South America while the North American USA300 variant (USA300-NA) dominated elsewhere. The authors combined phylogenomic modeling of epidemic success across a large ST8 genome set with lab experiments that directly measured growth, head-to-head competition, mercury susceptibility, and virulence-gene expression under sub-inhibitory mercury exposure. They focused on COMER, a mobile genetic element carried by USA300-LV that encodes mercury resistance, and asked whether mercury exposure could flip COMER from a fitness cost into a real-world advantage.
Who was studied?
The study did not involve human participants; it studied bacterial isolates and genomes. The authors analyzed 250 ST8 genomes to quantify “epidemic success” patterns over time and geography, then selected representative strains for functional testing that covered key evolutionary steps: an ancestral ST8 methicillin-susceptible strain, a basal USA300 MRSA ancestor lacking ACME and COMER, multiple USA300-LV strains carrying COMER, and USA300-NA strains carrying ACME. In the lab, they exposed these strains to mercury(II) chloride at trace, non-lethal levels to mimic plausible environmental contact and to test whether mercury changes competitive outcomes and virulence regulation.
What were the most important findings?
Across the genome dataset, acquiring major mobile elements sequentially increased epidemic success, but COMER behaved differently depending on geography: it improved success in South American isolates while reducing success outside South America. In vitro, USA300-LV showed a baseline fitness impairment compared with USA300-NA, which would predict poor competitiveness in mercury-free settings. That pattern reversed when mercury was present: COMER-positive strains had much higher mercury tolerance and, under sub-inhibitory mercury concentrations, they outcompeted COMER-negative strains during prolonged co-culture. Mercury exposure also acted like a virulence “switch” for USA300-LV: it consistently increased expression of key toxins and regulators (including α-toxin, γ-toxin, PSMα, LukS-PV, and agr/RNAIII) in USA300-LV, while USA300-NA and ancestral/basal strains showed no increase or even down-regulation under the same conditions. For a microbiome signatures database, the most actionable “MMA” is functional rather than taxonomic: COMER/mer-operon carriage plus mercury-triggered upshift of core and accessory virulence programs, creating a profile of “metal-selected, more competitive, more virulent” MRSA under low-dose mercury exposure.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
Clinically, this work links environmental metal exposure to pathogen dominance and virulence in a way that standard antibiotic-only narratives often miss. It supports the idea that mercury pollution can select for MRSA lineages that carry mercury resistance and simultaneously express higher virulence under the same exposure, which may increase skin infection burden and person-to-person spread in exposed communities. It also warns that metal resistance elements are not neutral passengers: they can impose a cost in low-mercury settings yet become highly advantageous where trace mercury is common, helping explain regional replacement patterns. For clinicians interpreting microbiome and infection risk, the key takeaway is that chronic, low-level environmental toxicants can reshape microbial competition and virulence regulation, so exposure history (especially in mining-affected regions) can be relevant when tracking outbreaks, recurrence, and unexpected shifts in dominant clones.
Mechanistic insights into staphylopine-mediated metal acquisition
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study reveals how S. aureus uses staphylopine (StP) to acquire transition metals, with CntA playing a central role in metal recognition and transport. The findings highlight new potential therapeutic targets to disrupt metal acquisition and reduce bacterial virulence.
What was studied?
This study investigated the mechanism by which Staphylococcus aureus utilizes staphylopine (StP), a metallophore, to acquire transition metals during infection. Specifically, it focused on the CntA protein, a component of the StP/metal transport system, and how it recognizes and transports StP-bound metals such as Co²⁺, Ni²⁺, and Zn²⁺. The researchers explored the detailed structural and biochemical interactions between StP, metals, and CntA, as well as how these interactions are critical for bacterial virulence.
Who was studied?
The study primarily examined Staphylococcus aureus and its StP/metal acquisition system, particularly the role of the CntA protein in metal recognition and transport. It also involved other proteins related to the StP-mediated metal transport system, such as CntB, CntC, and CntD, and investigated their roles in virulence. Additionally, the study explored the effects of mutations in specific amino acids of CntA to assess their impact on metal acquisition and bacterial fitness.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed the detailed mechanism by which S. aureus acquires transition metals via the staphylopine system. It was determined that CntA, a solute-binding protein (SBP), plays a critical role in recognizing and binding to StP/metal complexes. Structural analysis showed that binding of metals such as Co²⁺, Ni²⁺, and Zn²⁺ to StP induced a conformational change in CntA, which is essential for the subsequent transport of these metals into the bacterial cell. The study also identified key amino acid residues involved in metal recognition, such as arginine and tryptophan residues, which play a primary role in metal binding and facilitate the transport process. Furthermore, the researchers demonstrated that the StP/metal recognition mechanism is crucial for S. aureus's ability to grow under metal-limited conditions, such as those imposed by host immune proteins like calprotectin. Mutations in critical residues of CntA impaired the bacterium's ability to acquire metal and reduced its growth and virulence, highlighting the importance of StP-mediated metal acquisition for bacterial fitness.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings of this study have significant implications for understanding how S. aureus and other pathogens acquire essential metals during infection. By identifying the key role of the CntA-mediated StP/metal recognition system in metal homeostasis, this research provides new targets for antimicrobial therapies aimed at disrupting bacterial metal acquisition. Inhibiting this system could reduce bacterial virulence by limiting metal availability, an approach that could be particularly useful in treating infections caused by S. aureus. The study also adds to the broader understanding of bacterial strategies to evade host-imposed nutritional immunity, where pathogens compete with the host for metals like zinc and iron.
Higher incidence of zinc and nickel hypersensitivity in patients with irritable bowel syndrome
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Study identifying significantly higher zinc and nickel hypersensitivity in IBS patients, suggesting metal-induced immune activation as a contributor to mucosal inflammation and symptom generation.
What was studied?
This study investigated the higher incidence of zinc and nickel hypersensitivity in patients with irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), directly exploring how metal-induced immune activation might contribute to low-grade mucosal inflammation. The focus keyphrase zinc and nickel hypersensitivity in IBS appears here because the researchers proposed that immune responses to trace metal ions released from dental materials could trigger or exacerbate IBS symptoms. The investigation assessed whether IBS patients exhibit elevated T-cell–mediated hypersensitivity to commonly used dental metals—zinc, nickel, gold, and palladium—using the drug-induced lymphocyte stimulation test (DLST). The study leveraged both quantitative stimulation indices and sensitization prevalence to determine whether metal hypersensitivity might serve as a microbial-relevant immune signature, potentially connecting environmental exposures to mucosal immune dysfunction in IBS.
Who was studied?
The study examined 147 Japanese adults diagnosed with IBS, classified by Rome IV criteria into IBS-D, IBS-C, IBS-M, and IBS-U subtypes. These individuals represented a clinically diverse group with chronic abdominal pain and altered bowel habits. A comparison group of 22 healthy controls with no IBS symptoms established baseline sensitization patterns. All participants underwent DLST testing to quantify lymphocyte activation in response to zinc, nickel, gold, and palladium. This population design enabled the researchers to distinguish disease-specific hypersensitivity patterns from background sensitization rates in the general population, illustrating how IBS patients may uniquely respond immunologically to metal exposures encountered through dental materials and dietary sources.
Most important findings
A strikingly higher proportion of IBS patients exhibited sensitization to at least one dental metal (56.5%) compared with healthy controls (31.8%), as shown in the sensitization bar chart. The most significant differences involved zinc and nickel. None of the healthy controls exhibited zinc hypersensitivity, whereas 36.4% of IBS patients did, with markedly elevated stimulation indices (mean SI, 352 vs. 119). Nickel hypersensitivity also differed significantly, affecting 39.6% of IBS patients versus 21.1% of controls, accompanied by higher mean SI values. Figures on page 3 visually depict these shifts with clearly elevated beeswarm distributions. No meaningful differences were observed for gold or palladium, and hypersensitivity rates did not vary across IBS subtypes. These results map closely to established immune pathways: zinc elicits CD8-dominant lichenoid reactions, while nickel promotes IL-17A-producing CD4+ T-cell expansion—both mechanisms implicated in mucosal immune dysregulation and gut–neuron signaling relevant to IBS.
Key implications
This study suggests that zinc and nickel hypersensitivity may contribute to the characteristic low-grade immune activation seen in a subset of IBS patients. Because many common foods are rich in these metals and dental alloys can release trace ions chronically, hypersensitive individuals may experience ongoing T-cell activation that amplifies visceral pain pathways and mucosal inflammation. The findings support further investigation of dietary metal load, dental materials, and immune profiling as potential components of microbiome-informed IBS management strategies. Although preliminary, the work highlights environmental–immune interactions that might modify the intestinal milieu, influence microbial composition, and shape patient-specific symptom patterns.
Understanding How Minerals Contribute to Optimal Immune Function
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review explains how magnesium, zinc, copper, iron, and selenium shape innate and adaptive immunity and long-term inflammation. It highlights that magnesium deficiency can weaken the gut barrier and reduce bifidobacteria, which can raise inflammatory cytokines and worsen immune balance.
What was reviewed?
This paper reviewed how key dietary minerals support immune function and regulate inflammation, with a practical focus on magnesium, zinc, copper, iron, and selenium. The authors summarized mechanisms that shape innate immunity, adaptive immunity, and long-term inflammatory balance, and they paired these mechanisms with nutrition guidance and cautions about excessive supplementation. The review also described how mineral status can shift infection risk and chronic disease trajectories by altering immune cell signaling, cytokine production, oxidative stress control, and mucosal barrier stability.
Who was reviewed?
This was a narrative review, so it did not study one enrolled patient group; it reviewed previously published evidence across human studies, clinical trials, and relevant animal and mechanistic work. The reviewed literature covered general adult populations and higher-risk groups such as older adults, pregnant individuals, people with chronic disease or restricted diets, and those with mineral insufficiency that can weaken immune competence. The evidence base also included immune cell and tissue models that clarify mineral-driven effects on macrophages, neutrophils, lymphocytes, and inflammatory signaling pathways.
What were the most important findings?
The review argued that mineral adequacy protects immune performance by preventing a predictable pattern: overactive innate inflammation paired with weaker adaptive responses. For magnesium, it described immunoregulatory control of inflammatory signaling, including reduced cytokine output after immune stimulation through inhibition of NF-κB activation, and it emphasized magnesium’s role in T-cell development through Mg2+ transporters like TRPM7. For a microbiome signatures database, the strongest direct microbial association appeared under magnesium deficiency, where the review linked low magnesium to compromised intestinal barrier integrity and reduced bifidobacteria, alongside higher proinflammatory cytokines such as TNF and IL-6 in gut and liver. For zinc, it emphasized that deficiency impairs innate killing capacity and adaptive T-cell balance, while excessive zinc can suppress immunity. For copper, iron, and selenium, it highlighted that both low and high status can distort host defense, with iron and selenium tightly tied to oxidative stress and infection outcomes.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
Clinicians should treat mineral status as a modifiable immune driver, not a minor nutrition detail, especially when patients show recurrent infections, chronic low-grade inflammation, slow recovery, or diet and absorption risks. The review supports a food-first approach and targeted supplementation only when deficiency risk is clear, because oversupplementation can backfire and worsen immune regulation. For microbiome-informed care, the magnesium section provides a clinically useful bridge: magnesium deficiency can weaken the gut barrier and reduce beneficial bifidobacteria, which can amplify inflammatory signaling beyond the intestine and reinforce systemic immune dysregulation.
Lead(II) Binding in Natural and Artificial Proteins
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review defines how lead binding in proteins drives host enzyme inhibition and signaling errors while microbial operons export and precipitate Pb(II), reshaping niche metal availability and competitive fitness.
What was reviewed?
This chapter synthesizes structural, spectroscopic, and functional evidence for lead binding in proteins, spanning natural targets and de novo–designed scaffolds to define how Pb(II) engages biological ligands and perturbs macromolecular function. The review emphasizes lead’s thiophilicity, preference for Cys-rich coordination, and frequent adoption of hemidirected trigonal-pyramidal PbS₃ sites whose stereochemistry reflects the 6s² lone pair. Using δ-aminolevulinic acid dehydratase (ALAD), calmodulin, zinc-finger domains, and bacterial metalloregulatory networks (pbr, znt, cad) as exemplars, it links metal-site substitution or opportunistic binding to heme biosynthesis failure, signaling distortion, transcriptional misregulation, and selective pressure for microbial efflux and sequestration. It further exploits three-stranded coiled coils and related peptide bundles to isolate first-sphere rules for Pb(II) geometry and affinity, integrating UV/Vis, EXAFS/XAS, and ^207Pb NMR to benchmark PbS₃ fingerprints and quantify competition with Zn(II) and Ca(II).
Who was reviewed?
The evidence base includes human and mammalian protein systems (ALAD in erythrocytes; Ca(II)-sensor calmodulin; diverse zinc-finger transcription factors), Gram-negative and Gram-positive bacterial metal-resistance operons from Cupriavidus metallidurans, Escherichia coli, and Staphylococcus aureus (PbrR/PbrA/PbrT, ZntR/ZntA, CadC/CadA), and minimal peptide scaffolds engineered to present Cys₃ pockets within three-stranded coiled-coils. Clinical and environmental contexts appear through observations such as the predominance of ALAD-bound Pb in blood and the extraordinarily tight Pb(II) inhibition of ALAD activity, while microbial contexts appear via operon-encoded uptake, efflux, and periplasmic precipitation that together remodel local metal speciation.
Most important findings
Across systems, Pb(II) outcompetes native metals at Cys-rich loci and locks into hemidirected PbS₃ coordination; in ALAD, Pb(II) substitutes for Zn(II) at a Cys₃ site with femtomolar Ki, blocks substrate activation, and drives both heme failure and ALA accumulation, with a large fraction of whole-blood lead bound to ALAD in exposed workers. Calmodulin’s EF-hands can be filled by Pb(II) with higher affinity than Ca(II), provoking aberrant activation at very low concentrations and, under crystallization conditions, additional surface Pb(II) contacts that highlight the ion’s opportunism. Canonical and noncanonical zinc-finger motifs show that Pb(II) binding favors Cys-rich sites, misfolds domains, and diminishes DNA binding for factors such as GATA, TFIIIA, and Sp1.
In bacteria, lead-sensing transcription factors and P-type ATPases orchestrate resistance: PbrR selectively detects Pb(II) and induces an operon that couples uptake, cytosolic chaperoning, efflux, and periplasmic phosphate precipitation; ZntA and CadA export Pb(II) alongside Zn/Cd, while ZntR and CadC transduce Pb(II) occupancy into promoter remodeling. Designed Cys₃ coiled-coils reproduce natural PbS₃ spectra and reveal site-specific preferences (e.g., modest preference for “d” over “a” heptad layers), pKa coupling of thiolate formation, and extremely high apparent affinities, thereby decoupling second-sphere sterics from first-sphere chemistry. Collectively, these findings explain how Pb(II) displaces essential metals to alter enzymology and gene control and how microbial resistance circuits and sulfur-rich ligands sequester Pb(II), processes that, at community scale, are expected to shift competitive fitness under lead exposure through altered availability, export, and precipitation.
Key implications
For clinicians integrating microbiome-aware toxicology, the reviewed mechanisms indicate that host targets (ALAD, Ca(II) sensors, zinc-fingers) explain systemic morbidity, while bacterial Pb(II) sensing and efflux define how lead exposure selects for metal-resistant taxa and changes the metal landscape around biofilms and mucosa. Because Pb(II) binding is both avid and structurally specific, even low-level exposure can disrupt heme synthesis and signaling, and community composition may track with operon-encoded export and periplasmic precipitation capacity. These protein-level rules also rationalize biomonitoring (ALAD activity, blood Pb partitions) and suggest that therapeutic strategies must consider not only chelation but also the microbial metal economy that shapes colonization and inflammation at barrier sites.
Disulfiram and Copper Ions Kill Mycobacterium tuberculosis in a Synergistic Manner
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study shows that disulfiram, in combination with copper ions, significantly enhances the bactericidal effects against M. tuberculosis, especially against drug-resistant strains. The copper-dependent activity of disulfiram offers a potential new therapeutic approach for tuberculosis.
What was studied?
This study investigated the synergistic effect of disulfiram, an FDA-approved drug, in combination with copper ions against Mycobacterium tuberculosis (M. tuberculosis). The research aimed to explore how disulfiram and copper, when used together, could enhance the antibacterial properties of copper ions, which are known to play a role in bacterial toxicity. Disulfiram, typically used for alcohol addiction, was tested to determine if it could potentiate copper toxicity against M. tuberculosis, especially considering the challenges posed by drug-resistant strains of tuberculosis.
Who was studied?
The research focused on Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the causative agent of tuberculosis, and Mycobacterium smegmatis, a surrogate organism often used for preliminary studies on tuberculosis. The study used different strains of M. tuberculosis including the wild-type H37Rv strain and a derivative known as mc26230, which is a biosafety-level 2 classified avirulent strain. Both replicating and non-replicating forms of these bacteria were tested under controlled laboratory conditions, including the presence of copper ions and disulfiram.
Most important findings
The study revealed that disulfiram, when combined with copper ions, exhibited strong bactericidal effects on both replicating and non-replicating M. tuberculosis cells. The bactericidal action was significantly more potent when copper was present, highlighting the copper-dependence of disulfiram's antimicrobial activity. Importantly, the presence of copper enabled the disulfiram-copper complex to bypass the typical copper homeostasis machinery in the bacterial cells, allowing copper to interfere with cellular processes that are usually protected. The researchers observed a copper stress response, indicating that disulfiram facilitates the penetration of copper into the cell, leading to potential cellular damage via interference with iron-sulfur clusters and other copper-sensitive intracellular components. Notably, the disulfiram-copper complex was found to be more effective than copper or disulfiram alone.
Key implications
This study offers a promising new approach to tackling M. tuberculosis, particularly in the context of drug-resistant strains. By enhancing the effectiveness of copper ions with disulfiram, a known medication, this combination could potentially serve as a therapeutic strategy to target M. tuberculosis, including dormant bacterial populations that are typically more challenging to treat with conventional therapies. The findings suggest that repurposing disulfiram could be a viable strategy for treating tuberculosis, particularly in settings where traditional antibiotics are facing resistance. The study also highlights the potential for other small molecules to act synergistically with metal ions to overcome bacterial defenses, paving the way for the development of novel antimicrobial strategies.
Impact of occupational exposure on human microbiota
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review explains how workplace microbes, chemicals, metals, and air pollution can change the adult human microbiome. It highlights links to colonization, gut permeability, and immune effects, and it suggests that stopping exposure alone may not reverse risk if microbiome changes persist.
What was reviewed?
This review summarized how workplace exposures can reshape the adult human microbiome and why those shifts may matter for disease risk. It covered two broad exposure classes: biotic exposures from workplace microbes (for example, animal facilities, farms, and other high-bioaerosol settings) and abiotic exposures such as chemicals, heavy metals, and particulate matter that are often far higher at work than in daily life. The authors also explained why older “single-proxy” measures like endotoxin can miss important biology, because different bacterial endotoxins can push immune responses in opposite directions.
Who was reviewed?
The review drew from human observational studies, time-series workplace sampling studies, and supportive animal-model work rather than a single clinical cohort. It highlighted workers with animal contact (livestock workers, animal care workers, poultry-related work), military personnel with complex chemical exposures, and populations or models exposed to heavy metals and air pollution. Across these studies, the authors considered multiple body sites, especially the nasal passages, skin, oral cavity, lungs, and gut, because different occupational exposures can preferentially affect different microbial communities.
What were the most important findings?
The review emphasized that occupational environments can measurably alter the adult microbiome through both colonization and exposure-driven selection. Animal-associated work can shift the nasal and skin microbiome toward organisms found in the work environment, including strain-level signals such as livestock-associated MRSA colonization in some worker groups. The authors also highlighted evidence that certain military-related chemical mixtures and particulate matter exposures can disturb the gut microbiome and increase gut permeability in model systems, suggesting a gut–immune–lung link that could plausibly contribute to respiratory disease risk. For heavy metals and particles, the review described a consistent theme: these exposures can change gut microbial composition and function, and the microbiome may also modify how the host responds to toxins, making microbiome changes both a target and a mediator of exposure effects.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
For clinicians, the review supports a practical shift in thinking: exposure reduction may not fully reverse disease risk if the exposure already pushed the patient’s microbiome into a more pro-inflammatory or dysbiotic state. This matters for respiratory and systemic conditions where work exposures are intense and repeated, because microbiome changes can persist, interact with immune tone, and influence barrier integrity. The review also implies that occupational history can become clinically actionable microbiome context, especially when symptoms persist after workplace removal, and it highlights an evidence gap that clinicians should note: few studies directly link workplace-driven microbiome changes to hard clinical endpoints, so this remains a key area for future translational research.
Correlation of Heavy Metal Content in the Blood of Patients with Ovarian Cancer by Place of Residence
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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This study explores how the concentration of heavy metals, particularly zinc and copper, in the blood of ovarian cancer patients correlates with their recurrence-free survival. It highlights the potential of these metals as biomarkers for prognosis and suggests environmental factors play a role in cancer outcomes.
What was studied?
This study investigates the correlation between heavy metal content in the blood of patients with ovarian cancer and their place of residence. It specifically looks at the relationship between the levels of chromium, lead, cadmium, copper, and zinc in the blood and how these correlate with the recurrence-free survival rates of ovarian cancer patients. The research also explores how variations in heavy metal exposure, based on geographic location, might influence ovarian cancer prognosis and suggests the importance of considering these environmental factors in cancer treatment.
Who was studied?
The study analyzed 127 patients diagnosed with ovarian cancer at various stages (I-IV). The patients were divided based on their place of residence within the Ivano-Frankivsk region of Ukraine, which included districts like Ivano-Frankivsk, Kalush, Kolomyia, and Nadvirna. The study assessed blood samples to determine the concentration of various heavy metals and followed up on the recurrence-free survival of the patients over time, relating these findings to their geographic location and metal content in the blood.
Most important findings
The study found that there was a significant correlation between the zinc content in the blood of ovarian cancer patients and their place of residence. Patients living in Ivano-Frankivsk and Kalush districts, where zinc levels were higher, showed longer durations of recurrence-free survival. The highest levels of zinc and copper were associated with a more favorable prognosis, indicating a protective effect. However, no significant correlation was found between the content of chromium, lead, or cadmium in the blood and recurrence-free survival. This suggests that zinc and copper could serve as potential markers for ovarian cancer prognosis, while the role of other heavy metals requires further investigation.
Key implications
The findings suggest that monitoring the levels of certain heavy metals, particularly zinc and copper, in ovarian cancer patients could help in predicting their prognosis and tailoring individualized supportive therapies. The study also highlights the importance of considering environmental factors, such as geographic location and heavy metal exposure, in cancer treatment. While further research is necessary to confirm the role of zinc and copper, these findings offer new insights into how environmental factors may influence cancer progression and outcomes. This study advocates for a more personalized approach to ovarian cancer treatment, incorporating the impact of heavy metals and environmental exposure.
Specific Histidine Residues Confer Histatin Peptides with Copper-Dependent Activity against Candida albicans
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Copper-dependent activity against Candida albicans rises when histatin peptides bind copper via a proximal bis-His site, lowering EC50 and improving killing in vitro; copper chelation reverses this effect.
What was studied?
This study defines copper-dependent activity against Candida albicans by testing how histatin salivary peptides bind copper and use that copper to kill the fungus. The authors measured peptide–copper binding by spectrophotometric titrations, resolved copper coordination by X-ray absorption spectroscopy, and ran growth and killing assays with and without added copper or chelators. They mapped two copper(I) binding sites of nanomolar affinity and a high-affinity N-terminal copper(II) site, then linked these sites to antifungal potency. When the medium contained extra copper, histatin-5 required a much lower dose to inhibit growth; when a copper-specific chelator removed copper, activity fell. This work connects exact histidine positions to copper binding and to killing strength, and shows how copper in the oral niche can tune antifungal peptide performance.
Who was studied?
The experiments used Candida albicans (strain SC5314) in vitro and a panel of histatin-5–based peptides, including full-length histatin-5, N-terminal fragments, and His→Ala mutants that remove specific histidines. The team challenged C. albicans with peptides under copper-replete, copper-depleted, and baseline conditions, and used a cell-impermeant copper chelator, bathocuproine disulphonate (BCS), to limit copper availability. This design lets the authors link copper access, peptide sequence, and fungal survival with clear readouts of potency and copper binding behavior.
Most important findings
Copper boosted histatin-5 efficacy while copper removal erased it. Adding copper lowered the EC50 from about 5 µM to ~1 µM; BCS co-treatment prevented growth inhibition, while a general chelator (EDTA) weakened but did not abolish activity. Cells grown in copper-rich medium became more sensitive, and simultaneous exposure to BCS blocked killing despite similar cell-associated copper during the short assay, supporting a direct need for accessible extracellular copper during peptide action. The chemistry explains the biology. Histatin-5 binds copper(II) very tightly at its N-terminus (ATCUN site; Kd ≈ 8 pM), and it hosts two copper(I) sites of ~20 nM affinity anchored by adjacent histidines (a “bis-His” motif). X-ray absorption data indicate a third ligand helps complete the copper(I) site, consistent with His3 participation in one complex.
These distinct sites give histatin-5 the ability to engage both copper redox states, a feature that can amplify oxidative stress within fungal cells and drive killing. Sequence matters for copper-enabled potency. Truncated N-terminal peptides lacked activity alone but regained strong activity with added copper (EC50 ~5–6 µM). Mutating the key H7,H8 bis-His motif abolished copper-dependent killing, while mutating the distal H18,H19 pair had modest effects, highlighting the proximal bis-His site as the critical anchor for copper(I) and activity. The correlation between copper(I) affinity and antifungal potency across fragments and mutants defines a clean, microbiome-relevant signature: histatin peptides that preserve the bis-His motif and have access to copper show stronger activity against C. albicans.
Key implications
For oral and mucosal care, copper availability can tune innate antifungal defense. Saliva that delivers copper to histatin-5 can strengthen killing of C. albicans, while copper chelation or low copper may blunt that defense. In a microbiome signatures database, clinicians can tag “histatin–copper axis” with features that include the histatin-5 bis-His motif, high-affinity N-terminal copper(II) binding, and a copper-responsive killing phenotype. These markers predict higher peptide efficacy in copper-replete niches and lower efficacy with chelation or deficiency. Therapeutic strategies may include peptide designs that retain the proximal bis-His site or formulations that supply bioavailable copper in a controlled way, while avoiding excess that could injure host tissue. Clinicians should consider copper status, chelator use, and salivary flow when they judge risk for Candida overgrowth and when they evaluate peptide-based adjuncts.
Chronic arsenic exposure perturbs gut microbiota and bile acid homeostasis in mice
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study explores the effects of chronic arsenic exposure on the gut microbiota and bile acid metabolism in mice, revealing significant changes in microbial composition and bile acid homeostasis, which may contribute to metabolic dysfunction and related diseases.
What was studied?
This study examined the effects of chronic arsenic exposure on gut microbiota composition and bile acid metabolism in mice. Researchers aimed to determine how prolonged exposure to arsenic influences both the microbial communities in the gut and the homeostasis of bile acids, which are essential for various metabolic processes. Mice were exposed to arsenic through their drinking water, and after a period of three months, their fecal, serum, and liver samples were analyzed to evaluate any changes in microbial diversity and bile acid levels. The goal was to explore how arsenic exposure impacts the microbiome and metabolic regulation, potentially offering insights into its role in metabolic diseases.
Who was studied?
The study involved C57BL/6 male mice, a strain commonly used in toxicology research due to its well-characterized response to environmental exposures. A total of 12 mice were exposed to arsenic at a concentration of 1 ppm in their drinking water over the course of 13 weeks. The exposed group was compared to a control group of 12 mice that were not exposed to arsenic. The study focused on understanding how arsenic exposure affects the gut microbiome, with particular attention paid to its impact on the microbial communities that play a crucial role in regulating bile acid metabolism and other metabolic functions.
Most important findings
The results of the study indicated that arsenic exposure led to significant changes in both the composition of the gut microbiome and the profile of bile acids in the mice. Specifically, arsenic exposure was found to decrease the overall diversity of gut microbiota, which is an indicator of dysbiosis. Furthermore, there were significant alterations in the abundance of key microbial populations, with an increase in Bacteroidetes and a decrease in Firmicutes. These microbial shifts were associated with changes in bile acid levels, which play an essential role in fat digestion and the regulation of metabolic pathways.
The study also found that the impact of arsenic exposure on bile acid metabolism was notable. The mice exposed to arsenic showed a decrease in the levels of secondary bile acids such as lithocholic acid (LCA) and deoxycholic acid (DCA), while primary bile acids like cholic acid (CA) and chenodeoxycholic acid (CDCA) were significantly altered in their serum and liver. These changes in bile acid levels are critical because bile acids not only aid in digestion but also serve as signaling molecules involved in lipid metabolism and glucose homeostasis.
Key implications
The study underscores the potential for arsenic to disrupt both microbial balance and metabolic functions, particularly those related to bile acid metabolism. The changes observed in the gut microbiome and bile acid profiles may contribute to the development of various health conditions, including metabolic disorders, liver disease, and cardiovascular issues. These findings suggest that chronic arsenic exposure could alter metabolic pathways by affecting both the microbiome and bile acid homeostasis. Understanding the link between arsenic, gut microbiota, and metabolism could help inform strategies to mitigate the health risks associated with chronic arsenic exposure, particularly in populations with high environmental arsenic.
Multi-Omics Reveals that Lead Exposure Disturbs Gut Microbiome Development, Key Metabolites and Metabolic Pathways
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study demonstrates that lead exposure disrupts the gut microbiome, reducing microbial diversity and impairing key metabolic pathways related to vitamin E, bile acids, nitrogen metabolism, and energy metabolism. These disruptions may contribute to lead toxicity and associated diseases.
What was studied?
This study used multi-omics approaches to investigate the effects of lead exposure on the gut microbiome and its metabolic functions in C57BL/6 mice. The researchers aimed to explore how lead exposure affects the diversity and structure of the gut microbiome and to assess the impact on key metabolites and metabolic pathways. Using 16S rRNA sequencing, whole-genome metagenomics sequencing, and gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) metabolomics, the study assessed the changes in microbial composition, gene content, and metabolite profiles. These approaches helped identify how lead exposure disrupts microbiome development and alters metabolic functions, particularly in relation to oxidative stress, energy metabolism, and nutrient metabolism, which may have important implications for lead toxicity in the host.
Who was studied?
The study focused on C57BL/6 female mice, which were exposed to lead chloride in their drinking water for 13 weeks. The mice were randomly assigned to either a control or a lead-treated group, and their gut microbiome was analyzed at multiple time points (baseline, 4 weeks, and 13 weeks post-exposure). The study examined the taxonomic structure of the gut microbiome using 16S rRNA sequencing and assessed the metabolic changes through metagenomics and metabolomics. The researchers also compared changes in the phylogenetic diversity and metabolic pathways of the gut bacteria between the control and lead-treated groups, providing insights into how lead exposure disturbs gut microbiome development over time.
Most important findings
The study revealed that lead exposure significantly disrupted the gut microbiome community structure, with lead-treated mice showing reduced phylogenetic diversity over time. At the earliest time point assessed (week 4), the lead-treated animals exhibited impaired microbial development, with much lower species richness compared to the control group. Lead exposure led to significant perturbations in key metabolites such as vitamin E (α-tocopherol, γ-tocopherol) and bile acids (cholic acid, ursodeoxycholic acid, deoxycholic acid), all of which were significantly reduced. This alteration in bile acid homeostasis could potentially affect lipid metabolism and gut health. The study also demonstrated that lead exposure disturbed nitrogen metabolism, with changes in gene expression related to urease activation and creatinine degradation, and energy metabolism, with an increase in saccharide transport and a decrease in key metabolites like glycerol-3-phosphate. Furthermore, lead exposure activated oxidative stress pathways, leading to the upregulation of genes involved in detoxification and defense mechanisms against oxidative damage. These findings underscore the broad impact of lead on the functional capacity of the gut microbiome and its related metabolic pathways.
Key implications
This study has significant implications for understanding how lead toxicity may impact human health, especially in relation to the gut microbiome. The disruption of microbial diversity and metabolism could play a role in lead-induced diseases, particularly those affecting the gastrointestinal and metabolic systems. From a clinical perspective, pediatric populations are particularly vulnerable to the effects of lead exposure, which can lead to long-term health consequences, including immune system dysregulation and metabolic disorders. This research also highlights the potential for using the gut microbiome as a biomarker to monitor the effects of heavy metal exposure. Furthermore, the study suggests that targeting the gut microbiome with probiotics or other microbiome-modulating therapies could be a viable strategy for mitigating the health effects of lead exposure. Finally, understanding the microbial and metabolic changes induced by lead provides a foundation for future research into how microbiome-based interventions might be used to protect against or reverse the detrimental effects of heavy metal toxicity.
Bacterial Metallostasis: Metal Sensing, Metalloproteome Remodeling, and Metal Trafficking
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review examines bacterial metallostasis, focusing on metal sensing, metalloproteome remodeling, and metal trafficking. It highlights key regulatory mechanisms and implications for therapeutic interventions and synthetic biology.
What was studied?
The study focuses on bacterial metallostasis, including metal sensing, metalloproteome remodeling, and metal trafficking mechanisms in bacteria. It investigates the process through which bacteria regulate and balance essential metal ions, like copper, zinc, and manganese, and how these metals contribute to various cellular functions. The study also emphasizes the role of metalloregulatory proteins, metal-sensing riboswitches, and metallochaperones in maintaining metal homeostasis within bacterial cells.
Who was studied?
The study primarily examined bacterial systems, particularly focusing on bacterial species that exhibit mechanisms to sense and regulate metal ion concentrations. It involved a detailed investigation into bacterial metalloregulatory proteins and how these organisms adapt to various metal stress conditions, including starvation or overload, particularly in pathogens.
What were the most important findings?
One key finding is that bacteria use both protein-based and RNA-based mechanisms to detect and respond to changes in the bioavailability of transition metals like zinc, copper, and manganese. The study highlights metalloregulatory proteins such as ArsR, MerR, and Fur, which are involved in sensing specific metals and regulating genes responsible for metal transport and storage. The study also underscores the importance of the metalloproteome—proteins that bind metal ions—and the adaptive responses to metal stress, including the evolution of enzyme paralogs that perform the same functions with different metal cofactors. The mechanisms that govern metal allocation to metalloenzyme targets were also explored, with a focus on the role of metallochaperones.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings of this study have significant implications for both basic biology and applied microbiology. Understanding how bacteria maintain metallostasis can inform the development of new therapeutic strategies, particularly in the context of infectious diseases. By manipulating bacterial metallostasis, it may be possible to design antibiotics or other treatments that target metal homeostasis in pathogens, potentially overcoming existing resistance mechanisms. Additionally, the insights into metal-sensing riboswitches and the role of metallochaperones could contribute to advancements in synthetic biology, allowing for more precise control over metal ion utilization in engineered bacterial systems.
Lead exposure in relation to gut homeostasis, microbiota, and metabolites
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study explores how lead exposure disrupts gut microbiota, leading to compromised gut health and systemic issues. It highlights the potential of probiotics and other interventions to restore balance and mitigate Pb toxicity.
What was studied?
The study investigated the impacts of lead (Pb) exposure on gut microbiota, homeostasis, and metabolites, particularly focusing on how Pb-induced changes affect intestinal health and overall body systems. It aimed to understand how Pb disrupts gut microbiota composition and function, which could lead to broader physiological issues such as inflammation and metabolic disorders. The researchers also evaluated the mechanisms of Pb toxicity in gut homeostasis, highlighting the role of microbiota in mitigating or exacerbating these effects.
Who was studied?
The study focused on various populations, including children and animal models. A particular emphasis was placed on preschool children exposed to lead, comparing their gut microbiota composition with unexposed peers. In animal models, particularly mice and rats, the effects of prenatal and postnatal Pb exposure on gut microbiota were also explored, looking at both short- and long-term impacts. The research aimed to link Pb exposure with shifts in microbial communities and alterations in host health indicators such as gut permeability and metabolic function.
Most important findings
Lead exposure was found to significantly alter the gut microbiota composition, with an emphasis on reduced microbial diversity and shifts in the abundance of key taxa. For example, elevated levels of Firmicutes and decreased levels of Bacteroidetes were noted, disrupting the F/B ratio, which is a potential biomarker for gut health. Additionally, Pb exposure increased the abundance of pathogenic bacteria such as Gammaproteobacteria and Succinivibrionaceae, while reducing beneficial bacteria like Bifidobacterium and Lactobacillus. These changes were linked with increased intestinal permeability, enhanced systemic endotoxin levels, and various health disorders, including liver damage and neurodevelopmental impairments. The study also suggested that probiotics and other therapeutic interventions targeting the microbiota might help alleviate Pb-induced toxicity by restoring gut balance.
Key implications
The findings underscore the critical need for further research on Pb’s effects on the gut microbiota and its broader implications for human health. The alterations in microbial diversity and the shifts in microbial communities due to Pb exposure highlight potential therapeutic targets for mitigating its harmful effects, particularly through the use of probiotics, prebiotics, and dietary interventions. A better understanding of the relationship between Pb exposure and gut microbiota could lead to novel approaches in preventing or treating Pb-induced diseases, particularly in vulnerable populations such as children. This knowledge could inform future clinical strategies aimed at restoring gut homeostasis to combat Pb toxicity.
Oral Administration of Probiotics Inhibits Absorption of the Heavy Metal Cadmium by Protecting the Intestinal Barrier
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Probiotics
Probiotics
Probiotics are live microorganisms that offer significant health benefits when administered in adequate amounts. They primarily work by modulating the gut microbiome, supporting a balanced microbial ecosystem. Probiotics have been shown to improve gut health, modulate immune responses, and even influence metabolic and mental health disorders. With growing evidence supporting their therapeutic potential, probiotics are increasingly recognized for their role in treating conditions like irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), antibiotic-associated diarrhea (AAD), and even mental health conditions like depression and anxiety through their impact on the gut-brain axis.
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This study highlights the protective effects of Lactobacillus plantarum CCFM8610 probiotics against cadmium toxicity by preserving intestinal barrier function and reducing oxidative stress, offering a potential therapeutic strategy for preventing heavy metal absorption.
What was studied?
This study investigates the effects of probiotics, particularly Lactobacillus plantarum CCFM8610, on the inhibition of cadmium (Cd) absorption in the intestines. The primary focus was on understanding how probiotics can protect the gut barrier and alleviate cadmium-induced oxidative stress and inflammation. The study aimed to test whether probiotics could prevent intestinal Cd absorption through mechanisms beyond Cd binding, specifically targeting gut barrier protection.
Who was studied?
The research was conducted on both human intestinal cell lines (HT-29) and mouse models. In vitro assays were used to evaluate the protective effects of probiotics on intestinal cell viability, tight junction integrity, and oxidative stress. The mouse model was used to assess how probiotics influence Cd accumulation in tissues, fecal Cd levels, and intestinal barrier function when exposed to Cd.
Most important findings
The study demonstrated that L. plantarum CCFM8610 significantly alleviated cadmium-induced cytotoxicity in human intestinal cells and protected tight junctions from disruption. In mice, probiotics with good Cd-binding and antioxidative abilities increased fecal Cd excretion and reduced Cd accumulation in tissues. Treatment with probiotics not only protected the intestinal barrier but also decreased Cd-induced inflammation and oxidative stress. Notably, L. plantarum CCFM8610, which exhibited both strong Cd-binding and antioxidative properties, showed the most significant protective effects. This strain’s antioxidative ability played a crucial role in mitigating Cd-induced oxidative damage and improving gut barrier function.
Key implications
The findings suggest that probiotics, particularly those with Cd-binding and antioxidative properties, can serve as an effective strategy to protect against heavy metal toxicity. The protective effect extends beyond merely binding to cadmium; probiotics can restore intestinal barrier integrity, reduce oxidative stress, and lower intestinal permeability, preventing further absorption of cadmium. The use of L. plantarum strains as a daily supplement could be a promising intervention to mitigate the adverse effects of environmental cadmium exposure, especially for populations at high risk of exposure.
Silver(I), Mercury(II), Cadmium(II), and Zinc(II) Target Exposed Enzymic Iron-Sulfur Clusters when They Toxify Escherichia coli
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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The study investigates how soft metals like silver, mercury, cadmium, and zinc damage bacterial dehydratases by targeting their [4Fe-4S] clusters, revealing insights into the molecular mechanisms of metal toxicity in E. coli. The findings highlight the potential for oxidative stress and inform strategies for antimicrobial resistance.
What was studied?
This study aimed to explore how certain soft metals, specifically silver (Ag), mercury (Hg), cadmium (Cd), and zinc (Zn), target and damage [4Fe-4S] clusters, particularly in dehydratase enzymes, within Escherichia coli (E. coli). The researchers investigated the inactivation of fumarase A, a member of the dehydratase enzyme family, and other iron-sulfur dehydratases upon exposure to these metals. The study examined the inactivation of these enzymes both in vitro and in vivo, testing the hypothesis that soft metals exert their toxicity by directly damaging the iron-sulfur clusters in the enzymes, thus disrupting bacterial growth and metabolism.
Who was studied?
The study primarily focused on Escherichia coli (E. coli), a widely studied model organism, particularly the K-12 strain of E. coli. The researchers used several derivatives of this strain, including mutants with specific genetic modifications, to investigate how soft metals impact microbial cells. These strains included those lacking certain efflux systems, such as the ZntA-deficient mutant, to assess their sensitivity to metals like zinc. The experiments were performed under both aerobic and anaerobic conditions to determine the full scope of metal toxicity. Additionally, purified fumarase A was employed to study the direct effects of the metals on enzymatic activity and [4Fe-4S] cluster integrity.
Most important findings
The study revealed that Ag(I), Hg(II), Cd(II), and Zn(II) significantly inactivated fumarase A, a key enzyme in the dehydratase family, by targeting its [4Fe-4S] clusters. These metal ions destroyed the clusters by displacing the iron atoms, thereby impairing enzyme activity. The degree of damage varied across metals: Ag(I) and Hg(II) were the most potent, inactivating the enzyme at low micromolar concentrations, while Cd(II) and Zn(II) required higher doses to induce similar effects. The study also found that metals such as Mn(II), Co(II), Ni(II), and Pb(II) did not damage the [4Fe-4S] clusters even at millimolar concentrations. Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) analysis confirmed that the metals disrupted the iron-sulfur clusters by releasing iron, with Ag(I) causing the most extensive damage, leading to a complete loss of the [4Fe-4S] clusters.
Moreover, when E. coli cells were exposed to these metals in vivo, similar results were observed. Ag(I), Hg(II), Cd(II), and Zn(II) caused the inactivation of dehydratases, which could be reversed by rebuilding the iron-sulfur clusters with ferrous iron and dithiothreitol (DTT), supporting the hypothesis that the damage was specifically to the [4Fe-4S] clusters. The study also highlighted that the metal-induced damage was selective; other enzymes, such as malate dehydrogenase and NADH dehydrogenase, which do not rely on iron-sulfur clusters, were not affected.
Key implications
This study provides critical insights into the molecular mechanisms behind the toxicity of soft metals like silver, mercury, cadmium, and zinc, particularly in their impact on bacterial dehydratase enzymes. By targeting the [4Fe-4S] clusters in these enzymes, the metals disrupt key metabolic processes in bacteria, leading to growth inhibition. This mechanism suggests that the ability of these metals to damage microbial cells can be linked to their affinity for sulfur and their ability to target enzymes with exposed iron-sulfur clusters. The findings are significant for understanding metal toxicity in both environmental and clinical contexts, as soft metals are commonly used as antimicrobial agents. Furthermore, the study underscores the potential for metal-induced oxidative stress due to the disruption of iron homeostasis in cells.
Lead Precipitation by Vibrio harveyi: Evidence for Novel Quorum-Sensing Interactions
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study demonstrates that Vibrio harveyi regulates lead precipitation through quorum-sensing systems, particularly AI1, AI2, and a newly discovered AI3, with implications for environmental bioremediation and microbial interactions in metal-contaminated environments.
What was studied?
This study investigates the quorum-sensing regulation of lead (Pb) precipitation in Vibrio harveyi, a marine bacterium known for its complex communication mechanisms. The research examines how the luxO gene and the AI1-AI2 quorum-sensing system control the formation of Pb9(PO4)6, a rare lead phosphate salt. It highlights the role of quorum-sensing in regulating the precipitation of lead as a detoxification mechanism, demonstrating that certain mutants of V. harveyi can hyperprecipitate lead at lower temperatures than typical laboratory methods. The study also explores the involvement of AI3, a novel autoinducer, and the influence of heterologous bacterial species on V. harveyi's lead precipitation phenotype.
Who was studied?
The study focuses on the bacterial species Vibrio harveyi, particularly its quorum-sensing mutants, which are defective in the autoinducers AI1 and AI2. These mutants include class I mutants that show a hyperactive lead precipitation phenotype. Additionally, the research investigates interactions between V. harveyi and various heterologous bacterial species such as Vibrio fischeri, Escherichia coli, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and Salmonella enterica, to explore how interspecies signaling influences lead precipitation.
Most important findings
The most critical discovery in this study is that the quorum-sensing system in Vibrio harveyi, particularly the LuxO response regulator, controls the precipitation of Pb9(PO4)6. Mutants lacking functional LuxO were unable to precipitate lead, whereas wild-type V. harveyi could. The AI1-AI2 system was found to inhibit lead precipitation in high-density cell populations, suggesting a population-density-dependent regulation of this process. Additionally, the study introduces AI3, a previously uncharacterized autoinducer, which appears to regulate lead precipitation independently of AI1 and AI2. Heterologous species such as V. fischeri, P. aeruginosa, and S. enterica were shown to influence the lead precipitation phenotype of V. harveyi mutants, indicating a broader interspecies signaling mechanism.
Key implications
This research highlights a novel way in which quorum sensing can influence bacterial resistance mechanisms, such as the precipitation of toxic metals like lead. By identifying AI3 as an additional quorum-sensing signal, the study opens the possibility of broader applications in environmental bioremediation, where quorum-sensing manipulation could be used to enhance or inhibit metal precipitation processes. The findings also suggest that lead precipitation in V. harveyi could be a form of detoxification, regulated by both intrinsic and cross-species communication. These insights may provide new strategies for using bacterial systems in managing heavy metal pollution or controlling microbial interactions in contaminated environments.
Dietary copper-fructose interactions alter gut microbial activity in male rats
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Dietary copper-fructose interactions in rats depleted Akkermansia, shifted Firmicutes families, weakened tight junctions and goblet cells, and raised liver injury signals, defining a dysbiosis–barrier–liver axis.
What was studied?
This study tested how dietary copper-fructose interactions alter gut microbial activity in male rats and linked these shifts to gut barrier injury and liver stress that model early NAFLD. Investigators fed defined copper diets with or without high fructose and profiled fecal and intestinal microbiota by 16S rDNA sequencing, measured tight junction proteins and goblet cells, and tracked plasma endotoxin, LBP, and liver enzymes. The work asked whether marginal or supplemental copper, when combined with fructose, reshapes the gut community in ways that favor pathobionts, reduces protective taxa, and weakens the epithelial barrier. It also examined copper handling genes and systemic copper status to connect luminal changes with host metal routing.
Who was studied?
Researchers studied healthy weanling male Sprague–Dawley rats on AIN-76–based diets providing marginal copper, adequate copper, or supplemental copper for four weeks, with ad libitum water or 30% fructose water. They collected feces and intestinal tissue for microbiome analysis and barrier assays, and drew blood for copper indices, LBP, endotoxin, and liver enzymes. The design allowed clear contrasts between copper levels with and without fructose, so the team could pinpoint whether copper status alone, fructose alone, or their interaction best explained microbe shifts, barrier damage, endotoxemia, and liver injury markers.
Most important findings
Both low and high copper, when paired with fructose, changed the microbiome without improving growth and with clear signs of tissue stress. At the phylum level, Firmicutes rose in both copper-fructose states, while Bacteroidetes fell most with low copper plus fructose, producing a higher Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes ratio. Proteobacteria trended upward with fructose and copper, and Enterobacteriaceae expanded in the high copper plus fructose group. Verrucomicrobia dropped across copper-altered groups, driven by a marked loss of Akkermansia, a mucin-utilizing commensal linked to barrier integrity. Within Firmicutes, family-level patterns diverged by copper dose: low copper favored Peptostreptococcaceae and higher Lachnospiraceae, whereas high copper favored Lactobacillaceae and Erysipelotrichaceae alongside reduced Ruminococcaceae, a butyrate-producing family tied to epithelial health.
Barrier assays showed reduced claudin-1 and occludin protein and fewer goblet cells with both copper extremes, while Reg3B rose, consistent with an antimicrobial stress response; IL-22 trended higher in the same direction. Systemically, LBP rose with fructose independent of copper, and plasma endotoxin increased most with low copper, even though high copper plus fructose also raised Proteobacteria and Enterobacteriaceae, suggesting distinct injury routes. Liver enzymes (ALT/AST) increased in copper-fructose groups, indicating hepatic injury consistent with early NAFLD. Copper transport features shifted as well: intestine and liver Ctr1 expression fell under fructose, and ceruloplasmin activity rose when fructose accompanied high copper, pointing to active host copper routing during inflammation. Together, these data define a microbiome signature of copper-fructose exposure that includes Akkermansia loss, reduced Ruminococcaceae, expansion of Enterobacteriaceae under high copper, and dose-specific Firmicutes family changes that align with impaired barrier function and liver stress.
Key implications
Clinicians should recognize copper status and fructose load as joint drivers of dysbiosis and barrier failure that can precede and fuel NAFLD. In a microbiome signatures database, you can tag dietary copper-fructose interactions with Akkermansia depletion, reduced Ruminococcaceae, increased Lactobacillaceae or Peptostreptococcaceae depending on copper dose, and Enterobacteriaceae rise with high copper plus fructose. These shifts track with tight junction loss, goblet cell loss, higher LBP, and liver enzyme elevation. Assessing diet, copper intake, and fructose exposure may help stratify risk in patients with metabolic liver disease or barrier complaints, while interventions that restore Akkermansia, support butyrate producers, and correct copper imbalance may protect the barrier and reduce hepatic injury signals.
Cadmium attenuates the macrophage response to LPS through inhibition of the NF-κB pathway
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Cadmium exposure inhibits macrophage immune function through suppression of the NF-κB pathway, impairing the response to LPS. This may contribute to immune dysfunction and increased susceptibility to infections, especially in COPD patients.
What was studied?
The study investigated the effects of cadmium (Cd) exposure on macrophage immune function, specifically its impact on the NF-κB signaling pathway when macrophages are exposed to lipopolysaccharides (LPS), a common endotoxin. The authors hypothesized that cadmium, a toxic metal found in tobacco smoke, could alter macrophage function, which is critical in diseases like chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). The study used a variety of cell models, including human monocytes, THP-1 monocytes, macrophages, and primary mouse alveolar macrophages, to observe the immune responses to LPS exposure following Cd treatment.
Who was studied?
The study involved both in vitro cell models and primary human and animal models. The primary human monocytes and macrophages were isolated from healthy donors, while THP-1 cells were used as monocytic models. Additionally, alveolar macrophages were harvested from the lungs of mice that were exposed to cadmium via inhalation, to simulate an environment that mimics lung conditions in smokers, particularly those with COPD. The study also involved comparing the responses of monocytes and macrophages to LPS stimulation after Cd exposure.
Most important findings
The study found that cadmium exposure had a significant effect on the immune function of macrophages but not monocytes. Specifically, Cd exposure inhibited the NF-κB pathway in macrophages, leading to a decrease in the nuclear activity of p65, a key transcription factor involved in inflammatory cytokine production. This effect was dose-dependent and resulted in a reduced ability of macrophages to produce pro-inflammatory cytokines such as TNFα, IL-6, IL-8, and IL-10 in response to LPS.
In contrast, monocytes exhibited increased pro-inflammatory cytokine production under similar conditions, which suggests a differential effect of Cd on monocytes versus macrophages. The inhibition of NF-κB signaling was linked to reduced phosphorylation and activity of IKKβ, a crucial kinase in the NF-κB signaling pathway. Furthermore, the study showed that Cd treatment led to a shift in macrophage polarization, reducing M1-type gene expression and enhancing the M2 phenotype, which is often associated with immune suppression and tissue repair rather than pathogen clearance.
Key implications
The findings are significant in understanding the role of cadmium in exacerbating immune dysfunction in the lungs, particularly in patients with COPD, who are already at heightened risk for respiratory infections. By disrupting the NF-κB signaling pathway and impairing macrophage cytokine production, cadmium exposure may contribute to the inability of macrophages to respond effectively to pathogens, which can increase the risk of infections and disease progression in COPD patients. These insights suggest that cadmium accumulation in the lung, often a consequence of smoking, may impair the innate immune response and aggravate the clinical outcomes of respiratory diseases. The study also highlights the need for further investigation into how environmental toxins like cadmium may influence immune responses and contribute to chronic disease development, particularly in the context of COPD and other respiratory disorders.
Determination of Manganese in Urine and Whole Blood Samples by Electrothermal Atomic Absorption Spectrometry: Comparison ofChemical Modifiers
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study optimizes electrothermal atomic absorption spectrometry (ETAAS) for detecting manganese in urine and blood samples, demonstrating high sensitivity and precision, and providing insights into the use of chemical modifiers for improved analysis.
What was studied?
This study investigated the use of electrothermal atomic absorption spectrometry (ETAAS) to determine manganese (Mn) levels in urine and whole blood samples. The researchers explored the effects of different chemical modifiers, such as palladium (Pd), ruthenium (Ru), rhodium (Rh), and zirconium (Zr), on the sensitivity and accuracy of manganese detection in these biological matrices. The goal was to optimize the methodology for the direct determination of manganese while minimizing matrix interferences and improving measurement precision.
Who was studied?
The study involved analyzing urine and whole blood samples from healthy volunteers. The researchers utilized these samples to test the effectiveness of various chemical modifiers in improving the performance of ETAAS for manganese detection. The study focused on refining the technique to provide accurate measurements of manganese in biological fluids, particularly urine and blood, which are important for monitoring manganese exposure and toxicity.
What were the most important findings?
The study found that manganese could be determined with high sensitivity and precision in urine and whole blood samples without the need for chemical modifiers. The best results were obtained when no modifier was used, with manganese yielding sharp, symmetrical peaks in absorbance, indicating high sensitivity. However, the study also explored the use of modifiers like Pd, Ru, Rh, and Zr to improve performance in cases where matrix interferences might be present. While these modifiers did reduce background noise and improve some aspects of the measurement, they also led to broader absorption pulses and reduced sensitivity compared to the non-modified conditions. The study also demonstrated that manganese’s thermal behavior in a graphite furnace was stable, allowing for effective atomization even without modifiers. The optimal pyrolysis and atomization temperatures for both urine and whole blood samples were determined to be 1100°C and 2100°C, respectively, yielding satisfactory results. Additionally, recovery tests showed that the method could accurately determine manganese concentrations in spiked samples, with recovery rates close to 100%.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study underscores the importance of accurate manganese detection in biological fluids for monitoring exposure and assessing potential toxicity. The findings suggest that the methodology developed can be used in clinical and environmental settings to measure manganese levels with high sensitivity and precision. The lack of need for chemical modifiers in many cases simplifies the process, reducing costs and complexity. Moreover, the study provides valuable insights into the optimal conditions for manganese detection, which could be used to enhance monitoring efforts in both occupational and environmental health contexts. The results also highlight the potential for improving analytical techniques for other metals, offering broader applications in clinical and toxicological studies.
Bacterial Mg2+ Homeostasis, Transport, and Virulence
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review explains how bacteria sense magnesium outside and inside the cell, switch among Mg2+ transporters, and remodel their envelope to survive low Mg2+. It shows how Mg2+ limitation and host stresses can activate virulence programs, especially in Salmonella and related pathogens.
What was reviewed?
This paper reviewed how bacteria keep magnesium (Mg2+) at workable levels and why that control matters for infection. It explained Mg2+ as a structural and enzymatic necessity that stabilizes membranes and ribosomes, neutralizes nucleic acids, and supports many reactions, so bacteria must actively maintain Mg2+ in different compartments. The review focused on how bacteria sense Mg2+ outside the cytoplasm versus inside it, how they adjust Mg2+ transporter expression and activity, and how they remodel the cell envelope to cope when Mg2+ is scarce. It used Salmonella as the best-characterized model system and then extended the logic to other pathogens and regulatory circuits.
Who was reviewed?
The authors reviewed bacterial systems rather than human participants, so the “who” here was a set of bacterial species and their molecular pathways. The centerpiece was Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium because it has the strongest mechanistic evidence for Mg2+ transport and Mg2+-sensing regulation, including multiple transporters and distinct sensors for extra- and intracellular Mg2+. The review also pulled in other gram-negative bacteria with related PhoP/PhoQ signaling and virulence phenotypes, and it discussed gram-positive Group A Streptococcus as an example of a different Mg2+-responsive two-component system that primarily controls virulence genes. Across these organisms, the reviewed “subjects” were transport proteins, two-component regulators, RNA-based Mg2+ sensors, and envelope modification enzymes that change how bacteria manage cation stress.
What were the most important findings?
Mg2+ limitation is not just a nutrient issue for bacteria, but a signal that switches on virulence programs and survival mechanisms. Bacteria sense low extracytoplasmic Mg2+ through sensor kinases like PhoQ in Salmonella, which then drives PhoP-dependent transcription of genes that help survival under low Mg2+, including Mg2+ transporters and envelope remodeling functions. In parallel, bacteria sense cytoplasmic Mg2+ using RNA leaders (riboswitch-like sensors) that control whether transcription continues into Mg2+ transporter coding regions, so the cell stops making high-cost uptake systems once internal Mg2+ is adequate. The review highlighted three major Mg2+ transporter classes—CorA, MgtE, and the ATP-driven MgtA/MgtB family, and explained why multiple transporters exist: they differ in energy source, temperature performance, inhibitor sensitivity, and function under changing membrane potential. A key virulence connection was that low Mg2+ and host-like stresses converge on these regulatory systems, and some Mg2+ transport and sensing modules sit within pathogenicity islands
What are the greatest implications of this review?
For clinicians and microbiome translation, the implication is that host environments can shape microbial community behavior by restricting Mg2+ and by applying linked pressures such as acidity and antimicrobial peptides, and these pressures can directly push pathogens toward virulence states. This makes Mg2+ availability a plausible mechanistic bridge between mucosal inflammation and pathogen expansion, because the same signals that reflect host defense can activate bacterial regulatory circuits that improve survival and tissue damage potential. It also suggests that interventions that alter luminal ionic conditions, peptide stress, or inflammation could change pathogen fitness even without directly “killing” microbes, and that Mg2+-responsive pathways may serve as targets for anti-virulence strategies that reduce infection severity without relying solely on antibiotics.
Transition metals and virulence in bacteria
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review explains how bacterial pathogens acquire, compete for, and are poisoned by transition metals, highlighting metal-driven virulence strategies and host nutritional immunity mechanisms relevant to microbiome-associated infection biology.
What was reviewed?
This review article examines how transition metals shape bacterial virulence through three interconnected processes: acquisition, limitation, and intoxication. It emphasizes the evolutionary “arms race” between microbial strategies for metal uptake and host mechanisms for nutritional immunity. The review highlights how iron, zinc, and manganese—critical cofactors for bacterial metabolism—are sequestered, restricted, or weaponized by the host to control infection. It also explores the concept of transition metals and virulence in bacteria as a core microbiome-relevant signature, demonstrating how microbial metal-utilization pathways structure pathogen behavior, niche occupation, and survival. The article integrates molecular mechanisms, structural biology, host–pathogen coevolution, and ecological microbiology to reveal how elemental micronutrients act as regulators of infection outcomes.
Who was reviewed?
The review encompasses bacterial pathogens across Gram-positive and Gram-negative lineages, including Staphylococcus aureus, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Salmonella enterica, Yersinia spp., and Helicobacter pylori. Host mechanisms are also examined, particularly actions performed by neutrophils, macrophages, epithelial cells, and the proteins lipocalin-2, calprotectin, transferrin, and lactoferrin. The focus spans vertebrate immune systems broadly, highlighting conserved strategies used by mammals to alter microbial metal access. Together, the reviewed organisms illustrate how microbial metal acquisition systems both shape and respond to selective pressures across human tissues and microbiome-related environments.
Most important findings
A key finding is that metal competition constitutes a major determinant of bacterial virulence. Iron is strictly limited by the host, leading pathogens to evolve siderophores, heme-capture systems, and metal piracy mechanisms. Zinc and manganese restriction—driven by proteins such as calprotectin—is shown to profoundly suppress bacterial metabolic capacity. Conversely, hosts deploy toxic levels of copper and zinc within phagolysosomes, weaponizing mismetallation and oxidative chemistry. The review also identifies new microbial strategies such as stealth siderophores, zincophore secretion, and broad-spectrum metallophores like staphylopine. These systems demonstrate microbiome-relevant metal signatures: siderophore repertoires, manganese import profiles, and metal efflux capacity mark virulence traits.
Concept
Key Microbiome-Relevant Insight
Siderophores & piracy
Distinct siderophore families define pathogen niche fitness and resistance to host sequestration.
Calprotectin activity
Multimetal sequestration rewires microbial community dynamics and infection severity.
Metal intoxication
Copper/zinc delivery by phagocytes creates selective pressures shaping pathogen genomes.
Host metal dysregulation
Iron overload and zinc deficiency shift microbial virulence factor expression and disease risk.
Key implications
Understanding microbial metal utilization enables prediction of pathogen behavior in metal-variable environments, including the gut, lung, and urinary tract. Metal signatures—such as siderophore type, heme uptake pathways, and zinc/manganese transport profiles—may serve as biomarkers for virulence potential and microbiome destabilization. The review suggests therapeutic avenues that bypass traditional antibiotic targets, including siderophore decoys, gallium-based metal substitution strategies, and vaccines against metal acquisition systems. It also highlights how dietary metal intake and host genetic variations influence infection susceptibility, emphasizing the need to integrate metal homeostasis into microbiome-focused clinical decision-making.
The Role of Lead and Cadmium in Gynecological Malignancies
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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Breast Cancer
Breast Cancer
Traditionally linked to genetic predispositions and environmental exposures, emerging evidence highlights the microbiome as a critical and underappreciated factor influencing breast cancer progression, immune response, and treatment outcomes.
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This study explores the role of lead and cadmium in gynecological malignancies, focusing on their ability to mimic estrogen and induce oxidative stress, contributing to cancer development. It highlights their potential as biomarkers for early detection and treatment.
What was studied?
The paper investigates the impact of two toxic heavy metals, lead (Pb) and cadmium (Cd), on the development of gynecological cancers such as ovarian, endometrial, and cervical cancers. The authors explore how these metals contribute to cancer development, particularly through mechanisms like oxidative stress, DNA damage, and their ability to mimic estrogen. This review highlights the potential of Pb and Cd as biomarkers for cancer risk and progression, emphasizing their roles in the oncogenesis of gynecological malignancies.
Who was studied?
The study centers around women exposed to Pb and Cd, particularly those with gynecological cancers. It examines clinical and experimental research linking elevated metal levels to cancer occurrence, focusing on ovarian, cervical, and endometrial cancers. The research delves into the biological changes these metals cause, including hormonal disruption, oxidative stress, and DNA damage, all of which are associated with cancer development.
Most important findings
The study identifies the carcinogenic properties of Pb and Cd, showing that both metals function as metalloestrogens, activating estrogen receptors and mimicking estrogen’s effects. This mechanism contributes to hormone-dependent cancers like ovarian, endometrial, and cervical cancers. Elevated levels of Pb and Cd were found in neoplastic tissues of these cancers, establishing a clear connection between their presence and increased cancer risk. These metals were also found to disrupt oxidative stress regulation, leading to cellular damage. Pb has been linked to increased cancer risks, particularly breast cancer, while Cd similarly affects estrogen receptors, promoting hormone-related cancers. The study also points to the possibility of using Pb and Cd as biomarkers for early detection and progression monitoring of gynecological cancers.
Key implications
This research underscores the importance of reducing environmental and occupational exposure to Pb and Cd, which are modifiable risk factors for gynecological cancers. Identifying these metals as potential biomarkers provides a valuable tool for early detection and diagnosis, offering a new avenue for cancer risk assessment. Reducing exposure to these metals is essential to mitigate cancer risk, and further studies are needed to understand their full role in cancer development.
Molecular Mechanisms of Zinc as a Pro-Antioxidant Mediator: Clinical Therapeutic Implications
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review links the molecular mechanisms of zinc as a pro-antioxidant mediator to lower oxidative stress, restrained inflammation, and clinical signals in elders and chronic disease, with clear mechanistic paths that can inform microbiome interpretation.
What was reviewed?
This review explains the molecular mechanisms of zinc as a pro-antioxidant mediator and shows how normal zinc status limits oxidative stress and inflammation across human tissues. It describes how zinc shapes key cell signals, lowers reactive oxygen species, protects DNA and proteins, and supports immune balance. It focuses on zinc-driven control of transcription factors such as NF-κB, Nrf2, PPAR-α/γ, HNF-4α, KRAB zinc finger proteins, and post-transcription control by tristetraprolin, and it details the zinc–metallothionein–MTF-1 axis as a core sensor–effector loop. Clinical sections link these pathways to reduced infection in older adults, fewer oxidative injury markers, and signs of benefit in diabetes, macular degeneration, sickle cell disease, and alcohol-related liver disease.
Who was reviewed?
The review draws on human clinical trials in healthy adults and elders, people with sickle cell disease, diabetes, and age-related macular degeneration, plus animal and cell studies that explain mechanism. It highlights how zinc intake or depletion changes lipid peroxidation products, DNA oxidation products, inflammatory cytokines, and nuclear factor activity in leukocytes, endothelium, and hepatocytes. These human and experimental data give a coherent picture: adequate zinc dampens NF-κB-driven cytokines, boosts Nrf2-dependent antioxidant enzymes, and induces metallothionein to scavenge radicals, while zinc lack does the opposite and raises infection risk.
Most important findings
The review shows that zinc acts as a signal that turns on endogenous antioxidant defenses rather than as a direct radical scavenger. Adequate zinc upregulates metallothionein through MTF-1, which binds and neutralizes harmful species and stabilizes protein thiols. Zinc also restrains NF-κB activation after TNF-α, LPS, or oxidized LDL, which lowers IL-6 and TNF-α release, and it promotes Nrf2-dependent genes such as heme oxygenase-1 and glutathione-related enzymes. In endothelial and immune cells, zinc supports PPAR signaling that further suppresses oxidant-sensitive transcription. In hepatocytes, zinc restores HNF-4α and PPAR-α activity and limits alcohol-induced oxidative damage. Across trials, oral zinc cut markers of lipid peroxidation and DNA oxidation and reduced infection episodes in elders.
Key implications
Clinicians should view zinc status as a modifiable lever that shapes inflammatory tone and tissue redox balance. Checking diet risk and treating confirmed zinc lack can reduce oxidative stress markers, support immune control, and narrow micro-ecologic space for opportunists. During acute inflammation, falling serum zinc often reflects a host program and not simple deficiency, so timing and dose matter. Because high-dose zinc can impair copper uptake, long courses need monitoring of copper and blood counts. For microbiome reporting, track zinc exposures and note host markers such as metallothionein or Nrf2-target genes when available; these features explain shifts in pathogen burden and can improve signature attribution alongside routine taxa reads.
Effects of Hydrogen Sulfide on the Microbiome: From Toxicity to Therapy
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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The review examines the complex role of hydrogen sulfide in modulating the gut microbiome, highlighting its potential as a therapeutic agent to stabilize microbiota biofilms and reduce inflammation in diseases like IBD.
What was studied?
This review explored the effects of hydrogen sulfide (H₂S) on the gut microbiome, focusing on its dual roles as both a toxin and a therapeutic agent. The study assessed how H₂S, a gaseous signaling molecule produced by both gut bacteria and host cells, influences the microbiota, particularly its ability to modulate inflammation, microbial biofilms, and gut health. The review examined the mechanisms through which H₂S impacts the microbiome, including its influence on microbial diversity, biofilm formation, and its potential to maintain intestinal homeostasis. Additionally, it addressed how different concentrations of H₂S can either exacerbate gut diseases, such as inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), or provide therapeutic benefits by stabilizing microbiota biofilms and reducing inflammation.
Who was studied?
The review does not focus on specific individuals or animals but consolidates findings from a wide range of studies involving both human and animal models. It discusses the role of endogenous and exogenous H₂S in modulating the gut microbiome and its interaction with gut epithelial cells. The review highlights the contributions of both commensal bacteria and pathogenic microorganisms, including Escherichia coli and Helicobacter pylori, in producing H₂S and how this affects the host's health. Additionally, it emphasizes the need for further research into the effects of dietary H₂S and its potential as a treatment for microbiota-related diseases.
Most important findings
The review identified that H₂S plays a complex role in gut health, with both beneficial and detrimental effects depending on its concentration. High concentrations of H₂S produced by gut bacteria can disrupt the gut’s mucus barrier, impair epithelial integrity, and lead to inflammation, potentially contributing to diseases like IBD. However, at physiological levels, H₂S has anti-inflammatory and cytoprotective properties, stabilizing mucus layers, maintaining microbiota biofilm integrity, and preventing the invasion of pathogenic microorganisms. The review also found that H₂S interacts with the gut microbiota to promote the resolution of inflammation and tissue injury, highlighting its potential as a therapeutic agent. H₂S donors, such as diallyl disulfide (DADS), have been shown to restore the balance of microbiota biofilms and protect against gastrointestinal injury caused by various insults, including NSAIDs and oxidative stress.
Key implications
The findings underscore the dual nature of H₂S in the gut: while high levels can exacerbate gut diseases by disrupting microbiota biofilms and increasing the adhesion of pathogenic microbes, low levels of H₂S produced endogenously or administered exogenously may offer therapeutic benefits. This suggests that H₂S could be used as a targeted therapeutic to restore gut health, especially in conditions like IBD, where microbiota dysbiosis and inflammation play a central role. The review also points to the potential of dietary interventions, such as consuming sulfur-rich foods, to modulate H₂S production in the gut and promote microbiota stability. Future research should focus on understanding the molecular mechanisms behind H₂S’s interaction with the microbiome and its potential to improve treatments for inflammatory and infectious diseases.
Arsenate replacing phosphate – alternative life chemistries and ion promiscuity
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review explores the potential for arsenate to replace phosphate in biochemical reactions, examining enzyme promiscuity, arsenate esters' instability, and the implications for arsenic-based life forms. It also highlights the potential applications in bioremediation and astrobiology.
What was studied?
This review explores the fascinating idea that arsenate might replace phosphate in biological systems, specifically in critical biomolecules such as DNA and RNA. The study evaluates the potential for arsenic-based life forms by discussing how arsenate shares chemical similarities with phosphate. The review delves into the possibility of arsenate-promiscuity in enzymes that typically utilize phosphate, including enzymes involved in phosphate metabolism. It considers the biochemical properties of arsenate and phosphate, highlighting how arsenate esters exhibit high instability compared to phosphate esters, especially in water. The research also investigates arsenate’s interaction with various enzymes and proteins, the possible replacement of phosphate in cellular structures, and the implications of such substitution for life on Earth, particularly under environments where phosphate might be scarce.
Who was studied?
The review centers around arsenate’s role in biochemical reactions, and the studies mainly involve microbial organisms that thrive in environments rich in arsenic. This includes research into bacteria such as Halomonadaceae GFAJ-1, which can potentially substitute arsenate for phosphate in its DNA. The review discusses the biochemical assays performed on enzymes like L-aspartate-β-semialdehyde dehydrogenase, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, and purine nucleoside phosphorylase, all of which were tested with arsenate as a substitute for phosphate. The study also includes comparisons with phosphorus-dependent organisms and their enzymes, analyzing the promiscuity of these proteins for arsenate and phosphate, and how this affects enzymatic activity and the stability of metabolic processes.
Most important findings
The study presents significant findings regarding arsenate-phosphate promiscuity in enzymes. Several enzymes that typically utilize phosphate as a substrate, such as L-aspartate-β-semialdehyde dehydrogenase and glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, were found to also accept arsenate as a substrate, catalyzing reactions similarly to phosphate. However, the study notes that while arsenate can replace phosphate in some enzymatic reactions, it is not as stable as phosphate, particularly in forming esters. Arsenate esters hydrolyze much more rapidly than phosphate esters, leading to futile cycles where the arsenate-containing compounds quickly break down. The review also discussed arsenic-based life forms and how arsenate’s ability to substitute for phosphate could be advantageous in environments with limited phosphorus. Nevertheless, this substitution would create challenges due to arsenate’s instability and the hydrolytic breakdown of arsenate esters. The research also highlights the evolutionary implications of arsenate-phosphate promiscuity, suggesting that organisms in arsenic-rich environments might evolve to adapt to this chemistry.
Key implications
This research suggests that while arsenate-based life remains controversial, the potential for arsenate to replace phosphate in some biochemical pathways opens new avenues for understanding alternative life chemistries. The findings underscore the need for further research into enzyme promiscuity and arsenate utilization, especially in extremophiles that may thrive in arsenic-rich environments. Understanding arsenate’s interactions with enzymes can help elucidate the biochemical constraints that limit the incorporation of arsenate into critical biomolecules like DNA. The study also has implications for bioremediation, as harnessing the ability of certain organisms to utilize arsenate instead of phosphate might help in treating arsenic contamination. Finally, the research encourages the scientific community to explore the possibility of arsenic-based life forms in environments with limited phosphorus, providing insights into astrobiology and the search for extraterrestrial life.
Metallophores Drive Staphylococcus aureus Virulence and Pathogenicity
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Metallophores in S. aureus enable metal acquisition and virulence; disrupting these systems may offer novel antimicrobial strategies.
What was reviewed?
This review article comprehensively examined the role of metallophores in the pathogenicity and virulence of Staphylococcus aureus, emphasizing their molecular structures, biosynthetic pathways, transport mechanisms, and regulatory systems. The authors detail the distinct types of metallophores produced by S. aureus—including staphyloferrin A, staphyloferrin B, staphylobactin, aureochelin, and the broad-spectrum staphylopine—highlighting their importance in overcoming host nutritional immunity during infection.
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesizes data from numerous studies involving both in vitro and in vivo models, including murine infection systems. It primarily focuses on Staphylococcus aureus as a pathogen, but also references bacterial competitors and host immune responses to illustrate how metallophores enable S. aureus to outcompete other microbes and evade host defenses.
Most important findings
Metallophores are crucial for S. aureus to acquire essential metal ions under host-imposed metal-limiting conditions. The review identifies two primary iron-chelating siderophores (staphyloferrin A and B), a hydroxamate-type siderophore (staphylobactin), and the less-characterized aureochelin. Staphylopine, a nicotianamine-like opine metallophore, is distinguished by its ability to chelate multiple metals, including zinc and nickel. The regulation of metallophore systems is tightly controlled by metal-responsive regulators Fur and Zur. Notably, staphylopine acts as a zincophore, essential in zinc-limited environments. S. aureus also imports xenosiderophores produced by other microbes, further enhancing its adaptability and virulence.
Table: Summary of S. aureus Metallophores
Metallophore
Metal Target(s)
Regulatory Proteins
Transporter
Staphyloferrin A
Iron
Fur
HtsABC
Staphyloferrin B
Iron
Fur
SirABC
Staphylobactin
Iron
Fur
SirABC
Aureochelin
Iron (phenolate/catecholate)
Unknown
Unknown
Staphylopine
Zn, Ni, Co, Cu, Fe (broad)
Fur and Zur
CntABCDF, CntE export
Key implications
Understanding the metallophore-mediated metal acquisition systems of S. aureus reveals critical virulence mechanisms that could be therapeutically targeted. Disrupting these systems—especially the staphylopine pathway—could impair bacterial fitness under nutrient-limited conditions, attenuate virulence, and enhance susceptibility to host immune defenses. The insights into regulatory systems (Fur/Zur) and unique transporters also pave the way for antimicrobial strategies that block metallophore synthesis or function without relying on traditional antibiotics.
Metallothionein and Cadmium Toxicology—Historical Review and Commentary
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study explored the role of metallothionein in cadmium toxicity, focusing on its protective and transport roles, particularly in the kidneys. It emphasizes the potential of MT-related biomarkers for assessing cadmium exposure risks in humans.
What was studied?
The study focused on cadmium (Cd) exposure and its toxicity, particularly the role of metallothionein (MT), a low-molecular-weight protein, in modulating the toxic effects of cadmium. The research explored how MT binds cadmium, preventing some toxic effects but also facilitating cadmium transport to sensitive organs like the kidneys. The work also investigated the influence of the Cd/Zn ratio in MT for toxicity expression in organs and the development of models for cadmium toxicokinetics to improve risk assessments.
Who was studied?
The research investigated both animal and human subjects to understand the effects of cadmium exposure and the role of metallothionein in mitigating cadmium toxicity. Specific focus was placed on occupational and environmental exposure groups, including those in artisanal small-scale mining, where uncontrolled cadmium exposure remains prevalent. The study involved experimental work on mice and data from humans exposed to cadmium, with emphasis on biomarkers such as MT gene expression in lymphocytes and MT autoantibodies in blood plasma.
Most important findings
The study established that metallothionein (MT) has a dual role in cadmium toxicity. While MT binding to cadmium can reduce some of the toxic effects, it can also increase the transport of cadmium to organs like the kidneys, where it causes damage. The research highlighted the importance of the Cd/Zn ratio within MT in expressing toxicity, particularly in the kidneys. The study found that MT gene expression and the presence of MT autoantibodies in human lymphocytes serve as biomarkers for assessing susceptibility to cadmium-related kidney dysfunction. The study also proposed a toxicokinetic model for cadmium exposure, which combines cadmium levels in tissues with risk assessments to predict health outcomes.
Key implications
The findings underscore the importance of metallothionein as both a protective mechanism and a mediator of cadmium toxicity, especially regarding kidney health. The study suggests that improving risk assessments by considering MT-related biomarkers could refine cadmium exposure evaluations and help prevent kidney and other organ-related diseases in exposed populations. Moreover, the study indicates that zinc status plays a critical role in modulating the risks of cadmium toxicity, with good zinc status mitigating kidney dysfunction risk. The growing global demand for metals underscores the urgency of improving preventive measures, particularly in regions with ongoing artisanal mining.
Zinc in Human Health and Infectious Diseases
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review maps zinc in human health and infectious diseases, linking host zinc control to pathogen survival, clinical trial signals, and simple gene and protein markers that explain microbiome shifts under zinc pressure.
What was reviewed?
This review explains zinc in human health and infectious diseases and shows how zinc status shapes immune defense and pathogen control. The review describes zinc transport and storage, the ZIP and ZnT transporter families, metallothioneins, and S100 proteins such as calprotectin. It links zinc deficiency to a higher risk of respiratory infections, diarrhea, malaria, HIV, tuberculosis, and worse outcomes in sepsis, while zinc support can shorten common cold illness and some pneumonias. It also shows how illness shifts serum zinc into the liver via IL-6–driven ZIP14, lowering circulating zinc to starve microbes. The paper connects these host moves to pathogen countermeasures and to trial data on zinc supplements across infections.
Who was reviewed?
The review draws on adult and child populations from diverse regions, including elders in high-income countries and children in low-income settings where diet limits zinc. It summarizes human trials on colds, pneumonias, diarrhea, malaria, HIV, tuberculosis, and COVID-19, and adds cell and animal data that explain zinc signals in neutrophils, monocytes, and T cells. It also covers pathogens such as Candida albicans, Staphylococcus aureus, Escherichia coli, Helicobacter pylori, Neisseria species, and Mycobacterium tuberculosis to show how host zinc withholding or overload pressures shape survival.
Most important findings
Zinc sits at the center of nutritional immunity. Neutrophils release calprotectin, which binds zinc and limits the growth of Candida albicans and major bacteria; neutrophil traps carry calprotectin to infection sites and add killing power. During acute infection, IL-6 induces ZIP14, serum zinc falls, and the liver sequesters zinc, which denies microbes a key nutrient. Pathogens respond with high-affinity importers such as ZnuABC and surface proteins like ZnuD or TdfH that strip zinc from host proteins, yet many still exhibit slow growth under zinc restriction. In trials, zinc lozenges can shorten common cold duration, and zinc helps some childhood pneumonias and diarrheal disease, though results vary by dose, timing, and baseline status. The review warns that excess zinc can block copper uptake and disturb the copper–zinc balance, which links to poor outcomes in several diseases.
Key implications
Clinicians should check diet risk and disease context when they consider zinc. In patients with frequent viral colds or acute childhood diarrhea, short courses of oral zinc can aid recovery, while severe sepsis does not show clear benefit and may worsen with untargeted dosing. During acute inflammation, falling serum zinc reflects a host strategy, not simple deficiency, so replacement should match clinical goals. Because zinc and copper compete, long high-dose zinc can trigger copper lack, anemia, and immune harm; balance matters. For microbiome reporting, record zinc exposure, the copper–zinc ratio, and gene reads for znuA/B/C or znuD in pathogens, and calprotectin or ZIP14 in host samples. These markers explain shifts in pathogen load and can enrich a microbiome signatures database with metal-stress features that track response to care.
Heavy Metal–Gut Microbiota Interactions: Probiotics Modulation and Biosensors Detection
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review highlights how heavy metals alter the gut microbiota and discusses the potential of probiotics to mitigate these effects. It also emphasizes the role of advanced biosensors in detecting heavy metals in urine, supporting real-time monitoring of detoxification processes.
What was studied?
This review investigates the interactions between heavy metals (HMs) and the gut microbiota, with a specific focus on how probiotics can modulate these effects. The study also emphasizes the role of advanced biosensors in detecting HMs in urine, providing a non-invasive and rapid method to monitor HM exposure and the effectiveness of probiotic-based detoxification interventions. By exploring the bidirectional relationship between HMs and gut microbiota, the review highlights how HMs disrupt microbial balance and how probiotics can potentially reverse these effects, offering protective benefits for gut health and promoting detoxification.
Who was studied?
This review encompasses studies conducted across various animal models, including rodents, chickens, and fish, with a focus on understanding how heavy metal exposure alters the gut microbiota. In particular, it examines the effects of metals like arsenic, cadmium, mercury, and lead, and how they induce dysbiosis in the gut. Additionally, the study discusses the role of probiotics from genera such as Lactobacillus, Bifidobacterium, and Clostridium in alleviating heavy metal toxicity and restoring gut microbial balance. The review integrates findings from laboratory studies that explore these microbial changes and the potential therapeutic role of probiotics in counteracting HM-induced dysbiosis.
Most important findings
The study found that exposure to heavy metals significantly alters the gut microbiota composition, typically reducing microbial diversity and increasing the abundance of pathogenic bacteria. For example, arsenic exposure leads to a decrease in Bacteroidetes and Firmicutes, while promoting the growth of Verrucomicrobia and pathogenic bacteria like Helicobacter. Similarly, cadmium exposure reduces the diversity of the gut microbiome, increasing harmful bacteria like Escherichia coli, while beneficial microbes such as Akkermansia muciniphila are reduced. In contrast, probiotics have shown promise in mitigating these effects. Probiotic strains like Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium have been found to resist heavy metals and help restore microbial balance by enhancing the excretion of toxins. Biosensors have become vital tools in detecting heavy metal concentrations in urine, providing a real-time, cost-effective method for monitoring the effectiveness of probiotic interventions.
Key implications
The findings suggest that heavy metal exposure can have profound and long-lasting effects on gut health, potentially contributing to the onset or worsening of various diseases. The review emphasizes the importance of gut microbiota in regulating the bioavailability and toxicity of heavy metals, and the therapeutic potential of probiotics in modulating these effects. By restoring microbial balance, probiotics can enhance detoxification processes, providing a safer and more effective alternative to traditional detox methods. Biosensors further enhance the potential for real-time monitoring of heavy metal exposure, offering a non-invasive and efficient means of tracking the success of probiotic interventions. The review also highlights the need for further research into the development of targeted probiotic therapies and biosensors to improve heavy metal detoxification strategies, particularly for vulnerable populations.
Plasma Iron Infection Risk: Role of TSAT and HFE C282Y in Immune Defense
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Iron (Fe)
Iron (Fe)
OverviewIron is a pivotal nutrient at the host–pathogen interface. Virtually all microbes (with rare exceptions like Borrelia) require iron for processes from DNA synthesis to respiration. [1] In human hosts, free iron is vanishingly scarce due to “nutritional immunity,” wherein iron is locked up in hemoproteins or tightly bound by transport proteins.[2] This metal tug-of-war […]
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This review summarizes evidence that both low and high plasma iron increase infection risk, particularly in individuals with HFE C282Y homozygosity. Maintaining stable transferrin saturation is vital for immune function, with implications for managing hemochromatosis and iron deficiency to prevent infections and support microbiome health.
What was reviewed?
This commentary by Drakesmith and Zoller provides an expert synthesis of recent findings linking plasma iron status, hemochromatosis genotypes, and infection risk, with a particular focus on a large Danish cohort study by Mottelson et al. The paper critically reviews evidence that both hypoferremia (low plasma iron) and hyperferremia (high plasma iron), as well as homozygosity for the hemochromatosis-associated HFE C282Y mutation, are independently associated with increased risk of infections. The review places these findings in the context of iron metabolism, genetic determinants of iron homeostasis, and their effects on immune function. It also discusses the nuances of iron compartmentalization, particularly emphasizing the role of transferrin saturation (TSAT) as a key risk marker rather than total body iron stores. The review further explores the implications of these associations for clinical management and emerging therapeutic strategies, and highlights gaps in understanding the mechanistic links between iron status, immune competence, and susceptibility to specific pathogens.
Who was reviewed?
The commentary draws upon data from a variety of populations, but most prominently from a cohort of over 140,000 Danish individuals analyzed by Mottelson et al., which included genetic, biochemical, and clinical outcome data. Among these, a significant subgroup consisted of individuals homozygous for the HFE p.Cys282Tyr mutation, the primary genetic cause of hereditary hemochromatosis in European populations. The review also references findings from the UK Biobank, which includes middle-aged and older adults, and other population-based and genetic studies relevant to iron metabolism and infection risk. The referenced studies collectively span diverse patient groups, including those with iron deficiency, iron overload (hemochromatosis), and the general population, as well as some subgroups with comorbidities such as liver disease, diabetes, or heart failure.
Most important findings
The review highlights a U-shaped relationship between plasma iron status and infection risk, wherein both low and high TSAT are associated with increased susceptibility to infections, particularly pneumonia, sepsis, and skin infections. Notably, the infection risk is more closely linked to plasma iron (as measured by TSAT) than to ferritin (reflecting total body iron stores), suggesting that the circulating iron pool is most relevant for pathogen proliferation and immune function. Homozygosity for HFE p.Cys282Tyr is shown to increase infection risk, even in the absence of overt iron overload or comorbidities, indicating a primary effect of iron dysregulation rather than simply iron excess. The commentary also notes that high TSAT (>45–50%) is associated with adverse outcomes and that iron parameters remain relatively stable over time in most individuals, consistent with a strong genetic influence. Importantly, both impaired iron delivery to immune cells (in deficiency) and increased iron availability to pathogens (in overload) can disrupt host-pathogen balance. Emerging data suggest that the control of plasma iron fluxes—rather than static iron levels—is critical for maintaining immune competence and preventing infections.
Key implications
Clinically, these findings underscore the importance of maintaining plasma iron homeostasis within a normal range to minimize infection risk. For patients with hemochromatosis, this supports a shift in management focus from simply reducing iron stores to actively regulating TSAT—potentially through new therapies such as hepcidin mimetics or gene editing. Conversely, correcting iron deficiency is necessary not only to prevent anemia but also to support immune defense. The review also emphasizes the need for further research to clarify the immunological consequences of low TSAT, including which immune pathways are affected and which pathogens are most relevant. More broadly, the commentary advocates for a paradigm shift in the classification and management of iron disorders, highlighting the centrality of hepcidin deficiency and plasma iron dysregulation rather than just iron overload per se. Given the microbiome’s reliance on host iron availability, these findings have direct implications for understanding microbial signature shifts in iron-related conditions and designing interventions that balance host defense with microbiome stability.
Citation
Drakesmith H, Zoller H. The iron curve: infection at both ends. Comment on Mottelson et al, page 693. Blood. 2024;144(7):679-680. https://doi.org/10.1182/blood.2024025259
MOLECULAR MECHANISMS OF LEAD NEUROTOXICITY
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review explores the molecular mechanisms of lead neurotoxicity, focusing on ion mimicry, mitochondrial dysfunction, oxidative stress, and neuroinflammation. The findings emphasize the long-term cognitive and behavioral effects of lead exposure, with implications for clinical intervention and microbiome-related research.
What was studied?
This review focuses on the molecular mechanisms of lead neurotoxicity, investigating how lead (Pb²⁺), a toxic metal, affects brain function. Lead exposure is a well-established environmental health risk, especially in children and workers in high-exposure settings. The review discusses the pathways through which lead enters the brain and its subsequent effects on neuronal health. Key mechanisms include ion mimicry, where lead substitutes for essential divalent ions such as calcium, zinc, and iron. This leads to disruptions in calcium signaling, neurotransmitter release, and synaptic function. The review also explores lead-induced mitochondrial dysfunction, oxidative stress, and neuroinflammation as central to the neurotoxic effects. These processes contribute to long-term cognitive deficits and behavioral changes in individuals exposed to lead. By addressing these molecular events, the article provides insights into the broader neurotoxic effects of lead exposure and emphasizes the need for targeted therapies to mitigate its impact.
Who was studied?
The review synthesizes findings from animal models (primarily rodents) and human clinical studies, particularly focusing on populations exposed to lead via environmental or occupational sources. Experimental animals, such as rats, were exposed to lead through various methods, including oral ingestion, injection, and water consumption, to simulate human exposure. These studies were used to investigate how lead affects neurodevelopment and adult brain function. In addition, the review incorporates clinical data from children and adults who have been exposed to lead, highlighting the long-term effects on cognitive abilities, behavior, and neurodegeneration. The paper also touches upon the vulnerability of developing organisms, especially in early childhood when brain development is highly sensitive to environmental toxins like lead. It emphasizes that the neurotoxic effects of lead exposure are not limited to high-level acute poisoning but also include chronic low-level exposure that accumulates over time.
Most important findings
The review identifies several key molecular mechanisms responsible for lead neurotoxicity. One of the primary mechanisms is ion mimicry, where lead substitutes for calcium, zinc, and other divalent metals in the brain. This disrupts critical cellular processes that depend on these ions, such as neurotransmitter release, synaptic plasticity, and cell signaling, ultimately impairing cognitive function. Lead also affects mitochondrial function, impairing energy production and increasing the generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS). This results in oxidative stress, which further damages neurons. Additionally, lead exposure triggers neuroinflammation, exacerbating neuronal damage by activating glial cells and releasing inflammatory cytokines. This cascade of events leads to long-term effects on both structural and functional aspects of the brain, contributing to cognitive deficits, memory impairment, and behavioral changes. Moreover, the review underscores that lead exposure can disrupt the blood-brain barrier (BBB), making the brain more vulnerable to other toxins and increasing the risk of neurodegenerative diseases.
Key implications
The findings from this review have important clinical implications, particularly in the management of lead exposure in vulnerable populations, such as children and those in high-risk occupations. Clinicians should be aware that even low-level chronic lead exposure can have long-term effects on brain function, particularly in cognitive development and behavioral health. Early intervention, including chelation therapy and antioxidant treatments, could mitigate some of the damage caused by lead exposure. The review also highlights the need for preventive measures in communities with high environmental lead levels, as well as regular screening for lead exposure, especially in children. In terms of microbiome research, these molecular mechanisms suggest that lead exposure could alter the gut-brain axis, potentially impacting microbial signatures related to neurodevelopmental and neurodegenerative diseases. Understanding these interactions may lead to more effective treatments and interventions targeting the microbiome to mitigate lead-induced neurotoxicity.
Exposure to mercury from dental amalgam: actual contribution for risk assessment
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study measured mercury in urine and hair in dental workers and controls and linked urine mercury to the number of amalgam fillings. Levels stayed below occupational limits, but fillings still acted as a steady exposure source.
What was studied?
This study measured how much mercury people absorb from dental amalgam work and from having amalgam fillings, using biological monitoring as the main readout. The authors collected first-morning urine and hair samples and quantified total mercury with atomic absorption spectrometry in winter 2017 and spring 2018, then tested whether mercury levels tracked with dental activity and with the number of fillings in the mouth. They framed the work as an updated contribution to risk assessment because dental amalgam remains a meaningful source of chronic mercury exposure in the general population and a potential occupational exposure for dental staff.
Who was studied?
The study included 50 volunteers: 40 dental personnel (dentists and staff) and 10 controls who did not perform amalgam-related work during the sampling period. Dental personnel averaged 64 amalgam procedures in the prior month (range 15–280) and reported a higher average number of their own amalgam fillings than controls, which allowed the authors to examine exposure from both work tasks and personal restorations. The participants spanned adult ages, with a mean age of 44 years in dental personnel and 56 years in controls, and the analysis treated urine mercury (normalized to creatinine) and hair mercury as the primary exposure markers.
What were the most important findings?
Measured mercury levels stayed well below the occupational biological limit for urine mercury, supporting the authors’ conclusion that current dental workplace exposure generally remains within acceptable risk bounds under modern practices. In dental personnel, the median urine mercury was 1.48 µg/g creatinine (maximum 17.14), while controls showed a median of 0.36 µg/g creatinine (maximum 2.74), and hair mercury medians were 0.340 µg/g in dental personnel versus 0.224 µg/g in controls. The authors found a modest relationship between the number of a person’s own amalgam fillings and urine mercury across all participants, while hair mercury did not track with filling count, and occupational workload metrics did not show a clear correlation with urine or hair mercury within dental personnel. Because this study did not measure the oral or gut microbiome, it does not define microbial signatures; however, it strengthens exposure phenotyping for future microbiome work by giving realistic biomarker ranges for dental-amalgam–related mercury exposure that researchers can pair with microbiome profiling.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
Clinically, these findings support a balanced message: modern dentistry practices appear to keep mercury exposure in dental staff below established biological limits, yet amalgam fillings still act as a continual, low-level source of mercury for people who have them. This matters for risk discussions because clinicians often face patient questions about chronic exposure, and this study reinforces that urine mercury can rise with the number of restorations even when levels remain low on an occupational scale. For microbiome-focused clinicians, the key implication is practical rather than mechanistic: urine mercury normalized to creatinine provides a feasible exposure marker to stratify patients in studies that test whether mercury exposure associates with oral or gut dysbiosis, barrier changes, or inflammatory profiles, without assuming those effects from exposure alone.
Mercury(II) Binding to Metallothionein in Mytilus edulis revealed by High Energy-Resolution XANES Spectroscopy
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study shows that mussel metallothionein binds mercury in two main forms: a dominant linear Hg–thiolate complex and a substantial clustered Hg–thiolate structure with Hg–Hg pairing. The clustered form likely concentrates in the α-domain and supports cellular mercury detoxification.
What was studied?
This experimental study defined how inorganic mercury (HgII) binds to metallothioneins in living tissue and whether mercury forms polynuclear clusters inside the protein under real exposure conditions. The team exposed blue mussels to dissolved HgII, purified mussel metallothioneins from whole tissues, and then used high energy-resolution XANES spectroscopy together with computational structure modeling and biochemical checks to identify mercury coordination geometry, clustering, and protein-domain preferences.
Who was studied?
The investigators studied the marine bivalve Mytilus edulis as an in vivo exposure model and analyzed metallothionein molecules extracted from exposed animals. They compared mercury chemistry in whole mussel tissue versus the purified metallothionein fraction and evaluated protein forms by electrophoresis, which showed monomers and higher-order oligomers. This design allowed them to link a realistic exposure scenario to the specific molecular structures that mussels actually use for intracellular mercury handling.
What were the most important findings?
The study showed that mercury did not exist in a single “one-size” binding form inside metallothionein. Instead, the authors found two coexisting mercury environments: a dominant linear, two-coordinate Hg–thiolate complex and a substantial four-coordinate Hg–thiolate cluster that displayed a metacinnabar-type (β-HgS–like) local structure with Hg–Hg pairing. In whole tissue, the linear two-coordinate form dominated, while the metallothionein extract contained a higher fraction of the clustered species, supporting the idea that metallothionein sequesters mercury into more aggregated, detoxification-relevant structures. Mechanistically, the work pointed to the α-domain as a preferred site for cluster formation, with the CXXC motif acting as a nucleation “claw” and multiple CXC motifs supplying the spacing needed to build a polynuclear core, while Hg···Hg metallophilic interactions helped drive oligomerization and stabilize the clustered state.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
For clinicians thinking about mercury burden and detoxification capacity, this paper strengthens a key message: thiol-rich binding proteins can lock mercury into distinct structural states that likely change mercury’s mobility, persistence, and toxicity. The results also explain why older approaches that assumed a single tetrahedral mercury site can miss the real in vivo mixture, especially when mercury concentrations are low and structural disorder is high. While this is not a microbiome profiling paper, it matters for microbiome-informed risk work because host thiol sequestration and metallothionein induction can alter how much reactive mercury remains available to interact with epithelial surfaces and luminal microbes, potentially shifting downstream inflammatory and barrier signals even when total exposure appears similar.
Cadmium toxicity and treatment: An update
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review explores the toxic effects of cadmium exposure on multiple organ systems and its link to various diseases, including cancer and kidney dysfunction. It also discusses treatment options, including chelation therapy and nanoparticle-based interventions.
What was studied?
This review examined the toxicity of cadmium (Cd), a heavy metal with widespread environmental and occupational exposure, and its impact on various organ systems. The study explored the biological mechanisms by which cadmium accumulates in the body and the resulting detrimental effects, including carcinogenesis, nephrotoxicity, and reproductive system dysfunction. The paper highlighted the toxicological pathways, focusing on the generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS), oxidative stress, and the alteration of cell signaling pathways. The review discussed potential treatment strategies, including chelation therapy and the application of nanoparticles for cadmium detoxification.
Who was studied?
The study did not focus on specific individuals or animals but compiled data from various epidemiological, clinical, and experimental studies. It reviewed the effects of cadmium toxicity in both human populations and animal models, particularly in individuals exposed to cadmium through occupational settings, environmental pollution, and dietary sources. Research studies on the pathogenesis of cadmium-induced diseases in organs such as the kidneys, liver, bone, reproductive system, and cardiovascular system were analyzed. The review also explored treatment strategies used in cases of cadmium poisoning, including both traditional and nanoparticle-based chelation therapies.
Most important findings
Cadmium exposure is shown to have widespread toxic effects across multiple organ systems. The metal is known for its long biological half-life, which means it accumulates in tissues, particularly the kidneys, where it can lead to nephrotoxicity, including proteinuria, tubular dysfunction, and even renal failure in severe cases. In addition to renal damage, cadmium has a well-documented association with bone diseases, such as osteoporosis and osteomalacia, due to its interference with calcium and vitamin D metabolism. The review also identified that cadmium exposure is linked to various cancers, including lung, prostate, and kidney cancers, largely due to its ability to induce oxidative stress and disrupt DNA repair mechanisms. Furthermore, cadmium affects the reproductive system, causing sperm dysfunction in males and ovarian damage in females. It also impairs endothelial function and contributes to cardiovascular diseases by promoting atherosclerosis and hypertension.
Key implications
This study highlights the significant health risks associated with cadmium exposure and the need for comprehensive public health strategies to mitigate these risks. Occupational safety regulations must be enforced to limit cadmium exposure, particularly in industries such as battery manufacturing, electroplating, and agriculture. The findings also underscore the importance of monitoring environmental cadmium levels, particularly in areas with high soil and water contamination, to protect vulnerable populations. Additionally, the review calls for continued research into effective treatments for cadmium poisoning. The use of chelation therapies and nanoparticle-based antidotes holds promise in addressing cadmium toxicity, offering potential therapeutic solutions to mitigate its harmful effects. Further advancements in diagnostic tools and chelation agents are needed to improve treatment outcomes for individuals with chronic cadmium exposure.
Arsenic Binding to Proteins
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review examines how arsenic binds to proteins, disrupting their function and contributing to toxicity and resistance mechanisms. It highlights key proteins like thioredoxin and pyruvate dehydrogenase and discusses implications for arsenic-related diseases and bioremediation strategies.
What was studied?
This study investigates the chemical basis and biological implications of arsenic binding to proteins, particularly focusing on how arsenic compounds interact with cysteine residues in proteins. The study explores various forms of arsenic species, such as inorganic arsenite (As(III)) and methylated arsenicals (MMAIII and DMAIII), and their ability to bind to proteins, disrupting their structure and function. The review discusses how arsenic affects enzyme activity, including pyruvate dehydrogenase and thioredoxin, as well as DNA repair proteins. Additionally, it delves into the role of arsenic in cellular processes, such as biomethylation, enzyme inhibition, and apoptosis, and how these interactions contribute to arsenic toxicity and resistance mechanisms.
Who was studied?
The study focuses on human and bacterial proteins that interact with arsenic compounds, including enzymes and regulatory proteins from both prokaryotes and eukaryotes. The primary proteins studied include thioredoxin, pyruvate dehydrogenase, DNA repair enzymes, and metallothioneins, which are crucial for understanding arsenic-induced toxicity and resistance. Additionally, the ars operon in E. coli is highlighted as a model system for studying arsenic resistance mechanisms. The study also includes a range of proteins that bind arsenic, such as hemoglobin in rats, transferrin, and other key molecules involved in cell signaling and metabolism.
Most important findings
The study found that arsenic binding to proteins primarily occurs through interactions with cysteine residues, which are abundant in many proteins. This interaction can significantly alter the structure and function of the protein. Arsenic binding disrupts enzymatic activities, including enzyme inhibition and the biomethylation process, as observed in proteins like pyruvate dehydrogenase and thioredoxin. The research also revealed that arsenic-induced apoptosis in certain cancers, such as acute promyelocytic leukemia, is facilitated by the direct binding of arsenic to specific proteins, leading to cellular dysfunction. Another key finding was the discovery that arsenic-binding proteins like metallothioneins and the ars operon in bacteria help protect against arsenic toxicity by sequestering arsenic and promoting its efflux.
Key implications
Understanding how arsenic interacts with proteins has significant implications for both toxicology and therapeutics. The ability of arsenic to bind to critical cellular proteins, such as those involved in DNA repair and enzyme regulation, helps explain its toxicity and carcinogenic properties. This knowledge is essential for developing arsenic-based treatments for cancers like acute promyelocytic leukemia, where arsenic trioxide is used to induce apoptosis by binding to the PML-RAR fusion protein. Moreover, understanding how arsenic resistance mechanisms, like those mediated by the ars operon, work in bacteria can lead to new strategies for bioremediation in arsenic-contaminated environments. Clinicians and researchers can also explore arsenic-binding proteins as potential biomarkers for arsenic exposure and toxicity, aiding in the development of diagnostic tools for assessing arsenic-related health risks.
Undiagnosed Wilson’s Disease and Fibromyalgia Masking Bowel Perforation
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This case study highlights the difficulty of diagnosing Wilson’s disease in a patient with psychiatric and gastrointestinal symptoms. It underscores the importance of considering Wilson’s disease when unexplained liver dysfunction and neurological symptoms are present, advocating for comprehensive diagnostic approaches.
What was studied?
This case study examines the challenges in diagnosing Wilson's disease (WD) in a 37-year-old woman who presented with confusion, chronic diarrhea, and hepatic enzyme elevation. The research investigates how the patient's psychiatric history, including fibromyalgia and bipolar disorder, complicated the diagnosis. The patient’s symptoms were initially attributed to psychiatric issues, delaying the identification of Wilson's disease. The study also delves into how chronic laxative abuse and gastrointestinal complications, including a bowel perforation, masked the underlying liver disease.
Who was studied?
The study focused on a 37-year-old woman with a complex medical and psychiatric history. She had been previously diagnosed with fibromyalgia, bipolar disorder, and microscopic colitis, leading to significant confusion regarding the underlying cause of her symptoms. The patient had been managed for multiple psychiatric conditions, and her gastrointestinal symptoms had been treated symptomatically. The study follows her case from the initial misdiagnosis to the eventual identification of Wilson's disease.
Most important findings
The study revealed that the patient’s signs of acute liver failure, including altered mental status and elevated ammonia levels, were initially overlooked due to the psychiatric symptoms. It was later found that low ceruloplasmin and elevated urine copper levels, diagnostic markers of Wilson's disease, were present. However, a liver biopsy could not be performed due to the complications from a bowel perforation. The patient's psychiatric symptoms, including depression and personality changes, were eventually attributed to Wilson’s disease, illustrating its neurological manifestations. This case underscores the diagnostic challenge of Wilson’s disease when psychiatric and gastrointestinal issues dominate the clinical presentation.
Key implications
This case underscores the importance of considering Wilson's disease in patients with neuropsychiatric symptoms, even when liver involvement is not immediately apparent. The overlap between psychiatric disorders and Wilson's disease symptoms can delay diagnosis, especially when chronic medical conditions, such as fibromyalgia, complicate the clinical picture. Early recognition and treatment of Wilson's disease could prevent the progression to severe complications such as liver failure and bowel perforation. This case also highlights the need for comprehensive testing in patients with psychiatric and gastrointestinal symptoms, especially when there are subtle laboratory signs indicative of liver dysfunction. Additionally, it calls for improved awareness among healthcare providers of the diverse clinical presentations of Wilson's disease.
The Laboratory and Clinical Perspectives of Magnesium Imbalance
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review explains how magnesium imbalance affects neuromuscular and cardiac function and why lab results can mislead. It highlights pre-analytical errors, limits of serum magnesium, and strong links between magnesium, potassium, calcium, and gut-related absorption or loss.
What was reviewed?
This narrative review explained magnesium imbalance from two angles clinicians deal with every day: what magnesium does in the body and how lab testing can mislead interpretation. The authors emphasized that magnesium is mainly intracellular and acts as a calcium antagonist, so small shifts can affect neuromuscular function and cardiac conduction. They framed magnesium as a “forgotten analyte” that often hides behind other electrolyte problems, especially potassium, calcium, and phosphate changes, and they focused on how to interpret results in real clinical settings.
Who was reviewed?
The paper did not enroll patients because it was not a clinical trial; it reviewed prior publications across general populations and hospitalized settings. It drew heavily from evidence relevant to inpatients and ICU care, where hypomagnesemia is common and outcomes worsen when magnesium, potassium, and calcium abnormalities occur together. It also reviewed evidence tied to risk groups with impaired intake, absorption, or losses, including people with inflammatory bowel disease, short bowel states, bariatric surgery, alcoholism, diuretic exposure, and proton pump inhibitor use, along with those with kidney disease who are prone to hypermagnesemia.
What were the most important findings?
The review showed that magnesium interpretation fails when clinicians rely on one number without context. Serum magnesium reflects only a tiny extracellular fraction and can miss intracellular depletion, so “normal” values do not always rule out clinically relevant deficiency, especially when refractory hypokalemia or unexplained hypocalcemia appears. It also detailed common lab pitfalls that create false results, including hemolysis causing pseudo-hypermagnesemia and anticoagulants or collection issues altering free magnesium measurements.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
Clinicians should treat magnesium as a driver of multi-electrolyte instability, not as an optional add-on test. When potassium and calcium disorders persist despite replacement, magnesium deficiency should move to the top of the differential, and workup should consider urinary measures or loading approaches when deficiency is suspected but serum values look reassuring. From a microbiome-informed care lens, the strongest clinical bridge is practical: gut disease and gut function change magnesium handling, so persistent dysbiosis symptoms, diarrhea, malabsorption, or motility impairment can meaningfully alter magnesium status and downstream neuromuscular and cardiac risk.
Magnesium Matters: A Comprehensive Review of Its Vital Role in Health and Diseases
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review explains how magnesium supports energy, vascular function, immunity, glucose control, bone strength, and muscle health, and how low intake or poor absorption can raise risks for cardiometabolic disease and inflammation. It also highlights gut factors that may reduce magnesium availability.
What was reviewed?
This article is a narrative review that synthesized what is known about magnesium’s roles in human physiology and disease, spanning basic mechanisms (enzyme activity, ATP-dependent energy production, ion-channel regulation, and cellular signaling) and clinical relevance across cardiometabolic, musculoskeletal, neurologic, and mental health outcomes. It also summarized dietary sources, factors that can reduce bioavailability, and clinical consequences of deficiency or insufficiency, with the goal of helping clinicians connect magnesium status to common chronic disease patterns rather than treating it as an isolated lab value.
Who was reviewed?
Because this was a review and not a single clinical study, it did not enroll one defined cohort; instead, it summarized findings from previously published human observational studies, clinical trials, and systematic reviews/meta-analyses across multiple populations. The literature it pulled from included adults with hypertension and cardiovascular disease risk, people with type 2 diabetes or insulin resistance, postmenopausal women and others at risk for osteoporosis, and groups studied for migraines, asthma, mental health symptoms, and aging-related outcomes, alongside supportive mechanistic and preclinical evidence where relevant.
What were the most important findings?
The core finding is that suboptimal magnesium status aligns with a recognizable, multi-system risk profile that clinicians see often: higher cardiometabolic risk, worse glucose handling, greater inflammatory tone, and increased neuromuscular irritability. Mechanistically, magnesium supports endothelial nitric oxide signaling and acts as a functional calcium antagonist in vascular smooth muscle, so deficiency plausibly pushes vasoconstriction and blood-pressure elevation while also destabilizing cardiac electrical activity. The review also emphasized a consistent inverse association between magnesium intake and type 2 diabetes risk, linking low magnesium to insulin resistance and impaired glucose metabolism, and it connected adequate magnesium to healthier bone mineralization and reduced osteoporosis risk.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
Clinically, this review supports treating magnesium as a high-leverage, low-cost modifier of chronic disease pathways rather than a niche electrolyte issue. It implies that patients with clustered problems—hypertension, insulin resistance, migraines, muscle cramps, fatigue, low mood, or age-related frailty—may benefit from a deliberate magnesium assessment and a food-first repletion strategy, with supplementation considered when intake is low or risk is high. For microbiome-informed care, the review reinforces that gut conditions and intestinal chemistry can shape magnesium bioavailability, so improving diet quality and gut function may indirectly improve magnesium status and downstream inflammatory-metabolic outcomes.
Arsenic binding to human metallothionein-3
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study investigates how arsenic(III) binds to human metallothionein-3, revealing detailed binding kinetics and the role of MT3 in arsenic detoxification. These findings have implications for understanding arsenic poisoning and potential therapeutic strategies.
What was studied?
This study examines the interaction of arsenic (As(III)) with human metallothionein-3 (MT3), a cysteine-rich protein that plays a key role in heavy metal detoxification and cellular defense. The focus was on understanding the metalation pathways through which arsenic binds to MT3, investigating the rate and binding constants for each step of arsenic attachment. This research revealed detailed data on the binding of As(III) to apo-MT3 (the unmetalated form of MT3) under physiological conditions, providing insights into how MT3 functions in arsenic detoxification. The study also explored how As(III) binds to partially metalated Zn-MT3, providing a comparison to fully metalated forms and helping understand the structural dynamics of arsenic-metal interactions.
Who was studied?
The study focused on human metallothionein-3 (MT3), an isoform of metallothionein expressed primarily in the central nervous system. MT3 is involved in metal homeostasis and is particularly important in neurological protection, as its downregulation has been associated with neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer's. The research examined apo-MT3 (unmetalated MT3) and its ability to bind arsenic(III) under physiological pH (7.4). The binding properties of As(III) to partially metalated Zn-MT3 and fully metalated Zn7MT3 were also analyzed. By using mass spectrometry and UV-visible spectroscopy, the study quantified the rate constants and binding affinities of arsenic to these protein forms, comparing how different states of MT3 influence arsenic binding.
Most important findings
The study demonstrated that arsenic(III) binds to human MT3 rapidly and efficiently, with six As(III) ions binding sequentially to the apo-MT3 protein. The study also revealed that arsenic binds to MT3 in a noncooperative manner, with each successive As(III) binding event showing decreasing affinity. The binding occurs primarily through cysteine thiol groups, with noncooperative binding leading to the formation of a variety of Asn-MT3 species. Furthermore, fully metalated Zn7MT3 could not accommodate arsenic(III) due to the high affinity of zinc for the cysteine residues in the protein. However, arsenic was able to bind to partially metalated Zn-MT3, suggesting that zinc does not completely block arsenic binding in these intermediate states.
Key implications
The findings of this study have important implications for understanding how metallothionein-3 contributes to arsenic detoxification and its role in mitigating arsenic toxicity, particularly in the nervous system. The fact that arsenic binds efficiently to apo-MT3 and partially metalated Zn-MT3 provides insights into how arsenic exposure may disrupt cellular processes by interfering with metal homeostasis in neurological tissue. The rapid binding of arsenic to MT3 suggests that the protein could play a protective role against arsenic poisoning, especially in the brain, where it could sequester arsenic before it causes neurological damage. Clinically, these findings may inform arsenic detoxification therapies, potentially through strategies that modulate MT3 expression or enhance zinc availability to mitigate arsenic toxicity. Additionally, the study’s insights into the metalation properties of MT3 could lead to better strategies for addressing chronic arsenic exposure in affected populations.
Human milk metals and metalloids shape infant microbiota
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study examines the relationship between the metal content of human milk and the infant gut microbiota, highlighting metal-induced microbial shifts and their potential impact on infant health and development.
What was studied?
This study investigated the relationship between the metal(loid) content in human milk and its influence on the infant gut microbiota. Specifically, it aimed to explore how variations in metals such as iron (Fe), manganese (Mn), zinc (Zn), copper (Cu), and others affect the microbiota during the early lactation stage (7-15 days postpartum) and the mature lactation stage (30-60 days postpartum). The study analyzed human milk (HM) samples and infant stool samples from 77 mother-infant pairs using metallomic profiling and 16S rRNA sequencing to examine microbial abundances, richness, and diversity. The study used statistical tools like Spearman’s rank correlation to explore metal-microbiota interactions and their potential effects on infant gut development.
Who was studied?
The study focused on 77 healthy mother-infant dyads from the MAMI cohort. The mothers provided human milk samples, while stool samples were collected from their infants at two different time points: the early transitional lactation stage and the mature lactation stage. The infants were not exposed to any antibiotics during the study period, ensuring that the effects observed were due to natural variations in the metal content of human milk and the corresponding gut microbiota development.
What were the most important findings?
The study found significant differences in the concentrations of metals between the early and mature stages of lactation. For instance, cobalt (Co), copper (Cu), zinc (Zn), molybdenum (Mo), and antimony (Sb) were significantly lower in mature human milk compared to early lactation stages. In terms of microbiota, the relative abundance of Bifidobacterium was higher in infant stool samples during the mature lactation stage. Additionally, the study identified various correlations between metal concentrations in human milk and microbial abundances in infant feces. Notably, during early lactation, a positive correlation was found between nickel concentrations in human milk and the abundance of Corynebacterium in the infant gut, while negative correlations were observed between copper and Enterobacter spp., as well as antimony and Veillonella spp. In the mature lactation stage, the Klebsiella genus exhibited multiple negative correlations with metals such as iron, antimony, and vanadium. Additionally, the study noted that higher levels of metal diversity in human milk were associated with increased alpha diversity in the infant gut microbiota, particularly during the mature lactation phase.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings of this study highlight the crucial role of metals in shaping the infant gut microbiota during the first months of life. The metal(loid) content in human milk, which varies over the course of lactation, has the potential to influence microbial growth and metabolism. Understanding these relationships can help inform better breastfeeding practices and maternal health strategies, particularly in regions where environmental exposure to metals could affect both maternal milk and infant gut health. The study also sheds light on the role of specific microbes, such as Bifidobacterium, Klebsiella, and Enterobacter, which appear to be particularly sensitive to metal fluctuations, influencing microbial richness and diversity in the infant gut. The findings suggest that future research should delve deeper into the mechanisms by which metal(loid)s influence gut microbiota at the strain level and explore the long-term implications for infant health, immunity, and metabolic development.
A Comparative Study on the Paradoxical Relationship Between Heavy Metal Exposure and Kidney Function
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study compared heavy metal exposure and kidney function in Korea, revealing expected nephrotoxicity in the general population but paradoxically preserved eGFR in chronically exposed vulnerable communities.
What was studied?
This study examined the paradoxical relationship between heavy metal exposure and kidney function, focusing on a “heavy metal exposure and kidney function” integrated assessment across the Korean population and environmentally vulnerable regions. Using data from the Fourth Korean National Environmental Health Survey (KoNEHS) and the FROM cohort, the authors evaluated whether exposure to lead (Pb), mercury (Hg), and cadmium (Cd) demonstrated consistent or divergent associations with estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR). Notably, the paper explored why residents in vulnerable areas—who carried significantly higher exposures—exhibited an unexpected pattern where elevated heavy metals appeared to correlate with preserved or even increased eGFR. Integrated heavy metal concentration (ΣHM) served as the primary exposure metric, and comprehensive statistical analyses assessed correlations and odds ratios for eGFR decline.
Who was studied?
Two major populations were analyzed. The general population consisted of 2,984 adults aged ≥19 years from the nationally representative KoNEHS dataset (2018–2020). In contrast, the environmentally vulnerable group comprised 1,157 adults living within 10 km of 13 predefined contaminated areas, as part of the FROM study (2021–2023). These individuals had prolonged exposure to industrial emissions, abandoned mines, smelters, and coal-fired power plant byproducts. Participants underwent detailed biomonitoring of blood Pb and Hg, urinary Cd, and serum creatinine, with broad age representation but a high proportion of older adults in vulnerable regions. The vulnerable cohort, therefore, reflected both chronic exposure and age-related renal vulnerability—two factors likely central to the paradoxical findings.
Most important findings
The study confirmed substantially higher heavy metal levels in vulnerable areas—blood Pb nearly twice that of the general population, urinary Cd more than doubled, and Hg elevated in multiple regions. However, associations with renal function diverged sharply. In the general population, higher ΣHM and particularly urinary Cd were linked to declining eGFR, aligning with known nephrotoxic pathways involving proximal tubular dysfunction, oxidative stress, and impaired filtration. In contrast, vulnerable-area residents displayed positive correlations between ΣHM and eGFR, suggesting altered excretion dynamics, long-term adaptive responses, or shifts in steady-state metal distribution. Logistic models revealed that urinary Cd increased the odds of eGFR <60 mL/min/1.73 m² by 19.9% in the general population, whereas the same exposure reduced the odds by 23.3% in vulnerable groups. This paradox may reflect reduced renal Cd excretion due to preexisting microstructural decline, leading to higher circulating metals but preserved filtration metrics at certain thresholds.
Heavy Metal
General Population Association
Vulnerable Area Association
Lead (Pb)
Weak negative correlation with eGFR
No significant association
Mercury (Hg)
Minimal effect
Higher Hg associated with lower odds of eGFR decline
Cadmium (Cd)
Strongest predictor of eGFR reduction
Higher Cd associated with lower odds of reduced eGFR
ΣHM
eGFR decreases as ΣHM increases
eGFR increases as ΣHM increases
Key implications
This comparative analysis highlights that heavy metal exposure does not uniformly affect kidney function across populations. Chronic exposure, aging kidneys, and reduced urinary excretion likely alter biomarker behavior, producing misleading “protective” associations in heavily exposed communities. Clinicians must therefore interpret urinary Cd and blood metal levels cautiously, especially in older adults or those with long-term exposure histories. The findings underscore the need for early detection thresholds, integration of toxicokinetic biomarkers, and microbiome-focused research, given that heavy metals modulate gut microbial composition, impair detoxification pathways, and reshape microbially mediated metal handling. Identifying microbial signatures of metal burden—such as reduced Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium, or enrichment of metal-resistant genera—could enhance screening and risk stratification.
Magnesium: The overlooked electrolyte in blood cancers?
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review explains why magnesium deficiency is common and overlooked in blood cancers. It links magnesium to immune control of EBV, inflammation, and DNA repair pathways, and it highlights XMEN disease as proof that impaired magnesium transport can raise lymphoma risk.
What was reviewed?
This review examined magnesium as an underrecognized electrolyte in hematology and oncology, with a focus on blood cancers and lymphoma. The authors explained how magnesium supports DNA stability, DNA repair, apoptosis regulation, and control of oxidative stress and inflammation, then connected these mechanisms to cancer risk and outcomes. They also reviewed why magnesium deficiency is common, why routine testing can miss total-body depletion, and how common exposures in cancer care, such as diarrhea, malabsorption, and certain drugs, can worsen magnesium loss.
Who was reviewed?
The authors synthesized evidence from human observational studies, hospitalized patient cohorts, mechanistic cell studies, and animal models rather than enrolling a single study population. The “who” therefore included general adult populations evaluated for magnesium intake and cancer risk, hospitalized and critically ill patients where hypomagnesemia was measured alongside mortality and length of stay, and patients with hematologic malignancies who often receive magnesium-wasting therapies. The review also drew on rare-disease patients with XMEN syndrome and on populations where Epstein–Barr virus burden relates to lymphoma biology.
What were the most important findings?
The review linked low magnesium to worse health outcomes in general and highlighted signals that magnesium status may matter in blood cancers even though lymphoma-specific prognosis data remain limited. It emphasized that serum magnesium is an imperfect proxy because most body magnesium is intracellular or in bone, so “normal” serum values can coexist with deficiency. The authors highlighted a major immune mechanism from XMEN disease: MAGT1 defects reduce intracellular free magnesium, impair T and NK cell activation, lower NKG2D expression, and weaken control of EBV-infected cells, which increases lymphoma risk. They also described inflammatory activation during magnesium deficiency, including NF-κB–linked cytokine signaling, and discussed how cancer cells can upregulate transport pathways such as TRPM7 to favor growth.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
Clinicians should treat magnesium as a clinically meaningful variable in patients with blood cancers, not just a routine electrolyte, because deficiency is common, often silent, and plausibly linked to immune dysfunction, inflammation, and viral control. The review supports more proactive screening in high-risk settings, careful interpretation of “normal” serum magnesium, and thoughtful replacement strategies that avoid rapid peaks that trigger renal wasting. It also argues for better-designed prospective studies to test whether hypomagnesemia independently predicts outcomes in lymphoma and other blood cancers, and whether correcting deficiency improves immune competence and clinical endpoints.
Arsenic Exposure Perturbs the Gut Microbiome and Its Metabolic Profile in Mice: An Integrated Metagenomics and Metabolomics Analysis
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Arsenic exposure perturbs the gut microbiome in mice and rewires fecal, urinary, and plasma metabolites, including sharp shifts in indole and bile acid pathways, alongside loss of several Firmicutes families and a rise in a Clostridiales group, before any histologic injury appears.
What was studied?
This original study asked whether arsenic exposure perturbs the gut microbiome and its metabolic outputs in vivo. Investigators exposed specific-pathogen-free mice to sodium arsenite in drinking water (10 ppm) for four weeks, then combined 16S rRNA sequencing with liquid chromatography mass spectrometry metabolomics of feces, urine, and plasma. The work quantified exposure-driven shifts in community structure and linked them to altered small-molecule profiles. It further tested whether microbe–metabolite correlations reveal functional pathways affected by arsenic, focusing on bacterial families, indole derivatives from tryptophan metabolism, bile acid intermediates, and other diet- and host-derived compounds relevant to barrier function, energy harvest, and immune tone.
Who was studied?
The experiment used female C57BL/6 mice (about six to eight weeks old), housed under controlled temperature, humidity, and light cycles, with identical diets and filtered water. Ten animals received arsenic and ten served as controls. Researchers collected fecal pellets at necropsy and obtained urine and plasma close to the endpoint to capture steady-state microbial and metabolic signals. Body weight, intake, and standard histology did not differ between groups, isolating gut microbial and metabolic changes to arsenic exposure rather than systemic illness. Sample processing followed validated pipelines for QIIME-based taxonomic assignment and untargeted LC-MS feature discovery with subsequent metabolite identification by MS/MS.
Most important findings
Arsenic exposure produced a clear separation of microbial communities from controls by principal coordinates analysis and hierarchical clustering. Several Firmicutes families fell significantly, whereas one Firmicutes group within Clostridiales (Family XIII Incertae Sedis) rose about two-fold, indicating a compositional tilt away from typical short-chain-fatty-acid producers. In the fecal metabolome, 370 molecular features changed (224 decreased; 146 increased), and principal component analysis cleanly discriminated exposed from control mice.
Indole-pathway metabolites shifted markedly: indolelactic acid fell more than ten-fold, while indoxyl and 3-indolepropionic acid rose, each correlating with specific Firmicutes or Tenericutes families. Bile acid homeostasis also shifted, with reduced glycocholic acid in feces and increased excretion of 7-α-hydroxy-3-oxo-4-cholestenoate and a related degradation product, suggesting altered bile acid synthesis or enterohepatic cycling. Isoflavone metabolism signatures changed in parallel; fecal daidzein and dihydrodaidzein decreased, while O-desmethylangolensin increased and tracked with Bacilli-affiliated taxa. Correlation matrices linked these metabolite changes to the altered bacterial families, supporting a functional coupling between taxonomic and metabolic shifts under arsenic stress.
Key implications
For clinicians and translational researchers, these results define a coherent exposure signature: loss of multiple Firmicutes families commonly associated with butyrate production, broad remodeling of tryptophan-derived indoles that shape epithelial integrity and immune signaling, and disturbed bile acid handling that can influence glucose–lipid homeostasis and inflammation. Because the study observed no weight or histopathology differences, the microbiome and metabolome shifts likely precede overt tissue injury and may serve as early indicators of risk. For microbiome signature databases, the paired taxa–metabolite links (for example, depressed indolelactic acid with Firmicutes losses and increased O-desmethylangolensin with Bacilli) offer concrete features to catalog in arsenic-exposure panels.
Long-Term Exposure to Low-Level Arsenic in Drinking Water and Diabetes Incidence: A Prospective Study of the Diet, Cancer and Health Cohort
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study explores the link between long-term low-level arsenic exposure and diabetes incidence in Denmark. The results suggest a modest association, highlighting the potential health risks of low-level arsenic exposure and the need for further research in this area.
What was studied?
The study investigated the relationship between long-term low-level arsenic exposure in drinking water and the incidence of diabetes in Denmark. The research focused on determining whether low-level arsenic exposure, typically defined as less than 50 μg/L, is associated with an increased risk of diabetes in a large cohort over several years. This prospective cohort study utilized data from the Diet, Cancer, and Health (DCH) cohort and linked individual exposure to arsenic with diabetes incidence as tracked through the Danish National Diabetes Register.
Who was studied?
The study included 52,931 eligible participants from the DCH cohort, aged between 50 and 64 years, who were enrolled between 1993 and 1997. Participants were recruited from the Copenhagen and Aarhus areas in Denmark and followed for a mean period of 9.7 years. The study population was geographically diverse, with individuals living in areas with varying arsenic concentrations in their drinking water. The cohort's health data, lifestyle factors, and residential history were extensively documented, and the National Diabetes Register (NDR) was used to identify cases of diabetes. The study excluded individuals with pre-existing diabetes or a cancer diagnosis at the time of enrollment.
Most important findings
The study found a weak but positive association between long-term exposure to low-level arsenic and the incidence of diabetes. Specifically, for every 1 μg/L increase in arsenic levels in drinking water, the incidence rate ratio (IRR) for all diabetes cases was 1.03 (95% CI: 1.01, 1.06), and for strict diabetes cases, it was 1.02 (95% CI: 0.99, 1.05). The study also observed no significant differences in diabetes risk based on sex, waist circumference, smoking status, or physical activity, suggesting that the effect of arsenic on diabetes risk may be consistent across different subgroups. Additionally, the study revealed a potential exposure threshold, as the association between arsenic levels and diabetes risk appeared to plateau at higher concentrations of arsenic.
Key implications
The study’s findings suggest that long-term exposure to low-level arsenic in drinking water may contribute, albeit modestly, to the development of diabetes. This highlights the need to further investigate the role of environmental chemicals, like arsenic, in the rising incidence of diabetes globally, especially in populations with chronic low-level arsenic exposure. The study also underscores the importance of prospective cohort designs that track environmental exposures and health outcomes over time. For public health, these findings suggest a need for monitoring and regulating arsenic levels in drinking water, even at concentrations well below the currently accepted safety thresholds set by organizations such as the WHO. Further research is needed to determine the biological mechanisms through which arsenic influences glucose metabolism and to confirm whether a threshold exists for its toxic effects.
Biomarkers of Exposure: A Case Study with Inorganic Arsenic
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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The study examines biomarkers of inorganic arsenic exposure in humans, focusing on the metabolism and toxicological effects of arsenic. Key findings include the importance of urinary arsenic measurements and the impact of genetic differences in arsenic metabolism.
What was studied?
The study aimed to investigate the exposure to inorganic arsenic (iAs) in various populations and evaluate biomarkers for arsenic exposure, focusing on how arsenic is metabolized and its effects on human health. The research emphasizes assessing biomarkers that can quantify exposure to arsenic, its metabolism, and potential health consequences linked to chronic arsenic exposure from drinking water, food, and other environmental sources. The study also explores how arsenic interacts with the body, with a particular focus on the urinary excretion of arsenic and its metabolites as a primary indicator of exposure.
Who was studied?
The study primarily focuses on humans who are chronically exposed to inorganic arsenic through drinking water, food, and occupational exposure. It examines data from populations living in areas with significant arsenic contamination in their water sources, such as rural areas in Bangladesh, West Bengal, and regions near copper smelters. Additionally, the research includes exposure assessments among children, pregnant women, and workers in industries where arsenic is a known contaminant. These groups are particularly vulnerable to arsenic's toxic effects, especially due to variations in how arsenic is metabolized across different populations.
Most important findings
The research highlighted several key findings regarding arsenic exposure and its biomarkers. One of the most significant outcomes was that urinary arsenic levels correlate strongly with the levels of arsenic in drinking water. However, this relationship can be affected by dietary intake of seafood, which contains organic arsenic, potentially confounding exposure assessments. It was also discovered that the methylation of inorganic arsenic in the liver results in the formation of both monomethylarsonic acid (MMAV) and dimethylarsinic acid (DMAV). DMAV is less toxic than its inorganic counterparts but still poses risks due to its carcinogenic properties when accumulated over time.
The study pointed out that biomarkers such as urinary arsenic levels, urinary porphyrins, and skin lesions associated with chronic arsenic exposure could serve as effective tools for early detection of exposure. Additionally, the research identified variability in arsenic metabolism across individuals, which could be influenced by genetic factors, potentially leading to different levels of toxicity even when exposed to the same arsenic concentrations.
Key implications
The findings from this study underscore the importance of monitoring arsenic exposure using reliable biomarkers, such as urinary arsenic speciation, which could help assess the chronic health risks associated with arsenic exposure in vulnerable populations. By differentiating between inorganic and organic forms of arsenic in biological samples, healthcare professionals can better estimate exposure and avoid overestimating risks from non-toxic organic arsenic species. This could be crucial for establishing more accurate risk assessments and regulatory thresholds for arsenic exposure, especially in populations with prolonged exposure to contaminated drinking water or occupational arsenic. The study also suggests that genetic variability in arsenic metabolism could play a role in susceptibility to arsenic-related diseases, warranting further exploration of genetic screening in future arsenic exposure studies.
Bacterial Heavy Metal Resistance Systems: Mechanisms, Genes, and Clinical Implications
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review examines bacterial resistance systems to toxic metals, detailing efflux pumps, ATPases, and metallothioneins. It explores their mechanisms, gene regulation, and clinical or environmental relevance.
What was reviewed?
This review by Silver and Ji comprehensively examined emerging bacterial resistance systems to toxic heavy metals, focusing on newer plasmid- and chromosomally encoded mechanisms in bacteria. It outlined the genetic and functional diversity of systems conferring resistance to metals such as copper, cadmium, zinc, arsenic, cobalt, and nickel. The review integrates structural, mechanistic, and regulatory insights from plasmid-encoded efflux pumps, metallothioneins, P-type ATPases, and chemiosmotic antiporters, shedding light on their evolutionary relationships, functional architecture, and regulatory components.
Who was reviewed?
The review surveyed resistance determinants in various bacterial genera, including Escherichia coli,Pseudomonas syringae, Staphylococcus aureus, Synechococcus, Enterococcus hirae, Bacillus firmus, and Alcaligenes eutrophus. These species span Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria and include both clinical and environmental isolates, such as pig-derived E. coli, phytopathogenic Pseudomonas and Xanthomonas, and metal-tolerant soil bacteria.
Most important findings
Bacteria have evolved diverse mechanisms to withstand toxic heavy metal exposure, many of which are encoded on plasmids or chromosomes and are tightly regulated. This review highlights five major systems of bacterial heavy metal resistance, each with distinct structural and functional components. These include the copper-responsive pco/cop operons, the arsenic-handling ars systems, cadmium-specific P-type ATPases, the ATP-independent czc and cnr antiporters for cobalt, zinc, and nickel, and the cyanobacterial metallothionein system regulated by smt genes. Together, these mechanisms illustrate the biochemical and genetic sophistication underlying microbial adaptation to metal stress.
Resistance System
Mechanism and Features
Copper (pco/cop)
Plasmid-encoded four-gene operon (pcoABCD/copABCD) in E. coli and P. syringae; encodes periplasmic and membrane proteins regulated by a two-component system (PcoR/PcoS) via histidine-aspartate phosphotransfer.
Arsenic (ars)
ArsB-mediated efflux of As[III]; ArsC reduces As[V] to As[III]. Gram-negatives include ATPase subunit ArsA; Gram-positives rely solely on ArsB and chemiosmotic transport.
Cadmium (cadA)
P-type ATPase CadA exports Cd²⁺ in Gram-positive bacteria; shares conserved motifs with human Menkes Cu²⁺ ATPase, illustrating cross-kingdom homology.
Cobalt/Nickel/Zinc (czc/cnr)
Multi-component antiporters (e.g., CzcCBA, CnrCBA) from A. eutrophus lacking ATPase motifs; powered by proton gradients. Regulation involves membrane sensors (CzcD, CnrY) and novel transcriptional elements.
Metallothionein (smt)
In Synechococcus, smtA encodes metallothionein regulated by smtB. Metal response includes derepression, gene amplification, and deletion via HIP1 palindromic elements.
Key implications
This review highlights the diversity and complexity of bacterial metal resistance strategies, illustrating how efflux mechanisms, metallothioneins, and regulatory networks are tailored to environmental and evolutionary pressures. The findings are directly relevant to microbial metallomics, microbiome-host interactions, and antimicrobial resistance. Notably, the shared architecture between bacterial Cd²⁺ and human Cu²⁺ ATPases underscores the translational value of microbial models. From a microbiome perspective, plasmid-borne metal resistance genes can be mobile, potentially shaping microbial signatures in metal-rich or dysbiotic environments, including those associated with inflammation or industrial exposure.
Lead and δ-Aminolevulinic Acid Dehydratase Polymorphism: Where Does It Lead? A Meta-Analysis
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Meta-analysis shows ALAD polymorphism and lead interactions: ALAD2 raises BLL in workers, lowers chelatable lead, and slightly improves heme indices; bone lead is unchanged.
What was reviewed?
This meta-analysis examined ALAD polymorphism and lead, specifically whether the δ-aminolevulinic acid dehydratase (ALAD) gene variant (ALAD2 vs ALAD1) modifies blood and bone lead levels and clinical toxicity markers. The authors pooled observational studies reporting genotype-stratified data for blood lead (BLL), cortical and trabecular bone lead, zinc protoporphyrin (ZPP), hemoglobin, serum creatinine, dimercaptosuccinic acid (DMSA)–chelatable lead, and blood pressure. Random-effects models produced weighted mean differences or standardized mean differences; heterogeneity, Hardy–Weinberg equilibrium (HWE) violations, and publication bias were assessed. The biological rationale is that ALAD2 alters enzyme charge and binds more lead at the active site, potentially increasing measured BLL while decreasing bioavailable lead to downstream heme-pathway targets.
Who was reviewed?
Twenty-four studies met inclusion criteria; fourteen contributed to the BLL analysis (n=6,672: 5,861 ALAD1/1 and 811 ALAD2 carriers). Populations spanned occupationally exposed lead workers, environmentally exposed adults, and children. Allele frequencies varied by ancestry and setting, and two studies deviated from HWE, which the authors handled by sensitivity analyses (pooled results with and without those studies). Outcome coverage differed across papers (e.g., bone lead subsets; renal indices; DMSA testing), but overall the dataset enabled genotype-stratified synthesis across exposure tiers—from high occupational exposures to low environmental background—providing a framework to interpret genotype as an exposure/toxicity modifier.
Most important findings
ALAD2 carriage was associated with higher BLLs in lead workers, null differences in environmentally exposed adults, and larger, but design-limited differences in children; bone lead did not differ by genotype. For hematologic endpoints, ALAD2 carriers had slightly higher hemoglobin and lower (nonsignificant) ZPP, consistent with less heme-pathway inhibition despite higher BLL. DMSA-chelatable lead was lower in ALAD2, indicating reduced bioavailable/chelatable lead. Renal and blood-pressure findings were mixed overall, with small, setting-dependent effects. Mechanistically, stronger binding of lead to ALAD2 raises measured BLL yet reduces lead available to inhibit ferrochelatase, aligning with lower ZPP and slightly higher hemoglobin.
Key implications
Clinically, ALAD2 is a susceptibility modifier: in high-exposure workplaces, ALAD2 carriers may present with higher BLLs but fewer heme-pathway perturbations, whereas at low environmental exposures, genotype has little influence on BLL. Interpreting BLL without genotype may overestimatethe effective toxic burden in ALAD2 carriers or underestimate it in ALAD1/1 individuals when using ZPP/hemoglobin as effect markers. For microbiome research and databases, record exposure tier (occupational vs environmental), genotype (ALAD), and, where feasible, other modifiers (e.g., VDR, eNOS) when linking lead to taxa/pathways; this improves comparability of signatures and reduces misclassification when BLL is used as the sole exposure variable.
Magnesium modulates phospholipid metabolism to promote bacterial phenotypic resistance to antibiotics
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Magnesium influences bacterial phenotypic resistance by modulating fatty acid and phospholipid metabolism in Vibrio species, leading to reduced antibiotic uptake and increased resistance to drugs like balofloxacin.
What was studied?
This study explored the role of magnesium (Mg²⁺) in modulating bacterial resistance to antibiotics, specifically in the Vibrio species, Vibrio alginolyticus and Vibrio parahaemolyticus. The researchers examined how magnesium influenced the bacterial membrane composition, including phospholipid biosynthesis and fatty acid metabolism, to promote phenotypic resistance to antibiotics such as balofloxacin (BLFX). The study combined metabolic profiling, gene expression analysis, and antibiotic susceptibility testing to uncover the mechanisms by which magnesium confers this resistance.
Who was studied?
The study primarily focused on two strains of Vibrio: V. alginolyticus ATCC33787 and V. parahaemolyticus VP01. These bacteria, commonly found in marine environments, were exposed to varying concentrations of magnesium to observe changes in antibiotic resistance. The researchers also examined the impact of magnesium on membrane permeability and the fatty acid composition in these bacterial strains.
What were the most important findings?
The study demonstrated that high magnesium concentrations led to significant changes in fatty acid and phospholipid metabolism in Vibrio species, which in turn enhanced antibiotic resistance. Specifically, magnesium increased the synthesis of saturated fatty acids like palmitic acid while inhibiting unsaturated fatty acid production. This altered lipid composition, particularly the upregulation of phosphatidylglycerol (PG) and downregulation of phosphatidylethanolamine (PE), contributed to changes in the bacterial cell membrane. These membrane alterations led to reduced permeability and fluidity, which decreased the uptake of the antibiotic balofloxacin, thereby promoting phenotypic resistance. The findings also showed that magnesium influenced the activity of enzymes responsible for phospholipid biosynthesis, with Mg²⁺ promoting the production of saturated fatty acids and altering the phospholipid profile, ultimately affecting membrane properties and bacterial survival during antibiotic treatment.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings of this study have significant implications for understanding how environmental factors, such as magnesium levels, can influence bacterial resistance mechanisms. The ability of magnesium to alter membrane composition and fatty acid biosynthesis provides insights into non-genetic or phenotypic resistance, a growing concern in clinical settings. This study highlights the importance of magnesium in modulating the efficacy of antibiotics and suggests that manipulating magnesium levels in the environment could be a novel strategy to overcome phenotypic resistance. Additionally, the results could inform the development of new therapeutic approaches that target bacterial lipid metabolism or membrane properties to enhance the effectiveness of antibiotics in combating resistant bacterial infections, particularly in marine aquaculture and other settings with high magnesium exposure.
The magnesium transporter A is activated by cardiolipin and is highly sensitive to free magnesium in vitro
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study shows that the bacterial magnesium transporter MgtA depends on cardiolipin-rich membranes and is tightly regulated by free magnesium. MgtA acts as both a transporter and sensor, helping bacteria adapt to magnesium-limited host environments and supporting virulence-related survival.
What was studied?
This experimental study investigated how the bacterial magnesium transporter A (MgtA) functions at the biochemical level and how membrane lipids and free magnesium concentrations regulate its activity. The authors focused on MgtA from Escherichia coli as a model system to clarify how this transporter responds to magnesium limitation and how it integrates environmental signals at the membrane to control intracellular magnesium homeostasis, a process closely tied to bacterial stress adaptation and virulence.
Who was studied?
The study examined bacterial proteins and cells rather than human subjects. The primary biological system was Escherichia coli expressing native or mutant forms of MgtA, including catalytically inactive variants. The experiments used purified MgtA protein, E. coli membrane systems, and intact bacterial cells to assess transporter activity, lipid localization, and sensitivity to magnesium under controlled laboratory conditions.
What were the most important findings?
The study demonstrated that MgtA is not simply a magnesium pump but a highly regulated transporter whose activity depends on both membrane composition and free magnesium levels. MgtA required anionic phospholipids for activity, with cardiolipin acting as the strongest activator, restoring ATPase function lost during purification and localizing MgtA to cardiolipin-rich membrane domains at the cell poles. Functionally, MgtA showed extreme sensitivity to free magnesium: it became active when free magnesium dropped below physiological levels and was strongly inhibited once intracellular free magnesium exceeded roughly 1 mM. This narrow activity window supports a dual role for MgtA as both transporter and sensor of magnesium status. For microbiome signatures, this defines a functional microbial association rather than a taxonomic one: bacteria capable of cardiolipin-dependent MgtA activation gain a survival advantage in magnesium-limited host niches, enabling tighter control of intracellular magnesium during infection and stress.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This work reframes magnesium transport as a membrane- and lipid-regulated process that directly links bacterial metabolism, stress sensing, and virulence potential. Clinically and translationally, it suggests that bacterial fitness in host tissues may depend as much on membrane lipid organization as on nutrient availability itself. For microbiome-informed care and anti-virulence strategies, targeting magnesium sensing or disrupting cardiolipin–transporter interactions could weaken pathogen adaptability without directly killing bacteria, potentially reducing selective pressure for resistance.
Gallium as novel Antimicrobial Agents: Innovations in Combating Drug-Resistant Pathogens
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review highlights gallium's role as an iron mimic disrupting bacterial iron metabolism, effective against multidrug-resistant pathogens. Innovations in gallium delivery, including nanomaterials and synergistic therapies with antibiotics, address bioavailability challenges and enhance its antimicrobial potency.
What was reviewed?
The study reviewed the advancements in the application of gallium-based compounds and gallium as novel antimicrobial agents. The review aimed to address the challenges of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) by highlighting gallium's unique properties, mechanisms of action, and its potential as a non-antibiotic antibacterial strategy. The review summarized optimization strategies for gallium compounds, such as improving bioavailability and achieving sustained release, alongside synergistic effects with other antimicrobial agents.
Who was reviewed?
The review focused on multidrug-resistant (MDR) pathogens, including Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Acinetobacter baumannii, and methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA). It also discussed broader applications against Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria.
What were the most important findings?
The findings on gallium’s antimicrobial activity converge on its capacity to function as a redox-inert iron mimic that destabilizes iron-dependent metabolic pathways across diverse bacterial taxa. By substituting for ferric iron in essential enzymes and metabolic systems, gallium interrupts DNA synthesis, electron transport, oxidative stress responses, and biofilm maintenance. This mechanism provides broad-spectrum activity against multidrug-resistant organisms while minimizing the potential for resistance development. Advances in gallium delivery, including chelation strategies, nanomaterial-based carriers, doped bioglasses, and synergistic combinations with antibiotics, have markedly improved its solubility, bioavailability, and sustained antimicrobial performance, positioning gallium-based therapeutics as a promising class for addressing refractory and biofilm-associated infections.
Major Findings
Summary of Evidence
Iron Mimicry and Enzyme Inactivation
Gallium substitutes for Fe³⁺ in iron-dependent enzymes, disrupting processes including ribonucleotide reductase-mediated DNA synthesis, electron transport, and oxidative stress regulation. Its redox-inert nature prevents enzymatic turnover, halting bacterial growth.
Disruption of Biofilms
Gallium impairs biofilm formation, particularly in Pseudomonas aeruginosa, by reducing iron availability required for biofilm stability and virulence expression.
Sustained-Release Delivery Systems
Gallium-doped bioglasses, alloys, and nanostructured carriers provide extended antimicrobial activity suitable for implant-related or chronic infections.
Bioavailability Enhancement
Chelation, ligand coordination, and nanocarriers overcome gallium hydrolysis in physiological environments, improving solubility and intracellular delivery.
Synergistic Antibacterial Strategies
Gallium works synergistically with antibiotics such as vancomycin and ciprofloxacin, restoring activity against resistant strains, lowering required doses, and reducing resistance emergence.
Nanotechnology Innovation
Liposomes, Janus micromotors, and other engineered nanomaterials improve targeting, biofilm penetration, and controlled release of gallium compounds for enhanced antimicrobial efficacy.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
Gallium as a novel antimicrobial agent represents a promising alternative to traditional antibiotics, especially against MDR pathogens. The review highlights potential clinical applications in treating implant-related infections, respiratory conditions, and other systemic infections. However, limitations such as low bioavailability and the need for targeted delivery necessitate further research. Nonetheless, its role as a complement to existing antibiotics could significantly delay the development of resistance and enhance antimicrobial strategies.
Role of Iron in Bacterial Pathogenesis: Clinical Takeaways from an Editorial
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Iron (Fe)
Iron (Fe)
OverviewIron is a pivotal nutrient at the host–pathogen interface. Virtually all microbes (with rare exceptions like Borrelia) require iron for processes from DNA synthesis to respiration. [1] In human hosts, free iron is vanishingly scarce due to “nutritional immunity,” wherein iron is locked up in hemoproteins or tightly bound by transport proteins.[2] This metal tug-of-war […]
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This editorial distills how iron availability shapes bacterial virulence, host nutritional immunity, and therapeutic vulnerabilities, spanning siderophores, Feo, Fur and ExrR control, hepcidin dynamics, and heme analog antimicrobials, with clear implications for infection risk in iron overload and for iron-targeted interventions across clinical contexts.
What was reviewed?
This editorial synthesizes evidence on the role of iron in bacterial pathogenesis, emphasizing how iron scarcity and host nutritional immunity shape virulence, metabolic strategy, and antibiotic tolerance across diverse pathogens. Mechanisms covered include siderophore production and piracy, heme acquisition, ferrous iron uptake via Feo, and regulatory circuitry such as Fur and the newly identified ExrR. Therapeutic concepts such as heme analog antimetabolites are highlighted alongside host responses that restrict iron bioavailability. The focus is translational, linking molecular iron handling to clinical outcomes and potential interventions relevant to the role of iron in bacterial pathogenesis.
Who was reviewed?
The editorial curates contributions spanning extracellular and intracellular pathogens and multiple host contexts. Examples include Yersinia pestis toggling between yersiniabactin and Feo according to oxygen tension, fish pathogens Vibrio anguillarum and Photobacterium damselae, the Burkholderia cepacia complex in cystic fibrosis, Francisella tularensis with TonB-independent rhizoferrin uptake, and FupA-mediated Fe²⁺ transport. Regarding the role of iron in bacterial pathogenesis, Pseudomonas aeruginosa targeted by gallium–protoporphyrin IX, Ehrlichia ruminantium with ExrR-linked T4SS induction under iron depletion, Riemerella anatipestifer with Fur-dependent virulence, Mycobacterium tuberculosis exploiting surface GAPDH to bind host lactoferrin, and Salmonella Typhimurium where hepcidin-driven hypoferremia and iron overload modulate bacterial burden in vivo.
Most important findings
Across taxa, iron limitation is a cue that upregulates iron-acquisition systems and virulence programs. Pathogens flexibly switch among siderophores, xenosiderophore uptake, heme receptors, and Feo transport depending on oxygen, pH, and niche, which highlights how the role of iron in bacterial pathogenesis varies. Host nutritional immunity responds with hemopexin, transferrin, and hepcidin to curtail extracellular and dietary iron, yet pathogens often co-opt these same host proteins. Clinically relevant signals emerge: genetic or dietary iron overload increases susceptibility, lactoferrin can become an inadvertent iron source for M. tuberculosis via GAPDH, and heme analogs such as GaPPX can pharmacologically exploit bacterial heme receptors. Iron storage proteins (bacterioferritin and ferritin) may intersect with drug resistance networks, nominating novel targets like Rv1877.
Pathogen
Highlighted iron strategy or host interaction
Yersinia pestis
Aerobic yersiniabactin vs microaerobic Feo; Fur repression context dependent
Vibrio anguillarum
Multiple siderophores including anguibactin and vanchrobactin; xenosiderophore use
Photobacterium damselae
Citrate secreted as a minimalist siderophore linking core metabolism to iron uptake
Burkholderia spp.
Ornibactins, cepaciachelin, pyochelin, malleobactin plus heme and Feo uptake
Francisella tularensis
Rhizoferrin uptake without TonB; Fe²⁺ import via FupA
Pseudomonas aeruginosa
Heme receptors permit uptake of GaPPX, inhibiting growth under iron limitation
Ehrlichia ruminantium
Iron depletion activates ExrR, upregulating the T4SS and virulence genes
Riemerella anatipestifer
Fur regulates virulence; deletion attenuates infection in vivo
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
Surface GAPDH binds lactoferrin to pirate iron with high affinity
Salmonella Typhimurium
Infection induces hepcidin and hypoferremia; iron overload increases bacterial load
Key implications
For clinicians, iron status is integral to infectious risk and therapeutic planning. Avoid unnecessary iron enrichment during active infection or in iron-overload phenotypes given evidence that excess iron augments pathogen biomass. Consider host-directed strategies that modulate hepcidin or leverage lactoferrin while recognizing that certain pathogens directly exploit these proteins. Notably, the role of iron in bacterial pathogenesis can guide pathogen-directed opportunities, including blocking siderophore systems, inhibiting Feo transport in microaerobic niches, and targeting heme receptors with analogs like GaPPX. From a microbiome-signatures perspective, iron tension is a cross-cutting ecological driver that selects for organisms with efficient iron piracy; mapping siderophore families, heme receptor repertoires, and Feo presence can refine microbial associations tied to iron-rich or iron-restricted niches. Iron storage and regulatory proteins intersect with antimicrobial resistance, suggesting combinatorial regimens that pair conventional antibiotics with iron-pathway disruptors.
The interplay between copper metabolism and microbes: In perspective of host copper-dependent ATPases ATP7A/B
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review highlights the complex relationship between copper metabolism and microbial infections. It focuses on the role of copper transporters ATP7A/B in regulating copper homeostasis and how microbes manipulate these mechanisms to survive in the host.
What was studied?
This review focuses on the interplay between copper metabolism and microbial infections, specifically through the lens of host copper-dependent ATPases ATP7A/B. These transporters are vital for regulating copper homeostasis in the body, as they facilitate the transport of copper ions across cell membranes. The study explores the role of ATP7A and ATP7B in copper distribution within the body, as well as their interactions with various microbial pathogens like Salmonella enterica, Mycobacterium tuberculosis, and viruses like Influenza A Virus (IAV) and Zika Virus (ZIKV). The review outlines how microbes either exploit or disrupt copper metabolism to enhance their survival in the host, highlighting the dual role of copper as both an antimicrobial agent and a pathogen-facilitating factor.
Who was studied?
The review examines ATP7A and ATP7B, two copper-dependent ATPases in humans, and their interaction with copper transport mechanisms. It discusses the regulation and trafficking of these transporters in response to copper levels, as well as their involvement in various copper-related diseases, such as Wilson’s disease and Menkes disease. The research also delves into microbial pathogens like Salmonella, Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Cryptococcus, and Influenza A Virus, which influence host copper metabolism either by manipulating the expression of these transporters or by adapting their own copper handling mechanisms to survive in the host. The review underscores the microbial-host interactions that influence copper balance and their implications for immune responses and disease outcomes.
Most important findings
The study revealed several key insights into the interaction between ATP7A/B and microbes. Copper is essential for both host defense and pathogen survival, and copper's antimicrobial properties are well-established. The review highlighted that microbial pathogens like Salmonella and Mycobacterium tuberculosis manipulate host copper metabolism by upregulating copper transporters like ATP7A to sequester copper within host cells. This sequestration, however, may also increase host vulnerability to microbial survival, as pathogens use copper pumps to export copper and mitigate its toxic effects. Influenza A Virus and Zika Virus also interfere with copper regulation, which disrupts host copper homeostasis and contributes to oxidative stress, aiding viral replication. The review also pointed out the copper-resistance mechanisms of microbes, such as the use of copper pumps (e.g., CopA, GolT) and binding proteins to counteract copper toxicity within the host environment.
Key implications
This research has significant clinical implications for the treatment of microbial infections. Understanding the copper-dependent mechanisms in microbial survival provides a potential therapeutic target for copper-modulating treatments. Enhancing the host's copper sequestration during infections or using copper-based treatments could potentially weaken the pathogens' ability to thrive in the host. On the other hand, microbial resistance to copper presents a challenge, as many pathogens have evolved systems to evade copper toxicity. Clinicians could consider copper homeostasis when designing treatments for infections, especially those involving antibiotic-resistant pathogens. Furthermore, targeting ATP7A/B transporters could offer new therapeutic approaches for diseases like Wilson’s disease and other copper metabolism disorders, where dysfunction of these transporters leads to toxic copper accumulation. Additionally, copper supplementation or copper-related drugs could potentially be used to boost antimicrobial immune responses in patients with weakened defenses.
Non-classical roles of bacterial siderophores in pathogenesis.
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review shows non-classical siderophore roles in copper and zinc handling, oxidative stress control, and signaling, and maps gene–host markers that predict pathogen fitness across urine, gut, and airway.
What was reviewed?
This mini-review explains the non-classical roles of bacterial siderophores beyond iron capture and shows how these small molecules shape pathogenesis by handling other metals, buffering oxidative stress, and sending signals that tune virulence. The author outlines how siderophores bind copper, zinc, and nickel, block copper redox cycling, and even act as delivery systems for non-iron metals. The paper also covers siderophore-driven signaling that boosts virulence factor output, and class IIb microcins that hijack siderophore receptors to kill rivals. These insights link metal chemistry to real infection sites and give direct markers that clinicians can track in microbiome profiles.
Who was reviewed?
The review surveys key pathogens and niches that matter in clinical care and highlights uropathogenic Escherichia coli that use yersiniabactin to bind copper in urine and to gain zinc when calprotectin lowers zinc during cystitis or gut inflammation. It details Pseudomonas aeruginosa pyoverdine and pyochelin, which change with copper exposure and reactive oxygen stress and drive signaling that raises toxins. It includes Yersinia pestis where yersiniabactin can back up zinc uptake and support flea and mammalian infection, and touches probiotic E. coli Nissle that uses yersiniabactin to colonize the inflamed, zinc-poor gut. Host factors appear throughout, such as neutrophil and macrophage metal pressure, calprotectin that withholds zinc, and ATP7A that routes copper into phagosomes.
Most important findings
The core message is that siderophores act as broad metallophores and signals that shift survival under host metal stress. Yersiniabactin binds Cu(II) and prevents its reduction to more toxic Cu(I), which protects Enterobacterales in copper-rich urine; the same system can import Cu(II) and Ni(II) for enzyme use, and can favor zinc uptake when calprotectin lowers zinc in inflamed tissue. Catecholate siderophores such as enterobactin can worsen copper injury by driving Cu(II) to Cu(I), but E. coli CueO oxidase can blunt this effect, showing a clear circuit that predicts copper tolerance when cueO is present. In P. aeruginosa, copper raises pyoverdine genes, pyoverdine and pyochelin mediate stepwise signaling that boosts virulence factors, and oxidative stress triggers “privatization” of pyoverdine to resist damage. Yersiniabactin also behaves as an autoinducer: the Cu(II)–yersiniabactin complex activates the YbtA regulator and increases yersiniabactin and receptor expression, which links copper levels to siderophore supply and uptake.
Key implications
Clinicians can use siderophore modules as clear signatures of metal-adapted pathogens. Finding yersiniabactin in urinary isolates predicts copper-tolerant Enterobacterales and helps explain recurrent cystitis under copper stress. In an inflamed bowel, yersiniabactin with high calprotectin predicts zinc-savvy Enterobacterales that outcompete commensals. Detecting pyoverdine and pyochelin circuits in airway samples points to signaling-driven virulence and stress control in Pseudomonas. These signals also warn that copper-based devices or supplements may select for yersiniabactin-positive strains, while iron chelators can provoke inflammation or shift metal balance. Therapeutic ideas include blocking siderophore biosynthesis or uptake, using decoys that soak up metallophores, and pairing standard therapy with metal-aware steps that avoid feeding the very traits that promote persistence. Reporting siderophore loci with host markers like calprotectin or ATP7A in microbiome results can improve risk calls and guide targeted care.
Histatins: Salivary peptides with copper(II)- and zinc(II)-binding motifs
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study examines the copper-binding properties of Hist-5, a salivary peptide, and its role in combating Candida albicans infections. The findings highlight the critical role of copper ions in enhancing the peptide’s antimicrobial activity through specific metal-binding motifs.
What was studied?
This study explored the interaction of copper ions with histatin peptides, focusing on histatin-5 (Hist-5) and its ability to bind copper. The researchers specifically examined the copper-binding sites of Hist-5 and how these interactions contribute to its antimicrobial properties, particularly against Candida albicans. They investigated the role of the bis-histidine (bis-His) motif, which is believed to be critical for Cu(I) binding, as well as the potential for copper to modulate the peptide's antifungal activity.
Who was studied?
The study was centered on Hist-5, a histidine-rich antimicrobial peptide found in human saliva. Hist-5 is known for its ability to combat fungal pathogens like Candida albicans, an opportunistic yeast that affects mucosal membranes. The research focused on the structural and functional properties of this peptide, particularly how it binds copper ions and how this influences its effectiveness against microbial infections.
Most important findings
The research found that Hist-5 binds copper through specific motifs, namely the amino-terminal copper/nickel-binding (ATCUN) motif and the bis-His motif. These motifs allow Hist-5 to exhibit copper-dependent antimicrobial activity. The ATCUN motif binds Cu(II) and Ni(II), while the bis-His site is specifically responsible for binding Cu(I), which plays a key role in the peptide’s antifungal activity. The study also revealed that the affinity of Hist-5 for Cu(I) is significantly enhanced by the presence of histidine residues in adjacent positions. Furthermore, the copper-bound Hist-5 exhibited a higher affinity for the pathogen Candida albicans, facilitating its internalization into fungal cells, where it interacts with mitochondria and generates reactive oxygen species (ROS), leading to fungal cell death. The research emphasized that the copper-binding properties of Hist-5 are crucial for its biological activity, as these interactions stabilize its structure and modulate its ability to kill fungal cells.
Key implications
These findings underscore the importance of metal ions, specifically copper, in the antimicrobial activity of salivary peptides like Hist-5. Understanding the metal-binding mechanisms of Hist-5 provides valuable insights into the development of novel therapeutic strategies based on metal-mediated peptide interactions. This study suggests that Hist-5 or similar peptides could be further optimized to enhance their antimicrobial effectiveness against fungal infections, especially those caused by Candida albicans. Additionally, the copper-binding motifs identified could be targeted in drug design to create peptides that mimic Hist-5’s functionality, offering a potential alternative to traditional antifungal treatments.
Lipid metabolism in ferroptosis: mechanistic insights and therapeutic potential
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review explains how lipid metabolism drives ferroptosis by shaping oxidation-prone membrane phospholipids and controlling iron-dependent lipid peroxidation. It highlights ACSL4 and LPCAT3 remodeling, GPX4 and system xc− defenses, and backup antioxidant pathways such as FSP1–CoQ10 and GCH1–BH4, with implications for cancer and tissue injury.
What was reviewed?
This review focused on how lipid metabolism controls ferroptosis and how clinicians and translational teams can exploit that control for therapy. The authors framed ferroptosis as an iron-dependent, lipid peroxidation–driven death program where outcome hinges on the balance between lipid peroxide formation and layered antioxidant surveillance. They emphasized that phospholipids carrying polyunsaturated fatty acids supply the most oxidation-prone substrates, and they organized the field around three mechanistic pillars: iron’s catalytic role, lipid peroxidation chemistry, and the antioxidant systems that restrain lipid radicals. They also summarized how lipid synthesis, uptake, beta-oxidation, phospholipid remodeling, and lipid droplet storage change ferroptosis sensitivity, then linked these pathways to disease settings and drug strategies.
Who was reviewed?
Because this is a review, it did not examine a single patient group. It synthesized evidence from cell and tissue studies, animal disease models, and translational observations across cancer, ischemia–reperfusion injury, neurodegeneration, fibrosis, and immune disorders. The authors highlighted immune-relevant work showing that lipid uptake pathways can push tumor-infiltrating CD8 T cells toward ferroptosis, weakening antitumor function, and they also discussed clinical contexts where iron overload and oxidative lipid damage are measurable drivers of pathology and may be therapeutically modifiable.
What were the most important findings?
The review clarified that lipid metabolism is not a side feature of ferroptosis; it is the engine that determines whether lethal peroxidation can propagate in membranes. Polyunsaturated phospholipids act as the main fuel, and enzymes that load these fatty acids into membrane phospholipids raise vulnerability. In particular, ACSL4 activates arachidonic and adrenic acids for incorporation into phospholipids, while LPCAT3 helps reacylate lysophospholipids to form PUFA-rich membrane species that readily undergo oxidation, especially within phosphatidylethanolamine pools. In parallel, iron drives initiation and propagation of lipid radicals through Fenton chemistry and iron–lipid peroxide interactions, while multiple defense systems terminate chain reactions: the system xc− to glutathione to GPX4 axis detoxifies phospholipid hydroperoxides, and GPX4-independent systems such as FSP1–CoQ10 and GCH1–BH4 provide alternative radical-trapping protection. The review also stressed that lipid droplet storage can buffer ferroptosis by sequestering PUFAs away from membranes, yet release of stored fatty acids can later re-feed phospholipid remodeling and restore susceptibility.
What are the greatest implications of this study/ review?
Clinically, this review supports a practical, context-based approach: induce ferroptosis to eliminate drug-resistant cancers, but inhibit ferroptosis to reduce tissue loss in ischemia–reperfusion injury and neurodegeneration where iron-driven lipid peroxidation amplifies damage. It also offers biomarker logic grounded in mechanism—changes in GPX4, SLC7A11, ACSL4, oxidized phospholipids, and lipid peroxidation byproducts can reflect ferroptotic pressure—and it highlights emerging detection strategies such as lipidomics and in vivo imaging approaches that may help translate ferroptosis status into actionable signals. Finally, it underscores an immune and microbiome-adjacent point that matters for clinicians: lipid availability and uptake programs can alter ferroptosis sensitivity in immune cells and tumors, so dietary lipid context, tumor lipid remodeling, and microenvironmental lipid sources can all shift whether ferroptosis-based strategies help or harm.
UPEC Transition Metal Control in Virulence: Siderophores, Metallophores, and Clinical Implications
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review integrates host nutritional immunity with UPEC transition metal control, detailing siderophore and metallophore functions, copper “nutritional passivation,” and interspecies antagonism, and outlines translational targets for diagnostics and therapy in urinary tract infection.
What was reviewed?
This review synthesizes current evidence on uropathogenic Escherichia coli (UPEC) transition metal control in urinary tract infection, integrating host nutritional immunity, bacterial acquisition of iron, copper, zinc, manganese, and nickel, and the noncanonical functions of siderophores and metallophores in virulence. The diagram on page 5 (Figure 1) maps three import strategies for free ions, host complexes, and siderophore complexes, anchoring a mechanistic framework for pathogenesis. The structural plate on page 7 (Figure 2) compares enterobactin, salmochelin, aerobactin, and yersiniabactin, while the schematic on page 10 (Figure 3) introduces “nutritional passivation,” where yersiniabactin both buffers copper toxicity and preserves copper nutrition.
Who was reviewed?
The authors collate data from human UTI cohorts, transcriptional profiling of voided clinical isolates, murine cystitis and pyelonephritis models, and comparative genomics of uropathogenic Escherichia coli (UPEC). UPEC's mastery of transition metal control is vital for its adaptability. Evidence includes direct mass spectrometric detection of siderophores in patient urine, expression of metal transport and siderophore genes during human infection, and fitness effects of targeted mutants in vivo. The scope extends to host proteins relevant to nutritional immunity, including lactoferrin, siderocalin, and calprotectin, which shape metal availability in urinary microenvironments.
Most important findings
Metal sequestration by the host is multifaceted. Lactoferrin in neutrophil-rich urine binds iron tightly, calprotectin chelates zinc, manganese, and even ferrous iron and nickel in calcium-rich milieus, and siderocalin limits ferric iron by binding ferric–catechol complexes. Notably, siderocalin’s behavior in urine depends on pH and urinary catechols, which can render iron accessible again to bacterial siderophores. These dynamics position the urinary metabolome as a determinant of UPEC fitness.
UPEC deploys overlapping uptake systems for free Fe(II), Mn(II), Zn(II), and Ni(II) and imports host complexes such as heme and ferric citrate. Virulence links include Sit and MntH for Mn(II)/Fe(II), ZnuABC for zinc, Nik for nickel, ChuA and Hma for heme, and Fec for ferric citrate. These transporters are transcriptionally induced during infection and contribute to bladder or kidney colonization, showcasing the importance of UPEC's control over transition metals.
Four siderophore systems form a central virulence axis with condition-specific advantages. Enterobactin exhibits ultrahigh Fe(III) affinity and can liberate iron from siderocalin–catechol complexes in urine. Salmochelin, an enterobactin derivative with C-glucosylation, escapes siderocalin binding and supports biofilm and invasion phenotypes via IroN. Aerobactin, less hydrophobic and resistant to siderocalin, performs well in serum-like conditions and is epidemiologically linked to invasive UTI and antibiotic-resistant lineages. Yersiniabactin is both a siderophore and a metallophore that forms stable complexes with copper, cobalt, and nickel, is imported by FyuA, and can be fully recycled after inner membrane transport by YbtPQ. Direct detection of yersiniabactin and its pathway product escherichelin in patient urine underscores in vivo relevance.
Beyond iron capture, yersiniabactin passivates copper toxicity and, as Cu(II)-Ybt, can functionally supply copper to cuproenzymes, balancing toxicity and nutrition. This dual role, illustrated on page 10, improves survival in phagolysosomes and in copper-rich urine, aligning with upregulation of copper efflux systems during human infection. The pathway also produces escherichelin, which inhibits Pseudomonas pyochelin uptake, suggesting interspecies antagonism that may influence community structure in complicated UTIs. These insights identify Major Microbial Associations for a microbiome signatures database that include siderophore systems and their cognate receptors as consistent, virulence-linked features of UPEC across hosts and niches.
Key implications
Therapeutic opportunities include blocking yersiniabactin import, constraining siderophore function, or modulating urinary copper handling to tip the balance from nutritional passivation toward toxicity. Because siderocalin efficacy is contingent on urinary chemistry, strategies that alter urine pH or catechol pools may shift iron away from UPEC. Probiotic bladder colonization with strains that secrete escherichelin-like inhibitors could suppress pyochelin-dependent competitors. UPEC's tight transition metal control underscores the need for clinical translation, where virulence factor “communities” that co-segregate with specific siderophore systems support multiplexed targeting rather than single-factor inhibition.
An Essential Factor for High Mg2+ Tolerance of Staphylococcus aureus
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study identifies MpfA (SA0657) as a key magnesium protection factor in Staphylococcus aureus. Disabling MpfA makes the bacterium highly sensitive to Mg2+ and pinpoints a conserved CBS-domain residue needed for function, supporting a role in Mg2+ export or detoxification.
What was studied?
This study investigated why Staphylococcus aureus tolerates unusually high external magnesium and which bacterial factor protects it from magnesium toxicity. The authors focused on the gene SA0657, discovered during a suppressor screen that restored growth of a slow-growing ΔcshB mutant on serum-like media. They then tested whether SA0657 helps the cell survive high Mg2+ by controlling intracellular magnesium balance, and they mapped which protein features are essential for this protective role.
Who was studied?
The study examined bacterial strains, not patients. The authors used Staphylococcus aureus laboratory strains with targeted deletions and reconstructed point mutations in SA0657, including multiple independent loss-of-function suppressor mutants. They compared wild-type bacteria to ΔSA0657 strains and to strains carrying a key SA0657 point mutation that altered a conserved residue in a predicted Mg2+-sensing domain. They also performed complementation with plasmids expressing the wild-type or mutant SA0657 allele to confirm causality.
What were the most important findings?
The authors identified SA0657 as a required factor for high Mg2+ tolerance and renamed it MpfA (Magnesium Protection Factor A). Loss of MpfA made S. aureus dramatically sensitive to magnesium: in defined RPMI medium, adding only about 10 mM Mg2+ was enough to inhibit growth, while wild-type bacteria normally tolerate far higher Mg2+ levels. The study showed that many independent suppressor mutations truncated SA0657, and two distinct suppressors hit the same conserved glycine (Gly326) inside a CBS-domain pair, establishing this residue as critical for function. MpfA mutants also showed altered responses to other divalent cations (notably cobalt and manganese), consistent with a central role in divalent-ion handling rather than a nonspecific salt effect.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This work strengthens the idea that pathogens actively manage magnesium stress, not only by importing Mg2+ when it is scarce but also by preventing toxic accumulation when Mg2+ is abundant. For clinicians, the practical message is that magnesium availability can shape pathogen physiology and stress tolerance, which may influence survival in distinct host niches and during inflammation. Mechanistically, the study proposes MpfA as an Mg2+ exporter or an essential component of export, filling an important gap because bacterial Mg2+ export remains poorly defined. It also links MpfA-like proteins to the broader CorB/CNNM family, reinforcing that conserved Mg2+-sensing modules can control transport behaviors across species.
Effects of Copper Addition on Copper Resistance, Antibiotic Resistance Genes, and intl1 during Swine Manure Composting
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study explores the effects of copper exposure on copper and antibiotic resistance genes during swine manure composting, revealing changes in microbial community composition and gene persistence, particularly at higher copper concentrations, with implications for environmental management and resistance gene spread.
What was studied?
The study examined the effects of copper addition during the composting of swine manure, specifically focusing on its impact on copper resistance genes (CRGs), antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs), and the integrase gene (intI1) that plays a role in horizontal gene transfer. Researchers evaluated how varying copper concentrations influenced the persistence and abundance of these genes in relation to the microbial community composition throughout the composting process. The research aimed to understand the interactions between copper exposure, resistance gene dynamics, and bacterial community shifts during composting, with an emphasis on environmental and microbiological factors.
Who was studied?
The study utilized swine manure as the primary substrate for composting, collected from a medium-sized farm in Yangling, China. The swine feed had been supplemented with trace elements like copper and antibiotics, ensuring that the manure had a baseline concentration of copper and resistance genes. The composting process was controlled in a laboratory setting, with specific concentrations of copper (200 mg/kg and 2000 mg/kg) added to simulate varying levels of environmental copper contamination. Through this setup, the study sought to understand the response of the manure's microbial community, particularly the abundance and co-occurrence of copper and antibiotic resistance genes, as well as the intI1 gene.
Most important findings
The results demonstrated significant changes in the abundance of CRGs, ARGs, and intI1 throughout the composting process. The abundance of copper resistance genes such as pcoA and tcrB decreased, while genes like copA and cusA increased, suggesting that copper exposure exerted selective pressure on certain bacterial populations, enhancing their resistance capabilities. The study also observed that higher copper concentrations (Cu2000) had a more persistent effect on the microbial community composition, maintaining higher levels of certain CRGs even at later stages of composting. The presence of antibiotics, particularly macrolides, co-selected for the persistence of these resistance genes, as evidenced by the enhanced abundance of erm(A) and erm(B) genes, which are associated with macrolide resistance. Network analysis revealed that these genes, particularly the copper and antibiotic resistance genes, were co-located on the same bacterial taxa, such as Steroidobacter and Corynebacterium, suggesting these bacteria as potential hosts for the genes.
Key implications
The study highlights the interconnectedness between copper resistance, antibiotic resistance, and gene transfer during the composting process. The findings underscore the role of composting as a potential pathway for the persistence and spread of these resistance genes in the environment, especially in agricultural settings. The research suggests that copper, especially at higher concentrations, can alter the microbial community structure and potentially facilitate the horizontal transfer of resistance genes, which could have implications for public health and the management of antibiotic resistance in the environment. Understanding these dynamics is critical for developing strategies to mitigate the spread of resistance genes in composted manure, which is commonly applied to soil.
Distribution of Arsenic Resistance Genes in Prokaryotes
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review outlines the diversity, evolution, and distribution of arsenic resistance genes in prokaryotes, emphasizing their central role in the environmental microbiome, biogeochemical cycling, and potential clinical implications through gene transfer and resistance in pathogens.
What was reviewed?
This comprehensive review examined the distribution, diversity, and genetic organization of arsenic resistance genes in prokaryotes, with a particular focus on the microbiome’s role in arsenic detoxification and biogeochemical cycling. The authors detailed the evolutionary history, molecular mechanisms, and dissemination of arsenic resistance determinants across bacteria and archaea. The review also explored recent advances in understanding microbial resistance to both inorganic and organic arsenic compounds, including novel efflux systems and enzymatic pathways. Key topics included the structure and redundancy of arsenic resistance genes, horizontal gene transfer, adaptive responses in contaminated environments, and the significance of these systems in the context of environmental and public health.
Who was reviewed?
The review encompassed a wide range of prokaryotic organisms, including diverse bacterial and archaeal lineages from environmental, clinical, and industrial settings. It synthesized evidence from studies on model organisms such as Escherichia coli, Staphylococcus aureus, Bacillus subtilis, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and extremophiles like Halobacterium sp. and Ferroplasma acidarmanus. The analysis drew on data from both cultured isolates and metagenomic studies, covering prokaryotes found in arsenic-contaminated soils, groundwater, mine tailings, animal microbiomes (e.g., gut bacteria), and pristine environments presumed to be arsenic-free. The microbial populations reviewed ranged from those with minimal genetic resistance determinants to those harboring complex, redundant, and horizontally transferred arsenic resistance gene clusters.
Most important findings
The review identified that nearly all prokaryotes possess some form of arsenic resistance genes, reflecting ancient and ongoing selective pressures. The canonical ars operon, typically consisting of arsR (regulator), arsB (arsenite efflux pump), and arsC (arsenate reductase), is ubiquitous and often found on chromosomes, plasmids, transposons, and genomic islands, facilitating horizontal gene transfer and rapid adaptation. Variations and redundancies in ars operon structure are common, with some microbes harboring multiple operons that are differentially expressed depending on environmental conditions, such as arsenic concentration and temperature. The review also highlighted the evolution of additional resistance genes, including acr3 (an alternative arsenite efflux transporter), aqpS (aquaglyceroporin-based transport), mfs (major facilitator superfamily), and genes conferring resistance to organic arsenicals—arsM (arsenic methyltransferase), arsH (organoarsenical oxidase), arsP (organoarsenical efflux permease), and arsI (C-As bond lyase). These broaden the resistance spectrum and demonstrate convergent evolutionary solutions to arsenic toxicity.
The presence of these genes in pathogenic bacteria (e.g., Klebsiella pneumoniae, Yersinia spp., Campylobacter jejuni) and in environmental bacteria from highly contaminated sites underscores their role in both environmental adaptation and potential clinical relevance. Notably, the review recognized that efflux mechanisms, primarily via ArsB, Acr3, ArsP, and associated ATPases, are central to prokaryotic arsenic resistance. Furthermore, the review discussed the impact of microbial methylation and demethylation of arsenic on the global geocycle, influencing arsenic toxicity, mobility, and exposure risks to humans and animals. Metagenomic surveys revealed a remarkable diversity of arsenic resistance genes, with certain gene clusters (e.g., arsP for organoarsenicals) being particularly widespread.
Key implications
The widespread and diverse nature of arsenic resistance genes in prokaryotes has significant implications for environmental microbiology, clinical practice, and public health. Microbial arsenic resistance is a key driver of the global arsenic geocycle, influencing arsenic mobility, bioavailability, and toxicity in various ecosystems, including those affecting human water and food supplies. The detection of arsenic resistance determinants in both environmental and pathogenic bacteria raises concerns about the potential for horizontal gene transfer, which could enhance the survival and virulence of clinically relevant microbes in arsenic-rich environments. For microbiome research and clinical translation, understanding the prevalence and function of these resistance genes is essential for developing microbial signatures for risk assessment, bioremediation strategies, and monitoring the spread of resistance traits. The review also points to the evolutionary arms race between arsenic as an environmental toxin and microbial adaptation, emphasizing the need for continued surveillance of resistance gene dissemination and functional diversity in both environmental and host-associated microbiomes.
Effect of Dietary Copper on Intestinal Microbiota and Antimicrobial Resistance Profiles of Escherichia coli in Weaned Piglets
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
•
Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Dietary copper effect on intestinal microbiota in weaned piglets increased E. coli abundance and raised ciprofloxacin and chloramphenicol resistance, while shifting key metabolic pathways without growth benefit.
What was studied?
This original study tested the dietary copper effect on intestinal microbiota in weaned piglets and linked those shifts to Escherichia coli drug resistance. The authors fed piglets a basal diet with or without added copper sulfate at 20, 100, or 200 mg Cu/kg feed and profiled the ileal and cecal microbiota by 16S rDNA sequencing. They also isolated E. coli across time to measure resistance to common antibiotics. The work asked whether a pharmacological copper dose changes gut community makeup and function, increases E. coli abundance, and promotes antimicrobial resistance. The study also checked growth outcomes to see if copper improved gain or feed use while it altered the gut ecosystem.
Who was studied?
The study enrolled healthy weaned piglets (21 ± 1 days old) with similar starting weights. Investigators randomly assigned animals to control or copper-supplemented diets and sampled anal swabs at days 0, 21, and 42 for E. coli isolation. They collected ileal and cecal contents from control and 200 mg Cu/kg groups at weeks 3 and 6 for microbiota and functional predictions. E. coli isolates underwent standard identification and Kirby–Bauer disk diffusion testing against agents that included ampicillin, ceftriaxone, ciprofloxacin, chloramphenicol, and trimethoprim–sulfamethoxazole. The design let the authors compare community structure, inferred metabolic pathways, E. coli abundance, and resistance across dose and time.
Most important findings
Copper did not change alpha diversity but it changed community composition in both ileum and cecum. In the ileum after six weeks, copper shifted Firmicutes and Clostridiaceae and marked the genus Sarcina; in the cecum, copper altered Lactobacillus, Sporolactobacillus, and increased E. coli abundance. Predicted functions showed clear pathway effects. In the ileum, copper lowered pathways tied to energy metabolism, several amino acid routes, butanoate metabolism, nitrogen metabolism, and vitamin and cofactor metabolism. In the cecum, copper raised pathways for branched-chain amino acid biosynthesis and some lipid biosynthesis features and lowered peptidase-related functions.
These shifts point to reduced short-chain fatty acid support in the ileum and a tilt toward protein and lipid pathways in the cecum. Copper exposure increased E. coli richness in the hindgut and raised resistance. In the ileum, resistance to ciprofloxacin rose with copper, while in the cecum, resistance to chloramphenicol rose. Across all sites, most isolates were multidrug resistant, and a larger share of highly resistant strains (≥ six classes) came from copper-fed pigs. By day 42, resistance to ciprofloxacin and chloramphenicol showed a dose-dependent rise, with the 200 mg Cu/kg group highest. Growth metrics did not improve, so the microbiota and resistance costs occurred without clear performance gains. Together, these findings identify a signature of copper-driven shifts that includes higher E. coli abundance and higher rates of fluoroquinolone and phenicol resistance.
Key implications
Clinicians should read high copper intake as a pressure that can favor gut pathobionts and select for resistance. In a microbiome signatures database, this pattern would pair copper exposure with increased E. coli abundance and higher ciprofloxacin and chloramphenicol resistance. The ileal loss of butanoate and energy pathways hints at weakened barrier support, while cecal shifts toward amino acid and lipid routes signal altered nutrient processing. These results support careful copper use in animal production and suggest that copper exposure history in patients with animal contact could inform risk for resistant Enterobacterales. Although this is a swine model, the direction of effect is clear: sustained copper exposure can push gut communities toward E. coli growth and multidrug resistance, with limited host benefit.
The Impact of Mercury Selection and Conjugative Genetic Elements on Community Structure and Resistance Gene Transfer
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Mercury pollution reshaped a soil microbiome by lowering alpha diversity and increasing between-community divergence. A focal Pseudomonas strain survived mercury stress by acquiring mercury resistance, and conjugative elements spread merA widely across taxa, showing how toxicants can drive community change and resistance gene flow.
What was studied?
This study tested how mercury pollution and mobile genetic elements shape microbial community structure and the spread of mercury resistance genes. The authors embedded a focal bacterium, Pseudomonas fluorescens SBW25, into a species-rich soil community and tracked outcomes with and without mercury selection and with and without two conjugative mercury-resistance plasmids (pQBR57 or pQBR103). They followed population dynamics over repeated weekly transfers, measured community diversity with 16S sequencing, and linked resistance genes to specific community members using epicPCR.
Who was studied?
The researchers studied microbes in soil microcosms rather than human or animal participants. They used P. fluorescens SBW25 as a marked focal strain and paired it with a natural potting-soil community extracted from the same soil used in the experiment. They compared conditions with no mercury versus two mercury concentrations and compared SBW25 that started plasmid-free versus SBW25 that started carrying pQBR57 or pQBR103. This design let them separate the effects of chemical selection from the effects of introducing a resistance-bearing genetic vehicle.
What were the most important findings?
Mercury selection prevented SBW25 from being competitively excluded by the resident community, and SBW25 persisted even when it started without a resistance plasmid because it could acquire mercury resistance by horizontal gene transfer. In plasmid-free SBW25 populations exposed to mercury, the strain gained a distinct mercury-resistance element (ICE6775) that integrated into the chromosome, showing that community-to-focal transfer can rescue a vulnerable lineage under stress. Mercury pollution reduced within-sample (alpha) diversity and increased between-replicate (beta) divergence, meaning mercury filtered communities toward fewer tolerant lineages but produced more variable end states across replicates. Plasmid addition did not measurably restore community diversity, consistent with substantial pre-existing mercury resistance already present in the community. The introduced merA allele still spread broadly across taxa over five weeks, with recipients concentrated in Gammaproteobacteria (especially Pseudomonadales and Xanthomonadales) but also appearing in more distant groups such as Burkholderiales, Rhizobiales, and Bacillales, supporting a community-wide route for adaptive gene flow.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
For clinicians interpreting microbiome shifts under toxicant exposure, this work shows that mercury can restructure microbial communities while simultaneously accelerating the circulation of resistance traits through horizontal gene transfer. The key microbiome signature is not a single pathogen, but a pattern: reduced alpha diversity, increased beta dispersion, and enrichment of mercury-tolerant lineages alongside wider dissemination of the merA detox trait into multiple taxa. This combination supports “functional resilience” of resistance at the community level even when some sensitive organisms decline. Clinically, the study reinforces that environmental metal exposure can maintain and distribute resistance determinants independent of antibiotic use, which matters for predicting resistome persistence, spillover into clinically relevant bacteria, and the uneven responses seen across individuals or sites with similar exposure levels.
Introducing the ArsR-Regulated Arsenic Stimulon
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study explored the complex regulatory roles of ArsR proteins in Agrobacterium tumefaciens 5A, showing they influence a broad range of cellular functions, including arsenic resistance, metabolism, and iron homeostasis.
What was studied?
This study focused on the regulation of arsenic resistance in Agrobacterium tumefaciens 5A, through the ArsR proteins, which act as transcriptional regulators within the ars operon. The research used RNA sequencing (RNA-Seq) to analyze how various ArsR proteins influence gene expression in response to arsenic exposure. The main goal was to expand on the known mechanisms of arsenic resistance and explore the global impact of these proteins on bacterial metabolism and survival under arsenic stress. Previous studies mainly focused on the repression functions of ArsR, but this study highlights the broader roles of ArsR, which also includes gene activation.
Who was studied?
The study focused on Agrobacterium tumefaciens 5A, a model bacterium known for its ability to resist arsenic and other toxicants. This bacterium was chosen because of its well-documented ars operon, which contains genes involved in arsenic resistance, including ArsR. Four different arsR mutants (each lacking one of the four ArsR proteins) were used to assess the regulatory roles of these proteins. Wild-type A. tumefaciens 5A was compared to these mutants to evaluate the impact of individual ArsR proteins on gene expression. The bacteria were grown under different arsenic treatment conditions to examine the global effects of arsenic exposure on cellular functions such as metabolism, transport, and stress responses.
Most important findings
The study revealed that ArsR proteins have a much broader regulatory role than previously thought. ArsR was shown to not only repress genes involved in arsenic resistance but also activate a variety of other genes related to key cellular functions. This includes processes like phosphate acquisition, sugar transport, chemotaxis, copper tolerance, and iron homeostasis. The study also found that ArsR proteins operate hierarchically, with ArsR1 repressing ArsR4, ArsR4 activating ArsR2, and ArsR2 repressing ArsR3. Additionally, it was discovered that the expression of aioB, a gene associated with arsenic oxidation, was under partial positive regulation by ArsR2 and ArsR4, which was an unexpected finding. These findings demonstrate that ArsR proteins regulate a wide array of cellular functions beyond just arsenic resistance.
Key implications
For clinicians, this study underscores the complexity of microbial responses to environmental toxins like arsenic and emphasizes the need to consider the broader metabolic shifts that occur in the presence of such toxins. The findings suggest that arsenic exposure in the human gut microbiome could have far-reaching effects on microbial metabolism, potentially influencing disease processes and the efficacy of treatments. The understanding of ArsR-regulated pathways could help identify new therapeutic targets or strategies for managing arsenic toxicity.
Expanded Diversity and Phylogeny of mer Genes Broadens Mercury Resistance Paradigms and Reveals an Origin for MerA Among Thermophilic Archaea
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study mapped mercury detox genes across 84,032 microbial genomes and showed that MerA and MerB are far more widespread than known. Over half of MerB-positive genomes lacked MerA, suggesting alternative detox pathways that may matter for environmental and host-associated mercury handling.
What was studied?
This original research study used large-scale bioinformatics to map where mercury detoxification genes occur across prokaryotes and to infer how those genes evolved. The authors screened 84,032 bacterial and archaeal genomes, including isolate genomes, metagenome-assembled genomes, and single-cell genomes, for mercuric reductase (MerA), which reduces Hg(II) to volatile Hg(0), and organomercury lyase (MerB), which breaks the carbon–mercury bond in organomercury compounds such as methylmercury and generates Hg(II) that usually requires MerA for completion of detoxification.
Who was studied?
The “subjects” were publicly available microbial genomes spanning broad environmental and host-associated contexts rather than human participants. The dataset included thousands of bacterial and archaeal lineages across many phyla, plus plasmid genomes, which allowed the authors to identify both core taxonomic patterns and evidence of horizontal gene transfer. Notably, the paper includes examples of mer genes in organisms relevant to host-associated microbiomes, such as a Bacillus cereus strain isolated from a mouse gut sample, alongside many taxa common in soils, sediments, hot springs, aquifers, and other mercury-impacted habitats.
What were the most important findings?
MerA appeared in 7.8% of analyzed genomes and MerB in 2.1%, greatly expanding the known taxonomic range of mercury resistance compared with earlier inventories and identifying MerA and MerB in multiple archaeal and bacterial phyla not previously recognized to encode them. A key microbiome-relevant signal was the major microbial association between mer genes and diverse bacterial genera that include gut- and pathogen-adjacent groups; for example, many MerB-only genomes clustered within genera such as Clostridioides, Clostridium, Staphylococcus, Corynebacterium, Streptomyces, Enterobacter, and Mycobacterium/Mycobacteroides, implying that organomercury cleavage capacity may be more common than expected in clinically relevant lineages. Strikingly, just over half of MerB-containing genomes lacked MerA, which challenges the classic “MerB feeds MerA” detox model and supports alternative intracellular strategies for handling the Hg(II) produced by MerB, including sulfur-based buffering or sequestration, redox-homeostasis–linked Hg(II) reduction, and iron-coupled processes. Phylogeny placed the origin of MerA in thermophilic Archaea (Thermoprotei) consistent with geothermal mercury exposure, while MerB appeared to be recruited later, more consistent with mesophilic settings where methylmercury production is more likely.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
Clinically, this work reframes mercury-handling capacity as a distributed microbial trait that can plausibly exist in host-associated communities, not only in obvious environmental specialists, which matters when considering dietary methylmercury exposure and the potential for microbial demethylation or mercury transformations in the gut. Mechanistically, the frequent MerB-without-MerA pattern signals that mercury risk assessments and microbiome signature databases should not treat mer operons as a single fixed unit; instead, they should track MerA and MerB separately and consider co-occurring non-mer redox and sulfur-handling pathways that could complete detoxification or shift mercury speciation. Environmentally, the expanded diversity and lateral transfer of mer genes suggest strong selection pressure and a high likelihood of gene movement across ecosystems, which can influence how methylmercury is produced, degraded, and ultimately enters food webs.
Effects of cadmium exposure on intestinal microflora of Cipangopaludina cathayensis
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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The study examines how cadmium exposure alters the microbiota in rats, causing microbial translocation and metabolic shifts. The findings highlight potential biomarkers for assessing cadmium toxicity.
What was studied?
The study explored the impact of environmental cadmium (Cd) exposure on the gut and blood microbiomes of Sprague-Dawley rats, focusing on the translocation of specific microbiota from the gut to the blood and the subsequent effects on metabolic processes. The study used omics-based analyses, including 16S rRNA sequencing and serum metabolomics, to assess changes in microbial diversity, metabolic shifts, and inflammatory responses following Cd exposure. The primary aim was to determine how cadmium exposure disrupts the microbiota and the subsequent effects on overall health and metabolism.
Who was studied?
The research was conducted using Sprague-Dawley rats, a commonly used model in toxicological studies. These rats were exposed to cadmium chloride, a form of cadmium, to simulate environmental exposure to this toxic metal. The study focused on understanding how cadmium affects the balance of the microbiome, both in the gut and the blood, and how these changes contribute to liver injury and metabolic disruptions. The rats were selected for their relevance to studying the effects of environmental pollutants on animal health.
Most important findings
The study revealed significant changes in both the intestinal and blood microbiomes following cadmium exposure. Notably, Cd exposure led to an increase in gut microbiota such as Clostridia_UCG_014 and NK4A214_group, as well as blood microbiota such as Corynebacterium and Muribaculaceae. Cadmium exposure facilitated the translocation of these microbial species from the gut into the bloodstream. Moreover, the research identified a significant alteration in serum metabolites. Specifically, there was an up-regulation of indoxyl sulfate, phenyl sulfate, and p-cresol sulfate, alongside a down-regulation of δ-tocopherol and L-glutamine. These findings suggest that cadmium exposure impacts both the microbial communities and the metabolic pathways within the body, pointing to potential biomarkers for assessing Cd toxicity.
Key implications
The findings of this study provide critical insights into how environmental pollutants like cadmium alter microbial communities and how these changes can influence metabolic processes and organ function. The identification of novel biomarkers, such as specific serum metabolites and microbial shifts, expands our understanding of the role the microbiome plays in cadmium-induced toxicity. This research opens the door for future studies on how to mitigate the harmful effects of environmental contaminants on human health, particularly through microbial modulation. Additionally, understanding the link between gut microbial alterations and systemic health issues could inform future therapeutic strategies for conditions linked to environmental exposure.
The interplay between antimicrobial resistance, heavy metal pollution, and the role of microplastics
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review explains how heavy metals and microplastics work together to drive antimicrobial resistance by enriching biofilms, speeding gene transfer, and co-selecting metal and antibiotic resistance in soil and water microbiomes, creating environmental reservoirs that can feed resistant pathogens into humans.
What was reviewed?
This paper reviewed how heavy metals and microplastics jointly intensify antimicrobial resistance (AMR) in environmental microbiomes by promoting co-selection, cross-resistance, and horizontal gene transfer. The authors framed heavy metals as long-standing evolutionary pressures that predate antibiotics and described microplastics as newer, widespread “substrates” that concentrate microbes into biofilms and accelerate gene exchange, especially in soil, rivers, drinking-water distribution biofilms, and landfill leachate reservoirs where resistance determinants can persist and spread.
Who was reviewed?
Rather than focusing on a single patient group, the review synthesized evidence across microbial communities and taxa that occupy contaminated water and soil interfaces, including biofilm-associated bacteria on microplastics (the “plastisphere”) and organisms in anthropogenically impacted systems such as wastewater-affected rivers and landfill leachates. It highlighted clinically relevant spillover risk by repeatedly tying environmental selection to opportunistic and foodborne pathogens that can colonize humans through water and food chains, including genera such as Escherichia, Klebsiella, Shigella, Salmonella, Vibrio, Campylobacter, Listeria, and Pseudomonas when they acquire or enrich resistance traits in these niches.
What were the most important findings?
The review’s core finding is that heavy metals (notably Pb, Hg, As, Cr, Cd, and Ni) and microplastics act as synergistic upstream drivers of AMR by selecting for resistance systems that also protect against antibiotics, then packaging these traits into mobile genetic elements that move across communities. It connected major microbial associations to resistance “signatures,” emphasizing that microplastics foster dense biofilms that function as genetic exchange hotspots, while metals increase selection pressure and can upregulate multidrug efflux and stress-response regulators that broaden resistance. It repeatedly pointed to coupled ARG–MRG patterns, including integron involvement (e.g., intI1) and co-occurrence between metal resistance determinants such as czcA/rcnA and antibiotic resistance classes such as β-lactamases and multidrug resistance, and it cited landfill leachate and river systems as reservoirs where genes like aadA, blaCTX-M/blaSHV, ermB, mefA, tetM/tetQ, and sul1/sul2 track with metal burdens. It also reinforced that community structure matters: the review described enrichment of potential pathogens in plastisphere communities and reported that taxa such as Pseudomonadota (Proteobacteria) frequently carry ARG–MRG combinations, consistent with a “hub” role for gene sharing under mixed-pollutant exposure.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
For clinicians, the main implication is that AMR risk does not originate only from antibiotic exposure; environmental co-exposures can amplify resistant pathogens and resistance genes before patients ever enter care. The review supports treating microplastics and heavy metals as actionable upstream levers in a One Health framework because reducing these exposures can plausibly reduce ARG abundance, slow resistance dissemination, and limit the environmental “seeding” of opportunistic pathogens that later cause hard-to-treat infections. Practically, it strengthens the rationale for integrating environmental surveillance (water systems, agricultural soils, landfill leachate, and food-production settings) into AMR prevention strategies, because these compartments can maintain and distribute clinically relevant resistance profiles through biofilms, mobile elements, and pollutant-driven selection even when antibiotic pressure appears low.
Association between infants’ serum levels of 26 metals and gut microbiota: a hospital-based cross-sectional study in China
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study explores the impact of metal exposure on infant gut microbiota, identifying key metals like arsenic, copper, and manganese that alter microbial diversity and specific taxa, with implications for infant health and future therapeutic strategies.
What was studied?
This study investigated the impact of metal exposure on the gut microbiota of infants, focusing on 26 different metals and their interactions with microbial communities. The study assessed how metals like arsenic (As), copper (Cu), manganese (Mn), and others affect the diversity and composition of the infant gut microbiome, with a particular emphasis on how metal mixtures may influence microbial taxa and overall gut health.
Who was studied?
The study involved 342 infants who were recruited from a hospital in Hunan, China. These infants were assessed for their serum metal concentrations, and their gut microbiota was analyzed through fecal samples. The study population was stratified into full-term, preterm, and very preterm infants to explore potential differences in how metal exposure affects their microbiomes.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed that certain metals, particularly arsenic, copper, and manganese, significantly influenced the diversity and composition of the infant gut microbiota. Metals such as barium (Ba) and arsenic (As) were positively associated with the Chao1 index, which reflects microbial richness, while metals like chromium (Cr), cobalt (Co), and copper (Cu) showed negative associations. Further analyses, such as Bayesian kernel machine regression (BKMR), identified manganese (Mn) as a key driver of the abundance of Burkholderia-Caballeronia-Paraburkholderia, a genus of concern for its pathogenic potential. The study also found that the exposure to metal mixtures had a significant impact on specific microbial taxa, such as Clostridium_sensu_stricto_1, which was notably influenced by synergistic interactions between metals like Mn and Cu. Interestingly, some metals showed antagonistic interactions, with chromium and tungsten (Cr-W) or arsenic and praseodymium (As-Pr) combinations negatively affecting microbial diversity. This highlights the complex interactions between metals and gut microbiota and suggests that combined exposures may lead to significant shifts in microbial communities.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings of this study underscore the critical role of environmental metal exposure in shaping the infant gut microbiome, particularly in vulnerable populations like preterm infants. The identification of key metals that influence microbial diversity and specific taxa opens the door for future research into how these changes might affect long-term health outcomes, including the development of autoimmune diseases, allergies, and other gut-related disorders. The study highlights the need for further investigation into the synergistic and antagonistic effects of metal mixtures and how they could potentially be mitigated through dietary interventions or probiotic treatments. Given the importance of microbial health in early life development, these insights could guide public health strategies aimed at reducing exposure to harmful metals in environments where infants are particularly susceptible.
Association of placental manganese levels, maternal gut microbiota, and preeclampsia: a tripartite perspective
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study links placental manganese levels, maternal gut microbiota, and preeclampsia risk, highlighting specific bacterial genera and metabolic pathways involved. It suggests that manganese may help mitigate preeclampsia, offering new insights for therapeutic strategies targeting the gut microbiome.
What was studied?
This study investigated the relationship between placental manganese (Mn) levels, maternal gut microbiota, and the risk of preeclampsia (PE). The researchers explored how placental Mn concentrations and the composition of the maternal gut microbiota contribute to the development of preeclampsia, a serious pregnancy-related condition. They analyzed gut microbiota diversity and its specific bacterial genera that correlated with both preeclampsia and placental Mn levels. The study also included metabolic pathway analysis to understand the functional implications of these microbial changes.
Who was studied?
The study involved 42 pregnant women: 21 healthy pregnant women as the control group and 21 women diagnosed with preeclampsia (PE). Placental samples were collected to measure metal concentrations, particularly manganese, and fecal samples were collected to assess the gut microbiota composition. The participants were all aged 18 years or older and had a gestational age of more than 32 weeks at the time of sampling.
What were the most important findings?
The study found a significant negative correlation between placental manganese (Mn) levels and preeclampsia. The group diagnosed with preeclampsia had lower Mn levels in their placental tissue compared to the healthy controls. Furthermore, gut microbiota analysis revealed that specific bacterial genera, such as Campylobacter and Porphyromonas, were positively associated with preeclampsia and negatively correlated with Mn levels in the placenta. On the other hand, Coprobacillus, a genus associated with beneficial effects due to its short-chain fatty acid (SCFA) production, was negatively correlated with preeclampsia and positively correlated with Mn levels. The study also identified eight metabolic pathways linked to both preeclampsia and Mn, including the degradation of aromatic compounds and methane metabolism, which may play a role in modulating inflammation and oxidative stress during preeclampsia.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study underscores the significance of manganese in placental function and its potential role in protecting against preeclampsia. The interplay between Mn levels and specific gut microbiota genera may provide new insights into the mechanisms behind preeclampsia development. The findings suggest that Mn, through its modulation of the gut microbiota and associated metabolic pathways, could serve as a protective factor against preeclampsia. This opens the door for future research into therapeutic interventions aimed at restoring Mn balance and modifying the gut microbiome to reduce preeclampsia risk. Additionally, the identification of bacterial genera like Coprobacillus as beneficial factors further suggests that dietary or probiotic-based strategies targeting gut microbiota could be explored as potential treatments.
Genomic and pathogenicity islands of Listeria monocytogenes—overview of selected aspects
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study explores the persistence of Listeria monocytogenes biofilms in food industries, stressing the need for stronger hygiene protocols to prevent contamination. It highlights genetic factors that contribute to biofilm formation and resistance.
What was studied?
The study focused on the role of biofilm formation in Listeria monocytogenes, specifically within the food industry. It examines the persistence of this pathogen in food-processing environments and evaluates whether current hygiene programs are sufficient to control the biofilm formation and persistence of Listeria monocytogenes.
Who was studied?
The study investigated Listeria monocytogenes strains isolated from food processing environments, specifically those involved in the formation of biofilms. The study also looked at the environmental conditions that may contribute to the persistence of these biofilms in the food industry.
What were the most important findings?
The most significant findings of the study highlight the resilience of Listeria monocytogenes biofilms in food industry settings. These biofilms are often difficult to remove, making Listeria monocytogenes highly persistent in food processing plants. Strains capable of forming biofilms present a significant challenge to public health, as they can survive harsh cleaning procedures and continue to contaminate food products. The study also emphasizes the need for more effective hygiene protocols that specifically target biofilm formation. The importance of understanding the genetic basis for biofilm formation and resistance to sanitizers is also discussed, as these factors contribute to the pathogen's persistence.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study underscores the need for stronger biofilm-targeted interventions in the food industry. Since biofilms significantly enhance Listeria monocytogenes's persistence and resistance to cleaning agents, improving sanitation procedures is crucial. This has direct implications for food safety regulations and may require updates to the hygiene standards within food processing environments. The findings also stress the importance of monitoring biofilm formation as part of a broader strategy to reduce foodborne listeriosis outbreaks, which are particularly dangerous for vulnerable populations such as pregnant women and the immunocompromised.
Ferroptosis in ischemic stroke: mechanisms, pathological implications, and therapeutic strategies
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review explains how ferroptosis, driven by iron dysregulation and lipid peroxidation, exacerbates neuronal injury in ischemic stroke. It evaluates therapeutic strategies like ferrostatin-1, liproxstatin-1, and iron chelation, highlighting FABP5 as a potential biomarker for monitoring ferroptosis in stroke.
What was reviewed?
This review focused on the role of ferroptosis in ischemic stroke and how this distinct form of cell death—driven by iron-dependent lipid peroxidation—contributes to neuronal injury in stroke. The authors outlined the core molecular pathways involved in ferroptosis, including iron dysregulation, glutathione depletion, and the inactivation of GPX4. The paper further highlighted how ferroptosis amplifies stroke damage by interacting with neuroinflammation and mitochondrial dysfunction, providing a deeper understanding of its role in stroke pathology. Finally, the review explored various therapeutic strategies aimed at modulating ferroptosis to reduce ischemic damage, including pharmacological inhibitors and emerging nanomedicine and gene therapy approaches.
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesized findings from multiple experimental models, including rodent ischemic stroke models, in vitro neuronal cultures, and human postmortem tissue. It focused on how ferroptosis contributes to ischemic neuronal death and its intersection with neuroinflammation and oxidative stress in these models. The authors also discussed therapeutic approaches tested in preclinical trials and clinical contexts, considering the complexities and potential for translation into stroke therapy.
What were the most important findings?
The review clarified that ferroptosis is a significant contributor to neuronal death during ischemic stroke, particularly through iron dysregulation and lipid peroxidation. Increased levels of labile iron from hemoglobin degradation and disrupted iron transport catalyze Fenton reactions, producing hydroxyl radicals that initiate lipid peroxidation in neuronal membranes. This process is exacerbated by impaired antioxidant defenses, particularly the GPX4/GPX4-Glutathione axis, which normally detoxifies lipid hydroperoxides. The review also emphasized that mitochondrial dysfunction and endoplasmic reticulum stress further amplify the damage caused by ferroptosis, creating a vicious cycle of injury. Importantly, the paper highlighted therapeutic strategies aimed at inhibiting ferroptosis, such as lipid peroxidation inhibitors (e.g., ferrostatin-1, liproxstatin-1) and iron chelators (e.g., Deferoxamine), which have shown promise in preclinical studies by reducing infarct size and improving functional recovery. However, translating these findings to human stroke therapy faces challenges, particularly regarding narrow therapeutic windows and the potential toxicity of therapies that affect iron or lipid metabolism. The review also identified FABP5 as a potential biomarker for ferroptosis, which could help track stroke severity and monitor therapeutic response.
What are the greatest implications of this study/ review?
Clinically, this review presents ferroptosis as a critical pathogenic amplifier in ischemic stroke and suggests that targeting ferroptosis could improve patient outcomes by limiting neuronal death and reducing neuroinflammation. The key implication for clinicians is that therapeutic strategies should consider the temporal dynamics of ferroptosis, as the activation of ferroptosis in the early stages of stroke injury may exacerbate neuronal damage. Developing targeted therapies that inhibit ferroptosis while minimizing risks to normal iron and lipid metabolism could offer a new treatment avenue for ischemic stroke patients, particularly when combined with neuroprotective and anti-inflammatory strategies. The identification of FABP5 as a biomarker offers a promising tool to monitor ferroptosis-related pathology, which could help personalize stroke treatment regimens and improve therapeutic windows for intervention.
How Toxic and Essential Metals Disrupt Gut Microbiota: A Comprehensive Review
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review maps the bidirectional interactions between toxic and essential metals and the gut microbiota, detailing microbial shifts and host impacts. It highlights specific microbial taxa disrupted by metals like arsenic, cadmium, and nickel, providing insight into metal-driven dysbiosis and its implications for disease pathogenesis.
What was reviewed?
This review article investigates the bidirectional interactions between toxic and essential metals and the gut microbiota, synthesizing evidence on how these interactions influence host metabolic, immunologic, and physiologic outcomes. The paper categorizes ten common heavy metals including arsenic (As), mercury (Hg), lead (Pb), cadmium (Cd), copper (Cu), iron (Fe), manganese (Mn), chromium (Cr), silicon (Si), and nickel (Ni) based on their essentiality and toxicity. It compiles data from over 100 experimental studies across animal models and some human cohorts, highlighting how these metals alter microbial diversity, abundance, and metabolic output, and conversely, how gut microbes can modulate metal toxicity, bioavailability, and systemic absorption.
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesizes findings from studies involving humans, rodents (mice and rats), aquatic species (tilapia, zebrafish, crayfish), birds (budgerigars), and insects (bees), as well as in vitro models such as the SHIME (Simulated Human Intestinal Microbial Ecosystem). These models provided diverse insights into host–metal–microbiota interactions across species and life stages.
Most important findings
The review establishes that exposure to toxic heavy metals (THMs) like As, Hg, Pb, Ni, and Cd leads to gut dysbiosis characterized by decreased alpha diversity, disrupted SCFA production, and increased pro-inflammatory cytokines. Arsenic exposure, for instance, consistently elevated Bacteroidetes while suppressing Firmicutes, and perturbed bile acid metabolism. Mercury exposure altered gut-brain and gut-liver metabolites and enriched taxa such as Coprococcus and Oscillospira while suppressing Lactobacillaceae. Lead exposure decreased Ruminococcus and increased Proteobacteria and Succinivibrionaceae, linking microbial shifts to neurotoxicity and metabolic disorders. Cadmium increased pro-inflammatory genera like Helicobacter and Mycoplasma while decreasing protective Lactobacillus spp., impairing immune and reproductive functions.
Essential trace elements, while beneficial at physiological doses, caused microbial disturbances when in excess. High dietary Cu, Mn, or Fe exposure reduced probiotics like Lactobacillus, Bifidobacterium, and Akkermansia, and modulated bile acid, amino acid, and lipid metabolism. Notably, nickel exposure in both humans and mice reduced Lactobacillus and Blautia, increased uric acid, and worsened systemic inflammation. Chromium showed valence-dependent effects: trivalent Cr (Cr^3+) was beneficial, while hexavalent Cr (Cr^6+) promoted dysbiosis and tumorigenesis.
Microbial Taxa Altered by Heavy Metal Exposure
Below is a consolidated table summarizing bacterial taxa that have been reported to increase (↑) or decrease (↓) in relative abundance upon exposure to each of ten heavy metals. Each entry reflects significant changes observed in reviewed studies. Taxonomic ranks (phylum, family, genus, species) are listed as reported. If data for a metal were limited, the findings are correspondingly sparse.
This review underscores the critical role of microbial metallomics in modulating human health outcomes. The gut microbiota is not only a target of metal-induced toxicity but also a mediator of metal detoxification. The composition of the microbiota determines the host’s susceptibility to metal-induced metabolic and immune dysfunction, with implications for conditions such as diabetes, cardiovascular disease, neurodegeneration, and cancer. The authors advocate for gender-stratified, multi-metal exposure studies and microbiome-targeted intervention strategies to mitigate health risks. This work directly supports the development of microbiome signatures for environmental metal exposure and the validation of microbiome-targeted detoxification interventions.
A critical appraisal of ferroptosis in Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s disease
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review links ferroptosis to Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s disease by connecting iron imbalance, mitochondrial stress, and lipid peroxidation to neuronal loss. It highlights LOX-driven oxidized phospholipids, ACSL4-dependent lipid vulnerability, VDAC2-related iron handling, and ferritinophagy as key mechanisms, and it prioritizes Nrf2/Bach1 as actionable therapeutic targets.
What was reviewed?
This review critically appraised ferroptosis as a mechanistic driver of neurodegeneration, with a tight focus on Alzheimer’s disease and Parkinson’s disease. The authors framed ferroptosis as iron-dependent, lipid peroxidation–driven regulated cell death and used this lens to connect mitochondrial dysfunction, oxidative stress, and lipid damage to progressive neuronal loss. They emphasized unresolved initiation steps, including how lipoxygenase activity becomes de-repressed and how mitochondrial voltage-dependent anion channels may link redox stress to iron imbalance, then used these gaps to motivate therapeutic target discovery.
Who was reviewed?
Because this is a review, the evidence base came from previously published experimental and translational studies rather than a single recruited cohort. The paper synthesized findings from cellular models and disease-relevant systems used to study ferroptosis biology in the nervous system, alongside mechanistic work on lipid peroxidation chemistry and iron handling that is frequently applied to neurodegenerative contexts. The authors positioned the brain as uniquely vulnerable because iron trafficking across brain barriers and neuronal membrane lipid composition amplify the consequences of lipid peroxide accumulation.
What were the most important findings?
The review highlighted a consistent ferroptosis “signature” that clinicians can map onto neurodegenerative biology: polyunsaturated membrane lipids become peroxidized and break down into reactive aldehydes, while enzymatic lipid oxidation pathways such as LOX-15 produce specific oxidized phosphatidylethanolamine species that function as death signals. It underscored key molecular susceptibility nodes including ACSL4 and LPCAT3, which enrich oxidizable phospholipids, and it stressed that these lipid events interact with iron availability to propagate damage. The authors also argued that mitochondria are not passive bystanders: mitochondrial iron pools, ferritin buffering, and VDAC2-linked processes may influence how labile iron rises during stress, while ferritinophagy via NCOA4 can release iron that fuels ROS and accelerates ferroptosis. For your microbiome-signature needs, this paper did not present microbiome taxa or microbial metabolite associations, so no MMA can be assigned from this source.
What are the greatest implications of this study/ review?
The strongest clinical implication is that ferroptosis provides a unifying, target-rich framework that links iron dyshomeostasis, mitochondrial stress, and lipid peroxidation to neuronal injury in Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s disease, even when upstream triggers differ. The review points clinicians and translational teams toward therapeutic concepts that interrupt ferroptosis at multiple leverage points, including limiting iron-driven chemistry, preventing toxic phospholipid peroxidation, and strengthening endogenous anti-ferroptotic defense programs. In particular, the authors elevated Nrf2 activation and Bach1 inhibition as promising strategies to shift transcriptional tone toward protection, while also cautioning that major initiation steps remain incompletely defined and will affect how reliably any anti-ferroptosis approach translates across patients and disease stages.
Short-chain fatty acids regulate erastin-induced cardiomyocyte ferroptosis and ferroptosis-related genes
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study shows that gut microbiota–derived short-chain fatty acids can reduce erastin-induced lipid peroxidation and modulate iron and ATF3 signaling in cardiomyocytes. The findings link microbial metabolites to ferroptosis control during ischemic-like stress in heart cells.
What was studied?
This original research study tested whether gut microbiota–derived short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) can modulate cardiomyocyte ferroptosis under ischemic stress and whether the stress-response transcription factor ATF3 sits in that regulatory path. The authors combined human myocardial infarction single-nucleus transcriptomics to map ferroptosis-related gene activity across cardiac regions with in vitro cardiomyocyte injury models. They then exposed cardiomyocytes to sodium acetate, propionate, butyrate, or a physiologically patterned SCFA mixture and measured viability, lipid peroxidation, ferrous iron, and expression of ATF3 and ferroptosis-linked genes and proteins.
Who was studied?
The human component used a published spatial multi-omic atlas of myocardial infarction that included control donor hearts and multiple infarction-related regions (including ischemic, border, and fibrotic zones), enabling region- and cell-type–specific ferroptosis gene scoring, particularly in cardiomyocytes. The experimental component studied commercially available cardiomyocyte lines rather than newly enrolled patients or animals, using human AC16 cells and murine HL1 cells. The team induced ferroptosis with erastin and modeled ischemia–reperfusion–like injury with hypoxia followed by reoxygenation, then evaluated how SCFAs shifted ferroptosis markers and ATF3-related regulatory signals in these cells.
What were the most important findings?
Single-nucleus data showed that ferroptosis pathway genes rise in infarction-stimulated regions and appear prominently in cardiomyocytes, supporting ferroptosis as a relevant injury program in post-MI remodeling. In cell models, SCFAs reduced erastin-driven lipid peroxidation and reversed erastin-associated increases in intracellular Fe²⁺, consistent with a ferroptosis-attenuating effect in that setting. In the hypoxia–reoxygenation model, SCFAs improved cardiomyocyte viability and tended to lower lipid peroxide signal, but they could also strengthen Fe²⁺ signal, indicating that iron handling may respond differently depending on the injury context. Mechanistically, SCFAs increased ATF3 mRNA yet decreased ATF3 protein in most conditions, and the authors highlighted putative ATF3 transcriptional regulators that shifted with SCFA exposure, pointing to post-transcriptional control as a key feature. For microbiome-signature use, the paper does not report taxa-level changes, so MMA by organism is not available; instead, the actionable microbiome-linked exposure is the SCFA metabolite class itself (acetate, propionate, butyrate) and its association with reduced lipid peroxidation in cardiomyocytes under ferroptosis pressure.
What are the greatest implications of this study/ review?
This study strengthens the clinical concept that microbial metabolites can reach the heart and alter cell-death vulnerability, specifically by shifting ferroptosis biology during ischemic stress. It also suggests a practical translational angle: targeting ferroptosis in myocardial ischemia/reperfusion may benefit from strategies that mimic or amplify protective SCFA signaling, while recognizing that dose and context matter because iron readouts did not move uniformly across models. The ATF3 discordance between mRNA and protein emphasizes that clinicians and translational teams should not assume transcriptional changes reflect protein-level control, and it highlights the need for pathway-anchored biomarkers (lipid peroxidation and iron status) when evaluating SCFA-based or microbiome-targeted interventions in cardiac injury.
The influence of gastrointestinal pH on speciation of copper in simulated digestive juice
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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The study explores how gastrointestinal pH affects copper solubility and speciation during digestion. It reveals the role of food components in modulating copper bioavailability and highlights the impact of pH on copper toxicity and absorption.
What was studied?
This study investigated the speciation of copper (Cu) in simulated digestive juices and how gastrointestinal (GI) pH influences the copper forms that affect its solubility and bioavailability. By using a range of model solutions simulating different pH levels and digestive components, the researchers aimed to understand how copper speciation changes during digestion. They tested the copper concentrations and electrode responses at different pH levels and also looked at how food components like amino acids, organic acids, and proteins interact with copper ions. The results provide insight into the bioavailability and potential toxicity of copper in the digestive system.
Who was studied?
The study focused on copper solubility and speciation in model solutions that simulate the human gastrointestinal (GI) tract, including gastric and intestinal fluids. Researchers used food components such as amino acids (e.g., histidine, glycine), organic acids (e.g., citric acid, malic acid), and protein sources (e.g., casein, whey protein) to observe how these ligands interact with copper in a simulated digestive environment. The copper speciation was assessed at pH values ranging from 2.0 to 7.5, which corresponds to the acidic conditions in the stomach and more neutral conditions in the intestines. This approach aimed to simulate real-world digestion and offer insights into how copper behaves in the body.
Most important findings
As the pH increased, the solubility of copper decreased, particularly in solutions containing simple carbohydrates like glucose and fructose, where copper formed insoluble hydroxides at higher pH levels. However, in the presence of organic acids and amino acids, copper remained soluble, and its concentration was higher in the dissolved form. The study found that food components like histidine and glutamic acid formed stable complexes with copper, maintaining its solubility even at higher pH levels. Additionally, the presence of proteins like casein and whey protein decreased copper solubility, possibly due to the formation of larger complexes that could not pass through the membrane filters used in the experiments. The electrode response, measured by ion-selective electrodes (ISE), showed that copper ions (Cu²⁺) were most soluble at low pH (2.0–4.0) and less soluble at higher pH, with the highest solubility and electrode response observed in organic acid solutions.
Key implications
These findings highlight the importance of gastrointestinal pH in determining the bioavailability and toxicity of copper. In clinical practice, this could help clinicians understand how dietary components might influence copper absorption and its potential toxicity. The study also suggests that certain food components can modify copper solubility and bioavailability, which could have implications for individuals with copper-related diseases or those taking copper supplements. For microbiome studies, this information can help inform how copper interacts with gut microbiota, especially in individuals with altered pH levels or those consuming specific diets rich in organic acids or proteins. By adjusting copper intake or optimizing its bioavailability through dietary changes or supplementation, it may be possible to reduce copper-induced toxicity while maintaining adequate copper levels for physiological functions.
Unravelling the mechanisms of antibiotic and heavy metal resistance co-selection in environmental bacteria
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review explores how environmental bacteria acquire co-resistance to heavy metals and antibiotics, revealing complex genetic interactions and co-selection mechanisms.
What was studied?
The study focuses on understanding the mechanisms behind antibiotic and heavy metal resistance co-selection in environmental bacteria. It explores the genetic, environmental, and microbial factors that contribute to the dissemination of resistance genes in natural ecosystems. The paper delves into the roles of plasmids, transposons, and integrons in transferring resistance genes across different bacterial species, emphasizing the genetic interactions between antibiotic and metal resistance genes.
Who was studied?
The study examined environmental bacteria, focusing on their resistance to both antibiotics and heavy metals. It particularly looked at bacteria from environments like soil, wastewater, and aquatic systems, where heavy metal contamination often co-occurs with antibiotic pollutants. The study also investigates bacterial taxa such as Pseudomonadota, Actinomycetota, and Bacillota, which harbor resistance genes for both metals and antibiotics.
What were the most important findings?
The study's most significant finding is the complex interaction between antibiotic and heavy metal resistance mechanisms in environmental bacteria. It revealed that co-selection between these two types of resistance often occurs through mechanisms such as co-resistance, cross-resistance, and co-regulation. The research highlighted that genes for heavy metal resistance are frequently found in close proximity to antibiotic resistance genes on plasmids, transposons, and integrons. This co-selection may facilitate the persistence and spread of resistance across microbial communities, particularly in environments with both metal and antibiotic contamination.
Another critical insight was the demonstration that certain metals, such as copper, zinc, and cadmium, play a significant role in the co-selection of resistance genes. These metals enhance the horizontal gene transfer (HGT) of resistance genes, further complicating efforts to manage antimicrobial resistance in the environment.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study's findings underscore the need for a more integrated approach to managing antibiotic resistance in the environment. The overlap between heavy metal and antibiotic resistance mechanisms suggests that controlling metal pollution may also help mitigate the spread of antibiotic resistance. The study calls for further research into the environmental factors that drive co-selection and the development of strategies to reduce both metal and antibiotic contamination in natural reservoirs. Understanding these mechanisms could lead to improved regulatory measures and intervention strategies, such as the use of bioremediation techniques or the development of new antibiotics and metal chelators.
Toxic and essential metals: metabolic interactions with the gut microbiota and health implications
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study explores the essential role of metal ions in human health, detailing their involvement in enzyme catalysis and the impacts of imbalances on diseases. It also highlights potential clinical applications for metal-based therapies.
What was studied?
This study investigates the role of metal ions in enzyme catalysis, human health, and disease. Specifically, it looks at how metal ion imbalances contribute to various health problems, such as anemia, neurodegenerative diseases, immune dysfunction, and metabolic syndromes. The research also delves into the use of metal-based compounds in medical treatments and the importance of dietary intake in regulating metal ion levels.
Who was studied?
The study did not focus on individual participants but instead on existing literature and research studies involving the roles of metal ions in human health and disease. It reviewed various studies and clinical case reports examining the biological roles of metals like iron, zinc, copper, and magnesium in enzymatic functions, as well as their involvement in metabolic processes. It also reviewed studies on how metal imbalances—either through deficiencies or excess—lead to a range of health conditions, including anemia, neurodegenerative diseases, immune dysfunctions, and metabolic disorders. Additionally, the review discussed the therapeutic use of metal-based compounds and their potential in treating conditions related to metal imbalances, providing insights into clinical strategies to regulate metal ions for health improvement.
What were the most important findings?
The study confirmed the essential role of metal ions in stabilizing enzyme systems, facilitating catalytic reactions, and maintaining metabolic balance. Metal ions such as zinc, magnesium, and iron are integral to enzymes like carbonic anhydrase, kinases, and cytochrome oxidase. Deficiencies in these metals can lead to reduced enzymatic activity, impairing metabolic processes and contributing to disease progression. Additionally, the study highlighted that metal imbalances—either deficiencies or excesses—can result in various disorders, including anemia, neurodegenerative diseases, immune issues, and metabolic syndromes. Clinical case studies showed the impacts of metal imbalances, such as the role of iron deficiency in anemia and excessive copper in Wilson's disease, which affects liver and brain health.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study emphasizes the critical importance of maintaining balanced metal ion levels for optimal health and enzymatic function. It underscores the need for dietary interventions to prevent metal ion deficiencies, especially for at-risk populations such as pregnant women and children. Moreover, it suggests that personalized medicine, considering genetic variations in metal metabolism, could enhance healthcare interventions. The findings also have significant implications for the development of metal-based drugs in treating various diseases, with a focus on minimizing toxicity and improving treatment specificity. Future research could lead to more targeted therapies and improved methods for managing metal-related health conditions.
Environmental cadmium exposure alters the internal microbiota and metabolome of Sprague–Dawley rats
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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The study investigates how cadmium exposure alters gut and blood microbiomes in rats, linking these changes to metabolic disruptions and systemic inflammation.
What was studied?
This study explored the effects of environmental cadmium exposure on the microbiota and metabolome of Sprague-Dawley rats. The researchers aimed to understand how cadmium (Cd) exposure, particularly from environmental sources, affects the intestinal and blood microbiomes and their corresponding metabolites. The study used a 30-day exposure model with cadmium chloride (CdCl₂) administered to rats, and analyzed the changes in microbial composition and serum metabolites through high-throughput sequencing and liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS).
Who was studied?
The study involved Sprague-Dawley female rats aged 6-8 weeks. These rats were divided into two groups, one receiving daily cadmium exposure through CdCl₂, and the other receiving a control solution. The rats were exposed for 30 days, during which the effects on their intestinal and blood microbiomes were monitored. Inflammatory factors, tight junction protein expression, and metabolic profiles were assessed to identify the impact of cadmium on microbiome-related metabolic changes.
Most important findings
The study showed that cadmium exposure significantly altered the microbiome composition in both the blood and gut of rats. In the gut, cadmium exposure increased the abundance of harmful bacteria such as Clostridia_UCG_014, which is associated with proinflammatory responses. The blood microbiome also showed an increase in Corynebacterium and Muribaculaceae, bacteria that are typically not abundant in the blood under normal conditions. These changes were linked to alterations in inflammatory factors like TNF-α and IL-6, which were significantly elevated in both the blood and intestine. Additionally, serum metabolomics revealed significant changes in metabolic pathways, including lipid metabolism, amino acid metabolism, and oxidative stress markers. Notably, metabolites such as indoxyl sulfate and p-cresol sulfate were upregulated, while compounds like δ-tocopherol were downregulated, indicating potential oxidative damage. These findings suggest that cadmium exposure triggers microbial translocation from the gut to the blood, leading to systemic inflammation and metabolic disturbances.
Key implications
The results underscore the crucial role of gut microbiota in mediating the toxic effects of cadmium exposure. The translocation of gut bacteria into the bloodstream can exacerbate systemic inflammation, potentially leading to more severe health issues, including cardiovascular diseases and metabolic disorders. The study also highlights the importance of monitoring not only the gut microbiome but also the blood microbiome as a key indicator of exposure to environmental toxins. The identified metabolic biomarkers provide valuable insights for early detection of cadmium toxicity and for developing intervention strategies to mitigate its effects. The findings also suggest that interventions targeting gut microbiota modulation could help alleviate the health impacts of cadmium exposure, especially in areas with high environmental cadmium contamination.
The biology of ferroptosis in kidney disease
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review explains how ferroptosis drives kidney injury through iron-dependent lipid peroxidation when GPX4- and FSP1-based defenses fail. It highlights proximal tubule vulnerability, links ferroptosis to ischemia–reperfusion and nephrotoxins, and summarizes anti-ferroptotic strategies that protect kidneys in models.
What was reviewed?
This review explained how ferroptosis contributes to kidney disease by describing ferroptosis as iron-driven lipid peroxidation that becomes lethal when membrane-protecting antioxidant systems fail. The authors framed renal tissue, especially the proximal tubule, as unusually vulnerable because it carries high oxidative demand and abundant polyunsaturated membrane lipids that can rapidly peroxidize. They then connected core ferroptosis biology to nephrology-relevant injuries such as ischemia–reperfusion stress, nephrotoxic drug exposure, proteinuric states, and metabolic disease, and they highlighted where blocking ferroptosis may plausibly prevent tubular necrosis and organ dysfunction.
Who was reviewed?
Because this is a review, it did not follow a single patient cohort. Instead, it synthesized mechanistic and disease-model evidence spanning conditional mouse genetics, kidney injury models, cell and tissue experiments, and translational observations relevant to clinical nephrology. The paper repeatedly centered proximal tubular epithelial cells as the key “cell at risk,” while also discussing endothelial vulnerability under certain antioxidant conditions. It integrated human-facing contexts such as proteinuria-associated iron deposition, rhabdomyolysis-related myoglobin exposure, and diabetes-associated oxidative stress as settings where ferroptosis biology likely becomes clinically important.
What were the most important findings?
The review emphasized that kidney protection from ferroptosis depends mainly on two surveillance systems that stop lipid peroxide chain reactions: the cyst(e)ine–glutathione–GPX4 axis and the CoQ10/vitamin K–FSP1 axis. It highlighted that loss of GPX4 activity in adult mice rapidly produces acute renal failure with tubular necrosis, positioning GPX4 as a nonredundant renal safeguard. It also explained how renal iron handling can raise ferroptosis risk by expanding the labile iron pool, including during proteinuria and hemolysis-related states, and it described how ischemia–reperfusion and nephrotoxins converge on oxidative lipid damage. Finally, it summarized multiple anti-ferroptotic approaches—radical-trapping antioxidants and iron chelators—as consistently renoprotective in preclinical models, which supports ferroptosis as a druggable pathway in kidney injury.
What are the greatest implications of this study/ review?
This review supports a clinician-ready take-home: ferroptosis is a plausible driver of tubular cell loss in acute kidney injury and may contribute to the transition from acute injury to chronic disease when oxidative stress persists. It also supports a practical therapeutic map—lower redox-active iron, preserve GPX4-linked defenses, or interrupt lipid radical propagation—while acknowledging that translation will require careful dosing, safety, and context selection because iron and lipid redox biology also supports essential physiology. The authors make a strong case that early-phase trials of optimized ferroptosis inhibitors or targeted repurposing strategies could meaningfully change outcomes in high-risk renal settings such as ischemia–reperfusion injury, nephrotoxic exposures, and proteinuric disease.
The Effect of the Combination of Probiotics and Heavy Metals From Various Aspects in Humans: A Systematic Review of Clinical Trial Studies
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This systematic review links probiotics and heavy metals to clinical outcomes, showing faster diarrhea recovery with zinc, fewer H. pylori therapy side effects, improved iron absorption with prebiotics, and early evidence of lower toxic metal burden in pregnancy.
What was reviewed?
This systematic review examined how probiotics and heavy metals interact in human clinical trials and how gut-targeted interventions might change metal absorption, toxicity, and treatment side effects. The authors identified randomized and nonrandomized trials that administered probiotics, prebiotics, or synbiotics to people with metal exposure, anemia, gastrointestinal infection, or related conditions, and then measured clinical outcomes, biochemical markers, and in some cases metal levels in blood or stool. The review synthesized dosing ranges, formulation types, and adjunct therapies such as zinc or antibiotic regimens. It compared outcomes across arms to judge whether live microbe products improved metal detoxification, micronutrient handling (notably iron), or tolerability of standard therapies like bismuth-based quadruple therapy for Helicobacter pylori.
Who was reviewed?
The review included 31 clinical trials with a combined sample of 4,611 participants across varied life stages and clinical contexts. Populations spanned healthy volunteers, children with acute diarrhea, women and children evaluated for iron absorption outcomes, pregnant women with documented exposure to toxic metals, and patients receiving antibiotics or eradication therapy for H. pylori. Interventions covered probiotics alone, prebiotics such as galactooligosaccharides, and synbiotics, with probiotic doses ranging from roughly 10^7 to 2.5×10^10 CFU/day. Control conditions typically used a placebo or standard of care (for example, zinc alone in pediatric diarrhea or bismuth quadruple therapy in H. pylori), enabling attribution of added benefit to the microbial products. Across trials, strain composition differed, but most products reflected lactic acid–bacteria–based formulations typical of clinical use.
Most important findings
Across trials, probiotics combined with zinc shortened the duration of vomiting and diarrhea compared with zinc alone, indicating a clinically relevant benefit in pediatric settings. Probiotics also reduced the adverse effects of H. pylori eradication therapy—particularly diarrhea and vomiting—although they did not raise eradication rates when layered onto bismuth quadruple therapy. For hematinic outcomes, prebiotic galactooligosaccharides improved iron absorption in women and children, consistent with enhanced luminal solubility and colonic uptake. Blood parameter changes with probiotics were generally not significant versus placebo, suggesting that clinical benefit may arise from local gut actions rather than large systemic shifts detectable by routine labs.
For toxicology, one randomized trial in pregnant women showed lower body burdens of certain toxic metals with probiotic use, whereas similar reductions were not consistently observed in children. From a microbiome-signatures standpoint, the pattern across studies supports gut-lumen mechanisms—metal binding and sequestration by microbial cell walls and exopolysaccharides, modulation of luminal pH and bile acid pools that change metal speciation, and barrier-supporting effects that may limit translocation. Because most trials did not profile taxa or functions directly, specific taxon-level signatures cannot yet be cataloged with confidence; however, the reproducible symptom relief and micronutrient effects point to mucosal-level functional shifts rather than durable compositional overhauls.
Key implications
For clinicians, the evidence supports selective use of probiotics as adjuncts to reduce gastrointestinal side effects in H. pylori therapy and to hasten recovery in pediatric diarrhea when combined with zinc. Prebiotics appear promising for improving iron absorption, aligning with gut-centric mechanisms rather than systemic hematologic changes. Early but notable findings in pregnancy suggest probiotics could help lower toxic metal burden, warranting cautious consideration in high-exposure settings while awaiting confirmatory trials. For microbiome databases, current human evidence favors functional annotations—metal binding capacity, acidification potential, and mucosal barrier support—over specific taxa, given heterogeneous products and scarce sequencing. Future trials should standardize strain reporting, incorporate metagenomics and metallomics, and measure stool-bound versus absorbed metal fractions to define actionable microbial signatures that can be translated into exposure-mitigation and supportive care pathways.
Role of Calprotectin in Withholding Zinc and Copper from Candida albicans
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Calprotectin restricts Zn and Cu to Candida albicans, triggers ZRT1/PRA1 and a SOD1→SOD3 Cu-sparing shift, and shows early Zn stress that depends on calprotectin and a broader Cu-limitation program in kidney tissue.
What was studied?
This original study tested the Role of calprotectin in withholding zinc and copper from Candida albicans and defined when this host protein blocks metal nutrition to shape fungal survival. The authors asked if calprotectin (the S100A8/S100A9 complex) depletes bioavailable Zn and Cu around the fungus, how C. albicans adapts its metal uptake systems, and whether these responses occur in vivo during kidney infection. They measured fungal growth, intracellular metals, and metal-stress transcripts in vitro under yeast extract medium and serum conditions, and then tracked the same signatures in a mouse model of disseminated candidiasis to map the timing of Zn and Cu stress in tissue.
Who was studied?
The work used Candida albicans strain SC5314 and isogenic mutants in the Zn-stress regulator Zap1, with recombinant human calprotectin variants that either bind metals or cannot bind metals. The team grew yeast in rich medium and in 50% serum to capture host-like metal sources, quantified intracellular Zn, Cu, Mn by ICP-MS, and profiled transcripts of Zn uptake genes (ZRT1, PRA1) and Cu-stress enzymes (SOD1, SOD3). They then infected wild-type mice and calprotectin-deficient S100A9−/− mice, sampled kidneys over 24–72 hours, and measured host metals and fungal metal-stress transcripts to define how calprotectin shapes Zn and Cu availability early in infection.
Most important findings
Calprotectin bound metals with very high affinity and removed Zn from medium, which drove strong induction of C. albicans ZRT1 and PRA1 and held intracellular Zn steady through several divisions despite severe extracellular depletion; Zap1 loss increased calprotectin toxicity, and Zn supplementation reversed growth arrest, proving Zn withholding as the main stressor. In serum, calprotectin also withheld Cu: it blocked fungal acquisition of serum Cu, induced the classic Cu-sparing switch with SOD1 down and SOD3 up, and modestly increased CTR1, consistent with a Cu-starvation response.
Competition assays showed sub-picomolar Cu(II) binding at both calprotectin metal sites, explaining direct Cu sequestration. In vivo, kidney infection revealed distinct time courses: Zn-starvation markers (ZRT1, PRA1) spiked at 24 hours and depended on calprotectin, then faded by 72 hours as total kidney Zn rose; Cu-starvation markers (SOD1 down, SOD3 up) developed across 24–72 hours and did not require calprotectin at late timepoints, matching a fall in total kidney Cu that was calprotectin-independent. Together these data define a microbiome signature of early calprotectin-driven Zn withholding plus a broader, evolving Cu-limitation program in kidney tissue.
Key implications
Clinicians can read calprotectin as an early metal gatekeeper that restricts Zn and, in serum-rich niches, Cu, reshaping fungal metabolism and fitness. In a microbiome signatures database, pair calprotectin exposure with acute C. albicans ZRT1/PRA1 induction and the Cu-sparing SOD1→SOD3 switch, and note the temporal split: calprotectin drives early Zn stress, while kidney Cu limitation expands over time via additional host routes. These markers help judge risk for dissemination and guide supportive steps that avoid unintended metal supplementation in serum or devices. They also highlight why metal content and pH of local fluids, and neutrophil influx that delivers calprotectin, can tip colonization toward or away from invasive disease.
Role of Copper Efflux in Pneumococcal Pathogenesis and Resistance to Macrophage-Mediated Immune Clearance
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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The study highlights the crucial role of the copA copper efflux system in the virulence of Streptococcus pneumoniae by protecting it from macrophage-mediated copper toxicity, a key immune defense.
What was studied?
This study explores the role of copper efflux systems, particularly the copA gene, in the pathogenesis of Streptococcus pneumoniae and its ability to resist copper toxicity during infection. The copA gene encodes a copper efflux pump that is crucial for bacterial survival under conditions of excess copper. The research investigates how S. pneumoniae uses copper efflux to avoid macrophage-mediated killing, a key host immune defense. By studying the mutant strains of S. pneumoniae that lack the copA gene, the researchers assess the bacterium’s ability to survive copper-induced stress and its overall virulence in different infection models.
Who was studied?
The study focused on Streptococcus pneumoniae, a bacterium responsible for diseases like pneumonia, meningitis, and otitis media. The researchers used the S. pneumoniae strain TIGR4 for their experiments and created mutant strains lacking the copA, cupA, and copY genes. They also assessed macrophage-mediated killing of these strains in vitro to determine the role of copper efflux in bacterial survival under immune attack. The experiments included both wild-type and mutant strains of S. pneumoniae to compare their ability to withstand copper toxicity in host tissues.
Most important findings
The study found that the copper efflux system, specifically the copA gene, plays a critical role in the virulence of S. pneumoniae. The copA mutant exhibited a significantly reduced ability to survive in animal models, with lower bacterial counts in the lungs and bloodstream compared to the wild-type strain. This suggests that copper efflux is essential for the bacterium’s ability to resist copper toxicity during infection. The study also showed that the copA mutant was more susceptible to macrophage-mediated killing, although the bacteria were still engulfed by macrophages at similar rates as the wild-type strain. This indicates that copper efflux is crucial for resisting the toxic effects of copper within macrophages, which is part of the host's immune defense strategy.
When macrophages were depleted in the infected mice, the virulence defect of the copA mutant was partially rescued, further confirming the role of copper efflux in immune evasion. Interestingly, while the copA and cupA mutants both showed increased sensitivity to copper in vitro, only the copA mutant displayed significant attenuation of virulence in vivo. This highlights that the efflux of copper, rather than simply copper sensitivity, is essential for S. pneumoniae's ability to cause disease.
Key implications
The findings underscore the importance of copper homeostasis in bacterial pathogenesis, specifically how S. pneumoniae utilizes copper efflux to avoid the toxic effects of copper and survive within the host. The copA copper exporter plays a vital role in this process by preventing copper accumulation and enabling the bacteria to resist macrophage-mediated copper toxicity. These insights provide potential targets for new therapeutic strategies aimed at disrupting copper homeostasis in S. pneumoniae. Targeting the copper efflux systems could help weaken the pathogen’s ability to survive in the host and enhance the effectiveness of the immune response, particularly by preventing the bacterium from evading copper-induced toxicity.
Acquisition of Mn(II) in Addition to Fe(II) Is Required for Full Virulence of Salmonella enterica Serovar Typhimurium
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study identifies the essential roles of manganese and iron transporters (mntH, sitABCD, and feoB) in Salmonella enterica Typhimurium virulence. These transporters are required for bacterial survival inside macrophages and for successful infection, highlighting potential targets for antimicrobial therapy.
What was studied?
This study explored the role of manganese (Mn) and iron (Fe) acquisition in the virulence of Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium. The research focused on the genes involved in the transport of these metals, namely mntH (a manganese transporter), sitABCD (an ABC transporter for both Mn and Fe), and feoB (a ferrous iron transporter), and their impact on the bacterium's ability to survive and replicate inside host macrophages, as well as its virulence in vivo.
Who was studied?
The study primarily focused on Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium and its ability to acquire divalent metal ions, specifically manganese and iron, during infection. The study utilized various mutant strains of S. Typhimurium that were deficient in mntH, sitABCD, and feoB to assess their roles in bacterial survival, replication, and virulence in both in vitro macrophage models and in vivo mouse models.
What were the most important findings?
The study demonstrated that both manganese and iron acquisition are essential for the full virulence of Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium. The sitABCD operon, responsible for the high-affinity transport of Mn(II) and Fe(II), was crucial for the bacterium's ability to infect and survive in mice, particularly in macrophages. Mutants deficient in sitABCD exhibited reduced Mn(II) uptake, increased sensitivity to hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), and were significantly attenuated in vivo, showing prolonged survival times in infected mice. The feoB mutant, which lacked the Fe(II) transporter, also showed impaired virulence, though it had minimal effects on metal uptake in vitro. In contrast, the mntH mutation had a less significant impact on virulence, suggesting that while mntH contributes to Mn(II) uptake, it is not as critical for virulence as sitABCD. Additionally, combining mutations in mntH, sitABCD, and feoB led to further attenuation, underscoring the non-redundant roles of these transporters in acquiring essential metals for infection. The study also highlighted that the Nramp1 protein, which is involved in metal ion efflux in macrophages, plays a key role in limiting Salmonella replication by sequestering Mn(II).
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings underscore the critical role of metal acquisition, particularly manganese and iron, in bacterial pathogenesis. Understanding the mechanisms behind Salmonella's ability to acquire these metals could pave the way for developing novel therapeutic strategies that target metal transport systems in pathogenic bacteria. By disrupting these transporters, it may be possible to impair bacterial growth and survival within the host, enhancing the immune response and reducing the ability of Salmonella to establish infection. Furthermore, the study provides insights into how pathogens adapt to host-imposed metal restrictions and how these adaptations contribute to virulence, offering valuable information for clinicians dealing with Salmonella infections and potentially other metal-dependent bacterial pathogens.
The Effects of Cadmium Toxicity
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study explores how cadmium disrupts the immune function of macrophages by inhibiting the NF-κB signaling pathway, impairing the response to LPS, and potentially contributing to immune dysfunction in diseases like COPD.
What was studied?
This study investigated the effects of cadmium (Cd) exposure on macrophages and monocytes, particularly their immune response to lipopolysaccharide (LPS) stimulation. The research aimed to understand how Cd impairs the NF-κB signaling pathway, which is crucial for initiating immune responses. By using primary human monocytes and macrophages, as well as related cell lines, the study sought to determine the dose-dependent effects of Cd on immune dysfunction, highlighting its potential role in diseases like Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD), where macrophage dysfunction plays a critical role in disease progression and susceptibility to infections.
Who was studied?
The study involved primary human monocytes and macrophages derived from the same donors, as well as primary mouse bronchoalveolar lavage myeloid cells. The focus was on comparing the immune responses of macrophages and monocytes after Cd exposure and LPS stimulation. The study included cultured cell lines such as THP-1 cells, a human monocytic cell line, to observe the differential effects of Cd on these immune cells. The researchers specifically studied how Cd exposure impacts macrophage function differently from monocyte function, particularly in the context of inflammatory responses.
Most important findings
The most important findings from this study include the dose-dependent effect of Cd on macrophages, where Cd exposure resulted in a significant reduction in nuclear p65 activity, a critical component of the NF-κB pathway. This inhibition was not observed in monocytes, suggesting that Cd exposure differentially affects macrophages compared to monocytes. Furthermore, Cd was shown to inhibit IKKβ phosphorylation, which is required for NF-κB activation, leading to impaired cytokine production and immune responses. In addition, Cd exposure resulted in macrophage dysfunction, potentially increasing susceptibility to infections in individuals exposed to Cd, such as COPD patients. These findings provide a deeper understanding of how environmental toxins like Cd can disrupt immune system functioning, particularly in macrophages.
Key implications
This study has significant implications for understanding how chronic exposure to environmental pollutants like cadmium can lead to immune system dysfunction, particularly in macrophages. Since macrophages play a critical role in the body’s defense against pathogens, their impaired function due to cadmium exposure could exacerbate conditions such as COPD, increasing vulnerability to infections. The findings also emphasize the need for further research on the long-term effects of cadmium exposure on human health, particularly in individuals living in cadmium-contaminated environments. Understanding how cadmium affects immune responses could help develop therapeutic strategies to mitigate its toxic effects, especially in respiratory conditions.
Chelation in Metal Intoxication
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review discusses advancements in chelation therapy for treating metal toxicity, focusing on chelating agents, combination therapies, and antioxidants. Key findings highlight the effectiveness of MiADMSA and the potential for improved treatments.
What was studied?
The article provides a comprehensive review of chelation therapy as a treatment for metal intoxication, focusing on the ability of chelating agents to bind with toxic metal ions such as lead, arsenic, and mercury. By forming stable complexes with these metals, chelating agents enable their safe excretion from the body, thereby alleviating the toxic effects. The review also delves into advancements in chelation therapy, discussing the development of less toxic chelators, as well as the growing interest in combination therapies designed to enhance detoxification by addressing both metal mobilization and oxidative stress.
Who was studied?
The research primarily involved animal models, particularly rats and mice, to investigate the efficacy of various chelating agents in treating metal toxicity. Additionally, human studies involving metal poisoning and chronic exposure were also considered, emphasizing the role of chelation therapy in reducing metal burden in organs such as the liver, kidneys, and brain. These animal and human studies together highlight the practical application of chelation agents in clinical settings for metal detoxification.
Most important findings
The review identifies several key advancements in the field of chelation therapy. Meso-2,3-dimercaptosuccinic acid (DMSA) remains a commonly used chelating agent, but its inability to effectively mobilize intracellular metals poses a limitation. To address this, newer strategies such as combination therapies, where different chelators are used together, have shown promise in improving treatment efficacy. One such chelator, monoisoamyl DMSA (MiADMSA), has been shown to effectively mobilize metals like arsenic and lead, demonstrating less toxicity compared to traditional agents. In addition, antioxidants like vitamin C and α-lipoic acid, when used alongside chelation agents, help reduce oxidative stress, thereby improving therapeutic outcomes.
Key implications
Chelation therapy remains an essential treatment for metal intoxication, particularly in cases of chronic exposure or acute poisoning. While significant progress has been made with chelating agents, challenges remain in developing ideal chelators that can efficiently target and eliminate intracellular metals. The combination of chelation agents with antioxidants has proven to be an effective strategy for improving metal detoxification and protecting the body from oxidative damage. Ongoing research is crucial to refine existing therapies and develop new agents that offer enhanced safety and efficacy for treating metal poisoning.
Current Biomedical Use of Copper Chelation Therapy
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Current biomedical use of copper chelation therapy spans Wilson’s disease, cancer, lung fibrosis, diabetes, and neurodegeneration, with strongest support in Wilson’s disease and emerging roles in oncology and fibrosis, while neuro data remain limited.
What was reviewed?
This review explains the current biomedical use of copper chelation therapy across major diseases and ties drug action to copper biology and transport. It summarizes how approved and investigational chelators lower free copper, how zinc limits gut copper uptake, and how these tools fit Wilson’s disease care, neurodegeneration, lung fibrosis, diabetes, and cancer. It also describes why copper balance matters for enzymes, energy use, and redox stress, and how copper transporters like CTR1 and ATP7A/ATP7B affect drug handling and, in cancer, even platinum response. Trials with penicillamine, trientine, tetrathiomolybdate and its bis-choline form, and metal-targeting ionophores appear, with notes on safety and effect. The article closes with how copper lowering can curb tumor vessels, slow spread, and pair with chemo, radiotherapy, and immune drugs.
Who was reviewed?
The review draws on patients with Wilson’s disease, where chelators remove stored copper and zinc maintains low intake; people with Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s disease from small trials and animal work; adults with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis tested with tetrathiomolybdate; individuals with diabetes studied for cardiac and metabolic end points; and patients with solid tumors, including breast, ovarian, lung, prostate, and melanoma, in early- and mid-phase trials of copper lowering alone or in combinations. It discusses safety, dose, and limits seen with penicillamine, trientine, ammonium and bis-choline tetrathiomolybdate, DMSA, and metal ionophores such as PBT2, and it notes ongoing or stopped studies that inform today’s practice. It also highlights how copper transport genes may shift drug uptake and resistance in cancer, which links trial design to basic copper handling.
Most important findings
Chelation stands as first-line for Wilson’s disease, with trientine and zinc favored when penicillamine harms or worsens early neuro signs; bis-choline tetrathiomolybdate shows promise for neurologic Wilson’s disease with fewer early setbacks. In Alzheimer’s disease and Parkinson’s disease, results remain mixed and small, which temper the use of outside studies. In lung fibrosis, tetrathiomolybdate lowered fibrotic signals tied to copper-dependent lysyl oxidases. In diabetes, early work with trientine hints at heart benefit, but trials are few. In cancer, copper lowering hits tumor blood growth, matrix cross-linking, spread, and MAPK signaling, and can reduce PD-L1 and raise platinum drug uptake by shifting CTR1 and ATP7A/ATP7B, which may resensitize resistant tumors. Across settings, safety is acceptable with guided copper targets, but long-term balance and patient fit remain key. For microbiome databases, the paper reports no direct taxa shifts; the most relevant markers are host copper status, chelator exposure, and copper-handling genes that frame host–microbe metal stress.
Key implications
Clinicians should match the chelator and goal to the disease stage and watch for copper deficiency, anemia, or immune effects. In Wilson’s disease, plan a de-coppering phase, then maintenance with zinc or trientine. In cancer, consider copper lowering where angiogenesis or MAPK drives growth, or where platinum uptake is poor, and track copper transporters when possible. In lung fibrosis and diabetes, view chelation as an option within trials or niche care until stronger data arrive. For microbiome-aware care, record chelation and copper targets as exposures that can shape host metal pressure on microbes, even if this review gives no taxa signals; this helps interpret culture or sequencing from infected or tumor wounds where metal stress is part of control.
The Connection between Czc and Cad Systems Involved in Cadmium Resistance in Pseudomonas putida
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study explored how the CzcRS3 two-component system regulates cadmium resistance in P. putida by controlling efflux pump gene expression. The findings emphasize the role of CadR in regulating this system and offer insights into potential bioremediation strategies.
What was studied?
The study focused on understanding how the CzcRS and Cad systems contribute to cadmium resistance in Pseudomonas putida. The Czc system, regulated by the two-component system CzcRS, and the Cad system, which includes CadR and CadA, are known to be vital for bacterial resistance to heavy metals, especially cadmium. Researchers investigated how the CzcRS3 system regulates the expression of efflux pumps like CzcCBA, and how CadR interacts with the CzcRS3 promoter to mediate cadmium resistance. The study aimed to clarify the molecular relationship between these systems in P. putida and their contribution to metal ion homeostasis.
Who was studied?
Pseudomonas putida KT2440, a well-known environmental bacterium, was the subject of the study. This strain is widely studied for its ability to resist various environmental pollutants, including heavy metals like cadmium. P. putida strains, such as KT2440, are beneficial in bioremediation processes due to their ability to tolerate and degrade hazardous substances. In the study, genetically modified P. putida strains, including the deletion mutant ∆czcRS3 and an overexpressed strain, were used to examine the role of the CzcRS3 system in cadmium resistance.
Most important findings
The study identified the critical role of the CzcRS3 system in cadmium resistance. The deletion of CzcRS3 resulted in a significant reduction in cadmium resistance, as evidenced by a four-fold decrease in the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) of cadmium. Conversely, overexpression of CzcRS3 restored and even enhanced the cadmium resistance beyond the wild-type levels. This shows that CzcRS3 is crucial for regulating the expression of the efflux pump genes CzcCBA1 and CzcCBA2, which expel excess cadmium from the cell. Furthermore, the study revealed that the CzcRS3 system is directly regulated by CadR, which is activated by Cd2+, Zn2+, and Pb2+, highlighting a complex regulatory network between the Czc and Cad systems. The findings also underscored that CzcR3 has a weak regulatory effect on its own promoter, but this does not impact its overall functionality in cadmium resistance.
Key implications
The study provides new insights into the intricate regulatory mechanisms behind cadmium resistance in P. putida. Understanding the interaction between the Czc and Cad systems could open up new possibilities for environmental bioremediation strategies, especially in areas contaminated by heavy metals. By enhancing the expression of the CzcRS3 system, bacteria like P. putida could be engineered for better resistance to cadmium and potentially other heavy metals. This research also emphasizes the importance of multi-component efflux systems in bacteria, which can be leveraged in biotechnological applications aimed at heavy metal cleanup.
Effects of Cadmium Exposure on Gut Villi in Danio rerio
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study shows that cadmium exposure disrupts gut function in zebrafish, affecting villi morphology, goblet cell mucus production, and glycoprotein distribution. These changes may impair gut defense and highlight the environmental risks of cadmium contamination.
What was studied?
This study investigates the effects of cadmium exposure on the gut morphology and function of Danio rerio (zebrafish), focusing specifically on changes to the gut villi and goblet cells. The researchers examined how cadmium impacted glycan distribution and metallothionein expression in the intestines of zebrafish. Cadmium, a highly toxic heavy metal, is absorbed in aquatic organisms through the skin, gills, and gastrointestinal tract. The study explores the alterations in gut function that result from exposure to cadmium, which is commonly present in polluted water.
Who was studied?
The study focused on adult male zebrafish (Danio rerio), a model organism widely used in toxicology and environmental health research. The fish were divided into three groups, with one group as a control (unexposed to cadmium) and the other two exposed to 25 µM and 100 µM cadmium concentrations, respectively. These exposures mimic environmental cadmium contamination levels, allowing the researchers to assess the impact on gut morphology and mucosal function in a controlled setting. The analysis was particularly concerned with how these cadmium concentrations affected the distribution of mucus-producing goblet cells and the molecular expression of metallothionein in the gut.
Most important findings
The study demonstrated that cadmium exposure caused significant disruption to gut morphology, with both anterior and midgut regions showing signs of damage. At the lower cadmium concentration (25 µM), the mucosal epithelium was detached from the underlying connective tissue, with noticeable infiltration by seric fluids. Goblet cells, which produce mucus essential for gut defense, showed a reduction in staining intensity, indicating impaired function. At the higher concentration (100 µM), seric infiltration was less severe, and the goblet cells appeared to recover somewhat, with more normal staining.
Cadmium exposure also altered glycan residues on intestinal cells. The distribution of glycoproteins, specifically N-acetyl-glucosamine and galactose residues, was significantly altered in both enterocytes (intestinal cells) and goblet cells. These changes suggest that cadmium exposure interferes with the intestinal barrier's ability to properly regulate mucus production and absorption. Moreover, metallothionein (MT) expression, a protein involved in detoxifying heavy metals, was observed in enterocytes, with its distribution being dose-dependent. At the lower concentration of cadmium, MT was concentrated in the apical cytoplasm, but at the higher concentration, MT expression was reduced, indicating that the intestinal cells were overwhelmed by the cadmium toxicity.
Key implications
These findings highlight the potential for cadmium to disrupt gut function at the cellular and molecular levels. The alteration of mucosal integrity and glycoprotein distribution may compromise gut defense mechanisms, making the organism more susceptible to infections and inflammation. For aquaculture and environmental health, this study suggests that cadmium contamination in aquatic environments could severely affect the health of fish populations, potentially impacting food safety and the broader ecosystem. For human health, particularly in regions with high water pollution, similar disruptions in gut function could increase the risk of gastrointestinal diseases and infections, highlighting the need for regulatory measures to control cadmium exposure. The alterations in mucus composition and the changes in metallothionein expression also suggest potential biomarkers for cadmium-induced toxicity in environmental monitoring.
CtpB Facilitates Mycobacterium tuberculosis Growth in Copper-Limited Niches
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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CtpB tailors Mycobacterium tuberculosis growth to copper-limited niches, boosts fitness in adipocytes, and raises copper stress risk during phagosomal surges, yielding a clear gene–niche signature for clinical use.
What was studied?
This original study tested how CtpB Facilitates Mycobacterium tuberculosis Growth in Copper-Limited Niches and mapped when this P-type ATPase helps or harms the bacillus during host metal stress. The authors asked whether CtpB supports growth when copper is scarce, how its expression responds to copper chelation, and whether CtpB activity changes fitness when copper surges in host cells. They used controlled overexpression, targeted deletion, genetic complementation, and infection models to link CtpB function to copper import or directed copper delivery to cuproenzymes. The work places CtpB within nutritional immunity, where macrophages first starve bacteria of copper and later flood phagosomes with copper, and it tests if CtpB tunes survival across these swings.
Who was studied?
Researchers worked with Mycobacterium tuberculosis Erdman and M. bovis BCG strains and created ∆ctpB mutants and complemented strains. They expressed M. tuberculosis ctpB or ctpV in M. smegmatis under an inducible promoter to test gain-of-function in copper-rich media. Strains were passed through copper-free Sauton medium to deplete internal copper and then assayed growth with or without copper supplementation. They infected 3T3-L1 adipocytes, a copper-poor niche, and measured replication with or without added copper. They also tested virulence by intravenous infection of DBA/2 mice and monitored survival. Transcription studies probed ctpB induction under copper chelation and the role of sigma factor SigC.
Most important findings
CtpB responds to copper starvation and supports growth in copper-poor settings, yet it can sensitize cells when copper is high. Copper chelation induced ctpB transcription about eight-fold, while forced ctpB expression in M. smegmatis reduced growth only when copper was abundant, a pattern that fits copper import or high-affinity delivery to copper enzymes. Deleting ctpB produced no early defect but, after serial passage in copper-free medium, caused clear growth loss that copper addition partly rescued; the same pattern occurred in Erdman and BCG and reversed with complementation. In adipocytes, ∆ctpB showed a delayed replication defect that copper supplementation removed, and Erdman raised ctpB expression in low copper but not with added copper or zinc.
In DBA/2 mice, ∆ctpB infection shortened median survival by about 42% versus wild type despite similar organ burdens at death, which suggests faster disease progression and a “just-enough copper” advantage when CtpB is absent during copper spikes in vivo. CtpB is highly conserved in the M. tuberculosis complex and other intracellular mycobacteria, consistent with a niche-specific role in host metal pressure. These signals define a microbiome-relevant signature in which CtpB links copper-poor tissue niches (such as adipose) to mycobacterial fitness and ties copper surges in phagosomes to potential toxicity when import runs ahead of efflux and storage.
Key implications
Clinicians can read CtpB as a fitness factor in copper-limited niches and a liability during copper surges. In a microbiome signatures database, pairing ctpB with copper-handling loci (such as ctpV and mymT) and with host contexts that alter copper (adipose stores, activated macrophages) can refine risk for persistence or rapid disease. The adipocyte data support adipose as a copper-poor reservoir where CtpB helps growth, while the mouse survival data suggest that blocking CtpB could slow growth in copper-poor tissue yet might reduce copper-intoxication during phagosome transitions; any intervention should balance these effects. Gene-level reporting that flags ctpB together with sigC-linked import systems and copper efflux capacity can help predict where M. tuberculosis will thrive, when it will face copper injury, and how tissue site and inflammation state shape those outcomes.
Consequences of Disturbing Manganese Homeostasis
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review examines the essential role of manganese in human health, highlighting its involvement in enzyme activation and neurotransmitter function. It underscores the dangers of Mn dysregulation, especially its link to neurodegenerative diseases, and advocates for better monitoring and prevention strategies for Mn toxicity.
What was reviewed?
This review focused on manganese (Mn), an essential trace mineral, and its physiological roles as well as the consequences of its dysregulation in humans. The review assessed the various exposure routes to Mn, its homeostatic mechanisms, and the impact of its imbalance on human health, particularly its relation to neurodegenerative diseases, metabolic disorders, and brain functions.
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesized data from a broad range of scientific research spanning from 2018 to 2023, focusing on both experimental studies and clinical data regarding Mn exposure and its physiological effects on humans. It highlighted the consequences of Mn dysregulation, particularly in relation to the central nervous system, fertility, and metabolic diseases.
What were the most important findings?
Manganese is crucial for various biological processes, including energy metabolism, antioxidant defense, and neurotransmitter production. However, both Mn deficiency and excess can have detrimental health effects, with a particular focus on the brain's selective accumulation of Mn. Excessive exposure to Mn is linked to a range of neurodegenerative diseases, such as Parkinson’s disease, Alzheimer’s disease, and Huntington’s disease, due to oxidative stress, mitochondrial dysfunction, and the disruption of metal homeostasis. A key finding is that Mn accumulation in the brain, especially in the basal ganglia, is associated with movement disorders like manganism, which shares symptoms with Parkinson’s disease. Moreover, the review emphasized the U-shaped relationship between Mn intake and health outcomes, indicating that both extremes of Mn levels can be harmful. The review also identified the role of Mn in conditions like diabetes, osteoporosis, and metabolic diseases. It highlighted the importance of establishing reference values for Mn in various biological matrices to monitor exposure and prevent toxicity.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The findings underscore the importance of maintaining Mn homeostasis for optimal health. While Mn is essential for various enzymatic functions, overexposure, particularly in the form of environmental or occupational hazards, presents significant risks to neurodevelopment and the progression of neurodegenerative diseases. The review calls for better monitoring systems and reference values for Mn exposure, as well as strategies for preventing Mn toxicity. Additionally, the connection between Mn dysregulation and a range of disorders stresses the need for interdisciplinary research to further explore Mn's role in health and disease.
Siderophore Biosynthesis Inhibitors: A Novel Strategy Against Microbial Virulence and Resistance
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review outlines current strategies targeting siderophore biosynthesis as a therapeutic approach to microbial infections, emphasizing enzyme-specific inhibitors, nanoparticle delivery, and CRISPR-based interventions to impair iron acquisition and reduce virulence.
What was reviewed?
This comprehensive review explores the inhibition of siderophore biosynthesis as a promising antimicrobial strategy, particularly in the context of increasing resistance to conventional antibiotics. Siderophores—small, high-affinity iron-chelating compounds secreted by microbes—are essential for pathogenic survival under iron-limited conditions. The review delineates three main siderophore biosynthetic pathways: nonribosomal peptide synthetase (NRPS)-dependent, polyketide synthase (PKS)-based, and NRPS-independent (NIS) systems. It presents siderophore production as a key virulence factor and offers an extensive analysis of enzyme targets, including NRPS adenylation domains, phosphopantetheinyl transferases (PPTases), salicylate synthases, and siderophore transport systems. Recent advances in rational drug design, nanoparticle delivery systems, and CRISPR-based genetic manipulation are also explored as innovative tools to suppress microbial iron acquisition. This review consolidates a fragmented literature base, presenting a unified therapeutic framework for antimicrobial intervention by targeting microbial iron uptake pathways.
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesizes data from a broad range of microbial taxa, including bacteria such as Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Staphylococcus aureus, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Bacillus anthracis, and fungi such as Aspergillus fumigatus. These organisms span both Gram-negative and Gram-positive pathogens and include non-tuberculous mycobacteria (NTMs). Emphasis is placed on their shared reliance on siderophore systems for iron acquisition and pathogenesis. The microbial targets are selected based on their clinical relevance in antimicrobial resistance, virulence, and capacity to biosynthesize diverse siderophore classes.
Most important findings
The review identifies and characterizes a wide array of inhibitors and intervention strategies that target siderophore biosynthesis, grouped by enzyme class and mechanism of action. The review also highlights: Use of CRISPR-Cas9 to disrupt siderophore biosynthetic genes. Nanoparticles (e.g., zinc oxide, gold) as delivery tools and direct inhibitors of siderophore-mediated virulence. The distinction between bactericidal and antivirulence approaches, where the latter may reduce selective resistance pressures. Below is a condensed summary in table format:
Enzyme Target
Inhibitor Class
Example Compound(s)
IC₅₀ Range
Target Organism(s)
PPTase (NRPS)
Allosteric Inhibitors
ML267
0.29 µM
S. aureus, B. subtilis
PPTase (PptT in M. tb)
Amidino-urea analogues
Compounds 1–10
0.018–8.29 µM
M. tuberculosis
Adenylation domains (NRPS)
Salicyl-AMS & derivatives
Salicyl-AMS, Compound 15
10.7–12 nM
M. tuberculosis, Y. pestis
Salicylate Synthase (MbtI)
Furanic inhibitors
Compounds 19–22
2.6–12.1 µM
M. tuberculosis, M. abscessus
DHB Adenylation Domains
Bisubstrate analogs
DHB-AMS, Compound 23
4.5–85 nM
E. coli, B. subtilis
NIS Synthetase
Natural products
Baulamycin A & B
4.8–200 µM
S. aureus, B. anthracis
SidA (fungal hydroxylase)
Natural product (noncompetitive)
Celastrol
11 µM
A. fumigatus
FAAL/FACL (PKS-like enzymes)
Fatty acyl-AMS analogues
Hexanoyl-AMS, etc.
NA
M. tuberculosis
Key implications
Targeting siderophore biosynthesis presents a viable strategy for next-generation antimicrobial therapies, especially against multidrug-resistant organisms. Inhibitors that act on PPTases, adenylation domains, and salicylate synthases can impair iron acquisition and attenuate virulence without necessarily killing the pathogen, potentially reducing evolutionary pressures for resistance. The specificity of some inhibitors, such as ML267 and Salicyl-AMS analogues, enables narrow-spectrum approaches, while nanoparticle systems offer targeted delivery and immune synergy. The integration of genetic tools such as CRISPR enables mechanistic dissection of iron acquisition and opens avenues for strain engineering in microbial therapeutics. However, challenges remain in achieving selectivity, in vivo stability, and delivery to biofilm-embedded pathogens. Further exploration of NIS and fungal-specific pathways is warranted to diversify the antimicrobial toolkit.
Citation
Rocha BM, Pinto E, Sousa E, Resende DISP. Targeting siderophore biosynthesis to thwart microbial growth. Int J Mol Sci. 2025;26(8):3611. doi:10.3390/ijms26083611
The Role of Heavy Metals in the Biology of Female Cancers
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review explores how heavy metals, including cadmium, lead, and mercury, contribute to the development of female cancers by mimicking estrogen, inducing oxidative stress, and causing DNA damage. These findings highlight the need for further research to understand the molecular mechanisms involved and develop effective prevention strategies.
What was studied?
The article reviewed the effects of heavy metals such as lead, cadmium, mercury, and arsenic on the development and progression of female cancers, particularly those related to the reproductive system, including breast, ovarian, and endometrial cancers. The review explores the mechanisms through which these metals disrupt cellular processes, including their potential to act as metalloestrogens, induce oxidative stress, impair DNA repair, and alter gene expression through epigenetic modifications. The paper emphasizes the role of these metals in carcinogenesis, especially in hormone-sensitive tissues.
Who was studied?
This review does not focus on specific individuals. Still, it compiles evidence from various studies involving both in vitro and in vivo models, as well as epidemiological research on the association between heavy metal exposure and cancer risk in women. The studies reviewed involve human tissues, cancer cell lines, and animal models, with a focus on how heavy metals influence estrogen receptors and cellular pathways that regulate growth, proliferation, and apoptosis in cancers such as breast, ovarian, and endometrial cancers.
Most important findings
The review discusses several significant findings, including how heavy metals such as cadmium, lead, and mercury can mimic estrogen by activating estrogen receptors, particularly estrogen receptor-alpha (ERα), and promoting cell proliferation. These metals are categorized as metalloestrogens, which have estrogen-like effects that contribute to the development of hormone-dependent cancers, such as breast and ovarian cancers. Additionally, heavy metals induce oxidative stress by generating reactive oxygen species (ROS), which damage cellular components such as DNA, proteins, and lipids. This oxidative damage leads to genetic mutations and contributes to cancer initiation and progression. Furthermore, heavy metals can cause epigenetic changes, which alter gene expression without changing the DNA sequence, and impair DNA repair mechanisms, which are essential for maintaining genomic integrity. The review also highlights the importance of understanding the molecular mechanisms by which these metals influence cancer biology, particularly in hormone-sensitive cancers.
Key implications
The review underscores the growing concern about environmental exposure to heavy metals and their potential role in the development of female cancers. Despite the known risks, many gaps remain in our understanding of the specific molecular mechanisms by which these metals contribute to cancer progression. The review suggests that heavy metals should be considered an important environmental factor in cancer prevention and treatment strategies. Given the potential for heavy metals to disrupt hormonal balance, further research is needed to develop better regulatory measures to limit exposure, especially in industrial and agricultural settings. Understanding the role of heavy metals in cancer biology also opens new avenues for therapeutic strategies aimed at targeting these metals and their molecular pathways.
Role of Nickel in Microbial Pathogenesis
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Nickel-dependent enzymes like urease and hydrogenase are essential for pathogen virulence. This review outlines the mechanisms by which pathogens acquire and utilize nickel and explores implications for therapy and microbiome balance.
What was reviewed?
This review examined nickel in microbial pathogenesis, focusing on how nickel-dependent enzymes shape virulence across bacteria, fungi, and select protozoa. Nickel in microbial pathogenesis emerges as a central theme because pathogens rely heavily on nickel-requiring enzymes—particularly urease and [NiFe]-hydrogenases—to survive hostile host environments, acquire nutrients, and drive energy metabolism. Using mechanistic, genomic, and in vivo evidence, the paper synthesizes findings across more than forty prokaryotic and nine eukaryotic pathogens, emphasizing how nickel scarcity within the host constrains microbial physiology and selects for specialized uptake, storage, and trafficking systems. The review also integrates structural insights, host nutritional immunity, and emerging metallophore pathways, illustrating how nickel availability shapes pathogenic strategies and may represent a therapeutic vulnerability.
Who was reviewed?
The review covered a wide spectrum of microbial taxa, including gastric Helicobacter species, enteric bacteria such as Salmonella and Shigella, uropathogens like Proteus, Klebsiella, and Staphylococcus species, as well as fungal pathogens including Cryptococcus and Coccidioides. These organisms possess nickel-requiring enzymes used for acid resistance, nitrogen acquisition, energy generation, oxidative stress defense, or metabolic detoxification. Some protozoan parasites—including Leishmania and Trypanosoma—were discussed for their nickel-dependent glyoxalase systems. The organisms reviewed represent pathogens inhabiting diverse niches such as the stomach, urinary tract, respiratory tract, bloodstream, skin, macrophages, and central nervous system, with nickel biochemistry serving as a shared determinant of successful host colonization.
Most important findings
Nickel-dependent urease and [NiFe]-hydrogenases are the most influential virulence factors. Urease enables pathogens like Helicobacter pylori, Proteus mirabilis, and Cryptococcus neoformans to neutralize acidic environments through ammonia production; in urinary pathogens, this activity drives stone formation and biofilm-associated persistence. In H. pylori, urease also performs noncatalytic antioxidant functions tied to methionine-sulfoxide cycling. Hydrogenases fuel pathogenic energy metabolism: H. pylori uses hydrogen to power CO₂ fixation and energize CagA oncoprotein delivery. Enteric pathogens like Salmonella Typhimurium require multiple hydrogenases for gut colonization and intracellular survival. Additional nickel enzymes—Ni-glyoxalase I, Ni-superoxide dismutase, and Ni-acireductone dioxygenase—contribute to methylglyoxal detoxification, oxidative stress defense, and methionine salvage. A major theme is host-driven nickel limitation via calprotectin, lactoferrin, and hepcidin, which pressures pathogens to evolve high-affinity uptake systems (NikABCDE, NixA, NiCoT), metallophores such as staphylopine and pseudopaline, and histidine-rich storage proteins (Hpn, Hpnl) that buffer nickel and coordinate enzyme maturation. This interplay between host nutritional immunity and pathogen nickel acquisition emerges as a defining microbiome-relevant axis.
Nickel-associated factor
Microbiome-relevant pathogenic impact
Urease (e.g., H. pylori, P. mirabilis)
Acid neutralization, ammonia-driven dysbiosis, stone formation supporting polymicrobial biofilms
[NiFe]-Hydrogenases (e.g., H. pylori, Salmonella)
Hydrogen-dependent energy metabolism enhancing colonization, intracellular survival, and toxin delivery
Nickel uptake and metallophore systems
Competitive advantage within the microbiome through enhanced metal scavenging and enzyme activation
Nickel-storage proteins (Hpn, Hpnl)
Stabilization of enzyme maturation under metal scarcity, supporting long-term persistence in mucosal niches
Key implications
The review highlights nickel as a crucial microbial resource absent from mammalian biochemistry—creating an exploitable therapeutic gap. Targeting nickel uptake or storage could cripple multiple virulence pathways simultaneously, especially in pathogens highly dependent on urease and hydrogenase activity. Because commensal microbiota also use nickel enzymes, the review underscores the need for microbiome-aware therapeutic design. Nickel availability may shape microbial community structure, pathogen competition, and disease susceptibility. Understanding nickel-dependent signatures could enhance microbiome profiling, pathogen detection, and biomarker discovery.
An efflux transporter PbrA and a phosphatase PbrB cooperate in a lead-resistance mechanism in bacteria
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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The study highlights the cooperation between the PbrA efflux pump and PbrB phosphatase in the detoxification of lead, uncovering a novel mechanism for lead resistance in Cupriavidus metallidurans. This research suggests potential bioremediation applications and deeper insights into microbial heavy metal resistance mechanisms.
What was studied?
This study focused on the lead resistance mechanisms in Cupriavidus metallidurans CH34, particularly exploring the role of two key components: the PbrA efflux transporter and the PbrB phosphatase. The research examined how these proteins work in tandem to mitigate the toxic effects of lead (Pb²⁺) by effluxing the metal and sequestering it as a less toxic phosphate salt. The study investigated the metal specificity of the PbrA transporter and the enzymatic activity of PbrB, using genetically modified strains of C. metallidurans to analyze their responses to lead, zinc, and cadmium exposure. Through functional assays and complementation tests, the study aimed to elucidate the molecular mechanism of lead detoxification involving PbrA and PbrB and to identify how these proteins collaborate in conferring resistance.
Who was studied?
The study focused on Cupriavidus metallidurans CH34, a bacterium known for its ability to resist a range of heavy metals, including lead. Specifically, the pbrABCD operon was examined, which encodes proteins involved in lead resistance, including PbrA (a P1B-type ATPase) and PbrB (a C55-PP phosphatase). These genes were expressed in C. metallidurans DN440, a strain genetically modified to lack certain metal resistance genes, allowing the researchers to assess how the pbr operon conferred resistance to lead, zinc, and cadmium. Additionally, the study used Escherichia coli strains for complementary experiments involving PbrBC and phosphatase activity. These bacterial strains were carefully selected to examine the efficiency of the resistance mechanisms when exposed to various metal ions, with specific attention paid to the interaction between PbrA and PbrB.
Most important findings
The research found that PbrA, a P1B-type ATPase, was involved in the efflux of not only lead (Pb²⁺) but also zinc (Zn²⁺) and cadmium (Cd²⁺), suggesting a broader role for PbrA in heavy metal transport. However, the co-expression of PbrA and PbrB resulted in a specific increase in lead resistance, demonstrating that while PbrA exported multiple metals, lead sequestration via PbrB was crucial for enhanced resistance. PbrB was identified as a C55-PP phosphatase, and its ability to sequester lead as a phosphate salt was central to the mechanism. When expressed in conjunction with PbrA, PbrB helped precipitate lead, reducing its bioavailability and preventing further toxicity. Interestingly, expression of PbrA alone did not confer significant resistance to lead, while PbrB alone also failed to provide effective detoxification, underscoring the necessity of both proteins for efficient lead resistance. The study also highlighted that the PbrBC fusion protein could function independently of PbrC, further supporting the idea that PbrB alone is sufficient for lead detoxification.
Key implications
The findings have significant implications for understanding metal resistance mechanisms in bacteria, particularly in environments contaminated with heavy metals like lead. The cooperation between PbrA and PbrB provides a model for how bacteria might detoxify and handle toxic metals, which could inform strategies for bioremediation. The discovery that PbrB functions as a C55-PP phosphatase and is involved in lead sequestration offers new insights into bacterial adaptation to metal stress, especially regarding lead. These findings could have applications in designing microbial systems to reduce environmental lead contamination or to study the microbial resistance mechanisms that could be leveraged in clinical settings, where lead toxicity is a concern. Moreover, the broader applicability of PbrA and PbrB to other heavy metals suggests that these proteins could be targets for engineering bacteria with enhanced resistance to a range of contaminants. The study also emphasizes the importance of cooperative systems in bacterial resistance, where efflux pumps and enzymatic sequestration mechanisms work together to minimize metal toxicity.
New insights into the metabolism of organomercury compounds
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study shows that mercury cysteine conjugates act like amino acids and directly affect sulfur metabolism enzymes. Human GTK can use and inhibit these conjugates, while cystathionine γ-lyase is irreversibly inactivated at low micromolar mercury levels, expanding how mercury can drive toxicity.
What was studied?
This study investigated how organomercury compounds behave as “amino acid–like” molecules inside the body by testing whether mercury-containing cysteine S-conjugates interact with human sulfur–amino-acid metabolism enzymes. The investigators focused on two linked questions that matter for mercury toxicity: whether cysteine S-conjugates of methylmercury (CH3Hg-S-Cys) and inorganic mercury (Cys-S-Hg-S-Cys) can serve as substrates or inhibitors for recombinant human glutamine transaminase K (GTK, also called kynurenine aminotransferase I), and whether these same mercury conjugates can inactivate cystathionine γ-lyase, a key enzyme in transsulfuration. The authors explicitly framed this work around “molecular mimicry,” where mercury–thiol conjugates resemble endogenous sulfur-containing amino acids (CH3Hg-S-Cys resembling methionine, and Cys-S-Hg-S-Cys resembling cystine/cystathionine), which could broaden toxicity beyond nonspecific binding by routing mercury into defined biochemical pathways.
Who was studied?
The study did not involve humans or patient cohorts; it used purified enzyme systems and defined mercury–thiol conjugates generated in vitro to isolate direct biochemical interactions. The authors used recombinant human GTK as the primary human enzyme model, and they purified cystathionine γ-lyase from rat liver to test susceptibility to mercury-driven inactivation under controlled assay conditions. They also used standard sulfur-containing amino acids (including methionine, cystine, cystathionine, and glutamine) as comparators to establish normal substrate behavior, then layered in mercury species such as HgCl2 and methylmercuric chloride along with cysteine- and homocysteine-based conjugates to define specificity and potency.
What were the most important findings?
The central finding is that mercury cysteine S-conjugates do not act only as passive toxicants; they actively engage enzyme systems that handle sulfur amino acids, and they do so in ways that can alter metabolism. Recombinant human GTK accepted both CH3Hg-S-Cys and Cys-S-Hg-S-Cys as aminotransferase substrates, while the corresponding homocysteine conjugates showed much weaker or undetectable substrate behavior, indicating that conjugate structure strongly shapes enzymatic handling. At the same time, these mercury S-conjugates inhibited GTK’s canonical transamination reaction, with inhibition remaining substantial even when phenylalanine concentrations increased, supporting a strong noncompetitive component rather than simple substrate competition.
In contrast, cystathionine γ-lyase proved far more vulnerable: micromolar concentrations of HgCl2, CH3Hg-S-Cys, and especially Cys-S-Hg-S-Cys markedly inhibited activity, and the authors showed that this inhibition behaved as irreversible inactivation that did not recover with thiol reducers under their conditions, consistent with mercury-driven modification of a reactive active-site cysteine. The mechanistic interpretation is that Cys-S-Hg-S-Cys likely binds as a substrate analogue of cystathionine/cystine, then promotes rapid S–Hg exchange with the enzyme’s active-site cysteine, locking in loss of function. Importantly for microbiome-focused clinicians, the paper reinforced that methylmercury typically arises from microbial methylation in aquatic systems and then enters humans via food webs, meaning the microbiome’s upstream chemistry influences which mercury conjugates dominate in host tissues and therefore which enzyme interactions become clinically relevant.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
Clinically, this work supports a more targeted view of mercury toxicity: once mercury binds cysteine or glutathione, it can mimic endogenous amino acids and directly disrupt sulfur amino acid pathways through enzyme inhibition and irreversible inactivation, which can plausibly contribute to tissue injury patterns in liver, kidney, and brain. For microbiome translation, the key implication is that microbial mercury methylation sets the exposure form that later behaves as a transportable, enzyme-active conjugate in the host; this strengthens the logic of pairing exposure assessment with downstream metabolic biomarkers linked to transsulfuration and redox balance rather than relying on total mercury alone. For a microbiome signatures database, the “signature” here is mechanistic rather than taxonomic: mercury risk amplifies when organomercury forms capable of cysteine conjugation accumulate, because they can interfere with enzymes central to sulfur metabolism and cellular antioxidant systems, which may secondarily shape gut and systemic inflammatory environments.
Magnesium treatment increases gut microbiome synthesizing vitamin D and inhibiting colorectal cancer: results from a double-blind precision-based randomized placebo-controlled trial
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This trial shows magnesium supplementation changes colorectal-adjacent microbes in a TRPM7 genotype-dependent way, especially in rectal swabs. In people with typical TRPM7 function, magnesium increased Carnobacterium maltaromaticum and Faecalibacterium prausnitzii, microbes linked to local vitamin D activity.
What was studied?
This randomized, double-blind, precision-based placebo-controlled trial tested whether 12 weeks of personalized magnesium supplementation changes gut microbial features linked to vitamin D activity and colorectal cancer protection. The investigators targeted two microbes previously shown in animal work to support local vitamin D signaling and suppress colorectal carcinogenesis: Carnobacterium maltaromaticum and Faecalibacterium prausnitzii. They also tested whether responses differ by a functional magnesium-handling gene variant in TRPM7 and whether microbial changes explain shifts in circulating vitamin D metabolites.
Who was studied?
Researchers enrolled adults with a history of colorectal polyps in the Personalized Prevention of Colorectal Cancer Trial and randomized them to magnesium glycinate or placebo. The analysis included 226 participants with usable microbiome data, with a mean age around 60, and mostly White participants. They stratified randomization by TRPM7 genotype, comparing people with typical TRPM7 function (GG) versus carriers of a missense variant (GA). They profiled microbiomes from stool, rectal swabs, and rectal mucosal biopsies to capture different gut niches.
What were the most important findings?
Magnesium’s effect depended on TRPM7 genotype and sample niche, with the clearest signal in rectal swabs. In participants without the missense variant (GG), magnesium increased C. maltaromaticum and also increased F. prausnitzii in rectal swabs compared with placebo, supporting a genotype-specific microbial response. In carriers of the missense variant (GA), magnesium tended to move in the opposite direction for C. maltaromaticum in swabs and reduced F. prausnitzii in rectal mucosa. The treatment-genotype interaction stayed strongest for C. maltaromaticum, and the swab effect appeared mainly in females. Magnesium-driven microbial shifts did not mediate changes in circulating vitamin D metabolites, suggesting local gut effects rather than systemic vitamin D changes.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This trial supports a precision-nutrition concept for microbiome modulation: magnesium can shift colorectal-adjacent microbial signatures, but the direction and location depend on TRPM7 genotype and sex. For clinicians, the key implication is that magnesium supplementation may not produce uniform microbiome benefits; it may selectively raise microbes tied to local vitamin D signaling in some patients while lowering certain taxa in others. This genotype-aware pattern matters for building microbiome signature databases and for designing prevention strategies in higher-risk groups, because rectal swab and mucosal niches can respond differently than stool.
Methylmercury’s chemistry: From the environment to the mammalian brain
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review explains how methylmercury forms in the environment, enters the body, and reaches the brain through fast “exchange” chemistry with sulfur and selenium groups. It highlights microbial methylation as the exposure driver and selenoenzymes as vulnerable targets that amplify neurotoxicity.
What was reviewed?
This paper reviewed how methylmercury moves through the environment and the body by predictable chemical “exchange reactions” rather than by free diffusion of unbound toxin. The authors centered the review on methylmercury’s strong attraction to sulfur and selenium groups on small molecules and proteins, and they framed much of its behavior as a rapid ligand-swap process (often called “Rabenstein’s reaction”) in which methylmercury transfers from one thiol/selenol site to another. They also summarized where methylmercury comes from in real life exposure (especially fish and rice), how it forms in aquatic systems, and why target identification in humans remains difficult despite clear neurotoxicity.
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesized evidence across environmental microbiology, aquatic food webs, and mammalian toxicology rather than studying one patient group or a single experimental cohort. On the microbial side, it emphasized mercury-methylating and mercury-detoxifying organisms and pathways, including sulfate-reducing bacteria (for example Desulfovibrio), iron-reducing bacteria (for example Geobacter), methanogenic systems that involve cobalamin chemistry, and fungal methylation observations (for example Neurospora). On the host side, it focused on mammalian transport and protein targets, especially thiol-rich proteins (albumin, hemoglobin, glutathione systems) and selenoproteins involved in antioxidant defense.
What were the most important findings?
The authors argued that methylmercury’s key “signature” is not a single receptor but a chemistry pattern: it binds tightly to thiol (-SH) and even more strongly to selenol (-SeH) groups, then rapidly exchanges between them, which can distribute the toxin while also delivering it to sensitive protein sites. For microbiome and environmental tracking, the review highlighted that microbial methylation in low-oxygen sediments drives the most clinically relevant exposure form, and that demethylation can occur through microbial enzymes that cleave the carbon–mercury bond. Clinically, it emphasized that methylmercury often travels as cysteine-bound complexes that mimic methionine and can use amino-acid transport systems to cross barriers, helping explain efficient absorption and brain entry. For molecular harm, it stressed that selenoenzymes such as thioredoxin reductase and glutathione peroxidases are high-value targets because selenium binding is favored and inhibition can trigger oxidative stress cascades that amplify neurotoxicity.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
For clinicians, this review supports treating methylmercury exposure as a dynamic, compartment-shifting problem: the toxin’s distribution and persistence depend on where thiol and selenol “handoff” opportunities exist, not just on total body burden. It also suggests that risk and resilience can hinge on selenium biology and redox capacity, which may help explain delayed symptom onset and variable susceptibility. For microbiome signatures work, it reinforces that mercury risk assessment should prioritize microbial methylation context (anoxic sediment ecology and methylator activity) and should track functional potential (methylation/demethylation capacity) rather than looking for a single taxon. Finally, it identifies a practical research gap with translational value: measuring realistic exchange rates between common blood proteins and small thiols could improve models that predict who accumulates methylmercury in brain-relevant pools and who clears it more effectively.
The MgtR regulatory peptide negatively controls expression of the MgtA Mg2+ transporter in Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study shows that the Salmonella peptide MgtR directly limits the MgtA magnesium transporter during Mg2+ starvation. Deleting mgtR raises MgtA protein levels and makes MgtA appear earlier, which improves growth in low magnesium when other transporters are absent.
What was studied?
This study tested whether MgtR, a tiny 30–amino acid regulatory peptide encoded in the Salmonella mgtCBR operon, also controls the MgtA magnesium transporter in addition to its known role in targeting the virulence protein MgtC. The authors examined MgtA regulation specifically under Mg2+-depleted conditions, because Salmonella only produces MgtA when magnesium is scarce. They asked three practical questions that matter for bacterial fitness in host-like environments: does MgtR change how much MgtA protein accumulates, does it change when MgtA appears after Mg2+ starvation begins, and does it act at the transcriptional level or by direct protein interaction.
Who was studied?
The study evaluated bacterial strains and proteins, not human participants. The authors used Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium strains engineered to express MgtA with a C-terminal HA tag from its native chromosomal position so they could measure true physiological expression. They compared wild-type strains to mgtR deletion strains, plus strains that overexpressed MgtR from a plasmid, and they also used a reduced-transporter background that removed corA and the mgtCB genes to unmask growth effects attributable to MgtA control in low magnesium.
What were the most important findings?
The authors showed that MgtR functions as a negative, posttranscriptional regulator of MgtA protein abundance and timing during Mg2+ starvation. When Salmonella grew in low magnesium (10 µM), deleting mgtR increased MgtA protein levels, while inducing MgtR expression reduced MgtA protein, and neither condition produced detectable MgtA at high magnesium (1 mM), which fits the known rule that MgtA is a low-Mg2+ transporter. Timing mattered: after cells shifted from high to low magnesium, the mgtR deletion strain began accumulating MgtA earlier (about 30 minutes) than wild type (about 45 minutes), and MgtA remained higher at subsequent time points, meaning MgtR acts like a “brake” that prevents premature or excessive transporter buildup during magnesium stress. Importantly, qRT-PCR showed that MgtR did not change mgtA mRNA levels, so it did not act by turning transcription off; instead, a bacterial two-hybrid assay supported direct binding between MgtR and MgtA in vivo, which matches how MgtR targets MgtC. Functionally, the lack of MgtR improved growth in low magnesium when other magnesium import routes were removed, indicating that MgtR-mediated restraint on MgtA has real fitness consequences.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This work shows that Salmonella uses very small peptides to control magnesium transport capacity, which helps the pathogen balance “too little” magnesium against the cost and risk of overexpressing membrane transporters during stress. Clinically, it strengthens the idea that host-driven magnesium limitation does not just restrict growth; it triggers a regulated virulence-adaptation state where Salmonella calibrates transporter output and stress programs to fit the niche. Translationally, it points to anti-virulence opportunities: disrupting MgtR–MgtA interactions could force maladaptive magnesium uptake timing or overload stress responses, lowering pathogen fitness without relying on bactericidal pressure. It also adds a useful microbiome lens, because micronutrient limitation in inflamed tissues can select for organisms with refined magnesium-sensing and peptide-controlled transporter tuning, even when overall community composition changes are subtle.
The gut microbiota attenuate neuroinflammation in manganese exposure by inhibiting cerebral NLRP3 inflammasome
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study shows that manganese exposure triggers neuroinflammation in rats through the NLRP3 inflammasome, but fecal microbiota transplantation can alleviate these effects, suggesting microbiome-based therapies for neurotoxic and neurodegenerative diseases.
What was studied?
This study investigated the impact of manganese (Mn) exposure on neuroinflammation in rats and how fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) could mitigate these effects. The researchers focused on the NLRP3 inflammasome, a key player in neuroinflammation, and explored the molecular mechanisms underlying manganese-induced neurotoxicity. Specifically, they looked at how Mn exposure altered the gut microbiome and how FMT from healthy rats could attenuate neuroinflammation and reduce brain damage caused by manganese exposure.
Who was studied?
The study involved Sprague-Dawley rats, with three groups: a control group, a manganese-treated group, and a group that received fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) after manganese exposure. The rats were subjected to manganese chloride treatment, and their inflammatory responses, neurotoxicity, and gut microbiome alterations were analyzed. The FMT procedure was used to assess whether modulation of the gut microbiome could reduce the effects of Mn-induced neuroinflammation.
What were the most important findings?
The study found that manganese exposure led to significant neuroinflammation in rats, as evidenced by increased production of inflammatory cytokines and activation of the NLRP3 inflammasome in the brain. Specifically, there was upregulation of key inflammatory markers such as IL-1β, IL-18, NLRP3, and TLR4 in the brain. Manganese exposure also led to the accumulation of amyloid-beta (Aβ) and hyperphosphorylated tau (Tau) in the brain, which are hallmarks of neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer's and Parkinson's. Importantly, FMT from control rats significantly attenuated these effects, downregulating the expression of Aβ, Tau, and inflammatory cytokines, and inhibiting NLRP3 inflammasome activation in the brain. This suggests that the gut microbiota plays a crucial role in regulating neuroinflammation and that modulating the microbiome through FMT can alleviate the neurotoxic effects of manganese exposure.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study highlights the important role of the gut-brain axis in mediating the effects of environmental pollutants, such as manganese, on brain health. The findings suggest that altering the gut microbiome through FMT could be a novel therapeutic strategy for reducing neuroinflammation and mitigating neurodegenerative processes caused by metal exposure. Given the increasing concern about manganese toxicity in the environment, particularly in occupational settings, these results could inform future clinical strategies aimed at managing metal-induced neurotoxicity. Furthermore, the study underscores the potential of microbiome-based therapies for treating neurodegenerative diseases, which could be further explored in both preclinical and clinical settings.
Essential metals in health and disease
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review explores the biological roles of essential metals in human health, focusing on their contributions to enzymatic functions and redox reactions. It also highlights how dysregulation of metal homeostasis can lead to diseases like Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, and cancer.
What was reviewed?
This paper reviewed the roles of essential metals in human health and disease, focusing on the importance of metal ions in biological processes. It discussed the impact of metals such as sodium, potassium, magnesium, calcium, and various transition metals on enzymatic activities, redox reactions, and metal homeostasis. The review emphasized the interplay between essential and non-essential metals, their biochemical functions, and how disturbances in their regulation can lead to diseases like neurodegeneration, cardiovascular disorders, and cancer.
Who was reviewed?
The review examined essential metals' biological roles, their coordination chemistry, and their association with human health conditions. The authors provided a comprehensive overview of the contribution of metals like iron, copper, zinc, and others to cellular functions. They also reviewed research on how dysregulation of these metals contributes to diseases, drawing on existing literature and experimental findings from diverse disciplines such as bioinorganic chemistry, biophysics, and medicine.
What were the most important findings?
The most significant findings of this review underscore that essential metals play critical roles in numerous biological functions. These metals, especially redox-active transition metals such as copper and iron, are involved in electron transfer and enzyme catalysis. The review highlighted how metal dysregulation, whether through deficiency or excess, can lead to various diseases. Notably, conditions like Alzheimer's, Parkinson’s, and cardiovascular diseases are linked to disturbances in the homeostasis of metals like zinc, copper, and iron. Furthermore, the review examined the importance of maintaining metal balance through complex metallo-regulatory mechanisms, and the potential therapeutic implications of understanding these interactions in the context of disease prevention and treatment. The authors also noted the potential role of non-essential metals, such as chromium, in interacting with essential metals, further complicating metal homeostasis in disease contexts.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The review emphasizes the importance of a multidisciplinary approach to studying metal ions in health and disease, particularly in understanding metal interactions within biological systems. The findings suggest that better control over metal homeostasis could lead to improved therapeutic strategies for treating diseases related to metal imbalances. The study also advocates for increased research into the combined effects of essential and non-essential metals, which could provide deeper insights into disease mechanisms and open avenues for novel treatments. Additionally, the review points to the need for ongoing work in bioinorganic chemistry and systems biology to better understand the molecular pathways affected by metal dysregulation and to apply this knowledge in clinical settings for disease prevention and treatment.
Bacterial manganese sensing and homeostasis
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review summarizes bacterial Mn sensing and homeostasis mechanisms, highlighting key regulators like MntR and the yybP-ykoY riboswitch. It discusses newly identified Mn exporters and their roles in protecting against Mn toxicity, with implications for antimicrobial strategies targeting bacterial metal regulation.
What was reviewed?
This review focuses on the bacterial manganese (Mn) sensing and homeostasis systems, examining the mechanisms through which bacteria regulate intracellular Mn levels. It highlights the roles of various Mn-binding regulators, including MntR and the yybP-ykoY riboswitch, as well as newly identified Mn exporters. The review also covers advances in understanding the speciation of intracellular Mn pools, the molecular mechanisms behind Mn toxicity, and the emerging families of Mn exporters.
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesized research on bacterial Mn homeostasis, covering a wide range of bacteria, including Escherichia coli, Streptococcus pneumoniae, and Bacillus subtilis, as well as other species with diverse ecological niches. The studies reviewed focused on the identification of Mn transporters, their regulation, and the effects of Mn perturbations on bacterial growth and survival.
What were the most important findings?
The review identifies key mechanisms that bacteria use to control intracellular Mn levels, primarily through Mn importers and exporters. MntR, a transcription factor, plays a central role in regulating Mn homeostasis by controlling the expression of Mn transporters like MntH and MntP. The yybP-ykoY riboswitch, a recently discovered RNA-based regulator, also plays a crucial role in the post-transcriptional regulation of Mn exporters. New families of Mn exporters, such as MntP and MneA, were highlighted for their roles in reducing intracellular Mn levels and protecting bacteria from Mn toxicity. The review also emphasizes the complex interplay between Mn and other metals, such as Fe and Zn, which can affect Mn homeostasis. Furthermore, the research underscores the importance of balancing Mn levels, as both Mn deficiency and excess can lead to bacterial dysfunction, including oxidative stress and impaired virulence. The review also highlights advances in quantifying intracellular Mn pools, with the use of techniques like EPR spectroscopy to measure the distribution of Mn in bacterial cells.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The findings of this review have important implications for understanding bacterial metal homeostasis, especially in the context of infection. The ability of bacteria to regulate Mn levels is crucial for their survival in the host, as excessive Mn can disrupt cellular functions, while Mn limitation can impair pathogen defense mechanisms. This review suggests that targeting Mn transporters, regulators, and the riboswitch could be a promising strategy for developing new antimicrobial therapies, particularly for pathogens that rely on precise metal homeostasis for virulence. Additionally, the insights into Mn and metal interactions could help in the development of interventions that manipulate metal availability to either limit pathogen growth or promote the growth of beneficial bacteria.
Sulfhydryl groups as targets of mercury toxicity
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review explains that mercury toxicity largely comes from binding thiol groups in cysteine, glutathione, and proteins. That binding disrupts enzymes, antioxidant defenses, and signaling, driving oxidative stress, mitochondrial injury, and multi-organ effects that may also influence gut barrier stress and downstream microbiome function.
What was reviewed?
This review examined how mercury causes toxicity by binding to sulfhydryl (thiol, –SH) groups in biological molecules. The authors focused on how mercury’s strong attraction to cysteine residues and other thiol-containing ligands shapes mercury’s chemical forms in the body, its transport between tissues, and the downstream cellular pathways that lead to organ injury.
Who was reviewed?
The authors reviewed evidence from experimental and mechanistic research rather than a single patient cohort. They integrated findings from biochemical studies, animal and cell models, and proteomic work that mapped mercury-reactive cysteines across many proteins, then used that evidence to explain how thiol targeting links exposure to neurologic, renal, hepatic, and cardiovascular effects.
What were the most important findings?
The review emphasized that cysteine is mercury’s primary target, and that glutathione is a major competing thiol that both binds mercury and influences toxicity by controlling antioxidant capacity. In blood, albumin acts as a dominant mercury-binding protein through its free cysteine site, but mercury can rapidly exchange among available thiols, which enables redistribution into tissues. Mercury–thiol binding can directly inactivate enzymes and structural proteins through S-mercuration, disrupt mitochondrial function, and drive oxidative stress by limiting glutathione and thioredoxin availability and by impairing key antioxidant enzymes such as Mn-SOD and thioredoxin reductase.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
Clinically, the review supports a thiol-centered model of mercury harm: symptom risk depends not only on exposure dose but also on ligand availability, redox reserve, and tissue-specific vulnerability of thiol-dependent proteins. This framework helps explain why patients can show different organ patterns at similar measured mercury levels and why oxidative stress and sulfur metabolism markers may add context when evaluating exposure-related complaints. The review also strengthens the rationale for supportive strategies that protect thiol pools and antioxidant systems alongside exposure reduction, while acknowledging that many true thiol-mediated targets remain unmapped and that mercury effects can also occur through mechanisms not fully explained by thiol binding alone.
Ferroptosis: An Iron-Dependent Form of Nonapoptotic Cell Death
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study defines ferroptosis as an iron-dependent, lipid peroxidation–driven cell death triggered by antioxidant failure. Erastin blocks cystine uptake, depletes glutathione defenses, and drives lethal lipid ROS, while ferrostatin-1 prevents death in cancer cells and brain slice neurotoxicity models.
What was studied?
This study defined and experimentally mapped a distinct form of regulated cell death that the authors named ferroptosis. They used the RAS-selective small molecule erastin to trigger this phenotype, then tested what conditions were required for death, what cellular damage accumulated first, and how this process differed from apoptosis, necrosis, and autophagy. They also searched for pharmacologic and genetic modifiers to prove ferroptosis is a separable pathway and not a variant of known death programs.
Who was studied?
The authors primarily studied cultured cancer cells, including oncogenic RAS–mutant tumor cell lines, and compared responses across multiple lines to show that the phenotype generalizes. They also used apoptosis-deficient mouse embryonic fibroblasts to show that core apoptotic machinery is not required. To connect ferroptosis to clinically relevant neurotoxicity, they tested organotypic rat hippocampal slice cultures exposed to excitotoxic glutamate, which models oxidative injury relevant to stroke and neurodegenerative settings.
What were the most important findings?
Erastin caused a progressive rise in cytosolic and, critically, lipid reactive oxygen species, and cells died only when this iron-dependent oxidative burden continued long enough to overwhelm defenses. Iron chelation prevented both lipid ROS accumulation and death, while other classic inhibitors of apoptosis, necroptosis, lysosomal death, or autophagy did not reliably rescue, supporting a distinct pathway. The team identified ferrostatin-1 as a potent and selective inhibitor that blocked lipid ROS buildup and protected both cancer cells and glutamate-injured brain slices, linking these models through a shared iron- and lipid-oxidation–driven mechanism. Mechanistically, they showed erastin suppresses cystine uptake through system xc−, creating a cysteine and glutathione deficit that weakens antioxidant capacity; this sets the stage for lethal lipid peroxidation. A focused genetic screen highlighted a specific dependency network, including an iron-regulatory node and metabolic components that likely supply lipid substrates needed for ferroptotic execution.
What are the greatest implications of this study/ review?
For clinicians, this paper establishes ferroptosis as a practical disease-relevant concept: cells die when iron availability and membrane lipid chemistry allow runaway lipid peroxidation during antioxidant failure. That framing explains why ferroptosis induction may help eliminate apoptosis-resistant tumors, while ferroptosis inhibition may protect vulnerable neural tissue during excitotoxic or oxidative injury. It also introduces a clear therapeutic logic—either trigger ferroptosis by weakening cystine/glutathione defenses in selected cancer contexts, or prevent ferroptosis by blocking lipid radical propagation—while emphasizing that the pathway’s selectivity depends on iron handling, lipid composition, and redox state in the target tissue.
Regulation of Ferroptotic Cancer Cell Death by GPX4
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study shows that GPX4 controls ferroptosis by detoxifying lipid hydroperoxides. Erastin kills cells by depleting glutathione and disabling GPX activity, while RSL3 directly inhibits GPX4. GPX4 loss triggers lipid ROS, and ferroptosis inducers suppress tumor growth in xenografts.
What was studied?
This was an experimental mechanistic study that tested whether GPX4 is a central regulator of ferroptosis and whether chemically inducing GPX4 failure can selectively kill cancer cells and suppress tumor growth. The authors compared multiple ferroptosis-inducing small molecules and used metabolomics, chemoproteomics, and genetic modulation to map where these compounds converge. They showed that one class of ferroptosis inducers triggers ferroptosis by depleting glutathione, while another class triggers ferroptosis by directly inhibiting GPX4, and both routes converge on uncontrolled lipid peroxide accumulation as the lethal event.
Who was studied?
The work primarily used human cancer cell lines and engineered isogenic fibroblast-derived tumorigenic cell systems to model selective ferroptosis sensitivity, then extended findings to broad cancer lineage profiling and mouse xenograft tumor models. Key in vitro systems included HT-1080 fibrosarcoma cells and BJ-derived lines with or without oncogenic HRAS expression to test selective vulnerability under oxidative stress conditions. The authors also profiled ferroptosis sensitivity across a large panel of cancer cell lines and validated in vivo relevance using xenografts, demonstrating that ferroptosis induction can translate into measurable tumor growth suppression.
What were the most important findings?
The authors identified GPX4 as the essential “gatekeeper” enzyme that prevents ferroptotic death by detoxifying membrane lipid hydroperoxides, and they showed that disabling GPX4 reliably triggers ferroptosis across structurally diverse ferroptosis-inducing compounds. Metabolomic profiling established that erastin-driven ferroptosis depletes reduced and oxidized glutathione and increases lysophospholipid signals consistent with lipid oxidation, linking glutathione loss to downstream lipid peroxide stress. Chemoproteomics then pinpointed GPX4 as the top binding target for the potent ferroptosis inducer RSL3, and functional assays confirmed that active RSL3 blocks GPX4 catalytic activity against a GPX4-specific lipid peroxide substrate. Genetic modulation strengthened causality: GPX4 knockdown produced lipid ROS accumulation and ferroptotic death, while GPX4 overexpression protected cells from ferroptosis inducers, indicating GPX4 activity defines sensitivity. The study also established a practical classification of ferroptosis inducers into those that indirectly disable GPX4 via glutathione depletion and those that directly inhibit GPX4, creating a convergent mechanistic framework centered on lipid hydroperoxide detoxification failure.
What are the greatest implications of this study/ review?
For clinicians and translational teams, this paper positions GPX4-regulated ferroptosis as a druggable vulnerability in specific cancers and provides a clear mechanistic rationale for therapy design: if a tumor relies on GPX4 to survive high oxidative and lipid peroxide stress, then GPX4 inhibition or glutathione collapse can drive nonapoptotic cancer cell death and potentially overcome apoptosis resistance. The work also supports the use of pharmacodynamic readouts linked to lipid peroxidation during ferroptosis and shows that ferroptosis induction can suppress tumor growth in xenografts, reinforcing clinical relevance. Finally, by identifying cancer lineages with heightened sensitivity, the study motivates patient-stratified approaches where ferroptosis-based therapies target tumors most likely to depend on GPX4-mediated lipid peroxide control.
Ferroptosis: A Regulated Cell Death Nexus Linking Metabolism, Redox Biology, and Disease
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review explains ferroptosis, an iron-driven, lipid peroxidation cell-death pathway linked to metabolism and redox balance. It highlights key control points such as system xc−, glutathione, GPX4, lipid remodeling, and iron handling, and it connects these mechanisms to cancer and tissue injury.
What was reviewed?
This Primer reviewed ferroptosis as a regulated form of cell death that occurs when iron-dependent lipid hydroperoxides accumulate to lethal levels. It explained ferroptosis as an “Achilles’ heel” created by polyunsaturated fatty acids in membranes, and it framed cell survival as a balance between lipid peroxide generation and multiple repair or detox systems. The paper emphasized how ferroptosis sits at the crossroads of amino acid metabolism, glutathione biology, lipid remodeling, iron trafficking, and redox control, and it summarized where ferroptosis likely contributes to disease and where clinicians may be able to modulate it.
Who was reviewed?
Because this is a review, the authors did not analyze one patient cohort. Instead, they synthesized evidence drawn from diverse experimental settings, including mammalian cell systems, organ and tissue injury models, neurodegeneration models, and cancer models. They also referenced plant stress models to underscore that ferroptosis-like vulnerability is evolutionarily conserved. The review repeatedly connected mechanism to clinically recognizable contexts such as ischemia–reperfusion injury, hemorrhagic and traumatic brain injury, kidney degeneration, and carcinogenesis, focusing on what is consistent across systems rather than any single disease population.
What were the most important findings?
The review clarified that ferroptosis is defined by lethal lipid peroxidation that depends on iron availability and on the presence of peroxidation-prone polyunsaturated phospholipids. It highlighted GPX4 and glutathione as core defenses that detoxify lipid hydroperoxides, and it explained how limiting cystine import through system xc− can deplete glutathione and permit unchecked lipid damage. It also emphasized that membrane lipid remodeling enzymes, including ACSL4 and LPCAT3, shape susceptibility by determining whether arachidonic and adrenic acid–containing phospholipids become abundant substrates for oxidation, while iron uptake, ferritin handling, and ferritinophagy tune the labile iron pool that fuels this process.
What are the greatest implications of this study/ review?
This review gives clinicians a practical map for thinking about ferroptosis as a modifiable injury pathway rather than a niche laboratory phenomenon. It supports two translational directions: inducing ferroptosis to exploit metabolic and redox fragility in selected cancers, and inhibiting ferroptosis to limit tissue loss in conditions marked by oxidative stress and iron dysregulation. It also warns that ferroptosis readouts are sensitive to nutrient and antioxidant context, which matters for interpreting biomarkers and for designing interventions that change iron status, lipid availability, or antioxidant capacity.
Selenium: Tracing Another Essential Element of Ferroptotic Cell Death
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review highlights selenium's essential role in ferroptosis through GPX4 and FSP1. It discusses the therapeutic potential of selenium supplementation for neurodegenerative diseases, as well as selenium-independent pathways that suppress lipid peroxidation and offer new strategies for disease treatment.
What was reviewed?
This review explored the role of selenium in ferroptosis, focusing on its essential involvement through glutathione peroxidase 4 (GPX4), a key selenoenzyme that protects against lipid peroxidation and ferroptosis. It examines the dual role of selenium in regulating iron-dependent lipid peroxidation and the mechanisms through which selenium, via GPX4 and other selenoproteins, helps prevent oxidative damage in various tissues. The review highlights how selenium, beyond its canonical function in GPX4, is involved in a selenium-independent ferroptosis suppressor protein 1 (FSP1)-ubiquinone-NAD(P)H axis, which also suppresses ferroptosis through lipid radical trapping.
Who was reviewed?
The review draws from recent studies and genetic research in animal models, including mouse knockouts of GPX4 and other selenoproteins. These studies investigate the role of selenium in different tissues (e.g., neurons, liver, kidneys) and its interaction with ferroptosis. The paper also discusses selenium's critical role in neuronal function, specifically in preventing oxidative damage and neurodegeneration, providing insight into selenium deficiency-related diseases such as Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, and epilepsy.
What were the most important findings?
The review identifies selenium as a critical modulator of ferroptosis, especially through the GPX4-GSH pathway, which mitigates oxidative stress by reducing phospholipid hydroperoxides. The review also highlights the selenium-independent system, including the FSP1-CoQ10-NAD(P)H pathway, which operates parallel to GPX4 and lipid peroxidation control. Importantly, the review confirms that deficient selenium levels lead to impaired GPX4 function, increasing susceptibility to ferroptosis, resulting in severe conditions like neurodegeneration and organ failure. The paper also suggests that selenium supplementation can restore GPX4 expression, potentially preventing neurodegenerative diseases. Additionally, the study notes that excess selenium may be toxic, underlining the importance of optimal selenium levels for cellular protection.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The findings suggest that selenium's role in ferroptosis could provide a therapeutic target for diseases linked to oxidative damage and ferroptotic cell death, including neurodegenerative diseases and ischemia/reperfusion injury. Selenium supplementation, especially in tissues like the brain and liver, could protect against GPX4 depletion, reducing lipid peroxidation and neurodegeneration. Furthermore, understanding the selenium-independent ferroptosis suppressor protein (FSP1) pathway opens up additional avenues for therapeutic intervention in cancer and degenerative diseases where cell death regulation is key. The paper also emphasizes the potential for pharmacological modulation of selenium-dependent pathways, including GPX4 inhibition in cancer therapies, making selenium a key element in metabolic homeostasis and disease treatment.
Nutrient Metal Sequestration by Calprotectin Inhibits Bacterial Superoxide Defense, Enhancing Neutrophil Killing of Staphylococcus aureus
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study highlights calprotectin's role in sequestering manganese and zinc to disrupt bacterial superoxide defenses, making S. aureus more vulnerable to neutrophil-mediated killing, providing insights into potential therapeutic strategies targeting bacterial metal acquisition.
What was studied?
This study investigated the role of calprotectin, a neutrophil protein, in enhancing the killing of Staphylococcus aureus by sequestering manganese (Mn) and zinc (Zn), which are essential metals for bacterial defense mechanisms. The study particularly focused on how calprotectin's sequestration of these metals inhibits bacterial superoxide defense systems, thereby increasing the susceptibility of S. aureus to the immune response.
Who was studied?
The study primarily involved Staphylococcus aureus, including both wild-type strains and mutants deficient in superoxide dismutases (SODs), which are crucial for bacterial defense against oxidative stress. The research was conducted using in vitro assays and in vivo murine models to observe the effects of calprotectin on S. aureus growth and virulence.
What were the most important findings?
The study found that calprotectin, through its ability to bind manganese and zinc, significantly enhances the sensitivity of S. aureus to superoxide stress. Calprotectin sequesters these metals, disrupting bacterial superoxide defense mechanisms, particularly the manganese-dependent superoxide dismutases (SODs) in S. aureus. This metal sequestration leads to elevated superoxide levels within the bacteria, making them more susceptible to neutrophil killing. The research demonstrated that calprotectin's antimicrobial effects were directly linked to its ability to chelate metal ions, as mutations in calprotectin that impaired metal binding abolished its antimicrobial properties. Moreover, calprotectin increased the sensitivity of S. aureus to superoxide stress and neutrophil-mediated killing in both exponential and stationary bacterial phases.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study has significant implications for understanding how the immune system utilizes nutrient metal sequestration to combat infections. The findings emphasize the role of calprotectin in enhancing immune defense by making bacterial pathogens more vulnerable to oxidative stress, thus improving the effectiveness of neutrophils in clearing infections. The study also suggests that targeting metal ion acquisition in pathogens could be a potential therapeutic strategy, offering a new avenue for antimicrobial treatments, especially against S. aureus and other pathogens that rely on metal-dependent defenses.
Copper in microbial pathogenesis: Meddling with the metal
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Copper (Cu)
Copper (Cu)
Copper serves as both a vital nutrient and a potential toxin, with its regulation having profound effects on microbial pathogenesis and immune responses. In the body, copper interacts with pathogens, either supporting essential enzyme functions or hindering microbial growth through its toxicity. The gastrointestinal tract, immune cells, and bloodstream are key sites where copper plays a crucial role in controlling infection and maintaining microbial balance. Understanding copper’s interactions with the microbiome and host defenses allows for targeted clinical strategies.
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This review explores copper's role in microbial pathogenesis, highlighting its use by hosts as an antimicrobial weapon and the resistance mechanisms developed by pathogens. It discusses copper's involvement in immune defense and fungal virulence, offering insights into potential therapeutic strategies.
What was studied?
The study examines the role of copper (Cu) in microbial pathogenesis, particularly its dual role as both a necessary cofactor for microbial enzymes and a toxic element that the host uses to limit microbial growth. It reviews how the host utilizes Cu as a weapon and how pathogens have evolved mechanisms to resist its toxicity.
Who was studied?
This research focuses on a variety of pathogens, including bacteria like Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and Salmonella enterica, as well as fungi such as Cryptococcus neoformans. The study explores how these microorganisms interact with copper during infection and how they have developed resistance strategies to cope with copper's toxic effects.
Most important findings
Copper plays a significant role in the immune defense against microbial infections. In mammals, Cu is used to restrict pathogen growth, particularly through its accumulation in the phagolysosome of macrophages, which enhances antimicrobial activity. At the same time, pathogens have developed sophisticated mechanisms to mitigate Cu toxicity. For example, Salmonella and E. coli utilize the Cue and CopA systems to export excess Cu, while fungi like Cryptococcus neoformans use Cu-dependent enzymes like laccase for melanin production, which helps the pathogen evade host immune defenses. The study also highlights that Cu resistance is critical for the virulence of pathogens, where Cu homeostasis is tightly regulated.
Key implications
The findings suggest that Cu is a crucial part of the host's immune response, and understanding how pathogens resist its toxic effects could lead to new therapeutic strategies. Enhancing copper's antimicrobial properties might offer a novel approach for treating infections. The study also underscores the complexity of copper regulation in microbes, which could inform the development of drugs that target these resistance mechanisms.
Commensal iron acquisition and nutritional immunity during Salmonella infection
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Iron (Fe)
Iron (Fe)
OverviewIron is a pivotal nutrient at the host–pathogen interface. Virtually all microbes (with rare exceptions like Borrelia) require iron for processes from DNA synthesis to respiration. [1] In human hosts, free iron is vanishingly scarce due to “nutritional immunity,” wherein iron is locked up in hemoproteins or tightly bound by transport proteins.[2] This metal tug-of-war […]
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Nutritional Immunity
Nutritional Immunity
Nutritional immunity restricts metal access to pathogens, leveraging sequestration, transport, and toxicity to control infections and immunity.
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XusB in Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron binds enterobactin in OMVs, sustains commensal fitness, and creates a lipocalin 2 resistant iron pool that Salmonella can recapture, redefining commensal-iron-acquisition-and-nutritional-immunity during colitis.
What was studied?
This study interrogates commensal iron acquisition and nutritional immunity during Salmonella infection, focusing on how the gut commensal Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron captures xenosiderophores to sustain fitness and inadvertently modulates host defenses against pathogens. The authors identify XusB, a secreted, surface-anchored lipoprotein that binds ferric enterobactin with high affinity and is enriched in outer membrane vesicles. They combine structural biology, biochemistry, bacterial genetics, and murine infection models to show that XusB-bound enterobactin resists sequestration by host lipocalin 2, can be re-acquired by Salmonella via FepA or IroN, and thereby alters the effective pool of iron chelators available under inflammatory iron restriction. The graphical abstract on page 2 schematically depicts enterobactin crossfeeding, OMV packaging of XusB, and reduced lipocalin 2 access, framing commensal iron acquisition as a third axis in nutritional immunity beyond host and pathogen.
Who was studied?
Experiments used B. thetaiotaomicron VPI-5482 and isogenic mutants lacking xusB or harboring an enterobactin-binding deficient XusB, along with Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium strains, including wild type, entB deficient, ΔfepA iroN double mutant, and ΔiroB lacking salmochelin synthesis. Escherichia coli BW25113 mutants from the Keio collection informed receptor requirements for XusB-bound siderophore uptake. In vivo work involved antibiotic-pretreated conventional C57BL/6 mice for competitive infection and colonization studies, and gnotobiotic Swiss Webster mice to measure XusB in luminal OMV fractions without confounding microbes. Figures 4 and 7 detail competitive indices for Salmonella in mice colonized with B. thetaiotaomicron variants or administered OMVs, while supplementary analyses confirm comparable inflammation readouts across conditions.
Most important findings
XusB is a surface-exposed, OMV-enriched lipoprotein required for B. thetaiotaomicron utilization of catecholate xenosiderophores. Structural work shows XusB forms a seven-bladed beta propeller with a positively charged central calyx that accommodates Fe-enterobactin; docking and mutagenesis identify key contact residues, and binding affinity is in the low-nanomolar range near 148 nM. In vitro, OMV-associated or recombinant XusB preloaded with Fe-enterobactin fuels growth of B. thetaiotaomicron under iron chelation, elevates cellular iron by ICP-MS, and supports growth of Salmonella entB mutants and E. coli via TonB-dependent enterobactin receptors FepA and IroN. In species with distinct XusB homologs, XusB-bound siderophores can be “selfish,” restricting access to closely related Bacteroides while remaining accessible to Enterobacteriaceae.
Crucially, XusB changes the competitive landscape in the presence of host lipocalin 2. When lipocalin 2 is added with an iron chelator, XusB increases the competitive index of wild-type Salmonella over the ΔfepA iroN mutant, indicating that XusB-bound enterobactin constitutes an exploitable pool despite host sequestration of free enterobactin. In mice, XusB confers a resilience advantage to B. thetaiotaomicron during Salmonella colitis and increases Salmonella fitness when animals are colonized with XusB-positive B. thetaiotaomicron or given XusB-bearing OMVs. Page 34 visualizes the XusB architecture and calyx electrostatics, pages 39 to 41 depict in vitro and in vivo competition assays that demonstrate altered siderophore accessibility and pathogen advantage.
Key implications
For microbiome signatures, B. thetaiotaomicron emerges as a context-dependent facilitator of pathogen iron access under inflammation, linking a commensal siderophore-binding system to Salmonella expansion. B. thetaiotaomicron with XusB-mediated xenosiderophore capture and Salmonella Typhimurium with enterobactin or salmochelin utilization. Clinically, strategies that modulate iron availability or deploy siderophore-binding therapeutics must account for commensal OMV cargo that can buffer host sequestration and inadvertently aid pathogens. Targeting XusB-like systems may represent a translational lever to restore nutritional immunity without broadly disrupting commensals.
Measuring magnesium – Physiological, clinical and analytical perspectives
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review explains why magnesium testing often misses true deficiency, especially in critical illness. It compares blood and urine methods, highlights drug-related magnesium loss, and shows how urine indices and free magnesium may improve diagnosis and treatment decisions.
What was reviewed?
This paper reviewed magnesium biology and the practical clinical question of how to measure magnesium well enough to guide care. The authors connected basic physiology (absorption in the gut, storage in bone and muscle, and kidney control of excretion) to real-world lab testing, and they compared common measurement approaches in blood and urine. They also reviewed how medications and disease states drive magnesium imbalance, why these abnormalities often get missed in hospitalized patients, and what analytical issues (sample type, method bias, interference, and lack of standardization) can distort results and clinical decisions.
Who was reviewed?
The paper did not study a single patient cohort. Instead, it synthesized prior human clinical studies, laboratory method evaluations, and guideline-style evidence spanning healthy adults and pediatric reference interval work, critically ill and surgical patients, kidney and transplant populations, and patients exposed to magnesium-altering drugs. The “who” therefore includes the broad clinical populations represented across the cited literature, rather than a defined group enrolled by the authors.
What were the most important findings?
The most actionable finding is that “total serum magnesium” can misclassify status, especially in critical illness, because it includes protein- and ligand-bound magnesium and may not track the physiologically active fraction. The review emphasizes that free (often called “ionized”) magnesium may better reflect biologic activity, but it remains uncommon due to electrode selectivity issues, pH effects, and limited standardization and reference ranges. The authors also highlight urine magnesium as a powerful tool when interpreted correctly: spot urine magnesium normalized to creatinine and the fractional excretion of magnesium can help distinguish renal magnesium wasting from low intake or gastrointestinal loss. Method choice matters because dye-binding assays dominate routine testing but can suffer from interferences and calibration differences, while enzymatic approaches can offer better selectivity yet still show variability across platforms. For microbiome context, the review supports that intestinal absorption depends on intake and transport pathways (notably TRPM6/7), but it does not report microbial signatures or consistent organism-level associations.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
Clinicians should treat magnesium as a high-impact electrolyte, not a “background lab,” because abnormal levels can worsen outcomes and can be drug-driven, preventable, and clinically silent until severe. This review supports a more targeted strategy: interpret magnesium using the right specimen and method for the clinical question, consider urine-based indices when etiology is unclear, and recognize that a “normal” total magnesium may not rule out functionally important deficiency in high-risk settings. It also implies that health systems could improve care by standardizing measurement practices, validating decision cutoffs locally, and expanding access to reliable free magnesium testing where it changes management.
Fecal microbiome transplantation attenuates manganese-induced neurotoxicity through regulation of the apelin signaling pathway by inhibition of autophagy in mouse brain
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study shows that fecal microbiome transplantation (FMT) can attenuate manganese-induced neurotoxicity by regulating the apelin signaling pathway and autophagy in the brain, offering new therapeutic insights into managing metal-induced neurodegenerative diseases.
What was studied?
This study focused on how fecal microbiome transplantation (FMT) can mitigate manganese (Mn)-induced neurotoxicity in mice. The researchers examined the molecular mechanisms involved, specifically the role of the apelin signaling pathway and autophagy regulation in the hippocampus. The study also explored the effects of Mn exposure on the gut microbiota and the potential therapeutic benefits of FMT in alleviating neurodegenerative changes induced by Mn.
Who was studied?
The study involved male BALB/c mice, divided into three groups: a control group, a manganese-exposed group (Mn), and a group that received fecal microbiome transplantation (Mn+FMT). The animals were exposed to manganese chloride (MnCl₂) in their drinking water for five weeks, and fecal matter from donor mice was administered to the Mn+FMT group through oral gavage.
What were the most important findings?
The study found that manganese exposure activated autophagy in the hippocampus, which contributed to neurotoxicity. The expression of autophagy-related proteins such as Beclin-1, LC-3B, p62, and PINK1 was significantly increased in the Mn-exposed group. FMT treatment, however, attenuated this autophagy activation, suggesting that gut microbiota modulation can reduce the neurotoxic effects of Mn. The researchers identified the apelin signaling pathway as the key pathway regulated by FMT, with significant changes in this pathway observed in the Mn+FMT group. Specifically, FMT reversed autophagy activation in the hippocampus by modulating the apelin pathway, which plays a role in neuroprotection through anti-inflammatory and anti-apoptotic effects. Additionally, transcriptomic and proteomic analyses revealed that the FMT intervention improved the overall brain protein profile, contributing to the reduction of neuroinflammation and mitigating the neurodegenerative effects induced by manganese exposure.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study provides compelling evidence that FMT can modulate the gut-brain axis to alleviate neurotoxicity caused by environmental pollutants like manganese. The findings suggest that gut microbiome manipulation could serve as a novel therapeutic approach for neurodegenerative diseases, particularly those associated with metal toxicity, such as Parkinson’s disease. The identification of the apelin signaling pathway as a target for FMT-induced protection highlights the potential for developing microbiome-based therapies to control autophagy and reduce oxidative stress in the brain. This study opens new avenues for managing metal-induced neurodegeneration through the regulation of microbial communities, providing a unique approach to neuroprotection.
Effects of cadmium and copper mixtures on antibiotic resistance genes in rhizosphere soil
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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The study explores how cadmium and copper contamination in rhizosphere soil affects the distribution of antibiotic resistance genes. It shows that these metals contribute to the spread of resistance genes through co-selection, with significant implications for environmental and public health.
What was studied?
This study investigates how cadmium (Cd) and copper (Cu), both individually and in combination, influence the distribution of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) in rhizosphere soil. The research aims to examine how these heavy metals impact the abundance of specific bacterial communities and ARGs, including multidrug resistance genes and metal resistance genes. It explores whether metals like Cd and Cu, through interactions, contribute to the co-selection of resistance genes in the soil, which could have implications for human health via agricultural systems.
Who was studied?
The study primarily focuses on the bacterial communities in rhizosphere soil, which is the region of soil surrounding plant roots. These bacteria are directly influenced by soil contamination with heavy metals, specifically Cd and Cu. The experiment was conducted using agricultural soil samples treated with varying concentrations of these metals. The bacteria studied include those from key phyla like Proteobacteria and Actinobacteria, known for hosting various antibiotic resistance and metal resistance genes. The research also investigates the relationship between metal concentrations and the presence of resistance genes, linking these findings to environmental risks.
Most important findings
The study reveals that both Cd and Cu, when present in high concentrations, significantly influence the distribution and abundance of antibiotic resistance genes in rhizosphere soil. Key genes like acrA (multidrug resistance), intI-1 (integron), and sul3 (sulfonamide resistance) were found to be more abundant in soils contaminated with these metals. Interestingly, while cadmium had a direct effect on the presence of certain genes like acrA, copper primarily influenced genes like intI-1. The research also identified that most of the resistance genes were hosted by bacterial taxa such as Proteobacteria, Actinobacteria, and Bacteroidetes. The combination of Cd and Cu showed interactive effects on gene abundance, suggesting that these metals co-select ARGs.
Structural equation modeling showed that cadmium had a more direct effect on the abundance of ARGs compared to copper, which impacted them more indirectly by altering soil properties like pH and organic matter content. The study also noted that while microbial community diversity didn’t significantly affect the ARG distribution, mobile genetic elements (MGEs) played a crucial role in facilitating the horizontal gene transfer of ARGs between bacterial species.
Key implications
The findings of this study highlight the growing concern over the co-selection of antibiotic resistance genes in environments contaminated with heavy metals. The results emphasize the need to consider both metal pollution and antibiotic resistance when assessing environmental risks, especially in agricultural soils. Heavy metal contamination could be contributing to the spread of antibiotic resistance in the environment, which may ultimately impact human health. The research calls for more comprehensive environmental monitoring and management strategies to mitigate the risks posed by metal pollution, focusing on both heavy metal and antibiotic resistance.
Probiotics in addressing heavy metal toxicities in fish farming: Current progress and perspective
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study shows that probiotics can mitigate the effects of heavy metal toxicity in farmed fish. By binding metals and reducing oxidative stress, probiotics improve fish health and safety for consumption, offering a sustainable solution for the aquaculture industry.
What was studied?
The study explores the role of probiotics in alleviating the detrimental effects of heavy metal toxicity in fish farming. Heavy metals like copper, lead, mercury, and cadmium can accumulate in fish, leading to oxidative stress, immune dysfunction, and organ damage. The research investigates whether probiotics can reduce the harmful impact of these metals by enhancing detoxification processes and promoting gut health, which is crucial for maintaining overall fish health.
Who was studied?
The research primarily focuses on common fish species in aquaculture, such as tilapia, carp, and zebrafish. These species are often exposed to environmental heavy metals through contaminated water or feed, making them ideal candidates for studying the effectiveness of probiotics in mitigating heavy metal toxicity. The study examines the use of various probiotic strains, including Lactobacillus and Bacillus, and their impact on the health of these fish species under controlled laboratory conditions.
Most important findings
The study demonstrates that probiotics can be a promising strategy for reducing heavy metal toxicity in fish. The probiotics tested in the research were found to bind heavy metals in the digestive system, preventing their absorption and accumulation in tissues. In addition, probiotics enhanced the detoxification process by modulating antioxidant enzymes, including superoxide dismutase, catalase, and glutathione peroxidase. These enzymes play a vital role in reducing oxidative stress, a common consequence of heavy metal exposure. Furthermore, the probiotics supported the gut microbiome, which is essential for detoxifying metals and maintaining a balanced immune response. The research showed that fish treated with probiotics experienced less damage to their liver, kidneys, and intestines, which are organs frequently affected by heavy metal accumulation.
Key implications
The findings of this study have significant implications for both the aquaculture industry and food safety. By using probiotics to mitigate the effects of heavy metal toxicity, fish farmers can improve the health and welfare of their stock while also reducing the potential health risks posed to consumers. Probiotics offer a cost-effective and sustainable solution to the growing problem of metal contamination in aquaculture. Moreover, this approach could reduce the reliance on chemical treatments and antibiotics, promoting more environmentally friendly and safer farming practices. The study also highlights the potential for using probiotics to address other environmental stressors in fish farming, opening new avenues for research in sustainable aquaculture practices.
Urinary heavy metals and overall survival of advanced high-grade serous ovarian cancer: A nested case-control study in China
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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The study examines the association between urinary concentrations of heavy metals (arsenic, cadmium, mercury, lead) and survival in patients with advanced high-grade serous ovarian cancer. High levels of these metals correlate with worse outcomes, particularly lead, which significantly contributes to survival prognosis.
What was studied?
The study investigated the relationship between urinary concentrations of five heavy metals, arsenic (As), cadmium (Cd), chromium (Cr), mercury (Hg), and lead (Pb), and overall survival (OS) in patients with advanced high-grade serous ovarian cancer (HGSOC). Using a nested case-control design within the Ovarian Cancer Follow-Up Study (OOPS), the researchers aim to identify whether high levels of these metals in urine could serve as biomarkers for cancer prognosis and survival outcomes in women with HGSOC.
Who was studied?
The study focused on 318 women diagnosed with advanced high-grade serous ovarian cancer, with a 1:1 matched case-control design. The patients were recruited from Shengjing Hospital of China Medical University, Shenyang, China, and were matched for age at diagnosis, sample date, and body mass index. The cases were those who had passed away from the disease, and the controls were those who survived. The study excluded patients who had early-stage or non-serous ovarian cancer and those undergoing chemotherapy at the time of diagnosis, ensuring the cohort was limited to never-smokers to avoid confounding factors like smoking, which could affect metal accumulation.
Most important findings
The study found significant associations between higher urinary concentrations of arsenic, cadmium, mercury, and lead and worse overall survival for patients with advanced high-grade serous ovarian cancer. Specifically, individuals in the highest tertile for arsenic, cadmium, mercury, and lead concentrations had higher odds ratios for poor survival compared to those in the lowest tertile. The odds ratios (ORs) for arsenic, cadmium, mercury, and lead were 1.99, 2.56, 2.24, and 3.80, respectively, indicating a strong relationship between elevated metal levels and reduced survival. Additionally, a joint effect analysis revealed that mixtures of these heavy metals further exacerbated the association with poor survival outcomes, with lead contributing the most to this negative impact.
Key implications
This study suggests that urinary heavy metal concentrations, particularly of lead, cadmium, mercury, and arsenic, are associated with worse survival outcomes in advanced high-grade serous ovarian cancer. These findings support the notion that environmental exposures to these toxic metals might play a critical role in the prognosis of HGSOC. Given the persistent nature of these metals in the environment and their accumulation in the human body, they could serve as potential biomarkers for assessing cancer prognosis. The study calls for further research to validate these findings and explore mechanisms underlying the relationship between heavy metals and ovarian cancer survival, including their potential interaction with other environmental and genetic factors.
Co-effect of cadmium and iron oxide nanoparticles on plasmid-mediated conjugative transfer of antibiotic resistance genes
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study examines how the combination of cadmium and iron oxide nanoparticles enhances the conjugative transfer of antibiotic resistance genes in microbial communities. It emphasizes the risk of accelerated antibiotic resistance spread, especially in human pathogens, under environmental pollution.
What was studied?
The study investigates the co-effects of cadmium (Cd²⁺) and iron oxide nanoparticles (Fe₂O₃) on plasmid-mediated conjugative transfer of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs). Specifically, it explores how the combination of these environmental pollutants influences the horizontal gene transfer (HGT) process in microbial communities. The research uses the RP4 plasmid, known for facilitating the transfer of ARGs, to track how Cd²⁺ and Fe₂O₃ nanoparticles impact bacterial gene exchange and the subsequent spread of resistance traits, which can contribute to antimicrobial resistance.
Who was studied?
The study focused on bacterial strains from a water microbial community, using Pseudomonas putida KT2442 as the donor strain, which carries the RP4 plasmid. The recipient microbes were obtained from brackish water environments, providing a natural setting for studying gene transfer. The investigation centers on gram-negative bacteria, including human pathogens like Escherichia hermannii, Shigella boydii, and Klebsiella pneumoniae. These bacteria were subjected to various concentrations of Cd²⁺ and Fe₂O₃ nanoparticles to observe the effects on plasmid conjugation, with a particular focus on human pathogens that pose significant risks to public health.
Most important findings
The study found that the simultaneous exposure to Cd²⁺ and high concentrations of Fe₂O₃ nanoparticles significantly increased the conjugative transfer frequency of the RP4 plasmid compared to individual exposures. The highest transfer frequencies were observed when both pollutants were present, particularly with nano Fe₂O₃ at concentrations of 10 mg/L and 100 mg/L. Interestingly, the majority of the transconjugants identified were human pathogens, which emphasizes the potential public health implications of the findings. Mechanistically, the increased plasmid transfer was linked to enhanced cell membrane permeability, elevated antioxidant enzyme activities, and upregulated gene expression of conjugation-related genes (trbBp and trfAp). This suggests that the co-exposure to Cd²⁺ and nano Fe₂O₃ altered bacterial cell function, making it easier for plasmids to transfer between bacteria.
Key implications
This study highlights the potential risks posed by the combination of heavy metals and nanomaterials in the environment. The co-effect of Cd²⁺ and Fe₂O₃ nanoparticles can accelerate the spread of antibiotic resistance through enhanced horizontal gene transfer, especially in environments where human pathogens are prevalent. The findings stress the need for careful management of both heavy metal pollution and nanoparticle use, as they can inadvertently promote the dissemination of resistance genes, exacerbating the global challenge of antimicrobial resistance. Further studies are needed to understand the long-term ecological and public health impacts of these interactions and to develop strategies to mitigate the risks.
Urinary metals and metal mixtures and timing of natural menopause in midlife women
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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The study links higher urinary arsenic and lead concentrations to earlier menopause, suggesting that exposure to these metals accelerates ovarian aging. Women with higher environmental risk scores (ERS) experienced menopause earlier, emphasizing the role of metal mixtures in reproductive health.
What was studied?
The study investigated the relationship between urinary metal concentrations and the timing of natural menopause in midlife women, using data from the Study of Women’s Health Across the Nation (SWAN). It specifically examined 15 urinary metals, including arsenic, lead, cadmium, copper, mercury, and zinc, to assess how these metals, both individually and in mixtures, influenced the onset of menopause. The research aimed to fill the knowledge gap regarding the impact of environmental metal exposure on ovarian aging and the timing of menopause, a critical factor linked to various long-term health risks.
Who was studied?
The study population consisted of 1,082 premenopausal women, aged 45–56, from multiple racial and ethnic groups, including White, Black, Chinese, and Japanese women. The participants were enrolled in the SWAN study, a large, community-based, prospective cohort. These women were followed for an average of 4.1 years, during which they provided regular urine samples for analysis of metal concentrations. The study aimed to explore how various environmental exposures, specifically metals, affect the timing of natural menopause and associated health risks.
Most important findings
The study found that higher urinary concentrations of arsenic and lead were significantly associated with earlier natural menopause. Specifically, women in the highest quartile of urinary arsenic had an average menopause age 1.6 years earlier compared to those in the lowest quartile. Similarly, higher lead concentrations also correlated with earlier menopause. This suggests that exposure to certain metals may accelerate ovarian aging. Additionally, the study used an Environmental Risk Score (ERS) to quantify the cumulative effect of multiple metal exposures, showing that women with higher ERS values experienced menopause earlier, further emphasizing the role of metal mixtures in accelerating the menopausal transition. The study also observed no significant association with other metals like cadmium or mercury but highlighted the potential cumulative effects of metal mixtures on menopause timing.
Key implications
The study's findings emphasize that environmental exposure to heavy metals, such as arsenic and lead, may have significant public health implications by influencing the timing of natural menopause. Since earlier menopause is linked to various health risks such as cardiovascular diseases, osteoporosis, and cognitive decline, understanding the role of environmental toxins in this process could inform public health interventions aimed at reducing exposure to harmful metals. This research underscores the importance of considering both individual and combined exposures to metals in future epidemiological studies and public health policies.
Metal(loid)-gut microbiota interactions and microbiota-related protective strategies: A review
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review examines how metal(loid) exposure affects gut microbiota composition and function. It also evaluates microbiota-related strategies for metal(loid) detoxification.
What was reviewed?
The review focused on metal(loid)-gut microbiota interactions and the microbiota-related protective strategies. It specifically looked at the impact of metal(loid) exposure on gut microbiota, including essential metals and toxic metals like lead, mercury, cadmium, and arsenic. The review explored how these interactions might affect human health and how strategies such as probiotics, prebiotics, and postbiotics could mitigate the harmful effects of metals on the gut microbiota and overall health. The authors discussed the latest research on microbiota-metal(loid) interactions, including the potential for novel microbiota-related therapeutic strategies in metal(loid) detoxification.
Who was reviewed?
The review primarily examined various studies focusing on metal(loid)-gut microbiota interactions in different organisms, including humans. It reviewed research on how exposure to metals and metalloids, both essential (e.g., copper, zinc) and toxic (e.g., arsenic, mercury, cadmium), alters the gut microbiome. The review highlighted the effects of metal(loid) exposure on microbial diversity, bacterial composition, and the metabolic functions of the gut microbiota. Additionally, the review explored how the gut microbiome itself can influence the absorption, bioavailability, and toxicity of metals, thereby affecting human health. The review also emphasized the microbiota-related protective strategies, such as the use of probiotics, prebiotics, and postbiotics, which were researched in various clinical and experimental models. Studies in animals (e.g., rodents) and human microbiota composition were reviewed to establish the broader implications of metal(loid) exposure on gut health.
What were the most important findings?
The review highlighted several important findings, including the fact that metal(loid) exposure alters the composition and metabolic functions of gut microbiota. This can disrupt gut health and lead to various diseases, including metabolic, gastrointestinal, hepatic, and neurological conditions. For example, heavy metals such as arsenic, mercury, and cadmium have been found to decrease microbial diversity, promote pathogen growth, and disturb intestinal homeostasis. In contrast, metals like copper and zinc, essential for bodily functions, were found to have both beneficial and detrimental effects depending on their concentration.
The study also revealed that probiotics, prebiotics, synbiotics, and postbiotics have shown promise in mitigating the harmful effects of metal(loid) toxicity. These microbiota-related strategies could promote metal(loid) biotransformation and reduce bioaccessibility, offering a potentially safer and more economical alternative to traditional pharmacological treatments for metal(loid) detoxification.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The review's findings suggest that metal(loid)-gut microbiota interactions play a crucial role in the body’s response to environmental pollutants and toxins. Understanding these interactions can pave the way for innovative microbiota-based therapies to alleviate the health impacts of metal(loid) exposure. The implications are significant for public health, especially in areas where populations are exposed to high levels of toxic metals. Furthermore, the review underscores the need for more research into microbiota-based detoxification strategies, including the potential for genetically modified probiotics and other biotherapeutic agents. It also calls for further exploration of the mechanisms through which gut microbiota influence metal(loid) metabolism and toxicity.
Gut as a target for cadmium toxicity
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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The review examines how cadmium exposure affects gut microbiota, leading to dysbiosis, increased gut permeability, and systemic inflammation. It also explores the potential of probiotics to mitigate cadmium-induced toxicity, suggesting new therapeutic strategies.
What was studied?
This study reviews the effects of cadmium (Cd) exposure on gut microbiota and intestinal physiology. The primary focus is on how cadmium affects the gut's microbial composition, metabolic activity, and the overall functioning of the intestinal barrier. The review discusses the alteration of bacterial populations, particularly the Bacteroidetes-to-Firmicutes ratio, and its association with increased lipopolysaccharide (LPS) production. It also explores cadmium’s impact on tight junction proteins and intestinal permeability, which may lead to endotoxemia and systemic inflammation. Additionally, the study evaluates potential therapeutic strategies, including the use of probiotics, to mitigate cadmium toxicity in the gut.
Who was studied?
The study draws upon data from various animal models, including rodents like mice and rats, which were exposed to cadmium via drinking water or diet. It also references studies involving microbiota analysis in germ-free mice and wild-type animals to observe the differential impacts of cadmium exposure. Research on microbial populations was also derived from human microbiota studies, particularly those related to intestinal health and heavy metal toxicity. The analysis includes effects across different ages and sexes, with a focus on male and female mice, as well as the influence of early-life cadmium exposure on microbiota composition.
Most important findings
The study found that cadmium exposure caused significant alterations in gut microbiota, especially in the Bacteroidetes-to-Firmicutes ratio. Exposure led to an increase in Bacteroidetes abundance and a decrease in Firmicutes, potentially contributing to dysbiosis. This imbalance was associated with higher LPS production, which has been linked to inflammatory responses. The exposure also resulted in changes in gut morphology, including damage to tight junctions in intestinal cells, increasing gut permeability. This was shown to contribute to endotoxemia and systemic inflammation, impacting overall health. Moreover, the altered microbiota composition caused by cadmium exposure was linked to an increased susceptibility to infections, suggesting that cadmium-induced changes in gut function could impair immune responses. The study also noted that probiotics, such as Lactobacillus plantarum, could offer protective benefits against cadmium-induced toxicity by restoring gut function and reducing inflammatory responses.
Key implications
The findings underscore the importance of considering the gut as a primary target for cadmium toxicity. The study suggests that cadmium-induced dysbiosis and gut permeability may play a critical role in the toxic effects of cadmium, particularly in terms of systemic inflammation and increased susceptibility to infections. From a clinical perspective, this highlights the need for strategies to protect the gut microbiota in populations exposed to cadmium, such as through the use of probiotics. It also suggests that future research should explore the long-term impact of cadmium exposure on gut health, as well as the effectiveness of interventions like probiotics, chelation therapy, and antioxidants in reducing cadmium toxicity.
Exposure to heavy metals and hormone levels in midlife women
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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This study links urinary heavy metal exposure (arsenic, cadmium, mercury, lead) to altered sex hormone levels in midlife women, with stronger effects during the perimenopausal transition. It suggests that metal exposure may accelerate ovarian aging and impact long-term health outcomes.
What was studied?
This study examined the associations between urinary heavy metals, including arsenic, cadmium, mercury, and lead, and the levels of key sex hormones (estradiol, follicle-stimulating hormone, testosterone, and sex hormone-binding globulin) in midlife women. The research used data from the Study of Women's Health Across the Nation (SWAN), a multi-ethnic cohort of women aged 45-56 years, followed over several years. The focus was on understanding how environmental exposures to heavy metals might influence hormone profiles during the menopausal transition, a critical period of reproductive aging, which can have long-term health implications for women, including cardiovascular disease, osteoporosis, and metabolic disorders.
Who was studied?
The study included 1,355 women from the SWAN cohort, representing a diverse range of racial and ethnic groups, including White, Black, Chinese, and Japanese women. Participants were aged 45-56 years at baseline (1999-2000). The analysis focused on midlife women who were followed through their menopausal transition, with hormone levels repeatedly measured up until 2017. Urinary metal concentrations were assessed at baseline, and serum hormone levels were measured annually. The cohort included women from different geographic locations across the U.S., providing insights into how environmental exposures affect sex hormone levels across various populations.
Most important findings
The study found that exposure to heavy metals significantly influenced hormone levels in midlife women. Specifically, a doubling in urinary mercury and lead concentrations was associated with lower estradiol (E2) levels by 2.2% and 3.6%, respectively. Additionally, higher lead concentrations were associated with higher follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) levels, by 3.4%. Cadmium exposure was linked to increased levels of sex hormone-binding globulin (SHBG) by 3.6%. However, no significant association was found between metals and testosterone levels. The joint effects of metal mixtures showed a negative association with E2 and a positive association with FSH. The study also noted that the associations were stronger in early and late perimenopausal stages.
Key implications
The findings of this study highlight the significant role that environmental heavy metals can play in altering sex hormone levels during midlife, a crucial period for women’s health. The associations between higher lead and mercury concentrations with reduced estradiol levels and increased follicle-stimulating hormone levels suggest that metal exposure may accelerate ovarian aging, a factor that could impact menopause timing and related health risks, such as cardiovascular diseases and osteoporosis. The study emphasizes the need for public health strategies to minimize heavy metal exposure and further underscores the importance of monitoring environmental toxins as part of women’s healthcare during midlife.
Nickel exposure induces gut microbiome disorder and serum uric acid elevation
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Nickel exposure induces gut microbiome disorder and serum uric acid elevation by disrupting purine-degrading microbes, increasing inflammatory taxa, impairing intestinal metabolism, and elevating serum uric acid in humans and mice.
What was studied?
Nickel exposure induces gut microbiome disorder, and serum uric acid elevation was investigated to understand how chronic nickel exposure affects hyperuricemia through gut microbial and metabolic alterations in humans and mice. The study integrated human occupational exposure data, targeted microbial profiling, and metabolomic analyses to determine mechanistic links between nickel-associated dysbiosis, disrupted intestinal purine catabolism, and elevated serum uric acid. The research combined 16S rRNA sequencing and LC-MS/MS metabolomics to map microbial taxa changes and purine pathway perturbations, while mouse models validated causality and inflammatory consequences. The work also examined correlations between microbial shifts, bile acid metabolism, oxidative stress markers, and inflammation, revealing a multisystem disruption connecting heavy metal exposure to uric acid accumulation.
Who was studied?
A total of 109 human participants from an occupational cohort in Jinchang, China were examined, including 92 nickel-exposed workers and 17 unexposed controls. Inclusion criteria excluded kidney, liver, thyroid, or intestinal disease, ensuring uric acid elevations reflected exposure-related mechanisms rather than comorbidities. Fecal and serum samples were collected for microbiome and metabolomic profiling. Complementary mouse experiments used female Kun Ming mice receiving oral nickel chloride for 35 days to assess causal relationships between nickel exposure, microbiome disruption, purine metabolism, and systemic inflammation. Both populations showed consistent patterns, strengthening translational relevance.
Most important findings
Nickel exposure induced clear microbiome alterations strongly associated with disrupted purine metabolism and higher serum uric acid. Key purine-degrading taxa—including Lactobacillus, Lachnospiraceae_unclassified, and Blautia—were significantly reduced. These microbes normally degrade uric acid or reduce purine absorption, and their depletion paralleled elevated fecal purines and impaired intestinal purine breakdown. Pathogenic or inflammation-associated taxa, such as Parabacteroides, Escherichia-Shigella, Alistipes, and Mycoplasma, were enriched, contributing to intestinal inflammation and increased permeability. Metabolomic analyses showed elevated fecal adenine, guanine, inosine, and hypoxanthine, while serum uric acid was significantly higher. Mouse data confirmed increased serum uric acid, heightened pro-inflammatory cytokines, oxidative stress markers, and similar microbiome disruptions. Together, these findings identify a gut-driven mechanism in which nickel suppresses purine degradation, enhances systemic absorption of purines, and fosters inflammatory conditions that exacerbate uric acid accumulation.
Microbial/Metabolic Change
Effect Associated with Nickel Exposure
↓ Lactobacillus, Blautia
Reduced purine degradation and anti-inflammatory activity
↑ Parabacteroides, Escherichia-Shigella
Increased pathogenic and inflammatory signaling
↑ Fecal purines (adenine, inosine, etc.)
Impaired intestinal purine catabolism
↑ Serum uric acid and TNF-α
Systemic inflammation and hyperuricemia
Key implications
This study provides strong evidence that nickel-induced hyperuricemia is mediated not by impaired renal excretion alone but by microbiome-driven metabolic dysfunction. Heavy metal exposure disrupts the intestinal ecosystem, reduces key uricolytic microbes, suppresses purine catabolism, increases gut permeability, and intensifies inflammation. These findings expand the known environmental determinants of hyperuricemia and spotlight gut microbiome signatures—particularly reductions in Lactobacillus, Blautia, and Lachnospiraceae_unclassified and enrichment of inflammatory taxa—as potential biomarkers. Clinically, microbiome-targeted interventions may represent future therapeutic strategies for heavy-metal–associated hyperuricemia.
Diffusion and enrichment of high-risk antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs)
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study explores how heavy metals in an ecological restoration area of a manganese mining site promote the diffusion of high-risk antibiotic resistance genes and pathogens through a transmission chain involving mulberry leaves, silkworms, and soil, raising concerns for public health and environmental safety.
What was studied?
This study explored the diffusion and enrichment of high-risk antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) and pathogens through a transmission chain involving mulberry leaves, silkworm guts, silkworm feces, and soil in an ecological restoration area (RA) of a manganese mining site. The study aimed to assess how environmental factors, particularly heavy metals like manganese, zinc, and arsenic, influence the spread of antibiotic resistance through this transmission chain. The focus was on understanding how ARGs and pathogens are transferred and enriched in this ecological context, with the use of a plasmid (RP4) as a marker for horizontal gene transfer (HGT).
Who was studied?
The study focused on silkworm larvae (Bombyx mori) and their interaction with mulberry leaves grown in an ecological restoration area near a manganese mining site in Xiangtan, China. The researchers collected samples from both a restoration area (RA), contaminated with heavy metals, and a control area (CA), located farther from the mining site. The study analyzed the transmission of ARGs and pathogens through the ingestion of mulberry leaves by silkworms and subsequent microbial changes in their guts and feces. These samples were then added to soil to assess how ARGs and pathogens spread further into the environment.
What were the most important findings?
The study found that silkworms, after ingesting mulberry leaves from the restoration area (RA), enriched certain high-risk ARGs and pathogens in their feces, which were then transferred to the soil. The abundance of ARGs such as qnrB, oqxA, and rpoB increased significantly in feces from silkworms that ingested leaves from RA. The study also found that heavy metals like zinc, manganese, and arsenic played a crucial role in promoting the diffusion and enrichment of these ARGs in both silkworm feces and the soil. Interestingly, the presence of plasmid RP4, which mediates HGT, did not significantly contribute to the spread of ARGs due to the harsh survival conditions in the silkworm gut. However, the metal content in the environment enhanced the presence of certain high-risk ARGs, such as qnrB, oqxA, and rpoB, which were carried by pathogens like Klebsiella pneumoniae and Escherichia coli. After the silkworm feces were added to soil, the abundance of these ARGs increased by over four times within 30 days, indicating that the manure used as fertilizer in agricultural systems could be a significant vector for the spread of resistance genes.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings highlight the risk of environmental contamination with antibiotic-resistant pathogens through agricultural practices, particularly in areas affected by mining activities. The study suggests that heavy metal contamination not only impacts microbial health but also promotes the spread of high-risk ARGs in the ecosystem. This has significant implications for public health, particularly in regions with a strong sericulture industry, where silkworm feces are commonly used as fertilizer. The study emphasizes the need for better management practices to prevent the spread of antibiotic-resistant pathogens through agricultural by-products and calls for more attention to the ecological risks associated with metal contamination in agricultural practices. Moreover, understanding the complex relationship between heavy metals, microbiota, and ARGs could inform strategies to mitigate the risks of environmental ARG transmission.
The effect of pharmacologically altered gastric pH on cadmium absorption from the diet and its accumulation in murine tissues
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study explores how altering gastric pH with omeprazole and cimetidine affects cadmium absorption from the diet and its accumulation in murine tissues, showing limited impact on tissue cadmium levels despite changes in gastric pH.
What was studied?
This study investigated the effect of pharmacologically altered gastric pH on the absorption of cadmium (Cd) from the diet and its subsequent accumulation in murine tissues. Specifically, the study focused on how increasing gastric pH using proton-pump inhibitors (omeprazole) and H2 receptor antagonists (cimetidine) influenced cadmium bioavailability. The research explored whether altering gastric pH could reduce the absorption of cadmium, which is a significant environmental and dietary contaminant known to cause kidney dysfunction, cancer, and other health issues. The experiment aimed to determine whether pharmacologically induced changes in gastric pH could decrease cadmium accumulation in organs such as the liver, kidneys, and intestines.
Who was studied?
The study used male CD1 mice as the experimental subjects. The mice were randomly assigned to five different groups, including a control group, a group receiving a cadmium-amended diet, and groups receiving cadmium-amended diets along with either omeprazole or cimetidine treatment. These treatments were administered via gavage over 14 days. The study assessed the bioaccumulation of cadmium in various tissues such as the liver, kidneys, testes, and small intestine, following the different treatments. This approach allowed the researchers to evaluate how gastric pH modulation influenced cadmium absorption and distribution in the body.
Most important findings
The study found that pharmacologically altering gastric pH influenced the bioavailability of dietary cadmium in mice. While omeprazole treatment increased gastric pH, it led to a decrease in cadmium accumulation in the small intestine. However, omeprazole-treated animals did not show a significant reduction in cadmium concentrations in the liver, kidneys, and testes. The study also observed that cimetidine treatment did not significantly alter the gastric pH or cadmium absorption compared to the control. Additionally, the in vitro analysis of cadmium solubility suggested that an increase in gastric pH decreased cadmium solubility, which may have contributed to the reduced absorption in the small intestine observed in omeprazole-treated animals. The study also noted that even though gastric pH changes affected the absorption in the small intestine, there was compensatory absorption of cadmium in the large intestine, leading to similar cadmium accumulation in organs like the liver and kidneys.
Key implications
This study has important implications for understanding the role of gastric pH in cadmium absorption and its potential for mitigating cadmium toxicity. The results suggest that while increasing gastric pH with proton-pump inhibitors like omeprazole may reduce cadmium absorption in the small intestine, it does not significantly affect the accumulation of cadmium in major organs. This finding suggests that the gastrointestinal tract, particularly the small intestine, may not be the only site of cadmium absorption. The compensatory uptake in the large intestine, as observed in this study, highlights the complex nature of cadmium bioavailability and its potential health impacts. The research also indicates that simply altering gastric pH may not be an effective strategy for reducing cadmium toxicity, as its effects persist in other tissues.
What is the best strategy for moving microbiome-based therapies for functional gastrointestinal disorders into the clinic?
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review discusses the strategies for translating microbiome-based therapies into clinical practice for FGIDs, particularly IBS. It highlights the need for a systems approach integrating multi-omics data and patient stratification.
What was studied?
The study focuses on strategies to integrate microbiome-based therapies for functional gastrointestinal disorders (FGIDs), such as irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), into clinical practice. It examines the role of the gut microbiome in FGID pathogenesis, explores various therapeutic approaches such as fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) and probiotics, and highlights the need for more precise microbiome-targeted treatments.
Who was studied?
The review primarily considers the clinical and experimental studies related to FGIDs, specifically IBS. It integrates findings from human clinical trials and animal models that investigate the association between the microbiome and gastrointestinal function. The review also discusses challenges in translating these findings to therapeutic strategies.
Most important findings
The study reveals that microbiome alterations, particularly in individuals with IBS, are associated with gastrointestinal dysfunction, including changes in gut motility, visceral hypersensitivity, and intestinal permeability. Despite significant advances in understanding the microbiome's role, studies often show inconsistent results, with microbiome-based therapies failing to consistently address specific disease mechanisms. The review calls for a systems-based approach, integrating multi-omics data and patient-specific characteristics to improve therapeutic outcomes. The study emphasizes the importance of patient stratification based on microbial alterations and pathophysiological measurements.
Key implications
This review outlines the gap between microbiome research and clinical application. It suggests that to move microbiome-based therapies into the clinic effectively, future studies should combine multiple layers of data, including microbial composition, metabolomics, and clinical measurements. Personalized treatment strategies should be developed based on these integrated data, which can help target the underlying causes of FGIDs. Moreover, employing longitudinal studies will be crucial in understanding the dynamic nature of these disorders and identifying responders to specific therapies.
Metallochaperones: A critical regulator of metal homeostasis and beyond
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study investigates metallochaperones in plants, focusing on their role in metal homeostasis, detoxification, and stress responses. These proteins are essential for managing toxic metals like cadmium and enhancing plant resistance to environmental stressors and pathogens.
What was studied?
This study focuses on metallochaperones, a class of proteins that regulate metal ion homeostasis in plants. These proteins are crucial for metal uptake, transport, and detoxification, especially under conditions of metal stress. The research particularly addresses their role in plant growth, development, and responses to abiotic stresses like salinity, drought, and temperature extremes. The study also explores how metallochaperones interact with other proteins and facilitate metal transport to specific target sites, such as enzymes or cellular compartments, to ensure proper metal accumulation and detoxification.
Who was studied?
The study does not focus on individual organisms or clinical populations but investigates metallochaperones within various plant species. It looks at how these proteins function within plants, including model species like Arabidopsis, rice, barley, and wheat. These plants were studied in the context of how they manage metal ions such as copper, zinc, and cadmium, particularly under stress conditions.
What were the most important findings?
The study's most significant findings include the identification of two major subfamilies of metallochaperones: Heavy Metal-Associated Plant Proteins (HPPs) and Heavy Metal-Associated Isoprenylated Plant Proteins (HIPPs). These proteins play essential roles in mediating metal ion homeostasis, detoxification, and stress responses. The study highlights that metallochaperones bind and deliver metal ions like copper, zinc, and cadmium to target proteins, thus controlling metal distribution within the plant. Importantly, these proteins have been shown to contribute to plant tolerance to toxic metal accumulation, such as cadmium, and help mitigate the harmful effects of metals on plant health. Additionally, certain metallochaperones are involved in enhancing plant immunity, improving growth under stress, and even facilitating pathogen resistance. For example, the interaction between specific HIPPs and pathogen-related proteins suggests that some metallochaperones could enhance plant susceptibility to pathogens, influencing the plant-pathogen interaction dynamics. Furthermore, the study identifies potential applications of metallochaperones in phytoremediation, where plants can be genetically modified to overaccumulate metals from contaminated soils, effectively cleaning up the environment.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The implications of this study are significant for agricultural practices, particularly in the context of crop production and environmental sustainability. By understanding the role of metallochaperones in regulating metal ions, researchers can develop plants with improved tolerance to metal stress, leading to better crop yields in metal-contaminated soils. The potential for engineering plants to detoxify harmful metals like cadmium offers a novel strategy for phytoremediation, which could reduce pollution and improve soil quality. Additionally, the discovery that some metallochaperones regulate plant immune responses provides insights into developing crops with enhanced resistance to pathogens. This research opens new avenues for developing crops that not only thrive in adverse conditions but also contribute to environmental cleanup efforts, thus supporting food security and sustainable agriculture.
Arsenic disturbs the gut microbiome of individuals in a disadvantaged community in Nepal
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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In Nepal, arsenic disturbs the gut microbiome, driving sulfate-reducers and depleting commensals; urine arsenic best explains dysbiosis patterns with clear taxa-level signals useful for exposure-aware clinical care.
What was studied?
This original study tested whether arsenic disturbs the gut microbiome by linking individual urine arsenic levels to 16S rRNA–based fecal community profiles from two Nepalese communities, using Illumina MiSeq, QIIME 1.9.0, beta-diversity statistics, and LEfSe to detect exposure-associated taxa and functions.
Who was studied?
Investigators collected fecal and urine samples from residents of Mahuawa (n=20) and Ghanashyampur (n=22) in Nawalparasi, Nepal, where some wells reach ~500 µg/L arsenic; participants also completed health questionnaires, and the team grouped exposure as undetected, moderate, or high based on urine arsenic.
Most important findings
Urine arsenic explained the largest share of between-sample variation across all metadata, and beta diversity separated samples by urine arsenic within Mahuawa (Adonis p=0.009); species richness was generally lower where urine arsenic was higher. Exposure shifted taxa toward sulfate-reducing and arsenic-metabolizing bacteria: in Ghanashyampur, Bilophila and the family Desulfovibrionaceae correlated positively with urine arsenic, and the “High” group showed Collinsella enrichment; in Mahuawa, Bacillaceae rose with arsenic, while commensals Ruminococcus and Clostridiaceae fell; Erysipelotrichales decreased with exposure across communities.
Key implications
These data indicate that arsenic exposure can steer gut ecology toward sulfate-reducers (e.g., Bilophila, Desulfovibrionaceae) and away from protective commensals (e.g., Ruminococcus, Clostridiaceae), a pattern tied to inflammation and possible colorectal risk; clinicians caring for exposed patients should consider water source assessment and interventions that reduce exposure and support commensals.
Combined resistant dextrin and low-dose Mg oxide administration increases short-chain fatty acid and lactic acid production by gut microbiota
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study shows that combining resistant dextrin with low-dose magnesium oxide increases SCFA and lactic acid production by gut microbiota, improving gut health.
What was studied?
This study investigated the effects of combining resistant dextrin (RD) with magnesium oxide (MgO) on short-chain fatty acid (SCFA) and lactic acid production by the gut microbiota. The research aimed to understand how these dietary components influenced the gut microbiome in both mouse models and humans, specifically focusing on their impact on SCFA and lactic acid production, which are important for gut health.
Who was studied?
The study involved both animal (mouse) models and human subjects. In the animal model, mice were fed a diet supplemented with RD and MgO, and their cecal contents were analyzed for SCFA and lactic acid production. The human subjects included healthy adults who were given a similar combination of RD and magnesium supplements for a set period and were monitored for changes in fecal SCFA and lactic acid levels.
What were the most important findings?
The most significant finding from this study was that the combination of RD and low-dose magnesium oxide (MgO) promoted increased production of SCFAs and lactic acid in both mice and humans. In mice, feeding a 5% RD diet combined with low doses of MgO (10 mg/kg) significantly boosted the production of glucose-6-phosphate (G6P), SCFAs (including acetic, propionic, and butyric acid), and lactic acid compared to other treatments. High doses of MgO (250 mg/kg) had the opposite effect, suppressing the production of these metabolites. In humans, a similar increase in G6P and lactic acid production was observed when RD and magnesium supplements were combined, suggesting a consistent effect across species. Furthermore, the study highlighted that magnesium is essential for optimizing the effects of RD on microbiota metabolism, and that high MgO doses can have a suppressive, osmotic effect that diminishes SCFA and lactic acid production.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings from this study have significant implications for dietary interventions aimed at improving gut health. By combining RD with low-dose MgO, it may be possible to promote beneficial SCFA and lactic acid production, which are associated with improved gut function, immunity, and metabolism. These results suggest that magnesium supplementation could be used strategically to enhance the benefits of prebiotics like resistant dextrin. This could be especially useful for managing conditions such as constipation, metabolic disorders, or inflammation, where SCFA production plays a key role in disease management. The study also cautions that high doses of magnesium may have adverse effects, emphasizing the need for optimal dosage in clinical recommendations and interventions.
Inflammatory immunity and bacteriological perspectives: A new direction for copper treatment of sepsis
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Copper treatment of sepsis links host copper delivery, microbial copper genes, and cell death pathways. The review highlights biomarker value and careful therapeutic targeting to aid control of infection while limiting tissue injury.
What was reviewed?
This review examines copper treatment of sepsis and explains how copper shapes the host–pathogen fight from the gut to the bloodstream. The review describes copper as both a cofactor for life and a toxic stressor that immune cells deploy in phagosomes. It outlines copper’s links to apoptosis, pyroptosis, necroptosis, ferroptosis, and cuproptosis, and shows how these death pathways influence inflammation, barrier injury, and organ damage during sepsis. It also summarizes emerging therapeutic ideas, including copper chelators, copper ionophores, and copper-based nanomaterials, while warning that dose and timing matter because excess copper can worsen oxidative stress and tissue injury. The review connects these mechanisms to clinical signals, noting that blood copper levels rise in sepsis and may track risk.
Who was reviewed?
The authors synthesize findings from human cohorts with sepsis, animal models, and cell systems that profile copper handling in immune cells and epithelia. They integrate bacteriological data across major pathogens that face copper stress in the host, including Gram-negative organisms such as Salmonella and Escherichia coli, and Gram-positive organisms such as Staphylococcus aureus and Streptococcus pneumoniae. They also discuss mycobacteria and fungal models where copper transport and metalloregulation influence virulence. Across these sources, the review maps host importers and pumps that load copper into phagolysosomes, and microbial copper resistance modules and oxidases that keep periplasmic and cytosolic copper in check during infection.
Most important findings
The host raises copper at infection sites and in activated macrophages, where copper works with nitric oxide and reactive oxygen species to damage invading cells; chelating host copper reduces killing in models, confirming causality. Pathogens counter with P1B-type ATPase exporters, periplasmic multicopper oxidases, copper chaperones, and metallothioneins, and loss of these systems reduces survival in macrophages and lowers virulence in vivo. In the intestine, enterocyte ferroptosis and barrier loss can drive bacterial translocation in sepsis, linking metal stress to microbiome disruption. In patients, copper levels and the copper-to-zinc ratio associate with outcomes, suggesting biomarker potential. Copper ionophores, chelators, and copper nanomaterials show antibacterial and immuno-modulating effects in preclinical sepsis, including reactive species control and improved organ injury, but over-exposure can amplify inflammation and apoptosis. Together, these data position microbial copper resistance genes and host copper routing as key microbiome-relevant signatures in sepsis.
Key implications
Clinicians should view copper homeostasis as a modifiable axis of sepsis care. Monitoring copper and the copper-to-zinc ratio may aid risk assessment. Therapies that target microbial copper resistance, or that fine-tune host copper delivery, could improve pathogen control while limiting tissue damage. Copper ionophores and copper-mimetic nanoenzymes merit cautious evaluation as adjuncts, paired with strategies that protect the gut barrier to reduce dysbiosis and bacterial translocation. Any copper-based approach must balance antimicrobial gain against the risk of excess oxidative stress and cell death.
The essential role of magnesium in immunity and gut health
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Magnesium restriction in mice caused hypomagnesemia, increased inflammation, and altered the gut microbiome. These changes impacted immune function and highlighted the importance of magnesium in maintaining gut health and immune homeostasis.
What was studied?
This study investigated the impact of dietary magnesium (Mg²⁺) restriction on immune function and the intestinal microbiome, with a specific focus on peritoneal cells and gut health in mice. The researchers aimed to understand how magnesium deficiency alters immune responses and modulates the microbiota, examining the interplay between these factors in maintaining intestinal and immune homeostasis.
Who was studied?
The study involved male C57BL/6NTaq mice, which were divided into three groups: control, magnesium-restricted, and magnesium-restored groups. The control group received a diet with adequate magnesium, while the restricted group received a diet with significantly lower magnesium content for 4 weeks. Afterwards, the magnesium-restored group was switched to the control diet to evaluate the reversibility of the effects of magnesium deficiency.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed that dietary magnesium restriction induced hypomagnesemia, which led to increased inflammation and alterations in immune cell populations. Specifically, magnesium deficiency resulted in elevated neutrophil counts in both peripheral blood and the peritoneal cavity, indicating an inflammatory response. Gene expression analysis showed upregulation of pro-inflammatory cytokines such as TNF-α, IL-1β, and IL-10, but not IL-6, in peritoneal cells, suggesting that magnesium plays a critical role in regulating inflammatory pathways. Furthermore, magnesium restriction altered the intestinal microbiome, increasing microbiota diversity (Shannon diversity index) and changing the composition of specific taxa. For instance, the abundance of Romboutsia ilealis increased, while taxa like Oscillospiraceae and Lachnospiraceae were reduced. These findings suggest that magnesium deficiency can modulate gut microbiota composition, which in turn may influence immune responses and inflammatory pathways.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study highlights the essential role of magnesium in regulating both immune function and gut health. The findings suggest that magnesium deficiency contributes to chronic low-grade inflammation by altering immune cell responses and cytokine production. Moreover, the study shows that magnesium deficiency disrupts the gut microbiome, which may have broader implications for conditions such as inflammatory bowel disease, metabolic disorders, and other chronic diseases associated with gut dysbiosis. The impact of magnesium on immune cells in the peritoneal cavity further underscores the mineral’s significance in managing immune responses to pathogens. These results indicate that magnesium supplementation or dietary adjustments may help modulate inflammation and support gut health, offering potential therapeutic strategies for managing inflammation-related conditions.
Zinc and multi-mineral supplementation should mitigate the pathogenic impact of cadmium exposure
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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The study emphasizes the potential benefits of zinc and multi-mineral supplementation in reducing cadmium toxicity. It links cadmium exposure to various health issues and suggests supplementation as a strategy to mitigate its harmful effects.
What was studied?
This paper explores the potential role of zinc and multi-mineral supplementation in mitigating the pathogenic impacts of cadmium exposure. It focuses on cadmium’s toxic effects on human health, especially its association with various chronic diseases such as nephropathy, osteoporosis, cardiovascular diseases, and cancer. The study examines how supplementation with essential minerals like zinc, calcium, and magnesium may help limit cadmium absorption and reduce its toxicity. The paper highlights the role of zinc in stimulating metallothionein production, a protein that binds cadmium and reduces its harmful effects on the body. The study also explores other antioxidant supplements that may counteract cadmium-induced oxidative stress.
Who was studied?
The study primarily reviews epidemiological data and rodent studies, focusing on human populations exposed to cadmium through environmental sources such as tobacco smoke, food, and contaminated water. It emphasizes individuals with high-normal cadmium levels, typically non-industrial populations. The study also considers the role of dietary deficiencies in minerals such as zinc and iron, which can exacerbate cadmium absorption. The focus is on general human populations, including those with a higher risk of cadmium exposure, such as smokers and individuals who consume high amounts of plant-based foods that tend to absorb more cadmium.
Most important findings
The study finds that cadmium exposure is linked to a variety of health issues, including osteoporosis, cardiovascular disease, and kidney damage. It highlights that high-normal cadmium levels, even in non-industrial populations, increase the risk of renal damage and bone mineral loss. Zinc supplementation can help reduce the toxicity of cadmium by stimulating the production of metallothionein, a protein that binds to cadmium, rendering it less toxic. Zinc also has anti-inflammatory and antioxidant effects that may help alleviate the systemic effects of cadmium exposure. The paper also suggests that multi-mineral supplementation, particularly with calcium, magnesium, and zinc, can reduce cadmium absorption by competing for intestinal transporters, making it a promising strategy for preventing cadmium-related health risks. Antioxidant-rich supplements, including spirulina and N-acetylcysteine, may also help mitigate the oxidative stress caused by cadmium.
Key implications
This study suggests that cadmium exposure is a significant environmental risk factor for chronic diseases and that addressing mineral deficiencies may help reduce its harmful effects. Clinicians should consider the potential benefits of zinc and multi-mineral supplementation for individuals at risk of cadmium toxicity. Additionally, public health measures to reduce cadmium exposure from sources like tobacco smoke and contaminated food are crucial. For those already exposed to cadmium, dietary strategies, including the use of antioxidant supplements, could provide an additional protective effect. The findings also point to the need for more research on the long-term effectiveness of chelation therapy for chronic cadmium exposure.
The Promise of Copper Ionophores as Antimicrobials
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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The promise of copper ionophores as antimicrobials rests on raising intracellular copper to disable core enzymes, restore antibiotic activity, and boost host killing, with clear microbial markers to track response.
What was reviewed?
This review explains the promise of copper ionophores as antimicrobials and shows how small molecules that shuttle copper into microbes can tip host–pathogen battles. It defines copper-dependent toxicity as a mix of enzyme mismatch and energy failure rather than simple oxidation and maps how ionophores raise intracellular copper above export capacity. It surveys major chemotypes, including 8-hydroxyquinolines, dithiocarbamates such as disulfiram derivatives, pyrithione, and bis-thiosemicarbazones like GTSM and ATSM, and it highlights synergy with standard drugs in resistant strains. The authors link these actions to known host tactics that move copper to infection sites and argue that ionophores can amplify that pressure in vivo. They also discuss delivery designs that lower host toxicity, including pro-ionophores that switch on inside phagolysosomes, and they point to drug repurposing paths from oncology to infectious disease.
Who was reviewed?
The review draws on lab and animal data across priority pathogens and on early clinical insights from related agents. Examples include activity against Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Staphylococcus aureus, including MRSA, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Neisseria gonorrhoeae, Chlamydia trachomatis, and Streptococcus pneumoniae. It cites macrophage models where ionophores boost killing by using host copper, and it includes in vivo work where dithiocarbamates increase lung clearance of pneumococci. It also summarizes transporter genetics that shape entry of copper–ionophore complexes in Escherichia coli, and it reviews how copper efflux loss magnifies ionophore potency. The authors note that several agents, such as PBT2 and bis-thiosemicarbazones, already have human safety data from other fields, which could speed trials for infections.
Most important findings
The review shows that copper ionophores raise free copper inside microbes, which disables iron–sulfur enzymes, stalls nucleotide and carbon use, and collapses respiration on key fuels. Dithiocarbamates drive large rises in intracellular copper and strip the pneumococcal capsule, which tracks with better macrophage clearance and points to a surface shift that matters for biofilms. Pyrithione complexes enter through amino acid and siderophore transporters, which means uptake can be tuned by targeting these routes, and bis-thiosemicarbazones block NADH and succinate dehydrogenases in N. gonorrhoeae, including multidrug-resistant strains. 8-hydroxyquinoline analogs kill M. tuberculosis in a copper-dependent way in vitro and inside macrophages, where host copper supplies the needed metal. Several ionophores sensitize resistant bacteria to old drugs: PBT2 with metals breaks β-lactam resistance in S. pneumoniae and restores aminoglycoside activity in K. pneumoniae.
Key implications
Clinicians can view copper ionophores as tools that amplify host copper pressure while lowering the dose or restoring the effect of standard antibiotics. This approach may help clear drug-resistant Gram-positives, select Gram-negatives, and intracellular pathogens in niches where macrophages already deploy copper. Care must still balance efficacy and host safety; pro-ionophores that activate in phagolysosomes and agents with prior human data offer near-term paths. For microbiome-aware care, track copper stress genes, capsule state, and respiration targets in isolates; these markers explain reduced growth of MRSA, pneumococci, Enterobacterales, N. gonorrhoeae, and C. trachomatis under ionophore pressure. This review supports combined regimens that pair ionophores with β-lactams or aminoglycosides to re-open old drug classes against resistant strains, while calling for trials that define dosing windows, tissue copper effects, and selection risks.
Cadmium monitoring in saliva and urine as indicator of smoking addiction
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study highlights the use of cadmium levels in saliva and urine as indicators of smoking addiction. It shows that cadmium concentrations correlate with tobacco use, offering a non-invasive method for assessing exposure in smokers and second-hand smokers.
What was studied?
This study investigates the use of cadmium levels in saliva and urine as indicators of smoking addiction. It examines the relationship between cadmium exposure and tobacco smoking habits, focusing on both active and passive smoking and tobacco chewing. The research aims to establish how well cadmium concentrations in biological samples reflect the intensity of tobacco use. Saliva and urine samples from smokers, second-hand smokers, non-smokers, and tobacco chewers were analyzed for cadmium content using a molecular fluorescence methodology, validating the method’s accuracy and sensitivity.
Who was studied?
The study involved subjects from San Luis, Argentina, with various tobacco use habits. The participants were divided into groups based on their smoking behavior: smokers with different levels of addiction, second-hand smokers, and non-smokers. Saliva and urine samples were collected from 47 subjects, and their tobacco use was characterized by daily cigarette consumption. The study aimed to compare cadmium levels across these groups to understand the correlation between tobacco use and cadmium exposure. Additionally, the study looked at the stability of cadmium levels in biological samples over time.
Most important findings
The study found that cadmium levels in both saliva and urine were significantly higher in smokers than in non-smokers, confirming the relationship between cadmium exposure and tobacco use. The cadmium content in urine was positively correlated with the number of cigarettes smoked per day, demonstrating the cumulative effect of smoking on cadmium accumulation. Salivary cadmium concentrations also reflected this pattern, though they were generally lower than urinary levels. Interestingly, cadmium levels in the saliva and urine of second-hand smokers and tobacco chewers were also elevated, though not as high as in active smokers. The study demonstrated that both biological fluids could be used for cadmium monitoring, providing a non-invasive method for assessing smoking addiction. Stability tests revealed that both urine and saliva samples remained stable for up to 30 days when stored under appropriate conditions, ensuring that the method could be applied in epidemiological studies or clinical settings.
Key implications
The findings suggest that cadmium monitoring in saliva and urine can serve as an effective tool for assessing smoking addiction and exposure to tobacco-related toxins. The non-invasive nature of the sampling makes it especially useful for large-scale studies, including those involving children, the elderly, or individuals in sensitive health conditions. This method could potentially replace or complement more invasive techniques, offering a practical and reliable alternative for measuring tobacco exposure and its associated health risks. The study also highlights the need for public health campaigns to address the risks of second-hand smoke and tobacco chewing, which also contribute to cadmium exposure. Further research is necessary to refine the cadmium monitoring technique and explore its applicability in other populations and settings.
Environmentally relevant concentrations of mercury facilitate the horizontal transfer of plasmid-mediated antibiotic resistance genes
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study shows that low, environmentally relevant mercury levels can boost plasmid transfer of antibiotic resistance genes between E. coli by driving oxidative stress, membrane damage, and transfer-gene activation, while very high mercury levels suppress transfer by harming cells.
What was studied?
This experimental study tested whether mercury ions (Hg²⁺) at real-world aquatic concentrations alter the rate of conjugative spread of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs). The authors built a controlled mating system in which a donor strain carried a mobilizable plasmid (RP4) encoding resistance to multiple antibiotics, then they exposed the mixed culture to a gradient of Hg²⁺ concentrations and measured the frequency of plasmid transfer. They also measured oxidative stress and membrane injury markers and quantified expression of key plasmid-transfer regulatory genes to explain how mercury shifts the mechanics of horizontal gene transfer rather than only selecting for resistant strains after the fact.
Who was studied?
The investigators studied bacteria, not humans, using a defined donor–recipient pair to isolate the effect of mercury on gene transfer. The donor was Escherichia coli strain HB101 carrying the RP4 plasmid, and the recipient was E. coli K12 MG1655 with rifampicin resistance to enable selective counting of transconjugants. They optimized mating conditions and then conducted replicate conjugation experiments across Hg²⁺ exposures ranging from very low (0.001 mg/L) through higher levels (1.0 mg/L), while simultaneously profiling stress responses and cell structure changes that could influence contact-dependent transfer.
What were the most important findings?
Hg²⁺ at environmentally relevant concentrations (0.001–0.5 mg/L) increased plasmid-mediated ARG transfer from donor to recipient by roughly 2.4- to 5.3-fold compared with control conditions, while a higher concentration (1.0 mg/L) sharply suppressed transfer. Mechanistically, mercury exposure increased reactive oxygen species, lipid peroxidation (malondialdehyde), antioxidant enzyme activity, and membrane permeability while depleting glutathione, creating a pattern consistent with oxidative membrane injury that lowers the physical barrier to plasmid passage. Microscopy supported this mechanism by showing more apparent conjugation sites and membranes that appeared less clearly defined under Hg²⁺ exposure, which likely improved donor–recipient bridge formation at lower doses but disrupted viable mating structures at the highest dose. At the transcriptional level, Hg²⁺ reduced expression of global repressors of transfer (korA, korB, trbA) and increased expression of genes that promote mating pair formation and DNA transfer/replication (trbBp, traF, trfAp, traJ), directly aligning mercury exposure with a gene-expression program that favors conjugation.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This work strengthens a clinically relevant One Health message: mercury pollution can actively accelerate ARG dissemination by increasing horizontal gene transfer, even when mercury levels are within ranges documented in contaminated waters. For microbiome-signature efforts, the key “signature” is functional rather than taxonomic: mercury exposure can shift bacterial physiology toward oxidative stress and membrane damage, then unlock plasmid transfer pathways that move multidrug resistance across microbes that share the same environment. Clinicians should interpret this as upstream AMR pressure that can occur outside antibiotic use, meaning resistant pathogens can emerge or intensify in aquatic systems before reaching food chains, drinking-water interfaces, or human hosts. The study also clarifies that extreme mercury levels may kill or cripple cells and reduce transfer, so risk peaks at sublethal, environmentally plausible concentrations, which reinforces the value of mercury remediation and monitoring as part of AMR prevention strategy.
Efflux pumps activation caused by mercury contamination prompts antibiotic resistance and pathogen’s virulence under ambient and elevated CO2 concentration
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Mercury-contaminated paddy soil increased plant and human pathogen signals under both ambient and elevated CO₂. Metagenomics showed strong activation of efflux pumps, especially the RND family, alongside higher adherence and secretion-related virulence factors, linking metal exposure to antibiotic resistance potential and pathogen aggressiveness.
What was studied?
This study tested whether mercury-contaminated agricultural soil increases the abundance of plant and human pathogens and whether it strengthens antibiotic resistance and virulence by activating bacterial efflux pumps, under both current and future-like atmospheric CO₂ conditions. The researchers grew rice in clean versus legacy mercury-polluted paddy soils inside open-top chambers set to ambient CO₂ and elevated CO₂ (about +200 ppm), then used shotgun metagenomics to profile pathogen signals, efflux pump genes, and virulence factors in harvested soils.
Who was studied?
The study examined soil microbial communities associated with rice cultivation rather than human participants or animal models. The “subjects” were microbial DNA profiles from paddy soils collected from a clean field and a mercury-polluted field, incubated in replicated pots under two CO₂ environments, and sampled after a full growing period. The analysis emphasized potential plant pathogens and human pathogens detected in metagenomes and linked those taxa to functional genes tied to efflux, metal resistance, and virulence.
What were the most important findings?
Mercury contamination consistently increased the relative abundance of multiple common plant and human pathogen genera under both CO₂ conditions, with notable signals in taxa such as Xanthomonas, Pseudomonas, Salmonella, Staphylococcus, Streptococcus, Klebsiella, Mycobacterium, Magnaporthe, Dickeya, Vibrio, Yersinia, and Burkholderia. Functionally, mercury strongly increased efflux pump capacity, especially the RND family, which dominated the efflux landscape and roughly doubled in mercury soil at both CO₂ levels; the study highlighted increased abundance of key multidrug and metal efflux components including mexB, mdtA/mdtB/mdtC, acrA/acrB, and CO₂-dependent shifts that included smeD/smeF, alongside metal-linked systems such as silA and cusA/ybdE. Virulence-factor profiles shifted toward greater “offensive” potential in mercury soils, with higher representation of adherence and secretion systems and more exoenzyme-related capacity, and several adherence and secretion genes rose under both CO₂ conditions, aligning efflux activation with higher pathogenic aggressiveness. As a microbiome-signatures entry, the major association is functional: mercury selects for pathogen-enriched communities with an RND-efflux–upregulated resistome and a parallel rise in adherence/secretion-linked virulence potential.
What are the greatest implications of this study/ review?
For clinicians, this work supports a concrete bridge between environmental toxicant exposure and infection risk: mercury contamination can enrich soils for taxa that include recognized human pathogens while simultaneously selecting for mechanisms that raise antibiotic resistance potential and virulence capacity. The study also clarifies that mercury can act as a durable selection pressure that persists beyond antibiotic exposure, and that climate change context does not erase this effect, because mercury remained the dominant driver of efflux and virulence shifts under both ambient and elevated CO₂. For microbiome-informed risk assessment, the most useful signal is not a single organism but a pattern that combines pathogen enrichment with increased RND-efflux systems and virulence-associated adherence and secretion functions, suggesting that exposure history and local soil contamination can plausibly influence downstream food safety, occupational exposure risk, and the environmental reservoir that seeds resistant infections.
Modulation of methylmercury uptake by methionine: Prevention of mitochondrial dysfunction in rat liver slices by a mimicry mechanism
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study shows that methylmercury delivered as a cysteine complex increases liver and mitochondrial mercury uptake and worsens mitochondrial stress. Methionine pre-treatment lowers mercury uptake, preserves oxygen use, and protects mitochondrial function and cell viability in rat liver slices.
What was studied?
This study tested whether methionine can reduce mercury uptake and prevent mitochondrial injury in liver tissue by interfering with the “molecular mimicry” route used by the methylmercury–cysteine complex (MeHg–Cys). Using rat liver slices, the authors compared exposure to MeHg alone versus MeHg–Cys, then measured mercury accumulation in whole slices and isolated mitochondria, along with reactive species formation, oxygen consumption, and cell viability. They also evaluated whether a short methionine pre-treatment changes these outcomes, focusing on the liver because it can accumulate substantial mercury after MeHg exposure.
Who was studied?
The investigators studied adult male Wistar rats as the tissue source and performed an ex vivo liver-slice experiment rather than a human study. They prepared 300 μm liver slices and assigned them to treatment conditions that included MeHg (25 μM), cysteine, MeHg–Cys (25 μM each), methionine (250 μM), and methionine pre-treatment before MeHg or MeHg–Cys exposure. The exposures occurred for 30 minutes at 37 °C, and the team then isolated mitochondria from the slices to quantify mitochondrial-specific effects alongside whole-tissue measures.
What were the most important findings?
MeHg increased mercury levels in liver slices and in mitochondria, and the MeHg–Cys complex produced higher mercury uptake than MeHg alone, indicating that the cysteine complex enhances cellular entry and mitochondrial delivery. The MeHg–Cys condition also produced stronger mitochondrial oxidative stress signals, with higher reactive species formation in mitochondria than the MeHg-alone condition, and MeHg reduced oxygen consumption in slices, with a more pronounced effect when mercury was presented as MeHg–Cys. Methionine pre-treatment decreased MeHg uptake by liver slices and prevented the downstream toxicity pattern, preserving mitochondrial function and cell viability in both MeHg and MeHg–Cys conditions. In microbiome-signature terms, the key association is functional: MeHg presented as a cysteine conjugate behaves like a transportable nutrient mimic and drives mitochondrial stress in hepatic tissue, while methionine counters this by reducing uptake and limiting mitochondrial injury.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
For clinicians, this paper supports a clear mechanism for why exposure form matters: MeHg–Cys increases hepatic and mitochondrial mercury burden and amplifies mitochondrial oxidative stress, which likely drives early energy failure and cell injury in the liver. It also shows that methionine can meaningfully blunt uptake and toxicity in a controlled tissue model, positioning amino-acid competition or binding interactions as a plausible supportive strategy during acute exposures, even though the authors note that in vivo dynamics could differ by timing and distribution. For microbiome-informed risk framing, the practical takeaway is that methylmercury behaves as a conjugate that uses nutrient-like entry routes, so upstream factors that influence conjugate availability can shift organ burden and mitochondrial stress signals that later appear as systemic toxicity.
Arsenic induces structural and compositional colonic microbiome change and promotes host nitrogen and amino acid metabolism
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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The study explored the impact of arsenic exposure on the gut microbiome and host metabolism. The results demonstrated significant changes in microbial composition, which were linked to alterations in metabolic pathways, particularly nitrogen metabolism, shedding light on arsenic's role in disease promotion.
What was studied?
This study investigated the effects of arsenic exposure on the gut microbiome, specifically focusing on structural and compositional changes. Researchers exposed mice to different concentrations of arsenic in drinking water and analyzed the microbial community of the colon at various exposure points. The study also explored the functional impact of arsenic on host metabolism, particularly nitrogen metabolism, which plays a critical role in metabolic processes. The study utilized 16S rRNA sequencing and metagenomic analysis to assess changes in microbial diversity and functional pathways influenced by arsenic exposure.
Who was studied?
The study was conducted on C57BL/6 male mice, which were exposed to low (10 ppb) and high (250 ppb) concentrations of arsenite in drinking water. The exposure periods lasted for 2, 5, and 10 weeks. These mice were selected due to their genetic uniformity and well-established role in experimental research. This model helped to simulate long-term arsenic exposure and its effects on the gut microbiome. The microbiome and host metabolic profiles were then analyzed in conjunction with genetic testing to identify the potential link between arsenic-induced changes in microbiome composition and host metabolism.
Most important findings
The study found that arsenic exposure significantly altered the gut microbiome's composition, particularly affecting the abundance of bacterial families such as Firmicutes and Bacteroidetes. This shift in bacterial populations was dependent on both the exposure time and the concentration of arsenic. The exposure also resulted in a reduction of biofilm formation in the gut and impacted the diversity of microbial species. Metagenomic analyses revealed that arsenic exposure triggered changes in metabolic pathways related to nitrogen metabolism, especially in the reduction of nitrite and the synthesis of amino acids. The mice that were exposed to arsenic had altered levels of nitrogenous compounds in the colon and liver, including a rise in pathogenic metabolites related to arginine metabolism, which may contribute to disease promotion.
Key implications
The findings suggest that chronic arsenic exposure not only impacts microbial community structure but also alters the functional pathways within the microbiome, which can affect host metabolism. This alteration could contribute to the development of various diseases, especially those related to metabolic and cardiovascular dysfunction. Understanding the mechanism through which arsenic exposure influences microbial communities and their metabolic profiles may offer insights into environmental factors that influence human health. Moreover, this study emphasizes the importance of considering environmental factors, such as arsenic exposure, in the context of microbiome-based disease mechanisms and highlights potential pathways for future research into personalized medicine approaches.
Manganese-induced sex-specific gut microbiome perturbations in C57BL/6 mice
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study shows how manganese exposure alters the gut microbiome and metabolic functions in a sex-specific manner in C57BL/6 mice. It highlights changes in neurotransmitter pathways and microbial composition that could impact brain health and suggests the need for sex-specific approaches to understanding metal toxicity.
What was studied?
This study explored how manganese (Mn) exposure affects the gut microbiome in a sex-specific manner in C57BL/6 mice. The researchers used high-throughput sequencing, metagenomics, and metabolomics to investigate the changes in the gut bacterial composition, functional genes, and fecal metabolites in both male and female mice exposed to manganese chloride (MnCl₂). The study aimed to understand the impact of Mn on the gut microbiome and its possible contribution to neurotoxicity, as well as how these changes could be influenced by sex differences.
Who was studied?
The study involved C57BL/6 mice, with both male and female mice exposed to manganese chloride in their drinking water over a period of 13 weeks. The research analyzed changes in the gut microbiome and fecal metabolomes of these mice, comparing control groups with those exposed to Mn. Additionally, the study looked at specific bacterial genes and metabolic pathways that were altered due to manganese exposure.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed significant, sex-specific changes in the gut microbiome following manganese exposure. In males, Mn exposure led to a notable increase in the relative abundance of the phylum Firmicutes and a decrease in Bacteroidetes. In contrast, females exhibited an opposite pattern, with Firmicutes decreasing and Bacteroidetes increasing. At the genus level, manganese exposure significantly altered the abundance of key bacteria involved in neurotransmitter metabolism, such as tryptophan and GABA pathways. Genes related to LPS synthesis, oxidative stress, and DNA repair were more upregulated in female mice, while male mice exhibited greater changes in bacterial motility and chemotaxis genes. Furthermore, manganese exposure altered the metabolic profiles of both male and female mice, with female mice showing a stronger perturbation in antioxidant levels like α-tocopherol and γ-tocopherol. These findings suggest that manganese exposure affects both the microbial composition and metabolic pathways, influencing gut-brain communication, with notable sex-dependent effects.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study has significant implications for understanding how environmental exposure to metals like manganese can influence gut health, particularly through the gut microbiome. The sex-specific differences observed highlight the importance of considering gender when studying the toxicological effects of metals. The alterations in microbial composition and metabolism, particularly those affecting neurotransmitter pathways and inflammatory mediators, suggest that manganese exposure could influence brain health through the gut-brain axis. These findings offer potential insights into how metal toxicity contributes to neurological diseases and could lead to new therapeutic approaches for managing manganese-related neurotoxicity. Moreover, the study underscores the need to consider the gut microbiome as an important player in the overall effects of environmental exposures on health.
Arsenic exposure is associated with alterations to multiple red blood cell parameters among adults in rural Bangladesh
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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The study explored the impact of arsenic exposure on red blood cell parameters in rural Bangladesh, identifying sex-specific effects and changes in MCV and MCH, which may contribute to anemia or macrocytosis.
What was studied?
The study aimed to examine the associations between arsenic exposure and red blood cell (RBC) parameters, such as RBC counts, hematocrit (Hct), hemoglobin (Hgb), mean corpuscular volume (MCV), mean corpuscular hemoglobin (MCH), and mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration (MCHC). The study specifically looked at the effects of long-term arsenic exposure through drinking water on these hematological markers, which can serve as indicators of conditions like anemia and macrocytosis.
Who was studied?
The study involved 755 adults from rural Bangladesh, 45% of whom were male and 54% female. These individuals were part of the Health Effects of Arsenic Longitudinal Study (HEALS) cohort, a cohort that focuses on populations chronically exposed to elevated levels of arsenic through drinking water. The participants had varying arsenic exposure levels and included both non-smoking females and males, with a subset of male smokers. The research excluded female smokers due to an insufficient sample size. Blood and urine samples from these participants were analyzed to explore the link between arsenic exposure and RBC parameters.
Most important findings
The study found that arsenic exposure was linked to changes in several RBC parameters, such as MCV and MCH, among participants. Specifically, arsenic exposure was positively associated with increased MCV and MCH, indicating potential macrocytosis. However, these effects were more pronounced among males, particularly male smokers, who showed stronger associations between arsenic exposure and decreased MCHC. On the other hand, no significant associations were found between arsenic exposure and RBC counts, Hgb, or Hct among the participants overall. The study also revealed that arsenic exposure's impact on MCHC was absent in non-smoking females, suggesting a sex-specific difference in arsenic-induced hematotoxicity.
Key implications
The findings from this study suggest that chronic arsenic exposure may affect RBC function in various ways, potentially leading to anemia or macrocytosis. While the study did not find statistically significant associations for all RBC parameters, the clear trends observed in the data indicate that arsenic exposure could be a risk factor for hematological abnormalities, particularly in populations living in arsenic-contaminated areas. The sex differences in arsenic-induced hematotoxicity are significant, as they highlight the need for more targeted investigations into how arsenic affects men and women differently, potentially due to differences in arsenic metabolism. These results call for further research into arsenic's effects on hematological health, particularly in regions with high arsenic contamination levels, to improve health monitoring and interventions.
Targeting ACSLs to modulate ferroptosis and cancer immunity
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review explains how ACSL enzymes reshape tumor fatty-acid use and control ferroptosis and cancer immunity. It contrasts ACSL4-driven polyunsaturated lipid remodeling that promotes ferroptosis with ACSL3-oleic acid programs that resist ferroptosis, and it links these pathways to immunotherapy response.
What was reviewed?
This review explained how acyl-CoA synthetase long-chain enzymes activate long-chain fatty acids by converting them into acyl-CoA forms that feed fatty-acid oxidation, membrane lipid synthesis, and lipid signaling. The authors centered the discussion on cancer because tumors often rewire lipid handling to support growth, metastasis, and treatment resistance. They then connected that lipid wiring to ferroptosis, a lipid-peroxidation death pathway, and to antitumor immunity, arguing that ACSLs sit at a control point where lipid composition can shape both tumor survival and immune killing.
Who was reviewed?
Because this is a review, the authors summarized findings across many experimental systems rather than following a single cohort. They drew heavily from cultured tumor cell studies, mouse tumor models with intact immunity, and mechanistic work dissecting lipid remodeling and ferroptosis sensitivity. They also referenced immune-oncology studies showing how CD8 T cells, interferon-gamma signaling, and checkpoint blockade outcomes interact with tumor lipid metabolism, along with emerging observations that diet and microbiome lipid outputs can influence immunotherapy response.
What were the most important findings?
The review clarified that ACSL substrate preference largely determines whether an ACSL isoform promotes or blocks ferroptosis. ACSL4 most strongly drives ferroptosis because it channels polyunsaturated fatty acids such as arachidonic and adrenic acids into oxidizable membrane phospholipids that become lipid-peroxide “fuel” for ferroptotic death. In contrast, ACSL3 often supports ferroptosis resistance by using oleic acid to enrich monounsaturated phospholipids that are harder to oxidize, lowering the pool of peroxidation-prone targets. The review also connected these lipid programs to immunity: CD8 T cell–derived interferon-gamma can raise tumor ferroptosis sensitivity, and tumor ACSL4 activity can act as a leverage point that makes immune attack more effective. Beyond ferroptosis, the authors highlighted that ACSL5 can enhance antigen presentation pathways in tumors under certain lipid conditions, while ACSL3 can promote immunosuppression in pancreatic cancer models through tumor-derived signaling that weakens effective cytotoxic responses.
What are the greatest implications of this study/ review?
For clinicians and translational teams, this review frames ACSLs as practical “metabolic knobs” that can tune ferroptosis and reshape immunotherapy outcomes without treating ferroptosis as an isolated pathway. It supports a precision approach: tumors enriched for ACSL4-driven polyunsaturated lipid remodeling may be more amenable to ferroptosis-based combinations with checkpoint blockade, while tumors relying on ACSL3-oleic acid programs may resist ferroptosis and also suppress immune function, making ACSL3-linked pathways attractive combination targets. The review also raises a microbiome-relevant implication: lipid substrates that feed ACSL programs can come from diet and microbial metabolism, so patient lipid context may influence whether ferroptosis is inducible and whether antigen presentation and T-cell killing remain strong during therapy.
How pathogens feel and overcome magnesium limitation when in host tissues
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review explains how hosts restrict pathogens by triggering magnesium limitation signals during infection. It shows that bacteria respond to what they feel inside their cytoplasm and highlights Salmonella’s need for Mg2+ transport systems and stress sensors to survive inside macrophages.
What was reviewed?
This review explained how hosts use nutritional immunity to restrict pathogen growth and why magnesium limitation is a special case, because Mg2+ is abundant in living cells. The authors focused on the idea that pathogens respond to what they “feel” inside their cytoplasm, which can differ from the measured magnesium concentration in the host compartment. Using intracellular infection as the setting, the review connected host-driven stresses to bacterial magnesium homeostasis systems and showed how magnesium-related responses intersect with virulence control.
Who was reviewed?
Because this was a review, it did not study a single patient group. It reviewed host–pathogen evidence centered on mammalian macrophages and the macrophage resistance protein Slc11A1, alongside bacterial models that replicate within host vacuoles. The main pathogen framework was Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium, with supporting examples from other intracellular pathogens impacted by Slc11A1. The review also integrated bacterial genetic and regulatory studies that dissect magnesium transporters, stress sensors, and RNA leaders that report intracellular conditions.
What were the most important findings?
The review showed that magnesium limitation during infection is best understood as a regulated stress signal rather than a simple low-magnesium environment. Slc11A1 correlates with Salmonella experiencing a magnesium “starvation feeling,” and Salmonella needs the Mg2+ transporter MgtB to thrive in hosts with functional Slc11A1. The review clarified that PhoQ can sense low periplasmic Mg2+, but inside macrophages Salmonella mainly activates PhoQ through mildly acidic pH, which then drives PhoP-dependent virulence programs. A key microbiome-relevant concept is functional MMA at the pathway level: host pressures select for bacteria that can upregulate Mg2+ acquisition, tune transporter stability, and use RNA leaders to sense cytoplasmic Mg2+, ATP, and osmotic stress to sustain intracellular survival.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review reframes magnesium as a host-controlled ecological lever that can reshape pathogen behavior without directly changing bulk magnesium levels in a compartment. For clinicians translating microbiome science, the main implication is that infection risk and severity can hinge on host genes and host-cell conditions that alter what pathogens sense internally, not only on diet or serum minerals. It also supports anti-virulence thinking: targeting bacterial magnesium homeostasis, cytoplasmic sensing, or transporter stability may reduce intracellular pathogen fitness while avoiding some pressures that drive classic antibiotic resistance.
Beyond ferrostatin-1: a comprehensive review of ferroptosis inhibitors
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review explains why stopping membrane lipid peroxidation is the most reliable way to block ferroptosis. It compares endogenous defenses with synthetic inhibitors and shows that optimized radical-trapping antioxidants offer the strongest in vivo potential, while many upstream strategies remain less consistent across models.
What was reviewed?
This review summarized the current landscape of ferroptosis inhibitors and argued that blocking phospholipid peroxidation remains the most effective way to stop ferroptosis across disease contexts. The authors framed ferroptosis as an iron-catalyzed, regulated form of necrotic cell death that depends on membrane phospholipid peroxidation, and they positioned ferrostatin-1 as the historical benchmark while emphasizing that newer inhibitors improve potency and in vivo usefulness. They reviewed both endogenous defense systems and synthetic drug-like compounds, with a deliberate focus on radical-trapping antioxidants because these agents directly terminate lipid radical chain reactions at the membrane level and have generated the strongest proof-of-concept protection in animal disease models.
Who was reviewed?
Because this was a review, it did not evaluate one patient group. Instead, it integrated evidence from diverse experimental systems used across the ferroptosis field, including cell-based ferroptosis assays triggered by canonical inducers and multiple in vivo disease models where ferroptosis inhibition changes outcomes. The paper also drew from pharmacology and medicinal chemistry work that compares potency, stability, solubility, and exposure constraints that determine whether a ferroptosis inhibitor can realistically function in animals and, eventually, humans.
What were the most important findings?
The review’s central conclusion was that lipophilic radical-trapping antioxidants outperform many “upstream” targeted approaches because ferroptosis ultimately executes through lipid autoxidation in membranes, and radical-trapping chemistry can stop that chain reaction directly. It highlighted that the biological defense network includes multiple endogenous radical-trapping systems beyond GPX4, including vitamin E, coenzyme Q, tetrahydrobiopterin, vitamin K, and hydropersulfides, which together reinforce that ferroptosis control is fundamentally about maintaining membrane redox stability. The authors also clarified a practical point for interpreting the inhibitor literature: several agents labeled as lipoxygenase inhibitors can appear protective largely because they also behave as radical-trapping antioxidants, and assay conditions can substantially change apparent potency, making reference standards essential. Finally, the review emphasized that medicinal chemistry progress has produced newer radical-trapping inhibitors with improved stability and tolerability that enable successful in vivo studies, supporting ferroptosis inhibition as a realistic therapeutic strategy rather than only a cell-culture phenomenon.
What are the greatest implications of this study/ review?
For clinicians and translational teams, this review supports ferroptosis inhibition as a credible therapeutic concept in conditions where iron-driven oxidative membrane injury contributes to pathology, while also setting expectations for what will likely work best in practice. It suggests that interventions that directly suppress lipid peroxidation may translate more reliably than approaches that target a single upstream protein, because multiple metabolic routes can converge on the same final lipid radical pathway. It also highlights a key development barrier: the most effective inhibitors must combine membrane-localized radical trapping with acceptable pharmacokinetics and organ distribution, especially for indications requiring brain penetration or chronic dosing. Overall, the review positions optimized radical-trapping antioxidants as the current front-runners for near-term in vivo and translational progress, while encouraging biomarker development to track ferroptosis activity in patients.
Gut as the target tissue of mercury and the extraintestinal effects
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review explains how inorganic and methylmercury disrupt gut microbes, metabolites, tight junctions, and immune signals, making the gut a key target tissue that can drive liver and brain toxicity through gut–liver and gut–brain pathways.
What was reviewed?
This paper reviewed evidence that the gut is a primary target tissue for mercury, including inorganic mercury (IHg) and methylmercury (MeHg), and that gut injury helps explain “extraintestinal” toxicity in organs such as the liver and brain. The authors synthesized mechanistic and animal-model findings showing that mercury can be absorbed and chemically transformed in the gut, while mercury exposure also disrupts gut barrier functions (biological, chemical, mechanical, and immune), creating downstream systemic inflammation and organ-specific injury through gut–liver and gut–brain pathways.
Who was reviewed?
The review focused on experimental evidence across multiple animal models and in vitro intestinal systems rather than a single clinical cohort. It drew heavily from rodent studies (including Sprague Dawley rats and mice), fish models, and poultry models to describe conserved gut microbiome shifts, barrier damage, and metabolomic changes after oral IHg or MeHg exposure, and it used intestinal epithelial models (e.g., Caco-2) to support direct effects on permeability and tight junction biology.
What were the most important findings?
The authors concluded that both IHg and MeHg reliably trigger gut dysbiosis and metabolomic disruption that track with barrier injury and systemic effects. As major microbial associations, IHg exposure often enriches Proteobacteria and Firmicutes and alters families linked to inflammation and pathogenic potential while reducing diversity at higher doses; reported shifts include increases in taxa such as Desulfovibrionaceae and Pseudomonas in fish and expansions of pathobiont-associated groups in poisoned rodents, alongside reductions in beneficial taxa in some settings. MeHg similarly perturbs community structure and can reduce Lactobacillaceae while increasing Porphyromonadaceae and Prevotellaceae in intestinal regions, and it links to neuroactive metabolite changes in feces, including elevated glutamate and GABA with reductions in amino acids tied to neurotransmitter synthesis. Mechanistically, the paper emphasized mercury-driven tight junction and cytoskeletal disruption (including altered ZO1/F-actin patterns), increased intestinal permeability, and higher pro-inflammatory cytokine signaling (notably IL-6 and TNF-α), supporting a model where gut damage amplifies hepatotoxicity for IHg and neurotoxicity for MeHg via gut–liver and gut–brain axes.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
For clinicians and microbiome-signature work, this review argues that mercury toxicity is not only a direct organ-deposition problem; it is also a gut-mediated disease process where dysbiosis, inflammatory signaling, and barrier breakdown act upstream of liver and brain outcomes. This framing supports using gut microbial and fecal metabolite readouts as early indicators of mercury-related risk and suggests that microbiome-directed strategies could plausibly reduce harm, including approaches that restore barrier integrity, reduce inflammatory signaling, and shift microbial metabolism toward reduced mercury bioactivation. The authors also cautioned that many animal studies use relatively high exposures, so translating signatures to environmentally relevant doses remains a priority for future work and database annotation.
THE ROLE OF GUT MICROBIOTA IN FETAL METHYLMERCURY EXPOSURE: INSIGHTS FROM A PILOT STUDY
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This pilot study in late pregnancy linked maternal gut microbiota to mercury biomarkers and tested whether microbes directly change stool methylmercury. Stool methylmercury did not predict fetal exposure, and mercury cycling genes were largely absent, suggesting indirect microbiome pathways may matter more.
What was studied?
This pilot study tested whether gut microbiota in late pregnancy relates to methylmercury (MeHg) levels in maternal and fetal biomarkers and whether microbes directly drive stool MeHg through mercury methylation or demethylation. Researchers measured mercury species in maternal stool and hair and in cord blood when available, profiled stool microbiota with 16S sequencing, and then used metagenomic sequencing on selected samples to look for mercury cycling genes. The main goal was to connect microbiome patterns to fetal MeHg exposure risk during a highly vulnerable developmental window.
Who was studied?
The study enrolled 17 healthy pregnant women at 36–39 weeks of gestation who provided stool and hair samples, and a subset of 7 also provided cord blood at delivery. Most participants had low fish intake based on biomarker patterns, which limited high-dose MeHg exposure but allowed the authors to test microbiome links at low background exposure levels. The “microbiome” measured came from maternal stool, and gene searches focused on six stools chosen from the highest and lowest stool MeHg levels to increase the chance of detecting microbial mercury genes.
What were the most important findings?
The study found that stool MeHg did not meaningfully track fetal exposure, while established biomarkers did: maternal hair total mercury aligned strongly with cord blood MeHg, whereas stool MeHg showed only a weak, non-significant relationship with cord blood. Microbiome diversity measures showed minimal separation by mercury biomarkers, but specific taxa correlated with mercury measures in different directions. Seventeen genera associated with stool MeHg, stool inorganic mercury, or hair total mercury, yet those associations rarely overlapped across biomarkers, suggesting biomarker-specific microbial relationships rather than one consistent “mercury microbiome” profile. Mechanistically, the authors did not find convincing evidence that direct microbial methylation or classic mer-operon detox explained stool MeHg differences because they detected no definitive hgcA or merB, and they found only low-abundance merA signals.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
For clinicians, this study supports treating fetal MeHg exposure assessment as biomarker-driven rather than stool-MeHg–driven, because stool MeHg did not appear to predict fetal exposure in this cohort. The microbiome signal looks indirect: certain taxa tracked with stool MeHg, but the gene evidence argues against direct methylation or merB-based demethylation as the primary driver of stool MeHg variation. The authors’ strongest translational hypothesis is that gut microbiota may influence MeHg handling by modifying intestinal barrier function and reabsorption dynamics, potentially shifting how much MeHg remains in stool versus entering circulation. For a microbiome signatures database, the take-home signature is “taxa–biomarker correlations without clear mercury-cycling gene support,” pointing future work toward barrier and host–microbe pathways rather than microbial methylation alone.
Cadmium induces iron deficiency anemia through the suppression of iron transport in the duodenum
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study examines how cadmium exposure suppresses iron transport in the duodenum, leading to iron deficiency anemia. The research reveals the molecular mechanisms behind this disruption and its broader health implications.
What was studied?
This study investigates the impact of cadmium (Cd) exposure on iron metabolism, specifically how it induces iron deficiency anemia by suppressing iron transport in the duodenum. The researchers aimed to understand the molecular mechanisms by which Cd disrupts iron absorption and the regulation of iron transport-related proteins, particularly focusing on the role of divalent metal transporter 1 (DMT1), ferroportin 1 (Fpn1), and other key proteins involved in non-heme and heme iron absorption. The study used animal models, including mice, to analyze the effects of Cd on gene expression and protein levels in the duodenum, as well as its broader implications on serum iron concentrations and anemia development.
Who was studied?
The study involved laboratory animal models, specifically mice of different strains (C57BL/6J, 129/Sv, DBA/2), which were exposed to cadmium chloride (CdCl2) through oral gavage. The researchers focused on the effects of cadmium exposure on the expression of iron transport-related genes and proteins in the duodenum. Additionally, the study utilized human colon carcinoma Caco-2 cells as an in vitro model to study the cellular impact of Cd on iron transport.
What were the most important findings?
The most significant findings from this study reveal that Cd inhibits the expression of key iron transport-related genes in the duodenum, including DMT1, Fpn1, Dcytb, and Heph. The suppression of these genes was particularly pronounced in the proximal duodenum, where the majority of iron absorption occurs. This downregulation of iron transporters results in decreased iron absorption, contributing to lower serum iron levels and iron deficiency anemia. Interestingly, Cd exposure also led to a decrease in the expression of heme iron transport-related genes, such as HCP1 (heme carrier protein 1), suggesting that Cd affects both non-heme and heme iron absorption pathways. In addition to these molecular changes, the study observed that Cd exposure induced a significant reduction in serum iron concentrations and total iron-binding capacity, which are hallmark features of iron deficiency anemia. The study also demonstrated that Cd exposure decreased iron transport-related gene expression in Caco-2 cells, confirming the effects observed in the murine model. The inhibitory effects on iron transport were reversible to some extent, suggesting that the changes in iron metabolism caused by Cd exposure may be partially recoverable over time.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The implications of this study are significant in understanding the toxicological effects of cadmium and its role in disrupting iron homeostasis, potentially leading to iron deficiency anemia. The findings highlight the importance of iron transport mechanisms in the duodenum, and how their inhibition by environmental pollutants like cadmium can have detrimental health effects. This research provides valuable insights for public health, especially in regions where cadmium exposure is prevalent due to environmental contamination, tobacco smoke, or industrial activities. The study also emphasizes the need for further research into the long-term effects of cadmium exposure on iron metabolism and the development of strategies to mitigate its impact on public health. From a clinical perspective, this research could help in developing diagnostic markers for cadmium-induced anemia and inform treatment strategies that focus on improving iron absorption in affected individuals. Additionally, the study opens the door for investigating potential therapies or interventions aimed at protecting against the effects of environmental pollutants on metal homeostasis.
Extended sub-chronic exposure to heavy metal mixture induced multidrug resistance against chemotherapy agents in ovarian cancer cells
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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This study investigates how sub-chronic exposure to lead, cadmium, and cobalt induces multidrug resistance in ovarian cancer cells, highlighting the role of drug efflux transporters and reduced apoptosis in treatment resistance. These findings underscore the importance of environmental metal exposure in cancer therapy effectiveness.
What was studied?
The research investigates how chronic exposure to a mixture of lead (Pb), cadmium (Cd), and cobalt (Co) at low, non-lethal doses can induce multidrug resistance (MDR) in the NIH-Ovcar3 human ovarian cancer cell line. The study focuses on whether prolonged exposure to these heavy metals results in resistance to chemotherapy drugs like cisplatin (CP), 5-fluorouracil (5-FU), and doxorubicin (DX), and explores the molecular mechanisms behind this resistance. The research aims to uncover whether the heavy metals could influence drug efflux pumps and apoptosis pathways, making chemotherapy less effective.
Who was studied?
The study utilized the NIH-Ovcar3 human ovarian cancer cell line, which is commonly used for research into chemotherapy resistance. The cells were exposed to a mixture of Pb, Cd, and Co at concentrations that were below known harmful levels, simulating the chronic exposure seen in real-world environments. The research observed the development of multidrug resistance over several generations (20 passages) to investigate how these cells adapted to low-dose heavy metal exposure. This was followed by treatment with chemotherapy agents to examine how the exposure affected the cells' responses to these drugs.
Most important findings
The study showed that prolonged exposure to low doses of Pb, Cd, and Co resulted in significant chemotherapy resistance in the ovarian cancer cells. These resistant cells exhibited cross-resistance to three chemotherapy agents: cisplatin, 5-fluorouracil, and doxorubicin. The most pronounced resistance was observed against cisplatin and doxorubicin, where resistant cells had over 2.1 and 2.87 times higher IC50 values compared to controls. Furthermore, the study highlighted the role of ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters, particularly P-glycoprotein (ABCB1), Breast Cancer Resistance Protein (ABCG2), and Multidrug Resistance-associated Protein 1 (ABCC1), in this resistance mechanism. These transporters were significantly overexpressed in the resistant cell population, supporting the hypothesis that heavy metal exposure upregulates cellular detoxification pathways. Additionally, the resistant cells exhibited lower apoptotic activity and increased motility, suggesting that the exposure may also contribute to a more invasive and metastatic phenotype.
Key implications
The findings of this study suggest that even low levels of heavy metal exposure, which are often deemed safe, could contribute to the development of multidrug resistance in ovarian cancer cells. This has critical implications for clinical practice, especially in environments with high environmental contamination. The study emphasizes the need for monitoring heavy metal exposure in patients with ovarian cancer, particularly in those undergoing chemotherapy, as it could influence the efficacy of treatment. Understanding the molecular mechanisms, including the involvement of ABC transporters and reduced apoptosis, offers potential targets for overcoming resistance and improving therapeutic strategies. This research also calls for further exploration of how environmental exposures to heavy metals might affect cancer progression and drug resistance over time.
Effect of a controlled food-chain mediated exposure to cadmium and arsenic on oxidative enzymes in the tissues of rats
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study reveals how cadmium and arsenic exposure via the food chain disrupts oxidative enzyme activity in rats, leading to significant health risks, particularly in the liver and kidneys.
What was studied?
This study investigated the effects of cadmium and arsenic exposure on the activities of oxidative enzymes in various tissues of rats through a controlled food-chain mediated exposure. The study used fish, which were exposed to cadmium chloride (CdCl₂) and arsenic trioxide (As₂O₃), as the first trophic level. The contaminated fish were then used as protein sources in the rats’ diet, simulating how these metals enter the food chain. The effects of these metals on the liver, kidney, testes, heart, and brain of rats were assessed by analyzing the activities of four key oxidative enzymes: Sulphite oxidase (SO), Aldehyde oxidase (AO), Monoamine oxidase (MO), and Xanthine oxidase (XO).
Who was studied?
The study focused on adult male Wistar albino rats, which were divided into four groups. One group served as the control, while the other three were exposed to diets containing cadmium, arsenic, or a combination of both metals. The rats were exposed for either one or three months, after which their tissues were analyzed for metal accumulation and enzyme activity. The results from the rats provided insights into the impact of these heavy metals on oxidative enzyme function in different tissues.
Most important findings
The study showed that both cadmium and arsenic accumulated in the tissues of rats, particularly in the liver and kidneys. After one month of exposure, the liver showed the highest accumulation of both metals. However, after three months, the kidney had the highest accumulation. The exposure to cadmium and arsenic resulted in a significant reduction in the activities of oxidative enzymes in the liver, especially after both one and three months of exposure. In other tissues like the kidneys, testes, and heart, enzyme activities initially increased after one month but decreased after three months. In the brain, the activities of these enzymes were elevated throughout the study. These findings suggest that prolonged exposure to cadmium and arsenic via the food chain leads to significant disruption of normal oxidative enzyme activity, potentially impairing essential metabolic functions in the affected tissues.
Key implications
The results underscore the potential health risks associated with heavy metal contamination in the food chain, particularly from common food sources like fish. The accumulation of cadmium and arsenic in vital organs like the liver and kidneys, and the subsequent inhibition of oxidative enzymes, could contribute to metabolic disruptions and oxidative stress. This study highlights the need for monitoring and controlling the levels of these toxic metals in food sources, as chronic exposure may lead to long-term health issues. Additionally, understanding the enzyme inhibition and accumulation patterns can aid in developing strategies for mitigating the harmful effects of these metals, particularly in areas where arsenic and cadmium contamination in water and soil is a known issue.
Speciation analysis and fractionation of manganese: A review
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review examines manganese speciation and fractionation in environmental and biological systems, focusing on its bioavailability, toxicity, and the methods used for analysis. It highlights the challenges in studying manganese's various forms and its implications for human health and environmental management.
What was reviewed?
This review provides an in-depth analysis of the speciation and fractionation of manganese (Mn) across various environmental and biological matrices, including water, soil, plants, animals, and polluted environments. It discusses the methods used for manganese determination, such as extraction techniques, spectroscopic methods, and the challenges associated with analyzing manganese species in complex matrices.
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesized existing research from various studies on manganese speciation and fractionation, presenting findings from environmental and biological sample analyses. It covered the work of several organizations and researchers, providing insights into manganese’s role in the environment, its bioavailability, and its toxicological effects.
What were the most important findings?
The review highlighted the importance of manganese in biological systems, particularly in its various oxidation states, which influence its bioavailability, toxicity, and role in enzyme activation. Manganese in its divalent form (Mn²⁺) is the most stable and widely available for biological uptake, though it also exists in higher oxidation states in different matrices. The study detailed the methods used for manganese speciation, which are essential for understanding its role in both environmental and biological contexts. These methods include extraction techniques and multistep procedures, along with more advanced hyphenated techniques like liquid chromatography and inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS). It also emphasized the challenges of analyzing manganese due to its variable oxidation states and interactions with other elements, which can affect its stability in different samples. Special attention was given to manganese's role in plant uptake, animal metabolism, and its accumulation in environmental pollutants.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The review underscores the critical importance of manganese speciation analysis for understanding its environmental and biological implications, including its toxicity when accumulated in excess. The findings have significant implications for environmental monitoring, health assessments, and the development of strategies for managing manganese exposure in industrial and polluted settings. The information is particularly valuable for clinicians and environmental scientists concerned with manganese’s neurotoxic effects, as well as its role in diseases such as Parkinsonism. Moreover, the study’s emphasis on the variety of methods for speciation analysis aids in improving detection and understanding manganese’s behavior in different environments, contributing to better risk assessments and policy-making.
Simultaneous antibiotic removal and mitigation of resistance induction by manganese bio-oxidation process
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study shows that manganese bio-oxidation, facilitated by Pseudomonas aeruginosa strain MQ2, can effectively degrade antibiotics and reduce antibiotic resistance gene propagation by alleviating oxidative stress, offering new strategies for environmental antibiotic pollution control.
What was studied?
This study investigated the simultaneous removal of antibiotics and mitigation of antibiotic resistance (AMR) induction through a manganese bio-oxidation process. The researchers used the Mn(II)-oxidizing bacterium Pseudomonas aeruginosa strain MQ2 to explore how manganese bio-oxidation could not only degrade antibiotics such as ciprofloxacin (Cip) and tetracycline (Tet) but also reduce the development and transfer of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs). The study focused on the roles of biogenic manganese oxides (BioMnOx) and the effect of manganese oxidation on mitigating the induction of antibiotic resistance via oxidative stress.
Who was studied?
The study focused on Pseudomonas aeruginosa strain MQ2, a bacterium isolated for its ability to oxidize manganese. The research also examined Escherichia coli DH5α, used as a donor for conjugative transfer of ARGs, and P. aeruginosa strain MQ2 as the recipient. These bacterial strains were exposed to antibiotics and manganese to assess how manganese bio-oxidation influenced antibiotic degradation, resistance induction, and horizontal gene transfer (HGT).
What were the most important findings?
The study demonstrated that the manganese bio-oxidation process significantly mitigates the induction of antibiotic resistance. The P. aeruginosa strain MQ2 was able to degrade antibiotics like Cip and Tet effectively in the presence of BioMnOx, with removal efficiencies of 93% and 96%, respectively, within 24 hours. Notably, the manganese oxidation process reduced the development of resistance by decreasing oxidative stress, which is a major factor driving mutation and HGT of ARGs. The study also showed that manganese bio-oxidation decreased conjugative transfer of resistance genes between E. coli and P. aeruginosa, with a reduction of up to 26.7-fold in conjugative transfer frequency compared to control conditions. Additionally, the presence of BioMnOx shielded the bacteria by coating their surfaces, preventing oxidative damage and lowering the ROS levels inside the cells. This protective effect helped mitigate the mutation rates associated with antibiotic resistance.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study has important implications for wastewater treatment and environmental remediation strategies aimed at combating antibiotic resistance. By demonstrating the ability of manganese bio-oxidation to degrade antibiotics and reduce the spread of resistance genes, the research suggests that manganese-based treatments could be a promising approach to mitigate the environmental impact of antibiotic contamination. The findings also open the door for developing new bioremediation techniques that leverage manganese bio-oxidation to control both antibiotic pollution and the propagation of AMR in natural and industrial environments. This could significantly reduce the selective pressure exerted by antibiotics in polluted ecosystems, preventing the amplification of antibiotic-resistant bacteria and the transfer of resistance genes.
Impact of oxidative stress induced by heavy metals on ovarian function
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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This review highlights the impact of heavy metal-induced oxidative stress on ovarian function, contributing to premature ovarian insufficiency. It discusses the mechanisms by which metals like copper, arsenic, and cadmium induce ROS, leading to ovarian damage, and the potential therapeutic role of antioxidants.
What was studied?
This review examines the detrimental impact of heavy metals, including copper, arsenic, cadmium, mercury, and lead, on ovarian function, particularly through the induction of oxidative stress (OS). These heavy metals are known to generate reactive oxygen species (ROS), leading to cellular damage, apoptosis, and follicular atresia, all of which contribute to premature ovarian insufficiency (POI). The study focuses on the molecular and cellular mechanisms by which these metals affect ovarian health, highlighting their role in disrupting hormone production and accelerating ovarian aging.
Who was studied?
The review incorporates data from both human and animal studies, with a focus on research involving rodents as animal models. These studies explore the physiological effects of heavy metal exposure on ovarian cells, including granulosa cells and oocytes. It also examines the biochemical and physiological consequences of heavy metal toxicity in human populations, particularly those exposed to environmental pollutants, as well as laboratory findings that investigate the molecular mechanisms underlying ovarian damage caused by these metals.
Most important findings
The review underscores the significant role of oxidative stress in mediating the harmful effects of heavy metals on ovarian function. Metals like arsenic, cadmium, and mercury generate excessive ROS, which in turn disrupt mitochondrial function, induce DNA damage, and trigger apoptosis in ovarian cells. These metals also impair the activity of critical antioxidant enzymes, exacerbating oxidative damage. For example, copper exposure leads to follicular disruption and increased cell death, while arsenic accelerates ovarian failure by reducing levels of estrogen and anti-Müllerian hormone (AMH). Overall, the evidence suggests that these metals contribute to a decline in ovarian reserve, leading to early menopause and reduced fertility.
Key implications
The findings highlight the importance of addressing environmental heavy metal exposure as a potential risk factor for POI. The role of oxidative stress in the pathogenesis of ovarian dysfunction suggests that preventive measures, such as reducing exposure to environmental pollutants, could help protect ovarian health. Additionally, antioxidant treatments may offer a promising therapeutic approach to mitigate the damaging effects of oxidative stress caused by heavy metal exposure. Clinicians should consider these environmental factors when diagnosing and treating women with premature ovarian insufficiency.
Pseudomonas aeruginosa Magnesium Transporter MgtE Inhibits Type III Secretion System Gene Expression by Stimulating rsmYZ Transcription
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study shows that the magnesium transporter MgtE suppresses Pseudomonas aeruginosa type III secretion by blocking ExsA translation. MgtE activates the GacAS system, increases rsmY and rsmZ, and limits ExsA production, which lowers T3SS gene transcription without reducing exsA mRNA.
What was studied?
This study tested how the magnesium transporter MgtE in Pseudomonas aeruginosa controls virulence by regulating type III secretion system (T3SS) gene expression. The authors treated the T3SS as the key “acute infection” weapon and asked why mgtE expression suppresses T3SS transcription. They specifically examined whether MgtE acts through extrinsic regulatory networks that control synthesis of ExsA, the master T3SS transcription factor, rather than through the intrinsic ExsD/ExsC/ExsE control switch that responds to secretion conditions.
Who was studied?
The study examined bacterial strains and regulatory circuits, not human participants. It used Pseudomonas aeruginosa strains PA103 and PA14 with reporter constructs that read out T3SS transcription and translation, along with targeted mutants in key regulators such as gacA, gacS, and rsmY/rsmZ. The work also used engineered strains that uncoupled native exsCEBA transcription from ExsA autoregulation so the team could isolate posttranscriptional effects on ExsA.
What were the most important findings?
The authors showed that MgtE suppresses T3SS gene expression by blocking ExsA translation, not by reducing exsA transcription or destabilizing exsA mRNA. When they forced constitutive exsCEBA transcription, mgtE expression still reduced ExsA-dependent reporter output, which placed the effect after transcription. Translational reporters pinpointed the effect as exsA-specific within the exsCEBA operon: mgtE repressed the exsA fusion but did not reduce exsC, exsE, or exsB translation, and exsA transcript levels actually increased with mgtE expression, which argues strongly for translational repression rather than mRNA loss. Mechanistically, mgtE increased transcription of the small RNAs rsmY and rsmZ by about twofold or more, and this increase required the GacAS two-component system because the effect disappeared in gacA or gacS mutants.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study supports magnesium-linked regulation as an anti-virulence control point in a major opportunistic pathogen. It suggests that environmental cues associated with infection settings, including low magnesium and antibiotic exposure that increase mgtE expression, can push P. aeruginosa to “fine-tune” T3SS output rather than keep it fully on, which matters for how the organism balances acute damage versus persistence. Clinically, the results elevate the GacAS–RsmY/Z network and ExsA translation control as actionable targets: interventions that mimic MgtE’s downstream signaling could reduce toxin injection without selecting as strongly for classic resistance because they do not aim to kill the bacteria.
Staphylococcus aureus HrtA-heme-toxicity : ATPase function and heme-stress virulence reprogramming in S. aureus
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Staphylococcus aureus (S. Aureus)
Staphylococcus aureus (S. Aureus)
Staphylococcus aureus is a versatile skin and mucosal commensal that can transition into a highly virulent pathobiont. Known for its immune-evasive strategies, toxin production, and antibiotic resistance, it plays a significant role in chronic infections and microbiome imbalance.
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HrtA is the ATPase of HrtAB that protects S. aureus from heme toxicity. Catalytic residues are essential in vitro and in vivo. Heme-stressed hrtA mutants undergo stringent-like reprogramming with a shift from cytolytic to immunomodulatory toxins, redefining virulence control by heme availability.
What was studied?
This study investigates Staphylococcus aureus HrtA-heme-toxicity, defining the biochemical function of HrtA, the ATPase subunit of the heme-regulated transporter HrtAB, and linking its catalytic activity to survival under heme stress and to genome-wide transcriptional remodeling. The authors characterize HrtA ATPase kinetics in vitro, identify essential catalytic residues by site-directed mutagenesis, test in vivo complementation during growth with toxic heme, and profile the heme-stress transcriptome of an hrtA mutant to explain previously observed virulence shifts. The work positions HrtAB at the interface of heme acquisition and heme detoxification in Staphylococcus aureus pathogenesis, a setting relevant to iron competition in host niches and to immunomodulatory toxin expression that shapes host–microbe interactions.
Who was studied?
Experiments used S. aureus strain Newman and an isogenic hrtA deletion mutant for growth and transcriptional analyses, with Escherichia coli BL21(DE3) expressing recombinant HrtA and engineered HrtA mutants for biochemical assays. Heme exposure for microarrays was 1 μM to permit growth of the mutant, while adaptation and dominance tests used up to 10 μM heme; biochemical assays assessed pH, temperature, ATP concentration, and divalent cation requirements. These designs isolated HrtA’s role in heme tolerance and linked catalytic competence to cellular phenotypes and global gene expression under heme stress.
Most important findings
Purified HrtA hydrolyzed ATP, establishing it as the ATPase of the HrtAB transporter. Activity saturated near 0.25 mM ATP, was optimal at pH 7 to 8, and required Mn²⁺ or Mg²⁺, with an unusual in vitro temperature optimum of 10 to 20°C as depicted in Figure 2 on page 4. Conserved motifs were functionally essential: K45 in Walker A, G145 in the ABC signature, and E167 in Walker B were each required for ATP hydrolysis; R76 outside these motifs reduced but did not abolish activity. Only catalytically competent HrtA complemented the heme-sensitive growth defect of the hrtA mutant, whereas catalytically inactive variants acted dominant-negatively in wild-type cells under heme challenge, consistent with multimeric ABC transporter architecture.
Genome-wide expression profiling revealed that more than 500 transcripts changed at least twofold in the hrtA mutant during heme exposure, with the pattern most similar to the stringent response, including approximately 37.4 percent overlap and strong up-regulation of RelA. Virulence determinants were markedly reprogrammed: transcripts for staphylococcal superantigen-like exotoxins were induced, while pore-forming toxins such as gamma hemolysin subunits and a leukotoxin were repressed, indicating a shift from cell-lytic to immunomodulatory toxin profiles. Table 3 on page 7 details these changes, including increases in fibrinogen-binding proteins and immunodominant antigens. Regulatory systems, including HssRS and multiple two-component regulators and metal homeostasis repressors such as Fur and CzrA, were differentially expressed, offering mechanisms for the breadth of the response.
Key implications
For microbiome-oriented pathogenesis frameworks, these data support heme as a contextual host signal that directs S. aureus virulence programming. HrtAB function safeguards against heme’s membrane-damaging toxicity and prevents a costly, immunomodulatory stress response; loss of HrtA precipitates stringent-like reprogramming and favors secreted factors that can reshape immune recruitment in host tissues. In microbiome signatures, S. aureus emerges as a pathobiont whose toxin repertoire and immune interference vary with iron-heme availability, suggesting niche-specific expression states during dysbiosis. Therapeutically, the results raise the prospect of targeting HrtAB or its regulator HssRS to potentiate heme stress and blunt virulence without directly inhibiting growth, a strategy that could complement nutritional immunity and reduce selective pressure for resistance.
CadC, the transcriptional regulatory protein of the cadmium resistance system of Staphylococcus aureus plasmid pI258
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study identifies CadC as a key transcriptional regulator of the cadmium resistance operon in S. aureus plasmid pI258, revealing its role in controlling cadA expression in response to metal ions like cadmium, bismuth, and lead.
What was studied?
This study examined the cadmium (Cd) resistance system in Staphylococcus aureus plasmid pI258, specifically focusing on the role of the CadC protein as a transcriptional regulator of the cadA gene. The cadA gene encodes a P-type ATPase responsible for the energy-dependent efflux of cadmium ions. The study aimed to characterize the function of CadC, the protein involved in regulating the cadmium resistance operon, and how it controls the expression of the cadA gene, particularly in response to cadmium exposure. The research further explored how CadC interacts with the cadA operator/promoter region and the effect of cadmium and other metal ions on this regulatory mechanism.
Who was studied?
The study involved Staphylococcus aureus strain pI258, which contains the cadA cadmium resistance operon. The CadC protein was studied by overexpressing it in Escherichia coli cells for subsequent purification. The research utilized various in vitro techniques, including gel retardation assays and DNase I footprinting assays, to analyze the interaction between CadC and the cadA operator/promoter DNA. The study also compared the cadmium resistance regulation in S. aureus with other resistance mechanisms, such as those found in the arsenic resistance system.
Most important findings
The study found that the CadC protein from S. aureus pI258 is a key transcriptional regulator of the cadA operon. In gel retardation assays, CadC bound specifically to the cadA operator/promoter region, resulting in a shift in DNA mobility, indicating a direct interaction between CadC and the DNA. This interaction was shown to be metal-dependent, with cadmium (Cd²⁺), bismuth (Bi³⁺), and lead (Pb²⁺) causing the release of CadC from the DNA in a concentration-dependent manner. DNase I footprinting assays revealed that CadC protected specific regions of the DNA from degradation, particularly between nucleotide positions 27 and 114 relative to the transcription start point. The study also showed that CadC represses transcription of the cadA gene, with this repression relieved in the presence of Cd²⁺, suggesting that CadC functions as a repressor that is regulated by cadmium ions.
Key implications
The study reveals that CadC is a crucial regulatory protein that controls cadmium resistance in S. aureus by binding to the cadA promoter and inhibiting its transcription. The metal-dependent regulation of CadC provides important insights into how bacteria manage toxic metal exposure. Understanding how CadC operates and interacts with other metal ions may aid in the development of therapeutic strategies to counteract cadmium toxicity or exploit similar mechanisms for environmental or industrial applications. The study also underscores the complexity of heavy metal resistance systems in bacteria and the role of metal-responsive regulatory proteins in maintaining bacterial survival in toxic environments.
Cloning and Functional Analysis of the pbr Lead Resistance Determinant of Ralstonia metallidurans CH34
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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The study of the Ralstonia metallidurans pbr operon reveals mechanisms of lead resistance, highlighting Pb(II) uptake, efflux, and sequestration, and offering potential applications in bioremediation and therapeutic strategies for lead poisoning.
What was studied?
This study explores the lead resistance system in Ralstonia metallidurans strain CH34, particularly focusing on the pbr operon that mediates Pb(II) uptake, efflux, and accumulation. The research characterizes the pbr genes, pbrT, pbrA, pbrB, pbrC, and pbrD, and their roles in lead resistance, with an emphasis on Pb(II)-dependent inducible transcription and the PbrR regulatory protein, which belongs to the MerR family of metal ion-sensing proteins. The study also delves into the functional analysis of Pb(II) uptake and efflux mechanisms, as well as the identification of the Pb(II)-binding protein PbrD. This research contributes to understanding how bacteria cope with toxic lead concentrations and how metal-resistance systems evolve to mitigate environmental metal stress.
Who was studied?
The study focuses on Ralstonia metallidurans strain CH34, a bacterium isolated from heavy-metal-contaminated environments. This strain has been widely studied for its metal resistance traits, particularly regarding its ability to resist Pb(II), and is commonly used as a model organism for understanding bacterial metal tolerance. The study also involves molecular analysis using subcloning techniques, transcript analysis, and RNA isolation from various strains of Ralstonia metallidurans and Escherichia coli to investigate the genetic and biochemical basis of lead resistance.
Most important findings
The pbr operon in Ralstonia metallidurans is the first to be identified as specifically conferring resistance to Pb(II). The operon includes several key genes: pbrT, which encodes a Pb(II) uptake protein; pbrA, which encodes a P-type ATPase for Pb(II) efflux; pbrB, a membrane protein of unknown function; and pbrC, which is related to prolipoprotein signal peptidases. The gene pbrD, located downstream, encodes a Pb(II)-binding protein essential for Pb(II) sequestration. Pb(II)-dependent transcription of pbrABCD is regulated by the metal-sensing PbrR protein, which initiates gene expression in response to Pb(II) exposure. Functional analysis confirmed that PbrA acts as a Pb(II) efflux ATPase, while PbrT is involved in Pb(II) uptake, and PbrB and PbrC contribute to resistance through an unknown mechanism.
Key implications
The key implications of this study are twofold: first, it provides insights into the mechanisms of bacterial resistance to lead, specifically through the pbr operon and the coordinated action of PbrT, PbrA, PbrB, and PbrC. These findings may inform the development of bioremediation strategies using bacteria capable of sequestering or detoxifying Pb(II). Second, understanding how Pb(II) interacts with bacterial metal-sensing systems can inform the development of new therapeutic approaches for treating lead poisoning in humans. Targeting similar Pb(II) transport and sequestration mechanisms in pathogens may also offer novel strategies to combat microbial infections where lead-induced resistance plays a role.
Cuprous Oxidase Activity of CueO from Escherichia coli.
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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The cuprous oxidase activity of CueO converts toxic Cu(I) to Cu(II) in E. coli, partners with CopA and CusCFBA, and marks copper-tolerant Enterobacterales that can persist in acidic, inflamed gut niches.
What was studied?
This study defined the cuprous oxidase activity of CueO and explained how this periplasmic multicopper oxidase protects Escherichia coli from copper stress. The authors showed that CueO directly oxidizes toxic Cu(I) to the less reactive Cu(II), working in the same pathway as the CopA P-type ATPase that pumps Cu(I) into the periplasm. They quantified kinetics across pH and compared performance with yeast Fet3 and human ceruloplasmin, finding higher catalytic rates for CueO that fit a primary role in copper detox in the aerobic gut niche where E. coli lives. By placing CueO within the CueR-activated cue operon and alongside the CusCFBA efflux system, the paper links enzyme activity to a complete copper homeostasis circuit with clinical microbiome relevance.
Who was studied?
Researchers purified recombinant wild-type CueO and a C500S mutant that lacks the type-1 copper needed for catalysis, then tested oxygen consumption as a readout of Cu(I) oxidation. They used a stabilized Cu(I) donor to avoid spontaneous air oxidation and measured kinetic constants at pH 5.0 and 7.0. They also assessed ferroxidase activity and the effect of added Cu(II), using the inactive mutant to set background rates. For context, the authors compared catalytic efficiency to Fet3 and ceruloplasmin and set CueO within the copper regulons that include CopA (cytosol-to-periplasm Cu(I) export), CueR (Cu(I)-sensing regulator), and CusCFBA (periplasm-to-outside efflux), all of which E. coli uses to endure copper pulses in the gut.
Most important findings
CueO showed robust cuprous oxidase catalysis that exceeded homologs, with higher turnover numbers and favorable efficiency at acidic pH that matches the upper gastrointestinal environment. Cu(I) served as the only substrate that did not require added Cu(II) for activity, supporting a direct detox role in which CopA feeds periplasmic Cu(I) to CueO for oxidation to Cu(II). The C500S mutant lacked activity and confirmed that the observed oxygen consumption reflected CueO catalysis. Kinetic analysis showed greater activity at pH 5.0 than at pH 7.0, which aligns with prior phenoloxidase behavior and suggests enhanced protection in acidic mucosa.
Although CueO can oxidize Fe(II) or catecholates, the authors clarified that some reported catecholate “oxidase” signals likely arise because catecholates reduce Cu(II) to Cu(I), which CueO then oxidizes; the central biology remains Cu(I) removal. Placing these data into the full copper circuit, the study confirmed that E. coli senses and responds to Cu(I) via CueR, moves Cu(I) to the periplasm via CopA, oxidizes it via CueO, and expels excess copper through CusCFBA. For a microbiome signatures database, the combined presence of cueO, copA, cueR, and cusCFBA marks a copper-tolerant Enterobacterales profile suited to metal-stressed niches such as inflamed gut, where low pH, reactive oxygen species, and dietary copper raise Cu(I) pressure.
Key implications
Clinicians can read the cuprous oxidase activity of CueO as a mechanistic anchor for E. coli survival under host and dietary copper stress. Genomic detection of cueO with copA and cusCFBA in gut isolates signals a strain more likely to manage copper spikes, persist during inflammation, and compete against copper-sensitive commensals. Reporting these loci in microbiome results can help explain Enterobacterales expansion when gastric acidity rises or when feeds or supplements raise copper exposure. Because CueO activity peaks at lower pH, acid suppression and diet could alter copper risk and reshape community structure. Therapeutic copper use on devices or in feeds may select for cueO-positive strains; balanced strategies that limit unnecessary copper while preserving nutritional immunity may curb expansion of these pathobionts without harming beneficial taxa.
Ablation of the Ferroptosis Inhibitor Glutathione Peroxidase 4 in Neurons Results in Rapid Motor Neuron Degeneration and Paralysis
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study demonstrates that GPX4 is essential for motor neuron survival, with its ablation in mice leading to rapid motor neuron degeneration and paralysis via ferroptosis. Vitamin E supplementation delays disease onset, highlighting the potential for ferroptosis inhibition in treating neurodegenerative diseases.
What was studied?
This study explored the role of glutathione peroxidase 4 (GPX4) in the survival of motor neurons and the development of neurodegenerative symptoms. Specifically, the study focused on how ablation of GPX4 in neurons in adult mice leads to rapid motor neuron degeneration, paralysis, and death. GPX4 is a key enzyme that inhibits ferroptosis, a form of non-apoptotic, iron-dependent cell death triggered by lipid peroxidation. The researchers examined how loss of GPX4 triggers ferroptotic cell death in motor neurons, characterized by lipid peroxidation and mitochondrial dysfunction, and how ferroptosis inhibition, such as through vitamin E supplementation, could delay disease progression.
Who was studied?
The study used adult mice with an inducible knockout of GPX4 specifically in neurons (Gpx4NIKO model). This model allowed for the conditional ablation of GPX4 in neurons using tamoxifen (TAM) treatment, which was administered to create the neuronal knockout. The motor neurons of these mice, particularly those in the spinal cord, were examined for signs of neurodegeneration, paralysis, and muscle atrophy. The research also included control Gpx4(f/f) mice, to compare the effects of GPX4 loss and verify the role of ferroptosis in the observed symptoms.
What were the most important findings?
The study found that conditional ablation of GPX4 in motor neurons led to rapid paralysis, muscle atrophy, and death within 8 days of treatment. The spinal cord motor neurons showed significant degeneration, marked by a loss of motor neuron markers, including ChAT (Choline acetyltransferase) and synaptophysin, and an increase in lipid peroxidation. The lack of caspase-3 activation and TUNEL staining indicated that apoptosis was not involved, suggesting ferroptosis as the mechanism of cell death. The study also showed that vitamin E supplementation, a known ferroptosis inhibitor, delayed the onset of paralysis and prolonged survival, supporting the role of ferroptosis in motor neuron degeneration. Additionally, increased lipid peroxidation and mitochondrial dysfunction were identified as key features of ferroptosis in Gpx4-deficient motor neurons, further reinforcing the central role of lipid damage in the disease pathology.
What are the greatest implications of this study/ review?
The findings from this study suggest that GPX4 is essential for motor neuron health and survival, and its absence triggers ferroptosis in the spinal motor neurons. Clinically, this could have major implications for neurodegenerative diseases where motor neuron degeneration is a key feature, such as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). Understanding the role of GPX4 and ferroptosis inhibition could provide new therapeutic targets for conditions characterized by motor neuron death, and ferroptosis inhibitors like vitamin E may offer potential as adjunct therapies for neurodegenerative diseases. The findings also emphasize the importance of lipid peroxidation and mitochondrial function in neurodegeneration, suggesting that mitochondrial dysfunction could serve as a therapeutic target in treating ferroptosis-induced diseases. Furthermore, the study highlights ferroptosis as an alternative pathway of cell death in motor neurons, opening avenues for understanding the complex mechanisms of motor neuron diseases and improving treatment strategies for these conditions.
Induction of Metallothionein I by Arsenic via Metal-activated Transcription Factor 1
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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The study reveals that MTF1 mediates the induction of Metallothionein I by arsenic, highlighting the importance of cysteine residues in the activation of MTF1 and its role in arsenic resistance.
What was studied?
This study focused on the mechanisms through which arsenic (As³⁺) induces the expression of Metallothionein I (Mt1), a key protein involved in the detoxification of metals. The researchers examined how the Metal-Activated Transcription Factor 1 (MTF1) mediates this process, specifically by binding to metal response elements (MREs) in the promoter region of the Mt1 gene. The study also explored the molecular interaction between arsenic and MTF1, with a focus on the critical role of the cysteine residues at the C-terminal of MTF1 in its activation. Arsenic-induced activation of MTF1 was tested in cells through chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) assays, and its impact on gene transcription was assessed in both wild-type and knockout cell models.
Who was studied?
The study involved human and mouse cell lines, specifically MTF1 wild-type (MTF1 WT) and knockout (MTF1 KO) fibroblast cells, as well as various reporter assays to measure gene expression. The researchers used these models to investigate the cellular response to arsenic exposure, focusing on the role of MTF1 in regulating Mt1 gene induction. Additionally, cells were treated with arsenic and other metal inducers like cadmium (Cd²⁺) and zinc (Zn²⁺) to compare their effects on MTF1 activation and gene expression. The experiment also employed a series of mutations to dissect the role of specific cysteine residues in MTF1's function.
Most important findings
The study found that MTF1 plays a crucial role in the arsenic-induced induction of the Mt1 gene. Arsenic exposure resulted in a dose-dependent activation of MTF1, which then binds to the MREs of the Mt1 promoter, leading to increased Mt1 gene expression. The researchers demonstrated that the C-terminal cysteine residues of MTF1 are essential for its activation by arsenic, as mutations in these residues significantly impaired its ability to induce Mt1 expression. Furthermore, MTF1 knockout cells exhibited a reduced response to arsenic, which was restored upon reintroduction of MTF1, confirming the factor’s essential role in arsenic resistance. Interestingly, the study also highlighted that MTF1 activation by arsenic is independent of the Nrf2 pathway, which is typically involved in the cellular response to oxidative stress caused by metals.
Key implications
These findings have significant implications for understanding the molecular mechanisms behind arsenic toxicity and resistance. The identification of MTF1 as a key mediator in arsenic-induced gene expression provides insight into how cells adapt to toxic metal exposure. The study underscores the importance of the cysteine clusters in MTF1, which could serve as potential targets for therapeutic interventions aimed at mitigating arsenic toxicity. Moreover, this research paves the way for further studies into metal homeostasis and detoxification pathways, which could be valuable in developing treatments for arsenic-related health conditions, particularly in regions with high arsenic contamination in water.
Metal Preferences and Metallation
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study explores how metal ions affect metalloenzyme activity and the role of metal delivery systems in maintaining enzymatic function. It highlights the competition between metals like zinc, copper, and magnesium and emphasizes the importance of proper metallation for enzyme function.
What was studied?
The study investigates the metal preferences and metallation processes of enzymes, particularly focusing on the role of metal ions in metalloenzyme function. It explores how cells regulate the binding of metals to enzymes and how these metals impact enzymatic activity. The study also delves into the competitive nature of metal ions such as magnesium, manganese, iron, copper, zinc, and nickel, which compete for binding sites within metalloenzymes. This metal specificity is influenced by the environment of the cell and its available metal pools, with different metal ions showing varying levels of affinity for the same binding site. The study emphasizes the importance of metallochaperones and metal delivery systems that aid in the proper metalation of enzymes to maintain biological processes.
Who was studied?
The study focuses not on specific individuals but on the biochemistry of metal ions and metalloenzymes across various organisms, particularly microorganisms and cells. The study looks at how different enzymes, like those from bacteria and cyanobacteria, bind metals for their catalytic activities and how cells manage the competition for these metals.
What were the most important findings?
The study's most important findings include the significant role of metal delivery systems in maintaining the proper metalation of metalloenzymes. While some enzymes rely on dedicated metallochaperones to ensure the correct metal is inserted, others must compete for metals from buffered pools within the cell. For instance, zinc and magnesium often compete for the same binding sites in enzymes, and in the case of cyanobacteria, manganese, copper, and zinc have distinct metal preferences based on their relative concentrations in the cell. Moreover, the study emphasizes that mismetallation—where an enzyme binds a metal ion other than the preferred one—can lead to inactivity or altered enzyme function, as seen in enzymes like glyoxalase. The study also highlights the complex interplay between metal sensors in cells, which help to maintain metal homeostasis by detecting and regulating metal ion concentrations.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study has important implications for understanding how metal ions influence cellular processes and enzyme activities, particularly in relation to disease states and therapeutic applications. By elucidating the ways in which metal preferences are regulated, the study could help in designing better metal-based therapies, such as those for treating diseases linked to metal imbalances (e.g., Wilson's disease or hemochromatosis). Furthermore, the insights into metallochaperones and metal delivery pathways can inform the development of synthetic biology applications, such as engineering cells to more efficiently use metal cofactors or to develop more efficient biocatalysts for industrial applications. The findings may also provide valuable information for advancing treatments involving metal-based drugs, which require precise metalation for efficacy and minimal toxicity.
The Mismetallation of Enzymes during Oxidative Stress
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study explores the effects of oxidative stress on metallation in E. coli enzymes, focusing on the competition between iron, zinc, and manganese for enzyme binding sites, and the protective role of manganese in restoring enzyme activity.
What was studied?
The study investigates the metallation and mismetallation of enzymes during oxidative stress, focusing specifically on Escherichia coli (E. coli) as a model organism. The research explores how oxidative stress, caused by reactive oxygen species (ROS) such as superoxide and hydrogen peroxide, disrupts the normal metallation of enzymes. The key focus is on how iron-dependent enzymes, when exposed to oxidative stress, experience a shift in their metal content, often being mismetallated by zinc instead of iron. This process affects enzyme activity and can lead to metabolic bottlenecks in the cell. The study further delves into the role of manganese in rescuing such mismetallated enzymes, providing a substitute for iron and maintaining enzymatic activity under stress conditions.
Who was studied?
The study does not focus on individual participants but rather on the biochemical processes occurring within E. coli cells, specifically looking at how oxidative stress influences the metallation of enzymes. It also reviews the behavior of mononuclear iron enzymes under stress and the competition between metals like iron, manganese, and zinc for binding to these enzymes.
What were the most important findings?
The study identifies the key mechanisms through which oxidative stress leads to metallation problems in enzymes. The main finding is that reactive oxygen species, particularly superoxide and hydrogen peroxide, oxidize ferrous iron (Fe2+) in enzymes, causing the iron to dissociate. In its place, zinc often binds, resulting in the formation of a mismetallated enzyme with significantly reduced activity. Zinc-loaded enzymes, like those in the pentose phosphate and aromatic biosynthetic pathways, show reduced catalytic function, creating metabolic bottlenecks. The study also highlights that under oxidative stress, E. coli compensates by importing manganese, which can substitute for iron in many enzymes, restoring their activity. The research underscores the competition between zinc and iron for enzyme metallation and reveals that manganese plays a protective role by maintaining enzyme function when iron is unavailable or displaced by oxidative stress.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings of this study have several important implications, particularly for understanding microbial survival mechanisms under stress and for designing therapies targeting metal-related diseases. The competition between zinc, iron, and manganese in enzymatic processes highlights the delicate balance of metal homeostasis in cells. In clinical settings, this knowledge can inform treatments for diseases related to metal imbalances, such as iron overload disorders (e.g., hemochromatosis) or zinc deficiencies. Additionally, the role of manganese in rescuing iron-dependent enzymes under oxidative stress opens up potential therapeutic avenues for using manganese to protect against cellular damage in conditions where oxidative stress is prevalent, such as neurodegenerative diseases or bacterial infections. The study also provides insights into the molecular dynamics of metal binding in enzymes, which could aid in the development of drugs that modulate metal ion availability for therapeutic purposes.
Lysosome-related Organelles as Mediators of Metal Homeostasis
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review examines the role of lysosome-related organelles in regulating metal homeostasis, focusing on how these organelles store and transport metals like copper, zinc, and iron to maintain cellular balance and protect against toxicity.
What was reviewed?
This review focuses on the role of lysosome-related organelles (LROs) in regulating metal homeostasis within cells. It examines various intracellular compartments, including vacuoles, acidocalcisomes, and other lysosome-like structures, and their involvement in metal storage, sequestration, and mobilization. The review provides an in-depth look at how these organelles manage essential metal ions such as copper, zinc, iron, and manganese, ensuring they are available for biochemical processes while also protecting cells from metal toxicity. The paper highlights the specific metal transporters found within these organelles and their role in maintaining a balance between metal availability and cellular needs, especially in response to stress conditions like metal excess or deficiency.
Who was reviewed?
The review does not focus on individual study participants but rather on the biological systems and organelles within cells that are involved in metal homeostasis. Specifically, it covers various model organisms, including yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae), plants (Arabidopsis thaliana), algae (Chlamydomonas reinhardtii), and other eukaryotic organisms, as well as the role of specific transporters within these cells. The review discusses the functional characterization of metal transporters and their contributions to metal homeostasis in different cellular compartments such as vacuoles, acidocalcisomes, and the endomembrane system.
What were the most important findings?
The most important findings of the review emphasize the critical role of lysosome-related organelles, such as vacuoles and acidocalcisomes, in the storage and regulation of metal ions within cells. These organelles contain metal transporters that help maintain metal balance by sequestering metals like copper, zinc, and iron. For example, the vacuole in yeast and plants is essential for metal storage and detoxification, with transporters like the NRAMP and CDF families playing significant roles in metal uptake and efflux. The review also highlights the importance of maintaining the acidic environment within these organelles, which is facilitated by V-type ATPases, as a prerequisite for the proper function of these transporters. In plants, the vacuole functions not only in metal storage but also in the regulation of metal distribution, particularly in response to metal deficiency or excess. Furthermore, the review introduces the concept of acidocalcisomes, which are involved in the sequestration of divalent metal ions such as zinc and iron. These organelles are increasingly recognized for their role in metal homeostasis and stress responses.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The implications of this review are far-reaching in terms of understanding the fundamental mechanisms of metal homeostasis in cells and their potential applications in fields like agriculture, biotechnology, and medicine. A deeper understanding of how lysosome-related organelles manage metal ions can lead to better strategies for mitigating metal toxicity in plants and animals. For example, knowledge about metal storage and transport could inform efforts to engineer crops with improved tolerance to metal contamination, such as cadmium or arsenic in polluted soils. Additionally, the review's findings could help in developing therapeutic interventions for conditions related to metal imbalances, such as hemochromatosis (iron overload) or Wilson's disease (copper overload). By focusing on intracellular metal management, the review provides a clearer picture of how cells maintain metal homeostasis, which could lead to novel treatments for diseases caused by disruptions in metal trafficking.
Mycobacterium tuberculosis and Copper: A Newly Appreciated Defense against an Old Foe?
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Mycobacterium tuberculosis and copper shows copper rises at infection sites, while bacterial systems (MctB, CsoR–CtpV, RicR–MymT/MmcO) defend against toxicity; these markers inform clinical risk and target discovery.
What was reviewed?
This review explains Mycobacterium tuberculosis and copper as a host–pathogen battle in which the host raises copper to hurt the bacillus, while the bacillus builds defenses to survive. It maps copper sources in infection, such as ATP7A-driven copper delivery to phagosomes and possible release from ceruloplasmin, and then details the mycobacterial systems that sense, export, or buffer copper. Chief units include the CsoR regulon with the putative exporter CtpV, the RicR regulon with the metallothionein MymT and the multicopper oxidase MmcO, and the membrane protein MctB that prevents toxic copper build-up. Together, these data show how copper acts as nutritional immunity against tuberculosis and how gene circuits help the bacillus persist.
Who was reviewed?
The review covers M. tuberculosis copper responses tested across broth, macrophage models, and animal infections in mice and guinea pigs, and it links them to host copper routing in phagocytes. It integrates transcript data that defined CsoR and RicR regulons, deletion studies for ctpV, mymT, mmcO, and mctB, and fitness tests in vivo that showed stronger defects in guinea pigs than in mice for key mutants. It also discusses possible copper entry through porins and notes that mycobacteria keep far less cytosolic copper than environmental relatives. On the host side, it highlights ATP7A as a phagosomal copper pump and proposes ceruloplasmin as a copper source that phagocytes can process. This multi-system view ties gene function to real tissue niches where copper rises around bacilli.
Most important findings
The review concludes that copper rises at infection sites and that M. tuberculosis needs several copper defenses for full virulence. The CsoR–ctpV pathway supports copper export and contributes to virulence in guinea pigs. The RicR regulon turns on mymT (a Cu(I)-binding metallothionein), mmcO (a membrane-anchored multicopper oxidase), and other genes; single mymT or mmcO mutants show copper sensitivity in vitro but no mouse virulence loss, while a RicR “Cu-blind” strain that keeps the regulon off becomes copper-sensitive and attenuated. MctB limits intracellular copper; loss of mctB causes copper accumulation, strong copper sensitivity, and marked attenuation in mice and guinea pigs, with copper-supplemented hosts worsening the defect. The paper also points to ATP7A-dependent copper delivery by macrophages as a likely antimicrobial route and notes that acidic phagolysosomes may keep copper in its most toxic form.
Key implications
Clinicians can treat copper handling as a virulence trait and as part of nutritional immunity. In a microbiome signatures database, flag Mycobacterium tuberculosis and copper with markers that include mctB (low intracellular copper), ctpV (export), mymT/mmcO (buffering/oxidation), and host ATP7A at phagosomes. The presence and regulation of these loci predict survival in copper-rich lesions and help explain why copper exposure in granulomas suppresses bacilli. Therapeutic ideas include small molecules that inhibit MctB or keep the RicR regulon off, which would sensitize bacilli to physiologic copper and work with immunity rather than replace it. Any copper-targeted step should balance pathogen control against host toxicity and consider tissue site, inflammation, and pH, which shape copper speciation and effect
The Role of Copper and Zinc Toxicity in Innate Immune Defense against Bacterial Pathogens
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Copper and zinc toxicity in innate immunity drives early control of bacterial pathogens and shapes mucosal niches. The review links host metal routing and microbial export genes to killing, virulence, and microbiome shifts.
What was reviewed?
This review explains copper and zinc toxicity in innate immunity and how these metals shape early defense against bacteria. It shows that phagocytes load copper and zinc into pathogen-facing spaces, where copper cycles with reactive oxygen and nitrogen species to drive killing and where zinc can disrupt enzymes or starve microbes of manganese. It also outlines how host cells increase CTR1 and ATP7A to raise copper entry and routing, and how ZIP family transporters shift zinc during inflammation. The review links these metal surges to common infection sites, such as the nasopharynx and urinary tract, and to shifts that affect the local microbiome.
Who was reviewed?
The authors synthesize data from human and animal infection models and from primary macrophages and neutrophils. They compare bacterial species that face copper and zinc stress in vivo, including Streptococcus pneumoniae, Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium, uropathogenic Escherichia coli, Neisseria gonorrhoeae, Listeria monocytogenes, Mycobacterium tuberculosis, and Helicobacter pylori. They also include work on zinc shifts during fungal infection to show broader innate patterns that can influence mucosal communities.
Most important findings
The review shows that copper and zinc act as direct tools of killing in the phagosome and at mucosal sites. Activated macrophages raise copper import and move ATP7A toward phagolysosomes; copper then amplifies oxidative and nitrosative stress and breaks iron–sulfur enzymes that bacteria need. Bacteria counter with CopA or other P-type ATPases, periplasmic multicopper oxidases such as CueO, and envelope pumps such as CusCFBA; loss of these systems reduces survival in phagocytes and can lower virulence in mice. Zinc acts in two ways: it signals within innate cells and it harms microbes.
At mucosa, elevated zinc blocks manganese uptake in S. pneumoniae and weakens defense against oxidative stress; within phagocytes, zinc efflux mutants such as zntA or czcD show poor intracellular survival. The review notes metal routing in vivo, including higher copper in M. tuberculosis granulomas and copper build-up in urine during uropathogenic E. coli infection. For microbiome catalogs, the metal stress signature spans host transporters (CTR1, ATP7A, ZIP8, ZnT proteins) and microbial resistance loci (copA, cusFCBA, cueO, golT, ctpC, czcD), which map to niches like the nasopharynx, gut, and urinary tract where metals can tilt community structure and pathogen fitness.
Key implications
Clinicians should see copper and zinc handling as a modifiable axis in infection care. Checking nutrition and inflammatory status for these metals can inform risk. Pathogens that carry strong copper or zinc export systems may resist innate metal stress and persist. Adding such loci to a microbiome signatures database can flag strains with higher survival odds in phagocytes or at metal-rich mucosa. Therapies that spare host function yet stress microbial metal control—such as limiting manganese access during zinc surges or timing antibiotics when copper routing peaks—may raise killing while preserving tissue. Any attempt to change metal levels should avoid excess that could harm host cells or widen dysbiosis.
Combined DNase and Proteinase Treatment Interferes with Composition and Structural Integrity of Multispecies Oral Biofilms
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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The study investigates the effects of DNase I and proteinase K on the structure and composition of multispecies oral biofilms, finding that these enzymes disrupt biofilm integrity and shift microbial composition, potentially enhancing the effectiveness of antimicrobial treatments.
What was studied?
The study focuses on the effects of DNase I and proteinase K treatment on multispecies oral biofilms, specifically how these enzymes alter the biofilm's structure and microbial composition. The researchers tested these enzymes in various concentrations to see how they impacted the biofilm's integrity, including its exopolysaccharide (EPS) matrix, extracellular DNA (eDNA), and proteins. The goal was to understand how enzymatic treatment could potentially disrupt the biofilm and assist in the delivery of antimicrobial agents to treat biofilm-related oral infections. This study used a six-species biofilm model, including bacteria such as Streptococcus mutans, Fusobacterium nucleatum, Candida albicans, and others, to mimic oral biofilm conditions.
Who was studied?
The study used in vitro biofilms made up of six species: Actinomyces oris, Candida albicans, Fusobacterium nucleatum, Streptococcus oralis, Streptococcus mutans, and Veillonella dispar. These species were chosen due to their relevance in the human oral microbiome and their involvement in dental biofilm formation, which is associated with diseases such as dental caries and periodontitis. The biofilm model was designed to simulate supragingival plaque formation on hydroxyapatite, a material similar to human tooth enamel. The interaction between these species within the biofilm was studied to understand how enzymatic treatments might alter microbial growth and biofilm structure.
Most important findings
The study revealed that DNase I and proteinase K had significant effects on the biofilm structure and composition. DNase I treatment led to a reduction in microbial growth for several species, including Actinomyces oris and Fusobacterium nucleatum, by degrading eDNA, a critical component of the biofilm matrix. On the other hand, proteinase K promoted the growth of Streptococcus mutans and Streptococcus oralis, suggesting that protein degradation within the biofilm could enhance the survival of these species. When both enzymes were combined, there was a noticeable decrease in biofilm density and a shift in microbial composition, with fewer exopolysaccharides and extracellular proteins. This combination also led to a disruption of the biofilm's structural integrity, reducing the overall stability and making the biofilm more susceptible to antimicrobial treatments.
Key implications
The findings of this study have significant implications for biofilm-related disease treatment in clinical settings. Enzymatic treatments like DNase I and proteinase K could be used in combination with traditional antimicrobial agents to disrupt biofilms and improve drug efficacy. This could be particularly useful for treating oral infections caused by biofilm-forming bacteria, where standard antimicrobial therapies often fail due to the protective nature of the biofilm. Furthermore, understanding how specific enzymes target different biofilm components, such as eDNA and extracellular proteins, can inform the development of tailored therapies that address the complexities of multispecies biofilms. The results also underscore the importance of considering the biofilm composition when selecting treatments, as the presence of certain species like Streptococcus mutans can influence the treatment outcome.
Investigative algorithms for disorders affecting plasma manganese concentration: a narrative review
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study addresses diagnostic challenges for manganese imbalances, providing algorithms for identifying hypermanganesemia and hypomanganesemia, and offering solutions to improve clinical diagnosis, including sample handling and reference range standardization.
What was studied?
This study focused on the challenges of diagnosing disorders related to abnormal plasma manganese concentrations, specifically hypermanganesemia (excess manganese) and hypomanganesemia (manganese deficiency). The researchers aimed to create diagnostic algorithms to guide clinicians in identifying and evaluating abnormal manganese levels in patients. They explored the physiological, environmental, and analytical factors influencing manganese concentrations and identified the diagnostic barriers, including the lack of specific reference ranges, the potential for sample contamination, and the limitations of current diagnostic methods. The study also reviewed various diagnostic strategies and suggested ways to improve the accuracy of manganese assessments in clinical practice.
Who was studied?
The study reviewed data from human subjects, including clinical case studies and population-based studies, to understand the broader implications of manganese imbalances. It emphasized how conditions like manganese toxicity (manganism), associated with neurological damage resembling Parkinson's disease, and manganese deficiency, which can lead to issues like impaired glucose tolerance, were diagnosed. It also involved reviewing cases of occupational exposure, liver diseases, and genetic disorders that affect manganese metabolism.
What were the most important findings?
The study highlighted several key factors that complicate the diagnosis of manganese disorders. First, they found that there is significant variability in manganese concentrations across different laboratories due to differences in measurement methods and sample handling procedures. For example, blood samples can be contaminated by stainless steel needles, causing falsely elevated manganese levels. Additionally, the study emphasized the lack of harmonized reference ranges for manganese in blood, serum, and plasma, which further complicates clinical interpretation. One of the major findings was that manganese deficiency, though rare, could be linked to genetic mutations in the SLC39A8 transporter gene, leading to conditions such as congenital disorders of glycosylation. In contrast, manganese toxicity (hypermanganesemia) was often associated with conditions like liver disease, parenteral nutrition, and excessive environmental exposure, such as in industrial or occupational settings. The study also discussed how various physiological states, such as pregnancy, could affect manganese levels, which are usually higher in pregnant women and their newborns.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The greatest implications of this study are its contributions to improving the clinical recognition and management of manganese-related disorders. By providing a structured diagnostic framework, the study aids clinicians in accurately interpreting abnormal manganese levels in patients. It stresses the importance of proper sample handling, the need for consistent and widely applicable reference ranges, and the integration of genetic testing to identify underlying causes of manganese imbalance. Furthermore, the study suggests that clinicians should consider manganese levels in the broader context of conditions like liver disease, neurological disorders, and environmental exposure, which can all influence manganese homeostasis. This research could inform public health strategies, especially in regions with high industrial manganese exposure, and improve clinical protocols for diagnosing and managing both manganese toxicity and deficiency.
Functional characterization of a cadmium resistance operon in Staphylococcus aureus ATCC12600: CadC does not function as a repressor
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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The study identifies and characterizes the cadmium resistance operon in S. aureus ATCC12600. It reveals that the cadC gene is crucial for cadmium efflux and resistance but does not function as a repressor, offering new insights into cadmium resistance mechanisms.
What was studied?
This study focused on the functional characterization of a cadmium resistance operon in Staphylococcus aureus ATCC12600. The operon, which consists of two key genes, cadC and cadA, was identified in a transposon mutagenesis library. The research aimed to investigate the role of these genes in cadmium and zinc resistance and explore the genetic and functional mechanisms behind the resistance, particularly focusing on the efflux mechanism.
Who was studied?
The study involved Staphylococcus aureus ATCC12600, a non-methicillin-resistant strain. The operon was compared to similar operons found in methicillin-resistant strains (MRSA), particularly S. aureus MRSA252, and examined the gene expression and resistance properties. The research also involved mutant strains, including those with transposon disruptions in cadC, to better understand the functional impact of each gene within the operon.
Most important findings
The S. aureus ATCC12600 strain containing the cadC-positive plasmid showed high levels of resistance to cadmium sulfate, with minimal growth reduction even in the presence of 250 mg/ml cadmium sulfate. In contrast, the cadC-mutant strains exhibited significantly lower resistance. This suggested that cadC plays a crucial role in cadmium efflux, although the absence of CadC did not completely block cadmium efflux, as the cadA gene, even in the absence of cadC, still contributed to a lower level of resistance. Additionally, the study found that the CadC protein from S. aureus ATCC12600 did not function as a transcriptional repressor, unlike the CadC protein from pI258, which had been previously identified as a repressor.
Key implications
The findings demonstrate that the cadC gene in S. aureus ATCC12600 is integral to cadmium resistance, specifically through its involvement in cadmium efflux, but it does not operate as a repressor as seen in other strains. This research provides new insights into cadmium resistance mechanisms in S. aureus and highlights the differences between resistance mechanisms in non-MRSA and MRSA strains. Understanding these resistance pathways may aid in developing strategies for tackling cadmium toxicity, particularly in environments contaminated with heavy metals.
Widespread fungal–bacterial competition for magnesium lowers bacterial susceptibility to polymyxin antibiotics
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Fungal competition for magnesium between Candida albicans and Pseudomonas aeruginosa significantly lowers bacterial fitness but enhances resistance to polymyxin antibiotics. This highlights the role of Mg²⁺ in microbial interactions and offers potential therapeutic avenues to manage polymicrobial infections and combat antibiotic resistance.
What was studied?
The study focused on understanding the interactions between the fungus Candida albicans and the bacterium Pseudomonas aeruginosa, specifically how C. albicans sequesters magnesium (Mg²⁺) from P. aeruginosa and the impact this has on bacterial fitness and resistance to polymyxin antibiotics, such as colistin.
Who was studied?
The study involved P. aeruginosa (specifically the PAO1 strain) and C. albicans (strain SC5314), exploring their interaction in polymicrobial environments, such as in co-culture settings.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed that C. albicans sequesters Mg²⁺ from P. aeruginosa, impairing the latter's fitness in co-culture conditions. This was observed through competitive fitness assays and RNA sequencing, which showed that magnesium transporter MgtA in P. aeruginosa plays a crucial role in overcoming Mg²⁺ depletion during co-culture. Mg²⁺ sequestration by C. albicans also led to enhanced survival of P. aeruginosa when exposed to polymyxin antibiotics like colistin. This magnesium-mediated resistance was independent of the canonical mechanisms of resistance, highlighting how fungi influence antibiotic susceptibility in bacteria. Interestingly, this increased resistance could be disrupted by removing C. albicans or adding Mg²⁺. Moreover, the evolution of P. aeruginosa in the presence of C. albicans led to mutations that provided resistance to colistin, demonstrating the role of fungal competition in the evolution of antibiotic resistance.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study emphasizes the complex dynamics of microbial competition in polymicrobial infections, particularly the role of nutritional competition for Mg²⁺ between fungi and bacteria. The findings suggest that fungal-mediated Mg²⁺ sequestration not only impairs bacterial fitness but also enhances bacterial resistance to last-resort antibiotics like colistin. This insight could have significant implications for the treatment of polymicrobial infections, suggesting that disrupting fungal–bacterial competition or supplementing Mg²⁺ may improve the efficacy of polymyxin antibiotics, potentially mitigating resistance in clinical settings. Moreover, understanding these interactions could influence strategies for combating antibiotic resistance in diverse environments, including clinical infections and chronic conditions such as cystic fibrosis.
The Escherichia coli Small Protein MntS and Exporter MntP Optimize the Intracellular Concentration of Manganese
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study examines the roles of MntS and MntP in regulating manganese levels in E. coli, highlighting their importance in preventing manganese toxicity and supporting enzyme activation. The findings offer insights into bacterial metal homeostasis and potential therapeutic strategies targeting manganese regulation in pathogens.
What was studied?
This study focused on the roles of the small protein MntS and the manganese exporter MntP in the regulation of manganese homeostasis in Escherichia coli. The research explored how these proteins work together to optimize the intracellular concentration of manganese, ensuring that levels remain balanced to avoid toxicity while still supporting necessary enzymatic functions.
Who was studied?
The study primarily involved Escherichia coli as the model organism. It utilized various mutants and strains with overexpression or deletion of the MntS and MntP proteins to assess their roles in manganese import and export, as well as their effects on the bacteria's ability to cope with oxidative stress and maintain proper metal ion homeostasis.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed that MntS and MntP work in concert to regulate manganese levels within E. coli. MntS is produced when manganese is scarce and plays a role in enhancing the activation of manganese-dependent enzymes, while MntP is induced when manganese levels are high to export excess manganese and prevent toxicity. Overexpression of MntS led to the accumulation of excessive intracellular manganese, which resulted in reduced iron availability and impaired heme synthesis, ultimately leading to cell growth inhibition. In contrast, deletion of MntP, which prevents manganese export, mimicked the toxicity observed with MntS overexpression. The research showed that the balance between MntS and MntP helps the cell adapt to fluctuating manganese levels, preventing toxicity and supporting efficient enzyme function. The study also highlighted that excess manganese inhibits iron import, contributing to reduced cytochrome oxidase activity and metabolic dysfunction, particularly under aerobic conditions.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings of this study underscore the complex regulation of manganese homeostasis in E. coli and its critical role in preventing metal toxicity. Understanding the interplay between MntS and MntP in maintaining optimal manganese levels provides insights into bacterial adaptation to metal availability, which could have broader implications for microbiome research and antimicrobial therapy. Targeting these manganese regulatory pathways may offer new strategies to disrupt the growth of pathogens that rely on precise metal balance for virulence. Additionally, the study’s exploration of manganese toxicity mechanisms, particularly its interference with heme synthesis and iron metabolism, opens potential therapeutic avenues for diseases related to metal dysregulation.
The Staphylococcus aureus ABC-Type Manganese Transporter MntABC Is Critical for Reinitiation of Bacterial Replication Following Exposure to Phagocytic Oxidative Burst
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study identifies the MntABC manganese transporter as crucial for S. aureus survival after phagocytosis. It helps bacteria recover from oxidative stress by facilitating DNA repair through the NrdEF complex, offering new therapeutic targets to disrupt metal acquisition and combat bacterial infections.
What was studied?
This study examined the role of the manganese transporter MntABC in Staphylococcus aureus, focusing on its critical function in bacterial replication after exposure to the oxidative burst from phagocytic cells. The researchers used a mutant strain of S. aureus lacking MntABC and analyzed its susceptibility to oxidative stress from neutrophils and macrophages, as well as its ability to recover and resume growth post-phagocytosis. The study also explored the molecular mechanisms behind this recovery, particularly involving the manganese-dependent NrdEF ribonucleotide reductase complex, which is essential for DNA synthesis and repair.
Who was studied?
The study primarily investigated Staphylococcus aureus, specifically comparing wild-type and mutant strains lacking the MntABC transporter. It also involved human neutrophils and murine macrophages, as these cells generate reactive oxygen species (ROS) during the oxidative burst, which was central to understanding the bacterium’s response to host immune defense.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed that MntABC is critical for S. aureus’s ability to recover and resume growth following exposure to oxidative stress, particularly from the phagocytic oxidative burst. The mutant strain lacking MntABC exhibited significantly smaller colonies when recovered from phagocytic cells and displayed a delayed growth phenotype, both in vitro and ex vivo, after oxidative exposure. The researchers identified a key role for the manganese-dependent NrdEF complex in DNA repair and replication, which was upregulated in the mntC mutant under oxidative stress. Proteomic analysis showed that the NrdEF proteins were the most highly induced in the mntC mutant strain compared to the wild-type strain, suggesting that the bacteria attempt to compensate for impaired manganese acquisition by increasing the expression of NrdEF. The study also demonstrated that pre-exposure to oxidative stress with methyl viologen exacerbated the growth defects in the mntC mutant, confirming that manganese is crucial for bacterial recovery and survival under oxidative stress conditions.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings of this study underscore the importance of manganese acquisition in bacterial survival under oxidative stress, a condition induced by phagocytic cells during infection. The role of MntABC in facilitating manganese uptake for DNA repair and detoxification mechanisms highlights the critical need for functional metal acquisition systems in bacterial pathogenesis. This research has important therapeutic implications, suggesting that targeting manganese transport systems could be an effective strategy to inhibit S. aureus growth and reduce its virulence. By limiting manganese availability, it may be possible to enhance the effectiveness of the immune response and prevent the dissemination of infection.
Protective Effects of Lactobacillus plantarum CCFM8246 against Copper Toxicity in Mice
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Lactobacillus plantarum CCFM8246 shows protective effects against copper toxicity in mice by promoting copper excretion, alleviating oxidative stress, and improving liver function and cognitive performance. This suggests its potential for use in therapeutic applications for copper toxicity.
What was studied?
The study investigated the protective effects of Lactobacillus plantarum CCFM8246 against copper toxicity in mice. Copper, while essential in small quantities, can be toxic in excess, leading to oxidative stress and organ damage, especially in the liver, kidneys, and brain. The researchers focused on whether Lactobacillus plantarum could mitigate the effects of copper exposure by promoting copper excretion, reducing copper accumulation in tissues, and reversing oxidative stress.
Who was studied?
The study used adult male C57BL/6 mice, aged approximately 8 weeks and weighing between 28 and 30 grams. These mice were divided into groups to evaluate the effects of Lactobacillus plantarum CCFM8246 in two settings: an intervention group, where the probiotic was co-administered with copper, and a therapy group, where treatment began after the copper exposure had been established.
Most important findings
The findings revealed that Lactobacillus plantarum CCFM8246 significantly increased copper content in the feces of treated mice, indicating enhanced copper excretion. This helped reduce copper accumulation in the liver, kidneys, and brain. The strain also alleviated oxidative stress, as shown by improved levels of antioxidant enzymes (superoxide dismutase and glutathione peroxidase) and reduced malondialdehyde (MDA) levels. Furthermore, Lactobacillus plantarum improved liver function, reflected in the normalization of alanine aminotransferase (ALT) and aspartate aminotransferase (AST) levels. Most notably, spatial memory and cognitive function, measured through Morris water maze experiments, improved in copper-exposed mice treated with the probiotic, demonstrating its potential neuroprotective effects.
Key implications
This study highlights the potential of Lactobacillus plantarum as a therapeutic agent to counteract copper toxicity, a growing environmental and industrial concern. Its ability to enhance copper excretion and alleviate oxidative stress makes it a promising candidate for inclusion in future probiotic-based treatments for metal toxicity. The findings also suggest that Lactobacillus plantarum could be used as a complementary approach to conventional copper chelation therapies, offering a less invasive method with fewer side effects. Given the strain's tolerance to gastric and bile environments, it holds potential as a probiotic for clinical applications.
Structural analysis of the manganese transport regulator MntR from Bacillus halodurans in apo and manganese bound forms
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study uncovers the structural basis of manganese binding in the MntR regulator from Bacillus halodurans, revealing its role in bacterial manganese homeostasis. Understanding this process could inform new strategies for controlling bacterial infections by targeting metal regulation.
What was studied?
This study focused on the structural analysis of the manganese transport regulator (MntR) from Bacillus halodurans, particularly in its apo (metal-free) and manganese-bound forms. The research aimed to elucidate the mechanisms behind MntR's activation by manganese ions, a key regulator in bacterial manganese homeostasis. This study used X-ray crystallography to determine the crystal structures of both forms of MntR and explored how manganese binding influences the protein's structural conformation and its role in regulating manganese transport genes.
Who was studied?
The study primarily examined the MntR protein from Bacillus halodurans, comparing its apo and manganese-bound forms. The focus was on understanding the metal ion binding site, structural changes upon manganese binding, and how these changes affect the function of MntR as a transcriptional repressor involved in regulating manganese uptake and efflux in bacteria.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed that MntR from Bacillus halodurans is a homodimer with two subunits, each containing a metal-binding site located between the N-terminal DNA binding domain and the C-terminal dimerization domain. In the apo form, the structure is relatively flexible, but upon binding manganese, the protein adopts a more rigid conformation. The manganese ions form a binuclear cluster in one subunit, while the other subunit binds a magnesium ion. This binuclear manganese complex is coordinated by several highly conserved residues, including Glu99, Glu102, His77, and His103. Structural analysis also showed that the manganese binding site in MntR is essential for its regulatory function, as metal binding induces conformational changes that allow MntR to bind DNA and repress the transcription of manganese uptake genes. Interestingly, the study found that the C-terminal region of MntR was poorly ordered, particularly in the manganese-bound form, suggesting flexibility in this region. The study also emphasized that MntR's activation by manganese is crucial for maintaining manganese homeostasis in bacteria and for preventing toxicity due to excess manganese.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study provides valuable insights into the molecular mechanisms underlying manganese homeostasis in bacteria. By understanding how MntR functions as a metal-sensing transcriptional regulator, this research contributes to the broader understanding of metal ion regulation in microbial pathogenesis. The findings also highlight the potential for targeting MntR or its metal-binding sites as a therapeutic strategy in bacterial infections. Given the importance of manganese in bacterial growth and virulence, manipulating the MntR system could be a novel approach for controlling pathogenic bacteria that rely on precise metal regulation, such as Bacillus species and other Gram-positive bacteria.
Association of low-level heavy metal exposure with risk of chronic kidney disease and long-term mortality
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD)
Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD)
Dysbiosis in chronic kidney disease (CKD) reflects a shift toward reduced beneficial taxa and increased pathogenic, uremic toxin-producing species, driven by a bidirectional interaction in which the uremic environment disrupts microbial composition and dysbiotic metabolites accelerate renal deterioration.
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This study links low-level heavy metal exposure to increased CKD risk and higher cadmium-associated mortality, with synergistic toxicity when both metals are elevated.
What was studied?
This study investigated the association between low-level heavy metal exposure—specifically lead and cadmium—and chronic kidney disease (CKD) risk and long-term mortality, emphasizing how “low-level heavy metal exposure” may influence renal dysfunction and survival outcomes. Using 2003–2012 NHANES data with mortality follow-up through 2019, the researchers examined whether blood lead ≥1.5 μg/dL and blood cadmium ≥0.4 μg/L, both below established toxicity thresholds, were linked to CKD and all-cause mortality. The analysis incorporated demographic, metabolic, cardiovascular, behavioral, and sociodemographic covariates. CKD was defined by an estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) <60 mL/min/1.73 m², and albuminuria analyses were added to mitigate reverse causality. Mortality associations were evaluated using Cox regression models in CKD and non-CKD subgroups. Figures illustrate survival curves, showing steeper declines in groups with elevated cadmium, and details fully adjusted hazard ratios confirming cadmium’s strong mortality signal.
Who was studied?
The cohort included 24,810 adults from a nationally representative U.S. sample, with a mean age of 44.4 years and a near-even sex distribution. According to Table 1 (page 5), 39% had elevated blood lead and 40.3% had elevated cadmium levels. Individuals with higher metal levels were more likely to be older, have lower socioeconomic status, smoke, and exhibit higher rates of hypertension, cardiovascular disease, and stroke. CKD prevalence was 3.9%, representing 1,309 participants. The sample’s diversity—69.3% White, 11.1% Black, 13.4% Hispanic—supports the generalizability of findings. Cross-sectional and longitudinal components enabled evaluation of both CKD risk and long-term mortality across demographic strata.
Most important findings
Low-level exposure to lead and cadmium was clearly associated with clinically relevant kidney and mortality outcomes. Participants with CKD had significantly higher mean blood lead (2.14 vs. 1.58 μg/dL) and cadmium (0.60 vs. 0.53 μg/L). After adjustment, lead ≥1.5 μg/dL (OR 1.41) and cadmium ≥0.4 μg/L (OR 1.23) independently increased CKD odds. Albuminuria analyses confirmed dose-dependent associations even in those with normal eGFR. Mortality analyses demonstrated that elevated cadmium increased risk in both CKD (HR 1.42) and non-CKD (HR 1.40) populations, while lead was not independently predictive. Still, the combined elevation of both metals produced a synergistic mortality effect (HR 1.32). Microbiome-relevant considerations arise from known heavy-metal-induced dysbiosis documented in other literature; while not directly measured here, cadmium and lead can shift gut microbial communities, promote oxidative stress, and disrupt barrier integrity, pathways relevant for microbiome signature databases.
Heavy Metal Exposure
CKD Risk (Adjusted OR)
Mortality Risk (Adjusted HR)
Notable Patterns
Lead ≥1.5 μg/dL
1.41
NS
Linked to CKD but not mortality
Cadmium ≥0.4 μg/L
1.23
1.42 (CKD) / 1.40 (non-CKD)
Strong mortality driver
Both elevated
1.65
1.32
Synergistic interaction
Incremental burden
Dose-dependent
Dose-dependent (Cd strongest)
Aligns with toxicologic data
Key implications
The findings indicate that even low-level heavy metal exposure negatively affects kidney health and survival, challenging current toxicity thresholds. Cadmium’s stronger mortality association suggests it is a critical environmental toxin requiring intensified surveillance and mitigation, especially among smokers and groups with socioeconomic vulnerabilities. Lead’s robust association with CKD reinforces the need for ongoing exposure reduction despite declining national levels. Co-exposure dramatically heightens mortality risk, signaling the importance of cumulative toxicant assessment rather than single-agent evaluation. Clinically, results support incorporating environmental exposure screening into CKD risk assessment and highlight potential relevance for microbiome research, given heavy metals’ documented ability to disrupt microbial ecology and metabolic pathways.
The battle for iron between bacterial pathogens and hosts: clinical microbiome implications
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Iron (Fe)
Iron (Fe)
OverviewIron is a pivotal nutrient at the host–pathogen interface. Virtually all microbes (with rare exceptions like Borrelia) require iron for processes from DNA synthesis to respiration. [1] In human hosts, free iron is vanishingly scarce due to “nutritional immunity,” wherein iron is locked up in hemoproteins or tightly bound by transport proteins.[2] This metal tug-of-war […]
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This review maps the battle for iron between bacterial pathogens and hosts, detailing nutritional immunity, bacterial siderophores and heme uptake, siderocalin defense, stealth siderophores, and clinical implications for infection risk, vaccines, and microbiome-informed care.
What was reviewed?
This narrative review synthesizes the battle for iron between bacterial pathogens and hosts, focusing on vertebrate nutritional immunity and the microbial countermeasures that enable infection despite iron scarcity. It explains how vertebrates sequester iron intracellularly in ferritin and within heme, bind extracellular iron with high-affinity transferrin, and mop up free hemoglobin and heme via haptoglobin and hemopexin, thereby rendering free iron essentially unavailable to invaders. The article also details how pathogens sense iron limitation through regulators such as Fur and DtxR, and how they respond by deploying iron acquisition systems. The figure on page 2 visualizes this “iron battlefield” in health versus infection, highlighting host ligands, neutrophil lactoferrin release during inflammation, and bacterial receptors for transferrin, lactoferrin, hemoglobin, and hemophores.
Who was reviewed?
The review integrates host factors and representative pathogens across taxa. On the host side, it covers transferrin with an association constant near 10^36 for ferric iron, ferritin, lactoferrin from neutrophil granules, and hemopexin and haptoglobin that capture heme and hemoglobin. On the pathogen side, it describes Neisseria and Pasteurellaceae that express transferrin and lactoferrin receptors, Staphylococcus aureus that uses the Isd heme uptake machinery, Bacillus anthracis that produces the stealth siderophore petrobactin, Salmonella Typhimurium that produces salmochelin to evade siderocalin, and Borrelia burgdorferi which uniquely substitutes manganese to minimize iron dependence. The review also notes that individuals with iron overload, such as in hemochromatosis, are unusually susceptible to pathogens like Vibrio vulnificus, underscoring the clinical relevance of host iron status.
Most important findings
The central insight is that vertebrates practice nutritional immunity by withholding iron, while pathogens have evolved layered, high-affinity systems to overcome this barrier. In health, iron remains intracellular or tightly liganded, and transferrin renders free extracellular iron effectively insoluble; during infection, tissue damage and hemolysis increase the availability of hemoproteins, while inflammation releases lactoferrin, yet bacteria still require dedicated uptake systems to compete. Bacterial strategies fall into three principal categories: siderophore systems with subnanomolar to femtomolar iron-binding affinity that strip iron from transferrin or ferritin, heme acquisition through surface receptors and hemophores followed by cytosolic heme oxygenase or reverse ferrochelatase processing, and direct receptor-mediated removal of iron from transferrin and lactoferrin.
The host counters siderophore piracy with siderocalin (NGAL), which binds catecholate siderophores such as enterobactin and prevents their uptake. Bacteria, in turn, produce stealth siderophores like petrobactin and salmochelin that evade siderocalin binding, restoring iron access and virulence fitness. Human challenge data indicate that expression of both lactoferrin and transferrin receptors confers a selective advantage to Neisseria gonorrhoeae, reinforcing the concept that iron receptors are in vivo fitness determinants. Collectively, these mechanisms provide a coherent framework for linking microbial iron acquisition to virulence and for understanding how host iron status modulates pathogen selection pressures, with implications for microbiome signatures where enterobactin-dependent Enterobacteriaceae may be disadvantaged in high siderocalin states.
Key implications
Clinically, iron availability is a modifiable ecological variable that shapes pathogen success and likely influences community structure in infected niches. Elevated iron exposure, whether iatrogenic or from overload disorders, can reduce the effectiveness of nutritional immunity and favor siderophore-competent pathogens, which argues for extremely judicious iron administration during active infection and careful interpretation of transferrin saturation and ferritin in at-risk patients. Because iron uptake receptors and heme transporters are surface-exposed and induced during infection, they represent tractable vaccine antigens and therapeutic targets. Host effectors such as siderocalin highlight the feasibility of boosting endogenous nutritional immunity, while the emergence of stealth siderophores underscores the need for therapeutics that neutralize both classical and modified siderophores. For microbiome-informed practice, linking disease-associated pathogen blooms to iron handling, lactoferrin dynamics, and siderophore ecology can guide targeted interventions that either limit iron availability or block specific acquisition pathways.
Copper at the Front Line of the Host-Pathogen Battle
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review explores the critical role of copper in microbial pathogenesis, focusing on how the host uses it as an antimicrobial weapon and how pathogens resist Cu toxicity. It suggests potential therapeutic avenues targeting Cu resistance mechanisms.
What was studied?
This review focuses on the role of copper (Cu) in microbial pathogenesis and how it is utilized by both the host and pathogens. It examines Cu’s dual role as an essential cofactor in cellular processes and as a toxic element that the immune system uses to combat infections. The paper explores the ways the immune system harnesses Cu’s antimicrobial properties to fight pathogens, as well as the sophisticated mechanisms developed by pathogens to resist Cu toxicity during infection.
Who was studied?
The review addresses various pathogens, particularly bacteria and fungi, including Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Salmonella enterica, and Cryptococcus neoformans. These organisms were studied in the context of how they interact with Cu during infection and how they manage Cu’s toxic effects. The review also touches upon host cells, such as macrophages, that utilize Cu in defense against microbial invaders.
Most important findings
The findings reveal that Cu plays a critical role in host defense by aiding in the killing of pathogens. During infection, macrophages increase Cu levels in the phagosome to help neutralize pathogens. Cu works synergistically with reactive oxygen species (ROS) and nitric oxide (NO) to amplify its antimicrobial effects. However, pathogens have evolved intricate mechanisms to avoid Cu toxicity, such as Cu efflux pumps and Cu-binding proteins. These mechanisms are essential for the virulence of various pathogens, including Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and Streptococcus pneumoniae. Moreover, Cu homeostasis in fungal pathogens like Cryptococcus neoformans is crucial for virulence, with Cu-dependent enzymes playing significant roles in oxidative stress protection and melanin production.
Key implications
The review highlights the importance of Cu in both host immunity and microbial pathogenesis. New therapeutic strategies can target Cu resistance mechanisms in pathogens to combat infections. Understanding how the host uses Cu to fight infection and how pathogens resist this defense can lead to the development of drugs that disrupt Cu homeostasis, enhancing the immune response and making pathogens more susceptible to treatment.
The Two-Component System ArlRS and Alterations in Metabolism Enable Staphylococcus aureus to Resist Calprotectin-Induced Manganese Starvation
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study reveals that the ArlRS two-component system in S. aureus enables resistance to host-imposed manganese starvation by modulating metabolism, particularly by promoting amino acid utilization. These findings provide insights into how bacterial metabolic flexibility aids in overcoming nutritional immunity and suggest potential therapeutic targets.
What was studied?
This study focused on how Staphylococcus aureus adapts to host-imposed manganese (Mn) and zinc (Zn) starvation, particularly in the presence of the host immune effector, calprotectin (CP), which binds these metals. The research identified the role of the two-component system ArlRS in enabling S. aureus to resist CP-induced Mn starvation by modulating bacterial metabolism and metal acquisition.
Who was studied?
The study primarily examined Staphylococcus aureus, using both wild-type strains and mutant strains lacking the ArlRS system. It also investigated the effects of CP on these strains, particularly focusing on how the loss of ArlRS affects the bacterium's ability to grow under conditions of Mn starvation during infection in both normal and CP-deficient mice.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed that ArlRS, a global regulator in S. aureus, is crucial for the bacterium's ability to resist host-imposed Mn starvation during infection. ArlRS modulates the bacterium's metabolism, particularly by enhancing amino acid utilization, which reduces the need for manganese. This adaptation is especially evident when glucose, the preferred carbon source for S. aureus, is limited. Mutants lacking ArlRS were more sensitive to CP, which sequesters Mn and Zn, suggesting that ArlRS is necessary for S. aureus to adapt its metabolism in response to metal starvation. The research also showed that the ability of S. aureus to grow using amino acids, which bypasses some Mn-dependent steps in glycolysis, is disrupted when ArlRS is absent. In infection models, S. aureus strains lacking ArlRS had reduced virulence, particularly when Mn was limited, and showed decreased bacterial burdens in tissues compared to wild-type strains. These findings underscore the importance of metabolic plasticity in bacterial pathogenesis, particularly in overcoming host-imposed nutrient restrictions.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study highlights the role of metabolic adaptation in bacterial resistance to nutritional immunity, particularly during manganese limitation. By identifying ArlRS as a key regulator in this process, the research opens new avenues for targeting bacterial metabolism as a therapeutic strategy. Disrupting ArlRS or its regulated metabolic pathways could weaken S. aureus, making it more susceptible to the host immune response. Furthermore, understanding how S. aureus shifts from glucose to amino acid metabolism to conserve Mn could inform broader strategies to combat bacterial infections, particularly those caused by pathogens that are resistant to conventional antibiotics.
Effects of chronic exposure to arsenic on the fecal carriage of antibiotic-resistant Escherichia coli among people in rural Bangladesh
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study evaluates the relationship between arsenic exposure and antibiotic-resistant E. coli carriage in rural Bangladesh, revealing significant associations between arsenic contamination and increased resistance to antibiotics, particularly in children.
What was studied?
This study explores the effects of chronic arsenic exposure on the fecal carriage of antibiotic-resistant Escherichia coli (AR-Ec) in a rural population of Bangladesh. The research focused on comparing the prevalence and resistance patterns of AR-Ec isolates in children and mothers from two distinct areas: one with high arsenic exposure (Hajiganj) and the other with low exposure (Matlab). The study sought to understand the co-selection of antibiotic resistance linked to arsenic contamination in drinking water, as arsenic is known to drive resistance mechanisms in bacteria.
Who was studied?
The study involved 50 households from each of the two regions in Bangladesh—Hajiganj, which has high arsenic exposure (>100 μg/L), and Matlab, with low arsenic exposure (<20 μg/L). The participants were mothers and their children, particularly focusing on children under one year old. Stool samples from both mothers and children, as well as drinking water samples, were collected for analysis. The study aimed to examine how long-term arsenic exposure influences the gut microbiome, particularly the carriage of antibiotic-resistant E. coli.
Most important findings
The study found a significantly higher prevalence of AR-Ec in children from Hajiganj (94%) compared to those from Matlab (76%), though the prevalence in mothers did not show such a stark difference. The E. coli isolates from the high-arsenic area were more likely to be multidrug-resistant (83%) compared to those from the low-arsenic area (71%). Interestingly, co-resistance to arsenic and antibiotics, particularly third-generation cephalosporins (3GC) and fluoroquinolones (FQ), was more common in Hajiganj. The isolates from Hajiganj also demonstrated a higher frequency of resistance to multiple antibiotic classes, such as penicillin, cephalosporin, tetracycline, and macrolides, compared to those from Matlab. Furthermore, whole-genome sequencing revealed genetic diversity in the isolates, with certain virulence and antibiotic resistance genes being more prevalent in isolates from high-arsenic areas.
The study also highlighted the correlation between arsenic and antibiotic resistance, where arsenic-resistant E. coli isolates were more likely to show resistance to β-lactam antibiotics, such as ampicillin and cefotaxime. In contrast, resistance to tetracycline, trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole, and ciprofloxacin was less frequent among arsenic-resistant isolates. The research identified several important resistance genes, such as the blaCTX-M-1 for β-lactam resistance, as well as a variety of virulence genes that were present in the isolates from high-arsenic areas.
Key implications
This study has significant implications for public health, particularly in regions with high arsenic contamination. The findings underscore the potential health risks posed by arsenic exposure, which not only affects overall health but also exacerbates the spread of antibiotic-resistant bacteria. The co-selection of arsenic and antibiotic resistance could lead to more severe infections that are harder to treat, especially in children whose gut microbiome is still developing. Additionally, the study suggests that arsenic exposure, even at lower levels through food sources like rice, could contribute to the persistence of antibiotic resistance in communities. These results call for increased monitoring of arsenic exposure in water sources and a closer look at the role of diet in arsenic-mediated resistance. Addressing both environmental and microbial factors could play a crucial role in mitigating the health risks associated with arsenic contamination.
The exploitation of nutrient metals by bacteria for survival and infection in the gut
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study explores how trace metals impact gut microbiota composition and pathogen competition, emphasizing nutritional immunity and the potential for probiotic interventions to enhance pathogen resistance.
What was studied?
This study investigates the role of trace transition metals—such as iron (Fe), manganese (Mn), copper (Cu), and zinc (Zn)—in regulating the composition of the gut microbiota, especially in relation to the competition between enteric pathogens and the resident gut microbiota. The research emphasizes the mechanisms employed by bacteria to acquire these metals and the strategies utilized by both the host and pathogens to outcompete one another for these essential nutrients. The concept of nutritional immunity is central, focusing on how the host restricts pathogen access to metals, and how pathogens have evolved complex systems to counteract these restrictions.
Who was studied?
The study primarily focuses on the interaction between pathogens and the gut microbiota of vertebrates, particularly the mechanisms employed by both the host and the pathogens in relation to metal acquisition. Specific attention is given to the bacterial species involved in gut infections, such as Salmonella and Escherichia coli, and their ability to acquire essential metals like Fe, Mn, and Cu. The research also addresses how the gut microbiota itself regulates metal availability and competes for these metals, influencing the overall health of the host and susceptibility to infection.
What were the most important findings?
One of the key findings of this study is that the competition for essential metals like iron, zinc, manganese, and copper is a crucial factor in determining the success of both the host and pathogens during infection. The vertebrate host limits metal availability to pathogens as a defense strategy, a process known as nutritional immunity. This is achieved through proteins like calprotectin and transferrin, which bind metals and prevent their uptake by pathogens. In response, pathogens have evolved specialized mechanisms, such as siderophores and metal transporters, to acquire metals from the host. Interestingly, some pathogens also possess stealth mechanisms, such as modified siderophores, to avoid being sequestered by host immune proteins.
The study also highlights the intricate balance required in metal regulation, as both metal deficiency and overload can be detrimental to health. For instance, while metal sequestration helps prevent pathogen colonization, excessive metal levels can result in toxicity and oxidative stress, particularly through mismetallation of proteins. The research suggests that modulating metal availability in the gut through dietary or therapeutic interventions could provide novel ways to prevent or treat infections by promoting the competition of commensal bacteria against pathogens.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The greatest implication of this research is the potential for therapeutic strategies that leverage the competition for trace metals to combat enteric infections. By promoting the growth of beneficial gut microbes that outcompete pathogens for essential metals, it may be possible to enhance the effects of nutritional immunity and reduce pathogen colonization. This could lead to new treatments that either stimulate the growth of beneficial microbes or engineer probiotics that can efficiently compete for metals in the gut. Additionally, the study opens up avenues for exploring how the manipulation of metal levels could modulate the gut microbiota to prevent dysbiosis, a state associated with various gastrointestinal diseases and infections.
Lead: Natural Occurrence, Toxicity to Organisms and Bioremediation by Lead-degrading Bacteria: A Comprehensive Review
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review maps mechanisms and taxa underlying lead bioremediation by bacteria, linking microbial toolkits (EPS, phosphatases, sulfate reducers, PIB-ATPases, metallothioneins) to field performance and clinical microbiome relevance, and guiding signature curation and remediation design.
What was reviewed?
This comprehensive review synthesizes evidence on lead bioremediation by bacteria, spanning Pb’s natural occurrence, toxicodynamics across organisms, and the microbial toolkits that immobilize, export, or transform Pb(II) to reduce bioavailability. It explains how speciation in soils (soluble, exchangeable, organic-bound, and mineral-associated fractions) constrains plant and food-chain uptake, and why biological strategies—biosorption, bioaccumulation, biomineralization, and biotransformation—can outperform costly physical/chemical remediation for diffuse contamination. Mechanistically, the review details bacterial surface adsorption to peptidoglycan and exopolysaccharides, intracellular sequestration by metallothioneins, enzymatic precipitation (e.g., phosphatase-mediated Pb-phosphate and sulfate-reducer–driven PbS), and active efflux via P1B-type ATPases (including the pbr operon). It also highlights endophytic and rhizosphere consortia that mobilize or immobilize metals via siderophores, organic acids, and ACC deaminase, positioning plant–microbe systems as scalable, eco-compatible solutions.
Who was reviewed?
Evidence derives from contaminated soils, industrial effluents, riverine sediments, hot springs, and agricultural settings, integrating in vitro biosorption assays, pilot bioreactors, and plant–microbe phytoremediation trials. Bacterial taxa span Firmicutes (Bacillus spp., Lactobacillus spp.), Actinobacteria (Arthrobacter, Micrococcus), Proteobacteria (Pseudomonas, Stenotrophomonas, Variovorax, Alcaligenes), and thermophiles (Geobacillus), with additional observations in lactic acid bacteria derived from fermented foods and endophytes isolated from metallophyte roots. The review also contextualizes Pb toxicity across humans, livestock, fish, and plants, underlining why lowering environmental bioavailability is clinically meaningful, while reporting pH-, temperature-, and biomass-dependent performance characteristics that determine strain selection and deployment.
Most important findings
Across systems, bacteria consistently reduce aqueous Pb through rapid surface binding and precipitation, with capacity and kinetics shaped by pH (often optimal near 4–6 for adsorption), contact time, and microbial density. Lactic acid bacteria (e.g., Lactobacillus plantarum, L. acidophilus, L. brevis) and bifidobacteria exhibit metabolism-independent cell-wall binding and exopolysaccharide-mediated sequestration that can remove large fractions of dissolved Pb under bench conditions; similarly, Bacillus (including B. subtilis and B. gibsonii) achieves high adsorption capacities confirmed by FTIR/EDX, while Pseudomonas putida biomass displays fast, pH-sensitive biosorption. Field-relevant isolates such as Stenotrophomonas rhizophila and Variovorax boronicumulans can drive biomineralization within 72 hours, and thermophiles like Geobacillus thermodenitrificans retain activity in industrial wastewater matrices.
Functionally, the best-characterized genetic module is the pbr operon of Cupriavidus metallidurans, where PbrR activates the promoter upon Pb(II) sensing, PbrA (P1B-type ATPase) exports Pb(II), PbrB increases periplasmic phosphate to promote cell-surface precipitation, and accessory factors aid sequestration; beyond pbr, broad-specificity PIB-ATPases (e.g., ZntA-like systems) and metallothionein BmtA extend the “lead toolkit” across diverse bacteria. For a microbiome signatures database, the taxa most recurrently implicated include Lactobacillus/Bifidobacterium (high-affinity surface binding), Bacillus (robust adsorption and EPS), Pseudomonas/Stenotrophomonas (biosorption and biomineralization), and plant-associated endophytes that modulate bioavailability via siderophores and organic acids; functionally, EPS biosynthesis, phosphatase/urease, sulfate reduction, and P-type ATPase efflux represent salient, portable markers to index Pb-interacting communities.
Key implications
Clinically, diminishing environmental Pb bioavailability upstream reduces pediatric and obstetric risk from diet and dust, and the review supports pairing source control with bio-based remediation where excavation or chemical fixation is impractical. For practice-facing microbiome work, annotate samples with exposure tier, soil/water chemistry (pH, competing anions), and presence of Pb-responsive functions (EPS, phosphatases, sulfate reduction, PIB-ATPases, metallothioneins), because these traits predict real-world immobilization and influence measured Pb in stools or effluents. Probiotic LAB show promise for lowering gastrointestinal Pb bioaccessibility in vitro, but translation to therapy requires cautious validation; the most immediate application is environmental or food-chain mitigation using consortia tailored to local chemistry and host plants. Integrating these mechanism-based markers into microbiome databases will enable harmonized comparisons of Pb-associated taxa and functions across studies and settings.
Health Effects of Chronic Arsenic Exposure
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study highlights the health effects of chronic arsenic exposure through drinking water, linking it to cancers, cardiovascular diseases, and diabetes. It emphasizes the need for monitoring arsenic levels and improving public health interventions.
What was studied?
The study explored the long-term effects of chronic arsenic exposure from drinking water, focusing on its association with various health outcomes. Researchers aimed to understand how exposure to arsenic, even at low levels, contributes to serious diseases such as cancer (particularly skin, lung, and bladder cancer), cardiovascular diseases, and diabetes. They examined the toxicological mechanisms of arsenic, its effects on the human body, and its potential for causing both carcinogenic and non-carcinogenic health issues.
Who was studied?
The research studied individuals who were exposed to arsenic-contaminated drinking water over long periods. The study particularly focused on populations from areas known for arsenic contamination in their groundwater. These populations were mostly from rural regions where arsenic concentrations in drinking water exceeded the regulatory limit, with a focus on the South Korean population. The study population included both adults and children who were assessed for arsenic exposure via urinary biomarkers, which reflect recent exposure levels.
Most important findings
The study confirmed that arsenic exposure from drinking water is linked to several serious health risks, including cancer, cardiovascular diseases, diabetes, and neurological effects. Significant associations were found between arsenic concentrations and increased rates of skin cancer, lung cancer, bladder cancer, and cardiovascular diseases. Chronic exposure to low levels of arsenic was found to have a dose-dependent effect, particularly for type 2 diabetes and skin conditions. The study also found that arsenic exposure could lead to neurological impairments, including memory loss and intellectual deficits, particularly in children.
Key implications
The study emphasizes the need for improved water quality regulations and biological monitoring to mitigate the public health impacts of arsenic exposure. Given the significant association between arsenic and various health issues, the research highlights the importance of early detection and continuous monitoring of arsenic levels in drinking water, especially in rural areas. It also calls for greater public health awareness and health effect assessments to reduce the risks of long-term exposure. The study suggests that regular screening for arsenic exposure through biomarkers like urinary arsenic could be an effective preventive measure. Furthermore, it indicates that interventions to reduce arsenic contamination in drinking water should be prioritized in regions with naturally elevated arsenic levels.
Chronic arsenic exposure affects stromal cells and signaling in the small intestine in a sex-specific manner
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study explores the sex-specific effects of chronic arsenic exposure on stromal cells and signaling in the small intestine, highlighting how arsenic disrupts trophocytes and telocytes, which regulate stem cell functions.
What was studied?
The study focused on the effects of chronic arsenic exposure on the small intestine, specifically on the stromal cells and signaling pathways. Researchers aimed to investigate how arsenic exposure influences mesenchymal cells like trophocytes and telocytes, which play a key role in regulating the intestinal stem cell niche. The study used a mouse model to analyze the impact of different concentrations of arsenic (33 and 100 ppb) on various stromal markers in the small intestine, including the markers for trophocytes (PdgfraLo, CD81) and telocytes (PdgfraHi, CD201, Gli1).
Who was studied?
The study used transgenic mice (Sox9tm2Crm-EGFP) to examine the effects of arsenic exposure. Eighteen male and 18 female mice were exposed to drinking water containing arsenic at concentrations of 0, 33, and 100 ppb for 13 weeks. These mice were specifically chosen because the Sox9-EGFP transgene allows researchers to track intestinal stem cells and other epithelial cell populations. The sex-specific responses to arsenic exposure were analyzed, which revealed differential effects on stromal cells in the small intestine.
Most important findings
The study revealed significant sex-specific differences in the effects of arsenic exposure on stromal cells within the small intestine. Male mice exposed to arsenic showed increased expression of markers for trophocytes, particularly the PdgfraLo marker. In contrast, female mice exposed to arsenic had higher expression levels of telocyte markers, such as PdgfraHi. Additionally, the study found that arsenic exposure altered the epithelial cell populations, reducing Sox9+ cells, a marker for transit amplifying cells, intestinal stem cells, and enteroendocrine cells.
A more in-depth analysis showed that the trophocyte marker CD81 was significantly reduced in both male and female mice exposed to arsenic, suggesting an impairment in the function of these cells. Furthermore, Grem1, a key protein secreted by trophocytes to regulate stem cell differentiation, showed increased expression in males exposed to arsenic, further indicating the perturbation of the stromal cell function. In females, no such increase was observed, which highlights a sex-dependent response to arsenic exposure.
Key implications
The findings from this study have important implications for understanding how arsenic exposure affects the intestinal environment, particularly in terms of the balance between stromal cells like trophocytes and telocytes. Since these cells play a crucial role in maintaining the intestinal stem cell niche and regulating differentiation, the disruption caused by arsenic exposure could have long-term effects on intestinal health. The study also underscores the need for further investigation into the sex-specific mechanisms that underlie arsenic toxicity. These results suggest that arsenic might contribute to the development of diseases related to gastrointestinal health, particularly through its impact on stromal cells and the disruption of signaling pathways necessary for epithelial cell differentiation and regeneration.
Cadmium Uptake Kinetics in Rat Hepatocytes: Correction for Albumin Binding
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study investigates how albumin influences cadmium uptake in primary rat hepatocytes, revealing its protective role in reducing toxicity. The findings suggest albumin's involvement in cadmium bioavailability and provide insights for developing therapeutic strategies to mitigate cadmium-related health risks.
What was studied?
This study examined the kinetics of cadmium (Cd) uptake in primary rat hepatocytes, focusing on the role of albumin in modulating its absorption. Researchers exposed hepatocytes to cadmium concentrations both with and without the presence of bovine serum albumin (BSA), aiming to understand how albumin binding affects the bioavailability and toxicity of cadmium. The study also analyzed how the presence of albumin altered the rate and extent of cadmium uptake, which is crucial for developing models predicting cadmium dosimetry in vivo. The findings also explored the toxicological consequences of cadmium accumulation in hepatocytes, as well as the biological mechanisms underlying this process.
Who was studied?
The study utilized male Fischer 344 rats for the isolation of primary hepatocytes, which were then cultured and exposed to cadmium under controlled laboratory conditions. The cells were cultured in TGS buffer with or without BSA (600 µM), a physiological concentration of albumin, to mimic in vivo conditions more accurately. The primary hepatocytes were exposed to cadmium concentrations ranging from 1.0 to 80 µM in albumin-free buffer, or 32 to 8000 µM in buffer containing BSA. Various biochemical assays were performed to determine cellular toxicity, and the cadmium uptake rates were measured at different time intervals.
Most important findings
The study revealed a significant interaction between albumin and cadmium uptake in rat hepatocytes. When BSA was present, the hepatocytes showed a reduced cadmium toxicity, as indicated by a higher EC50 (65.5 ± 2.4 µM in the presence of BSA vs. 14.3 ± 3.9 µM in its absence). This shift in the cadmium exposure-response curve suggests that albumin binding reduces the bioavailability of free cadmium, making it less toxic to the cells. The cadmium uptake was observed to occur in two phases: a rapid initial uptake (Component I) and a slower sustained uptake (Component II). The first component was more pronounced in the absence of albumin, whereas the second component, indicative of sustained cadmium accumulation, occurred at a faster rate when albumin was present. Scatchard analysis of the cadmium-BSA binding showed two high-affinity binding sites for cadmium, indicating that albumin plays a critical role in modulating cadmium distribution.
Key implications
The findings from this study have important implications for understanding cadmium toxicity and the role of plasma proteins, particularly albumin, in modulating metal bioavailability. By demonstrating that albumin reduces the toxicity of cadmium through binding, the study suggests that albumin could serve as a protective factor against cadmium exposure. This insight is crucial for developing more effective therapeutic strategies to mitigate cadmium toxicity, such as albumin-based treatments or the use of other chelating agents that reduce the concentration of free cadmium in tissues. The study also emphasizes the importance of considering albumin levels when developing in vitro models to study metal absorption and toxicity, as it significantly impacts the interpretation of experimental results. These findings contribute to the growing understanding of the dynamics of heavy metal toxicity, offering potential strategies for clinical intervention.
The Effects of an Environmentally Relevant Level of Arsenic on the Gut Microbiome and Its Functional Metagenome
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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At 100 ppb, arsenic reshaped mouse gut communities, lowered SCFA gene capacity, increased LPS and stress pathways, and enriched multidrug and conjugation genes while shifting taxa toward Akkermansia and Bifidobacterium and away from SCFA-producing Firmicutes.
What was studied?
This original study tested how an environmentally relevant dose of arsenic changes the gut ecosystem and its gene functions in mice using a combined 16S rRNA and shotgun metagenomics approach. The authors exposed mice to 100 ppb arsenic in drinking water for 13 weeks and tracked shifts in community structure and pathways. The work centered on the arsenic gut microbiome functional metagenome, asking whether low-dose exposure lowers short-chain fatty acid (SCFA) capacity, raises inflammatory signals such as lipopolysaccharide (LPS), and selects for stress and resistance genes that could affect host health. The study also mapped specific taxa that rise or fall with exposure to support reproducible microbiome signatures.
Who was studied?
The team used specific-pathogen-free female C57BL/6 mice. They first normalized the microbiota by fecal transplant and cage rotation, then split animals into control and exposed groups with arsenic provided in the water at 100 ppb. All mice received the same purified diet, and the facility kept temperature, humidity, and light cycles stable. Fecal samples were collected before exposure and after 13 weeks to compare diversity, composition, and metagenomic functions across time and treatment. Sequencing and downstream analyses defined taxonomic shifts and differential gene pathways linked to arsenic exposure.
Most important findings
Arsenic exposure reduced alpha diversity and separated beta-diversity profiles from controls over time. Firmicutes decreased while Verrucomicrobia increased, with notable genus-level losses in Lactococcus, Ruminococcus (Lachnospiraceae and Ruminococcaceae), Coprococcus, Dorea, Oscillospira, and unassigned Clostridiales. Akkermansia, Bifidobacterium, and Anaerostipes increased. Functionally, genes tied to pyruvate metabolism and SCFA synthesis (including acetate kinase and 3-hydroxybutyryl-CoA dehydrogenase) declined, suggesting reduced capacity to make butyrate and acetate that support epithelial energy and immune balance. In parallel, genes of the starch utilization system (susB, susC, susD, susR) rose, a likely compensatory shift in glycan harvesting. Arsenic enrichment of LPS biosynthesis, assembly, and transport genes pointed to a more pro-inflammatory bacterial output.
Oxidative stress and DNA repair modules (eg, superoxide dismutase, catalase, DnaJ, RecN) increased, consistent with a metal-induced stress milieu. Vitamin pathways expanded, including folate and B6, B12, thiamin, riboflavin, and menaquinone biosynthesis, a pattern that may reflect microbiome attempts to buffer redox stress and support methylation. Notably, classic arsenic resistance determinants (arsenate reductase and ACR3 efflux) decreased, while cobalt/zinc/cadmium resistance, multidrug efflux pumps, beta-lactamases, and many conjugative transposon proteins (Tra family) increased, signaling pressure toward horizontal gene transfer and antibiotic resistance traits under arsenic exposure. Together, these results define a signature of reduced SCFA potential, higher LPS capacity, and a stress-adapted, resistance-leaning gene repertoire at 100 ppb arsenic.
Key implications
For clinicians, this profile flags two actionable risks at low-dose exposure: weakened SCFA support for barrier function and immune tone, and amplified LPS-linked inflammatory signaling that can prime systemic effects. For microbiome databases, the directional taxa and pathway shifts provide a concise signature: loss of SCFA-producing Firmicutes lineages, gain of Akkermansia and Bifidobacterium, decline in pyruvate/SCFA genes, rise in Sus, LPS, stress, and vitamin modules, and enrichment of multidrug and conjugation genes. These signatures can guide exposure stratification in clinical cohorts, help interpret dysbiosis patterns in arsenic-exposed patients, and inform interventions that restore SCFA output while limiting pro-inflammatory load. The rise in resistance and horizontal gene transfer potential suggests environmental arsenic may co-select antibiotic resistance, an added concern for infection control.
A landscape of metallophore synthesis and uptake potential of the genus Staphylococcus
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study maps the metallophore synthesis and uptake potential across the Staphylococcus genus, revealing species-specific production and utilization of metallophores. These findings provide insights into microbial cooperation, competition, and potential therapeutic targets for infections caused by S. aureus and other staphylococcal species.
What was studied?
This study explored the biosynthesis and uptake potential of metallophores in the Staphylococcus genus, focusing on the production and utilization of staphyloferrin A (SF-A), staphyloferrin B (SF-B), and staphylopine (STP). The research aimed to map the genetic landscape of metallophore biosynthesis across different Staphylococcus species, and how some species "cheat" by utilizing metallophores produced by others. A comprehensive bioinformatic analysis of over 1,800 strains and 77 representative species was conducted, analyzing their metallophore production and uptake capabilities.
Who was studied?
The study primarily focused on Staphylococcus species, including Staphylococcus aureus, Staphylococcus epidermidis, Staphylococcus lugdunensis, and other species within the Staphylococcus genus. Over 1,800 strains were analyzed to explore variations in metallophore synthesis and uptake, with specific attention given to differences in the ability to produce and acquire metals such as iron, manganese, and zinc via metallophores.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed significant diversity in metallophore synthesis across the Staphylococcus genus. While SF-A biosynthesis was widespread, occurring in nearly all species, several species had truncated SF-A biosynthetic gene clusters (BGCs), rendering them non-functional. In these species, novel metallophore BGCs, yet to be fully characterized, may compensate for the loss of SF-A production. SF-B production was more restricted, with a few S. aureus strains and closely related species possessing the necessary biosynthetic genes. Staphylopine (STP), responsible for manganese and zinc binding, was found in 39% of species across the genus, while some species like S. lugdunensis exhibited a "cheating" behavior by encoding metallophore uptake systems without producing their own metallophores. This suggests a metabolic dependency on the metal-sourcing capabilities of other species. The research also highlighted the complexity of metallophore acquisition systems, with several species exhibiting variations in metallophore receptors, such as HtsA and CntA, leading to distinct strategies for acquiring metals from the environment and competing with other organisms in metal-limited environments.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings underscore the importance of metallophore-driven metal acquisition in Staphylococcus species, which plays a crucial role in bacterial competition and cooperation within the human microbiome. Understanding the diversity of metallophore systems and their role in microbial community dynamics could have significant implications for developing strategies to manipulate metal availability in pathogenic bacteria. This could lead to novel therapeutic approaches targeting bacterial metal acquisition systems, especially for infections caused by S. aureus and other staphylococcal species. Additionally, the study’s findings on “cheating” species, which exploit the metallophore production of other bacteria, could provide insights into the ecological interactions within microbial communities and how such mechanisms influence bacterial virulence and resistance.
The Metallophore Staphylopine Enables Staphylococcus aureus To Compete with the Host for Zinc and Overcome Nutritional Immunity
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study reveals that S. aureus uses the Cnt-StP system to acquire zinc during infection, enabling it to compete with the host’s immune defenses. This zinc acquisition pathway is critical for pathogen survival and virulence, offering new targets for antimicrobial therapy.
What was studied?
This study explored how Staphylococcus aureus acquires zinc during infection and competes with the host’s immune system for this critical metal. The research identified the role of two zinc import systems—AdcABC and CntABCDF—and the metallophore staphylopine in zinc acquisition. It also investigated how these systems allow the pathogen to resist host-imposed zinc starvation, a component of the host’s nutritional immunity.
Who was studied?
The study primarily focused on Staphylococcus aureus and its ability to acquire and utilize zinc during infection. Researchers used wild-type and mutant strains of S. aureus lacking key zinc transporters (AdcABC, CntABCDF) and the metallophore staphylopine (StP) to assess their role in overcoming host-imposed zinc starvation.
What were the most important findings?
The study identified that S. aureus utilizes two distinct zinc import systems: the AdcABC system and the CntABCDF system. While the AdcABC system has been previously associated with zinc uptake in other bacteria, the CntABCDF system, along with the metallophore staphylopine (StP), was shown to be critical for zinc acquisition during infection. Loss of either the Cnt system or StP severely impaired S. aureus’ ability to grow in zinc-limited conditions and diminished its ability to resist the immune effector calprotectin (CP), which restricts metal availability. Interestingly, the Cnt system was primarily responsible for S. aureus's ability to compete with CP for zinc, while the AdcABC system did not play a significant role in this competition. The metallophore staphylopine was found to function similarly to siderophore-based iron acquisition systems, facilitating the uptake of zinc via the Cnt system. Additionally, the study showed that the Cnt-StP system is the dominant zinc acquisition pathway used by S. aureus during systemic infection in mice, with mutants lacking this system showing reduced bacterial burden and virulence.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings of this study have important implications for understanding how S. aureus and other pathogens overcome the host's nutritional immunity. By identifying the Cnt-StP system as a key player in zinc acquisition, the research offers insights into new strategies for disrupting bacterial infection. Targeting zinc acquisition systems like Cnt-StP could provide a novel approach to antimicrobial therapy, especially for infections where zinc limitation plays a crucial role in the host defense. Moreover, the discovery of staphylopine analogs in other bacterial pathogens suggests that this system might be broadly applicable in bacterial pathogenesis, potentially opening up new avenues for therapeutic intervention across a range of infections.
Host subversion of bacterial metallophore usage drives copper intoxication
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Host subversion of bacterial metallophore usage shows that zinc starvation makes S. aureus import copper via staphylopine, triggering copper stress and reducing fitness in vivo; these loci and host calprotectin form a practical microbiome signature.
What was studied?
This original study tested how host subversion of bacterial metallophore usage changes metal stress during infection and showed that the host can flip staphylopine-based uptake in Staphylococcus aureus to drive copper intoxication under zinc-limited conditions. The authors asked whether zinc starvation, which induces the Cnt–staphylopine system, also opens an entry path for copper that then activates the copper stress response and hurts bacterial growth and fitness in vivo. They measured reporters for the copper efflux pump CopA, tracked intracellular metals, and compared wild-type and mutant strains that either rely on staphylopine for zinc (ΔadcA) or lack staphylopine import (ΔcntA). They also modeled host zinc withholding with calprotectin and tested competition in a mouse skin infection to link the in vitro signals to disease.
Who was studied?
Experiments used S. aureus Newman and USA300 LAC backgrounds with targeted deletions in adcA, cntA, cntKLM, and copA, plus combinations that forced reliance on either AdcABC or the Cnt–staphylopine system. The team exposed bacteria to zinc-limited media with graded copper, added calprotectin to mimic inflamed tissue, and then used inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry to quantify intracellular copper and zinc. For in vivo relevance, they used female C57BL/6 mice in a subcutaneous abscess model and measured competitive indices for copA-deficient strains against controls, and for ΔadcA versus ΔcntA strains, to determine how metallophore use shapes copper stress during skin infection.
Most important findings
Zinc starvation switched staphylopine uptake in Staphylococcus aureus into a copper entry route that triggered strong copper stress at nanomolar levels. Loss of staphylopine import blocked this effect, while forcing staphylopine use increased copper sensitivity and intracellular copper. Deleting the copper pump CopA amplified damage and cut growth. Calprotectin, which starves zinc at inflamed sites, lowered the copper needed to induce stress. In a mouse skin abscess, strains lacking CopA or relying on staphylopine showed reduced fitness, proving that this copper import pathway operates in vivo. Similar risks may occur with yersiniabactin in Enterobacterales during inflammation.
Key implications
Clinicians can read zinc-starved, staphylopine-positive S. aureus as copper-sensitized in vivo. Embedding the cnt operon, copA/copBL, and calprotectin levels into a microbiome signatures database can flag niches where the host can exploit metallophore promiscuity. Copper-aware care might time or tune topical metals or adjuvants to amplify host copper stress while avoiding tissue harm. Genomic detection of yersiniabactin-like systems in Enterobacterales suggests broader reach of this rule. In simple terms, the host can turn a zinc-scavenging tool into a copper Trojan horse; mapping these modules helps risk-stratify skin, urinary, or gut infections and guides metal-aware stewardship.
Magnesium Sensing Regulates Intestinal Colonization of Enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli O157:H7
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study shows that low gut magnesium activates a virulence pathway in EHEC O157:H7 that boosts LEE gene expression and intestinal attachment. A magnesium-rich diet raised colon magnesium and sharply reduced bacterial adherence in mice, supporting magnesium as an anti-virulence approach.
What was studied?
This study tested whether enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli (EHEC) O157:H7 uses magnesium levels in the large intestine as a host cue to turn on virulence genes that drive intestinal attachment. The authors focused on the PhoQ/PhoP two-component system as the magnesium sensor and mapped a newly defined regulatory route that links magnesium sensing to the locus of enterocyte effacement (LEE), the pathogenicity island that encodes the type III secretion system and key adherence factors needed to form attaching-and-effacing lesions. They identified an O-island 119 gene, Z4267, and renamed it LmiA, then tested whether this factor directly activates the LEE master regulator ler and thereby increases LEE gene expression and epithelial adherence under low-magnesium conditions typical of the large intestine.
Who was studied?
The study primarily examined bacterial strains and host models rather than human participants. It used EHEC O157:H7 (including targeted mutants such as deletion of OI-119, lmiA, phoP, and phoQ, plus complemented strains) and tested adherence to human epithelial cell lines (Caco-2 intestinal cells and HeLa cells) to model host contact. It also used female BALB/c mice to test intestinal colonization and adherence in vivo, including diet-based manipulation of luminal magnesium to see whether magnesium-rich intake changes EHEC adherence in the colon.
What were the most important findings?
The authors showed that OI-119 is required for full adherence and LEE expression, and they traced that effect to LmiA as the key OI-119 regulator. Deleting OI-119 or lmiA sharply reduced adherence to epithelial cells and reduced pedestal formation, while complementation restored these phenotypes. Mechanistically, LmiA bound specifically to the LEE1 promoter region, increased ler transcription, and drove downstream LEE operon expression; LmiA did not bind the other LEE promoters in the same way, which supports a model where it works mainly through ler. Upstream, PhoP directly bound the lmiA promoter and activated lmiA, placing PhoQ/PhoP above LmiA in the magnesium response pathway. High magnesium (around 500 µM) reduced lmiA and LEE expression and reduced adherence in vitro, and these magnesium effects depended on intact phoQ/phoP and lmiA. In mice, a magnesium-rich diet raised colon magnesium levels and produced a large drop in EHEC adherence to colon tissue, while mutants lacking lmiA/phoQ/phoP already showed low adherence and did not respond meaningfully to diet magnesium. For microbiome-signature needs, the paper does not provide broad community MMA, but it gives a strong pathogen-specific MMA: low luminal magnesium increases EHEC O157:H7 fitness for colon colonization by activating PhoQ/PhoP → LmiA → Ler → LEE, while higher luminal magnesium suppresses this virulence state and reduces adherence.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This work supports magnesium as a practical, diet-linked anti-virulence lever for A/E pathogens, because magnesium does not need to kill bacteria to reduce colonization pressure; it can instead suppress the gene program that enables tight epithelial attachment. Clinically, that frames magnesium status in the distal gut as a factor that could influence susceptibility to EHEC/EPEC colonization and disease severity, especially when standard antibiotics are undesirable due to toxin-release concerns. Translationally, the study suggests that strategies that increase magnesium availability in the large intestine, such as targeted formulations that reach the colon, could reduce pathogen adherence and transmission risk. It also provides a clear mechanistic bridge for microbiome clinicians: a simple ionic cue in the gut lumen can flip a conserved virulence switch across multiple EHEC and EPEC serotypes, so micronutrient context can directly change pathogen behavior even without major shifts in overall community composition.
Manganese Detoxification by MntE Is Critical for Resistance to Oxidative Stress and Virulence of Staphylococcus aureus
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study highlights the role of MntE in Mn detoxification and its crucial impact on S. aureus's resistance to oxidative stress and virulence. Disrupting MntE leads to Mn accumulation, reduced fitness, and increased sensitivity to host immune responses, suggesting MntE as a potential antimicrobial target.
What was studied?
This study examined the manganese (Mn) detoxification mechanism in Staphylococcus aureus by identifying the role of MntE, a member of the cation diffusion facilitator (CDF) protein family. The research focused on how MntE helps to maintain intracellular Mn homeostasis, which is crucial for resistance to oxidative stress and for the bacterium’s virulence during infection.
Who was studied?
The study primarily focused on Staphylococcus aureus, specifically investigating the role of MntE and MntR, two key proteins involved in regulating Mn homeostasis. The research also used various mutant strains of S. aureus, including MntE and MntR knockouts, to assess the effects of disrupted Mn detoxification.
What were the most important findings?
The study found that MntE is crucial for detoxifying excess Mn in S. aureus, particularly under conditions of Mn overload. MntE-mediated efflux prevents Mn accumulation, which would otherwise lead to toxicity and disrupt cellular function. Mutants lacking MntE showed increased Mn accumulation and decreased resistance to oxidative stress, particularly when exposed to oxidants like sodium hypochlorite (NaOCl) and paraquat. Moreover, the mntE mutants exhibited reduced virulence in a mouse model of systemic infection, as evidenced by significantly lower survival rates compared to wild-type S. aureus strains. MntR, a transcriptional regulator, was found to control the expression of MntE, suggesting that the regulation of Mn homeostasis is tightly coordinated. Additionally, the study highlighted an inverse relationship between intracellular Mn and iron (Fe) levels, implying that excess Mn affects the balance of essential metals in the cell.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings underscore the importance of Mn homeostasis in bacterial pathogenesis and stress the potential of targeting MntE for developing new antimicrobial therapies. Disrupting Mn detoxification could weaken S. aureus, making it more susceptible to host immune defenses, particularly oxidative stress responses. Furthermore, the study provides insights into how S. aureus adapts to fluctuating Mn levels during infection, which could guide future research into managing metal availability as a strategy to control bacterial virulence.
Nickel exposure reduces enterobactin production in Escherichia coli.
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Nickel exposure reduces enterobactin production in Escherichia coli, extends lag phase, triggers iron-starvation signals, and lowers extracellular catechols, defining gene and metal markers to track iron supply in Enterobacterales.
What was studied?
Nickel exposure reduces enterobactin production in Escherichia coli by blocking the normal rise of this catecholate siderophore during iron-limited growth. The authors investigated whether nickel contributes to the longer lag phase and iron starvation by limiting extracellular enterobactin, even as cells activate iron uptake genes. They tracked growth, intracellular metals, siderophore levels, and promoter activity to connect nickel stress with a drop in secreted enterobactin and a shortfall in iron delivery. This work identifies nickel as a metal signal that reshapes siderophore output and iron balance in Enterobacterales, which is important for both environmental and host niches.
Who was studied?
The team used Escherichia coli MG1655 in defined minimal media with background iron in the nanomolar range and added NiCl₂ from 0 to 50 μM. They measured intracellular Fe, Ni, Zn, Mn, and Cu by ICP-MS, quantified catecholate siderophores in culture supernatants by the Arnow assay and FPLC, and read iron-responsive promoters with lacZ fusions for fepA, sufA, and iscR. A ΔfepA mutant helped test whether lower extracellular catechols reflect faster re-uptake rather than reduced production. This design separated transcriptional responses from actual siderophore supply in the medium that supports iron import.
Most important findings
Nickel prolonged lag phase without large effects on later growth and blocked the normal rise in intracellular iron during lag, while cells accumulated nickel and modestly increased zinc. Despite that iron need, nickel kept fepA, sufA, and iscR expression high, showing a clear iron-starvation response. Yet extracellular catechols fell in a nickel-dose-dependent way, and FPLC showed that enterobactin and each hydrolysis product declined with nickel. The ΔfepA strain also showed reduced extracellular catechols under nickel, which rules out faster FepA-mediated import as the cause and supports impaired production or export.
Together, these data explain why iron uptake fails under nickel stress: siderophore supply outside the cell drops even as demand rises. The study also situates this effect within broader metal cross-talk noted for catecholates, which can increase copper toxicity by driving Cu(II) to Cu(I); nickel therefore not only limits iron capture but may change copper risk by lowering catecholate output in mixed-metal settings relevant to inflamed mucosa. For a microbiome signatures database, this yields practical markers: entCEBA/entS pathway activity and extracellular catechols as readouts of iron supply, with nickel exposure as a modifier that predicts transient iron starvation in Enterobacterales.
Key implications
Clinicians can read nickel as a metal stressor that delays E. coli adaptation by cutting extracellular enterobactin and pushing iron starvation, even when iron uptake genes stay on. In host settings that raise nickel—industrial exposures, devices, or diets—Enterobacterales may show a lag in iron acquisition with downstream shifts in growth and competition. Reporting entCEBA, entS, and fepA status with measured or inferred nickel exposure can help explain low-iron signals and guide metal-aware care. Because catecholate loss also blunts copper redox cycling, nickel may transiently lower copper injury from catechols while still limiting iron, a trade-off that could favor strains that switch to non-catecholate metallophores. Embedding these gene modules and metal context in microbiome reports can refine risk calls for Enterobacterales dominance in stressed urine or gut and support targeted mitigation that avoids adding metals that worsen imbalance.
Heavy Metals Toxicity: Mechanism, Health Effects, and Therapeutic Interventions
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Cardiovascular Health
Cardiovascular Health
Recent research has revealed that specific gut microbiota-derived metabolites are strongly linked to cardiovascular disease risk—potentially influencing atherosclerosis development more than traditional risk factors like cholesterol levels. This highlights the gut microbiome as a novel therapeutic target for cardiovascular interventions.
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This review addresses the health effects, toxicity mechanisms, and therapeutic interventions related to heavy metals, highlighting the importance of further research and improved treatment strategies.
What Was Reviewed?
This review article focuses on the mechanisms, health effects, and therapeutic interventions related to the toxicity of heavy metals (HMs) such as chromium, arsenic, cadmium, mercury, and lead. It consolidates extensive research findings on the biochemical properties of these metals and their impact on human health. The review investigates the molecular and cellular effects of heavy metals, including enzyme inhibition, DNA damage, oxidative stress (OS), and protein dysfunction. Furthermore, the article discusses the toxic effects of these metals on various organ systems such as the nervous, cardiovascular, reproductive systems, and their role in cancer development. It emphasises the need for improved understanding and interventions to address the significant health risks posed by these pollutants.
Who was Reviewed?
The review article examines various studies and research on heavy metals (HMs), specifically focusing on their toxicity mechanisms, health effects, and therapeutic interventions. The subjects of the review are the biological systems and human health in response to exposure to heavy metals like arsenic, cadmium, chromium, mercury, and lead. It synthesizes findings from multiple studies that have investigated the impacts of these metals on human physiology, particularly their toxicity at the molecular and cellular levels, and the therapeutic methods developed to mitigate these effects. Therefore, it is not focused on individual people or specific groups but rather on the collective findings from the body of research surrounding these toxic substances and their effects on human health.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The review provides detailed insights into how heavy metals exert their toxic effects, including their interference with cellular functions such as enzyme activity, energy metabolism, and protein synthesis. These disruptions are compounded by oxidative stress, where heavy metals induce the production of reactive oxygen species (ROS), further exacerbating cellular damage. One key finding is the way these metals can accumulate in human tissues, leading to chronic toxicity that affects multiple organ systems. For instance, mercury and lead exposure can cause neurological damage, while cadmium is particularly harmful to kidney function. The review also identifies the role of heavy metals in the development of cancer, suggesting that their ability to induce DNA damage and gene mutations plays a critical role in carcinogenesis. Furthermore, it underscores the importance of therapeutic interventions like chelation therapy, antioxidants, and emerging strategies such as nanotechnology and gene therapy to mitigate these toxic effects.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Review?
The review highlights the urgent need for more effective treatment options and preventive measures against heavy metal toxicity. It calls for continued research into the biochemical mechanisms that underlie metal toxicity and advocates for multidisciplinary approaches to address this global health challenge. By improving understanding of the toxicity pathways, the review sets the stage for developing more targeted and efficient therapeutic strategies. Moreover, it stresses the importance of reducing environmental exposure to heavy metals through stricter regulations and public health initiatives. These findings are crucial for clinicians and public health experts to develop better management strategies for populations at risk of heavy metal exposure.
Evaluation of serum heavy metal levels on primary ovarian insufficiency
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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This study explores the potential link between serum heavy metal levels and premature ovarian insufficiency. The higher levels of metals like lead and mercury in women with POI suggest environmental toxins may contribute to ovarian dysfunction, though the findings were not statistically significant.
What was studied?
This study investigated the serum levels of heavy metals in women with Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI). POI, a condition defined by the loss of ovarian function before the age of 40, can be influenced by various environmental factors, including exposure to heavy metals. The research aimed to assess the levels of aluminum, arsenic, mercury, manganese, and lead in women with POI and compare these levels to those in healthy women. The study sought to understand the potential relationship between elevated serum heavy metal levels and the onset of POI, which could help identify environmental risk factors for ovarian dysfunction.
Who was studied?
The study involved 46 women, divided into two groups: 23 women diagnosed with POI and 23 healthy women who served as the control group. The participants were matched by age, BMI, and gravidity, ensuring that these factors did not skew the results. The women with POI had been diagnosed based on clinical criteria, including amenorrhea for at least four months and elevated follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) levels. Women with a history of pelvic surgery, cancer, autoimmune diseases, endometriosis, or other chronic systemic diseases were excluded. Blood serum samples were collected from both groups to measure the levels of heavy metals.
Most important findings
The study found that the serum levels of aluminum, arsenic, mercury, manganese, and lead were higher in women with POI compared to the control group, though the differences were not statistically significant. Despite the lack of significant differences, the higher levels of these metals in the POI group suggest a potential link between environmental exposure to heavy metals and the development of POI. Specifically, the study highlights how metals like lead and mercury may contribute to ovarian dysfunction due to their toxicity. These metals can induce oxidative stress and disrupt the hormonal balance, potentially accelerating ovarian aging and depletion.
Key implications
While the study did not find statistically significant differences in serum metal levels between the two groups, it underscores the need for further research into the role of environmental heavy metals in ovarian health. Clinicians should be aware of the potential environmental risk factors, including heavy metal exposure, when diagnosing and managing women with POI. Future studies should aim to identify causal relationships and explore potential therapeutic interventions, such as detoxification or antioxidant therapies, to reduce the impact of heavy metal toxicity on ovarian function.
Zinc sequestration by human calprotectin facilitates manganese binding to the bacterial solute-binding proteins PsaA and MntC
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study reveals how the human immune protein calprotectin (CP) sequesters zinc, facilitating manganese binding to bacterial solute-binding proteins. This interaction prevents zinc toxicity and supports bacterial virulence, offering new insights into metal ion competition between host and pathogen.
What was studied?
This study investigated the role of the human immune protein calprotectin (CP) in the competition between Streptococcus pneumoniae and Staphylococcus aureus for metal ions, particularly zinc (Zn²⁺) and manganese (Mn²⁺), during infection. The focus was on how CP’s ability to sequester zinc facilitates manganese binding to bacterial solute-binding proteins (SBPs) like PsaA and MntC, which are essential for bacterial metal acquisition. The study employed X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy to elucidate the mechanisms behind CP-mediated metal exchange in the context of bacterial virulence.
Who was studied?
The study primarily examined two Gram-positive pathogens, Streptococcus pneumoniae and Staphylococcus aureus. The research focused on the solute-binding proteins (SBPs) PsaA and MntC from these bacteria, which are involved in manganese acquisition. Additionally, the study explored the interaction between these bacterial proteins and CP, a key host-defense protein, in the context of zinc sequestration and manganese uptake.
What were the most important findings?
The study demonstrated that CP’s zinc sequestration abilities significantly affect the microbial acquisition of essential metals. Zinc ions, when bound to PsaA or MntC, prevent the uptake of manganese, which is crucial for bacterial survival and virulence. CP effectively competes with both PsaA and MntC for zinc, sequestering zinc from these proteins and allowing manganese to bind instead. This metal exchange was facilitated by CP’s dual metal-binding sites, which preferentially sequester zinc and promote manganese binding in bacterial solute-binding proteins. Additionally, the study found that both PsaA (from S. pneumoniae) and MntC (from S. aureus) exhibited a strong thermodynamic preference for zinc over manganese, but CP’s metal-withholding strategy prevents zinc toxicity and allows manganese to be utilized for bacterial growth. These findings suggest that CP plays a crucial role in modulating metal ion availability during infection, influencing the pathogenesis of bacterial diseases.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study’s findings provide new insights into the intricate interplay between host metal-withholding mechanisms and bacterial metal acquisition systems. By showing how CP facilitates manganese binding to bacterial proteins while preventing zinc poisoning, the research contributes to a better understanding of the host-pathogen battle for essential metals. These insights open up new avenues for therapeutic strategies aimed at manipulating metal availability to hinder bacterial survival, especially in the treatment of S. pneumoniae and S. aureus infections. Moreover, this study highlights the role of CP in the broader context of nutritional immunity, where metal sequestration not only limits pathogen growth but may also influence microbial community dynamics and infection outcomes.
Wide Spectrum Potent Antimicrobial Efficacy of Wound Dressings Impregnated with Cuprous Oxide Microparticles
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Wound dressings impregnated with cuprous oxide cut bioburden fast, block bacterial passage, and act against common wound microbes with durable activity, offering a practical tool to reshape the wound microbiome in support of healing.
What was studied?
This original study tests wound dressings impregnated with cuprous oxide and shows that they kill a wide range of microbes fast and keep bacteria from crossing the dressing. The team used standard textile biocidal tests at 37°C and found more than 10,000-fold drops in viable counts within three hours for major wound pathogens, with Candida albicans reaching that threshold by eighteen hours. The dressings kept full activity after natural aging for up to three years and after seven daily high-dose bacterial challenges, which signals durable copper release. The authors also compared these dressings to several silver products and reported stronger or at least comparable killing after one hour. The work explains why copper works across species, noting membrane damage, protein and nucleic acid injury, and oxidative stress, and it argues that stable, slow ion release from cuprous oxide drives the sustained effect on the dressing surface.
Who was studied?
The experiments used in vitro exposure of clinical and reference microbes that define wound bioburden. The panel covered methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, Staphylococcus epidermidis, Escherichia coli, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Enterobacter aerogenes, Enterococcus faecalis, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and Candida albicans. The authors also tested barrier function by placing inocula on the outer face and checking for growth beneath the dressing. Two- and three-layer formats blocked passage, and an adhesive-border format stopped ingress even after seven daily external inoculations. Control dressings without copper showed no killing and allowed passage. These tests reflect real wound threats because the species chosen are common in acute and chronic wound microbiomes and often form biofilms that delay healing.
Most important findings
The dressings caused at least a four-log drop in viable bacteria within three hours for all tested species and kept this effect after aging for up to three years, which proves stable biocidal output. After seven consecutive daily exposures to about one million K. pneumoniae cells, the dressings still yielded no recoverable colonies, while controls held the full inoculum, which shows sustained capacity under heavy soil. The copper dressings prevented microbes from crossing from the outside to the wound side in barrier tests, while controls leaked large numbers.
When compared head-to-head with multiple silver dressings at one hour, the copper dressings and two silver comparators cleared all organisms, while several other silver dressings left sizable counts, which places the copper option among the most active fast-killing dressings tested. For microbiome use, the study links fast copper killing to taxa that often dominate chronic wounds—MRSA, Pseudomonas, Enterobacterales, and Enterococcus—and sets an expected signature of reduced viable burden at the dressing–wound interface. It also frames resistance risk: the authors note that copper injures microbes at multiple sites and that reported copper tolerance is uncommon, which lowers the chance of selecting a single resistance path on the dressing surface.
Key implications
Clinicians can use these dressings to cut surface bioburden quickly and to block outside-in seeding, which may help wounds leave the inflammatory phase and move toward repair. In microbiome reports, expect falling relative and absolute loads of MRSA, Pseudomonas, and Enterobacterales under the dressing, with fewer culture recoveries and lower sequencing reads at follow-up. Pair this with gene markers of copper handling in any persistent isolates, such as copA or cus operons, to flag rare copper-tolerant strains. The durability after aging and repeated high-dose exposure supports weekly wear cycles in routine care. Because some silver dressings show weaker early killing, the copper option offers a practical first-line surface control when fast reduction in viable counts is a priority or when silver cytotoxicity is a concern.
Microbial Metallophores in the Productivity of Agroecosystems
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Microbial metallophores are vital in sustainable agriculture, enhancing nutrient availability, promoting plant growth, and mitigating heavy metal toxicity. The study highlights their potential in bioremediation and as biocontrol agents.
What was studied?
This study explored the role of metallophores, particularly microbial siderophores, in microbial ecology, metal acquisition, and plant-microbe interactions. The authors delved into their potential applications in sustainable agriculture, bioremediation, and biotechnology. Metallophores, small molecules that chelate metal ions, are pivotal in nutrient cycling and metal detoxification, crucial for plant growth and microbial health. The study discusses the use of metallophores in combating metal toxicity in soil and promoting plant health by enhancing nutrient availability.
Who was studied?
The study primarily focused on the role of microbial siderophores in promoting plant health and addressing soil metal toxicity. It included microorganisms such as Pseudomonas and Streptomyces species, known for their ability to produce metallophores. These microbes were studied in the context of agricultural applications, including their interaction with plants like Phaseolus vulgaris (common bean), and their impact on plant growth and pathogen resistance. The research also investigated microbial strains used in bioremediation and their role in enhancing plant growth under metal stress conditions.
Most important findings
The findings highlighted the significant role of metallophores in improving metal ion availability for plants and mitigating metal toxicity. For instance, siderophores produced by Pseudomonas putida KNP9 were shown to increase Phaseolus vulgaris biomass, while Streptomyces acidiscabies E13 helped cowpea plants acquire iron despite the presence of toxic metals. The study also revealed the potential for microbial metallophores to act as biocontrol agents against soil pathogens and improve soil health by reducing oxidative stress. Furthermore, the research emphasized the application of siderophores in phytoremediation, where they aid in removing heavy metals from contaminated soils, making them a viable solution for soil decontamination.
Key implications
The study underscores the importance of metallophores in sustainable agriculture by reducing the reliance on chemical fertilizers and pesticides. By improving nutrient availability and enhancing plant resistance to abiotic stress, microbial metallophores contribute to soil health and crop yield. These molecules could revolutionize agriculture by reducing environmental pollution, improving plant growth in metal-contaminated soils, and providing eco-friendly solutions for crop production. Additionally, siderophores' use in bioremediation could significantly mitigate heavy metal contamination, thus promoting long-term agricultural sustainability. Further research is necessary to explore the full potential of metallophores in various agricultural practices and scale up their application for wider environmental benefits.
Diversity of Mercury-Tolerant Microorganisms
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review explains how mercury-tolerant bacteria, fungi, and microalgae resist and transform mercury. It highlights detox genes such as the mer system, biofilm binding, and redox-driven methylation and demethylation that change mercury toxicity and exposure risk across ecosystems.
What was reviewed?
This review summarized the diversity of mercury-tolerant microorganisms and explained how bacteria, fungi, and microalgae survive and transform mercury in contaminated environments. The authors connected mercury’s environmental forms (elemental, inorganic, and organic such as methylmercury) to microbial processes that either convert mercury into less toxic forms or, in some settings, generate the most toxic form through methylation. They framed these organisms as practical tools for bioremediation because microbes can bind mercury, accumulate it, chemically transform it, or reduce it to volatile elemental mercury.
Who was reviewed?
The authors reviewed research on environmental microorganisms rather than human patients. They covered microbes isolated from mercury-impacted soils, sediments, seawater, industrial and municipal waste streams, mining-affected ecosystems, and plant-associated niches such as rhizospheres. They highlighted findings from diverse microbial groups, including sulfate-reducing and iron-reducing bacteria linked to methylmercury formation, as well as bioaccumulating and volatilizing strains that can lower bioavailable mercury in water or soil.
What were the most important findings?
The review emphasized that mercury tolerance is widespread and multi-mechanistic, and it often depends on genetic detoxification systems plus broader stress defenses. A central “microbiome signature” is the mer operon and related genes that encode transport and detoxification functions, including mercury uptake and regulation, cleavage of carbon–mercury bonds in organomercurials, and reduction of Hg2+ to Hg0. Beyond mer genes, many organisms rely on extracellular polymeric substances and biofilms that bind mercury outside the cell, thiol-based buffering and antioxidant responses that limit oxidative damage, and sequestration or precipitation that immobilizes mercury. The authors also reinforced that methylation and demethylation capacities vary by physiology and environment, with oxygen-free, nutrient, and redox conditions shaping whether microbial communities increase methylmercury risk or push mercury toward less harmful forms.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
For clinicians tracking microbiome-relevant exposures, this review supports a clear translational point: mercury risk is not only about dose, but also about microbial community function, especially genes and pathways that control mercury speciation. Environments that enrich methylating groups can raise methylmercury formation potential, while environments dominated by detoxifying and binding organisms can reduce bioavailable mercury and shift exposure profiles downstream in food webs. For remediation and public health, the review argues that bioremediation can be more sustainable than many chemical methods, but it requires careful design because some microbial activities can inadvertently increase methylmercury under certain conditions. For a microbiome signatures database, the most useful entry is functional: enrichment of merA/merB-linked detoxification capacity, EPS/biofilm-mediated binding potential, and anaerobic methylation potential in sulfate- and iron-reducing guilds.
The Dysbiosis of Gut Microbiota Caused by Low-Dose Cadmium Aggravate the Injury of Mice Liver through Increasing Intestinal Permeability
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study reveals how low-dose cadmium exposure disrupts gut microbiota, increasing intestinal permeability and liver injury in mice. The findings emphasize the role of microbiota in modulating toxin absorption and liver function.
What was studied?
The study examined the effects of low-dose cadmium exposure on the gut microbiota, intestinal permeability, and liver injury in mice. Researchers aimed to understand the interplay between cadmium-induced dysbiosis in gut microbiota and its subsequent effects on liver function, specifically how increased intestinal permeability might lead to greater cadmium accumulation in the liver. By assessing various microbial communities and conducting transcriptomic analyses, the study explored the molecular pathways activated by cadmium exposure.
Who was studied?
Female C57BL/6J mice, aged six weeks and weighing 22g, were used in this study. These mice were selected for their genetic homogeneity, which is crucial for controlled experimental outcomes. The mice were divided into three groups: a control group, a low cadmium treatment group, and a group treated with both cadmium and an antibiotic cocktail to deplete gut microbiota. This study extended over a year to mimic long-term environmental exposure to cadmium and assess the cumulative effects on both gut health and liver function.
Most important findings
The study found that low-dose cadmium exposure significantly altered the gut microbiota composition in mice, leading to dysbiosis. This disruption of the microbiota resulted in increased intestinal permeability, which facilitated higher cadmium accumulation in the liver. Through transcriptomic analysis, 162 genes were identified as differentially expressed, with a notable upregulation of genes involved in chemical carcinogenesis and cellular response to stress. Furthermore, the abundance of beneficial gut bacteria, particularly Akkermansia muciniphila, was significantly reduced, which correlated with the increased intestinal permeability and liver injury. The depletion of gut microbiota through an antibiotic cocktail partially restored the expression of genes related to tight junction proteins, thus providing partial protection against the adverse effects of cadmium.
Key implications
These findings highlight the critical role of the gut microbiome in modulating the toxicity of environmental pollutants like cadmium. The altered microbiota not only contributes to increased intestinal permeability but also plays a direct role in cadmium absorption, suggesting that maintaining a healthy microbiome could be an important strategy in mitigating environmental toxin-related health risks. The study also underscores the need for further research into the gut-liver axis and its implications for chronic diseases linked to environmental toxins. These insights could pave the way for microbiome-targeted therapies to protect against heavy metal toxicity.
Bacillus subtilis MntR coordinates the transcriptional regulation of manganese uptake and efflux systems
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study explores how the MntR metalloregulator in Bacillus subtilis coordinates Mn(II) uptake and efflux systems to maintain Mn homeostasis and prevent toxicity, offering insights into bacterial metal regulation and potential therapeutic targets for controlling metal imbalance in infections.
What was studied?
This study investigated the role of the MntR metalloregulator in coordinating manganese (Mn) homeostasis in Bacillus subtilis. It explored how MntR controls the transcription of genes involved in Mn uptake and efflux systems, focusing on MntH, MntABCD (for Mn import), and MneP, MneS (for Mn efflux). The study further delved into how MntR regulates these systems in response to varying Mn(II) levels and its crucial role in preventing Mn(II) toxicity.
Who was studied?
The study primarily focused on Bacillus subtilis, using both wild-type and mutant strains. The mutants involved included those lacking MntR, MneP, and MneS, allowing the researchers to examine the impact of these transporters on Mn(II) sensitivity and regulation. The study also utilized DNA-binding and transcription assays to investigate how MntR activates and represses the expression of relevant genes.
What were the most important findings?
The study identified MntR as the central regulator that directly activates Mn(II) efflux genes (mneP and mneS) while repressing Mn(II) import genes (mntH and mntA) under conditions of Mn sufficiency. Mutants lacking MntR or the Mn(II) efflux pumps (MneP and MneS) were highly sensitive to Mn(II), accumulating excessive Mn(II) intracellularly. The research showed that MntR directly binds to the regulatory regions of both the uptake and efflux genes, with different affinities depending on the metal's concentration. The study also revealed that the efflux systems are induced at higher Mn(II) concentrations than the uptake systems, highlighting a delicate balance between Mn(II) import and export. Notably, the MntR-regulated Mn(II) efflux systems (MneP and MneS) played a significant role in preventing Mn(II) toxicity, as seen in the pronounced sensitivity of double mutants lacking both pumps.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study enhances the understanding of how bacteria like Bacillus subtilis maintain Mn(II) homeostasis, crucial for both growth and survival under varying metal conditions. It underscores the importance of the MntR-regulated Mn(II) efflux systems in defending against Mn(II) toxicity, which is essential for bacterial pathogenesis and stress resistance. These insights can inform future strategies for targeting metal homeostasis in pathogenic bacteria, offering potential therapeutic approaches for combating metal-related toxicity in infections. Additionally, the study provides a model for understanding how bacteria manage metal ion homeostasis, which could have broader implications in microbiome research and antimicrobial development.
Moving metals: how microbes deliver metal cofactors to metalloproteins
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study explores the role of metallochaperones in bacteria, focusing on how they deliver essential metal ions to metalloproteins and maintain metal homeostasis under metal stress. These mechanisms are vital for bacterial survival, especially during infection.
What was studied?
This study explores the mechanisms through which bacteria deliver essential metal cofactors to metalloproteins, focusing specifically on the role of metallochaperones in metal homeostasis. The study discusses the biological importance of transition metals such as copper, iron, zinc, nickel, and cobalt, which are crucial cofactors for numerous enzymes. These metals are vital for bacterial survival and function but also toxic when in excess. The research highlights how bacteria regulate metal ion distribution within cells, ensuring that the correct metal binds to specific metalloproteins, thereby preventing mismetallation and maintaining cellular integrity. The study covers the functional dynamics of various metallochaperones and their role in metal trafficking, including their ability to prevent the misplacement of metals in enzymes, which could otherwise result in inactivity or toxicity.
Who was studied?
The study does not focus on specific individuals but investigates bacterial systems, particularly examining how bacteria acquire and manage essential metal ions. It focuses on bacterial metallochaperones, which are proteins responsible for transferring metal ions to metalloproteins, ensuring that these ions are correctly incorporated into enzymes required for critical cellular functions.
What were the most important findings?
The key findings of this study include the critical role of metallochaperones in maintaining metal ion homeostasis within bacterial cells. These proteins prevent the mis-metalation of metalloproteins by delivering specific metal ions to enzymes that require them for activity. The study details how bacteria have evolved various strategies to avoid metal toxicity, including the regulation of metal transporters, sequestration of metals by chaperones, and compartmentalization of metals in specific cellular regions. Additionally, the study highlights the emerging discovery of new classes of metallochaperones, such as copper sequestering proteins (Csps), which bind and deliver copper ions to target enzymes, including particulate methane monooxygenase in methanotrophs. The research also discusses the role of these systems under conditions of both metal limitation and intoxication, such as those experienced by bacterial pathogens during infection. The findings underline the importance of these metallochaperones in bacterial virulence, as they help bacteria thrive in hostile environments by managing nutrient metal acquisition while avoiding metal toxicity.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The implications of this study are significant for understanding bacterial metal homeostasis and its impact on bacterial physiology, especially during infection. The research sheds light on the mechanisms by which pathogens manage metal ions in the host environment, which can be crucial for their survival and virulence. The ability of bacteria to effectively manage metal cofactors could be a potential target for therapeutic strategies aimed at disrupting metal homeostasis in pathogenic bacteria, thus limiting their ability to cause disease. Additionally, the discovery of new metallochaperones and their specific roles in metal delivery opens up new avenues for drug development, particularly in the context of antibiotic resistance. Understanding how bacteria adapt to fluctuating metal concentrations could also enhance the development of antimicrobial agents that target metal trafficking systems, offering a novel approach to combating infections.
A Review on Coordination Properties of Thiol-Containing Chelating Agents Towards Mercury, Cadmium, and Lead
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review explains how thiol-based chelators bind mercury, cadmium, and lead and how that chemistry guides clinical treatment. It compares common agents such as DMSA and DMPS, outlines safety tradeoffs, and clarifies why brain and intracellular metal stores remain hard to remove.
What was reviewed?
This paper reviewed how thiol-containing chelating agents bind and help remove three high-priority toxic metals—mercury, cadmium, and lead—from the body. The authors connected clinical practice to coordination chemistry by explaining how sulfhydryl (thiol) groups interact with Hg²⁺, Cd²⁺, and Pb²⁺, and why those binding preferences matter for treatment success. The review compared classic and newer chelators, including BAL (dimercaprol), DMSA (succimer), DMPS (unithiol), d-penicillamine, alpha-lipoic acid and its reduced form (DHLA), and emerging candidates such as MiADMSA, while also discussing pharmacokinetics, toxicity, and practical drug selection.
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesized evidence drawn from human poisoning and overexposure cases (including occupational exposure), supported by animal and in-vitro work that clarifies tissue distribution, excretion pathways, and metal–ligand equilibria. It also integrated laboratory chemistry studies (speciation, stability constants, and structural approaches such as spectroscopy and modeling) to explain why certain chelators perform better for specific metals or exposure forms.
What were the most important findings?
The review aligned drug choice with metal form and target tissue, emphasizing that DMSA is generally preferred for lead poisoning and organic (methyl) mercury exposure due to a better safety profile than older agents, while DMPS is positioned as the preferred option for acute inorganic mercuric salt poisoning. The authors highlighted recurring constraints that shape real-world outcomes: most thiol chelators distribute mainly outside cells and have limited ability to cross the blood–brain barrier, which restricts removal of brain mercury and intracellular cadmium stores. They also underscored clinically relevant tradeoffs, including that DMPS use can coincide with losses of essential trace elements such as zinc and copper, which supports monitoring and replacement during therapy. From a microbiome database standpoint, the key “signal” is absence of direct microbiome data: the review flags gut-related variables (like oral absorption and fecal/biliary excretion) as clinically meaningful, but it does not map those variables to specific microbial shifts.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
Clinicians can use this review as a decision-support bridge between mechanism and bedside chelation choice: match the chelator to the metal species and exposure route, and anticipate limitations in mobilizing intracellular or CNS stores. The chemistry framing helps explain why dithiol agents (like DMSA and DMPS) often outperform single-thiol ligands for these metals, and why combination approaches get proposed when deposits sit in hard-to-reach compartments—yet the authors are clear that clinical experience with combinations remains limited. For microbiome-aware practice, the implication is practical rather than taxonomic: because chelation depends partly on gastrointestinal handling and excretion, gut function may influence exposure and elimination, but this paper cannot populate microbiome signature fields beyond noting that no MMA were reported.
Deferoxamine B: A Natural, Excellent and Versatile Metal Chelator
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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A comprehensive review of Deferoxamine B metal chelator links siderophore chemistry, microbial uptake, and clinical chelation/imaging, highlighting speciation across metals—including Pb(II)—and implications for microbiome-related metal competition.
What was reviewed?
This review synthesizes chemistry, biology, and clinical applications of the Deferoxamine B metal chelator, a natural trihydroxamate siderophore produced by Streptomyces pilosus and other actinomycetes, with emphasis on its solution equilibria across metals, protein recognition, and therapeutic/diagnostic uses relevant to host–microbe competition for metals. It details protonation behavior, very high-affinity Fe(III) complexation, notable binding to other trivalent and divalent ions (including Pb[II]), and how DFOB’s terminal amine enables conjugation for imaging and drug delivery. Mechanistic sections describe why hydroxamate coordination stabilizes hard cations, how formation constants and pM/K_D values compare across the periodic table, and where DFOB intersects host “nutritional immunity” and microbial siderophore trafficking.
Who was reviewed?
Evidence spans physicochemical measurements (potentiometry, spectrophotometry, SAXS, calorimetry), computational modeling (DFT), and structural biology showing feroxamine B recognition by siderophore transport proteins of Escherichia coli and Staphylococcus aureus, alongside preclinical/clinical contexts where DFOB removes iron, modulates redox injury, and serves as a radiometal chelator. The review also summarizes conjugation to antibodies for ^89Zr immunoPET and notes bacterial infection imaging with ^68Ga-DFOB in Pseudomonas aeruginosa and S. aureus, linking microbial uptake systems to diagnostic specificity.
Most important findings
DFOB’s three bidentate hydroxamates wrap hard metal centers to yield exceptionally stable octahedral or higher-coordinate complexes; Fe(III) binding dominates across pH 1–10, with the amine protonated and not metal-bound. Stability trends extend to Al(III), Ga(III), In(III), Co(III), Mn(III), Zr(IV), Th(IV), and Pu(IV); among divalents, Cu(II) is notably strong, while Pb(II) forms measurable but weaker complexes (pM and K_D values position Pb(II) below Fe(III)/Ga(III) but within biologically relevant chelation). These equilibria mean DFOB can substantially lower free ferric iron at acidic to neutral pH, outcompeting many ligands and impacting microbial metal acquisition, yet it can also bind non-iron cations and thereby alter the “metal economy” at host–microbe interfaces. Protein studies show feroxamine B fits cognate periplasmic binding proteins (FhuD family), explaining bacterial uptake and enabling vectorization of reporters or therapeutics via the terminal amine.
Clinically, DFOB remains foundational for iron-overload therapy and demonstrates antioxidant benefit where iron-driven ROS exacerbate toxicity; the review also reports preliminary protection against lead-induced cardiotoxicity in rats, consistent with DFOB’s ability to buffer redox-active metal stress. In diagnostics, ^68Ga-DFOB targets infections and ^89Zr-DFOB–antibody conjugates enable immunoPET, though Zr(IV) coordination chemistry motivates octadentate DFOB analogues to reduce bone accumulation. Collectively, these findings position DFOB as a bridge between microbial siderophore biology and clinical chelation, with quantifiable speciation parameters valuable for microbiome-signature curation where metal availability, siderophore uptake, and host sequestration shape community states.
Key implications
For clinicians integrating microbiome insights, the review indicates that Deferoxamine B can modulate metal availability that underpins microbial fitness, virulence factor expression, and community competition, while simultaneously serving as a therapeutic chelator and a targeting scaffold for infection imaging. Because siderophore transporters of pathogens recognize feroxamine B, DFOB-based probes can noninvasively report siderophore-active infections, and DFOB derivatives may perturb metal-driven dysbiosis where iron, aluminum, or lead exposures intersect with oxidative stress and barrier injury. The reported formation constants, protein affinities, and in vivo imaging/therapy data provide actionable parameters for designing chelation strategies and for annotating microbiome signatures that hinge on Fe(III) sequestration and cross-metal buffering.
Heavy Metals and Human Health: Possible Exposure Pathways and the Competition for Protein Binding Sites
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review discusses the toxicological impact of heavy metals like arsenic, cadmium, and mercury on human health, particularly their interaction with proteins and enzymes, leading to various disorders and potential carcinogenesis. Detoxification strategies and the importance of environmental cleanup are also highlighted.
What was studied?
The review article explores the physiological and biochemical effects of toxic heavy metals, specifically their interactions with proteins and enzymes in the human body. It covers the sources, routes of exposure, and the toxicity of metals such as arsenic, cadmium, mercury, lead, and nickel. The article focuses on how these metals disrupt protein functions and enzyme activities, leading to various health disorders.
Who was studied?
The review does not focus on a particular group of individuals, but instead synthesizes findings from numerous studies on the effects of heavy metal exposure. It includes data from research on populations exposed to these metals through environmental contamination, as well as workers in industries dealing with heavy metals and individuals consuming contaminated food or water.
Most important findings
The review underscores several key findings: toxic heavy metals like arsenic, cadmium, lead, mercury, and nickel can mimic essential metal ions in proteins and enzymes, disrupting normal biological functions. This leads to a range of health issues such as neurological, cardiovascular, renal, and reproductive disorders. Additionally, cadmium and lead's ability to replace calcium, magnesium, and zinc disrupts crucial cellular processes, leading to long-term health problems such as cancer, organ damage, and immune dysfunction. Another significant finding is the competition these metals face for protein-binding sites, which causes disturbances in enzyme activity and protein folding. The review also highlights that detoxification mechanisms, such as metallothioneins and phytochelatins, play a critical role in mitigating these toxic effects.
Key implications
This review emphasizes the substantial threat posed by heavy metals to human health, particularly in light of rising environmental contamination due to industrial activities. Understanding the mechanisms by which these metals interfere with cellular functions is crucial for developing effective treatments and prevention strategies. It also underscores the importance of bioremediation and phytoremediation, which are environmentally sustainable methods for reducing metal bioavailability and mitigating their harmful effects on human populations.
Cadmium Toxicity and Health Effects—A Brief Summary
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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The review examines the sources, accumulation, and health effects of cadmium, emphasizing its long-term toxicity, particularly its role in lung, kidney, bone, and neurological diseases. It underscores the need for continued monitoring and preventive measures for populations at risk.
What was studied?
The study focuses on cadmium (Cd), a toxic metal that can accumulate in the human body and cause various health issues. It examines how Cd exposure occurs, primarily through inhalation and ingestion, and the subsequent toxic effects it has on the body. The review explores the role of cadmium in chronic diseases, including lung diseases, kidney damage, bone demineralization, and neurological disorders, and it highlights how the metal accumulates over time, especially in high-risk populations like smokers and workers in the metal industry.
Who was studied?
The review addresses the human population exposed to cadmium, particularly those at higher risk, such as workers in the metallurgical industry and individuals who smoke. It also focuses on the general population, discussing exposure through environmental sources like contaminated food and air. The paper highlights how cadmium accumulates in various tissues, especially the lungs, kidneys, and bones, and emphasizes the need for continuous monitoring of at-risk individuals.
Most important findings
Cadmium is primarily absorbed through the respiratory and digestive systems, with 13–19% absorbed via inhalation and 10–44% through ingestion. The accumulation of cadmium in human tissues, particularly the kidneys, lungs, and bones, can lead to long-term health problems. Its biological half-life ranges from 16 to 30 years, meaning it can remain in the body for decades. Chronic exposure to cadmium is linked to a wide range of health issues, including lung diseases, kidney damage, osteoporosis, cardiovascular problems, and neurological disorders. Exposure to cadmium also plays a role in cancer development, particularly lung, prostate, and breast cancer, through mechanisms like oxidative stress and DNA damage.
Key implications
The findings underscore the importance of continuous monitoring for individuals exposed to cadmium, especially those in high-risk groups. Chronic exposure, even at low levels, can cause significant health problems, and the study calls for improved preventive measures, such as stricter occupational safety regulations and dietary interventions. It also stresses the importance of reducing cadmium exposure through public health initiatives and environmental policies aimed at controlling pollution from industrial activities.
Iron Supplementation and Microbiome in Preterm Infants: Risks of Dysbiosis and Pathogen Enrichment
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Iron (Fe)
Iron (Fe)
OverviewIron is a pivotal nutrient at the host–pathogen interface. Virtually all microbes (with rare exceptions like Borrelia) require iron for processes from DNA synthesis to respiration. [1] In human hosts, free iron is vanishingly scarce due to “nutritional immunity,” wherein iron is locked up in hemoproteins or tightly bound by transport proteins.[2] This metal tug-of-war […]
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High-dose enteral iron supplementation in VLBW infants was associated with reduced microbial diversity, Proteus enrichment, and increased microbial potential for ferroptosis and epithelial invasion, highlighting risks of intestinal dysbiosis.
What was studied?
This longitudinal observational study investigated how different enteral iron supplementation (EIS) dosages affect the intestinal microbiome of very low birth weight (VLBW) preterm infants. Infants were stratified into groups receiving 3–3.9, 4–4.9, 5–5.9, or ≥6 mg/kg/day of elemental iron. Using 16S rRNA V4 gene sequencing, bacterial taxonomy and predicted functional pathways were analyzed from stool samples collected before and after EIS initiation. The study also employed the Piphillin software to infer functional capacities such as ferroptosis and epithelial invasion from the microbiome. Linear mixed-effects models were used to determine associations between EIS dose and microbial parameters, adjusting for multiple clinical covariates.
Who was studied?
The study cohort comprised 80 VLBW infants (average gestational age: 28.1 ± 2.4 weeks; average birth weight: 1103 ± 210 g) from a single tertiary academic center. A total of 342 stool samples were collected over the first two months of life, including 105 samples before and 237 after EIS initiation. Inclusion criteria restricted the cohort to infants under 1500 g birth weight without major anomalies, and all received iron supplementation as per clinical protocols. Infants varied in sex, mode of delivery, feeding type (maternal breast milk, formula, or mixed), and antibiotic exposure.
Most important findings
Infants receiving higher EIS doses (≥6 mg/kg/day) exhibited a statistically significant increase in the abundance of Proteus spp. and Bifidobacterium, and a reduction in alpha diversity (Shannon index) compared to lower-dose groups. These alterations are indicative of gut dysbiosis. Notably, Proteus enrichment was associated with formula feeding, earlier initiation of EIS, and female sex. Predicted functional potential using KEGG pathway analysis revealed a higher abundance of pathways related to ferroptosis and bacterial epithelial invasion, particularly in the highest dose group two weeks after iron initiation. This finding aligns with mechanistic literature suggesting that iron-rich environments enhance bacterial pathogenicity. These microbial alterations occurred despite adjustments for confounding factors, including gestational age, antibiotic use, anemia, feeding mode, and maternal BMI.
Microbial/Functional Marker
EIS Dose Effect (Group 6 vs. others)
Statistical Significance
Proteus abundance
Significantly increased
p < 0.001
Bifidobacterium
Also increased (vs. group 3)
p = 0.028
Shannon Index (diversity)
Significantly reduced
p < 0.001
Ferroptosis pathways
Increased in high-dose group
Inferred via KEGG pathways
Epithelial invasion genes
Enriched in high-dose group (week 2 post-EIS)
Inferred via KEGG pathways
Key implications
This study provides compelling evidence that high-dose enteral iron supplementation may disrupt microbial homeostasis in VLBW infants, contributing to intestinal dysbiosis marked by reduced diversity and pathogenic enrichment. The enrichment of Proteus—a known opportunistic pathogen—and functional potentials for epithelial invasion underscore potential risks for enteric inflammation or sepsis in this vulnerable population. These findings advocate for caution in the upper dosing range of EIS and suggest the need for individualized dosing regimens. They also emphasize the importance of integrating microbiome considerations into neonatal nutritional protocols, especially where pathogen proliferation and barrier integrity are clinical concerns.
The siderophore yersiniabactin binds copper to protect pathogens during infection
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Yersiniabactin binds copper in vivo, protects UPEC from copper stress, and blocks catecholate-driven Cu(II)→Cu(I) toxicity, yielding a clear urinary microbiome signature with direct clinical use.
What was studied?
This original study shows that yersiniabactin binds copper in vivo and protects uropathogenic Escherichia coli during urinary infection. The authors used targeted mass spectrometry to detect the Cu(II)–yersiniabactin complex directly in mouse and human urine, then tested whether this chemistry changes copper stress and survival. They compared the growth and viability of strains that make yersiniabactin with mutants that lack it, probed competition with catecholate siderophores, and measured how apo-yersiniabactin prevents toxic copper redox cycling. By pairing metabolite detection with functional assays, the study links a clear biochemical event to a survival advantage under host copper pressure in the urinary tract, and it reframes a classic “iron siderophore” as a broader metallophore with clinical impact.
Who was studied?
The work focused on uropathogenic E. coli (UPEC), centered on strain UTI89 and isogenic mutants that lack yersiniabactin biosynthesis (ΔybtS) or catecholate production (ΔentB). The team analyzed urine and bladder tissue from infected C3H/HeN mice, and they examined midstream urine from women with acute cystitis, confirming whether the infecting isolate expressed yersiniabactin. In both hosts, liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry detected the Cu(II)–yersiniabactin complex, often in excess of the Fe(III)–yersiniabactin form, which shows that copper binding occurs during infection and not only in vitro. They then linked this signal to phenotype by showing that clinical urinary isolates resist copper more than non-urinary strains from the same patients and that apo-yersiniabactin rescues a biosynthetic mutant from copper toxicity, thereby tying human findings to mechanistic tests.
Most important findings
Yersiniabactin formed a stable complex with Cu(II) in physiologic fluids and did so in vivo during UTI, with most mouse and human samples showing more Cu(II)–yersiniabactin than Fe(III)–yersiniabactin. Yersiniabactin expression correlated with higher copper resistance among urinary isolates, and loss of yersiniabactin sensitized UTI89 to copper; adding apo-yersiniabactin restored survival, but adding pre-formed Cu(II)–yersiniabactin did not, which proves that open copper-binding capacity drives protection. The study also resolved opposing roles for siderophore classes: catecholate siderophores, including enterobactin or its 2,3-dihydroxybenzoate moiety, reduced Cu(II) to more toxic Cu(I) and deepened killing, while yersiniabactin prevented that reduction by sequestering Cu(II) first. Together these data define a clean microbiome signature for UPEC: presence of the yersiniabactin locus predicts copper tolerance in the urinary niche, whereas abundant catecholate output without yersiniabactin predicts copper-sensitized growth.
Key implications
Clinicians can read yersiniabactin as a copper-protection trait that helps UPEC persist during inflammation, when local copper rises. In a microbiome signatures database, tag “yersiniabactin binds copper” with features that include in vivo Cu(II)–yersiniabactin detection, improved survival under micromolar copper, and the protective block of catecholate-driven Cu(II)→Cu(I) reduction. Pair this with genomic markers such as the yersiniabactin receptor gene fyuA and biosynthetic genes to flag strains suited for the urinary tract. These markers explain why yersiniabactin-positive Enterobacterales expand in copper-stressed urine and why copper-based device or topical strategies may select for such strains. Therapeutically, blocking yersiniabactin biosynthesis or uptake could unmask catecholate-dependent copper toxicity and tip control toward the host, while care with exogenous copper exposure can avoid favoring copper-tolerant pathobionts in recurrent UTI.
Dysregulation of transition metal ion homeostasis is the molecular basis for cadmium toxicity in Streptococcus pneumoniae
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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The study uncovers how cadmium disrupts transition metal homeostasis in Streptococcus pneumoniae, affecting manganese and zinc uptake and contributing to oxidative stress.
What was studied?
This study investigated how cadmium (Cd²⁺) affects the homeostasis of transition metal ions in Streptococcus pneumoniae. It focused on how Cd²⁺ competes with manganese (Mn²⁺) and zinc (Zn²⁺) for uptake and accumulation in the bacterium, leading to a disturbance in its metal ion balance and an increase in oxidative stress. Using a combination of assays, structural analyses, and growth experiments, the study revealed the mechanisms by which Cd²⁺ disrupts the bacterial metal uptake and efflux systems, particularly targeting the Psa permease responsible for manganese acquisition.
Who was studied?
The study focused on Streptococcus pneumoniae (S. pneumoniae), a Gram-positive bacterium. This organism was selected due to its reliance on a single manganese-specific uptake system, the PsaBCA permease. Researchers explored how the exposure to cadmium, a non-physiological metal ion, interferes with the bacterium’s homeostasis of essential metals like manganese and zinc. The study involved various mutant strains of S. pneumoniae to examine how different metal ion transporters and homeostatic systems contribute to the bacterium's response to cadmium exposure.
Most important findings
The study uncovered how cadmium disrupts manganese and zinc homeostasis in Streptococcus pneumoniae. Cadmium competes with manganese for the Psa permease, significantly reducing manganese accumulation and enhancing the upregulation of the manganese efflux pathway (MntE). This disruption causes oxidative stress due to decreased manganese availability for the enzyme superoxide dismutase (SodA). Additionally, cadmium affects zinc homeostasis by triggering the upregulation of the zinc-efflux transporter CzcD, leading to a depletion of intracellular zinc. This dysregulation of both manganese and zinc disrupts the function of zinc-responsive transcriptional regulators such as AdcR and SczA, ultimately impairing the bacterium’s ability to manage oxidative stress.
Key implications
This study highlights the complex mechanisms by which cadmium disrupts metal ion homeostasis in bacteria. The findings provide insight into how environmental pollutants like cadmium can impair bacterial function by disturbing essential processes like metal ion uptake and oxidative stress management. These insights are crucial for developing new therapeutic strategies to mitigate the harmful effects of cadmium exposure, particularly in microorganisms.
Interplay between enterobactin myeloperoxidase and lipocalin 2 in the inflamed gut
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Escherichia coli (E. coli)
Escherichia coli (E. coli)
Escherichia coli (E. coli) is a versatile bacterium, from gut commensal to pathogen, linked to chronic conditions like endometriosis.
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Aferric enterobactin disables myeloperoxidase, granting E. coli a survival edge in colitis, while lipocalin 2 restores enzyme function and counters colonization.
What was studied?
This study investigated the interplay between enterobactin myeloperoxidase and lipocalin 2 as a determinant of Escherichia coli (E. coli) survival within the inflamed gut. The authors tested whether the catecholate siderophore enterobactin, particularly in its iron-free form, directly inactivates the neutrophil peroxidase system that generates hypohalous acids, and whether host lipocalin 2 reverses this effect. Spectral kinetics using lactoperoxidase as a model readout showed that enterobactin and its monomer 2,3-dihydroxybenzoic acid rapidly drive compound I back to the ferric resting state, thereby aborting oxidant formation. Figures and spectra on page 3 document the immediate reversion of the Soret peak to 412 nm, consistent with suicide substrate behavior.
Who was studied?
The work combined in vitro enzyme assays, bacterial killing assays, and murine models of colitis. Nonpathogenic E. coli K-12 and isogenic siderophore mutants were used, including DfepA (overproduces enterobactin), DaroB and DentC (enterobactin deficient), and DaroB/DfepA. Recombinant human or murine lipocalin 2 was applied to test host countermeasures. In vivo, streptomycin-pretreated Salmonella-induced gastroenteritis and dextran sulfate sodium colitis models quantified cecal and colonic myeloperoxidase activity and E. coli colonization. A schematic on page 8 summarizes the experimental mechanism linking hypoferremia, enterobactin release, myeloperoxidase inactivation, and lipocalin 2 rescue.
Most important findings
Enterobactin, only in its aferric form, potently inhibited myeloperoxidase and lactoperoxidase in a dose- and time-dependent manner, outperforming the reference inhibitor 4-aminobenzoic acid hydrazide. DHBA showed similar but weaker effects. Iron-loaded enterobactin and DHBA failed to inhibit, establishing iron-free specificity. Glycosylated or non-catecholate siderophores, including salmochelin, yersiniabactin, and ferrichrome, did not inhibit at much higher concentrations, implying a catecholate-dependent mechanism. In vivo, DfepA reduced mucosal myeloperoxidase activity and achieved higher fecal and tissue burdens than enterobactin-null mutants in both colitis models, indicating a survival and colonization advantage under inflammation. Preincubation of enterobactin or DHBA with human or mouse lipocalin 2 abolished enzyme inhibition, restoring peroxidase activity. The spectral plots on page 3 and bactericidal assays on pages 5–6 show rapid conversion of compound I to Fe(III) and protection from myeloperoxidase–H2O2 killing, while figure panels on page 7 demonstrate lipocalin 2 reversal. Collectively, these data position enterobactin as a dual-use molecule for iron acquisition and immune evasion, with lipocalin 2 as the host countermeasure.
Finding
Evidence
Aferric enterobactin inhibits MPO
Dose–response and kinetics; spectral reversion to 412 nm within seconds (page 3).
Iron-bound enterobactin inactive
Fe:Ent 3:1 shows no inhibition; 1:1 greatly reduced (page 3).
DHBA inhibits but less potently
Parallel inhibition and spectra similar to enterobactin (pages 3–4).
Salmochelin, yersiniabactin fail
Minimal MPO/LPO inhibition at high doses (page 4).
DfepA gains survival advantage
Lower mucosal MPO and higher colonization in colitis models (pages 5–6).
Lipocalin 2 rescues MPO
Prebinding with human or mouse Lcn2 negates inhibition (page 7).
Key implications
Enterobacteriaceae, particularly E. coli, exploit siderophore chemistry to neutralize neutrophil peroxidase-mediated killing during inflammation. Enterobactin emerges as a mechanistic driver of E. coli blooms in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) by disabling a key oxidative effector, while lipocalin 2 functions as a host rebuttal that can restore peroxidase activity. The failure of salmochelin to inhibit myeloperoxidase, despite its ability to evade lipocalin 2, suggests an evolutionary trade-off that may tune siderophore portfolios across pathotypes and disease niches. Clinically, lipocalin 2 levels, siderophore profiles, and myeloperoxidase activity could serve as coupled biomarkers that stratify inflammatory risk and E. coli overgrowth. Therapeutically, strategies that stabilize peroxidase function, enhance lipocalin 2 binding to catecholate siderophores, or limit aferric enterobactin bioavailability may interrupt the survival advantage documented in this work. The mechanism diagram on page 8 provides a concise translational blueprint for these interventions.
Antimicrobial Properties of Magnesium Open Opportunities to Develop Healthier Food
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This mini-review explains how higher-dose magnesium can reduce bacterial adhesion and weaken biofilm formation. It highlights why biofilms resist cleaning and heat, and it summarizes evidence that magnesium in milk can reduce Bacillus biofilms and lower survival after pasteurization.
What was reviewed?
This mini-review summarized evidence that magnesium, when present at higher concentrations than normal growth conditions, can reduce bacterial adhesion and weaken biofilm formation. It connected these effects to real-world control points in food systems, especially dairy processing, where biofilms drive persistent contamination and repeated product loss. It also discussed plausible mechanisms, including changes at the cell surface and shifts in biofilm-regulatory signaling that can make microbes less able to attach and persist.
Who was reviewed?
Because this was a review, it did not enroll patients; it synthesized findings from published laboratory and food-matrix studies across multiple bacteria and model systems. The reviewed organisms included common biofilm formers relevant to food safety and human exposure, such as Bacillus species and other gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria used in adhesion and biofilm experiments. It also reviewed work on magnesium-based interventions, including magnesium salts used in food matrices and magnesium-related materials tested for anti-adhesion effects.
What were the most important findings?
The central finding was that magnesium’s impact is dose- and context-dependent: at higher, millimolar-range concentrations, magnesium often reduces adhesion and lowers biofilm biomass, while lower levels may not produce these anti-biofilm effects. Across the summarized studies, magnesium exposure commonly weakened biofilm formation and, in some models, reduced expression of matrix-related pathways that stabilize the biofilm structure. In milk-based experiments, magnesium supplementation impaired Bacillus biofilm formation and also improved heat-treatment outcomes by decreasing post-pasteurization survival, consistent with magnesium pushing bacteria away from protective, persistent biofilm states. For a microbiome signatures database, the paper does not report community-wide major microbial associations, but it supports a consistent functional signal: higher magnesium availability can reduce persistence traits like adhesion and biofilm formation that enable long-term colonization of surfaces and repeated reseeding of environments.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review suggests magnesium can function as a practical anti-adhesion and anti-biofilm tool that complements hygiene and thermal processing rather than replacing them. In dairy settings, magnesium enrichment may lower biofilm resilience and reduce survival through pasteurization, which can cut recurring contamination risk. More broadly, it supports the idea that shifting ionic conditions can change microbial behavior in ways that reduce persistence.
Beneficial Effects of a Low-Nickel Diet on Relapsing IBS-Like and Extraintestinal Symptoms of Celiac Patients during a Proper Gluten-Free Diet: Nickel Allergic Contact Mucositis in Suspected Non-Responsive Celiac Disease
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) is a common gastrointestinal disorder characterized by symptoms such as abdominal pain, bloating, and altered bowel habits. Recent research has focused on the gut microbiota's role in IBS, aiming to identify specific microbial signatures associated with the condition.
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A study of celiac patients revealed that persistent symptoms during gluten-free eating may stem from nickel allergic contact mucositis. A low-nickel diet significantly improved gastrointestinal and systemic symptoms.
What was studied?
This study examined how a low-nickel diet influences persistent gastrointestinal and extraintestinal symptoms in celiac patients who remain symptomatic despite full serologic and histologic remission on a gluten-free diet. Because a gluten-free diet often increases dietary nickel exposure—especially from foods like corn—the investigators explored whether nickel allergic contact mucositis (ACM) contributes to symptom relapse in patients who would otherwise be considered to have non-responsive celiac disease. Nickel sensitivity was evaluated using an oral mucosa patch test, and symptom changes were assessed through a modified Gastrointestinal Symptom Rating Scale.
Who was studied?
A total of 102 adults with celiac disease adhering to a strict gluten-free diet for at least 12 months were screened. After excluding individuals with lactose intolerance, Helicobacter pylori infection, inflammatory bowel disease, cancer, or insufficient symptom severity, 20 women aged 23–65 completed the study. All participants were in confirmed serologic and histologic remission yet reported relapsing gastrointestinal or systemic symptoms. Each underwent nickel oral mucosa patch testing and subsequently followed a low-nickel diet for three months in addition to their gluten-free diet.
Most important findings
The study revealed consistent nickel sensitivity among the final cohort: all 20 participants exhibited positive findings on the oral mucosa patch test, indicating nickel ACM. Symptomatic patterns showed three distinct phases. Symptoms initially improved with gluten withdrawal but then recurred during prolonged gluten-free eating, suggesting increasing dietary nickel load from nickel-rich gluten-free staples. After initiation of the low-nickel regimen, patients experienced marked improvement across both gastrointestinal and systemic symptoms. The trend was evident in symptom trajectory graphs, where nickel-related symptoms such as bloating, loose stools, dermatitis, headache, and fatigue demonstrated a clear rise during prolonged gluten-free eating and an equally clear drop after nickel restriction. Table 1 summarizes symptom directionality, showing more than 80% of symptoms improving after the diet change.
Finding
Observation
Prevalence of nickel ACM
100% of final cohort positive on oral mucosa patch test
Symptom relapse during prolonged GFD
83.3% of symptoms worsened
Symptom improvement on a low-nickel diet
83.4% of symptoms improved
Significant improvements
10 of 24 symptoms reached statistical significance
Key implications
This study highlights nickel ACM as an underrecognized contributor to persistent symptoms in celiac patients on long-term gluten-free diets. Since many gluten-free foods are naturally high in nickel, dietary nickel exposure becomes a potential trigger for IBS-like and systemic manifestations. The findings support incorporating nickel sensitivity evaluation into the workup for non-responsive celiac disease once gluten exposure and villous damage are excluded. Clinically, a structured low-nickel diet may reduce symptoms substantially and prevent misclassification of nickel sensitivity as refractory celiac disease or unexplained IBS-like relapse. The work also underscores broader dietary-microbial interactions: nickel-sensitive mucosal inflammation likely alters microbial ecology, contributing to symptom generation and emphasizing the relevance of nickel-associated microbial signatures in clinical microbiome frameworks.
Effect of Dietary Magnesium Content on Intestinal Microbiota of Rats
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study explores how dietary magnesium levels affect the gut microbiota of rats. It shows that low magnesium increases beneficial microbes, while high magnesium promotes potentially harmful bacteria. These changes may influence metabolism and gut health.
What was studied?
This study assessed the effects of different dietary magnesium levels on the intestinal microbiota of rats. The researchers tested three distinct diets: a control diet with normal magnesium levels, a low magnesium diet, and a high magnesium diet. They then analyzed the microbiota composition through 16S rRNA sequencing to determine how different magnesium concentrations influenced the gut microbiome.
Who was studied?
The study involved male Wistar rats, which were fed different magnesium-supplemented diets for two weeks. The rats were divided into three groups: control (C-Mg), low magnesium (L-Mg), and high magnesium (H-Mg). Fecal samples were collected after the treatment period for microbiota analysis, and biochemical parameters were measured to assess health impacts.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed that dietary magnesium significantly influences the intestinal microbiota composition. The rats on the high magnesium diet (H-Mg) showed reduced microbiota diversity compared to the control and low magnesium groups. In contrast, the low magnesium diet (L-Mg) increased the abundance of certain genera such as Lactobacillus, Dorea, Turicibacter, and SMB53. These taxa are often linked with metabolic processes and gut health, and their overrepresentation could suggest that low magnesium intake might enhance gut microbiome functionality. The high magnesium diet, however, resulted in an overrepresentation of Desulfovibrio, Parabacteroides, Helicobacter, and Sutterella, taxa known to be associated with inflammatory processes and potentially pathogenic gut environments. Functional analysis using PICRUSt showed that the L-Mg microbiome was enriched for metabolic pathways related to carbohydrate metabolism and butanoate metabolism, which indicates a higher capacity to harvest energy from the diet. These findings highlight how magnesium levels, even in the absence of magnesium deficiency, can alter gut microbial composition and metabolism.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The greatest implications of this study lie in understanding how micronutrient levels, specifically magnesium, can modulate gut microbiota and metabolic processes. For clinicians, this finding is important because it suggests that dietary magnesium, even when not deficient, can significantly shape the microbiome in ways that may affect gut health, metabolic processes, and disease susceptibility. The changes observed in microbiota composition with different magnesium levels could have implications for managing conditions related to gut dysbiosis, such as obesity, insulin resistance, and inflammatory bowel disease. This study also calls attention to the potential effects of magnesium supplementation on microbiome health, supporting the idea that careful manipulation of dietary magnesium could offer therapeutic avenues for gut-related health issues.
Magnesium: Biochemistry, Nutrition, Detection, and Social Impact of Diseases Linked to Its Deficiency
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review explains how magnesium supports energy, vascular tone, glucose handling, bone strength, and brain excitability, and why low intake or poor absorption can raise chronic disease risk. It also clarifies why serum magnesium can miss deficiency and why gut factors matter for magnesium availability.
What was reviewed?
This paper reviewed magnesium from four clinician-relevant angles: core biochemistry and cellular roles, diet sources and real-world reasons intake runs low in Western patterns, practical challenges in measuring magnesium status, and the disease burden tied to deficiency. It emphasized that magnesium supports hundreds of enzymes, ATP-dependent metabolism, DNA/RNA stability, neuromuscular signaling, and vascular function. It also highlighted that serum magnesium can stay “normal” even when intracellular and bone stores are depleted, which can mask chronic insufficiency in routine care.
Who was reviewed?
Because this was a review, it did not enroll a single cohort; it synthesized prior human and preclinical research across broad populations and high-risk clinical groups. The reviewed evidence included adults with cardiometabolic risk, people with type 2 diabetes or insulin resistance, postmenopausal and older adults at fracture risk, and patients affected by neurological conditions where excitability pathways matter. It also incorporated data on groups prone to low magnesium because of losses or malabsorption, including older adults, people with gastrointestinal diseases such as Crohn’s disease, inflammatory bowel disease, and celiac disease, and individuals exposed to medications that can lower magnesium.
What were the most important findings?
The review argued that chronic, subclinical magnesium deficiency is common and clinically meaningful because it shifts multiple pathways toward inflammation and dysfunction. Mechanistically, magnesium acts as a physiological calcium antagonist, modulates L-type calcium channels in the heart and vessels, supports endothelial nitric oxide biology, and stabilizes neuronal excitability through NMDA receptor gating, so low magnesium plausibly links to hypertension, arrhythmias, cramps, migraines, and neuropsychiatric symptoms.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
Clinicians should treat magnesium as a systems-level modifier rather than a minor electrolyte, especially when symptoms cluster across cardiometabolic, neuromuscular, and inflammatory domains. The review supports a practice shift toward risk-based assessment because serum magnesium alone may miss depleted tissue stores, and it strengthens the rationale for addressing diet quality and absorption barriers alongside supplementation when appropriate. For microbiome-aware care, the key implication is directional: gut health and fermentable fiber patterns can move magnesium bioavailability, and low magnesium can amplify low-grade inflammation that may worsen gut-related symptom loops, making magnesium a practical lever in integrative management.
Dietary Magnesium Alleviates Experimental Murine Colitis through Modulation of Gut Microbiota
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study explores how dietary magnesium supplementation can alleviate murine colitis by modulating the gut microbiota, improving microbiota richness, and reducing inflammation.
What was studied?
This study explored the effects of dietary magnesium (Mg) supplementation on experimental murine colitis, focusing on how magnesium influences the gut microbiota. Researchers assessed the impact of different magnesium diets (low, normal, and high magnesium) on colitis severity and its correlation with changes in gut microbial composition. The study aimed to determine whether magnesium supplementation could alleviate colitis symptoms and restore a beneficial gut microbiota.
Who was studied?
The study involved C57BL/6 mice, which were divided into three groups based on their dietary magnesium content: low magnesium (Hypo-Mg), normal magnesium (CTRL), and high magnesium (Hyper-Mg). The colitis was induced using dextran sodium sulfate (DSS), and the mice were monitored for disease activity. Their gut microbiota was analyzed using 16S rRNA gene sequencing, and disease severity was evaluated through weight loss, fecal consistency, and disease activity index (DAI).
What were the most important findings?
The study found that magnesium supplementation, especially high magnesium levels, significantly influenced both the severity of colitis and the gut microbiota composition in mice. In DSS-treated mice, the high magnesium (Hyper-Mg) diet led to a reduced disease activity index (DAI), suggesting that magnesium supplementation alleviated colitis symptoms. Additionally, magnesium supplementation increased microbiota diversity and richness, with significant changes in specific bacterial populations. High magnesium promoted the growth of beneficial bacteria, particularly Bifidobacterium, and reduced the abundance of Enterobacteriaceae, a pro-inflammatory group. At the phylum level, magnesium supplementation shifted the microbiota from an abundance of Bacteroidetes in magnesium-deficient diets to a more balanced phyla profile in magnesium-supplemented groups. Moreover, the functional analysis indicated that magnesium supplementation enriched pathways related to energy metabolism, DNA repair, and biosynthesis, while magnesium deficiency favored catabolic pathways, suggesting that magnesium supports beneficial microbial functions related to intestinal health.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings suggest that dietary magnesium may be an effective strategy to manage inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) by modulating the gut microbiota and promoting the growth of beneficial bacteria such as Bifidobacterium. The study highlights that magnesium not only plays a role in immune function but also directly influences the gut microbiome, which is crucial in maintaining gut health and preventing disease. Magnesium supplementation could be a promising adjunct therapy for IBD patients, particularly those with magnesium deficiencies. This study also opens avenues for exploring magnesium as a potential dietary intervention to restore a healthy microbiota, improve metabolic homeostasis, and reduce inflammation in IBD and other gastrointestinal disorders.
Magnesium Orotate and the Microbiome–Gut–Brain Axis Modulation: New Approaches in Psychological Comorbidities of Gastrointestinal Functional Disorders
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review links magnesium, especially magnesium orotate, to gut–brain axis modulation in functional GI disorders with anxiety or depression. It summarizes evidence that magnesium status can shift microbiome diversity, inflammation, and neuroactive pathways, and it highlights early pilot work combining magnesium orotate with SSRIs and probiotics.
What was reviewed?
This narrative review examined how magnesium, and especially magnesium orotate, may modulate the microbiome–gut–brain axis in functional gastrointestinal disorders that commonly overlap with anxiety and depression. The authors pulled together recent animal and human evidence on magnesium’s effects on gut physiology, inflammation, neurotransmission, and microbial metabolism, then focused on whether magnesium orotate could act as an adjuvant alongside probiotics and standard therapies. The review also compared the plausibility of these approaches in adults versus children, with an emphasis on dysbiosis-driven symptom loops.
Who was reviewed?
The review covered evidence from both animal models and human studies, prioritizing recent literature and open-access full-text reports. The “who” therefore included experimental rodents exposed to magnesium deficiency or magnesium supplementation and then assessed for microbiome shifts and behavior-like outcomes, plus human cohorts with gut–brain axis conditions. These human populations included adults with major depression who showed suboptimal response to SSRIs and then received adjunct magnesium orotate, and patients with functional gastrointestinal disorders where psychological comorbidities commonly accompany GI symptoms. The pediatric perspective drew on children and adolescents with functional GI symptoms and neurodevelopmental conditions linked to dysbiosis.
What were the most important findings?
Across the reviewed evidence, magnesium intake repeatedly acted as a microbiome-sensitive signal that can change short-chain fatty acid output, immune tone, and stress-related behaviors. The review highlighted that magnesium shifts can alter microbial diversity and specific taxa in time- and dose-dependent ways, with animal data showing links between magnesium deficiency, increased inflammatory cytokine signaling, reduced overall diversity over time, and anxiety- or depression-like behavior. For microbiome signatures, the review emphasized psychobiotic candidates such as Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium as gut–brain relevant genera and noted that magnesium status may influence these groups and related metabolite pathways. Importantly, small pilot human studies suggested that adding magnesium orotate to SSRI regimens, and especially combining magnesium orotate with probiotics, coincided with improved depression and anxiety scores, with relapse reported when patients returned to SSRI-only therapy.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
For clinicians, the review supports treating magnesium status as a practical, modifiable lever within gut–brain axis care, while also warning that responses may vary by baseline magnesium state, gut inflammation, and microbiome context. The biggest clinical implication is that magnesium orotate may offer a dual-action strategy: it can improve magnesium bioavailability and potentially support microbial and neurochemical pathways tied to symptom severity in functional GI disorders with psychological comorbidity. For a microbiome signatures database, the review frames magnesium as a factor that can reshape “psychobiotic” patterns and inflammatory signaling, making magnesium intake a key metadata variable when interpreting associations between taxa, mood symptoms, and functional GI outcomes.
Dietary Strategies for the Treatment of Cadmium and Lead Toxicity
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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The study discusses dietary strategies to counteract the toxicity of cadmium and lead exposure, emphasizing the role of essential metals, vitamins, probiotics, and edible plants. These strategies offer a safer, more accessible alternative to traditional chelation therapy.
What was studied?
The study reviews dietary strategies aimed at mitigating the toxic effects of cadmium (Cd) and lead (Pb) exposure. These heavy metals are known to cause a range of health issues, including oxidative stress, organ damage, and disturbances in metal homeostasis. While traditional chelation therapy has been used to treat heavy metal toxicity, it comes with significant side effects and safety concerns. The paper examines how essential metals, vitamins, edible plants, phytochemicals, and probiotics can serve as more natural, affordable, and side-effect-free alternatives.
Who was studied?
The review primarily focuses on human populations exposed to Cd and Pb through environmental factors such as contaminated air, water, food, and industrial materials. It also touches on animal studies to explore the protective effects of various dietary supplements against these toxins. Groups at high risk, such as children, pregnant women, and workers in polluted environments, are particularly emphasized due to their heightened vulnerability to heavy metal toxicity.
Most important findings
The review highlights several dietary supplements that can protect against Cd and Pb toxicity. Essential metals like zinc, calcium, and iron can reduce the absorption of these toxic metals in the intestine and mitigate their toxic effects by promoting detoxification pathways, such as metallothionein synthesis. Vitamins, especially Vitamin C and E, exhibit strong antioxidant properties that help reduce oxidative stress induced by Cd and Pb. Edible plants such as garlic, ginger, and onions, rich in antioxidants and sulfur compounds, provide protective effects by chelating the metals and preventing their absorption. Phytochemicals like curcumin, anthocyanins, and catechins have been shown to protect against oxidative stress and organ damage caused by Cd and Pb exposure. Probiotics, particularly Lactobacilli, have been found to reduce the toxicity of these metals by promoting intestinal health and enhancing the excretion of heavy metals.
Key implications
This review suggests that dietary interventions, including the intake of essential metals, vitamins, edible plants, and probiotics, can provide a safer, more accessible alternative to chelation therapy for mitigating the harmful effects of Cd and Pb exposure. These supplements can easily be incorporated into the daily diet, making them suitable for large populations at risk. However, the review calls for further human trials to determine the optimal dosages of these dietary strategies and confirm their effectiveness in real-world settings.
An arsenic metallochaperone for an arsenic detoxification pump
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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The study explores how ArsD, a metallochaperone, enhances ArsA’s ability to expel arsenic from cells, improving arsenic detoxification. This interaction increases arsenic resistance in E. coli, with potential applications in bioremediation and combating arsenic poisoning.
What was studied?
This study examines ArsD, a metallochaperone involved in arsenic detoxification in Escherichia coli. ArsD interacts with ArsA, the catalytic subunit of the ArsAB efflux pump, facilitating the transfer of arsenic(III) (As(III)) to ArsA. This interaction enhances the pump’s ability to extrude arsenic from the cell, preventing arsenic toxicity. The researchers focused on the biochemical and structural mechanisms by which ArsD increases the affinity of ArsA for arsenic, thus improving arsenic resistance at lower concentrations of the metalloid. X-ray crystallography and fluorescence spectroscopy were used to investigate the structure of ArsD and its interaction with ArsA.
Who was studied?
The study focused on the ArsD protein from Escherichia coli, a well-studied bacterium with an ars operon that includes ArsA, the ATPase that pumps arsenic out of cells. The research involved manipulating strains of E. coli to express arsAB and arsDAB, allowing the team to observe the effects of ArsD on arsenic resistance. In addition, yeast two-hybrid assays were conducted to analyze the interaction between ArsD and ArsA, and biochemical assays were used to study arsenic transfer and the activity of the ArsAB pump. These experiments aimed to understand how ArsD enhances the function of ArsA, increasing arsenic extrusion and providing cells with a competitive advantage in arsenic-rich environments.
Most important findings
The study revealed that ArsD plays a critical role in enhancing the efficiency of ArsA in arsenic detoxification. It was found that ArsD increases the affinity of ArsA for arsenic by 60-fold, enabling more effective arsenic extrusion at lower concentrations. This finding is significant because it means that ArsD allows the ArsAB pump to operate efficiently in subtoxic arsenic conditions, which are commonly found in environments like soil and water. The study also demonstrated that ArsD physically interacts with ArsA and transfers arsenic directly to ArsA, a process that is accelerated by the presence of ATP. The interaction between ArsD and ArsA is facilitated by cysteine residues in both proteins, which form a complex that enhances the rate of arsenic transfer and extrusion.
Key implications
The findings of this study provide valuable insights into how microbial arsenic resistance mechanisms operate at the molecular level, which could have significant implications for both bioremediation and human health. By understanding the role of ArsD in enhancing ArsA's arsenic extrusion, we can better understand how bacteria cope with environmental arsenic, and this knowledge can inform the development of bioremediation strategies to clean up arsenic-contaminated water sources. Additionally, the research suggests that targeting the ArsD-ArsA interaction could lead to new therapeutic approaches for treating arsenic poisoning in humans. This study also sheds light on the broader implications of metallochaperones in managing toxic metal exposure, opening up possibilities for improving environmental health protocols.
Copper resistance is essential for virulence of Mycobacterium tuberculosis
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Copper resistance is essential for virulence of Mycobacterium tuberculosis; MctB prevents copper build-up, and loss of MctB cripples survival in copper-rich granulomas, defining actionable microbial and host signatures.
What was studied?
This original study tested the claim that copper resistance is essential for the virulence of Mycobacterium tuberculosis by defining how the outer membrane channel MctB (Rv1698) prevents toxic copper build-up and supports survival in vivo. The authors combined genetics, metal quantification, and animal infection models to link copper handling to disease. They deleted mctB, restored it by complementation, and measured copper inside cells, growth under copper stress, and bacterial fitness during infection. They also showed that host tissues increase copper in granulomas, suggesting that the immune system uses copper to restrict the pathogen. The work frames copper as both a nutrient and a weapon and positions MctB as a key defense that maintains low intracellular copper and protects the bacillus from phagosomal copper spikes.
Who was studied?
Researchers worked with Mycobacterium tuberculosis H37Rv and an isogenic ∆mctB mutant, plus a complemented strain. They used M. smegmatis to confirm conserved function of the homolog Ms3747. For in vivo tests, they infected BALB/c mice and guinea pigs with low-dose aerosols and, in mice, raised dietary copper to mimic higher host copper exposure. They microdissected guinea pig lung granulomas to measure tissue copper and tracked organism burden in lungs, lymph nodes, and spleen. Across these settings they quantified intracellular copper, copper-responsive gene signals, and survival to connect MctB function with virulence during host copper stress.
Most important findings
Loss of MctB caused striking copper sensitivity and accumulation. The ∆mctB mutant accumulated about two orders of magnitude more intracellular copper and showed severe growth inhibition at copper levels tolerated by wild type; a copper(I) chelator rescued growth, marking Cu(I) as the toxic species. In mice, copper supplementation sharpened the mutant’s survival defect, consistent with copper-driven killing. In guinea pigs, copper concentrations rose within primary lung granulomas, and ∆mctB displayed a profound virulence defect with roughly 1,000-fold fewer bacteria in lungs and 100-fold fewer in lymph nodes than wild type at day 30, despite preserved granuloma histology. These results reveal a clean microbial signature in which MctB-mediated efflux limits intracellular copper, while host tissues raise copper at infection sites to suppress bacilli. They also show that M. tuberculosis is unusually copper-sensitive compared with many bacteria, with inhibitory copper levels matching those found in phagosomes.
Key implications
Clinicians can treat copper handling as a virulence trait in tuberculosis. Genomic detection of mctB in a microbiome signatures database should flag strains with stronger capacity to endure host copper stress, while absence or dysfunction of this locus predicts impaired survival when granulomas elevate copper. Because copper levels in phagosomes approach those that inhibit M. tuberculosis, drugs that block MctB could sensitize bacilli to physiologic copper and work as immune-boosting adjuncts rather than direct bactericides. In settings where diet or inflammation raises tissue copper, failure of copper efflux may reduce pathogen fitness, but host injury from excess copper remains a concern; any copper-targeted strategy should balance pathogen control against host toxicity. Embedding mctB with other copper loci (e.g., ctpV, mymT) and host copper routing markers in reports can help link tissue site, inflammation state, and predicted bacterial persistence, supporting risk stratification and targeted therapy.
Cadmium hijacks the high zinc response by binding and activating the HIZR-1 nuclear receptor
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study shows that cadmium acts as a zinc mimetic by binding to and activating the HIZR-1 nuclear receptor, leading to the activation of high zinc homeostasis genes in C. elegans. The research highlights the overlap between cadmium and zinc responses, shedding light on cadmium's transcriptional control mechanisms.
What was studied?
This study investigated how cadmium exposure affects the high zinc response in organisms by binding to and activating the HIZR-1 nuclear receptor, a key transcription factor involved in zinc homeostasis. The researchers focused on how cadmium, a toxic heavy metal, hijacks the high zinc response by functioning as a zinc mimetic. They explored cadmium's ability to bind to the HIZR-1 ligand-binding domain and cause nuclear accumulation, leading to transcriptional activation through the high zinc activation (HZA) enhancer.
Who was studied?
The study utilized Caenorhabditis elegans (C. elegans), a model organism commonly used for understanding metal toxicity and cellular responses. Transgenic C. elegans animals expressing fusion proteins (HIZR-1::GFP) were exposed to various metal ions, including cadmium and zinc, to study the nuclear accumulation and transcriptional activation processes. Mutant strains with specific gene knockouts were also used to assess the role of HIZR-1 in cadmium response.
Most important findings
The study demonstrated that cadmium directly binds to the ligand-binding domain of HIZR-1, similarly to zinc, and induces its nuclear accumulation in intestinal cells. This process activates transcription via the HZA enhancer. Many genes activated by cadmium overlapped with those activated by high zinc, supporting the idea that cadmium hijacks the high zinc homeostasis system. Importantly, HIZR-1 was found to be essential for the transcriptional activation of certain genes in response to cadmium. However, not all cadmium-activated genes required HIZR-1, suggesting that multiple mechanisms regulate cadmium. Cadmium exposure led to the nuclear accumulation of HIZR-1 and activated the transcription of genes that are typically upregulated during zinc homeostasis.
Key implications
This research reveals an unexpected mechanism by which cadmium mimics zinc’s actions and activates the high zinc response. Cadmium, typically known for its toxic effects, functions as a ligand for HIZR-1, an essential receptor for regulating zinc homeostasis. Understanding how cadmium interacts with HIZR-1 could provide insight into cadmium’s toxicological mechanisms, potentially guiding new therapeutic strategies for cadmium exposure. The study also highlights how heavy metals can manipulate cellular pathways that normally maintain metal homeostasis, offering new avenues for investigating metal-induced toxicity and resistance mechanisms.
Mercury(II) binds to both of chymotrypsin’s histidines, causing inhibition followed by irreversible denaturation/aggregation
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study shows mercury(II) can bind histidines to inhibit chymotrypsin and trigger irreversible denaturation and aggregation. Imidazole blocks aggregation, aggregation rises above pH 6.5, and histidine-targeting DEPC shifts mercury effects, supporting a two-histidine mechanism.
What was studied?
This laboratory study tested whether mercury(II) can harm proteins by binding to histidine residues, not only to cysteine thiols. The researchers used chymotrypsin as a model enzyme because it has no free cysteine thiols (its cysteines are locked in disulfide bonds), so mercury cannot act through the usual cysteine-based pathway. They measured two outcomes side by side: loss of enzyme activity and visible aggregation/precipitation, then used small-molecule competitors and targeted histidine modification to pinpoint which amino-acid sites drove each effect.
Who was studied?
The study did not involve patients or living participants. It studied purified chymotrypsin in solution and exposed it to defined concentrations of HgCl2 under controlled pH and buffer conditions. The team also used mechanistic probes, including free imidazole and acetate as competing ligands and diethylpyrocarbonate (DEPC) to block histidine side chains, so they could connect mercury binding to specific residues and distinct outcomes: inhibition versus irreversible denaturation and aggregation.
What were the most important findings?
Mercury(II) inhibited chymotrypsin activity at low concentrations even when most enzyme remained soluble, then drove denaturation and aggregation at higher concentrations. Enzyme kinetics showed that mercury lowered catalytic turnover (kcat) while leaving substrate affinity (Km) largely unchanged, which fits a noncompetitive inhibition pattern consistent with mercury binding to a catalytic residue rather than blocking substrate binding. Aggregation strongly increased above pH ~6.5, matching histidine deprotonation behavior, and free imidazole strongly prevented precipitation, far more than acetate, supporting a dominant mercury–histidine interaction. DEPC produced a biphasic effect: at lower levels it increased mercury-driven precipitation, but at higher levels it fully protected the enzyme, consistent with selective blocking of different histidines.
What are the greatest implications of this study/ review?
This work expands the clinical logic of mercury toxicity by showing that histidine binding can be sufficient to shut down enzymes and trigger protein unfolding and aggregation, even when cysteine thiols are unavailable. The authors propose a two-site model with distinct consequences: mercury binding to His57 primarily inhibits catalysis, while binding to His40 triggers irreversible denaturation and aggregation, a pattern that may help explain heavy-metal–driven protein aggregation more broadly. For microbiome-relevant exposure framing, the study supports focusing on inorganic Hg(II) chemistry after demethylation, because Hg(II) can damage proteins through histidine interactions that are not captured by cysteine-only toxicity models.
Neurotoxic Effects and Biomarkers of Lead Exposure: A Review
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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The review examines the neurotoxic effects of lead exposure, focusing on mechanisms such as ion mimicry, mitochondrial dysfunction, and neuroinflammation. It emphasizes the long-term impact of lead on cognitive function and behavior and discusses biomarkers for assessing lead exposure and its effects on the brain.
What was studied?
The review article delves into the neurotoxic effects of lead exposure, focusing on how lead disrupts brain function at a molecular level. Lead, a well-known environmental toxin, is capable of crossing the blood-brain barrier and accumulating in the brain, where it causes significant damage. The article explores the mechanisms by which lead affects neuronal function, particularly through ion mimicry. Lead substitutes for calcium and other essential divalent cations in the brain, disrupting critical signaling pathways, neurotransmitter release, and synaptic function. The review also highlights lead's effects on mitochondrial function, where it interferes with cellular energy production and increases oxidative stress, leading to neurodegeneration. Additionally, it discusses the role of lead in neuroinflammation, which exacerbates neuronal damage, and provides insights into biomarkers that can help assess lead exposure and its neurotoxic effects, such as blood lead levels (BPb), bone lead (BnPb), and δ-aminolevulinic acid dehydratase (δ-ALAD) activity.
Who was studied?
The review synthesizes findings from a variety of studies, including animal models and human clinical studies, which examine the neurotoxic effects of lead exposure across different populations. In experimental animal studies, particularly with rodents, lead was administered via different routes such as oral ingestion, injection, or water to simulate human exposure. These studies focus on understanding how lead exposure disrupts cognitive function, behavior, and brain development. In human studies, the review examines the effects of lead exposure in both children and adults, particularly those who have been exposed in occupational or high-risk environmental settings. These clinical studies provide important data on how lead exposure, even at low levels, can result in cognitive impairments, behavioral changes, and an increased risk of neurodegenerative diseases. The review also emphasizes the vulnerability of children, who are especially sensitive to the neurotoxic effects of lead, and discusses the long-term impacts of early-life exposure.
Most important findings
The most significant findings of the review underscore the molecular pathways through which lead disrupts brain function. Lead’s ability to mimic calcium ions is a central mechanism, allowing it to enter neurons and interfere with calcium-dependent processes such as neurotransmitter release, synaptic plasticity, and overall neuronal signaling. This interference in cellular processes is key to understanding the cognitive deficits and behavioral changes associated with lead exposure. Additionally, the review highlights how lead induces mitochondrial dysfunction, which reduces ATP production and increases oxidative stress. This oxidative stress damages neurons and contributes to the development of neurodegenerative diseases. Another critical finding is the neuroinflammatory response triggered by lead exposure, which further exacerbates neuronal damage by activating glial cells and releasing inflammatory cytokines.
These processes collectively lead to the long-term cognitive and behavioral impairments seen in individuals with lead exposure, including memory problems, attention deficits, and hyperactivity. The review also discusses biomarkers of lead exposure, such as blood lead levels (BPb) and bone lead (BnPb), which serve as indicators of both recent and long-term exposure. These biomarkers help clinicians assess the neurotoxic burden of lead in individuals and understand its impact on brain function.
Key implications
The findings of this review have significant clinical and public health implications. Clinicians should be aware that low-level chronic lead exposure can have long-term neurotoxic effects, particularly on cognitive function and behavior. Early identification of lead exposure through biomarkers, such as BPb and BnPb, is critical for managing and mitigating the effects of lead toxicity. Interventions, including chelation therapy, antioxidant treatments, and anti-inflammatory strategies, may help alleviate the damage caused by lead exposure, particularly in children who are most vulnerable to its effects. Public health strategies should focus on reducing environmental and occupational lead exposure, especially in communities with high levels of contamination, to prevent the neurotoxic effects of lead. Moreover, for microbiome researchers, the review suggests that lead exposure could influence the gut-brain axis, which may alter microbial signatures related to neurodevelopmental and neurodegenerative diseases.
The buffer capacity and buffer systems of human whole saliva measured without loss of CO2
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study investigates the buffer capacity and systems of human whole saliva, revealing the key role of bicarbonate, saliva flow rate, and pH in maintaining oral health. It provides insights into the implications for dental health and saliva analysis.
What was studied?
This study examined the buffer capacity and buffer systems of human whole saliva under conditions designed to minimize the loss of CO2, a significant factor in the accuracy of saliva pH and buffering capacity measurements. The researchers focused on unstimulated and stimulated saliva from 20 healthy volunteers, measuring key components such as bicarbonate (HCO3), phosphate, and protein concentrations, and their contributions to saliva's overall buffer capacity. The study also assessed the impact of saliva flow rates, pH variations, and the depletion of CO2/HCO3 from saliva on its buffering ability.
Who was studied?
The study involved 20 healthy volunteers, including 9 males and 11 females, with a mean age of approximately 27 years. All participants were in good health and did not take any medication during the study. They were asked to refrain from eating, drinking, and oral hygiene for two hours before saliva collection. The research was conducted at the University of Copenhagen, with saliva samples taken under conditions that minimized CO2 loss.
What were the most important findings?
The study found that the buffer capacity of whole saliva depends heavily on the bicarbonate concentration, saliva flow rate, and pH level. Stimulated whole saliva (SWS) had a higher buffer capacity than unstimulated whole saliva (UWS), particularly at pH levels ranging from 5.25 to 7.25, which is close to the physiological pH range of the mouth. Bicarbonate was identified as the primary contributor to the buffer capacity, especially in SWS. The buffer capacity of both UWS and SWS was significantly reduced when CO2/HCO3 was depleted from the samples, highlighting the essential role of this buffer system. Additionally, the study observed that increasing saliva flow rates led to higher bicarbonate concentrations and an alkaline pH, which in turn increased the buffer capacity. The contribution of the protein buffer system was significant at acidic pH levels (below pH 5), but less impactful at higher pH levels.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings of this study underscore the importance of bicarbonate in maintaining the buffering capacity of saliva, particularly in the context of oral health. The ability to manage and measure saliva's buffer capacity has direct implications for understanding how saliva protects the teeth and oral mucosa from acid-induced damage, such as from dietary acids or bacterial metabolism. This knowledge could improve clinical practices in areas like caries prevention, where buffering capacity plays a role in reducing the risk of tooth demineralization. Additionally, the study highlights the role of saliva flow rate and pH in influencing saliva's buffering ability, which could inform therapeutic strategies for patients with dry mouth (xerostomia) or those at risk of dental decay due to insufficient salivation. It also provides valuable insight into the impact of CO2 loss on saliva measurements and suggests improved methods for more accurate saliva analysis in clinical and research settings.
Impacts of Mercury Exposure Levels and Sources on the Demethylation of Methylmercury Through Human Gut Microbiota
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study shows human gut microbiota can demethylate methylmercury and that detox rates vary by exposure level and food source. Higher Desulfovibrio and methanogen signals aligned with faster demethylation, while mer and hgcAB genes did not explain the process.
What was studied?
This study examined whether human gut microbiota can directly demethylate methylmercury (MeHg) and whether that detox activity changes with different mercury exposure levels and exposure sources. The researchers compared residents from a high-exposure, rice-based mercury area (Wanshan) with residents from lower-exposure areas tied mainly to rice (Yangtou) or fish (Zhuchang). They paired human exposure biomarkers with metagenomic profiling and an anaerobic in vitro MeHg-demethylation assay designed to reflect gut conditions.
Who was studied?
The study enrolled 33 healthy adult residents (11 per town) who met strict dietary patterns and exclusion criteria, including no recent antibiotics, no probiotic use, and no known gastrointestinal disease. Participants provided hair, urine, and fecal samples for mercury measurement, and stool samples underwent shotgun metagenomic sequencing to characterize community composition and mercury-relevant functional genes. The team then used fecal inocula in anaerobic culture to quantify how quickly each participant’s microbiota degraded MeHg over time.
What were the most important findings?
Residents in the high-exposure town showed clearly higher mercury burdens, with hair and urine levels indicating both higher MeHg and inorganic mercury exposure compared with the lower-exposure towns. Overall gut microbial richness and diversity did not differ meaningfully, but community composition did, indicating that mercury-related context reshaped “who is there” more than “how many are there.” A key microbiome signature emerged: Desulfovibrio and methanogen-associated taxa were more abundant in the higher-exposure and fish-exposure settings, and these same groups aligned with higher MeHg demethylation capacity in vitro. The microbiota from Wanshan and Zhuchang degraded MeHg faster than Yangtou early in the assay (first 6 hours), and all groups showed substantial degradation by 48 hours. Functionally, classic mer operon signals were extremely low and methylation genes (hgcAB) were not detected, supporting demethylation routes not driven by typical mer/hgc pathways and pointing toward anaerobic metabolism-linked mechanisms.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
For clinicians, this study supports a practical concept: gut microbiota can contribute to MeHg detoxification, and real-world exposure level and food source can shift that detox potential by changing specific anaerobic guilds. This helps explain why measured body burden does not always match estimated dietary intake, because microbial demethylation can reduce the fraction that persists as MeHg. For microbiome signatures databases, the strongest entry is functional and taxon-linked: higher Desulfovibrio and methanogen-associated signals track with higher MeHg demethylation rates, while mer and hgcAB signals do not explain human-gut demethylation in this cohort. Clinically, exposure history may matter not only for toxic load but also for microbiome-mediated detox capacity.
Cd(II), Pb(II), and Zn(II) ions regulate expression of the metal‐transporting P‐type ATPase ZntA in Escherichia coli
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study demonstrates that Cd(II) and Pb(II) induce zntA expression in E. coli through ZntR, highlighting the importance of ZntA in metal resistance and the potential for therapeutic applications targeting metal transporters.
What was studied?
This study investigates the regulation of the zntA gene in Escherichia coli, which encodes a P-type ATPase that exports toxic metals like Cd(II), Pb(II), and Zn(II) from the cell. Specifically, the research examines how the zntA promoter is activated by the presence of these metal ions, with a particular focus on Cd(II) and Pb(II), which were found to be the most effective inducers of zntA expression. The regulation of zntA is mediated by ZntR, a transcriptional regulator from the MerR family, which facilitates the activation of the gene in response to metal exposure. This study clarifies the role of ZntR in mediating the metal-dependent activation of the zntA transporter and extends previous knowledge on how bacteria respond to metal stress.
Who was studied?
The study centers on Escherichia coli (E. coli) strains, including RK4353, which is used as the wild-type model, and various mutants, such as RKP2910, which carries a single-copy fusion of the zntA promoter with the lacZ reporter gene. Additionally, strains with mutations in the zntA or zntR genes were used to study the specific role of the zntA transporter and the ZntR regulator in response to metal ions like Cd(II), Pb(II), and Zn(II). The study also investigates the effects of metal exposure in defined media, including MOPS minimal medium, which is used to assess the induction of zntA expression under controlled conditions.
Most important findings
The key finding of the study is that Cd(II) and Pb(II), not just Zn(II), are significant inducers of the zntA gene expression in E. coli. Cd(II) was found to be the most effective inducer, triggering a 44-fold induction, while Pb(II) also caused a 3.8-fold induction of the zntA promoter. These inductions were mediated by the ZntR regulator, which binds to the zntA promoter and activates its transcription in response to metal exposure. The study also observed that the zntA mutant strain exhibited higher basal levels of zntA expression than the wild-type strain in the absence of metals, suggesting that metal homeostasis through zntA is tightly regulated even under basal conditions. Furthermore, the study found that other metals like Hg(II) and Ni(II) also induced zntA, but Cd(II) and Pb(II) were much more effective, highlighting their role in ZntA-mediated metal export.
Key implications
The findings underscore the significance of ZntA in protecting E. coli from metal toxicity by exporting not only Zn(II) but also Cd(II) and Pb(II). This mechanism has broader implications for understanding bacterial resistance to environmental metals, especially in settings where exposure to toxic metals like lead and cadmium is high. The ZntR-mediated regulation of zntA expression offers insights into how bacteria adapt to metal stress and could inform the design of bioremediation strategies for contaminated environments. Moreover, understanding how ZntR mediates metal ion-specific regulation could be leveraged for therapeutic interventions to mitigate metal poisoning in clinical settings, as it suggests potential avenues for targeting bacterial metal efflux pumps to control bacterial growth and virulence in environments exposed to toxic metals.
Copper: Toxicological relevance and mechanisms.
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study highlights how Cu imbalance leads to oxidative stress and cellular toxicity, contributing to liver and neurological diseases. It emphasizes the need for tight Cu regulation and offers insights into potential biomarkers and therapeutic strategies for Cu-related disorders.
What was studied?
This study examined the toxicological relevance of copper (Cu) and the mechanisms by which excess Cu leads to cellular damage. It explored how Cu imbalance affects various biological systems, contributing to diseases like liver disorders, neurodegeneration, and oxidative stress. The authors reviewed how Cu toxicity induces cellular damage via its redox activity, leading to the generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS), which cause DNA damage, lipid peroxidation, and protein dysfunction. The paper also discussed the regulatory systems in place to control Cu homeostasis, the molecular transport mechanisms involved, and the role of Cu-related diseases like Wilson’s and Menkes disease.
Who was studied?
The study primarily focused on research conducted on humans, animal models, and cell cultures to examine the effects of copper overload and deficiency. It emphasized conditions like Wilson’s disease, a genetic disorder causing Cu accumulation in tissues, particularly the liver, brain, and corneas. The authors also referenced studies on liver dysfunction, neurodegenerative diseases, and other Cu-related disorders to illustrate the broad implications of Cu imbalance. Through the analysis of Cu transport and homeostasis, the study connected Cu’s impact on health to a range of physiological and biochemical processes.
Most important findings
The study highlighted Cu-induced oxidative stress as the most significant factor in Cu toxicity. Copper’s ability to cycle between Cu(II) and Cu(I) states enables it to generate ROS, including hydroxyl radicals, which cause damage to lipids, proteins, and DNA. The authors also identified key Cu-binding proteins and chaperones, like ceruloplasmin and metallothionein, that help manage Cu transport and storage to prevent toxicity. However, when Cu homeostasis is disrupted, as in Wilson’s disease, Cu accumulates in tissues, leading to liver damage, neurodegeneration, and other serious complications. The study also linked lipid metabolism and gene expression alterations to Cu toxicity, suggesting that these may be early markers of Cu-induced cellular damage. Furthermore, oxidative damage was strongly implicated in the pathogenesis of diseases like Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, and Huntington’s diseases due to Cu’s ability to generate harmful ROS in the brain.
Key implications
This study underscores the critical role of Cu homeostasis in maintaining health. Disruptions in Cu balance can lead to severe toxic effects, highlighting the importance of regulating Cu levels in both clinical and environmental settings. For microbiome signatures, clinicians could consider Cu-induced oxidative stress as a potential factor contributing to microbial dysbiosis, especially in individuals with Cu overload or deficiency. Targeting the Cu transport system or Cu-binding proteins may provide therapeutic avenues for treating Cu-related diseases. Moreover, measuring serum ceruloplasmin levels and using genetic markers for Cu transport could serve as valuable biomarkers for diagnosing Cu toxicity early, especially in patients at risk for conditions like Wilson’s disease or neurodegenerative disorders.
Assessing the Role of the Gut Microbiome in Methylmercury Demethylation and Elimination in Humans and Gnotobiotic Mice
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study shows the gut microbiome helps clear dietary methylmercury by demethylating it in the intestine. People differed widely in elimination rates, which tracked with stool demethylation activity and specific taxa patterns, especially Alistipes.
What was studied?
This study tested whether the gut microbiome helps the body clear dietary methylmercury (MeHg) by demethylating it into inorganic mercury (Hg(II)), which the intestine reabsorbs poorly and the body can excrete in stool. The researchers paired a controlled human fish-meal exposure protocol with mechanistic mouse experiments (conventional, antibiotic-treated, germ-free, and gnotobiotic/humanized models) and shotgun metagenomics of human stool. They also used anaerobic fecal cultures to measure how strongly each person’s stool community transformed mercury in vitro and compared that activity with each person’s MeHg elimination rate.
Who was studied?
The human arm enrolled adult volunteers (healthy, 18–80 years) who ate three tuna meals one week apart and then avoided fish for 60 days while researchers estimated MeHg elimination kinetics from mercury patterns along the hair shaft; 27–29 participants contributed usable datasets depending on analysis completeness, and MeHg half-lives spanned roughly 28–90 days. The animal arm used C57BL/6J mice to isolate microbiome effects by comparing intact microbiomes, microbiome depletion with antibiotics, complete absence of microbes in germ-free mice, and restoration via fecal microbiome transplant from selected human donors, plus a mono-colonization test with Alistipes onderdonkii.
What were the most important findings?
People varied widely in MeHg elimination, and faster elimination tracked with higher stool-community mercury transformation in anaerobic culture, supporting microbiome-driven demethylation as a key contributor to clearance. A prebiotic (inulin) reliably shifted microbiome composition but produced mixed elimination effects within individuals, arguing against a simple “more fiber equals faster clearance” rule. In mice, removing microbes (germ-free or antibiotics) sharply reduced stool Hg(II) and slowed elimination, while transplanting human stool microbiomes into germ-free mice restored faster elimination. Metagenomics did not detect canonical merB demethylation genes, pointing to a nontraditional pathway. As major microbial associations, Alistipes (especially Alistipes onderdonkii) correlated positively with faster human elimination, while Bacilli and two Lachnospiraceae-related OTUs correlated negatively; however, A. onderdonkii alone did not restore normal elimination in mono-colonized mice, implying a consortium effect or host–microbe interaction rather than a single “silver bullet” species.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
Clinically, this work strengthens the idea that gut microbiome function can shift MeHg body burden by changing how much MeHg gets demethylated in the gut and trapped for fecal loss, which may help explain why two people with similar fish exposure can carry very different risk. It also warns against oversimplified interventions: a prebiotic can remodel the microbiome yet still yield unpredictable MeHg clearance changes, so patient-specific microbial function matters more than broad taxonomic shifts. For a microbiome signatures database, the most actionable signal is functional—demethylation capacity—supported by taxa-level markers like Alistipes/Alistipes onderdonkii (positive) and certain Lachnospiraceae/Bacilli patterns (negative), while the missing merB signal suggests clinicians should not assume classic mercury-resistance genes drive gut demethylation in humans.
Heavy metals: toxicity and human health effects
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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A mechanistic review links heavy metals and human health to dysbiosis via protein-binding competition, redox injury, epithelial leak, and LPS-driven inflammation, outlining organ toxicity and clinical chelation strategies.
What was reviewed?
This narrative review synthesizes mechanistic and toxicological evidence on heavy metals and human health, with a particular focus on how protein-binding competition and redox disruption converge on gut–immune pathways relevant to dysbiosis. To ensure the focus remains clinically meaningful for microbiome work, the review tracks how aluminum, cadmium, arsenic, mercury, lead, and chromium perturb antioxidant defenses, displace essential metals at enzyme and transporter sites, and impair epithelial integrity, mechanisms that link heavy metals and human health to shifts in microbial ecology, lipopolysaccharide (LPS) translocation, and mucosal inflammation.
Who was reviewed?
Evidence spans occupationally and environmentally exposed humans, in vivo rodent models, and cellular systems that clarify organ- and pathway-specific toxicity. The review aggregates data across inhalational, oral, and dermal exposures, emphasizing intestinal, renal, pulmonary, cardiovascular, and neurobehavioral endpoints. It also details redox signaling nodes (e.g., NF-κB, Nrf2) and host metal-handling proteins (e.g., metallothioneins, transferrin) that mediate the host–microbe consequences of exposure.
Most important findings
Heavy metals disrupt redox balance by binding thiols on antioxidant enzymes (SOD, catalase, GPx) and by displacing essential metals (Fe, Cu, Zn, Ca, Mg) at protein active sites, thereby amplifying reactive oxygen species through Fenton chemistry and impairing mitochondrial function. At the gut interface, aluminum and cadmium exemplify a shared path: epithelial tight-junction dysfunction, increased intestinal permeability, and heightened LPS trafficking that primes Kupffer cells and systemic cytokine responses (IL-1β, IL-6, TNF-α), all of which are consistent with a dysbiotic shift away from probiotic taxa toward opportunistic/pathobiont profiles. In murine colitis models, aluminum exposure intensifies and prolongs inflammation, increases colonic myeloperoxidase activity, suppresses epithelial renewal, and upregulates NF-κB signaling with downstream MMP-9 expression—findings that map to microbiome-linked exacerbation of barrier injury and inflammatory bowel disease phenotypes.
Cadmium further demonstrates microbiome-relevant toxicity via Nrf2- and p62-modulated autophagy flux, mitochondrial complex II/III inhibition, and ion-transport derangements that alter luminal electrolytes and epithelial energetics, conditions that can select for stress-tolerant, inflammation-associated microbes. Across organs, the same protein-binding competition and redox injury that shape the intestinal milieu also drive renal tubular dysfunction (low-molecular-weight proteinuria, glycosuria), pulmonary inflammation and remodeling (airway wall thickening, macrophage M1 polarization), and atherosclerosis-promoting lipid disturbances, each accompanied by cytokine patterns that reinforce microbe–immune crosstalk. Collectively, these data nominate host redox and metal-handling pathways as primary drivers linking exposure to clinically meaningful microbiome signatures, barrier failure, endotoxemia, and inflammation-prone community states.
Key implications
For clinicians integrating microbiome insights, the review supports considering heavy-metal exposure as a modifiable upstream determinant of dysbiosis, especially in patients with IBD, chronic liver disease, chronic kidney disease, or cardiometabolic comorbidity. Practical takeaways include maintaining vigilance for exposure histories (occupational aerosols, contaminated food/water), recognizing biomarker constellations consistent with endotoxemia and oxidative stress (elevated CRP, cytokines, myeloperoxidase), and understanding that chelation—where clinically appropriate—targets a root driver of barrier damage and microbe–immune activation rather than downstream inflammation alone. The mechanistic emphasis on NF-κB/MMP-9, Nrf2, metallothioneins, and mitochondrial injury provides tractable nodes for aligning exposure mitigation with microbiome-sensitive care pathways.
Regulatory effects of transition metals supplementation/deficiency on the gut microbiota
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review examines how iron, copper, zinc, and manganese affect gut microbiota composition and function, highlighting their regulatory role in health and disease. It discusses both the effects of metal deficiencies and supplementation on microbial balance and associated health outcomes.
What was reviewed?
This review explored the regulatory effects of transition metals (iron, copper, zinc, and manganese) on the gut microbiota, focusing on both deficiency and supplementation. The paper discussed how these metal ions influence microbial composition, diversity, and functionality, highlighting their impact on host health and disease mechanisms.
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesized findings from 20 studies conducted on animal models and humans, examining the effects of transition metals on the gut microbiota. It included research on the regulatory roles of metals in microbiota dynamics, particularly how they modulate microbial communities and interact with host metabolic and immune systems.
What were the most important findings?
The review revealed that the availability of transition metals significantly impacts the composition and diversity of the gut microbiota. For example, iron deficiency leads to shifts in microbial populations, including increased Lactobacillus and Enterobacteriaceae while decreasing Roseburia. Supplementation with iron, however, can lead to an increased abundance of Bacteroides spp. and a more active microbiota metabolism. Copper supplementation was shown to disrupt gut microbiota balance, with alterations in Firmicutes and Proteobacteria populations. Zinc and manganese were also found to affect microbial composition, with excessive zinc potentially increasing pathogen abundance, especially Enterococcus and Clostridium species, while manganese influenced oxidative stress responses. The review emphasized the complexity of these interactions, where both deficiencies and excesses of metals lead to dysbiosis, impacting overall gut health and influencing disease states like inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) and infections.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The findings underline the critical role of transition metals in regulating gut microbiota composition and their broader implications for health. The review suggests that managing metal ion levels through diet or supplementation could be a strategy to manipulate the gut microbiome, enhancing beneficial bacteria and inhibiting pathogenic ones. However, it also cautions about the potential risks of excessive metal supplementation, which may exacerbate dysbiosis and contribute to disease. Understanding the mechanisms by which metals influence gut microbiota offers insights into therapeutic strategies for treating conditions like IBD, gastrointestinal diseases, and even neurodegenerative disorders, where the microbiome plays a key role.
Staphylococcus aureus Metal Acquisition and Nutritional Immunity: Virulence Insights
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Iron (Fe)
Iron (Fe)
OverviewIron is a pivotal nutrient at the host–pathogen interface. Virtually all microbes (with rare exceptions like Borrelia) require iron for processes from DNA synthesis to respiration. [1] In human hosts, free iron is vanishingly scarce due to “nutritional immunity,” wherein iron is locked up in hemoproteins or tightly bound by transport proteins.[2] This metal tug-of-war […]
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Zinc
Zinc
Zinc is an essential trace element vital for cellular functions and microbiome health. It influences immune regulation, pathogen virulence, and disease progression in conditions like IBS and breast cancer. Pathogens exploit zinc for survival, while therapeutic zinc chelation can suppress virulence, rebalance the microbiome, and offer potential treatments for inflammatory and degenerative diseases.
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This review outlines how Staphylococcus aureus overcomes host nutritional immunity by acquiring iron, manganese, and zinc, underscoring the critical role of metal transport systems in virulence and immune evasion.
What was reviewed?
This review article critically evaluates the mechanisms by which Staphylococcus aureus acquires essential transition metals—specifically iron, manganese, and zinc—despite host-imposed nutritional immunity. The paper also explores host strategies that limit bacterial access to these metals as part of the innate immune response, and how these interactions shape bacterial virulence. It further assesses the physiological and molecular basis of metal ion acquisition, storage, transport, and detoxification systems in S. aureus, with emphasis on their contribution to pathogenicity across various infection models.
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesizes a comprehensive body of work involving both in vitro molecular studies and in vivo animal models, particularly murine abscess and systemic infection models, to elucidate how S. aureus exploits siderophores, heme acquisition systems, and high-affinity metal transporters. Studies involving genetically modified bacterial strains (e.g., mutants lacking isd, mntABC, mntH, or hrtAB) and host knockout models (e.g., calprotectin-deficient mice or Nramp1-deficient mice) are also central to the review’s analysis.
Most Important Findings
Understanding how Staphylococcus aureus circumvents nutritional immunity reveals key mechanistic nodes underpinning its virulence. The organism’s capacity to acquire essential transition metals—iron, manganese, zinc, and copper—via specialized systems allows it to evade host-imposed metal sequestration, enabling persistence in inflamed or nutrient-deprived tissue microenvironments such as abscesses. The host counters this with dynamic sequestration strategies, including proteinaceous chelators like calprotectin and localized oxidative stress. These metal-dependent virulence strategies are not only essential to S. aureus pathogenesis but also shape its metallomic and microbiome signature within infected tissues. Below is a structured summary of these host-pathogen interactions.
Category
Key Findings
Iron Acquisition
S. aureus synthesizes two siderophores—staphyloferrin A and staphyloferrin B—that chelate iron and are imported via HtsABC and SirABC, respectively. Preferential iron acquisition from heme occurs through the Isd system, which involves surface receptors (IsdB, IsdH), membrane transporters (IsdDEF), and cytoplasmic heme oxygenases (IsdG, IsdI). IsdB demonstrates high specificity for human hemoglobin.
Manganese Acquisition
High-affinity manganese uptake is mediated by MntABC (ABC-type) and MntH (Nramp-type) transporters. Manganese is essential for the activity of superoxide dismutases (SodA, SodM), which protect S. aureus against reactive oxygen species.
Zinc and Copper Interactions
Calprotectin sequesters both manganese and zinc in abscesses. While S. aureus zinc importers remain unidentified, export is mediated by CzrAB and plasmid-encoded CadA. Host-derived copper toxicity is countered by S. aureus through CopA (efflux pump) and CopZ (chaperone), regulated by the CsoR repressor.
Host-Microbe Competition
The vertebrate immune system enforces nutritional immunity through sequestration of iron (transferrin, lactoferrin, ferritin), manganese, and zinc (calprotectin). Imaging mass spectrometry and LA-ICPMS confirm localized depletion of manganese and zinc in abscess cores.
Microbiome-Relevant Insights
The tug-of-war between calprotectin and S. aureus defines a manganese- and zinc-centric virulence axis, contributing to microbial persistence and shaping microbiome signatures. The non-redundant roles of IsdG and IsdI across tissue sites suggest adaptive metallomic specialization that could serve as a basis for microbial stratification in disease-specific microbiome signatures.
Key implications
The review underscores that transition metal acquisition is not ancillary but foundational to S. aureus pathogenesis, especially within abscesses where nutritional immunity is most intense. These findings highlight new avenues for antimicrobial strategies, such as siderophore inhibitors, calprotectin mimetics, or vaccines targeting IsdA/IsdB. Furthermore, the dependency on specific metal ions offers microbiome signature implications: differential abundance or gene expression of metal transporters (e.g., mntA, isdB) could serve as microbial biomarkers of invasive staphylococcal disease. Imaging mass spectrometry emerges as a critical tool in microbial metallomics for both diagnostic and therapeutic development.
Parkinson-like wild-type superoxide dismutase 1 pathology induces nigral dopamine neuron degeneration in a novel murine model
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review examines the role of altered wild-type SOD1 in Parkinson’s disease, highlighting its involvement in dopamine neuron degeneration and presenting a novel mouse model for studying SOD1-related pathologies.
What was reviewed?
The review examines the pathology of wild-type superoxide dismutase 1 (SOD1) in Parkinson's disease (PD), focusing on how altered post-translational modifications (PTMs) and metal-binding deficiencies contribute to misfolding and aggregation of SOD1 in the substantia nigra pars compacta (SNc). This pathology is observed in PD patients despite the absence of SOD1 gene mutations, with structural and functional alterations leading to the degeneration of nigral dopamine neurons. The review explores the biochemical mechanisms behind SOD1 dysfunction, including copper deficiency and the influence of elevated SOD1 protein levels. Furthermore, it introduces a novel mouse model, the SOCK mouse, engineered to simulate the biochemical conditions observed in PD and to study the relationship between wild-type SOD1 pathology and dopamine neuron health. The model's relevance in understanding PD etiology is emphasized, particularly in exploring potential therapeutic targets for modifying SOD1-related pathologies.
Who was reviewed?
The review does not focus on individual human or animal subjects but instead discusses existing studies on the impact of SOD1 pathology in Parkinson's disease. It examines post-mortem brain tissue from PD patients and utilizes animal models, particularly the novel SOCK mouse model, to investigate the role of misfolded SOD1 in neurodegeneration. The study particularly focuses on the nigral dopamine neurons, which are the most vulnerable in PD, and how their degeneration is linked to abnormal SOD1 behavior.
What were the most important findings?
The key findings of this review center on the discovery of altered post-translational modifications in SOD1 within the SNc of Parkinson’s disease patients. These modifications, such as decreased copper binding, atypical oxidation, and glycation of key amino acid residues, were associated with SOD1 misfolding, aggregation, and dysfunction. The review also highlights that the SOCK mouse model, engineered to replicate a decrease in copper availability and elevated wild-type SOD1 levels, develops progressive dopamine neuron loss in the SNc. This model mimics the pathological conditions observed in PD patients, such as misfolded SOD1 and dopamine neuron degeneration, in the absence of α-synuclein deposition. Importantly, the model did not show spinal cord motor neuron degeneration, distinguishing it from other transgenic SOD1 models. The review suggests that copper deficiency and SOD1 overexpression act together to precipitate the accumulation of disordered SOD1, leading to neuron dysfunction and degeneration, thus providing new insights into Parkinson’s pathogenesis.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The greatest implications of this review are centered on the identification of wild-type SOD1 pathology as a potential novel target for Parkinson’s disease therapeutics. The findings suggest that correcting the post-translational modifications of SOD1, particularly those involving copper binding, could mitigate the misfolding and aggregation of SOD1 in the brain. The SOCK mouse model provides a valuable tool for further understanding the mechanisms by which SOD1 dysfunction contributes to dopamine neuron degeneration and could be pivotal in testing potential drug candidates aimed at modifying SOD1 behavior. This review advocates for targeting the biochemical alterations in SOD1 to develop disease-modifying treatments for Parkinson's disease, marking an important step forward in addressing the unmet therapeutic needs in this field.
Copper homeostasis in Enterococcus hirae
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Copper homeostasis in Enterococcus hirae maps a four-gene circuit—CopA, CopB, CopY, CopZ—and a reductase that set copper uptake and export, yielding clear genomic markers to predict copper tolerance and stress in gut and wound niches.
What was reviewed?
This review explains copper homeostasis in Enterococcus hirae as a simple model that reveals how bacteria sense, move, and buffer copper in ways that shape survival in host and environmental niches. It centers on the cop operon, which encodes the repressor CopY, the copper chaperone CopZ, and two CPx-type P-ATPases, CopA and CopB. The authors describe how these parts work together to manage copper from scarcity to overload, and how similar motifs appear in human ATP7A/ATP7B and in other microbes. The review links chemistry to physiology, showing how copper’s redox states, ligands, and pH set what form cells can move and where it goes. These steps provide clear, gene-level markers that a microbiome signatures database can track to predict copper tolerance or stress across gut and wound sites.
Who was reviewed?
The article draws on in vivo and in vitro work in E. hirae and compares it to related systems in Escherichia coli, Staphylococcus aureus, Listeria monocytogenes, yeast, plants, and humans. It includes structural and functional studies of CopA and CopB transporters, CopY regulation, CopZ-like chaperones, and an extracellular copper reductase that supplies Cu(I) for uptake. It also reviews conserved motifs, such as the intramembrane CPx sequence in copper pumps and the Cys-X-X-C metal-binding loop in chaperones and N-termini of ATPases. By setting E. hirae alongside pathogens and host proteins, the review shows why this Gram-positive model helps interpret copper handling in mucosa, biofilms, and devices where enterococci and other gut commensals or opportunists can face copper stress.
Most important findings
The review defines a four-part circuit that matches copper supply with need and prevents damage. Under low copper, CopA supports uptake, likely of Cu(I), while CopY, bound to DNA, keeps the operon quiet; when copper rises, CopZ loads with Cu(I) and delivers it to CopY, which releases DNA and turns on the operon. CopB then exports excess Cu(I) and protects the cell; direct Ag(I)/Cu(I) transport by CopB confirms this role. An extracellular or membrane-bound reductase reduces Cu(II) to Cu(I), the transported species, explaining how cells gain copper at neutral pH. CopZ carries exposed Cu(I), which eases handoff to partners but also raises risk; a copper-stimulated serine protease trims Cu-CopZ to limit harm. These parts map to actionable markers for a microbiome database: copA (uptake/Ag sensitivity), copB (export), copY (Cu-responsive repressor with CxCx4CxC site), copZ (Atx1-like chaperone), and a surface reductase signature.
Key implications
Clinicians can read the cop operon as a compact stress module that forecasts how enterococci handle copper on skin, wounds, catheters, and in the gut, where feeds, pipes, or topical copper raise exposure. Sequencing that detects copA/copB/copY/copZ can flag strains that tolerate copper and may persist on copper-touch surfaces or in metal-amended feeds. The same genes can also predict cross-responses to silver and to thiol-depleting stress. In a microbiome signatures database, tagging these loci with niche context and pH can refine risk calls: copA plus reductase marks efficient copper entry at neutral pH; high copB marks export capacity; copZ abundance without checks can signal oxidative risk. These insights support measured use of copper surfaces or dressings and argue for surveillance where copper use is heavy, since selection may shift communities toward copper-tolerant enterococci and reduce beneficial competitors.
Trace elements in human physiology and pathology. Copper
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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The review links copper’s enzyme roles and tight homeostasis to clinical states that shift metal supply at mucosa, offering host and microbial markers to track copper-shaped microbiome risk.
What was reviewed?
This review explains trace elements in human physiology and pathology, copper, and shows how copper acts as a vital cofactor yet turns toxic when unbound. The authors describe copper’s redox roles in respiration, antioxidant defense, iron handling, and connective tissue support, and then detail the tight homeostasis that keeps free copper near zero. They outline intestinal uptake, blood transport on albumin and transcuprein, delivery by chaperones to cuproenzymes, and ATP7A/ATP7B-driven export and biliary excretion. They also link copper excess to reactive oxygen species and protein damage, and copper lack to failed enzyme function and anemia. The narrative sets a clinical frame for how inflammation, diet, and genetics shift copper pools that microbes experience at mucosal sites.
Who was reviewed?
The review compiles data from human physiology, animal studies, and cell models to map copper movement from gut to liver and tissues. It discusses enterocyte uptake through CTR1, buffering by glutathione and metallothionein, and organ delivery via chaperones such as ATOX1, CCS, and COX17. It covers Menkes disease and Wilson disease as examples of failed ATP7A/ATP7B trafficking, and it explains how ceruloplasmin carries most serum copper and supports iron export. The authors also describe how inflammatory cytokines raise ceruloplasmin levels, how zinc therapy lowers intestinal copper uptake, and how biliary excretion dominates copper loss. This broad scope gives clinicians concrete host markers that shape the metal landscape for the microbiome and invading pathogens.
Most important findings
The review shows that copper must remain protein-bound to avoid tissue injury while still feeding key enzymes. It highlights cytochrome c oxidase and Cu/Zn-SOD as sentinel cuproenzymes that fail early in copper lack, and it places metallothionein as a major buffer that sequesters excess copper and limits radical damage. It explains how CTR1 pulls copper into enterocytes, how ATOX1 hands copper to ATP7A/ATP7B in the trans-Golgi for enzyme loading or efflux, and how ceruloplasmin carries the bulk of circulating copper. Inflammation raises serum ceruloplasmin, shifting exchangeable copper and likely the metal tone at the mucosa.
The review also details how high zinc or tetrathiomolybdate reduces copper absorption, and how bile flow controls whole-body copper balance. For a microbiome signatures database, these points translate into actionable host and microbial markers: host ATP7A/ATP7B variants, high ceruloplasmin states, and zinc therapy predict lower luminal copper; high biliary copper flow or impaired Wilson protein can raise gut copper; microbial tolerance modules such as CueO/CopA/Cus in Enterobacterales or cop operons in enterococci signal capacity to persist when copper rises during inflammation.
Key implications
Clinicians can read copper balance as both a systemic measure and a local ecological force. Inflammation that elevates ceruloplasmin may increase copper delivery to sites where microbes compete, favoring copper-tolerant taxa and restraining sensitive commensals. Zinc therapy for Wilson disease or deliberate zinc use can depress intestinal copper, which may ease copper stress on the gut microbiome but also reduce host cuproenzyme activity if carried too far. Reporting host markers such as ceruloplasmin, ATP7A/ATP7B status, and bile flow alongside microbial copper-handling genes can improve risk calls for dysbiosis or infection in the inflamed gut, biliary disease, or device-adjacent mucosa. These data support careful copper modulation in nutrition and device use and argue for restraint with metal exposures that could select for copper-tolerant pathobionts.
The ArsD As(III) metallochaperone
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study investigates the structural and biochemical role of ArsD, a metallochaperone in E. coli, in enhancing arsenic detoxification by transferring As(III) to the ArsA ATPase, providing new insights into arsenic resistance mechanisms in bacteria.
What was studied?
This study explores the function of ArsD, a metallochaperone involved in arsenic resistance in Escherichia coli. ArsD facilitates the transfer of arsenic(III) (As(III)) to the ArsA ATPase, which is part of an ATP-driven arsenic efflux pump. This pump actively extrudes arsenic from cells, contributing to resistance against environmental arsenic. ArsD plays a critical role by increasing the affinity of ArsA for As(III), thus enhancing the efficiency of arsenic detoxification. The study investigates the crystal structure of ArsD, its interaction with ArsA, and the biochemical process by which ArsD delivers arsenic to ArsA, using X-ray crystallography and NMR spectroscopy to understand the structural and functional details of this interaction.
Who was studied?
The study focuses on the ArsD protein found in Escherichia coli, specifically examining its role in the ars operon on plasmid R773. The ArsD protein, a metallochaperone, is analyzed in relation to its interaction with ArsA, the ATPase subunit of the ArsAB pump. Various mutants of ArsD were also created to explore how changes in its structure affect its interaction with ArsA and its ability to transfer arsenic. Additionally, the study investigates the behavior of ArsD in both its free form and when bound to arsenic. It also examines ars operon sequences in other bacteria, suggesting that similar systems exist across diverse species capable of arsenic detoxification.
Most important findings
The study found that ArsD plays a critical role in arsenic resistance by enhancing the efficiency of ArsA in extruding arsenic from the cell. The cysteine residues in ArsD (Cys12, Cys13, and Cys18) form a high-affinity site for As(III), which is transferred to ArsA, thereby increasing its affinity for arsenic and improving the efflux process. The researchers also discovered that ATP hydrolysis by ArsA is required for the transfer of As(III) from ArsD to ArsA, suggesting a conformational change in ArsA during the catalytic cycle that facilitates this process. The study also demonstrated that ArsD enhances ATPase activity in ArsA, making it more effective at lower arsenic concentrations, typical of environmental conditions. Additionally, structural analysis revealed that ArsD and ArsA form a transient complex during the arsenic transfer process, with the binding sites of both proteins coming into close proximity to allow for efficient arsenic transfer.
Key implications
For clinicians, understanding the role of ArsD in arsenic detoxification provides insight into how microbial arsenic resistance mechanisms could be leveraged for bioremediation in contaminated areas. The findings suggest that ArsD's ability to deliver As(III) to ArsA could be crucial in developing microbial treatments to clean up arsenic-contaminated water sources, a significant health concern in regions with arsenic-rich drinking water. Moreover, understanding the mechanism of action of metallochaperones like ArsD could inform the development of new therapeutic strategies for managing arsenic poisoning in humans. This could lead to more targeted approaches in environmental health, especially in arsenic-affected communities.
The many “faces” of copper in medicine and treatment
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review explores copper’s essential roles in human health and its involvement in diseases like Wilson’s disease, Alzheimer’s, and cancer. It highlights copper’s dual role in disease progression and therapeutic strategies for copper imbalances.
What was studied?
This review explores the multifaceted roles of copper (Cu) in medicine, specifically its importance in human health, disease mechanisms, and its potential therapeutic applications. Copper is a vital micronutrient, serving as a cofactor for various enzymes involved in critical biological processes like oxidative stress, immune function, and cellular respiration. The study focuses on both copper deficiency and copper excess, highlighting the diseases that arise from imbalances in copper levels, such as Wilson's disease and Menke's disease, as well as the potential therapeutic uses of copper chelation in cancer, fibrosis, and neurodegenerative diseases. The review also addresses the role of copper in angiogenesis, oxidative stress, immune responses, and its involvement in diseases like Alzheimer's and diabetes. Special attention is given to copper-requiring proteins, such as ceruloplasmin, cytochrome c oxidase, and superoxide dismutase, that depend on copper for their activity.
Who was studied?
The review covers several genetic disorders related to copper metabolism, including Wilson’s disease, Menke’s disease, and aceruloplasminemia, which result from mutations in copper transport and homeostasis genes like ATP7A and ATP7B. These conditions lead to either copper toxicity (in Wilson's disease) or deficiency (in Menke’s disease and aceruloplasminemia), manifesting as various systemic effects such as neurological damage, liver dysfunction, and cardiovascular complications. The study also considers the role of copper in non-genetic diseases such as Alzheimer's disease, diabetes, prion diseases, and cancer, where copper plays a dual role, either promoting or inhibiting disease progression depending on its concentration and the specific biological context. Additionally, the review investigates the impact of copper complexes in medical treatments and therapeutic interventions for these diseases.
Most important findings
Copper has a complex and dual role in human health. While copper deficiency leads to various health problems like impaired immune function, neurological deficits, and cardiovascular issues, copper excess, as seen in Wilson's disease, results in toxic accumulation in tissues, particularly the liver and brain. The review also highlights the therapeutic potential of copper-lowering therapies in the treatment of conditions like cancer and fibrosis. Zinc therapy, commonly used in Wilson's disease, works by competing with copper for absorption in the gastrointestinal tract, thus preventing copper buildup. The review also discusses ceruloplasmin (Cp) as a major copper-binding protein in the blood, playing an essential role in iron metabolism and preventing iron overload. Other copper-dependent proteins like cytochrome c oxidase, involved in mitochondrial energy production, and superoxide dismutase, which detoxifies reactive oxygen species (ROS), are also critical for maintaining cellular health.
Key implications
The findings of this review underscore the importance of copper regulation in maintaining health and preventing disease. Clinicians should be aware of the potential for copper toxicity in individuals with Wilson’s disease or those exposed to excess copper in the environment, such as in water or food sources. Copper chelation therapy could be a valuable tool in managing these conditions, especially in diseases like Wilson’s and in preventing copper-induced tumor progression. The role of copper in neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer’s, where it contributes to amyloid plaque formation, calls for further research into copper-modulating treatments. The dual role of copper in promoting and inhibiting disease progression suggests the need for careful monitoring of copper levels in patients with these conditions, alongside the use of targeted therapies that either promote or inhibit copper utilization.
Metallochaperones: Bind and Deliver
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review examines the role of metallochaperones in copper and nickel ion transport, highlighting their significance in metal ion homeostasis and implications for treating diseases like Wilson's and Menkes diseases.
What was reviewed?
This review explores the role of metallochaperones in delivering metal ions to their target proteins in biological systems, focusing on copper and nickel chaperones. The paper reviews how these metallochaperones bind and transport metal ions such as Cu(I) and Ni(II) to enzymes and proteins that require them for proper functioning. It covers the structural characteristics of several metallochaperones, including Atx1, CCS, and UreE, and how they interact with metal-binding sites in their target proteins. The review also discusses how these chaperones mediate the assembly of metal cofactors for enzymes involved in vital biological processes like respiration, antioxidant defense, and nitrogen metabolism.
Who was reviewed?
The review primarily focuses on metallochaperones, specifically those involved in copper and nickel transport in both prokaryotic and eukaryotic organisms. It examines the molecular mechanisms of metallochaperone function in organisms such as yeast, bacteria (e.g., Klebsiella aerogenes), and humans. The study discusses copper chaperones like Atx1, Atox1, and CCS, along with nickel chaperones such as UreE, in relation to their target proteins, which include copper transport ATPases, superoxide dismutase (SOD1), cytochrome c oxidase, and urease.
What were the most important findings?
The review highlights several important findings about the function of metallochaperones. First, it underscores the critical role of copper chaperones like Atx1 in transferring copper to ATPases such as Ccc2, which are essential for copper incorporation into the Golgi apparatus and other cellular compartments. CCS chaperones were found to be integral in transferring copper to copper-zinc superoxide dismutase (SOD1), a crucial antioxidant enzyme. Additionally, UreE plays an essential role in delivering nickel to the urease enzyme for proper function in nitrogen fixation. The review also elaborates on the structural aspects of these chaperones, noting that the CXXC motif in Atx1 and Atox1 and the CXC motif in CCS are key to their ability to bind metal ions and deliver them to their respective targets.
A significant point made in the review is that metallochaperones are highly specific in recognizing their target proteins, which allows for precise metal delivery, ensuring that metal ions are incorporated into the correct active sites of enzymes. This specificity is achieved through protein-protein interactions, where chaperones dock with target proteins to facilitate metal transfer. The review also highlights ongoing research into other metallochaperones involved in nickel and iron metabolism, which are still not fully understood but are essential for a wide range of enzymatic processes.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The implications of this review are significant for both basic biological research and therapeutic applications. Understanding the function of metallochaperones can lead to better insights into how metal ions influence various biological processes, including cell signaling, oxidative stress response, and enzyme catalysis. This knowledge could be crucial in designing therapeutic interventions for diseases related to metal imbalances, such as Wilson's disease (copper overload) and Menkes disease (copper deficiency). Additionally, targeting metallochaperones or their pathways could provide new opportunities for treating neurodegenerative diseases where metal ion mismanagement, particularly copper and zinc, plays a role in pathology.
The study also opens up avenues for research into the development of metallochaperone inhibitors or mimetics that could be used in drug design to either prevent metal ion misincorporation or enhance metal delivery to deficient enzymes. This approach could potentially improve treatments for various conditions, including cancer and cardiovascular diseases, where metal homeostasis is disrupted.
The Dietary Fiber Pectin: Health Benefits and Potential for the Treatment of Allergies by Modulation of Gut Microbiota
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review explains how dietary pectin may shift gut microbiota and SCFA production to shape allergy risk, while also noting reports of pectin-related sensitization and anaphylaxis. It highlights structure-dependent microbial associations and immune pathways that matter in asthma and food allergy.
What was reviewed?
This review examined how the dietary fiber pectin may influence allergic diseases by reshaping gut (and sometimes lung) microbiota and by changing microbe-derived metabolites, especially short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs). The authors compared evidence across pectin sources and structures (including differences in degree of esterification and modified or hydrolyzed pectin fractions) to explain why pectin sometimes dampens allergic inflammation but can also, in select circumstances, promote sensitization or trigger reactions. They also summarized proposed immune pathways that connect pectin fermentation and SCFA signaling to regulatory immune programs that matter in asthma, food allergy, and atopic disease.
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesized findings from multiple evidence streams rather than focusing on one patient cohort. It drew on murine allergy and airway-inflammation models, rat metabolic and gut physiology studies, in vitro fermentation experiments using human fecal microbiota, mechanistic in vitro work using immune and epithelial cell systems (including dendritic cells and macrophages), and human clinical observations such as case reports of pectin-associated anaphylaxis or occupational asthma. In other words, the “who” spans experimental animals, human-derived microbial communities, human immune cells, and real-world human exposures, allowing clinicians to see where signals are consistent and where translation remains uncertain.
What were the most important findings?
Across models, pectin repeatedly acted as a microbiota-accessible substrate that shifted community composition and metabolic output in ways relevant to allergic inflammation, with a consistent theme of higher SCFA generation (acetate, propionate, butyrate) after fermentation. Major microbial associations (MMA) linked to pectin exposure included increased Bifidobacterium and Lactobacillus in several contexts, plus enrichment or modulation of taxa tied to SCFA production or immune homeostasis such as Faecalibacterium prausnitzii, Eubacterium rectale, Roseburia, Ruminococcus, Prevotella, and Bacteroides, while community changes varied by pectin structure and degree of esterification. Mechanistically, SCFAs were positioned as key mediators that support peripheral regulatory T-cell programs and temper dendritic-cell inflammatory function via receptor signaling and epigenetic effects, while pectin itself also showed direct immune activity, including selective inhibition of pro-inflammatory TLR2–TLR1 signaling and interference with LPS–TLR4 interactions in certain experimental settings. Importantly, the review emphasized a clinically relevant controversy: pectin can reduce allergic airway inflammation in some models, yet it may also protect food allergens from digestion, abrogate oral tolerance in specific experiments, and has been implicated in human anaphylaxis and occupational asthma, sometimes with suspected cross-reactivity to tree nuts such as cashew or pistachio.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
For clinicians, the review supports pectin as a plausible dietary lever to influence allergic risk through microbiome metabolism, but it argues against treating “pectin” as a single, predictable intervention. The strongest practical implication is that pectin’s immunologic direction may depend on structure (source, degree of esterification, molecular weight, and processing into oligosaccharides), baseline microbiota, and route of exposure, which together determine whether SCFA-linked regulatory signals dominate or whether sensitization risks emerge. This framing encourages careful patient selection and phenotype awareness: pectin-rich diets or supplements may help when the therapeutic goal is to increase SCFA production and strengthen regulatory immune tone, yet clinicians should remain alert to rare but meaningful hypersensitivity reactions and to the possibility that certain matrices could increase allergen persistence in the gut. The review also points to a near-term research need that clinicians can track: defining structure-specific pectin “signatures” that reliably shift MMA and SCFA profiles toward tolerance-supporting patterns without increasing adverse reactions.
The Role of Selenium in Arsenic and Cadmium Toxicity: an Updated Review of Scientific Literature
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review explores the protective effects of selenium against arsenic and cadmium toxicity, emphasizing its role in reducing oxidative stress, inflammation, and cellular damage. The findings suggest selenium supplementation may help mitigate the harmful effects of these metals on human health.
What was studied?
This review investigates the role of selenium in mitigating the toxic effects of Arsenic (As) and cadmium exposure. Researchers examined the various mechanisms by which selenium interacts with these toxic metals, focusing on its potential to reduce oxidative stress, inflammation, and cellular damage. The review synthesizes findings from studies that explored the impact of selenium supplementation on individuals and animals exposed to high levels of arsenic and cadmium, emphasizing how selenium can potentially alleviate the harmful effects of these heavy metals on human health.
Who was studied?
The review covers a broad range of studies involving both animal models and human populations. Animal studies mainly used rodents, particularly rats and mice, exposed to arsenic and cadmium through drinking water or food. These animals were then administered selenium supplements to evaluate its protective effects. In terms of human studies, the review references populations living in regions with chronic exposure to arsenic and cadmium, including areas in Bangladesh, India, and China. The studies reviewed in this paper focused on the impacts of selenium on biomarkers related to arsenic and cadmium toxicity, such as oxidative stress markers, liver function, and kidney damage.
Most important findings
The review highlights significant findings related to selenium's ability to counteract arsenic and cadmium toxicity. Selenium was shown to mitigate the oxidative stress induced by these metals by enhancing the activity of antioxidant enzymes, particularly glutathione peroxidase. In addition to reducing oxidative damage, selenium helps prevent cellular damage to vital organs like the liver and kidneys, which are often targeted by prolonged exposure to arsenic and cadmium. Selenium also plays a role in reducing inflammation, as it helps lower the levels of pro-inflammatory cytokines that are elevated due to arsenic and cadmium exposure. Furthermore, the review discusses how selenium might influence the detoxification pathways in the body, particularly through its effects on the glutathione system. Studies have also suggested that selenium supplementation may have different levels of efficacy depending on the sex of the individuals.
Key implications
The findings of this review suggest that selenium supplementation may be an effective strategy for mitigating the health impacts of arsenic and cadmium exposure, particularly in populations at risk for chronic exposure to these toxic metals. However, the review also emphasizes the need for more research to determine the optimal dosage and form of selenium that would provide maximum protection without any adverse effects. Given that arsenic and cadmium exposure is a significant health concern in many developing countries, selenium supplementation could serve as an accessible and cost-effective intervention. It is critical to understand how selenium interacts with other environmental toxins to further develop comprehensive health strategies. The review also points out that the effects of selenium may vary based on genetic factors, diet, and other environmental conditions, highlighting the importance of personalized approaches to selenium supplementation in regions with high arsenic and cadmium exposure.
Total arsenic and speciation analysis of saliva and urine samples from individuals living in a chronic arsenicosis area in China
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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The study assessed arsenic exposure in Shanyin County residents through saliva and urine samples. It confirmed that saliva is a potential biomarker for total arsenic exposure, although less effective for understanding arsenic metabolism.
What was studied?
The study aimed to assess arsenic exposure in individuals from an arsenic-contaminated area in Shanyin County, Shanxi Province, China. Researchers focused on measuring total arsenic and its species in both urine and saliva samples to investigate the potential use of saliva as a biomarker for arsenic exposure. They compared arsenic concentrations in these biological fluids, correlating them with arsenic levels in drinking water and the presence of skin lesions. The study also explored the relationship between arsenic metabolism and species found in both urine and saliva.
Who was studied?
The participants in the study included 70 individuals from 42 families residing in Shanyin County, an area with a high prevalence of arsenicosis, a disease caused by chronic arsenic exposure. The subjects were mostly adults, with the study including both male and female participants, with ages ranging from 21 to 78 years. This population was selected due to their exposure to arsenic-contaminated drinking water, with some individuals also exhibiting skin lesions commonly associated with arsenic poisoning.
Most important findings
The study found that both salivary and urinary arsenic levels were positively correlated with the arsenic concentration in drinking water, as well as with the presence of skin lesions. Specifically, as the arsenic concentration in drinking water increased, so did the levels of arsenic in both saliva and urine, confirming that these biological fluids can serve as useful indicators of arsenic exposure. The research also revealed that while saliva exhibited a lower concentration of arsenic compared to urine, there was a strong correlation between the arsenic found in saliva and that in urine, making saliva a potential biomarker for total arsenic exposure. However, it was noted that arsenic in saliva did not show the same degree of methylation as in urine, with inorganic arsenic being the most prevalent species in saliva. In contrast, urine predominantly contained methylated species like dimethylarsinate (DMA) and methylarsonic acid (MMA).
Key implications
The findings suggest that saliva can be used as a non-invasive, practical biomarker for assessing total arsenic exposure, particularly in population studies. However, while saliva can help monitor exposure levels, it is less effective in evaluating arsenic metabolism, which can be better assessed through urine samples. This distinction underscores the importance of selecting appropriate biomarkers depending on the type of arsenic exposure and the desired analysis. The study also emphasizes the need for continued exploration into the relationship between arsenic species and human health, particularly in understanding the biological mechanisms underlying arsenic toxicity and its systemic effects.
Lead as a Risk Factor for Osteoporosis in Post-menopausal Women
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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The review highlights the connection between lead exposure and osteoporosis risk in post-menopausal women, showing how lead release during bone turnover contributes to health complications. Strategies to reduce bone resorption during menopause can mitigate lead-related risks and improve health outcomes.
What was studied?
The review explored lead exposure as a risk factor for osteoporosis in post-menopausal women, focusing on how lead accumulates in bones throughout an individual's life and is released during periods of increased bone resorption, such as menopause. During menopause, the hormonal decline in estrogen leads to increased bone turnover, where bone resorption surpasses formation. This imbalance can trigger the release of stored lead from bones into the bloodstream, contributing to various adverse health outcomes, including osteoporosis. The paper examines how this process increases the risk of hypertension, kidney dysfunction, neurocognitive issues, and cardiovascular problems in post-menopausal women. The review also discusses factors that influence bone and blood lead levels, such as ethnicity, occupation, lifestyle, and environmental exposures, which can amplify the risks associated with lead exposure.
Who was studied?
The review focuses on post-menopausal women, who are particularly vulnerable to the effects of lead exposure due to hormonal changes that affect bone metabolism. Various studies included in the review analyzed different populations of post-menopausal women, with specific attention to those living in environments where lead exposure is significant, either due to occupational or environmental factors. Ethnic differences were also noted, with studies suggesting that white women may have a stronger inverse relationship between lead exposure and bone mineral density (BMD) compared to African-American women. Additionally, the impact of lifestyle factors such as smoking, alcohol use, and dietary habits (especially calcium and vitamin D intake) was examined, as these factors can influence blood lead levels and bone health.
Most important findings
The review underscores that lead exposure is a significant risk factor for osteoporosis in post-menopausal women. It highlights how the mobilization of lead from bones, triggered by bone resorption during menopause, contributes to increased blood lead levels and subsequently worsens the risk of osteoporosis. The review also points out that higher blood lead levels (BLLs) are associated with decreased bone mineral density (BMD), particularly among white women, although this relationship was less clear in African-American women. Environmental and occupational factors, such as living in lead-contaminated environments or working in industries with lead exposure, were identified as key contributors to elevated BLLs. The review further suggests that estrogen deficiency, which is common in post-menopausal women, exacerbates this process by promoting bone resorption, leading to the release of lead from the bones into the bloodstream. Other factors, such as dietary intake of micronutrients like calcium and vitamin D, were found to influence the magnitude of lead exposure, with some studies indicating that higher micronutrient intake could help reduce BLLs.
Key implications
The findings from this review emphasize that post-menopausal women are at higher risk of adverse health outcomes related to lead exposure, particularly osteoporosis. For clinicians, this underscores the need for targeted interventions aimed at reducing bone resorption during menopause, such as the use of hormone replacement therapy (HRT) or other medications that can slow down bone loss. Additionally, clinicians need to assess environmental and occupational lead exposure, as well as lifestyle factors like smoking and alcohol use, which could further exacerbate lead-related health risks. In terms of microbiome research, the review indicates that lead exposure may affect bone metabolism and health outcomes, highlighting the importance of considering lead exposure as a potential confounding factor in microbiome studies, particularly in post-menopausal women. Understanding the impact of lead on bone turnover and its influence on microbial signatures could provide valuable insights into the broader health effects of chronic lead exposure and the management of osteoporosis.
Heavy metal association with chronic kidney disease of unknown cause in central India: results from a case-control study
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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The study demonstrates that arsenic exposure is independently associated with CKDu in central India, with CKDu and CKD patients showing heavier burdens of cadmium, lead, and chromium than healthy individuals.
What was studied?
This study investigated heavy metal association with CKDu, focusing on whether exposure to arsenic (As), cadmium (Cd), lead (Pb), and chromium (Cr) differs in adults with chronic kidney disease of unknown cause (CKDu) compared with those who have traditional chronic kidney disease (CKD) or normal renal function. Conducted at a tertiary hospital in central India, the research directly measured blood and urine metal concentrations using inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectrometry, enabling a more reliable assessment of systemic metal burden than urine-only measurements. The investigators also evaluated environmental and behavioral exposures, including pesticide use and drinking water sources, to identify potential pathways contributing to CKDu. Visual data reinforce these findings through box plots showing markedly elevated blood arsenic in CKDu compared with CKD and healthy controls, alongside consistently higher cadmium, lead, and chromium levels in all renal dysfunction groups.
Who was studied?
Adults aged 18–70 years were enrolled between 2019 and 2022, comprising 60 CKDu patients, 62 CKD controls, and 54 healthy controls, all from central India. CKDu participants met strict diagnostic criteria excluding diabetes, longstanding hypertension, glomerular disease, obstruction, or kidney stones, with proteinuria below 2 g/g and eGFR <60 mL/min/1.73 m² for at least three months. CKD controls had similar renal impairment but with identifiable etiologies and greater proteinuria. Healthy controls were relatives of patients, confirmed to have normal eGFR (>90 mL/min/1.73 m²), normal albumin-creatinine ratios, and no comorbidities. Groups were comparable in many behavioral variables, but CKDu patients reported disproportionately higher pesticide exposure and surface-water consumption.
Most important findings
The clearest signal was the disproportionately high blood arsenic in CKDu (median 91.97 µg/L), significantly exceeding levels in CKD (4.5 µg/L) and healthy controls (39.01 µg/L). Regression modeling (page 10) confirmed blood arsenic as independently associated with CKDu after accounting for age and sex. Urinary arsenic, by contrast, was highest in healthy participants—a pattern likely explained by reduced urinary excretion in CKD and CKDu due to lower GFR. Cadmium, lead, and chromium were consistently higher in both CKDu and CKD groups relative to healthy controls, with CKD generally showing the largest elevations. Urinary Cd, Pb, and Cr were undetectable in most healthy subjects. Strong correlations between these metals in both blood and urine (page 6) imply shared environmental co-exposures. Surface water use was another strong predictor of CKDu (OR ~3.18).
Heavy Metal
CKDu vs CKD
CKDu vs Healthy
Key Note
Arsenic
Much higher
Higher
Only metal independently linked to CKDu
Cadmium
Slightly lower
Higher
Weak CKD-specific trend
Lead
Lower
Higher
Significant overall burden in kidney disease
Chromium
Slightly lower
Higher
Strong co-exposure correlations
Key implications
This work identifies arsenic as a key environmental factor associated with CKDu in central India, implicating pesticide contamination and surface water as potential exposure routes. The broader heavy-metal burden in CKD and CKDu underscores systemic environmental toxicity as a shared contributor to renal injury. These findings highlight the importance of integrating environmental health assessment—including metal exposure history and water-source evaluation—into clinical evaluation of CKDu, and they offer mechanistic links to known microbial dysbiosis pathways relevant for microbiome-signature databases.
Long-term exposure to low-level arsenic in drinking water is associated with cause-specific mortality and hospitalization in the Mt. Amiata area (Tuscany, Italy)
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Long-term exposure to low-level arsenic in drinking water in Mt. Amiata, Italy, was linked to increased mortality and hospitalization risks, especially for cardiovascular diseases and cancer. Even low-level exposure below the regulatory limit showed significant health implications.
What was studied?
This study investigated the long-term health effects of low-level arsenic exposure through drinking water in the Mt. Amiata region of Tuscany, Italy. It focused on understanding how chronic exposure to arsenic, even at concentrations below the regulatory limit, affects public health outcomes. Specifically, the research assessed its impact on mortality and hospitalization rates, analyzing the correlation between arsenic exposure and health conditions such as cardiovascular diseases, lung cancer, and respiratory diseases. The study sought to explore the potential long-term risks associated with low-level arsenic contamination in drinking water, particularly in regions where arsenic concentrations exceed the current safety standards.
Who was studied?
The study included a cohort of 30,910 individuals from five municipalities in the Mt. Amiata region. This population, with a total of 407,213 person-years of follow-up, represented a mix of age, gender, and socio-economic statuses. The focus was on individuals residing in areas with arsenic concentrations higher than the recommended maximum limit of 10 μg/L in drinking water. Participants' health data, including their exposure to arsenic, socio-economic factors, and residential duration in the area, were all taken into account to assess the long-term health effects of arsenic exposure.
Most important findings
The study revealed a clear connection between long-term arsenic exposure and increased mortality rates, particularly in women. Exposure to arsenic levels exceeding 10 μg/L was linked to higher risks of non-accidental mortality, with a notable increase in cancer-related deaths, especially in women. There was also a significant association between arsenic exposure and hospitalization for cardiovascular diseases, lung cancer, and respiratory conditions. The research further indicated that even levels of arsenic exposure below the regulatory limit of 10 μg/L were associated with certain health risks, suggesting that current standards might not adequately protect populations from the long-term health effects of arsenic. These findings point to the need for stricter monitoring and regulation of arsenic levels in drinking water to safeguard public health.
Key implications
This study underscores the serious health risks associated with long-term arsenic exposure, even at levels considered safe by current regulatory standards. The connection between arsenic exposure and various chronic diseases, such as cardiovascular diseases and cancer, highlights the potential public health crisis in areas with arsenic-contaminated drinking water. Given these findings, there is a clear need to reassess arsenic exposure guidelines and implement more effective regulatory measures. Furthermore, the study emphasizes the importance of continuous monitoring of water quality, particularly in regions where arsenic levels are naturally elevated, to mitigate health risks and prevent the occurrence of chronic diseases associated with long-term exposure to this toxic element.
Ferroptosis: principles and significance in health and disease
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review explains how ferroptosis, an iron-driven lipid peroxidation death pathway, shapes cancer, inflammation, and organ injury. It highlights core regulators such as GPX4 defense, iron handling, lipid remodeling, and microbiome-derived metabolites that can shift ferroptosis sensitivity.
What was reviewed?
This paper reviewed ferroptosis as a regulated, non-apoptotic form of cell death driven by iron-dependent lipid peroxidation, then mapped the main molecular “pressure points” that determine whether cells resist or enter ferroptosis. It focused on core chemistry (iron handling and lipid oxidation), the best-supported defense systems that stop membrane damage, and how organelles and metabolism shape susceptibility. It also summarized where ferroptosis matters in disease, with emphasis on cancer biology and therapy response, and it highlighted emerging clinical angles such as candidate biomarkers and drug strategies to either trigger ferroptosis in tumors or block it in tissue injury.
Who was reviewed?
Because this is a review, it did not study a single patient cohort. Instead, it synthesized evidence across experimental systems that include human and mouse cells, tumor models, and inflammatory or ischemia–reperfusion models, alongside translational observations in conditions where iron load and oxidized lipids rise. It also integrated host–microbe work showing that gut and intratumoral microbes can shift ferroptosis sensitivity through secreted metabolites, linking microbiome composition to host redox control in contexts such as colorectal cancer, infection-driven inflammation, and barrier injury.
What were the most important findings?
The review clarified that ferroptosis starts when iron availability and oxidant generation outpace antioxidant “brakes,” leading to runaway oxidation of polyunsaturated lipids and, later, loss of membrane integrity. It emphasized the central protective role of the cystine import pathway that fuels glutathione and GPX4 activity, and it highlighted parallel protection that does not rely on GPX4, including membrane-associated systems that regenerate radical-trapping antioxidants. It connected lipid remodeling enzymes to risk, explained how iron trafficking and ferritin turnover can raise the labile iron pool, and described membrane damage control mechanisms that influence whether death spreads to neighboring cells. Importantly for microbiome signatures, it described microbial and metabolite links that can suppress or reshape ferroptosis programs, including colorectal cancer–relevant anaerobes and Lactobacillus-derived activities that modulate host antioxidant pathways.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
For clinicians, the key implication is that ferroptosis is not just a lab concept: it is a tunable vulnerability in cancer and a plausible driver of injury in organs exposed to oxidative stress, ischemia–reperfusion, infection, and chronic inflammation. The review supports a practical framework: push ferroptosis in tumors that resist apoptosis, but prevent ferroptosis in settings like acute tissue injury where lipid peroxidation amplifies damage. It also suggests that biomarkers tied to oxidized lipids and iron handling may help stratify risk or treatment response, while microbiome-aware care may matter because microbial metabolites can shift host ferroptosis thresholds and potentially influence colorectal cancer biology and therapy response.
The Role of Chelation in the Treatment of Arsenic and Mercury Poisoning
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review explores the role of chelation therapy in treating arsenic and mercury poisoning, focusing on the efficacy of BAL, DMPS, and DMSA in acute cases and the challenges posed by chronic exposure. It discusses therapeutic benefits, limitations, and the need for further research.
What was studied?
This paper examines the role of chelation therapy in treating arsenic and mercury poisoning, particularly focusing on the efficacy of key chelating agents such as British anti-lewisite (BAL), DMPS (Unithiol), and DMSA (Succimer). The review traces the development of these chelators, their therapeutic use, and the effects of chelation on the elimination of arsenic and mercury from the human body. The study delves into the historical context of chelation therapy, starting with the creation of BAL during World War II for treating arsenic poisoning from lewisite, an arsenic-based chemical weapon. The article also explores the animal studies that demonstrated the efficacy of these chelating agents in acute exposure cases and discusses the limitations of chelation therapy for chronic exposure to these heavy metals.
Who was studied?
The review incorporates data from animal studies, controlled trials, and clinical case reports of arsenic and mercury poisoning, mainly focusing on the effects of chelation therapy in humans. The patients studied in clinical trials were exposed to inorganic arsenic and mercury, either through occupational exposure, environmental contamination, or industrial accidents. These studies aim to determine the practical application of chelation agents in human cases, especially in scenarios of chronic exposure, which presents a more complex challenge than acute poisoning. Additionally, the review includes information about historical clinical applications of BAL, especially its use in treating arsenic intoxication related to medical treatments in the mid-20th century.
Most important findings
The review provides insights into the clinical application of chelating agents in treating arsenic and mercury intoxication. BAL, DMPS, and DMSA have proven effective in acute poisoning, with studies showing significant improvements in arsenic excretion and survival rates when administered promptly after exposure. Notably, DMPS and DMSA offer a higher therapeutic index than BAL and do not redistribute arsenic or mercury to the brain, a significant advantage over BAL, which can cause such redistribution. However, the review highlights the limited success of chelation therapy in cases of chronic arsenic and mercury poisoning, where the efficacy of these agents in reducing long-term morbidity and mortality remains largely unproven.
The review further examines the impact of chelation on various biomarkers, such as urine arsenic levels, as well as the therapeutic limitations, especially when the treatment is delayed. Chelation therapy has been more successful in preventing acute toxicity, but its role in treating chronic poisoning remains less clear. Moreover, the study discusses the adverse effects associated with chelation therapy, including allergic reactions and gastrointestinal disturbances, which can complicate treatment regimens. The review concludes that while chelation is a vital tool in acute intoxication, its efficacy in chronic exposure remains uncertain, and further studies are needed to better understand its potential benefits and risks.
Key implications
The findings of this review have significant implications for the treatment of arsenic and mercury poisoning, particularly in clinical settings where patients may have been exposed to these metals for extended periods. While chelation therapy offers rapid and effective detoxification in acute poisoning cases, the efficacy of long-term treatment in chronic exposure scenarios requires more robust evidence. Clinicians must balance the benefits of chelation, such as increased excretion of toxic metals, with the risks of potential side effects and metal redistribution, especially when using agents like BAL. The review suggests that chelation therapy should be initiated as early as possible to achieve optimal results and reduce the severity of symptoms.
The Human Gut Microbiome’s Influence on Arsenic Toxicity
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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The human gut microbiome and arsenic toxicity are tightly linked: microbes change arsenic speciation and dose, while arsenic reshapes gut ecology, altering risk. Clinicians should integrate microbiome status, nutrition, antibiotics history, and speciation into assessment and management.
What was reviewed?
This review examined how the human gut microbiome and arsenic toxicity intersect, focusing on ways gut bacteria alter arsenic speciation, bioavailability, metabolism, and excretion. It summarized evidence that gut microbes reduce arsenate, efflux, and sequester arsenite via ars operons (ArsC, ArsB/Acr3, ArsA, ArsD), methylate arsenic through ArsM to mono- and dimethylated species, and generate thiolated and glutathione-conjugated forms that change toxicity. It also covered ex vivo human stool incubations showing microbiome-driven conversion of pentavalent species into more toxic trivalent organoarsenicals, animal studies linking microbiome disruption to higher body burdens, and population studies connecting exposure with shifts in community structure and resistance genes.
Who was reviewed?
The authors synthesized culture studies of gut and environmental bacteria, ex vivo work with human fecal samples, gnotobiotic and antibiotic-perturbed mouse models (including humanized AS3MT-knockout mice), and limited human epidemiology. The authors discussed US infant cohorts where urinary arsenic correlated with gains and losses in genera, Bangladeshi children where high household water arsenic enriched Enterobacteriaceae and resistance genes, and rodent experiments showing that even 10 ppb exposures shifted microbiome composition and host pathways. They also highlighted clinical angles around arsenic trioxide therapy, noting how patient microbiomes may influence oral bioavailability and toxicity, and called for epidemiologic studies that track microbiome function alongside arsenic speciation and health outcomes.
Most important findings
The microbiome can directly biotransform arsenic and change host exposure. Bacteria reduce arsenate to arsenite and pump it out, methylate arsenite to MMA and DMA, and, in low-oxygen gut settings, can favor more toxic trivalent organoarsenicals; stool incubations from humans produced MMA(III) and DMA(III) from pentavalent precursors. In vivo, microbiome depletion increases host arsenic load: antibiotic-treated mice showed reduced fecal excretion and greater hepatic and pulmonary accumulation, while colonization with commensals such as Faecalibacterium protected AS3MT-deficient mice. Arsenic itself perturbs gut communities in dose- and time-dependent ways, with reported enrichment of
Gammaproteobacteria/Enterobacteriaceae in exposed children and decreases in common commensals in animal models; sex, feeding status, and micronutrients modify these effects. Notably, arsenic exposure co-selects antibiotic and metal resistance genes, consistent with ars loci co-occurring on mobile elements. Across models, SCFA-producing taxa (e.g., Blautia, Lachnospiraceae, Ruminococcus, Faecalibacterium) tracked with better survival or lower toxicity, suggesting functional markers for a microbiome signatures database. Mechanistically, microbial redox chemistry, methylation, thiolation, and adsorption to Gram-positive extracellular polymers emerge as key routes by which microbes lower or raise the effective dose at the mucosa and shape urinary speciation profiles relevant to clinical risk.
Key implications
Clinicians should factor microbiome status into arsenic risk assessment and care. Unnecessary antibiotics may raise tissue burdens by stripping biomass that binds or transforms arsenic, while diets that support SCFA producers could help restore barrier function and detox pathways. Iron sufficiency may blunt arsenic-driven dysbiosis, and zinc deficiency may worsen it, so basic nutrition matters in exposed patients. For monitoring and research, pair exposure metrics with microbiome readouts and arsenic speciation, since the same dose can yield different toxicity depending on gut community function. In oncology, as oral arsenic trioxide use expands, integrate stool microbiome profiling and recent antibiotic history into pharmacovigilance and PK/PD studies. Overall, the review argues for microbiome-aware public health and precision mitigation that combine source remediation with strategies to preserve or rebuild protective gut functions.
Evaluation of mercury exposure level, clinical diagnosis and treatment for mercury intoxication
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review explains how mercury form and exposure route change diagnosis and treatment. It compares blood, urine, and hair biomarkers, discusses why symptoms do not always match measured levels, and summarizes supportive care and chelation options while noting that firm treatment thresholds remain hard to define.
What was reviewed?
This review explained how different mercury forms (metallic, inorganic, and organic methylmercury) create different exposure routes, target organs, and clinical patterns, so clinicians should not treat “mercury” as one uniform toxin. It focused on the practical steps needed to evaluate exposure sources (occupational versus environmental), interpret biomarker tests, and decide when symptoms and measured levels justify intervention. The authors emphasized that most modern concern centers on chronic low-to-moderate exposure in the general environment, not only the high-dose disasters historically linked to methylmercury.
Who was reviewed?
The authors reviewed evidence from multiple human and experimental settings rather than one patient group. They summarized occupational case and surveillance data (where inhaled mercury vapor historically dominated), general-population studies where diet drives exposure, and major epidemiologic cohorts that assessed neurodevelopmental risk from low-grade methylmercury exposure. They also incorporated clinical toxicology guidance and reports on chelation, dialysis-based strategies, and supportive care, using these sources to outline how clinicians can evaluate symptomatic patients while acknowledging that symptom–level correlations remain inconsistent across studies.
What were the most important findings?
The review clarified how to match a biomarker to the suspected mercury form and timing. Blood and urine often reflect recent or ongoing exposure, but urine is most informative for metallic and inorganic mercury, while hair best captures chronic methylmercury exposure and can approximate longer-term dose history. The authors stressed that measurement alone rarely proves toxicity because symptoms vary widely and many routine lab abnormalities lack mercury specificity. They highlighted practical thresholds used in published guidance for “vigilance” versus “intervention” while underscoring that universal diagnostic cutoffs do not exist. They presented provocation testing with chelators as a debated tool intended to estimate body burden when symptoms and exposure history remain unclear.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
Clinicians should treat mercury assessment as a structured risk-and-symptom decision rather than a single lab result. This review supports taking a detailed exposure history, identifying and removing the exposure source, and choosing biomarkers that fit the suspected form and exposure window. It also reinforces that chelation can be appropriate in symptomatic poisoning, yet indications remain incompletely standardized, and benefits versus harms depend on mercury form, severity, and clinical stability. Finally, the paper highlights a real practice gap: chronic low-level exposure is common and controversial, so clinicians need clearer, evidence-based standards that link exposure level, symptoms, and outcomes to guide when to treat.
Is Urinary Cadmium a Biomarker of Long-term Exposure in Humans? A Review
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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The review shows that urinary cadmium biomarker long-term exposure provides a stable signal of cumulative dose. Smoking, age, sex, iron status, and kidney function shape values. Proper dilution adjustment and stratification improve validity for clinical and microbiome research.
What was reviewed?
This review examines urinary cadmium biomarker long-term exposure in humans and assesses how well urinary cadmium (U-Cd) reflects body burden over time. The authors explain cadmium toxicokinetics and show that kidneys store cadmium for decades and release small amounts into urine. They describe how U-Cd tracks renal cadmium and thus captures cumulative exposure better than blood cadmium in most non-occupational settings. They summarise evidence on factors that change U-Cd, such as smoking status, age, sex, iron status, renal physiology, and urine dilution. They also discuss analytical issues that can bias U-Cd, including creatinine normalisation and polyatomic interferences during ICP-MS analysis, and they propose ways to handle these issues in study design and interpretation.
Who was reviewed?
The review draws on adult populations from community cohorts and national surveys, plus residents of historically contaminated regions and some occupational groups. It includes never, former, and current smokers, and both men and women, with attention to women who have low iron stores and pregnancy history. It covers first-morning void, spot, and 24-hour urine sampling and compares their performance. It also pools data across studies to examine smoking strata by age and evaluates temporal stability using repeated measures in healthy participants. The authors give practical ranges for U-Cd in Western populations without unusual exposure and report how values differ when kidney disease or proteinuria changes renal handling.
Most important findings
U-Cd shows good to excellent temporal stability, with intraclass correlation coefficients between 0.66 and 0.81 across months to years and across spot and first-morning samples. This supports its use as a marker of long-term exposure rather than day-to-day intake. U-Cd rises with age and is higher in women, driven in part by lower iron stores that upregulate divalent metal transporters and increase cadmium absorption. Smoking exerts the strongest effect. Current smokers have the highest U-Cd, former smokers sit between current and never smokers, and differences persist decades after cessation, which reinforces U-Cd as an index of cumulative dose.
In Western general populations without unusual exposures, creatinine-normalised U-Cd usually stays below 2 μg/g. Creatinine normalisation corrects for urine dilution but can inflate age associations because creatinine falls with age; specific gravity offers an alternative. Kidney disease and proteinuria can increase U-Cd through co-excretion of cadmium-metallothionein, which risks reverse causality in cross-sectional links between U-Cd and renal outcomes. Analytical interferences during ICP-MS can bias low-level measurements unless laboratories manage isobaric and polyatomic overlaps. For microbiome studies, the paper does not report microbial taxa or community shifts; yet it supports U-Cd as a stable external exposure variable that investigators can align with gut or oral microbiome signatures, provided they stratify by smoking and account for iron status, sex, age, and renal function to avoid confounding.
Key implications
Clinicians and researchers can use U-Cd as a practical, stable marker of cumulative cadmium burden in population studies and translational work. They should stratify by smoking status, adjust for urine dilution, and record iron status, sex, and age in models. They should avoid over-interpreting cross-sectional associations with renal outcomes when proteinuria is present and should consider prospective designs. Microbiome researchers can pair U-Cd with host and microbial data as an exposure variable and include renal and iron measures to reduce bias. These steps improve risk estimates and make U-Cd more useful in both clinical and exposure–microbiome research.
A narrative review on the role of magnesium in immune regulation, inflammation, infectious diseases, and cancer
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review explains how magnesium supports immune signaling and controls inflammation. It links magnesium deficiency to higher cytokine activity, oxidative stress, infection risk, and cancer progression. It also highlights magnesium-dependent T-cell function pathways and notes that microbiome links appear through inflammaging, not consistent taxa signatures.
What was reviewed?
This narrative review examined how magnesium supports immune regulation and how magnesium deficiency drives inflammation, oxidative stress, infection risk, and cancer biology. The authors synthesized evidence on magnesium’s core roles in immune cell signaling, cytokine control, antibody and complement activity, and cellular energy and nucleic-acid stability. They also reviewed how magnesium intake, absorption, and renal handling shape systemic magnesium status, then connected magnesium biology to clinical patterns such as chronic low-grade inflammation, impaired antiviral defense, and tumor progression.
Who was reviewed?
The review covered a mix of animal experiments, human observational studies, mechanistic cell work, and selected clinical research, rather than one single patient cohort. The “who” therefore included rodents fed magnesium-deficient diets to model immune and inflammatory changes, cultured human and animal immune or endothelial cells used to map signaling pathways, and human populations studied for links between dietary or serum magnesium and outcomes. These human groups included older adults, post-menopausal women, hospitalized or critically ill patients, people with asthma, and patients studied during COVID-19 waves for associations between magnesium status and inflammatory burden.
What were the most important findings?
The review concluded that magnesium acts as a required immune cofactor and a gatekeeper of inflammatory tone. Magnesium deficiency repeatedly aligned with higher baseline inflammation, including higher pro-inflammatory cytokine signaling and oxidative stress, while also impairing adaptive responses such as cell-mediated immunity and immunoglobulin-related functions. Mechanistically, magnesium supported CD8+ T-cell effector function through magnesium-dependent regulation of LFA-1 activity, and magnesium flux through transport systems such as MAGT1 helped sustain signaling needed for immune activation. For microbiome-signature context, the review linked magnesium insufficiency to “inflammaging” and gut microbiota–related inflammatory stimuli, but it did not define consistent taxon-level microbial markers as major microbial associations.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
Clinically, this review positions magnesium status as a modifiable upstream variable that can shape immune competence, inflammation, and vulnerability to infection and malignancy. It supports screening for deficiency in higher-risk settings where low magnesium is common, including older age, critical illness, and chronic inflammatory states, because deficiency can amplify inflammatory cascades and weaken antiviral or antitumor immune responses. At the same time, the review emphasizes that excessive supplementation can be harmful, so clinicians should individualize dosing and monitor risk, especially in patients with altered renal handling.
Public and occupational health risks related to lead exposure updated according to present-day blood lead levels
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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A clinician-focused review updates present-day lead exposure risks and microbiome implications, contrasting older population metrics with SPHERL’s prospective data and outlining how exposure tiers, co-exposures, and confounding shape credible microbiome–lead signatures.
What was reviewed?
This review synthesized contemporary evidence on lead exposure risks and microbiome-relevant health endpoints, updating public and occupational risk assessments to reflect present-day blood lead levels and re-examining causal pathways (e.g., hypertension, renal dysfunction) alongside the prospective SPHERL cohort of newly hired lead workers. It contrasts historical population metrics (notably NHANES III and GBD modeling) with current exposure distributions and longitudinal physiologic responses after first occupational exposure.
Who was reviewed?
Populations encompassed U.S. adults from NHANES (with historical blood lead means falling from ~13.1 µg/dL in the late 1970s to ~1.4–1.6 µg/dL by 2003–2010) and workers in battery/recycling plants in the SPHERL cohort (baseline geometric mean 4.22 µg/dL rising to ~14.1 µg/dL at 1–2 years). The narrative also considered higher-exposure settings in low- and middle-income countries and co-exposures (e.g., cadmium) that may modify risk.
Most important findings
The review argues that many widely cited hazard estimates linking low-level lead exposure to mortality are of limited relevance today because they were derived from older, higher, or imputed exposure distributions, did not adequately incorporate competing risks/nonfatal events, and leaned on a hypertension-mediated pathway not consistently supported by contemporary data. In contrast, SPHERL—uniquely measuring health before and after first occupational exposure with a >3-fold rise in blood lead—found no significant, dose-responsive changes in office or ambulatory blood pressure, heart-rate variability, peripheral nerve conduction, neurocognitive performance, or estimated GFR over two years after adjustment for key confounders and diurnal/shift-related effects. Regression-to-the-mean explained much of the within-person variability, and no consistent shift in blood-pressure distributions was observed. Nevertheless, the review cautions about generalizing these findings to older or comorbid populations and highlights that exposures in some regions remain substantially higher (e.g., median worker blood lead >60 µg/dL in certain settings) and that cadmium co-exposure is a recognized renal toxicant.
Key implications
Clinically, present-day community exposures in high-income settings are near preindustrial background, so blanket cardiovascular/renal risk inflation from low-level lead is not supported; risk stratification should prioritize occupational cohorts, pregnant patients, children, CKD/diabetes, and residents of high-exposure locales. For microbiome practice and databases, curate signatures by exposure tier (ambient ~1–2 µg/dL vs. occupational/intermediate vs. high), record co-exposures (especially cadmium), and capture time-of-day/shift work, hydration, and diet—all of which can shift renal proxies and potentially confound microbe–metal links.
Fine control of metal concentrations is necessary for cells to discern zinc from cobalt
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study highlights how bacterial sensors for zinc and cobalt operate under tightly regulated metal conditions. It reveals how improper sensing during metal shock can compromise bacterial function, offering insights into potential therapeutic strategies that exploit bacterial vulnerabilities.
What was studied?
This study investigated the regulatory mechanisms behind bacterial metal sensing, specifically how certain bacteria, like Salmonella Typhimurium, regulate metal homeostasis. The researchers focused on the metal sensors Zur, ZntR, RcnR, and FrmR, which help bacteria differentiate between metals such as zinc (Zn), cobalt (Co), and Copper (Cu), and formaldehyde. They explored how these sensors respond to varying concentrations of metals and their potential mis-sensing during metal shock.
Who was studied?
The study was conducted on the enteric pathogen Salmonella Typhimurium strain SL1344. This strain was used to examine the responses of several metal sensors (Zur, ZntR, RcnR, FrmR) under different metal conditions. Additionally, Escherichia coli strains were used in some of the experiments for genetic manipulations and metal exposure tests.
Most important findings
The main discovery was that metal sensors like Zur and ZntR are highly specific in their response to zinc (Zn), while RcnR specifically responds to cobalt (Co). However, when these sensors are exposed to non-cognate metals at higher concentrations, such as cobalt in place of zinc, they malfunction, leading to inappropriate gene expression. This mis-sensing during metal shock suggests that bacteria are particularly vulnerable to mis-metalation when the concentrations of these metals exceed certain thresholds. The study also demonstrated that this specificity is tightly controlled within a narrow buffered concentration range, with the sensors only responding effectively at those precise levels.
When cells were exposed to cobalt or zinc shock, several sensors showed an unexpected response to non-cognate metals, highlighting the fine-tuning needed for these sensors to distinguish between metals. The study's findings suggest that the regulation of metal homeostasis is crucial to prevent bacterial mis-sensing and to maintain cellular integrity during metal fluxes.
Key implications
These findings have important implications for understanding bacterial survival mechanisms and the vulnerabilities of pathogens under metal stress. Mis-sensing of metals by bacterial sensors may present an "Achilles heel" that could be exploited by immune systems to limit pathogen growth. Furthermore, the tight regulation of metal ion concentrations within bacteria may offer new targets for antimicrobial therapies, particularly by manipulating metal sensors or their responses to metal shock. This research adds another layer of understanding to how bacteria adapt to metal-rich environments and could guide the development of novel strategies to combat infections by disrupting metal sensing pathways.
The gut microbiome is required for full protection against acute arsenic toxicity in mouse models
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study demonstrates that both a functional host As3mt enzyme and a stable, diverse gut microbiome, especially the presence of Faecalibacterium prausnitzii, are required for full protection against acute arsenic toxicity in mice, highlighting the microbiome as a target for arsenicosis prevention and treatment.
What was studied?
This study investigated the protective role of the gut microbiome against acute arsenic toxicity in mouse models and explored the specific microbial taxa associated with this protection. The research addressed the ambiguity in previous literature, where the gut microbiome had been implicated in both mitigating and exacerbating arsenic toxicity, but without direct in vivo evidence. The authors used a combination of wild-type, antibiotic-treated, germ-free, and transgenic (As3mt knockout) mice to dissect the interplay between host genetics, microbiome composition, and arsenic detoxification. Experimental interventions included microbiome disruption by antibiotics, generation of germ-free lines, and fecal transplantation from healthy human donors. The study further sought to identify specific microbial taxa, especially those present in the human gut, that confer resilience to arsenic toxicity, with a focus on the stability and diversity of the gut microbiome under arsenic stress. Importantly, the authors used high-dose, acute arsenic exposures akin to severe environmental contamination to model real-world risk scenarios.
Who was studied?
The subjects were laboratory-bred C57BL/6 mice, including both wild-type and those genetically deficient in the arsenic (+3 oxidation state) methyltransferase enzyme (As3mt-KO). This enzyme is critical for arsenic methylation and detoxification. Mice were studied under various microbiome conditions: conventional (normal microbiome), antibiotic-treated (microbiome disrupted), germ-free (no microbiome), and gnotobiotic (colonized with defined microbiota, including human stool transplants and specific strains such as Faecalibacterium prausnitzii). Human donors for fecal transplants were healthy adults aged 24–40 years, with no known arsenic exposure. The study included both male and female mice, with exposures ranging from 10–100 ppm inorganic arsenate in drinking water, and experimental endpoints included survival, arsenic excretion, tissue accumulation, and microbiome composition (via 16S rRNA sequencing).
Most important findings
The study demonstrated that both a functional host arsenic methyltransferase enzyme (As3mt) and an intact gut microbiome are required for full protection against acute arsenic toxicity. Disruption or absence of the gut microbiome (via antibiotics or germ-free conditions) led to significantly reduced arsenic excretion, increased arsenic accumulation in tissues (notably lung and liver), and increased mortality in mice, especially those lacking As3mt. Human fecal transplantation into germ-free As3mt-KO mice restored protection from arsenic-induced mortality, with survival strongly correlating with the stability and diversity of the transplanted microbiome. Analysis of microbiome composition revealed that both the presence/absence and relative abundance of specific taxa were associated with survival.
Faecalibacterium was consistently linked to protection. Gnotobiotic experiments showed that bi-colonization with E. coli and F. prausnitzii significantly increased survival compared to germ-free or E. coli-only colonized mice, establishing a causal role for F. prausnitzii in mitigating arsenic toxicity. The magnitude of the protective effect also varied according to individual human donors, indicating inter-individual variation in microbiome-mediated detoxification. Increased alpha diversity and microbiome stability during arsenic exposure were significant predictors of survival, suggesting that community resilience is crucial for host protection.
Key implications
This research provides the first direct in vivo evidence that the gut microbiome is a critical determinant of host susceptibility to acute arsenic toxicity. The findings imply that inter-individual differences in gut microbiome composition and stability may explain variability in arsenicosis prevalence and severity among similarly exposed populations. The identification of Faecalibacterium prausnitzii as a potentially protective microbial signature opens avenues for microbiome-targeted interventions, including the use of probiotics in populations at risk for arsenic exposure. Clinically, these results support a paradigm that considers the microbiome as both a biomarker and a therapeutic target in arsenic toxicity and potentially other environmental toxicant exposures.
Exposure to environmental pollutants selects for xenobiotic-degrading functions in the human gut microbiome
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study highlights the significant impact of environmental pollutants on the gut microbiome, selecting for microbial functions that degrade xenobiotics and potentially promoting antibiotic resistance. Understanding these changes can provide insights into the role of the microbiome in detoxifying pollutants and influencing human health.
What was studied?
This study explored the effects of environmental pollutants on the gut microbiome, particularly the selection for xenobiotic-degrading functions. Researchers analyzed the microbiome composition and function in individuals living in areas with varying levels of pollution, specifically focusing on pollutants like heavy metals and dioxins. The study aimed to understand how long-term exposure to pollutants influences the gut microbiome's ability to degrade harmful chemicals and how such changes may affect human health.
Who was studied?
The study focused on a cohort of 359 individuals from the Campania region of Southern Italy, a region with a well-documented history of environmental pollution. Participants were categorized based on their level of exposure to pollution, which was quantified using the Municipality Index of Environmental Pressure (MIEP). The subjects were divided into three groups: high, medium, and low environmental pollution, with additional factors such as age, sex, and lifestyle habits considered in the analysis.
Most important findings
The study revealed that environmental pollutants, particularly dioxins and heavy metals, lead to significant changes in the gut microbiome. The group exposed to the highest levels of pollution showed an increase in microbial species associated with the degradation of pollutants, including Actinomycetota and Pseudomonadota. Notably, genes responsible for the degradation of dioxins and other pollutants were enriched in the microbiomes of individuals from highly polluted areas. Additionally, exposure to pollutants correlated with an increase in antibiotic resistance genes, highlighting the potential risk of co-selecting for resistance to both environmental pollutants and antibiotics. The high and medium pollution groups also exhibited a higher abundance of microbial genes related to heavy metal transport and resistance, suggesting an adaptation of the microbiome to the pollutant-rich environment.
Key implications
This study underscores the gut microbiome's role in responding to environmental pollutants and highlights the potential for using the microbiome as a tool to assess the impacts of pollution on human health. The findings suggest that the microbiome may serve as a defense mechanism by detoxifying harmful compounds, but the selection for xenobiotic-degrading microbes may also promote the co-selection of antibiotic resistance, which poses significant public health risks. These results emphasize the need for incorporating microbiome health into environmental risk assessments and stress the importance of further research into how environmental pollutants shape the microbiome and its associated functions.
Microbial regulation of ferroptosis in cancer
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review explains how a gut bacterial tryptophan metabolite, IDA, can promote colorectal cancer by blocking ferroptosis through an AHR–ALDH1A3–FSP1–CoQ10 pathway. It reframes microbial metabolites as direct regulators of tumor cell death vulnerability, not just immune modifiers.
What was reviewed?
This News & Views piece reviewed how microbiome-derived metabolites can shape cancer behavior by changing ferroptosis sensitivity in tumor cells. It centered on a new mechanism linking a gut bacterial tryptophan metabolite, trans-3-indoleacrylic acid (IDA), to colorectal cancer progression through ferroptosis suppression. The authors emphasized that microbial metabolites can remodel tumor signaling and microenvironments, and they framed ferroptosis control as a clinically relevant lever because ferroptosis-based strategies are actively being explored in cancer therapy.
Who was reviewed?
Because this was a review-style commentary, it synthesized evidence across cell and animal models and translational human observations reported in the highlighted study. The core experimental systems included two-dimensional cancer cell lines, three-dimensional tumor spheroids, and xenograft mouse models, alongside additional colorectal cancer mouse models used to test microbial effects in vivo. It also referenced human fecal and tissue findings that connect microbiome metabolites and host pathways to colorectal cancer, and it contrasted pro-tumor and anti-tumor microbial metabolite examples shown in the figure, including immune-supportive indole derivatives from Lactobacillus.
What were the most important findings?
The key message was that IDA uniquely suppresses ferroptosis in colorectal cancer cells through signaling rather than by simply lowering lipid peroxidation. A broad metabolite screen identified IDA as a strong inhibitor of RSL3-triggered ferroptosis, while other tryptophan derivatives did not show the same effect. Mechanistically, IDA acted as an endogenous ligand for AHR, drove AHR nuclear activity, and required intact AHR function to block ferroptosis. Downstream, the pathway ran through AHR-driven ALDH1A3 induction, which increased NADH availability to support FSP1-dependent CoQ10 reduction, strengthening anti-ferroptotic defense in a way that is described as GPX4-independent. In translational observations, IDA levels were higher in colorectal cancer–associated fecal profiles, Peptostreptococcus anaerobius appeared as a major in vivo contributor to IDA biosynthesis, and tumor samples showed higher AHR and ALDH1A3 expression, supporting relevance to human disease context.
What are the greatest implications of this study/ review?
This review expands how clinicians and researchers should interpret “microbiome effects” in colorectal cancer: microbial metabolites can promote cancer not only through inflammation or immune shifts, but also by actively protecting tumor cells from ferroptosis. It suggests a functional microbiome signature where P. anaerobius–linked IDA production aligns with an AHR–ALDH1A3–FSP1–CoQ10 anti-ferroptosis axis, potentially making tumors harder to eliminate with ferroptosis-inducing strategies. Clinically, it encourages combining ferroptosis-targeted therapies with approaches that disrupt this metabolite-driven protection, while also reminding teams to consider the additive and competing effects of multiple metabolites and diet-driven microbiome changes when predicting tumor behavior and treatment response.
Bacterial siderophores in community and host interactions
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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The study explores the multifaceted role of bacterial siderophores in microbial community dynamics and host interactions. It highlights their impact on bacterial competition, survival, and virulence, offering insights into potential therapeutic strategies for managing infections and manipulating microbial communities.
What was studied?
The study explored the role of bacterial siderophores in microbial interactions within communities and their influence on host interactions. Siderophores are molecules produced by bacteria to acquire iron, a critical nutrient often limited in many environments. The research delved into how these molecules facilitate both cooperation and competition among bacteria. Additionally, the study examined how siderophores influence microbial virulence and the ability to colonize host environments, such as in humans and plants, particularly under iron-limited conditions.
Who was studied?
The study primarily focused on Pseudomonas aeruginosa, a bacterium known for its pathogenicity, and its siderophore production. It also analyzed the interactions between P. aeruginosa and other microorganisms in mixed-species communities. Host-associated microbial communities, including those found in human and plant environments, were studied to understand how siderophores help beneficial bacteria compete with pathogenic species. The research also considered the complex relationship between siderophore production and host immune responses.
Most important findings
The study revealed that siderophores are essential not only for acquiring iron but also for shaping bacterial interactions within microbial communities. These molecules enable bacteria to thrive in environments with limited iron availability by sequestering iron and making it accessible. The study also highlighted how siderophores can foster cooperation between microbial species and create competitive dynamics. Furthermore, it was found that non-producer bacteria could exploit the siderophores produced by others, leading to competitive "cheating" behavior. In addition, siderophore production was shown to influence bacterial virulence. For instance, mutations in siderophore production in P. aeruginosa reduced its ability to infect, demonstrating the link between iron acquisition and bacterial pathogenicity.
Key implications
The findings underscore the pivotal role of siderophores in microbial ecology and infection dynamics. Siderophores help beneficial bacteria outcompete pathogens by reducing the availability of iron, thereby enhancing host defense. Understanding the role of siderophores in microbial communities opens potential therapeutic strategies to manipulate bacterial competition, for instance, using siderophore-mediated competition to control harmful bacteria. The study also highlights the importance of siderophores in the evolution of bacterial communities, as their production can lead to co-evolution and the emergence of cheating behaviors that influence microbial survival and virulence.
Nutritional Immunity and Metallomic Signatures: Metal Competition at the Host–Pathogen Interface
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Nutritional Immunity
Nutritional Immunity
Nutritional immunity restricts metal access to pathogens, leveraging sequestration, transport, and toxicity to control infections and immunity.
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This review details how nutritional immunity shapes host–pathogen interactions through metal sequestration and intoxication, highlights key microbial metal acquisition systems, and discusses their implications for microbiome signatures and the development of novel antimicrobial therapies.
What was reviewed?
This comprehensive review by Murdoch and Skaar provides a detailed synthesis of current knowledge on nutritional immunity and metallomic signatures—the dynamic competition for trace metals at the host–pathogen interface. The review explores how vertebrate hosts restrict metal availability to limit bacterial proliferation, while pathogens have evolved diverse acquisition and detoxification strategies to overcome these host defenses. The authors examine the molecular mechanisms underlying metal sequestration and trafficking by both host and pathogens, the tissue- and cell-specific roles of individual metals in infection, and the emerging concept that both metal starvation and intoxication are critical aspects of host defense. Particular attention is given to the molecular machinery involved in metal homeostasis, including siderophores, metallochaperones, metal transporters, and regulatory proteins. The review also highlights recent therapeutic advances that exploit bacterial metal acquisition pathways, such as siderophore–antibiotic conjugates, and discusses the translational potential of nutritional immunity research.
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesizes data from a broad range of studies encompassing both vertebrate hosts (primarily mammals, including humans and animal models) and bacterial pathogens (notably Gram-positive and Gram-negative species such as Staphylococcus aureus, Escherichia coli, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Acinetobacter baumannii, Mycobacterium tuberculosis, and Neisseria spp.). It also draws on microbiome-focused research, considering commensal and opportunistic bacteria within the gut. It addresses the impact of dietary metal availability and host genetic factors on infection risk and microbiome composition. The review encompasses both in vitro and in vivo studies, as well as translational research on therapeutic interventions targeting metal homeostasis.
Most important findings
This review highlights the pivotal role of trace metal regulation at the host–microbe interface, emphasizing how host-imposed metal sequestration, termed nutritional immunity, restricts microbial access to essential elements like iron, zinc, nickel, and manganese. In response, pathogens evolve countermeasures including siderophore production, high-affinity metal transporters, and metallochaperones to overcome these barriers. The host may also weaponize metals such as copper and zinc to exert antimicrobial pressure.
These dynamic interactions significantly influence the composition of the gut microbiome and infection susceptibility, modulated by dietary metal intake and host genetic polymorphisms. Importantly, the review outlines therapeutic innovations targeting bacterial metal acquisition systems, including siderophore-antibiotic conjugates and host-metal modulating strategies. Finally, the concept of microbial metallomics—taxon-specific metal acquisition and detoxification pathways—emerges as a powerful tool for diagnostics and precision antimicrobial targeting. The review underscores several crucial findings relevant to microbiome signatures, metallomic signatures, microbial metallomics, and clinical translation:
Key Concept
Description
Host Metal Sequestration
Vertebrate hosts utilize proteins like transferrin, lactoferrin, calprotectin, S100 proteins, metallothioneins, and haptoglobin to restrict microbial access to metals in tissues, blood, and mucosa—a process termed nutritional immunity.
Bacterial Adaptation
Pathogens counteract metal sequestration by upregulating siderophores (e.g., staphyloferrin, yersiniabactin), transporters (ZnuABC, FeoB), and metallochaperones (ZigA, YeiR); some exploit host proteins for metal “piracy.”
Metal Intoxication
Host phagocytes may deliver toxic levels of metals (e.g., Cu, Zn) into pathogen-containing compartments to promote oxidative damage and microbial death.
Microbiome and Diet
Variations in dietary metals and host genetics affecting metal metabolism alter microbiome structure and pathogen susceptibility; excess Fe/Zn and nickel (Ni) may favor pathogen overgrowth, while deficiencies impair immune defense.
Therapeutic Advances
Novel antimicrobials like cefiderocol hijack bacterial metal uptake systems; strategies targeting metal acquisition pathways or host metal-binding proteins hold promise for future infection control.
Metallomic Signatures
Pathogen-specific metal-handling systems (e.g., S. aureus Isd system, Yersinia yersiniabactin, Acinetobacter ZnuD) may serve as diagnostic biomarkers or antimicrobial targets within a precision medicine framework.
Key implications
For clinical practice, this review highlights the importance of considering metallomic signatures and metal homeostasis as determinants of infection risk, pathogen virulence, and microbiome stability. Metal acquisition and detoxification systems represent promising targets for next-generation antimicrobials, vaccines, and other microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs). Additionally, dietary supplementation or restriction of trace metals should be approached cautiously, as it can influence both beneficial microbiota and pathogen expansion. Recognizing microbial metal-handling signatures may aid in predicting infection risk, guiding therapeutic choices, or developing microbiome or metallome-based diagnostics. The integration of nutritional immunity concepts into clinical microbiology will be critical for advancing precision medicine approaches in infectious disease and microbiome management.
Sex-specific associations of infants’ gut microbiome with arsenic exposure in a US population
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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The study explores the relationship between arsenic exposure and the infant gut microbiome, revealing sex-specific associations and highlighting how formula-fed male infants are particularly affected. The findings emphasize the importance of early-life environmental exposures on microbiome health and immune development.
What was studied?
The study explored the association between arsenic exposure and the gut microbiome composition in infants at six weeks of age. Researchers focused on understanding how arsenic exposure through maternal well water affects the gut microbial communities in infants, particularly regarding sex-specific differences. Arsenic is known to have antimicrobial properties, which can disrupt the balance of the gut microbiome, potentially influencing early-life immune development. This research involved analyzing urinary arsenic concentrations and stool microbiome composition in infants, revealing distinct relationships between these two factors. The research also emphasized the role of infant feeding methods (breastfeeding vs. formula feeding) as potential confounders in the relationship between arsenic exposure and the gut microbiome.
Who was studied?
The study analyzed 204 infants who were part of the New Hampshire Birth Cohort Study (NHBCS). These infants were recruited from regions with varying arsenic exposure levels through drinking water, primarily from private wells. The infants were classified into sex-specific and feeding-specific groups to identify potential interactions between arsenic exposure, sex, and feeding method on the gut microbiome. Urine samples were collected to measure arsenic concentrations, while stool samples were used to analyze the microbiome using 16S rRNA gene sequencing. The infants' dietary habits were classified into exclusively breastfed, formula-fed, and combination-fed categories to account for any potential confounding effects of feeding on microbiome composition.
Most important findings
The study identified sex-specific differences in how arsenic exposure affected the gut microbiome composition. In formula-fed male infants, arsenic exposure was positively associated with an increase in certain Firmicutes genera, such as Ruminococcus, while negatively impacting genera like Bacteroides and Bifidobacterium. However, no such associations were observed in female infants or breastfed infants. This highlights the possibility that male infants may be more vulnerable to arsenic-induced microbial changes than female infants. Furthermore, the study revealed that arsenic exposure leads to dysbiosis, with reduced microbial diversity and a shift in microbial populations that may influence immune system development. The findings suggest that even moderate levels of arsenic exposure could have significant effects on the infant microbiome during a critical developmental window. Notably, formula-fed infants had higher urinary arsenic levels than their breastfed counterparts, which contributed to the observed differences in microbiome composition.
Key implications
This research underscores the critical need to consider environmental factors, such as arsenic exposure, in the context of early-life microbiome development. The findings indicate that arsenic exposure during infancy, particularly for formula-fed male infants, may disrupt the gut microbiota in ways that could affect long-term immune function and increase susceptibility to gastrointestinal disorders and immune-related diseases. The study also highlights the importance of sex-specific effects in microbial community alterations, suggesting that male and female infants may respond differently to environmental stressors like arsenic. The sex-specific differences observed in arsenic exposure and its effects on the microbiome may open up new avenues for understanding how arsenic exposure contributes to immune dysfunction and disease predisposition in later life. Given the growing concern about arsenic contamination in drinking water, particularly in rural areas, these findings call for policy changes to limit arsenic exposure, especially for vulnerable populations like infants.
Augmented antibiotic resistance associated with cadmium induced alterations in Salmonella enterica serovar Typhi
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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The study demonstrates how cadmium exposure enhances antibiotic resistance in Salmonella enterica serovar Typhi by altering bacterial growth, biofilm formation, and antibiotic susceptibility. The findings highlight the environmental impact of cadmium in promoting resistance.
What was studied?
This study explored the association between cadmium exposure and the development of antibiotic resistance in Salmonella enterica serovar Typhi, the pathogen responsible for typhoid fever. The researchers focused on how intracellular cadmium accumulation in clinical isolates of S. Typhi correlates with altered antibiotic resistance patterns. Through laboratory adaptation, the study demonstrated that cadmium exposure not only increased resistance to common antibiotics like ampicillin and ciprofloxacin but also induced phenotypic changes in the bacteria. These included alterations in growth responses, morphology, biofilm formation, and macrophage survival. The study also looked at the molecular mechanisms behind this resistance, such as changes in protein expression and the upregulation of metal-binding proteins.
Who was studied?
The study involved both a reference strain of S. Typhi (Ty2) and clinical isolates obtained from patients with typhoid fever. These clinical isolates were collected from different medical institutions in India. The bacteria were exposed to cadmium chloride (CdCl₂), and their response to cadmium was compared with their antibiotic susceptibility patterns. The isolates were adapted to sub-inhibitory concentrations of cadmium to assess the long-term effects of cadmium exposure. The research aimed to examine how cadmium-induced alterations influence the pathogen's ability to resist antibiotics and survive under stressful conditions.
Most important findings
The study revealed that cadmium exposure led to a significant increase in the resistance of S. Typhi to multiple antibiotics. Clinical isolates that were initially sensitive to antibiotics became resistant after cadmium exposure, and resistant strains became even more resistant. The minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs) for antibiotics such as ciprofloxacin and ampicillin increased substantially, with cadmium exposure correlating with higher levels of resistance. Exposure to cadmium resulted in changes to the pathogen's growth patterns, including delayed growth in the lag phase and prolonged log phase.
Transmission electron microscopy revealed structural alterations in the bacteria, including a reduction in the periplasmic space and the appearance of electron-dense regions, indicating metal sequestration. Proteomic analysis identified significant changes in protein expression, including downregulation of porins, which are key components in the bacterial outer membrane that control the influx of antibiotics. The study also found that cadmium exposure led to increased biofilm formation and enhanced survival of S. Typhi within macrophages, indicating a higher capacity for persistence in the host.
Key implications
The findings underscore the worrying potential of heavy metal contamination in the environment to drive antibiotic resistance in pathogens like S. Typhi. The study highlights the role of environmental cadmium as a long-term selective pressure, co-selecting for both metal and antibiotic resistance in bacteria. This has major implications for public health, particularly in areas with high levels of environmental metal contamination. The increased biofilm formation and enhanced intracellular survival observed in cadmium-exposed S. Typhi suggest that these bacteria may be harder to treat and control in clinical settings. The results also point to the need for strategies to limit environmental exposure to heavy metals and to monitor the co-selection of metal and antibiotic resistance, which could help curb the rise of resistant infections.
Nickel chelation therapy as an approach to combat multi-drug resistant enteric pathogens
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study evaluates nickel chelation therapy using DMG against multidrug-resistant Salmonella and Klebsiella. DMG impaired virulence by inhibiting Ni-dependent enzymes, reduced bacterial load in organs, and improved survival in animal models, offering a promising metallomic intervention.
What was studied
Nickel chelation therapy was investigated as a strategy to inhibit multidrug-resistant (MDR) enteric pathogens, with a focus on how dimethylglyoxime (DMG) affects the growth and virulence of Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium and Klebsiella pneumoniae. This work explored how nickel sequestration disrupts key microbial enzymes—particularly hydrogenases and urease—central to the metabolic fitness and pathogenicity of these organisms. Since nickel-dependent enzymes form well-established components of microbial physiology, these findings also contribute a microbiome-relevant signature: the dependency of certain pathogens on nickel for enzymatic activity. The study provides a detailed look at how DMG interferes with these microbial systems.
Who was studied
The investigation used three bacterial strains: MDR Salmonella Typhimurium ATCC 700408, non-MDR Salmonella Typhimurium ATCC 14028, and MDR Klebsiella pneumoniae ATCC BAA-2472. In vivo analysis involved BALB/c mice and Galleria mellonella larvae to assess toxicity and therapeutic potential. These models allowed evaluation of systemic and localised effects of DMG, including pathogen load in organs and host survival outcomes.
Most important findings
DMG displayed bacteriostatic effects against all tested Enterobacteriaceae strains at millimolar concentrations, with growth suppression thresholds differing by species. Hydrogenase activity in Salmonella—an enzyme system heavily reliant on nickel—was significantly inhibited by DMG beginning at 0.5 mM, and nearly abolished at 10 mM. The table on page 3 of the article clearly shows dose-dependent inhibition, with activity restored partially by the addition of nickel chloride. The page 4 urease activity table illustrates similar findings for Klebsiella, showing complete loss of urease function at 5 mM DMG. These enzymatic disruptions align with known microbial metabolic pathways that depend on nickel cofactors. In mouse models, oral DMG significantly reduced Salmonella organ burden by approximately one log and improved survival up to 50%. In wax moth larvae, pretreatment with DMG improved survival from 0% to 40–60% when challenged with MDR organisms. DMG itself showed no meaningful toxicity in either model across a wide dosing range. NMR analysis confirmed detectable levels of DMG in mouse liver tissue, supporting systemic absorption and explaining reductions in microbial virulence.
Key Outcome Category
Summary of Findings
Bacteriostatic Effects
Growth suppressed at millimolar DMG levels; species-specific thresholds observed.
Enzyme Inhibition
Hydrogenase inhibited ≥0.5 mM; urease abolished at 5 mM DMG.
In Vivo Virulence Reduction
1-log organ burden drop in mice; 40–60% survival in larvae.
Toxicity & Absorption
No measurable toxicity; DMG detected in liver via NMR.
Key implications
The findings indicate that nickel chelation represents a promising avenue for targeting MDR pathogens that depend on nickel-requiring enzymes for survival and virulence. For microbiome-focused clinical applications, the study expands a potentially valuable signature: the reliance of certain pathogens on nickel-dependent metabolic pathways. Inhibitors like DMG may offer adjunctive therapeutic strategies in cases where antibiotic resistance limits treatment options. Moreover, identifying nickel-dependent pathways broadens the landscape for precision microbiome manipulation by exploiting metal-based vulnerabilities in pathogenic organisms while minimally affecting the host. Further studies would be required to validate safety, organ distribution, and clinical efficacy in humans.
Inhibition of red blood cell development by arsenic-induced disruption of GATA-1
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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The study examines how arsenic exposure disrupts erythropoiesis by inhibiting GATA-1 function, leading to anemia. It highlights the role of zinc finger motifs in GATA-1 and provides insights into arsenic-induced hematological disorders.
What was studied?
This study focuses on the inhibitory effects of arsenic (AsIII) exposure on erythropoiesis, the process of red blood cell development. The authors examine how arsenic interferes with the GATA-1 transcription factor, a key regulator of erythropoiesis, by disrupting the zinc finger (ZF) motifs essential for GATA-1’s activity. Arsenic interacts with these ZF domains, leading to zinc loss from GATA-1, impairing its DNA binding and interaction with FOG-1, another critical co-factor in erythroid differentiation. This disruption results in a failure of proper erythroid differentiation and contributes to dyserythropoiesis (abnormal red blood cell development) and ultimately anemia. The study uses both in vitro models, such as K562 cells (human leukemia cells), and in vivo models with C57BL/6J mice exposed to varying arsenic concentrations to explore these mechanisms.
Who was studied?
The study primarily focused on C57BL/6J mice, which were exposed to arsenic trioxide (AsIII) via drinking water at concentrations relevant to environmental exposure (20 to 500 ppb). Bone marrow cells from these mice were analyzed for erythropoiesis and myelopoiesis. The study also used K562 cells, a human erythroleukemia cell line, to investigate the effects of arsenic exposure on erythroid differentiation in a controlled in vitro setting. These cells were treated with arsenic and other agents like hemin to stimulate erythroid differentiation, allowing for the assessment of cell marker expression and differentiation status at different concentrations of arsenic.
Most important findings
The study revealed that arsenic exposure disrupts GATA-1 function, which in turn inhibits erythropoiesis. Specifically, arsenic exposure led to a significant reduction in zinc content within GATA-1, preventing it from binding to DNA and interacting with FOG-1, which is necessary for proper erythroid differentiation. The study showed that arsenic selectively inhibits erythroid progenitor differentiation by reducing the number of early erythroid progenitors, such as BFU-E and CFU-E, which are crucial for the development of mature red blood cells. Importantly, myelopoiesis was not affected by arsenic exposure, suggesting that the inhibition was specific to the erythroid lineage. In vivo, arsenic exposure in mice resulted in reduced erythroid progenitors in the bone marrow, leading to anemia. This disruption of erythropoiesis was found to occur at multiple stages of erythroid differentiation, from early progenitors to late erythroblasts.
Key implications
The findings provide novel insights into how arsenic toxicity can lead to anemia by disrupting erythropoiesis through the inhibition of GATA-1 function. This mechanism sheds light on how environmental arsenic exposure can contribute to hematological disorders, particularly anemia in populations exposed to arsenic-contaminated drinking water. Understanding the specific interactions between arsenic and zinc finger transcription factors like GATA-1 could lead to targeted preventive and therapeutic strategies for arsenic-related anemias. Furthermore, this study emphasizes the importance of addressing arsenic exposure as a public health concern, especially in regions with high levels of arsenic in groundwater, where the effects on erythropoiesis may exacerbate the already prevalent issues of anemia.
Bioavailability of arsenic, cadmium, lead and mercury as measured by intestinal permeability
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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The study explored how gut microbes and chelating agents influence the bioavailability of arsenic, cadmium, lead, and mercury by assessing their intestinal permeability using a Caco-2 cell model. It found that both microbes and chelating agents reduce the permeability of these metals, mitigating their toxicity.
What was studied?
The study focused on assessing the bioavailability of four heavy metals, including arsenic (As), cadmium (Cd), lead (Pb), and mercury (Hg)—by evaluating their intestinal permeability using a Caco-2 cell model. This model mimics the intestinal epithelium and is commonly used to measure how substances are absorbed across the intestinal barrier. The research investigated how gut microbes and chelating agents influence the bioavailability of these metal(loid)s, exploring their interaction with intestinal cells and their potential to reduce metal absorption.
Who was studied?
The study used an in vitro model, employing Caco-2 cells, a human intestinal epithelial cell line, to replicate the intestinal barrier and assess metal(loid) transport. Additionally, two bacterial species, Escherichia coli and Lactobacillus acidophilus, were introduced to observe their effects on the permeability of the heavy metals. The research also explored the role of chelating agents, such as ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA) and 2,3-dimercapto-1-propanesulfonic acid (DMPS), to investigate how these compounds could reduce the absorption of heavy metals.
Most important findings
The study demonstrated that the presence of gut microbes and chelating agents significantly reduced the intestinal permeability of arsenic, cadmium, lead, and mercury. Specifically, the permeability of these metal(loid)s was lower when gut bacteria were present, with Lactobacillus acidophilus showing a stronger impact than Escherichia coli. Chelating agents, particularly EDTA and DMPS, also decreased the absorption of these metals by forming complexes, making them less permeable across the intestinal barrier. The presence of both gut microbes and chelating agents significantly reduced the apparent permeability coefficient (Papp) values, a key measure of permeability. The reduction in permeability varied among the different metal(loid)s, indicating that each metal interacted differently with the gut environment and treatment agents. These findings suggest that both gut bacteria and chelating agents could serve as strategies to reduce the bioavailability and subsequent toxicity of these metals.
Key implications
This study has important implications for public health and toxicology. By demonstrating that gut microbes and chelating agents can influence the absorption of heavy metals, this opens up potential therapeutic avenues to mitigate metal toxicity, particularly in individuals with chronic exposure. The results highlight the importance of the gut microbiome in modulating the absorption of environmental contaminants and suggest that interventions aimed at restoring or enhancing beneficial gut bacteria could reduce the harmful effects of heavy metals. Furthermore, the use of chelating agents may provide a complementary approach to reduce the bioavailability of toxic metals in the gastrointestinal tract, offering a potential strategy for reducing heavy metal poisoning.
The association between low-concentration heavy metal exposure and chronic kidney disease risk through α-klotho
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study analyzed how low-level heavy metal exposures influence CKD risk and identified α-klotho as a mechanistic mediator, highlighting cadmium’s nephrotoxicity and complex mixture effects.
What was studied?
The association between low-concentration heavy metal exposure and chronic kidney disease (CKD) risk through α-klotho was studied in this original research article. This analysis specifically explored how cadmium, mercury, lead, and thallium—identified as priority pollutants via machine-learning screening—relate to CKD risk, with α-klotho positioned as a mechanistic mediator. The investigators leveraged NHANES 2007–2016 data and advanced modeling approaches, including Bayesian kernel machine regression (BKMR), to evaluate metal mixtures rather than single-exposure models. Because microbiome signatures often intersect with toxin-response phenotypes such as inflammation, oxidative stress, and renal metabolic shifts, understanding how toxic metals perturb α-klotho is clinically relevant for any microbiome-focused biomarker database.
Who was studied?
A total of 2,415 U.S. adults aged 40–79 years were analyzed from NHANES cycles spanning 2007–2016 The association between lowconc…. Participants included 1,997 non-CKD controls and 418 individuals with CKD, defined by reduced estimated glomerular filtration rate or albuminuria. Baseline characteristics showed that CKD participants were older, had higher BMI, and had greater prevalence of diabetes and hypertension. Urinary concentrations of Cd, Hg, Pb, and Tl were quantified using ICP-MS, while α-klotho was measured via ELISA. The population's low-level exposure setting provides meaningful insight applicable to environmental-health and microbiome-health interface research.
Most important findings
The study found that heavy metals, particularly Cd, Tl, Pb, and Hg, ranked highest among 51 pollutants screened for CKD risk contribution. Machine-learning SHAP analysis (page 5) highlighted cadmium and thallium as the strongest predictors. Logistic and BKMR models revealed a notable pattern: cadmium exposure increased CKD risk, whereas thallium and lead exhibited inverse associations, potentially reflecting reduced urinary excretion in impaired renal function rather than protective effects. Hg showed no significant direct association with CKD, but higher Hg correlated positively with α-klotho, suggesting biological interaction. α-Klotho itself strongly associated with lower CKD risk and partially mediated the mercury–CKD link (≈34.5% mediation; page 11). These findings align with known microbial and host-metabolic disturbances tied to oxidative stress pathways—where shifts in microbial taxa and metabolites such as short-chain fatty acids are known to modify oxidative and inflammatory tone.
Metal
Direction of Association with CKD
Notable Mechanistic Link
Notes
Cadmium
Positive (↑ CKD risk)
Oxidative stress, tubular injury
Strongest risk signal
Mercury
No direct association
α-Klotho mediation
Low-dose hormetic effects
Lead
Negative association
Possible reverse causality
Hyperfiltration hypothesis
Thallium
Negative association
Mitochondrial and oxidative effects
Very low exposure levels
Key implications
This study underscores that even low-level metal exposures can influence CKD risk through pathways relevant to oxidative stress, endocrine regulation, renal tubular integrity, and α-klotho biology. For microbiome-focused clinicians, α-klotho serves as a central integrator of systemic oxidative burden—conditions strongly modifiable by gut microbial composition. These findings reinforce the need to evaluate environmental toxins alongside microbiome data when building precision-medicine signatures. Moreover, the differential behavior of metals within mixture models demonstrates the importance of multivariate environmental assessment rather than single-toxin frameworks, particularly when identifying clinically meaningful microbial–host interaction signatures.
Arsenic toxicity: Sources, pathophysiology and mechanism
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review examines arsenic toxicity, its pathways of exposure, and its harmful effects on human health, focusing on oxidative stress, genotoxicity, and epigenetic changes. It highlights the link between arsenic exposure and diseases like cancer, cardiovascular disorders, and neurotoxicity.
What was studied?
This review explores the toxicity of arsenic, a naturally occurring element, and its widespread impact on human health. The paper focuses on arsenic exposure, its chemical forms (primarily inorganic arsenite [As3+] and arsenate [As5+]), and how it contributes to various chronic diseases. Arsenic's toxicity is linked to its interactions with sulfur-containing proteins, and the review examines the significant role of oxidative stress, genotoxicity, and epigenetic changes in arsenic-induced pathogenesis. The review also covers arsenic’s effects on vital organs such as the liver, kidneys, and nervous system, and it discusses potential molecular mechanisms contributing to its toxicity, including mitochondrial dysfunction and signaling pathway disruptions.
Who was studied?
The review includes studies from a range of populations, with a primary focus on those exposed to arsenic through drinking water and environmental sources. Populations in areas with high arsenic levels in groundwater, such as parts of India, Bangladesh, China, and Central and South America, are particularly vulnerable. The paper draws on a wide variety of research, including epidemiological studies, animal models, and laboratory experiments, to illustrate how arsenic exposure leads to different health outcomes across diverse regions and environments. Special emphasis is placed on the effect of arsenic on vulnerable groups, such as children and pregnant women, as well as the potential transgenerational impacts of exposure.
Most important findings
The review highlights arsenic's extensive impact on human health, particularly its association with chronic diseases such as cancer, cardiovascular disorders, neurotoxicity, and diabetes. Arsenic exposure induces oxidative stress, resulting in the generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and mitochondrial dysfunction, which in turn contribute to cellular damage and organ toxicity. The review also emphasizes the role of epigenetic modifications, including histone alterations and changes in DNA methylation, which may affect gene expression and contribute to the long-term health effects of arsenic exposure. Arsenic-induced inflammation and its effects on cellular signaling pathways, such as the NF-κB pathway, were identified as key contributors to its toxic effects. Additionally, the review outlines the carcinogenic effects of arsenic on multiple organs, including the lungs, liver, kidneys, and skin, and underscores the importance of addressing arsenic contamination, especially in regions where exposure remains high.
Key implications
The findings of this review have significant implications for public health and environmental policy. Understanding the complex mechanisms through which arsenic exerts its toxic effects is crucial for developing strategies to mitigate exposure and prevent the associated health risks. The review stresses the need for continued research to fill gaps in our understanding of arsenic toxicity, particularly in terms of the epigenetic changes it induces and its long-term impacts on human health. The review also calls for stronger regulation of arsenic levels in drinking water and for the development of more effective bioremediation and pharmacological approaches to reduce arsenic toxicity. Further studies are necessary to explore the development of therapeutic agents that target specific molecular pathways disrupted by arsenic exposure, as well as interventions that can reduce its impact on vulnerable populations.
Elevated Lead, Nickel, and Bismuth Levels in the Peritoneal Fluid of a Peritoneal Endometriosis Patient without Toxic Habits or Occupational Exposure following a Vegetarian Diet
February 12, 2026
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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A case study links elevated lead, nickel, and bismuth in peritoneal fluid with endometriosis, highlighting potential dietary and environmental exposures as contributors. Further research may identify these potentially toxic elements (PTEs) as diagnostic biomarkers and therapeutic targets.
What was studied?
This case study investigated elevated lead, nickel, and bismuth levels in peritoneal fluid—a key extracellular environment that bathes endometriotic lesions—using ICP-MS/MS analysis. The focus keyphrase elevated lead nickel bismuth peritoneal endometriosis frames the central finding: unusually high concentrations of these potentially toxic elements in a young woman with peritoneal endometriosis despite lacking identifiable toxic or occupational exposures. The study examined how environmental contaminants, diet, and lifestyle might contribute to metal accumulation in the peritoneal cavity, a microenvironment increasingly recognized as influential in inflammatory and hormonal dysregulation relevant to endometriosis pathophysiology. This approach aligns with microbiome-informed clinical interests because toxic element accumulation can modulate immune tone, oxidative stress, and microbial community structure, indirectly shaping local inflammation and lesion activity.
Who was studied?
Researchers evaluated a 22-year-old woman diagnosed with peritoneal endometriosis during laparoscopic surgery. She was a nonsmoker, consumed no alcohol, and reported no occupational or environmental toxic exposures. Importantly, she followed a lacto-ovo vegetarian diet, a potential contributor to trace metal intake. Her peritoneal fluid results were compared with those of an age-matched control patient with a benign serous cystadenoma and with ten additional non-endometriosis controls. This comparative structure allowed investigators to contextualize abnormal metal concentrations and evaluate whether observed elevations were disease-specific or potentially linked to diet or unrecognized environmental exposure.
Most important findings
The most striking result was the extreme elevation of lead (90:1 ratio), accompanied by high nickel and bismuth levels. These potentially toxic elements have known interactions with endocrine and immune pathways, both relevant to endometriosis and potentially influential to microbiome dynamics given their antimicrobial and redox-active properties. Lead and nickel can disrupt estrogen receptor signaling, generate oxidative stress, alter immune cell activation, and shape cytokine patterns—mechanisms paralleling microbiome-mediated inflammatory modulation. The vegetarian diet, rich in plant-derived foods capable of accumulating soil-associated metals, may have contributed to exposure. Bismuth, though less studied in gynecologic contexts, has antimicrobial properties that could influence local microbial signatures in peritoneal or reproductive tissues. Cobalt and barium were also elevated, reinforcing the possibility of cumulative environmental or dietary exposure.
Analyte
Case vs. Control Ratio
Lead (Pb)
90:1
Nickel (Ni)
4:1
Bismuth (Bi)
1.5:1
Cobalt (Co)
5:1
Key implications
These findings suggest that toxic metal accumulation in the peritoneal cavity may contribute to endometriosis development or severity, either directly through oxidative and endocrine disruption or indirectly by influencing microbial behavior, immune tone, and metabolic signaling within the peritoneal microenvironment. Though causality cannot be inferred from a single case, this study underscores the need for broader investigation of environmental exposures—including dietary sources—in reproductive pathology. The work also highlights the potential utility of peritoneal fluid metal signatures as biomarkers for endometriosis, helping integrate environmental toxicology with emerging microbiome-centered diagnostic frameworks.
The Mechanisms of Cadmium Toxicity in Living Organisms
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study examines the effects of cadmium exposure on the microbiome, showing how it alters gut and blood microbiota, impacts metabolites, and links to inflammatory responses. The research reveals significant microbial shifts and potential biomarkers for Cd-induced toxicity.
What was studied?
The study investigates how cadmium (Cd) exposure alters the composition of the microbiome in rats. Specifically, it examines the shift in microbial communities in the blood and gut, and how these changes are correlated with metabolic and inflammatory changes induced by Cd. The study explores the effects of Cd on the intestinal barrier, microbial diversity, and associated serum metabolites.
Who was studied?
The study involved Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats exposed to cadmium chloride (CdCl2). These rats were selected to model the physiological and microbiome-related effects of environmental Cd exposure. The research focused on how Cd exposure impacts the gut microbiota and its translocation to the blood, alongside changes in the blood microbiome.
Most important findings
The study found that Cd exposure disrupted the balance between gut and blood microbiota. It specifically increased the abundance of certain harmful bacteria such as Clostridia_UCG_014, which has been linked to inflammatory diseases like Type 2 diabetes. Additionally, Cd exposure caused the translocation of microbiota from the gut to the blood, with an increase in the abundance of bacteria like Corynebacterium and Muribaculaceae. Metabolically, Cd exposure led to the upregulation of serum metabolites like indoxyl sulfate, phenyl sulfate, and p-cresol sulfate. These changes were associated with a decrease in essential metabolites like L-glutamine, which are crucial for intestinal barrier integrity. A significant link between microbial changes and inflammatory markers like TNF-α and interleukin-6 was also observed.
Key implications
The findings suggest that cadmium exposure not only disrupts microbial communities in the gut but also leads to systemic effects through the translocation of microbiota into the bloodstream. This translocation and the subsequent dysbiosis could exacerbate inflammation and increase the susceptibility to diseases like obesity, diabetes, and cardiovascular diseases. The study highlights the potential role of blood microbiome alterations as biomarkers for cadmium toxicity and the associated health risks. It also underscores the need for further research to explore the mechanisms behind these microbial shifts and their long-term health implications.
Toxicity of Glutathione-Binding Metals: A Review of Targets and Mechanisms
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review explains how mercury, cadmium, arsenic, and lead disrupt glutathione and cysteine-based defenses. It emphasizes catalytic mercury-driven glutathione oxidation and metal-conjugate breakdown that generates electrophiles and metal sulfides, linking these mechanisms to kidney, neurologic, and carcinogenic injury patterns.
What was reviewed?
This paper reviewed how thiol-binding metals and metalloids, especially mercury, cadmium, arsenic, and lead, interact with the glutathione-centered “soluble thiolome” and cysteine-rich proteins to drive toxicity, with a focus on oxidative stress pathways that do not require classic Fenton chemistry. The author synthesized evidence from chemistry, biochemistry, toxicology, and analytical mass spectrometry to explain why these metals produce organ-specific damage despite sharing strong affinity for thiol groups. Who was reviewed: the review drew on findings spanning exposed humans (environmental and occupational), experimental animals, isolated tissues and cell systems (notably kidney proximal tubule models), and microbial systems that evolved mercury-resistance machinery, alongside mechanistic and structural studies of glutathione conjugates, enzyme targets, and metallothionein metal clusters.
Who was reviewed?
The paper reviewed evidence drawn from multiple research settings rather than one defined patient group. It synthesized findings from human exposure studies (environmental and occupational), animal experiments, and cell and tissue models—especially systems used to study renal proximal tubule injury and redox enzyme inhibition. It also incorporated microbial and environmental microbiology literature where mercury-resistance machinery evolved, mainly to explain how mercury chemistry and thiol binding operate across living systems, even though the clinical focus remained on human-relevant toxicity mechanisms.
What were the most important findings?
The review argues that toxicity often arises not from simple glutathione depletion by stoichiometry, but from catalytic and enzyme-targeting mechanisms after metals form glutathione conjugates. For mercury, the key mechanistic insight is a catalytic cycle: glutathione–Hg(II) conjugates can be processed to Hg–cysteinyl-glycine, which favors Hg reduction to elemental Hg(0), while oxidizing thiol pools and amplifying oxidative stress; intracellular re-oxidation of Hg(0) can re-enter the cycle, making mercury uniquely potent among thiol-binding metals. For “electrochemically silent” metals such as cadmium and lead, the review highlights an alternative route: glutathione–metal conjugates can decompose to generate (1) nanoparticulate metal sulfides that can deposit in tissues and (2) an electrophilic dehydroalanine analog of glutathione (EdAG) capable of irreversibly inactivating glutathione-dependent enzymes. The most clinically relevant molecular targets emphasized include glutathione synthesis control (glutamate-cysteine ligase), glutathione recycling (glutathione reductase), and redox signaling/repair enzymes (glutaredoxins, glutathione peroxidases, peroxiredoxins), where inhibition shifts cellular redox potential toward injury and cell death.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
Clinicians should interpret thiol-binding metal toxicity as a redox-network disorder, not merely “oxidative stress” in the abstract: metal–thiol conjugation can disable the very enzyme systems that maintain glutathione homeostasis, creating self-propagating vulnerability in high-demand tissues like kidney and nervous system. The mercury model is particularly actionable because it explains why some thiol donors can paradoxically worsen renal toxicity in certain contexts and why proximal tubule handling of processed glutathione conjugates matters for injury. The review also underscores metallothioneins as both detox buffers and long-term metal reservoirs, with proposed mechanisms for nanoparticulate sulfide formation that may contribute to chronic organ burden. For microbiome-signature thinking, the paper’s discussion of microbial mercury-resistance cassettes and horizontal gene transfer supports the broader clinical concept that metal exposures can shape microbial ecology and potentially co-select resistance traits, even when the primary pathology presents in human organs.
Gut Microbiome Phenotypes Driven by Host Genetics Affect Arsenic Metabolism
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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The study demonstrates how IL-10 gene knockout mice show significant changes in their gut microbiome and arsenic metabolism. These alterations contribute to higher levels of toxic arsenic metabolites, highlighting the role of host genetics in shaping exposure outcomes.
What was studied?
This study aimed to explore how host genetics, specifically IL-10 gene knockout, interacts with the gut microbiome and impacts arsenic metabolism. The researchers hypothesized that variations in the gut microbiome driven by host genetics could affect how arsenic is metabolized and whether this interaction influences arsenic toxicity. Using an integrated approach combining 16S rRNA sequencing for microbial profiling and HPLC-ICP-MS for arsenic speciation, the study examined whether the IL-10 gene knockout in mice altered the gut microbiome's composition and, in turn, influenced arsenic biotransformation into more toxic metabolites. The study was designed to address how the microbiome influences arsenic metabolism, shedding light on individual susceptibility to arsenic-induced diseases.
Who was studied?
The study utilized C57BL/6 mice, a commonly used strain for genetic research, focusing on both wild-type and IL-10 knockout (IL-10−/−) mice. The IL-10 knockout model was selected due to IL-10’s critical role in immune regulation, which is intertwined with gut microbiome composition. The mice were exposed to arsenic in drinking water at a dose of 10 ppm for four weeks. After exposure, the researchers collected fecal samples for microbiome analysis, blood and urine for arsenic metabolite measurements, and performed histological evaluations. The aim was to see if the IL-10 gene knockout mice had significant changes in their gut microbiome compared to the wild-type mice and how these changes affected arsenic metabolism.
Most important findings
The study found that the gut microbiome composition was significantly altered in IL-10−/− mice compared to wild-type mice. The Bacteroidetes family increased, while Firmicutes decreased significantly, particularly within the Lachnospiraceae family. These changes in gut microbiome composition were linked to alterations in arsenic metabolism. Specifically, DMAsV (dimethylarsinic acid) levels were significantly reduced in the urine of IL-10 knockout mice, while MMAsV (monomethylarsonic acid) and iAsV (inorganic arsenic) levels were increased. This pattern indicates that the genetic alteration in IL-10 significantly impacted the ability of the microbiome to detoxify arsenic through methylation, leading to higher levels of more toxic arsenic species. Moreover, the ratio of MMAsV/DMAsV was higher in the knockout group, which mirrors human patterns that are associated with higher toxicity and disease risk. The study also demonstrated that the altered microbiome composition had functional impacts on arsenic metabolism, highlighting a genetic-microbiome interaction in the context of xenobiotic processing.
Key implications
This study highlights the crucial role of host genetics in shaping the gut microbiome and its capacity to metabolize arsenic. The findings suggest that individuals with specific genetic profiles, such as those with an IL-10 knockout, may be more vulnerable to arsenic toxicity due to altered microbiome-mediated biotransformation of arsenic. For clinical practice, this implies that genetic screening and microbiome profiling could be essential tools for personalizing arsenic exposure risk assessments and treatment strategies, particularly in populations exposed to contaminated drinking water. Additionally, this study contributes to the broader understanding of xenobiotic metabolism, where interactions between host genetics, gut microbiota, and environmental toxins like arsenic can influence health outcomes. For microbiome research, these findings suggest that gut microbial phenotypes, driven by genetic factors, should be considered in studies linking microbiota composition with environmental toxicants and disease susceptibility.
Arsenic levels in the hair of people exposed to arsenic and awareness of its risk factors
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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In rural China, drinking water often exceeded standards, and hair arsenic was higher in exposed residents. Age, male sex, and wheat-based diet increased levels, making hair arsenic a useful long-term marker for clinical screening and for stratifying microbiome studies.
What was studied?
This cross-sectional study examined arsenic hair levels and risk factors by measuring arsenic in household water, home-grown wheat, and human hair from residents of an arsenic-affected rural area and a nearby low-arsenic control. The investigators quantified arsenic with ICP-MS and paired biomarker data with questionnaires on demographics and behaviors, then used group comparisons and multivariable regression to identify exposure drivers. The central aim was to determine whether environmental media in the exposed area exceeded safety limits and whether individual factors such as age, sex, residence time, wheat intake, smoking, and bathing habits explained variation in hair arsenic, a long-term exposure marker relevant to clinical risk assessment and microbiome exposure modeling.
Who was studied?
Adults aged 18 years and older with at least three years of residence were recruited from two rural communities on the Guanzhong Plain, China. Ninety-nine participants from the arsenic-contaminated area and forty-one from the control area provided hair samples; 150 drinking-water and 87 wheat samples from the exposed area, and 15 water and 10 wheat samples from the control, characterized local media. Participants completed structured questionnaires that captured water source and intake, wheat-based food intake, bathing time, tobacco and alcohol use, disease history, and residence duration. Ethical approval and informed consent procedures were in place.
Most important findings
Drinking water in the exposed area frequently exceeded the 10 µg/L standard, with 89.33% of samples above the limit, while only 2.13% of wheat samples surpassed 0.5 mg/kg; all control-area media were within limits. Mean hair arsenic was higher in the exposed community than the control (0.967 vs 0.392 mg/kg), and 29.29% of exposed residents had hair arsenic above 1 mg/kg. Hair arsenic distributions differed significantly between areas. In univariate analyses, higher hair arsenic associated with male sex, older age, longer residence (>60 years), smoking, a history of chronic disease, and greater wheat-based food intake. Multivariable models identified age and male sex as independent predictors, and wheat intake as a behavioral contributor. These results position hair arsenic as a stable exposure proxy that captures both environmental load (water) and dietary pathways (wheat and preparation water).
For microbiome signature efforts, the study provides exposure strata and covariates that can reduce confounding: sex and age modify internal dose; diet links arsenic exposure to luminal chemistry; smoking may alter exposure and host processing. Together, these elements enable cleaner mapping between arsenic dose and gut community shifts when integrating biomarker-defined exposure into microbiome analyses.
Key implications
For clinicians, hair arsenic offers an accessible, long-term marker to screen patients from endemic regions, triage water testing, and contextualize dermatologic findings. For microbiome researchers, using hair arsenic to stratify cohorts can sharpen exposure–microbiome associations and improve the fidelity of signatures by accounting for sex, age, residence time, and wheat-based diet as covariates. Public health actions should prioritize safe water substitution and cooking practices that limit arsenic transfer from water to staple foods, while counseling smokers about compounded exposure risk. Programmatically, pairing household water interventions with biomarker monitoring can verify exposure reduction and support longitudinal microbiome and clinical follow-up.
Stool as a novel biomarker for arsenic exposure through diet: a case-control study in a West Bengal population
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study investigates stool as a novel biomarker for arsenic exposure through diet, providing evidence that stool arsenic levels correlate with urinary arsenic and groundwater arsenic, supporting its potential use in arsenic exposure assessment in populations with limited access to clean drinking water.
What was studied?
This study focused on evaluating arsenic exposure through diet by assessing stool samples in populations from West Bengal, India. Given that arsenic exposure via drinking water is well-documented, the researchers aimed to explore whether stool could serve as a reliable biomarker for arsenic exposure through the food chain, particularly in areas where groundwater arsenic contamination is prevalent. By comparing stool and urine arsenic concentrations between exposed and control populations, the study sought to validate stool as a viable marker for dietary arsenic exposure, particularly as many exposed individuals continue to consume arsenic-laden food despite access to safer drinking water.
Who was studied?
The study participants included two groups: the case group from arsenic-affected regions in Nadia, West Bengal, and a control group from the less-exposed district of Paschim Medinipore. The case group consisted of individuals exposed to higher levels of arsenic through dietary sources, primarily rice and groundwater used for cooking, while the control group comprised individuals with minimal arsenic exposure. The subjects were aged 28–60, and both males and females participated, with a total of 60 individuals (24 exposed and 36 control participants). The researchers aimed to assess the correlation of stool arsenic levels with urinary arsenic and environmental arsenic contamination levels.
Most important findings
The results showed significant differences in arsenic concentrations between the case and control populations, with the exposed group displaying higher arsenic levels in both stool and urine. The average stool arsenic concentration in the exposed population was 234 µg/kg, compared to 66 µg/kg in the control group. Similarly, urinary arsenic levels were markedly higher in the exposed group (142 µg/L) than in the control group (0.61 µg/L). These findings were further supported by statistical analysis, including Pearson’s correlation, which demonstrated a positive correlation between stool arsenic and groundwater arsenic in both groups, particularly in the exposed population. The correlation between urinary and stool arsenic was also strong in the case group (r = 0.52), further reinforcing the potential of stool as a biomarker for arsenic exposure through diet.
Moreover, multi-metal analysis showed a negative correlation between stool arsenic and most other heavy metals in the exposed group, while the control group showed opposite correlations. These differences were also reflected in the principal component analysis (PCA), which suggested a distinct pattern of arsenic and heavy metal interactions in the stool of the exposed individuals. This analysis supports the hypothesis that stool arsenic is not only reflective of dietary exposure but also correlated with other environmental contaminants.
Key implications
The findings of this study have significant implications for environmental health monitoring and arsenic exposure assessment. First, the study provides evidence that stool arsenic concentration can serve as a reliable biomarker for arsenic exposure through diet, particularly in areas where contaminated groundwater is used for cooking. This could help mitigate the challenges associated with using urine as a sole biomarker for arsenic exposure, as urine primarily reflects arsenic intake through drinking water. The ability to assess arsenic exposure through non-invasive stool samples offers a more accessible and potentially more accurate method for monitoring dietary arsenic exposure, especially in rural or resource-limited settings. Furthermore, this research highlights the need for increased awareness and regulatory measures to limit arsenic exposure from food sources like rice, pulses, and vegetables, which are commonly contaminated in regions with high groundwater arsenic levels.
Influence of Sulfate Reduction on Arsenic Migration and Transformation in Groundwater Environment
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study explores the impact of sulfate-reducing bacteria on arsenic migration and transformation in groundwater. It highlights how sulfate reduction enhances arsenic release and mobilization, providing insights into potential bioremediation strategies for arsenic-contaminated aquifers.
What was studied?
This study investigates the role of sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB), specifically Desulfovibrio vulgaris, in the reduction of arsenic and iron in a high-arsenic groundwater environment. The authors explored how sulfate reduction affects the bio-reduction of Fe(III) and As(V) and its implications for arsenic mobilization in sediments. Microcosm experiments simulated groundwater conditions with varying sulfate concentrations, highlighting the microbial interactions that promote the transformation of arsenic species and their mobility in groundwater systems.
Who was studied?
The research primarily focused on the sulfate-reducing bacterium Desulfovibrio vulgaris, a model organism known for its ability to reduce sulfur compounds and metals, including arsenic and iron. The study also involved sediment samples collected from a high-arsenic aquifer in Shanyin County, China.
Most important findings
The study found that sulfate reduction significantly enhances the bio-reduction of Fe(III) and As(V), which in turn facilitates arsenic release from sediment into groundwater. The addition of 1 mM sulfate led to a dramatic increase in the reduction rates of Fe(III) and As(V), with Fe(III) and As(V) reduction rates increasing by 111.9% and 402.2%, respectively. This sulfate-mediated process also promoted the release of arsenic from sediment particles, primarily through the microbial reduction of iron arsenates and the transformation of As(V) to the more mobile As(III). The concentration of As(III) increased substantially in the presence of sulfate, while As(V) was reduced to form thioarsenic species, which further increased arsenic mobility.
In sediment samples, sulfate reduction enhanced the release of both As(V) and thioarsenic species in the early stages of the experiment. The results also showed that iron sulfide formed during the sulfate reduction process adsorbed some arsenic back into the sediment, but the overall arsenic release outweighed the adsorption effect, suggesting that sulfate reduction plays a crucial role in arsenic mobilization in contaminated aquifers.
Key implications
The findings suggest that sulfate reduction, particularly in high-arsenic aquifers, can be a critical factor influencing arsenic contamination and its migration in groundwater. The study highlights the importance of sulfate concentration in environmental remediation strategies, especially in bioremediation efforts aimed at reducing arsenic pollution. Managing sulfate levels can control arsenic mobility and enhance the effectiveness of bioremediation in arsenic-contaminated groundwater. Additionally, understanding the mechanisms of sulfate-reducing bacteria in arsenic transformations could contribute to better predictive models for arsenic behavior in subsurface environments and inform regulatory policies related to groundwater quality.
Influence of toxic metal exposure on the gut microbiota (Review)
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study investigates how copper supplementation affects gut microbiota and E. coli resistance in weaned piglets. It reveals that copper alters microbial composition and promotes antibiotic resistance, with potential implications for public health and animal agriculture.
What was studied?
The study explores the impact of pharmacological doses of copper on the microbial communities in the hindgut and the antimicrobial resistance profiles of Escherichia coli in weaned piglets. Specifically, the study aims to investigate how copper supplementation affects microbial diversity and composition in the ileum and cecum, as well as the resistance of E. coli strains to common antibiotics.
Who was studied?
The research focused on twenty-four healthy, weaned piglets aged 21 ± 1 days, with an average weight of 7.27 ± 0.46 kg. These piglets were randomly divided into four groups. One group received a basal diet, while the other groups were given diets supplemented with varying doses of copper (20, 100, or 200 mg copper/kg feed, in the form of CuSO4).
Most important findings
The study demonstrated that while copper supplementation did not significantly affect the diversity of the microbial communities in the piglets' gastrointestinal tract, it did notably alter their composition. Copper supplementation influenced the microbial metabolic functions related to energy metabolism, protein metabolism, and amino acid biosynthesis. Moreover, the study found that copper treatment increased the abundance of E. coli in the hindgut. Additionally, E. coli strains isolated from the copper-treated groups exhibited higher resistance to antibiotics such as chloramphenicol and ciprofloxacin. The resistance of E. coli to multiple drugs also increased in the ileum of the piglets, highlighting a potential risk of promoting antimicrobial resistance in agricultural settings.
Key implications
The findings from this study have significant implications for animal agriculture and public health. The observed increase in E. coli resistance to antibiotics in response to high copper intake raises concerns about the potential role of copper in promoting antimicrobial resistance. This is particularly important as resistant strains of E. coli may pose a risk to human health through the food chain. Additionally, the altered microbial composition in the gut due to copper supplementation suggests that long-term exposure to pharmacological copper doses could lead to shifts in gut microbiota, possibly impacting host health. Therefore, careful management of copper supplementation in livestock is recommended to avoid unintended consequences, such as the development of antimicrobial resistance.
The relationship between serum levels of uric acid and prognosis of infection in critically ill patients
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study evaluated how serum uric acid levels relate to infection outcomes in ICU patients and found that uric acid reflects renal and metabolic stress rather than prognosis.
What was studied?
The relationship between serum uric acid and the prognosis of infection in critically ill patients was examined in this retrospective study, which evaluated serum uric acid levels within 24 hours of ICU admission. The study examined the relationship between the focus keyphrase serum uric acid prognosis and clinical outcomes, as well as organ-related biomarkers such as serum creatinine and blood urea nitrogen. The research further assessed how uric acid varied across different infection types and comorbidities, and whether alterations in uric acid reflected a meaningful microbial or host-response signal in severe infection. Page 1 of the manuscript shows that uric acid was studied as both an oxidative stress–related molecule and a marker influenced by purine metabolism, renal excretion, endothelial injury, and infection-associated inflammatory pathways. Study figures demonstrate linear associations between uric acid and creatinine or BUN, reinforcing its value as a metabolic–renal indicator rather than a direct infection prognosticator.
Who was studied?
A total of 471 critically ill adults admitted to the ICU of Huashan Hospital (Shanghai, China) between 2003 and 2010 were included. As detailed on page 2, participants had confirmed single-site or multisite infections—most commonly pneumonia, CNS infection, urinary tract infection, or sepsis. Comorbidities such as diabetes, hypertension, renal insufficiency, and cerebral infarction were frequent, influencing baseline uric acid values. The cohort had a median age of 57 years, and nearly two-thirds were male. Prognostic outcomes ranged from complete recovery to death, allowing comparison of uric acid levels across clinical trajectories.
Most important findings
Study results showed no direct statistical association between initial serum uric acid levels and prognosis of infection after adjusting for confounders. Study indicates that while unadjusted analyses suggested a correlation, removing patients with renal dysfunction, trauma, erythrocytosis, and CNS infection eliminated prognostic significance. Importantly, uric acid strongly correlated with creatinine and BUN, suggesting renal function and protein metabolism drive its variability. From a microbiome-related perspective, uric acid reflects systemic oxidative stress and metabolic shifts common in severe infection, but it is not a microbial biomarker and does not directly correlate with pathogen-specific patterns. However, because uric acid can modulate inflammatory responses—promoting cytokine production and interacting with endothelial pathways—its fluctuations may indirectly reflect host–microbiome interactions mediated by systemic inflammation, renal perfusion, and metabolic stress.
Finding
Interpretation
Uric acid correlated with creatinine
Indicates renal function is a key driver of serum uric acid variation
Uric acid correlated with BUN
Links uric acid to protein metabolism and catabolic stress
No adjusted link to prognosis
Uric acid is not a reliable independent predictor of infection outcome
High levels in CNS infection, trauma
Reflect metabolic stress rather than microbial signatures
Key implications
The study suggests that serum uric acid is not an independent prognostic biomarker for infection in critically ill patients. Instead, its fluctuations appear to mirror renal impairment, oxidative stress, and metabolic disturbance. For microbiome-focused clinicians, uric acid lacks clear microbial specificity and should not be interpreted as part of a microbiome-derived signature. Rather, it acts as an indirect indicator of host physiological stress. Future research integrating metabolomics, microbiome profiling, and cytokine mapping may clarify whether uric acid interacts with microbial metabolic pathways in severe infection, but current evidence does not support its use as a standalone prognostic tool.
Current opinion on the regulation of small intestinal magnesium absorption
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review explains that the small intestine absorbs magnesium through regulated transcellular and paracellular pathways. Hormones, luminal pH sensing, and proton pump inhibitors can suppress absorption, while fermentation-linked acidification may support uptake. It links dysbiosis and inflammation to impaired magnesium bioavailability.
This mini-review updated how clinicians should think about magnesium absorption in the small intestine, moving beyond the older idea that absorption is mostly passive and unregulated. It explained that the duodenum, jejunum, and ileum absorb magnesium through both transcellular routes (through TRPM6, TRPM7, and TRPM6/7 channels with basolateral export mechanisms) and paracellular routes (through tight junction pores influenced by claudins). It also emphasized that small-intestinal magnesium uptake changes quickly in response to hormones, luminal acidity, pH-sensing channels and receptors, and medications like proton pump inhibitors, which means absorption is more regulated and more clinically “tunable” than many clinicians assume.
Who was reviewed?
Because this was a review, it did not enroll patients; it synthesized evidence from human and animal intestinal tissues, epithelial models, and mechanistic transport studies. The reviewed work included experiments that measured segmental transport in the duodenum, jejunum, and ileum using epithelial preparations and Ussing chamber approaches, plus cell models such as Caco-2 monolayers that clarified pH sensing and transporter regulation. It also reviewed clinical observations around proton pump inhibitor–associated hypomagnesemia, integrating them with mechanistic animal and cell findings to explain why long-term acid suppression can lower magnesium absorption in the small intestine.
What were the most important findings?
The review argued that small-intestinal magnesium handling is a regulated system with identifiable control points that can explain real-world magnesium deficiency patterns. It described transcellular uptake through TRPM6/TRPM7 family channels in small-intestinal epithelium and noted that heteromeric TRPM6/7 may allow more continuous uptake than TRPM6 alone in some contexts. It also described paracellular movement as a major contributor, but it emphasized that tight junction composition can change permeability and therefore change magnesium flux. Hormones mattered: parathyroid hormone and FGF-23 directly suppressed transcellular magnesium absorption in multiple small-intestinal segments through signaling that reduces membrane-associated TRPM6 expression. Luminal pH also mattered: acidity improves magnesium solubility and supports absorption, while bicarbonate secretion and pH elevation can precipitate magnesium and reduce free ion availability. Proton-sensing pathways created a practical bridge between acid suppression and magnesium loss, because ASIC1a, OGR1/GPR68, and P2Y2-linked signaling can shift bicarbonate secretion and thereby alter soluble magnesium.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
Clinicians should treat hypomagnesemia risk as a gut-absorption problem as often as a renal-loss problem, especially in patients using proton pump inhibitors or with symptoms of malabsorption, small intestinal bacterial overgrowth, or chronic inflammation. The review supports a practical mindset: when magnesium is low, raising luminal magnesium intake alone may not correct the problem if acid suppression, bicarbonate secretion, tight junction changes, or transporter dysfunction is limiting absorption. It also strengthens microbiome-informed care logic, because luminal acidity, fermentation patterns, and barrier integrity can all change magnesium bioavailability; in other words, dysbiosis and magnesium deficiency can reinforce each other through pH, inflammation, and epithelial function.
The Role of Metal Ions in Enzyme Catalysis and Human Health
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study explores the essential role of metal ions in enzyme catalysis and human health, emphasizing their impact on metabolic processes and disease prevention. It also highlights the importance of maintaining balanced metal ion levels to avoid deficiencies or toxicities linked to various health conditions.
What was studied?
This study investigates the role of metal ions in enzyme catalysis and their implications for human health. It specifically looks at the biochemical roles of essential metal ions, such as zinc, magnesium, iron, copper, and manganese, in various enzymatic processes. These ions are vital cofactors for numerous metalloenzymes that facilitate catalytic reactions, stabilize protein structures, and regulate metabolic pathways. The study explores the physiological significance of these metal ions in maintaining homeostasis, as well as the health risks associated with their imbalances, including diseases like anemia, neurodegenerative disorders, and cardiovascular issues.
Who was studied?
The study does not focus on individual human participants but rather on the biochemical processes involving metal ions in enzyme catalysis, as well as the implications of metal ion imbalances in human health. It also reviews clinical data related to conditions caused by deficiencies or toxicities of these essential metal ions, such as iron deficiency anemia, Wilson's disease (copper overload), and hemochromatosis (iron overload).
What were the most important findings?
The most significant findings of this study emphasize the crucial role of metal ions in enzyme function and metabolic processes. These ions stabilize enzyme structures, facilitate substrate binding, and enable catalytic reactions that are essential for cellular processes like oxidative phosphorylation, DNA synthesis, and neurotransmission. The study also highlights how deficiencies in metal ions, such as zinc, iron, and magnesium, lead to severe health conditions. For example, iron deficiency causes anemia, zinc imbalances affect immune function, and magnesium deficiency is linked to neurological and cardiovascular issues. Furthermore, the study points out that excess metal ion accumulation can also be harmful. For instance, copper overload in Wilson's disease can cause neurological and hepatic damage, while iron overload in hemochromatosis leads to oxidative stress and organ failure. The therapeutic use of metal-based drugs, such as platinum-based chemotherapeutics and gadolinium-based MRI agents, was also discussed, though the study cautions about the potential toxicity associated with these treatments.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study has important implications for both clinical medicine and public health. It emphasizes the need for maintaining optimal metal ion levels to prevent various health disorders, highlighting the necessity for dietary regulation and supplementation strategies. It also underscores the potential for targeted therapies using metal-based drugs, which could be crucial for treating diseases such as cancer and neurodegenerative disorders. The findings advocate for further research into improving metal ion-based treatments while minimizing their toxic side effects, as well as exploring nutritional interventions to prevent metal-related disorders. Additionally, the study suggests the importance of genetic screening and personalized medicine to optimize metal ion homeostasis in individuals.
Bacterial Iron Detoxification Mechanisms: Insights into Iron Homeostasis and Oxidative Stress Mitigation
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review explores bacterial iron homeostasis, focusing on detoxification pathways, oxidative stress mitigation, and iron-storage mechanisms. It highlights regulatory proteins like Fur and DtxR and storage proteins like ferritins. These insights provide potential therapeutic targets for limiting bacterial growth and addressing iron-related dysbiosis in host-pathogen interactions.
What was reviewed?
This review examines the mechanisms bacteria employ to manage iron homeostasis, detoxify excess iron, and mitigate oxidative stress caused by reactive oxygen and nitrogen species. The review surveys molecular insights into various iron-regulating proteins and pathways, highlighting their structures, functions, and evolutionary significance. These mechanisms are critical for bacterial survival, especially under oxidative stress and during host-pathogen interactions.
Who was reviewed?
The review focuses on bacteria from diverse ecological niches, including both Gram-positive and Gram-negative species. It examines key bacterial proteins and regulatory systems such as Fur (ferric uptake regulator), DtxR/IdeR (iron-dependent regulators), and novel regulators like RirA and Irr. The study also investigates iron storage proteins like ferritins and mini-ferritins (Dps), alongside mechanisms for iron acquisition, transport, and detoxification.
What were the most important findings?
The review highlights iron's dual role as an essential nutrient and potential toxin due to ROS generation via the Fenton reaction. Proteins like Fur, DtxR, and RirA regulate iron homeostasis by balancing uptake, storage, and efflux to prevent oxidative stress. Ferritins and Dps detoxify excess iron by sequestering it, while siderophores facilitate iron acquisition. The interplay between iron homeostasis and ROS/RNS detoxification is critical during immune responses, with bacteria exhibiting diverse adaptations to manage iron under varying environmental stresses.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The insights provided by this review have significant implications for understanding bacterial survival strategies under nutrient limitation and oxidative stress. These findings offer potential therapeutic targets for managing bacterial infections. Iron acquisition and storage systems are particularly attractive targets, as their disruption could limit bacterial growth and virulence. Additionally, understanding bacterial iron detoxification pathways can inform microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as iron chelation, especially in conditions where dysbiosis may alter iron homeostasis or oxidative stress.
Critical Review on Zeolite Clinoptilolite Safety and Medical Applications in vivo
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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The review highlights clinoptilolite's detoxifying, immunomodulatory, and antioxidant properties, showing its safety and potential for in vivo use in humans and animals. It can adsorb toxic metals like nickel, support gut health, and modulate immune responses, making it valuable for conditions like systemic nickel allergy syndrome and microbiome imbalances, with promising applications in both human supplements and veterinary care.
What was reviewed?
The review focused on the safety and medical applications of clinoptilolite, a naturally occurring zeolite, for in vivo use. The analysis encompassed the physical and chemical properties of clinoptilolite, its detoxifying capabilities, and its potential therapeutic effects in both human and veterinary medicine. The review also considered various studies on clinoptilolite's role in detoxification, immune modulation, oxidative stress, and its impact on body homeostasis. The safety of clinoptilolite for internal consumption, including concerns about the potential release of heavy metals like lead during use, was also addressed.
Who was reviewed?
The review examined the available scientific literature concerning the effects of clinoptilolite in various contexts, specifically in animal studies and human trials. It included research from both clinical studies and preclinical evaluations that utilized clinoptilolite as a dietary supplement or therapeutic agent. The literature encompassed studies on humans, including clinical trials and case studies, as well as extensive research on animals such as dairy cows, rats, mice, and poultry, assessing both the therapeutic benefits and safety profiles of clinoptilolite-based products.
What were the most important findings of this review?
Detoxification Properties: Clinoptilolite exhibits high cation-exchange capacity, making it effective in adsorbing toxic metals such as lead, cadmium, and nickel from the body. This property makes it valuable in reducing the load of toxic elements in animals and humans.
Safety Profile: Clinoptilolite, particularly in its micronized and purified forms, has been shown to be generally safe for in vivo use at varying dosages, with no significant toxic effects observed in animals or humans. The European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) has classified it as safe for consumption in animal feeds at specified doses.
Immunomodulatory and Antioxidant Effects: Clinoptilolite can modulate immune responses, as evidenced by its effects on immune cell counts and antioxidant enzyme activity in various studies. This includes improved responses in immunodeficient conditions and a reduction in markers of oxidative stress.
Impact on Microbiota and Gastrointestinal Health: Clinoptilolite has shown positive effects on gut health, potentially through its detoxifying role, the maintenance of intestinal wall integrity, and its ability to modulate the microbiota composition. These effects suggest potential therapeutic roles in conditions like gastrointestinal disorders, dysbiosis, and enhanced resistance to pathogens.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
Potential for Human Therapeutics: The review highlights the potential use of clinoptilolite as a nutraceutical for detoxifying heavy metals and improving immune responses in humans. Its safety profile supports further exploration into its use in supplements aimed at mitigating conditions related to heavy metal exposure, such as systemic nickel allergy syndrome (SNAS) and other metal-induced toxicities.
Veterinary Applications: Clinoptilolite's effectiveness in improving animal health—particularly its ability to enhance reproductive health, detoxify nitrates, and manage mycotoxins—suggests that it could serve as a valuable supplement in livestock production. Its role in reducing ammonia and supporting gut health is particularly important for animal productivity and welfare.
Integration in Microbiome-Targeted Therapies: Given its impact on gastrointestinal health and the microbiome, clinoptilolite holds promise as a component of microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs). It could serve as an adjunctive therapy in managing conditions like irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) and other dysbiosis-associated disorders.
Safety Considerations and Future Research: The review underlines the importance of rigorous quality control and characterization of clinoptilolite materials for in vivo applications. Variability in clinoptilolite's physical and chemical properties across different sources necessitates careful evaluation before therapeutic use. Future studies are needed to delineate the specific mechanisms by which clinoptilolite exerts its effects on immune modulation and detoxification, as well as to confirm its efficacy and safety in long-term human applications.
Does Exposure of Lead and Cadmium Affect the Endometriosis?
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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The study links lead and cadmium exposure to increased endometriosis risk, emphasizing lead's role at low blood levels and synergistic effects with cadmium. It advocates for strict monitoring and preventive measures to minimize exposure.
What Was Studied?
This study investigated the association between occupational exposure to lead and cadmium and the risk of developing endometriosis (EM) among South Korean female workers. Utilizing medical and biological data from over 26,000 individuals who underwent lead-associated medical examinations between 2000 and 2004, the study examined blood lead levels (BLLs), co-exposure to cadmium, and their relationship with hospital admissions for EM.
Who Was Studied?
The study focused on South Korean female workers exposed to lead as part of their occupation. These individuals underwent specialized medical examinations. A total of 26,542 workers were included, with the study comparing EM admissions in lead-exposed workers against the general population and noise-exposed workers as control groups.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study found that lead exposure, even at relatively low levels (BLLs < 5 µg/dL), was significantly associated with an increased risk of EM. The standard admission rate (SAR) for EM in lead-exposed workers was 1.24 times higher than the general population, and for workers with BLLs < 5 µg/dL, it was 1.44 times higher. Co-exposure to lead and cadmium demonstrated a synergistic effect, amplifying the risk of EM beyond what could be expected from exposure to either metal alone. While cadmium exposure alone did not show a statistically significant association with EM, the relative excess risk due to interaction (RERI) was 0.33, indicating a notable combined impact of these metals. The study also highlighted that oxidative stress induced by heavy metal exposure likely underpins these effects, with mechanisms involving the disruption of antioxidant defenses and cellular damage.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
This research underscores the need to minimize exposure to heavy metals, particularly lead and cadmium, among female workers. It also calls for rigorous monitoring of blood lead and cadmium levels in workplaces to mitigate their combined effects. The findings are critical for understanding the environmental and occupational contributors to EM and suggest that policies limiting heavy metal exposure could have a substantial public health impact, especially for at-risk populations.
GS2 Gallium Complex: A Novel Inhibitor of MMP-14 for Anti-Metastatic Cancer Therapy
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Research on GS2, a new gallium complex, showed potent inhibition of cell invasion and MMP activity in cancer cells, particularly MMP-14. These findings indicate GS2's strong potential as a therapeutic agent against metastatic cancers by interfering with key processes of cancer cell invasion and matrix degradation.
What Was Studied?
This study examined the effects of [N-(5-chloro-2-hydroxyphenyl)-L-aspartato] chlorogallate (GS2), a water-soluble gallium complex, on tumor cell invasion and the activity and expression of matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs). Specifically, it evaluated GS2's anti-invasive properties and its regulatory effects on MMP-2, MMP-9, and MMP-14 in two human cancer cell lines: metastatic HT-1080 fibrosarcoma and MDA-MB231 breast carcinoma cells.
Who Was Studied?
The research utilized human cell lines HT-1080 (fibrosarcoma) and MDA-MB231 (breast carcinoma). Additionally, MCF7 cells transfected with MMP-14 and non-transfected fibroblast cells (F40) were used for supplemental experiments.
Most Important Findings
GS2 demonstrated significant anti-invasive and anti-MMP activities at non-cytotoxic concentrations. The compound inhibited MMP-2, MMP-9, and MMP-14 activities in a dose-dependent manner, with IC50 values of 168 µM, 82 µM, and 20 µM, respectively. GS2 reduced the mRNA expression of MMP-14 in both cell lines and inhibited MMP-2 and MMP-9 expression exclusively in MDA-MB231 cells. Western blotting confirmed decreased MMP-14 protein expression in response to GS2. Importantly, GS2 significantly inhibited cell invasion through a type-I collagen-coated matrix, correlating with the downregulation of MMP-14, a critical regulator of the extracellular matrix and tumor invasion. Notably, GS2's inhibition of MMP-14 showed specificity for cells expressing higher MMP-14 levels, a hallmark of invasive cancer phenotypes.
Greatest Implications
The findings suggest GS2 is a promising candidate for anti-metastatic therapy targeting MMP-14. This is particularly relevant for cancers characterized by elevated MMP-14 expression, such as type II endometrial adenocarcinoma and invasive pituitary adenomas. GS2’s ability to selectively inhibit MMP-14 and reduce cancer cell invasion positions it as a potential therapeutic for limiting tumor metastasis. Moreover, its low cytotoxicity at effective concentrations highlights its clinical applicability.
Gut Microbiota as a Mediator of Essential and Toxic Effects of Zinc in the Intestines and Other Tissues
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Zinc
Zinc
Zinc is an essential trace element vital for cellular functions and microbiome health. It influences immune regulation, pathogen virulence, and disease progression in conditions like IBS and breast cancer. Pathogens exploit zinc for survival, while therapeutic zinc chelation can suppress virulence, rebalance the microbiome, and offer potential treatments for inflammatory and degenerative diseases.
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This review illustrates zinc’s dose- and species-dependent impact on gut microbiota, linking both deficiency and excess to dysbiosis and systemic inflammation. Physiological Zn enhances barrier integrity and probiotic efficiency, while excess Zn favors pathogens. Zn–microbiota interactions extend beyond the gut, influencing neurodevelopmental and metabolic diseases.
What was reviewed?
This review comprehensively examined the bidirectional relationship between zinc (Zn) status—both deficiency and excess—and gut microbiota composition across multiple species, including poultry, pigs, rodents, and humans. It also explored how these microbiota changes modulate local (intestinal) and systemic (extraintestinal) physiological and pathological effects of zinc, including inflammation, metabolic disorders, and neurodevelopmental conditions.
Who was reviewed?
The review drew from both in vivo and in vitro studies involving chicks, piglets, mice, and human subjects, including genetic studies on human Zn transporters. It considered experimental Zn deficiency and supplementation using various Zn formulations (oxide, sulfate, nanoparticles) and reviewed probiotic co-supplementation studies.
Most Important Findings
Zinc plays a critical, dose-dependent role in shaping gut microbiota composition and function, with downstream effects on intestinal and systemic health. Zinc deficiency is consistently associated with gut dysbiosis, which is marked by decreased microbial diversity, shifts in phyla proportions (notably reduced Firmicutes and increased Proteobacteria), and compromised intestinal barrier function. Physiological zinc supplementation, in contrast, supports gut integrity by enhancing tight junction protein expression, reducing pathogen abundance, and promoting beneficial microbial metabolite production such as short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs).
However, zinc overexposure induces microbial shifts favoring pathogenic taxa, impairs gut barrier function, and promotes systemic inflammation and endotoxemia. Beyond the gut, zinc–microbiota interactions have been implicated in extraintestinal disorders including autism spectrum disorder (ASD), attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), severe acute pancreatitis, fetal alcohol syndrome, endometriosis, and obesity. Notably, co-supplementation with probiotics enhances zinc bioavailability and supports microbial-host homeostasis, with some probiotic strains (e.g., E. coli Nissle 1917) exploiting zinc-binding mechanisms to competitively inhibit pathogens. The review highlights a nuanced, dose-dependent role of zinc in gut microbiota regulation:
↓ Microbial diversity to healthy baseline levels; potential behavioral improvements
Zinc in Severe Acute Pancreatitis
↓ E. coli translocation; ↓ IL-1β and TNFα; ↑ Bifidobacterium and Lactobacillus abundance
Zinc in Fetal Alcohol Syndrome / Obesity
Correlates with α-defensin levels, barrier integrity, and shifts in weight-associated microbiota
Zinc + E. coli Nissle 1917Probiotic Supplementation
↑ Zinc bioavailability; ↑ mucosal integrity; antagonism of pathogens via Zn-binding siderophores
Greatest Implications
This review underscores the critical role of microbial context in modulating zinc’s biological effects. While physiological zinc supports microbial homeostasis and host immunity, excess zinc undermines nutritional immunity, selects for virulence traits in pathogens, and disrupts host–microbe symbiosis. Importantly, the work highlights the importance of considering microbial responses to Zn when designing supplementation strategies, especially in vulnerable populations (e.g., children, ASD, chronic inflammation). It also opens avenues for microbiota-targeted zinc therapeutics in metabolic and neurodevelopmental diseases.
Heavy Metals and Pesticides Toxicity in Agricultural Soil and Plants: Ecological Risks and Human Health Implications
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review explores the toxicity of heavy metals and pesticides in agricultural ecosystems, detailing their ecological and health impacts. It highlights pathways, bioaccumulation, and synergistic interactions, emphasizing the need for improved agricultural practices and bioremediation to mitigate these toxicants' harmful effects on soil, plants, and human health.
What Was Reviewed?
The paper is a comprehensive review focusing on the toxic effects of heavy metals (cadmium, lead, copper, and zinc) and pesticides on agricultural soil, plants, and human health. It provides an integrated synthesis of the pathways of these toxicants, from their sources to their accumulation in the environment and their implications for ecosystems and humans. The review also highlights the synergistic and antagonistic interactions between these toxicants and their combined effects on soil, plants, and humans.
Who Was Reviewed?
The review synthesizes previous studies involving agricultural soils, plants, and human populations exposed to heavy metals and pesticides. It encompasses research on various sources of these toxicants, including natural (e.g., geological) and anthropogenic sources (e.g., agricultural practices and industrial emissions), along with their bioaccumulation in ecosystems and transmission through food chains.
Most Important Findings
The review identifies key pathways through which heavy metals and pesticides impact agricultural ecosystems and human health. Heavy metals, such as cadmium and lead, were found to disrupt soil properties (e.g., pH, microbial diversity) and plant physiology (e.g., nutrient uptake, photosynthesis). Similarly, pesticides alter soil enzymatic activity, microbial communities, and plant metabolic processes. Both toxicants contribute to human health risks through bioaccumulation and persistence in food chains, leading to diseases like cancer, neurological disorders, and metabolic syndromes.
The synergistic and antagonistic interactions between heavy metals and pesticides exacerbate these effects, creating complex toxicity profiles that are challenging to predict. For example, combined exposure to cadmium and certain pesticides magnifies soil microbial damage and plant stress responses.
Greatest Implications
The review underscores the urgent need for multidisciplinary strategies to mitigate the combined toxicity of heavy metals and pesticides. It calls for improved agricultural practices, stringent regulations on pesticide use, and enhanced research on bioremediation techniques. Furthermore, understanding these toxicants' interactions is crucial for developing effective interventions to protect ecosystems and human health.
Metalloestrogens exposure and risk of gestational diabetes mellitus: Evidence emerging from the systematic review and meta-analysis
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This systematic review and meta-analysis identified arsenic, antimony, and copper as metalloestrogens associated with an increased risk of gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM). The findings highlight the significance of environmental metal exposure in pregnancy, underscoring the need for public health policies to mitigate these risks and further research into the mechanisms linking metalloestrogens to GDM.
What Was Reviewed?
The systematic review and meta-analysis examined the relationship between exposure to metalloestrogens—specifically arsenic (As), antimony (Sb), chromium (Cr), cadmium (Cd), copper (Cu), selenium (Se), and mercury (Hg)—and the risk of developing gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM). This review aimed to aggregate findings from observational studies to better understand how these metals, which have estrogenic properties, impact the development of GDM. A comprehensive search of PubMed, Web of Science, and Embase databases was conducted to collect relevant studies up until December 2023.
Who Was Reviewed?
The meta-analysis included a total of 33 observational studies, which involved 141,175 subjects, comprising 9,450 cases of GDM and 131,725 controls. The review covered a wide geographic distribution, with studies conducted in multiple countries and varying methodologies for exposure assessment. Biological specimens such as blood, urine, and other tissues were analyzed to measure levels of metalloestrogens in pregnant women and correlate them with the occurrence of GDM.
What Were the Most Important Findings of This Review?
The meta-analysis revealed that exposure to certain metalloestrogens, specifically arsenic (As), antimony (Sb), and copper (Cu), is associated with an increased risk of GDM. Arsenic exposure exhibited a risk ratio (OR = 1.28, 95% CI [1.08, 1.52]), antimony a higher risk (OR = 1.73, 95% CI [1.13, 2.65]), and copper was also linked with a modest increase in GDM risk (OR = 1.29, 95% CI [1.02, 1.63]). However, high heterogeneity in these studies was noted, with substantial variability in the results for arsenic (I2 = 64.1%), antimony (I2 = 80.9%), and copper (I2 = 71.6%). Other metalloestrogens, such as selenium, cadmium, chromium, and mercury, did not show a statistically significant association with GDM in this analysis.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Review?
The greatest implication of this review is the emerging recognition that environmental exposure to metalloestrogens could be a significant contributor to the risk of GDM. This finding underscores the importance of considering environmental and occupational exposure to harmful metals in pregnancy, which could lead to metabolic disturbances that increase the likelihood of GDM. The results suggest that public health policies should place greater emphasis on reducing environmental contamination by metalloestrogens, especially in populations at higher risk of GDM. Additionally, it points to the need for more targeted research on how different metals disrupt estrogenic pathways and influence insulin signaling and pancreatic function, which may open new avenues for preventive strategies, early diagnosis, and novel treatments for GDM.
The high heterogeneity in the studies also highlights the complexity of the relationship between metalloestrogens and GDM. Variations in exposure levels, methods of measurement, and geographical factors call for standardized approaches in future research to better clarify these associations. Furthermore, the study suggests the necessity for increased awareness and education among healthcare providers regarding environmental factors in pregnancy, encouraging efforts to mitigate exposure in vulnerable populations.
Metalloestrogens: an emerging class of inorganic xenoestrogens with potential to add to the oestrogenic burden of the human breast
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This review opens new avenues in toxicology and endocrine research, identifying metalloestrogens as a critical factor in hormone disruption and breast cancer risk. Further studies are necessary to confirm these findings and develop effective mitigation strategies for human health protection.
What was reviewed?
This study, published in the Journal of Applied Toxicology, reviewed the concept and emerging evidence of metalloestrogens mimicking estrogenic activity. The review focused on how these metals interact with estrogen receptors (ERs) like organic xenoestrogens, potentially contributing to estrogenic activity in human breast tissue and increasing the risk of hormone-related cancers such as breast cancer. The review primarily covered in vitro and in vivo studies of various metal ions, including aluminum, antimony, arsenite, barium, cadmium, chromium (Cr(II)), cobalt, copper, lead, mercury, nickel, selenite, tin, and vanadate. The review also highlights significant research contributions from multiple studies and scholars focusing on the effects of metalloestrogens on human breast cancer cell lines, such as MCF-7 and T47D, as well as their impact on gene expression and cellular proliferation.
Most Important Findings:
Estrogenic Activity of Metals: The review found that various metal ions can act as estrogen agonists by binding to estrogen receptors, particularly ERα, and mimicking the actions of physiological estrogens. This was demonstrated in studies showing that metals such as cadmium, nickel, and aluminum could displace estradiol from the ligand-binding domain of ERα, leading to altered gene expression and increased cell proliferation in breast cancer cells.
Molecular Mechanisms: Metals such as cadmium were shown to bind directly to the ligand-binding domain (LBD) of the estrogen receptor, interfering with the receptor's normal function. This binding alters the receptor’s ability to interact with estrogen response elements (EREs) on DNA, thereby affecting the transcription of estrogen-regulated genes. For instance, cadmium was found to downregulate ER levels and upregulate estrogen-regulated gene expression, driving cell proliferation.
Cooperative Action with Estrogens: The metals did not antagonize estradiol’s action; instead, they often enhanced the agonist actions of estradiol. In some cases, metals like copper and cobalt increased breast cancer cell proliferation when combined with estradiol, indicating a synergistic effect that may exacerbate estrogenic signaling in hormone-dependent cancers.
In Vivo Evidence: The review highlighted evidence of in vivo estrogenic activity in animal models, particularly for cadmium, which was shown to increase uterine weight, induce mammary gland development, and alter gene expression. The estrogenic effects of cadmium were noted at doses relevant to human exposure, raising significant concerns about environmental exposure to these metals.
Environmental and Occupational Exposure: The presence of metalloestrogens such as cadmium and aluminum in everyday consumer products (e.g., antiperspirants) and the environment (e.g., tobacco smoke, and industrial pollutants) implies widespread human exposure. These metals can accumulate in the body, especially in breast tissue, and may contribute to the burden of aberrant estrogen signaling involved in breast cancer development.
Greatest Implications:
Breast Cancer Risk: The review underscores the potential for metalloestrogens to increase the risk of breast cancer by contributing to estrogenic signaling within breast tissue. Given that breast cancer is often driven by estrogen receptor activation, the cumulative burden of environmental estrogens and metalloestrogens could enhance the likelihood of cancer development and progression.
Environmental Health and Toxicology: The widespread presence of these metals in the environment, their ability to accumulate in the body, and their newly recognized estrogenic activity suggest a need for revised regulatory guidelines and risk assessments for human exposure to metalloestrogens. This includes re-evaluating safe exposure levels, especially for metals like cadmium, which is already classified as a human carcinogen.
Endocrine Disruption: The concept of metalloestrogens extends the traditional understanding of endocrine-disrupting chemicals (EDCs) beyond organic compounds, emphasizing the need for further investigation into how inorganic metals may impact hormone-related diseases. This review calls for more research on the long-term effects of chronic exposure to metalloestrogens in both wildlife and humans.
Public Health Awareness: There is a strong implication for public health education regarding the sources of metalloestrogen exposure, such as antiperspirants, diet, cigarette smoke, and industrial pollutants. Raising awareness could lead to better personal care practices and lifestyle choices to reduce individual exposure to these potentially harmful metal ions.
Metals at the Host–Fungal Pathogen Battleground
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Fungal pathogens rely on metal acquisition for virulence. This review reveals how host tissues manipulate iron, copper, zinc, and manganese to starve or intoxicate fungi and how pathogens adapt, with implications for antifungal therapy and microbiome-targeted interventions.
What was reviewed?
This review, titled “Metals at the Host–Fungal Pathogen Battleground” by Garg et al. (2024), provides a comprehensive analysis of how fungal pathogens and their mammalian hosts engage in a dynamic, metal-centric battle during infection. The paper focuses on four key transition metals—iron (Fe), copper (Cu), zinc (Zn), and manganese (Mn)—and discusses their dual roles as essential micronutrients and toxic agents. The review examines how the host immune system manipulates metal availability to control fungal infections through nutritional immunity and metal toxicity, and how fungi adapt through sophisticated metal uptake, detoxification, and cofactor-utilization systems.
Who was reviewed?
The review explores fungal pathogens of major clinical concern, primarily Candida albicans, Cryptococcus neoformans, Aspergillus fumigatus, Histoplasma capsulatum, and other pathogenic molds and yeasts. It includes insights drawn from model organisms such as Saccharomyces cerevisiae while highlighting evolutionary expansions in metal acquisition strategies among fungal pathogens. These fungi were examined in the context of their interaction with host immune responses and fluctuating tissue-specific metal availabilities during infection.
What were the most important findings?
One of the central insights is the host's use of “nutritional immunity” to manipulate metal availability—either sequestering metals to starve the fungus or flooding them with toxic concentrations. Calprotectin, a neutrophil-derived metal-binding protein, plays a critical role by sequestering Zn and Mn at infection sites. During C. albicans infection, Zn and Cu levels in kidney tissue follow a biphasic pattern: an initial deprivation phase followed by toxic overload, compelling the fungus to recalibrate metal acquisition and detoxification systems. The review details distinct fungal responses to each metal: siderophore-mediated Fe acquisition, Cu detoxification through P-type ATPases and metallothioneins, Zn scavenging via zincophores like PRA1, and Mn uptake through NRAMP transporters (e.g., SMF12, SMF13). These responses are tightly regulated by metal-specific transcription factors—SEF1 and HAP for Fe, MAC1 and ACE for Cu, ZAP1 for Zn—but notably, no Mn-specific regulon has been identified, suggesting post-transcriptional regulation may dominate Mn homeostasis.
From a microbiome perspective, these findings highlight that major fungal pathogens exhibit clear dependencies on metal-acquisition genes and metalloregulation systems, suggesting that transitions in microbial metal use may be a distinguishing trait in dysbiotic or pathogenic microbiomes. The expression of zincophores and siderophore transporters, as well as evidence of calprotectin-induced nutrient metal depletion, could serve as microbial signature markers (MMAs) for fungal overgrowth and metal imbalance in tissue-specific microbiomes. Additionally, the review underscores that host micronutrient modulation—especially Fe and Mn dynamics—has significant implications for microbiome resilience and therapeutic outcomes, especially in patients receiving iron supplements or experiencing metal dysregulation from comorbidities.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review fundamentally shifts the framing of antifungal strategies by revealing that metals are both nutrient targets and weapons in host-pathogen interactions. For clinicians, this offers novel therapeutic opportunities: metal chelation, metallophore inhibition, and interference with fungal metal transporters could be developed into antifungal interventions. Importantly, these approaches must be designed to minimize collateral damage to commensal microbial taxa, many of which share metal acquisition strategies. The review also emphasizes that rising antifungal resistance demands novel targets, and metal-based pathways offer promising, underexploited avenues for drug development. For microbiome researchers, this paper underscores the need to integrate metallomic profiling into microbiome signatures, especially for fungal overgrowth conditions like candidiasis, aspergillosis, and histoplasmosis. Incorporating fungal metallophore gene presence, metal uptake transporters, and responses to host nutritional immunity into microbiome databases will enhance precision in diagnostics and intervention selection.
Nickel Allergic Contact Mucositis in Suspected Non-Responsive Celiac Disease
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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The study points to nickel sensitivity as a novel contributor to persistent symptoms in Celiac Disease (CD) patients and supports the use of a low-nickel diet as an effective intervention, potentially altering future approaches to treating the disease.
What was studied?
This study examined the prevalence of nickel (Ni) allergic contact mucositis (ACM) in celiac disease (CD) patients who were in serological and histological remission from their condition but continued to experience relapsing gastrointestinal and extraintestinal symptoms despite following a strict gluten-free diet (GFD). Additionally, the study investigated the therapeutic effects of a low-nickel diet on these persistent symptoms in the CD patients. The study hypothesized that Ni-rich foods, which are commonly consumed in a GFD, might lead to intestinal sensitization to Ni and induce symptoms similar to irritable bowel syndrome (IBS).
Who was studied?
The study recruited 102 consecutive CD patients (74 female, 28 male, age range 18–65 years) who had been on a GFD for at least 12 months and were in serological and histological remission (Marsh–Oberhuber type 0–I). These patients continued to report relapsing gastrointestinal and/or extraintestinal symptoms despite adherence to the GFD. After applying exclusion criteria (e.g., lactose intolerance, Helicobacter pylori infection, inflammatory bowel diseases), 20 female patients completed the study. All these patients underwent nickel oral mucosa patch testing (omPT) and were subsequently placed on a low-nickel diet for three months.
What were the most important findings?
Prevalence of Ni ACM in CD patients: The study found that 100% of the CD patients who completed the study tested positive for Ni ACM using the omPT, suggesting a high prevalence of nickel sensitivity in CD patients experiencing recurrent symptoms despite a GFD.
Symptom trends and the impact of a low-nickel diet:
Following an initial gluten-free diet (T0 vs. T1), 79.2% of the total symptoms improved, with 58.3% showing statistically significant improvement. However, after prolonged adherence to a GFD (T1 vs. T2), 83.3% of symptoms worsened, with 41.7% of symptoms showing statistically significant exacerbation. This relapse of symptoms was attributed to increased dietary intake of Ni-rich foods commonly consumed in a GFD (e.g., corn). After three months of a low-nickel diet (T2 vs. T3), 83.4% of symptoms improved, with 41.7% showing statistically significant improvement. Both gastrointestinal and extraintestinal symptoms showed substantial relief, including key symptoms such as abdominal pain, bloating, fatigue, and dermatitis.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
Nickel sensitivity as a cause of persistent symptoms in celiac patients: This study suggests that nickel sensitivity (Ni ACM) may be a significant underlying cause of persistent gastrointestinal and extraintestinal symptoms in CD patients who are in remission but continue to suffer despite adherence to a GFD. The findings imply that the ingestion of Ni-rich foods commonly included in a GFD might trigger or exacerbate these symptoms in Ni-sensitive individuals.
Clinical management of celiac disease: The results highlight the potential clinical importance of considering nickel sensitivity in CD patients with unresolved symptoms. Nickel oral mucosa patch testing (omPT) should be considered as part of the diagnostic workup for such patients, and a low-nickel diet (LNiD) could be an effective therapeutic intervention to alleviate these symptoms. This could lead to an improved quality of life for CD patients and more targeted dietary interventions.
Potential changes in dietary guidelines: If larger studies confirm these findings, dietary guidelines for celiac patients may need to be expanded to include advice on limiting Ni-rich foods, particularly for patients who are unresponsive to a GFD alone. This could represent a significant shift in how refractory or non-responsive celiac disease is treated.
Overlap with other dietary interventions: The study also draws attention to the overlap between nickel-rich foods and foods commonly eliminated in low-FODMAP diets, which are often prescribed for IBS-like symptoms. This suggests that some benefits attributed to low-FODMAP diets may, in fact, be due to the concurrent reduction of nickel intake, further emphasizing the need for specific diagnostic testing in dietary management.
Nickel Allergy as a Risk Factor for Endometriosis
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This study identifies nickel allergy as an independent risk factor for endometriosis, highlighting shared immune dysregulation and estrogenic pathways. Using a population-based cohort, researchers found a 2.5-fold increased odds of nickel allergy in women with endometriosis, emphasizing the role of environmental exposures in its pathogenesis.
What Was Studied?
This study examined the association between nickel allergy and endometriosis using a population-based nested case-control design. The research aimed to determine whether nickel allergy is an independent risk factor for endometriosis by analyzing a cohort dataset provided by the South Korean National Health Insurance Service (NHIS), which included approximately 1 million individuals. The study was designed to assess causality and improve upon previous correlational studies.
Who Was Studied?
The study included 4,985 women divided into two groups: 997 women with endometriosis and 3,988 controls matched by age and socioeconomic status. The endometriosis group was identified using diagnostic codes, surgery records, and drug prescriptions between 2009 and 2013, while nickel allergy cases were identified between 2002 and 2008 using specific diagnostic and patch test codes.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The findings revealed that women with endometriosis had a significantly higher prevalence of nickel allergy (0.8%) compared to the control group (0.3%), with an adjusted odds ratio of 2.474 (95% CI: 1.023–5.988; p = 0.044). The study highlights the estrogenic and immune-modulating properties of nickel, suggesting that elevated blood nickel levels associated with nickel allergy may contribute to endometriosis pathogenesis. Both conditions share immunological mechanisms, including cell-mediated hypersensitivity and immune dysregulation. The study also emphasizes the activity of nickel as a metalloestrogen, which may influence endometriosis through its interaction with estrogen receptors. Despite its low clinical prevalence, the findings support nickel allergy as a potential contributing factor to endometriosis, particularly in the context of autoimmune and estrogenic pathways.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
This study underscores the link between environmental factors, such as nickel exposure, and the development of endometriosis. Identifying nickel allergy as a risk factor paves the way for further research into environmental triggers and immune-mediated mechanisms in endometriosis. These findings could lead to targeted prevention strategies, such as reducing nickel exposure in at-risk populations, and inform therapeutic approaches that address immune and estrogenic pathways in endometriosis management.
Nickel Allergy is Found in a Majority of Women with Chronic Fatigue Syndrome and Muscle Pain—and may be Triggered by Cigarette Smoke and Dietary Nickel Intake
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Nickel
Nickel
Bacteria regulate transition metal levels through complex mechanisms to ensure survival and adaptability, influencing both their physiology and the development of antimicrobial strategies.
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Nickel allergy, smoking, and dietary nickel intake may worsen chronic fatigue and muscle pain. Managing exposure can improve symptoms.
What was studied?
This study investigated the relationship between nickel allergy, cigarette smoking, and dietary nickel intake in women diagnosed with chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) and muscle pain. The primary aim was to evaluate the prevalence of nickel allergy in this population and explore how smoking and dietary nickel may trigger or exacerbate symptoms.
Who was studied?
The study involved 204 women aged 21 to 73 years with chronic fatigue and muscle pain, meeting the criteria for fibromyalgia and chronic fatigue syndrome but with no signs of autoimmune disorders. The participants underwent immune stimulation therapy using a Staphylococcus vaccine for six months, and their nickel allergy history, smoking habits, and treatment responses were analyzed.
What were the most important findings?
The study found that 52% of the women had a history suggestive of nickel allergy, and 28% were habitual smokers. Nickel allergy and smoking significantly influenced treatment outcomes, with non-allergic, non-smoking participants showing the highest treatment success rates (39%), compared to only 6% in allergic smokers. Additionally, two case reports highlighted the impact of dietary and smoking changes: one participant improved after quitting smoking and reducing dietary nickel intake, while another experienced sustained symptom relief by following a low-nickel diet. Notably, nickel hypersensitivity was associated with increased fatigue and muscle pain symptoms triggered by dietary nickel or cigarette smoke, both of which contain trace amounts of the metal. The findings indicate that systemic nickel allergy, potentially exacerbated by smoking or high dietary nickel, may contribute to chronic fatigue and muscle pain.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This research emphasizes the importance of recognizing nickel allergy as a potential factor in chronic fatigue syndrome and muscle pain. The interplay between nickel hypersensitivity, dietary nickel intake, and smoking could have significant clinical implications. Managing nickel exposure through dietary adjustments such as a low-nickel diet and smoking cessation may serve as a non-invasive strategy to alleviate symptoms in affected patients. Furthermore, the study underscores the need for broader awareness and diagnostic consideration of systemic nickel allergy in chronic fatigue-related conditions, particularly in women.
Nickel Sensitivity in Patients With Irritable Bowel Syndrome
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study suggests that nickel sensitivity may play a significant role in the etiology of IBS, warranting further exploration and potentially influencing future diagnostic and therapeutic strategies for IBS management.
What was studied?
This study investigated the relationship between nickel (Ni) sensitivity and irritable bowel syndrome (IBS). Specifically, the researchers aimed to determine whether patients with IBS are more prone to nickel sensitivity than healthy individuals. The study utilized patch testing, a standard method for diagnosing contact allergies, to evaluate Ni sensitivity in both IBS patients and a healthy control group.
Who was studied?
The study included 50 patients diagnosed with IBS based on the Rome IV criteria and 40 healthy volunteers who served as the control group. Both groups were similar in terms of age, gender distribution, and dietary habits. The mean ages of the patient and control groups were 42.82 and 39.77 years, respectively, with no significant difference in age or gender between the groups. Exclusion criteria were applied to ensure that systemic medication, dietary restrictions, or recent use of nickel-containing products did not confound the results.
What were the most important findings?
Nickel sensitivity prevalence in IBS: The study found that 40% of the IBS patient group exhibited nickel sensitivity, compared to 17.5% of the control group. This difference was statistically significant (p=0.03), suggesting a strong association between Ni sensitivity and IBS.
Gender distribution: While nickel sensitivity was more common in women, with 45.8% of female IBS patients testing positive compared to 34.6% of male patients, the difference in sensitivity between genders was not statistically significant. However, among men, Ni sensitivity was significantly higher in the IBS group compared to the control group (p=0.03).
Nickel sensitivity’s role in IBS: The study supports the hypothesis that nickel sensitivity might play a role in the pathogenesis of IBS, corroborating earlier studies that suggested a link between nickel intake and gastrointestinal symptoms mimicking IBS.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
Clinical relevance of nickel sensitivity in IBS: This study highlights the potential role of dietary nickel in triggering or exacerbating IBS symptoms. If nickel sensitivity is confirmed as a contributor to IBS pathogenesis, dietary modifications such as low-nickel diets may be a viable treatment approach for some IBS patients, possibly improving symptoms and reducing treatment costs.
Future research directions: The findings suggest a need for more comprehensive studies to further explore the relationship between nickel sensitivity and IBS, as well as to investigate the pathophysiological mechanisms underlying this association. Additionally, larger studies could focus on whether low-nickel diets provide significant clinical improvement in IBS patients with nickel sensitivity.
Gender considerations in treatment: While nickel sensitivity is traditionally more associated with women, this study reveals that nickel sensitivity is significantly higher in men with IBS compared to healthy controls. This finding may influence future clinical approaches, encouraging practitioners to consider nickel sensitivity in both male and female IBS patients.
Plants that Hyperaccumulate Heavy Metals
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This chapter reviews hyperaccumulator plants, especially in the Brassicaceae family, and their mechanisms of metal uptake. It highlights implications for human health, including how high-metal diets may shift the microbiome toward dysbiosis—an insight relevant to conditions like endometriosis where metallomic imbalances and microbial disruptions intersect.
What was reviewed?
This chapter, “Plants that Hyperaccumulate Heavy Metals” by Elisa Fasani, provides a detailed review of the physiological, genetic, and ecological mechanisms underlying metal hyperaccumulation in plants, with a particular emphasis on angiosperm species. It defines hyperaccumulators as plants that uptake, translocate, and sequester heavy metals in their aerial tissues at concentrations vastly exceeding those of typical plants, and systematically reviews the elements for which hyperaccumulation occurs (e.g., nickel, zinc, cadmium, arsenic). It also discusses the evolutionary distribution of this trait, highlighting its prevalence in specific plant families, notably the Brassicaceae and Euphorbiaceae, and examines the molecular determinants of hyperaccumulation such as transporters, chelators, and stress-response proteins.
Who was reviewed?
The review encompasses approximately 500 hyperaccumulator taxa, primarily angiosperms, focusing on model species like Arabidopsis halleri and Noccaea caerulescens. These species are genetically similar to A. thaliana and have been extensively studied for their abilities to hyperaccumulate Zn, Cd, and Ni. The genus Alyssum, particularly Alyssum bertolonii and Alyssum lesbiacum, also features prominently, especially in relation to Ni accumulation. Although most hyperaccumulator species are herbaceous perennials adapted to metalliferous soils, the review also includes ferns (e.g., Pteris vittata) for arsenic hyperaccumulation and other non-Brassicaceae families that contribute to the small number of Cd and Se hyperaccumulators.
What were the most important findings?
A central finding of the review is the disproportionate representation of Brassicaceae among metal hyperaccumulator plants, with about 25% of known hyperaccumulator species belonging to this family. This family dominates zinc hyperaccumulation, and includes the only two known angiosperm arsenic hyperaccumulators. The genus Alyssum within Brassicaceae is especially rich in nickel hyperaccumulators, highlighting this family’s strong metallomic signature. Importantly, hyperaccumulation of one metal often correlates with the uptake of others—particularly Zn with Cd and Pb—due to shared ionic characteristics. The physiological mechanisms facilitating hyperaccumulation include enhanced uptake, symplastic mobility, xylem loading, and vacuolar sequestration, while detoxification involves metal ligands like histidine and nicotianamine. A significant portion of the review is dedicated to the molecular biology of hyperaccumulation, emphasizing gene families such as ZIP, CDF, NRAMP, HMA, and YSL, and the roles they play in metal homeostasis. Notably, the review supports the “elemental defense” hypothesis, wherein metal accumulation deters herbivores and pathogens. This is especially relevant for microbiome research: hyperaccumulator plants harbor metal-tolerant microbial communities, a parallel to dysbiotic profiles seen in metal-rich environments or metal-exposed tissues in humans. These plant-microbiome-metal interactions may mirror microbial shifts seen in chronic inflammatory diseases with elevated heavy metal burden, such as endometriosis.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The implications for clinical microbiome research are substantial. The review reinforces the concept that chronic exposure to dietary heavy metals—even from otherwise health-associated vegetables like those in the Brassicaceae family—could influence host microbiome composition by selecting for metal-resistant, pro-inflammatory taxa. In the context of endometriosis, this is particularly compelling given the elevated presence of these metals in the metallomic signature of the condition. The well-documented accumulation of arsenic, cadmium, lead, nickel, and zinc in Brassicaceae suggests that excessive consumption of these vegetables—especially when sourced from contaminated soils—could contribute to microbial dysbiosis and worsen disease pathology. Furthermore, the elemental defense mechanism in plants that favors metal accumulation over chemical defenses may have unintended consequences when translated to human exposure, especially when these plants become regular components of the diet. The review thus supports reevaluating blanket dietary recommendations for high Brassicaceae intake in individuals with microbiome-mediated conditions or impaired metal detoxification.
Potential Role of Copper in Diabetes and Diabetic Kidney Disease
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review explores copper's role in diabetes and diabetic kidney disease, emphasizing its impact on oxidative stress, glycemic control, and renal function. Findings highlight the potential of copper homeostasis as a therapeutic target and the Zn/Cu ratio as a biomarker for diabetes management and DKD progression.
What Was Reviewed?
The paper reviewed the role of copper in diabetes and its complications, with a specific focus on diabetic kidney disease (DKD). Copper, as an essential trace element, is pivotal in various biological processes, but its imbalance—either deficiency or excess—can lead to pathophysiological outcomes. This review summarized findings from animal studies, human observational research, and clinical investigations to explore the interplay between copper metabolism and diabetes-related complications.
Who Was Reviewed?
The review incorporated findings from diabetic and non-diabetic human subjects, diabetic animal models (primarily rodents), and observational studies spanning a range of diabetes subtypes, including type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM), type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), and gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM). It also examined patients with varying stages of DKD, from normoalbuminuria to microalbuminuria.
Most Important Findings
The review highlighted the dual role of copper in diabetes and DKD. Elevated copper levels in serum or tissue are often linked with poor glycemic control and oxidative stress, which exacerbates diabetes-related complications. In T1DM and T2DM patients, higher copper levels and altered copper-to-zinc (Cu/Zn) ratios were correlated with increased glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) levels, indicating poor glucose regulation. In DKD, urinary copper excretion increases in advanced stages, suggesting that impaired renal function may disrupt copper homeostasis, leading to nephrotoxicity and disease progression.
Animal studies demonstrated that copper-chelating agents like tetrathiomolybdate and triethylenetetramine (TETA) reduced oxidative stress, improved glucose tolerance, and mitigated renal and cardiac damage in diabetic models. These findings emphasize the potential of copper regulation as a therapeutic avenue. The Zn/Cu ratio emerged as a potential biomarker for assessing metabolic and renal health in diabetes, with a higher ratio associated with better glycemic control and reduced DKD risk.
Greatest Implications
The findings underscore the significance of maintaining copper homeostasis in diabetes management. Dysregulated copper metabolism contributes to oxidative stress, inflammation, and tissue damage, which accelerates the progression of diabetes and its complications. Interventions targeting copper balance, such as dietary adjustments, copper chelators, or enhancing the Zn/Cu ratio, could offer novel therapeutic strategies for preventing or managing DKD. Moreover, the Zn/Cu ratio could serve as a diagnostic and prognostic biomarker in diabetic populations.
Presence of metalloestrogens in ectopic endometrial tissue
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study examined the presence of metalloestrogens in ectopic endometrial tissue from fifty women diagnosed with endometriosis. Cadmium, nickel, and lead were found in all tissue samples, with nickel and lead showing particularly high concentrations. These findings suggest that metalloestrogens play a role in the etiology of endometriosis by interacting with estrogen receptors, emphasizing environmental pollutants' role in endometriosis progression.
What was studied?
This study investigated the presence of metalloestrogens in ectopic endometrial tissue from women with endometriosis. Metalloestrogens, heavy metals that can mimic estrogen and may contribute to estrogen-dependent diseases, were the focus, particularly regarding their potential role in the persistence and pathology of endometriosis. The researchers specifically analyzed levels of cadmium, nickel, and lead in ectopic endometrial samples using advanced metal detection techniques, Total Reflection X-ray Fluorescence (TXRF) and Graphite Furnace Atomic Absorption Spectroscopy (GFASS).
Who was studied?
The study included fifty women of reproductive age diagnosed with endometriosis via laparoscopy or laparotomy at the Professorial Gynecology Unit of the National Hospital, Colombo, Sri Lanka, during 2009-2010. The participants underwent these procedures for diagnosis or treatment, and endometriotic tissue samples were collected during surgery. The participants presented with varied symptoms like infertility, dysmenorrhea, chronic pelvic pain, and endometriomas.
What were the most important findings?
The study found significant levels of cadmium, nickel, and lead in all ectopic endometrial tissue samples. Specifically, geometric mean concentrations were reported as follows: cadmium (2.861 μg/Kg), nickel (17.547 μg/Kg), and lead (25.785 μg/Kg). The concentrations varied by tissue site, with the ovarian endometrioma wall showing higher, though not statistically significant, metal levels than pelvic endometrial patches or nodules in the pouch of Douglas.
Implications
This study is one of the first to identify and quantify metalloestrogens in ectopic endometrial tissue, shedding light on a possible environmental and molecular link to endometriosis. It underscores the mechanism by which these metals could perpetuate endometriosis, given their ability to interact with estrogen receptors in ectopic tissue. The implications are substantial for public health, especially given the widespread environmental exposure to metals such as cadmium, nickel, and lead. These findings suggest that environmental pollution may play a significant role in the etiology and progression of endometriosis, calling for further investigation into the estrogen-mimicking properties of environmental metals and their regulation. Additionally, the study highlights the need for preventive measures to reduce heavy metal exposure to nickel and lead, particularly among women susceptible to estrogen-related diseases.
Presence of metalloestrogens in ectopic endometrial tissue
February 12, 2026
/
Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This study quantified metalloestrogens—cadmium, nickel, and lead—in ectopic endometrial tissue, suggesting their role in endometriosis persistence.
What Was Studied?
This study investigated the presence of metalloestrogens—heavy metals with estrogenic effects—in ectopic endometrial tissue. Metalloestrogens, such as cadmium, nickel, and lead, have been implicated in estrogen-dependent diseases like endometriosis. The study aimed to quantify these metals in ectopic endometrial tissues from women diagnosed with endometriosis, using advanced analytical techniques.
Who Was Studied?
The study included 50 women of reproductive age who had endometriosis confirmed through laparotomy or laparoscopy. The participants were patients from a gynecology unit at a tertiary care hospital in Sri Lanka. Samples of ectopic endometrial tissue were collected from these women during surgical procedures, and the disease severity was classified based on the Revised American Society for Reproductive Medicine classification system.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study found significant levels of three metalloestrogens—cadmium (2.861 µg/kg), nickel (17.547 µg/kg), and lead (25.785 µg/kg)—in all ectopic endometrial tissue samples analyzed. Among these, lead exhibited the highest concentration. The study is notable for being the first to report the quantitative detection of metalloestrogens in ectopic endometrial tissue. Notably, the presence of these metals varied slightly depending on the tissue site, such as the wall of an endometrioma or nodules in the pelvic region, though these differences were not statistically significant. The findings suggest a potential role for environmental metalloestrogens in the persistence and progression of endometriosis.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
The detection of metalloestrogens in ectopic endometrial tissue underscores their role in the etiology and maintenance of endometriosis. These metals may act as endocrine disruptors, binding to estrogen receptors in ectopic tissue and mimicking estrogenic effects, thereby contributing to the persistence of the disease. The findings highlight the need for further research to elucidate the mechanistic pathways by which metalloestrogens influence endometriosis. Clinicians should consider environmental exposures and diet as a factor in managing and preventing this condition.
Relaxed fibronectin: a potential novel target for imaging endometriotic lesions
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Research on relaxed fibronectin as a target for imaging endometriotic lesions showed that a novel radiotracer binds preferentially to this protein in disease areas. This finding could lead to improved diagnostic techniques for endometriosis, offering a non-invasive method to detect lesions accurately, thereby enhancing treatment planning and patient outcomes.
What was studied?
The study investigated relaxed fibronectin as a novel target for imaging endometriotic lesions. Researchers explored using a preclinical radiotracer, [111In]In-FnBPA5, which binds specifically to relaxed fibronectin, an extracellular matrix protein involved in the pathogenesis of diseases like cancer and fibrosis.
Who was studied?
The study involved preclinical experiments using mice and immunohistochemical analysis on tissue samples from mice and patients diagnosed with endometriosis.
What were the most important findings?
The radiotracer [111In]In-FnBPA5 accumulated in the mouse uterus, with uptake varying according to the estrous cycle, suggesting an increased abundance of relaxed fibronectin during estrogen-dependent phases. Immunohistochemical analysis on patient-derived tissues showed that relaxed fibronectin is preferentially located near the endometriotic stroma, supporting its potential as a target for imaging endometriosis.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings that [111In]In-FnBPA5 uptake varies in the mouse uterus with the estrous cycle, indicating increased relaxed fibronectin during estrogen-dependent phases, hold significant implications for future research on endometriosis.
Biomarker Identification: Understanding the fluctuation of relaxed fibronectin could help identify biomarkers for endometriosis, enabling earlier and more accurate diagnosis.
Pathogenesis Insights: These results suggest that estrogen-driven changes in fibronectin might play a role in the development or exacerbation of endometriosis. This could lead to a better understanding of the disease’s underlying mechanisms.
Targeted Therapies: By highlighting the relationship between estrogen, fibronectin, and endometrial tissue changes, new therapeutic targets may be identified, paving the way for treatments that modulate fibronectin or its pathways.
Diagnostic Imaging: The study suggests that targeting relaxed fibronectin could significantly improve the diagnostic imaging of endometriosis. This approach may lead to developing a specific radiotracer for noninvasive detection of endometriotic lesions, potentially enhancing diagnosis accuracy and aiding in better disease management.
Clinical Application: The researchers also suggest using gallium-68 for potential clinical application, which could further refine imaging techniques and improve patient outcomes.
Role of Cholestyramine in Refractory Hyperthyroidism: A Case Report and Literature Review
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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A 52-year-old woman with refractory iodine-induced hyperthyroidism showed significant improvement with cholestyramine, reducing FT4 by 30% in 5 days. Despite conventional treatments failing, cholestyramine proved effective, leading to euthyroidism. This highlights cholestyramine's potential as an adjunct therapy.
What was studied?
The study investigated the role of cholestyramine as an additional treatment for refractory iodine-induced hyperthyroidism in a patient who did not respond to conventional therapies.
Who was studied?
A 52-year-old female patient with a history of goiter who developed iodine-induced hyperthyroidism following a CT scan with contrast. The patient had obstructive symptoms and was unresponsive to standard treatments, including dexamethasone, carbimazole, and propranolol.
What were the most important findings?
After adding cholestyramine, the patient’s FT4 levels decreased by 30% within 5 days and normalized by 12 days.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
Cholestyramine can be an effective adjunct therapy for managing refractory iodine-induced hyperthyroidism, suggesting a potential new treatment avenue for similar cases, such as Grave's Disease (GD). This case highlights the need for alternative treatments when conventional therapies fail and emphasizes the utility of cholestyramine in rapid thyroid hormone reduction.
The Association between Zinc and Copper Circulating Levels and Cardiometabolic Risk Factors in Adults: A Study of Qatar Biobank Data
February 12, 2026
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Cardiovascular Health
Cardiovascular Health
Recent research has revealed that specific gut microbiota-derived metabolites are strongly linked to cardiovascular disease risk—potentially influencing atherosclerosis development more than traditional risk factors like cholesterol levels. This highlights the gut microbiome as a novel therapeutic target for cardiovascular interventions.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study evaluated the associations of zinc, copper, and Zn/Cu ratio with cardiometabolic risk factors in Qatari adults, revealing copper’s protective role and Zn/Cu ratio’s adverse implications for metabolic health.
What was studied?
This study analyzed the relationship between zinc (Zn), copper (Cu), and the zinc-to-copper (Zn/Cu) ratio with cardiometabolic risk (CMR) factors and metabolic syndrome (MetS) using data from the Qatar Biobank. It sought to determine whether circulating levels of these trace minerals and their ratios were associated with various markers of cardiometabolic health, including lipid profiles, blood pressure, glucose levels, and body composition.
Who was studied?
The study included 437 Qatari adults aged 18 and older, representing both sexes. Participants had detailed cardiometabolic and mineral status profiles measured. Individuals with non-communicable diseases, those taking mineral supplements, and pregnant or lactating women were excluded to ensure a clear analysis of trace mineral associations with CMR factors.
Key Findings
This study revealed several associations between trace mineral levels and cardiometabolic markers. High Cu levels were associated with a reduced risk of MetS, lower diastolic blood pressure (DBP), and decreased prevalence of low HDL cholesterol, suggesting a protective role of copper in cardiometabolic health. Conversely, a higher Zn/Cu ratio was linked to an increased risk of MetS and low HDL, indicating that imbalances in these trace elements could worsen metabolic health.
While Zn alone was not strongly correlated with MetS or most CMR factors, it showed weak positive correlations with waist circumference (WC) and triglycerides (TG), which are notable for metabolic processes. Cu, on the other hand, positively correlated with HDL and total cholesterol (TC) while negatively correlating with DBP. These findings emphasize the differential and sometimes opposing roles of these minerals in cardiometabolic regulation.
In terms of microbiome relevance, trace elements like Zn and Cu influence microbial composition and metabolic functions. For example, Zn deficiency can affect glucose metabolism and inflammation, while Cu is a cofactor for antioxidative enzymes like superoxide dismutase, influencing oxidative stress pathways. Dysregulation of these pathways is often linked to microbial dysbiosis, potentially contributing to MetS and other cardiometabolic conditions.
Greatest Implications
The results underscore the need to consider trace element levels, particularly Cu and the Zn/Cu ratio, in cardiometabolic health assessments. The findings suggest that higher Cu levels confer protective effects against MetS and DBP, whereas an elevated Zn/Cu ratio increases the risk of adverse outcomes, including low HDL and MetS. These insights could inform clinical interventions, such as dietary adjustments or supplementation, to balance trace mineral levels and support cardiometabolic health. Additionally, these results highlight the potential role of trace mineral modulation as part of microbiome-targeted therapies, given their influence on systemic inflammation and metabolism.
The copper chelator ammonium tetrathiomolybdate inhibits the progression of experimental endometriosis in TNFR1-deficient mice
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Ammonium tetrathiomolybdate (TM) inhibits endometriosis progression in TNFR1-deficient mice by reducing copper and estradiol levels, lesion growth, angiogenesis, and oxidative stress.
What Was Studied?
This study evaluated the therapeutic potential of ammonium tetrathiomolybdate (TM), a copper chelator, in inhibiting the progression of experimental endometriosis (EDT) in TNFR1-deficient mice. It explored TM's effects on copper and estradiol concentrations, lesion development, angiogenesis, oxidative stress, and inflammatory pathways. The research aimed to address how TM mitigates EDT in a worsened state caused by TNFR1 deficiency, a condition characterized by reduced cell death and increased lesion proliferation.
Who Was Studied?
The subjects were TNFR1-deficient female C57BL/6 mice divided into three groups: sham-operated (KO Sham), EDT-induced (KO EDT), and EDT-induced with TM treatment (KO EDT+TM). EDT was induced via autologous uterine tissue transplantation into the intestinal mesentery, and TM was administered orally postoperatively. Experimental outcomes were evaluated one month after EDT induction.
Most Important Findings
The study revealed several critical findings. First, EDT induction significantly elevated copper and estradiol levels in the peritoneal fluid, both of which were restored to physiological levels with TM treatment. TM also reduced lesion volume and weight, decreased cell proliferation, and suppressed angiogenesis, as evidenced by lower blood vessel counts and reduced expression of Vegfa, Fgf2, and Pdgfb. Furthermore, TM altered oxidative stress markers, decreasing the activity of superoxide dismutase (SOD) and catalase (CAT) while increasing lipid peroxidation, suggesting a pro-oxidative environment conducive to apoptotic signaling.
From a microbiome perspective, copper's role as a metalloestrogen and its involvement in estradiol synthesis underline the relevance of copper chelation in addressing estrogen-dependent diseases like endometriosis. By reducing copper levels, TM may disrupt microbial contributions to oxidative stress and inflammation, though direct microbiome-specific findings were not explored.
Greatest Implications
The study's findings suggest TM's dual role in reducing pro-inflammatory and pro-angiogenic pathways while restoring copper and estradiol homeostasis. These mechanisms are vital for mitigating EDT progression, particularly in the context of TNFR1 deficiency, where pathological signaling is exacerbated. Clinically, TM represents a potential adjunct therapy for managing endometriosis, particularly in cases resistant to conventional hormone treatments. The findings also reinforce the broader therapeutic relevance of targeting trace metals like copper in inflammatory and estrogen-dependent conditions.
The effect of a low-nickel diet and nickel sensitization ongastroesophageal reflux disease: A pilot study
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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A low-nickel diet significantly reduced GERD symptoms in 95% of participants, regardless of patch test status. The results suggest dietary nickel may contribute to GERD pathophysiology independently of classical allergy mechanisms.
What was studied?
This prospective pilot study investigated the therapeutic potential of a Low‑Nickel diet (LNiD) in patients with refractory gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) and explored whether epicutaneous patch testing for nickel (Ni) could predict dietary responsiveness. The researchers sought to determine whether dietary nickel contributes to GERD pathophysiology and whether identifying nickel sensitivity via patch testing can inform clinical decision-making.
Who was studied?
Twenty adult patients with a confirmed diagnosis of GERD were enrolled at a single site in West Virginia. All had persistent GERD symptoms despite at least three months of proton pump inhibitor (PPI) therapy and a GERD-HRQL score ≥30 at baseline. Patch testing was conducted using nickel sulfate and three additional common allergens (cobalt chloride, balsam of Peru, and cinnamic aldehyde), but patients were blinded to their patch test results until the end of the study. All participants adhered to a standardized low-nickel diet for eight weeks. GERD symptom severity was evaluated pre- and post-intervention using the validated GERD Health-Related Quality of Life (GERD-HRQL) questionnaire, which assesses heartburn, regurgitation, and overall symptom burden.
What were the most important findings?
Nineteen out of twenty participants (95%) reported substantial improvement in GERD symptoms after following the low-nickel diet. Mean total GERD-HRQL scores dropped by 27.05 points, while mean heartburn and regurgitation scores declined by 11.45 and 10.85 points, respectively—all statistically significant reductions (p < 0.001). Improvements were consistent across participants, regardless of nickel patch test results. Although 3 participants (15%) tested positive for nickel sensitivity, their symptom improvement was only modestly different from those who tested negative. Importantly, the magnitude of symptom reduction was not significantly correlated with patch test status. Nearly half of participants (45%) reported being satisfied with their GERD symptoms post-intervention, a notable shift from the 95% dissatisfaction rate at baseline.
While the study did not measure microbiome parameters directly, the data suggest nickel may act as a dietary irritant that exacerbates esophageal inflammation independently of overt allergic sensitization. This opens the possibility that dietary nickel contributes to barrier disruption or mucosal immune activation along the upper gastrointestinal tract—mechanisms well-documented in nickel-induced contact mucositis and consistent with microbial shifts observed in conditions like irritable bowel syndrome IBS and H. pylori infection, both of which have been responsive to nickel restriction.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study establishes that a low-nickel diet may be a powerful non-pharmacologic intervention for GERD, even in patients unresponsive to standard therapy. The data challenge the assumption that only patients with demonstrable nickel allergy benefit from nickel restriction, suggesting that dietary nickel may provoke inflammation through mechanisms not captured by skin-based patch testing. This has important clinical implications: patch test–guided exclusion diets may miss a substantial subset of patients who stand to benefit from nickel reduction. The findings justify broader consideration of dietary nickel as a contributing factor in GERD and potentially other inflammatory gastrointestinal conditions. Importantly, the intervention had excellent adherence and tolerability, supporting its viability in routine care. Future randomized, controlled trials with larger sample sizes and microbial/metallomic profiling are warranted to validate these findings and explore underlying mechanisms.
The Influence of Lactoferrin in Plasma and Peritoneal Fluid on Iron Metabolism in Women with Endometriosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This study demonstrates that peritoneal fluid-to-plasma ferritin and lactoferrin ratios distinguish endometriosis stage and severity. Iron overload and shifting iron-binding protein profiles reveal a localized dysregulation that may influence disease progression and potentially pathogenic microbiome selection.
What was studied?
This study investigated the role of lactoferrin (LF) in relation to iron metabolism in women with and without endometriosis by measuring levels of LF, ferritin (FT), transferrin (TF), and iron (Fe) simultaneously in plasma and peritoneal fluid. The authors specifically explored whether the concentrations and ratios of these iron-related proteins in the two biological compartments could distinguish the presence and progression of endometriosis. The goal was to identify noninvasive or minimally invasive biomarkers that may aid in diagnosing or staging the disease based on iron metabolism, especially given endometriosis’ pro-inflammatory, iron-rich microenvironment.
Who was studied?
The study cohort included 90 women of reproductive age undergoing diagnostic laparoscopy, of whom 57 had histologically confirmed endometriosis (stages I–IV) and 33 did not. Plasma and peritoneal fluid samples were collected pre- and intra-operatively. Subjects were classified based on endometriosis diagnosis and stage, and specimens were evaluated for levels of LF, FT, TF, and Fe using ELISA, immunoturbidimetric assay, and colorimetric methods.
What were the most important findings?
Key findings highlight that ferritin and iron concentrations were significantly elevated in peritoneal fluid compared to plasma, especially in patients with advanced-stage endometriosis. In contrast, transferrin was consistently lower in peritoneal fluid. Notably, lactoferrin levels did not significantly differ between women with and without endometriosis when evaluated independently in plasma or peritoneal fluid, but the peritoneal fluid/plasma lactoferrin ratio decreased progressively with increasing disease severity, significantly distinguishing stage I from stage IV. The ferritin ratio was markedly higher in the endometriosis group, underscoring its potential as a disease marker. Correlation analyses revealed that in severe endometriosis, lactoferrin was significantly associated with ferritin and iron in the peritoneal fluid, suggesting a disrupted iron regulation mechanism localized to the disease microenvironment. Importantly, the elevated ferritin concentrations in peritoneal fluid may serve a compensatory, protective role to sequester iron and mitigate oxidative stress, while lactoferrin may lose this protective function as disease progresses.
From a microbiome perspective, this study underscores the iron-dependent ecological shifts that may select for siderophilic pathobionts. The iron overload and pro-oxidative milieu likely fosters the expansion of iron-requiring microbial taxa, potentially including Escherichia, Enterobacter, and Fusobacterium, known to be enriched in some endometriosis microbiome signatures. While microbial profiling was not performed, the metallomic dysregulation described supports the hypothesis that iron availability is a crucial factor in shaping pathogenic microbial communities in endometriosis.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study provides compelling evidence that iron-binding proteins—particularly ferritin and lactoferrin—play a localized and differential role in the progression of endometriosis. The findings suggest that peritoneal fluid iron metabolism, and especially the ferritin-to-lactoferrin balance, may be a critical axis of disease progression and potentially a therapeutic target. The study introduces the peritoneal fluid/plasma concentration ratio as a novel diagnostic parameter, offering a more granular assessment than conventional plasma markers. The declining lactoferrin ratio and increasing ferritin ratio with disease severity may signal a transition from iron sequestration and immune modulation toward iron-driven oxidative stress and tissue damage. This may serve as a foundation for the development of metallome-targeted diagnostics and therapies, including exogenous lactoferrin supplementation, which the authors suggest could restore iron balance in advanced disease stages. These findings also have implications for understanding how iron dysregulation may foster microbial dysbiosis, providing a mechanistic link between host iron metabolism and the pathophysiological selection of microbial communities in endometriosis.
The influence of nickel on intestinal microbiota disturbances
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Nickel
Nickel
Bacteria regulate transition metal levels through complex mechanisms to ensure survival and adaptability, influencing both their physiology and the development of antimicrobial strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
•
Excess nickel disrupts gut microbiota, promoting dysbiosis and contributing to conditions like obesity and systemic nickel allergy syndrome (SNAS). Probiotics and nickel-restricted diets show promise in mitigating these effects, underscoring the need for further research and clinical intervention.
What was reviewed?
The paper reviewed the influence of nickel on intestinal microbiota disturbances, drawing on 59 scientific publications from the past 20 years. The analysis focused on nickel’s dual role as an essential element for microbial enzymatic reactions and a disruptor of gut microbiota, especially under conditions of excessive exposure or systemic nickel allergy syndrome (SNAS).
Who was reviewed?
The review encompassed research involving humans, animals, and microbial models. Specific attention was given to populations exposed to high levels of nickel, individuals with SNAS, and animal studies demonstrating changes in microbial communities under nickel exposure.
What were the most important findings?
Nickel acts as a cofactor for metalloenzymes like urease, hydrogenase, and [NiFe]-hydrogenase, essential for microbial survival. However, excess nickel promotes dysbiosis, characterized by reductions in beneficial taxa and increases in nickel-resistant bacteria. In humans with SNAS, the microbiota showed decreased levels of beneficial genera such as Bifidobacterium and Lactobacillus, known for their probiotic effects and urease activity, and increases in nickel-tolerant taxa, including Clostridiaceae and Bacillaceae. Similarly, animal studies indicated reduced Verrucomicrobia and Bacteroidetes while promoting Escherichia coli and Enterococcus.
Nickel exposure also leads to an increased abundance of Bacteroides fragilis, Bacteroidales S24-7, and Interstinimonas, with a concurrent decline in Firmicutes, disrupting the Firmicutes-to-Bacteroidetes ratio, a critical marker of gut health. This imbalance contributed to systemic inflammation and altered immune responses. Moreover, nickel-reliant pathogens, such as Helicobacter pylori, which require Ni2+-dependent enzymes like urease for colonization, further highlighted nickel’s role in microbial pathogenicity. Probiotic strains such as Lactobacillus fermentum demonstrated detoxifying effects by metabolizing nickel, suggesting their therapeutic potential.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The findings reveal that nickel exposure significantly alters gut microbial ecology, driving dysbiosis and systemic inflammation in susceptible populations. The rise of nickel-tolerant taxa, coupled with the decline of protective bacteria, underscores nickel’s role as a disruptor of gut homeostasis, contributing to conditions like obesity and SNAS. Probiotic supplementation, particularly strains capable of nickel detoxification, and dietary restrictions like a low-nickel diet, have shown promise in mitigating these effects. This review highlights the urgent need for dietary nickel regulations and further clinical studies on therapeutic interventions targeting nickel-induced microbial dysbiosis.
Trace Elements and Endometriosis: Insights into Oxidative Stress and Novel Therapies
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This review explores the role of trace elements and oxidative stress in endometriosis, highlighting their potential as therapeutic targets. It underscores the need for further research into the trace elements’ roles in endometriotic lesions.
What was reviewed?
The article reviews the role of trace elements in the pathogenesis and management of endometriosis, a chronic, estrogen-dependent inflammatory disease. It synthesizes existing research on the impact of oxidative stress and environmental exposure to trace elements like zinc, nickel, cadmium, and copper, linking these factors to the formation and proliferation of endometrial-like lesions outside the uterus.
Who was reviewed?
The review focuses on studies involving women with confirmed endometriosis, highlighting environmental and biological factors such as trace element concentrations in blood, urine, and peritoneal fluid. Additionally, it incorporates experimental findings, including animal models, to explore the mechanistic roles of trace elements.
What were the most important findings?
The review emphasizes the link between oxidative stress and endometriosis, with trace elements acting as potential modulators of this process. Zinc, for instance, is identified for its antioxidant and anti-inflammatory roles, with lower levels in endometriosis patients potentially contributing to lesion formation. Nickel, on the other hand, has been implicated in the condition as a metalloestrogen, as further evidenced by improved symptoms following a low-nickel diet. Cadmium and lead, known for inducing oxidative stress, show conflicting associations with endometriosis, though some evidence suggests their presence synergistically exacerbates disease severity. Copper's involvement in angiogenesis and its elevated levels in endometriosis patients suggest a role in lesion proliferation. The review also highlights discrepancies in study findings, emphasizing the need for further research on trace elements within endometriotic implants rather than just systemic fluids.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The review underscores the potential of targeting trace elements and oxidative stress as therapeutic strategies for endometriosis. It calls for more comprehensive research into the specific roles of trace elements within endometriotic tissue, as these could pave the way for novel diagnostic markers and treatments. Additionally, the environmental and dietary implications of trace element exposure warrant further exploration, particularly in the context of prevention and symptom management.
Urine metallomics signature as an indicator of pancreatic cancer†
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study identifies a distinct urinary metallomic signature in pancreatic cancer patients, marked by altered calcium, magnesium, copper, and zinc levels, along with lighter zinc isotopic composition. These findings suggest that non-invasive urine tests could enable early PDAC detection by leveraging trace metal imbalances and stable isotope shifts.
What was studied?
This study explored the utility of urinary metallomic profiling—specifically concentrations and isotopic composition of essential metals—as a non-invasive diagnostic tool for pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC). The researchers examined urine samples from PDAC patients and healthy controls to identify specific metal dyshomeostasis and isotopic shifts that could serve as biomarkers for PDAC detection.
Who was studied?
Urine samples from 21 patients diagnosed with PDAC and 46 healthy control subjects were analyzed. All samples were collected under ethical approval through the Barts Pancreas Tissue Bank.
Most important findings:
A distinct urinary metallomic signature was identified in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) patients, characterized by decreased calcium and magnesium and increased zinc and copper levels. The multivariate model integrating these four elements exhibited outstanding diagnostic accuracy, achieving an area under the curve (AUC) of 0.995 with 99.5% sensitivity. Moreover, stable zinc isotope analysis revealed a shift toward isotopically lighter zinc in PDAC patients (median δ⁶⁶Zn = −0.15‰) compared to healthy controls (median δ⁶⁶Zn = +0.02‰), likely due to oxidative stress-induced oxidation of cysteine-rich metallothioneins, which preferentially bind lighter isotopes. From a microbiome-metallomic perspective, such trace metal imbalances—particularly involving zinc and copper—may influence microbial community structure by selectively enriching pathogenic taxa and diminishing beneficial ones. Although the microbiome was not directly assessed in this study, the metallomic disturbances observed may serve as indirect indicators of host-microbe dysregulation, especially relevant in gastrointestinal malignancies such as PDAC.
Element
Change in PDAC vs. Control
Calcium (Ca)
Decreased (***p < 0.0001)
Magnesium (Mg)
Decreased (**p = 0.0002)
Zinc (Zn)
Increased (*p = 0.015)
Copper (Cu)
Increased (*p = 0.02)
Greatest implications of the study:
This work provides strong preliminary evidence that urinary metallomic profiles—specifically Ca, Mg, Cu, Zn concentrations and zinc isotopic signatures—can serve as non-invasive biomarkers for PDAC detection. It is the first study to report isotopic zinc alterations in urine associated with PDAC and proposes a compelling mechanistic link to oxidative stress and metalloprotein dysregulation. If validated in larger cohorts, this approach could represent a breakthrough in early detection of pancreatic cancer, a malignancy notorious for its asymptomatic progression and poor prognosis. The authors propose that isotopic measurements, which offer significantly greater resolution than standard clinical assays, could even function as prognostic tools if longitudinally correlated with disease progression.
Akkermansia muciniphila in infectious disease: A new target for this next-generation probiotic?
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review shows that Akkermansia muciniphila protects against bacterial and viral infections by strengthening gut barriers and regulating systemic immunity. Evidence supports its role as a next-generation probiotic with effects extending beyond metabolism into infection and immune resilience.
What was reviewed?
This review examined the emerging role of Akkermansia muciniphila in infectious disease and evaluated its potential as a next-generation probiotic beyond metabolic health. The authors synthesized preclinical and mechanistic evidence describing how A. muciniphila influences susceptibility to bacterial and viral infections through effects on gut barrier integrity, immune regulation, and systemic host responses. The review focused on recent animal studies that directly tested A. muciniphila supplementation in models of enteric infection, sepsis, and respiratory viral disease, while integrating known molecular mechanisms to explain these outcomes.
Who was reviewed?
The review drew on data from murine models of infection and immune dysfunction, including mice challenged with Listeria monocytogenes, Salmonella Typhimurium, Clostridioides difficile, influenza virus, and phleboviruses. It also incorporated findings from diet-modified mouse models, particularly high-fat diet systems that mimic Western dietary patterns known to suppress A. muciniphila abundance. Human data were referenced indirectly through clinical trials and safety assessments of live and pasteurized A. muciniphila, but no primary human infection cohorts were reviewed.
What were the most important findings?
Across infectious disease models, Akkermansia muciniphila consistently emerged as a protective major microbial association linked to reduced pathogen burden and improved host survival. Supplementation restored resistance to Listeria and Salmonella infection in high-fat diet mice without broadly restructuring the microbiome, indicating a direct host-mediated effect. Mechanistically, A. muciniphila improved gut barrier function, reduced systemic lipopolysaccharide levels, and modulated immune signaling pathways including TNF-α, TLR2, TLR4, and NF-κB. Specific microbial effectors played central roles, including the outer membrane protein Amuc_1100, the tripeptide RKH that attenuates lethal sepsis, and the β-carboline alkaloid harmaline, which enhanced antiviral immunity through bile acid–TGR5 signaling. The review also highlighted adaptive immune effects, including modulation of IgA responses and T-cell activity, extending A. muciniphila’s influence beyond local gut immunity. Importantly, both live and pasteurized preparations demonstrated efficacy, supporting functional activity independent of colonization.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review positions Akkermansia muciniphila as a clinically relevant immunomodulatory organism with potential applications in infection prevention and immune support. For clinicians, reduced abundance may signal impaired colonization resistance and immune vulnerability, particularly in patients consuming Western diets. The findings support exploration of A. muciniphila-derived postbiotics as adjunctive strategies for infectious disease mitigation while emphasizing the need for context-dependent use and microbiome complexity awareness.
The non-pathogenic Escherichia coli strain Nissle 1917 – features of a versatile probiotic
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Probiotics
Probiotics
Probiotics are live microorganisms that offer significant health benefits when administered in adequate amounts. They primarily work by modulating the gut microbiome, supporting a balanced microbial ecosystem. Probiotics have been shown to improve gut health, modulate immune responses, and even influence metabolic and mental health disorders. With growing evidence supporting their therapeutic potential, probiotics are increasingly recognized for their role in treating conditions like irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), antibiotic-associated diarrhea (AAD), and even mental health conditions like depression and anxiety through their impact on the gut-brain axis.
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E. coli Nissle 1917 is a non-pathogenic probiotic strain that inhibits pathogenic bacteria, reduces inflammation, and strengthens intestinal barrier function, with proven clinical efficacy in treating gastrointestinal diseases.
What was studied?
This article reviews the versatile properties of Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 (EcN), focusing on its microbiological, immunological, and pharmacological characteristics as a probiotic. The strain’s origins, isolation, and non-pathogenic nature were explored, highlighting its lack of virulence factors, and its beneficial properties such as inhibiting pathogenic bacteria, enhancing epithelial barrier function, and modulating inflammatory responses. The article also delves into its safety profile, genetic makeup, and clinical efficacy in treating gastrointestinal diseases like chronic constipation, inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD), and diarrhea. The review examines EcN’s unique ability to promote intestinal health and its mechanisms of action, offering insights into its widespread use as a therapeutic agent.
Who was studied?
The study focuses on Escherichia coli Nissle 1917, a strain that was first isolated by Alfred Nissle in 1917 due to its antagonistic effects against pathogenic enterobacteria. EcN is a non-pathogenic strain of E. coli, meaning it does not carry any pathogenic virulence factors, such as enterotoxins, cytotoxins, or adhesins, making it safe for use in humans. It is commonly used in medical and veterinary applications as a probiotic agent. Its biological activities, safety, and therapeutic applications were analyzed, highlighting its use in treating chronic gastrointestinal conditions and its efficacy in both human and animal models. The study also notes its genetic features, such as genomic islands and the presence of fitness factors that contribute to its probiotic properties.
Most important findings
EcN is distinguished from other E. coli strains due to its ability to inhibit the growth of pathogenic bacteria, such as Salmonella, E. coli O157:H7, and Clostridium perfringens. It is particularly noted for its immunomodulatory properties, including its ability to reduce inflammation and improve intestinal barrier function. The strain produces microcins, which inhibit the growth of competing bacteria, and it has a unique lipopolysaccharide (LPS) structure that is crucial for its anti-inflammatory effects. EcN has been shown to stimulate the production of defensins and strengthen tight junctions in intestinal cells, helping to prevent conditions like leaky gut. Clinical trials have demonstrated EcN's therapeutic potential in treating ulcerative colitis, chronic constipation, and infectious diarrhea.
Key implications
The findings suggest that E. coli Nissle 1917 is a highly effective probiotic with wide-ranging applications in gastrointestinal health. Its ability to inhibit pathogenic bacterial growth and modulate the immune system presents it as a potential therapeutic agent for chronic inflammatory diseases like ulcerative colitis and for improving gut health in general. EcN’s effects on the intestinal barrier and its ability to regulate inflammatory responses indicate its potential use in treating conditions associated with gut permeability and inflammation. Moreover, its safety profile and proven clinical efficacy make it a valuable alternative to traditional antibiotic treatments, especially for preventing and managing infections in both humans and animals.
Gut microbiota modulation: a narrative review on a novel strategy for prevention and alleviation of ovarian aging
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review explores how gut microbiota modulation influences ovarian aging and presents potential therapies like fecal microbiota transplantation and probiotics to prevent or alleviate ovarian aging, offering new strategies for preserving reproductive health.
What was studied?
This narrative review explores the connection between gut microbiota and ovarian aging, focusing on how modulation of the microbiome could offer a novel strategy for alleviating ovarian aging and preventing related disorders. The review investigates how the gut microbiota influences ovarian functions such as follicular development, oocyte maturation, and ovulation, and examines alterations in gut microbiota composition with aging, including its potential role in conditions like premature ovarian insufficiency (POI). Furthermore, the paper discusses interventions targeting gut microbiota, such as fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) and probiotic therapies, as potential strategies for delaying ovarian aging.
Who was studied?
The review includes data from studies on both human and animal models, including premenopausal and postmenopausal women, as well as murine and other species models. The review primarily focuses on women experiencing ovarian aging, such as those in menopause or with POI, and incorporates findings from animal studies investigating the relationship between gut microbiota composition and ovarian function.
Most important findings
The review reveals that ovarian aging is influenced by changes in the gut microbiota, with distinct differences in microbial composition observed in postmenopausal women compared to premenopausal women. Specifically, postmenopausal women exhibit lower gut microbiome diversity and altered abundances of microbial taxa, such as an increase in Bacteroides and a decrease in Firmicutes. The study also highlights the role of specific gut bacteria in regulating ovarian function. For example, the gut microbiota’s production of short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs), such as butyrate, influences ovarian function by modulating hormonal levels and immune responses. Furthermore, interventions like FMT and probiotics have shown potential in restoring a "younger-like" microbial profile and improving ovarian function in animal models, suggesting a promising therapeutic approach for human ovarian aging.
Key implications
This review underscores the potential for gut microbiota modulation as a novel strategy to combat ovarian aging and related reproductive health issues. The evidence linking gut microbiota dysbiosis to ovarian dysfunction highlights a new avenue for therapeutic interventions, particularly through FMT or probiotics, which could help preserve ovarian function, delay menopause, and improve fertility. However, further research, particularly human clinical trials, is needed to fully understand the mechanisms and efficacy of these microbiome-based interventions for ovarian aging.
Vaginal microbiome of women with premature ovarian insufficiency: a descriptive cross-sectional study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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The study reveals that women with premature ovarian insufficiency on systemic hormone therapy maintain a Lactobacillus-dominated vaginal microbiome, similar to estrogenized women, though some show signs of bacterial vaginosis, indicating the influence of factors beyond estrogen.
What was studied?
This study aimed to characterize the vaginal microbiome of women with premature ovarian insufficiency (POI) who were receiving systemic hormone therapy (HT). Premature ovarian insufficiency, which leads to a decrease in ovarian activity before the age of 40, has various physiological and psychological impacts. The research focused on identifying the composition of the vaginal microbiome in these women, using 16S rRNA pyrosequencing to profile the microbial communities. The study classified vaginal samples into five phylogenetic groups based on bacterial predominance, comparing the results to existing knowledge of vaginal microbiomes in estrogenized women.
Who was studied?
The study involved 40 sexually active women diagnosed with POI who had been using systemic hormone therapy for at least six months. The average age of the participants was 37.13 years, with the mean age of POI diagnosis being 27.90 years. Women in the study had a range of hormone therapy regimens, including oral conjugated estrogen, 17β-estradiol, and tibolone. Participants with conditions like vulvovaginitis, current antibiotic use, or systemic illnesses were excluded. The study aimed to evaluate how long-term HT affects the vaginal microbiome, particularly focusing on the dominance of Lactobacillus species.
Most important findings
The study identified several significant microbial patterns in the vaginal microbiome of women with POI undergoing hormone therapy. The majority of participants had a microbiome dominated by Lactobacillus species, which is considered typical for women receiving estrogen. Specifically, Lactobacillus crispatus was found to be predominant in 33.4% of the participants, while Lactobacillus iners dominated another 33.4%. Smaller groups showed a predominance of Lactobacillus gasseri and Lactobacillus jensenii. However, 15.2% of the women had a vaginal microbiome characterized by anaerobic bacteria, such as Gardnerella and Prevotella, which are typically associated with bacterial vaginosis. The presence of these bacteria despite systemic estrogen supplementation suggests that factors beyond estrogen, such as sexual activity, diet, or immune response, may influence the vaginal microbiome.
Key implications
The findings suggest that systemic hormone therapy in women with POI largely supports the maintenance of a healthy vaginal microbiome dominated by Lactobacillus species, similar to women with preserved ovarian function. However, the presence of anaerobic bacteria in a significant proportion of women indicates that estrogen alone may not be sufficient to restore the vaginal ecosystem entirely. This highlights the need for additional strategies, such as probiotics or dietary adjustments, to address microbial imbalances in women with POI. The study also points to the potential role of other factors, such as sexual practices and immune response, in influencing vaginal health and microbial colonization.
Increasing the copper sensitivity of microorganisms by restricting iron supply, a strategy for bio‐management practices
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Restricting iron import makes bacteria far more sensitive to copper, enabling strong antimicrobial effects at lower doses and revealing gene and enzyme signatures that inform microbiome-aware control strategies.
What was studied?
This study tested increasing the copper sensitivity of microorganisms by restricting iron supply as a way to lower the copper dose needed to control bacteria. The authors mapped how copper overload damages iron–sulfur enzymes, triggers an iron-starvation signal, and drives bacteria to import iron to rebuild damaged clusters. They then asked whether blocking iron uptake would remove this safety valve and make cells far more sensitive to copper or cadmium. The work linked copper stress to induction of iron transport genes, shifts in superoxide dismutase activity, and markers of porphyrin pathway damage, and it framed a practical bio-management strategy that pairs low copper with iron limitation.
Who was studied?
The primary model was the purple bacterium Rubrivivax gelatinosus carrying targeted defects in copper or cadmium efflux pumps (CopA or CadA) and in iron import systems (FbpABC and the Ftr pathway). The team validated the concept in Vibrio cholerae by combining a copA deletion with loss of the periplasmic iron-binding protein FbpA, and they profiled Escherichia coli efflux mutants to track superoxide dismutase responses to copper or cadmium. These species span environmental and enteric pathogens and capture microbiome-relevant traits such as siderophore use and oxidative stress control.
Most important findings
Limiting iron uptake sharply increased copper or cadmium killing. In R. gelatinosus, disrupting fbpA or fbpBC in efflux-defective strains caused growth arrest with copper concentrations that the parent strains tolerated, and combining fbpA and ftrA defects heightened sensitivity further. Copper stress induced fbpA and ftrA expression and reduced cellular iron in efflux mutants, which shows that cells perceive iron lack during metal overload. Release of coproporphyrin III signaled copper injury to iron–sulfur enzymes, and Fe-S repair demands likely drove the iron-uptake response. In V. cholerae, the copA fbpA double mutant showed stronger copper sensitivity than either single mutant, confirming the role of iron import in defense. In E. coli, copper or cadmium accumulation shifted superoxide dismutase activity from Fe-Sod to Mn-Sod, consistent with iron dysregulation under metal stress.
Key implications
Clinicians and agronomists can pair copper exposure with iron limitation to lower required copper, reduce environmental load, and still suppress target microbes. For microbiome tracking, expect decreased survival of Enterobacterales and Vibrio-like taxa when iron import is constrained under copper pressure, with gene signatures that include downshifted fbpABC or ftr transcripts and stress markers such as sodB upregulation. This work also echoes host nutritional immunity, which withholds iron while flooding phagosomes with copper; therapeutics that inhibit siderophore uptake or Fbp/Ftr transporters could potentiate host copper defenses without raising metal doses. Because heavy metals can co-select antibiotic resistance, strategies that achieve control with less copper are desirable. These data provide a mechanistic basis and specific microbial targets to build microbiome-aware, metal-sparing interventions.
Adhesive threads of extraintestinal pathogenic Escherichia coli
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review explains how adhesive threads of extraintestinal pathogenic Escherichia coli shape gut colonization, tissue tropism and invasive disease and shows how detailed adhesin profiles can inform microbiome based risk assessment and vaccine design.
What was reviewed?
This review describes adhesive threads of extraintestinal pathogenic Escherichia coli and explains how a wide range of fimbrial and afimbrial adhesins support colonization and disease at sites outside the gut. The authors focus on ExPEC pathotypes such as uropathogenic, newborn meningitic, septicaemia associated and avian pathogenic strains and show that these lineages arise mainly from phylogenetic group B2 and to a lesser extent from group D. They summarize in detail the structure, genetics and receptor specificity of major adhesins, including type 1 fimbriae, P fimbriae, curli fibres, S fimbriae, F1C fimbriae, Dr fimbriae, afimbrial adhesins, temperature sensitive haemagglutinin and newer trimeric autotransporter and yqi encoded systems. The review then links these adhesive systems to specific host receptors, such as mannose-containing glycoconjugates, P blood group antigens, sialylated glycoconjugates, and glycosphingolipids.
Who was reviewed?
The review draws on molecular, epidemiological, and experimental data from human and animal extraintestinal pathogenic Escherichia coli isolates and compares them with commensal and intestinal pathogenic strains. It includes work on uropathogenic strains from women and children with cystitis and pyelonephritis, newborn meningitis isolates from infants with sepsis and meningitis, and avian pathogenic strains from poultry with colisepticaemia, as well as septicaemia-associated strains from diverse hosts. The authors discuss phylogenetic analyses that show enrichment of these adhesins in B2 and D lineages and highlight the frequent co-occurrence of multiple adhesin systems within single ExPEC genomes. They also describe in vitro and in vivo infection models that use human bladder and kidney epithelium, brain endothelial cells, chicken tracheal and gut explants, and animal infection models in chicks, mice, and other species to define how each adhesin contributes to colonization, tissue tropism, and virulence.
Most important findings
The review shows that ExPEC strains carry a rich and diverse adhesin repertoire and that adhesive threads of extraintestinal pathogenic Escherichia coli form a key virulence platform that supports both gut colonization and spread to extraintestinal sites. Type 1 fimbriae, present in most ExPEC, mediate mannose-sensitive binding to urinary and intestinal epithelia and show phase variable expression and strong selection on the FimH adhesin, which improves binding to monomannose receptors and enhances urinary tract colonization. P fimbriae bind Galα(1–4)Gal containing P blood group antigens.
Curli fibres bind extracellular matrix proteins, promote biofilm formation and internalisation into eukaryotic cells, and occur in almost all avian ExPEC strains, suggesting an essential role in persistent carriage and tissue invasion. Dr fimbriae and related afimbrial adhesins bind decay accelerating factor and Dr blood group antigens and associate with chronic urinary tract infection, pregnancy-related complications, and tubulointerstitial nephritis. The review introduces ExPEC Adhesin I, encoded by yqi, as a novel fimbrial system prevalent in more than half of ExPEC isolates, concentrated in B2 and ST95 lineages, and essential for colonization in avian models, which makes it a promising marker and target. Notably, the authors highlight evidence that some of these adhesins also mediate binding to colonic and ileal enterocytes and support intestinal colonization in chickens and piglets, suggesting that adhesive profiles form part of a microbiome signature that links gut reservoirs to subsequent urinary, respiratory or systemic disease.
Key implications
For clinicians, this review indicates that adhesive threads of extraintestinal pathogenic Escherichia coli are central determinants of host colonization, tissue tropism, and the transition from asymptomatic gut carriage to invasive disease, which means that adhesin repertoires are relevant both for pathogenesis and for microbiome-based risk assessment. The strong association of particular adhesins and phylogenetic backgrounds with urinary tract infection, neonatal meningitis, and avian septicaemia suggests that detection of adhesin gene combinations such as fimH, pap, sfa, foc, dra, tsh, and yqi, together with B2 or D assignment, could help to define high-risk ExPEC clones in intestinal or environmental samples. From a therapeutic perspective, the review supports adhesins as vaccine and antibody targets, since blocking receptor binding at mucosal surfaces can prevent initial colonization and reduce bacterial spread, as already shown for FimH and P fimbriae in animal models.
Insights from 100 Years of Research with Probiotic E. Coli
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Probiotics
Probiotics
Probiotics are live microorganisms that offer significant health benefits when administered in adequate amounts. They primarily work by modulating the gut microbiome, supporting a balanced microbial ecosystem. Probiotics have been shown to improve gut health, modulate immune responses, and even influence metabolic and mental health disorders. With growing evidence supporting their therapeutic potential, probiotics are increasingly recognized for their role in treating conditions like irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), antibiotic-associated diarrhea (AAD), and even mental health conditions like depression and anxiety through their impact on the gut-brain axis.
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Probiotic-e-coli-nissle-1917 shows benefit in ulcerative colitis, infant diarrhea, and innate immune priming, with transient engraftment and microcin-based pathogen suppression, but no effect in Crohn’s disease. Safety is strong, though neonatal products require caution.
What was reviewed?
This review synthesized 100 years of clinical and mechanistic research on E. coli Nissle 1917 and other E. coliprobiotics. The review compared EcN (Mutaflor), Symbioflor 2, and Colinfant. It assessed human studies, animal models, genomics, and safety. The review also traced origins, dosing, colonization, and proposed modes of action and summarized outcomes in ulcerative colitis, infant diarrhea, functional gut disorders, and immune markers. It examined the proximity of probiotic strains to uropathogenic E. coli at the genomic level and noted microcin production, iron acquisition systems, and adhesins. The review by Wassenaar provided the integrated evidence base. It considered ethical issues for neonatal use where hemolysin appears. It mapped research trends and future applications against antimicrobial resistance.
Who was reviewed?
Adults with ulcerative colitis received EcN and showed remission maintenance comparable to mesalazine. Children with ulcerative colitis tolerated EcN and maintained remission. Patients with Crohn’s disease did not benefit. Healthy adults showed β-defensin induction after Symbioflor 2. Newborns and preterm infants colonized transiently with EcN and showed higher stool or mucosal IgA. Infants with acute viral diarrhea had shorter illness with EcN. Adults with constipation improved stool frequency. Liver cirrhosis data were limited. Elderly residents did not clear multidrug-resistant E. coli with EcN. Evidence for Colinfant came mainly from a single research group in infants.
Most important findings
EcN supports ulcerative colitis remission at rates similar to mesalazine. It does not treat Crohn’s disease. Its benefits likely reflect host–microbe signaling, not durable engraftment. Fecal detection in adults declines weeks after dosing. Human β-defensins rise after exposure to Symbioflor 2. Infant studies show higher EcN-specific IgA and fewer detected enteric pathogens. EcN produces microcins M and H47. These peptides inhibit Enterobacteriaceae and Shiga-toxin–producing E. coli in vitro. Strong iron uptake and yersiniabactin support nutrient competition against Salmonella in animal models. Genomes of EcN and Colinfant resemble uropathogenic E. coli, including adhesins and hemolysin loci, yet clinical safety is good. Symbioflor 2 harbors multiple genotypes with distinct traits. One genotype drives β-defensin induction. Another genotype colonizes more persistently. Together, these signatures point to a probiotic profile characterized by transient carriage, microcin-mediated pathogen suppression, innate immune priming, and iron-linked competitive exclusion.
Key implications
Clinicians can consider EcN to maintain remission in ulcerative colitis. It is not indicated for Crohn’s disease. Expect transient colonization and host-mediated effects. Benefits may come from microcins and defensin induction. Infant diarrhea may shorten with EcN. Monitor products for hemolysin in neonatal settings. Genomic proximity to uropathogens warrants vigilance, yet observed safety is strong. Probiotic strategies may regain value as antibiotic resistance grows. Personalization will matter because colonization varies. Use clear endpoints, stool microbiome reads, immune markers, and relapse rates to guide care.
The bacterial genotoxin colibactin promotes colon tumor growth by modifying the tumor microenvironment
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This addendum explains how colibactin-producing E. coli can speed colon tumor growth by inducing senescence and a growth-factor secretory program. The pathway runs through c-Myc, miR-20a-5p, SENP1, and altered p53 SUMOylation, with HGF signaling driving proliferation of nearby uninfected tumor cells.
What was reviewed?
This article addendum reviewed and extended prior work showing that colibactin-producing (pks-positive) Escherichia coli can promote colon tumor growth by reshaping the tumor microenvironment, not just by causing DNA damage or inflammation. The authors focused on a “promotion” model in which brief bacterial contact with a small fraction of malignant cells triggers cellular senescence and a senescence-associated secretory phenotype that releases growth factors capable of stimulating proliferation in nearby, uninfected tumor cells, thereby sustaining tumor expansion.
Who was reviewed?
The paper discussed evidence from mouse xenograft experiments using human intestinal epithelial tumor cells, from multiple human intestinal epithelial cell lines studied in vitro, and from a chemically induced AOM/DSS colorectal cancer mouse model colonized with a clinical pks-positive E. coli strain and its matched pks-deficient mutant. It also reviewed supporting observations in human colorectal cancer biopsies that were colonized by pks-positive E. coli versus pks-negative E. coli, using these clinical samples to confirm that the same molecular “senescence and growth-factor” signals appear in human disease contexts.
What were the most important findings?
The key finding was that pks-positive E. coli can increase tumor growth through an indirect, paracrine mechanism driven by senescence and growth-factor release. In xenografts, a single short exposure to pks-positive bacteria increased tumor growth and proliferation markers when bacteria contacted tumors at a lower bacteria-to-tumor-cell ratio, while higher exposure pushed tumors toward growth suppression consistent with widespread arrest, reinforcing that dose and accessibility determine outcome. Infected epithelial cells developed classic senescence features and then produced a secretory program enriched in growth factors, with HGF emerging as a central mediator because blocking HGF signaling removed the pro-proliferative effect of conditioned media and reduced xenograft growth. Mechanistically, the authors linked senescence induction to altered p53 SUMOylation driven by a regulatory cascade in which colibactin-associated DNA damage increased c-Myc, which raised miR-20a-5p, which suppressed SENP1, leading to increased SUMO-conjugated p53 and senescence. In the AOM/DSS model and in human colorectal cancer biopsies colonized by pks-positive E. coli, tumors showed higher DNA damage and senescence-associated signals along with increased HGF pathway activation and lower SENP1-expressing cells, supporting that this pathway operates in vivo and can mark a microbiome-linked tumor-promoting niche.
What are the greatest implications of this study/ review?
This work reframes the microbiome signature “mucosa-associated pks-positive E. coli” as a driver of tumor promotion through microenvironment remodeling, meaning clinicians should consider colibactin exposure as a factor that can accelerate tumor progression even when only a subset of cells directly contacts bacteria. It also suggests a practical therapeutic logic: targeting colibactin production or interrupting downstream effectors of the senescence secretory program—especially HGF pathway signaling—could reduce protumor growth-factor pressure without requiring broad microbiome eradication. Finally, it implies that biomarkers such as miR-20a-5p, reduced SENP1, senescence markers, and HGF activation may help identify colibactin-linked tumors and stratify patients for adjunct approaches that address microbiota-associated promotion alongside standard oncologic care.
Triggering Akkermansia with dietary polyphenols: A new weapon to combat the metabolic syndrome?
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review shows that dietary polyphenols selectively increase Akkermansia muciniphila, improving gut barrier function and metabolic outcomes through microbiome-mediated mechanisms rather than direct antioxidant effects.
What was reviewed?
This review evaluated whether dietary polyphenols can selectively increase the abundance of Akkermansia muciniphila and thereby counteract obesity and metabolic syndrome. The authors synthesized experimental and clinical evidence to propose that polyphenols act as microbiota-targeted metabolic modulators rather than traditional antioxidants, focusing on gut-level mechanisms that precede systemic absorption. The review framed A. muciniphila as a responsive biomarker and potential effector of metabolic health within polyphenol-rich dietary patterns.
Who was reviewed?
The review integrated data from diet-induced obese mouse models, gnotobiotic and conventional rodent studies, in vitro gut and epithelial systems, and a limited number of human dietary intervention studies in healthy individuals and patients with metabolic dysfunction. Rather than emphasizing a single population, the authors compared responses across host metabolic states to assess translational relevance and safety.
What were the most important findings?
Across studies, polyphenol-rich extracts consistently increased Akkermansia muciniphila abundance in obese and metabolically dysregulated animals, with cranberry and grape-derived polyphenols showing the most robust effects. These increases closely tracked improvements in body weight gain, insulin sensitivity, lipid metabolism, and intestinal inflammation, even when overall microbial diversity remained largely unchanged. Proanthocyanidins emerged as key drivers, particularly high–molecular-weight forms that resist absorption and remain in contact with the gut mucosa. Mechanistically, polyphenols appeared to enhance mucus layer integrity by increasing goblet cell activity and Muc2 expression, thereby expanding the ecological niche for A. muciniphila. In parallel, some polyphenols likely acted directly on microbial metabolism or indirectly by suppressing competing pathobionts and reducing oxidative stress in the intestinal environment. The review also highlighted strong concordance between the effects of polyphenols and metformin, both of which increased A. muciniphila abundance and reduced metabolic endotoxemia, suggesting shared microbiome-mediated pathways. Importantly, A. muciniphila was presented as a major microbial association linking polyphenol intake to improved barrier function, reduced inflammation, and downstream metabolic benefits rather than as a simple passenger organism.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review positions dietary polyphenols as a safer, more physiologic strategy to promote Akkermansia muciniphila than direct probiotic administration. For clinicians, it emphasizes that metabolic benefits depend on host context, microbial balance, and controlled mucin degradation. The findings support precision nutrition approaches that leverage polyphenol-rich foods or extracts to restore gut barrier integrity and metabolic health while avoiding risks associated with excessive or inappropriate microbial supplementation.
Listeriolysin S: A bacteriocin from epidemic Listeria monocytogenes strains that targets the gut microbiota
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study reveals how Listeria monocytogenes uses listeriolysin S (LLS) as a bacteriocin to alter the gut microbiota, aiding in colonization and infection, with implications for therapeutic interventions targeting microbiota modulation.
What was studied?
This study explored the role of listeriolysin S (LLS), a bacteriocin produced by Listeria monocytogenes, and its impact on the gut microbiota during infection. Specifically, it examined how LLS affects the microbial community composition in the host intestine and how it contributes to the virulence of Listeria during oral infection. The study focused on comparing the effects of LLS-producing Listeria strains and mutants lacking LLS on bacterial growth, colonization, and microbiota modulation.
Who was studied?
The study primarily investigated Listeria monocytogenes, particularly focusing on strains producing LLS and its effect on the gut microbiota in a mouse model of oral infection. It compared the wild-type LLS-producing strain (F2365, lineage I) to isogenic mutants deficient in LLS production (llsA and llsB mutants). The microbial community composition in infected mice was analyzed using high-throughput 16S rDNA sequencing to determine how LLS production influences the intestinal microbiota.
What were the most important findings?
The study found that LLS plays a crucial role in modulating the host’s gut microbiota during Listeria monocytogenes infection. The presence of LLS significantly altered the abundance of specific bacterial genera in the intestinal microbiota, particularly decreasing the populations of Alloprevotella and Allobaculum, both of which are producers of acetic and butyric acids, compounds known for their protective roles against Listeria. The reduction in these bacteria was linked to the production of LLS, suggesting that LLS functions as a bacteriocin targeting specific gut bacteria. The study also showed that the absence of LLS in mutant strains resulted in a lower ability to colonize the intestine and a reduced survival rate in the intestinal content, particularly within the first few hours after infection. These findings suggest that LLS’s bacteriocin activity is crucial for Listeria's ability to modify the gut microbiota to facilitate colonization and infection. Furthermore, the study demonstrated that LLS does not significantly alter the microbiota at the phylum level but induces changes at the genus level, emphasizing its specific role in targeting certain microbiota members.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings have significant implications for understanding Listeria monocytogenes pathogenesis and its interaction with the gut microbiota. By identifying LLS as a bacteriocin that can modulate the microbiota, the study suggests that Listeria may actively shape the gut environment to enhance its own survival and facilitate infection. This opens new avenues for developing therapeutic strategies that target bacteriocins like LLS to prevent or mitigate Listeria infections, particularly in individuals with compromised immune systems or those undergoing treatments that disrupt the microbiota. The study also emphasizes the importance of considering the gut microbiota in the study of bacterial infections, as its modulation could play a critical role in disease outcomes.
Immuno-modulatory effect of probiotic E. coli Nissle 1917 in polarized human colonic cells against Campylobacter jejuni infection
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study shows that the immuno modulatory effect of Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 primes polarized colonic cells, reduces Campylobacter jejuni adhesion and survival, and rebalances NF kappa B, MAPK and Akt signaling to limit inflammation and epithelial injury.
What was studied?
This study examined the immunomodulatory effect of Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 in polarized human colonic cells against Campylobacter jejuni infection, focusing on how the probiotic reshapes epithelial innate responses and limits pathogen invasion and survival. The authors evaluated whether EcN pretreatment of polarized HT 29 cells reduces adhesion, invasion, and intracellular persistence of diverse C. jejuni strains and then profiled host antibacterial gene expression using a targeted RT2 PCR array. Because the focus keyphrase immuno modulatory effect of Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 appears here, the work is framed as an analysis of how EcN primes epithelial cells and alters key signaling pathways, such as NF kappa B, MAPK, and Akt, to create a protective microbiome-linked immune signature.
Who was studied?
The investigators used polarized human colorectal adenocarcinoma HT 29 cells as an in vitro model that closely mimics intestinal epithelium, including brush border, mucus production, tight junctions, and transepithelial resistance. These cells were infected with a wide panel of C. jejuni isolates from humans, poultry, turkeys, cattle, and starlings to capture host diverse strains with variable virulence and colonization properties. Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 served as the probiotic exposure and was applied to HT 29 monolayers before C. jejuni challenge, with conditions designed to test both early invasion at two hours and intracellular survival at twenty-four hours. For mechanistic analysis, the authors focused on a highly invasive reference strain, C. jejuni 81 176, and assessed changes in expression of one hundred and eighty-four antibacterial response genes, including cytokines, chemokines, pattern recognition receptors, and signaling intermediates in pathways relevant to epithelial barrier function and inflammation.
Most important findings
The study showed that the immunomodulatory effect of Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 profoundly altered the outcome of Campylobacter infection in polarized HT 29 cells. Pretreatment with EcN for four hours significantly reduced adhesion, invasion and intracellular survival of all tested C. jejuni strains, with some poultry and starling isolates showing complete clearance and no recoverable intracellular bacteria. For the 81 176 strain, EcN pretreatment achieved around ninety-three percent reduction in invasion and one hundred percent reduction in intracellular survival, indicating strong functional protection. Transcript profiling revealed that C. jejuni infection alone induced robust activation of NF kappa B signaling and upregulation of proinflammatory genes, including IL8, IL6, IL12B, IL18, TNF, and multiple chemokines, together with genes in TLR, NOD, and MAPK pathways, and promoted expression changes consistent with epithelial barrier disruption and apoptosis.
In contrast, EcN exposure without C. jejuni upregulated genes involved in cell growth, maintenance, proliferation, antimicrobial responses, and anti-inflammatory control, including regulators linked to Akt and PI3K signaling. When cells were pretreated with EcN and then infected, the expression of key proinflammatory mediators and upstream regulators, such as NF kappa B, TLR4, TLR5, TICAM1, TICAM2, NOD1, CASP8, IRAK3, JUN, and TRAF6, was markedly reduced compared with infection alone. At the same time, genes associated with anti-apoptotic and cytoprotective responses were favored. This pattern suggests that EcN primes epithelial innate immunity toward a balanced, protective state that limits pathogen-driven inflammation and supports barrier integrity.
Key implications
For clinicians, these findings indicate that the immunomodulatory effect of Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 extends beyond simple pathogen exclusion and involves active reprogramming of epithelial innate responses that may translate into reduced inflammation and tissue injury during Campylobacter infection. By dampening NF kappa B-driven cytokine storms while promoting Akt-mediated survival pathways, EcN appears to shift the mucosal environment toward a primed but controlled state that favors rapid pathogen clearance and preserves barrier function. From a microbiome signatures perspective, EcN carriage may mark a host with epithelial cells biased toward protective TLR and NOD signaling patterns and reduced susceptibility to Campylobacter-induced barrier disruption and apoptosis. These data support further evaluation of EcN as an antibiotic-sparing adjunct for Campylobacter-related gastroenteritis, and they also illustrate how probiotics can be characterized and selected based on defined transcriptional and signaling fingerprints in human intestinal models, rather than only on taxonomic identity or empirical clinical outcomes.
The role of key gut microbial metabolites in the development and treatment of cancer
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Short-chain Fatty Acids (SCFAs)
Short-chain Fatty Acids (SCFAs)
Short-chain fatty acids are microbially derived metabolites that regulate epithelial integrity, immune signaling, and microbial ecology. Their production patterns and mechanistic roles provide essential functional markers within microbiome signatures and support the interpretation of MBTIs, MMAs, and systems-level microbial shifts across clinical conditions.
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This review explores the dual role of gut microbial metabolites in cancer, focusing on their anticancer and pro-carcinogenic effects. It emphasizes the potential of SCFAs, bacteriocins, and dietary modifications in preventing and treating cancer, with a focus on colorectal cancer and other common malignancies.
What was studied?
The review focuses on the role of gut microbial metabolites in cancer development and treatment. It highlights the complex interaction between gut microbiota, their metabolites, and the host’s immune system, emphasizing how these metabolites can both inhibit and promote carcinogenesis. Specific metabolites such as short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs), bacteriocins, and phenylpropanoid-derived compounds were explored for their potential anticancer activities. The review also discusses pro-carcinogenic metabolites like secondary bile acids, which can contribute to cancer progression through mechanisms such as inflammation and oxidative stress.
Who was studied?
The review examines existing studies, including in vitro and in vivo research on the effects of gut microbial metabolites on various cancers, including colorectal, breast, liver, and head and neck cancers. It evaluates the impacts of dietary patterns and microbiota composition on cancer risk and progression. The studies investigated range from clinical observations to animal models, focusing on the effects of microbial fermentation products like SCFAs and secondary bile acids on tumor growth, immune modulation, and inflammation.
Most important findings
Gut microbial metabolites, particularly SCFAs like butyrate, exhibit anticancer properties by promoting apoptosis, inhibiting cell proliferation, and modulating immune responses. However, metabolites like secondary bile acids can promote carcinogenesis by increasing oxidative stress and inflammation. The balance between these metabolites plays a crucial role in cancer risk, especially in colorectal cancer (CRC). Diets high in protein and fat can favor the production of harmful metabolites, whereas diets rich in fiber support the production of beneficial SCFAs, reducing cancer risk. Additionally, bacteriocins, antimicrobial peptides produced by certain gut bacteria, showed cytotoxic effects against cancer cells, suggesting their potential as novel therapeutic agents.
Key implications
This review underscores the importance of gut microbial metabolites in cancer prevention and therapy. While SCFAs and bacteriocins offer promise as therapeutic agents, the pro-carcinogenic effects of secondary bile acids highlight the need for further research on how to balance these metabolites for optimal health outcomes. The integration of diet-based interventions and microbiota modulation could become a key strategy in cancer prevention and treatment, especially when combined with traditional therapies. Future clinical studies are required to refine these approaches and develop more targeted cancer treatments that harness the microbiome’s potential.
The influence of the gut microbiome on ovarian aging
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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This review examines the relationship between gut microbiota and ovarian aging, highlighting microbial dysbiosis as a key factor in ovarian function decline. It explores microbiota-based therapies like FMT to delay ovarian aging and discusses the role of dietary and pharmacological interventions.
What was studied?
This review explores the complex interaction between the gut microbiota and ovarian aging. It focuses on the role of gut microbiota dysbiosis in ovarian aging, premature ovarian insufficiency (POI), and menopause. The review discusses the bidirectional relationship between the ovaries and the gut microbiome, highlighting how changes in microbial composition may influence ovarian function and aging. The authors also examine emerging therapeutic strategies, such as fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT), probiotics, and anti-aging interventions that target the gut microbiota to preserve ovarian function and delay aging.
Who was studied?
This review discusses findings from both human and animal models, including premenopausal and postmenopausal women, as well as murine and zebrafish models. The focus is on understanding how the gut microbiota composition changes across different stages of ovarian aging, including natural menopause and POI. Several studies on animal models of ovarian aging and iatrogenic menopause (caused by surgery or chemotherapy) are included, which help to elucidate the mechanisms underlying the gut-ovary axis.
Most important findings
The review highlights significant shifts in the gut microbiota composition during ovarian aging. In particular, dysbiosis (microbial imbalance) is linked to ovarian dysfunction, with changes in the abundance of specific microbial groups such as Bacteroides, Firmicutes, and Prevotellaceae. Lower microbial diversity and an imbalance in short-chain fatty acid (SCFA) producers like Faecalibacterium and Butyricimonas were observed in postmenopausal women and in animal models of POI. The gut microbiota is shown to affect estrogen metabolism through microbial β-glucuronidase (gmGUS), influencing circulating estrogen levels. Fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) studies in mice revealed that young microbiota could reverse age-related ovarian damage, suggesting the therapeutic potential of microbiota-based interventions. Additionally, the review discusses the role of dietary interventions, such as caloric restriction (CR), in modulating the gut microbiota and delaying ovarian aging.
Key implications
The findings suggest that gut microbiota plays a significant role in the aging process of the ovaries, and its manipulation may offer a new strategy for combating ovarian aging and preserving fertility. The bidirectional interaction between the microbiota and ovarian function points to potential therapeutic avenues, such as probiotics, prebiotics, or FMT, to restore youthful ovarian function and delay menopause. These strategies could be integrated with other anti-aging interventions like CoQ10, melatonin, and resveratrol to enhance reproductive health and prevent ovarian-related diseases. However, more research is needed to establish the exact mechanisms and therapeutic potential of these interventions.
ZntA maintains zinc and cadmium homeostasis and promotes oxidative stress resistance and virulence in Vibrio parahaemolyticus
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study investigates the role of ZntA in zinc and cadmium homeostasis, oxidative stress resistance, and virulence in Vibrio parahaemolyticus. ZntA protects against metal toxicity and promotes bacterial survival under stressful conditions, highlighting its importance in bacterial pathogenesis.
What was studied?
This study explored the role of ZntA, a metal-transporting ATPase, in maintaining zinc (Zn) and cadmium (Cd) homeostasis and its involvement in oxidative stress resistance and virulence in Vibrio parahaemolyticus. The research focused on understanding how ZntA mediates metal homeostasis and contributes to bacterial survival and pathogenicity under various environmental stresses.
Who was studied?
The study used the Vibrio parahaemolyticus strain RIMD2210633, a gram-negative bacterium known for causing gastroenteritis in humans and acute hepatopancreatic necrosis in shrimp. Mutant strains were created, including the zntA deletion mutant (ΔzntA) and complemented strains, to assess the role of ZntA in metal homeostasis, oxidative stress resistance, and virulence.
Most important findings
The research showed that ZntA plays a critical role in maintaining metal homeostasis, particularly for zinc and cadmium. ZntA was found to be induced by several metals, including Zn, Cu, Co, Ni, and Cd, but not by Fe or Mn. The absence of ZntA in the ΔzntA mutant significantly impaired the growth of V. parahaemolyticus under excess Zn, Ni, and Cd conditions. In contrast, the growth of the wild-type (WT) and complemented strains was not affected under these conditions. ZntA was also essential for the bacteria's ability to resist oxidative stress induced by hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), and its deletion led to reduced virulence in zebrafish models. Additionally, the study demonstrated that ZntR, a transcriptional regulator, positively regulates zntA expression in response to metal stresses, with zntA being upregulated in the presence of excess metals.
Key implications
This study highlights the essential role of ZntA in bacterial survival under metal stress, particularly in maintaining Zn and Cd homeostasis. The findings suggest that ZntA's involvement in oxidative stress resistance and virulence could have important implications for developing strategies to manage V. parahaemolyticus infections. Understanding the mechanisms behind metal homeostasis and oxidative stress resistance in pathogenic bacteria could lead to new therapeutic approaches aimed at disrupting metal regulation, potentially enhancing the effectiveness of antimicrobial treatments. Moreover, the study underscores the importance of metalloregulation in bacterial pathogenicity and survival, offering insights into how V. parahaemolyticus adapts to hostile environments within the host.
Benefits and concerns of probiotics: an overview of the potential genotoxicity of the colibactin-producing Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 strain
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Escherichia coli Nissle 1917, a probiotic strain, offers significant health benefits, but its genotoxic potential due to colibactin production raises safety concerns, particularly in relation to colorectal cancer. The review underscores the need for further research on the balance between benefits and risks.
What was studied?
This review examines the benefits and potential risks associated with Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 (EcN), focusing on its use as a probiotic, particularly addressing concerns regarding its genotoxic potential due to the presence of the colibactin-producing pathogenic island (pks). EcN has been widely used to treat gastrointestinal disorders, but its potential to produce colibactin, a genotoxic metabolite, has raised safety concerns. The review provides an overview of in vitro and in vivo studies evaluating the probiotic and genotoxic properties of EcN, with a focus on its potential role in colorectal cancer (CRC) development.
Who was studied?
The review does not focus on specific individuals or groups. Instead, it synthesizes findings from a variety of studies that examine the effects of EcN in both human and animal models. These studies span from clinical trials to laboratory experiments investigating EcN's genotoxicity, antimicrobial activity, immune-modulatory effects, and its role in maintaining gastrointestinal health. The review also considers data from metagenomic analyses, safety studies, and clinical trials evaluating EcN’s effectiveness in treating conditions like inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), ulcerative colitis (UC), and gastrointestinal infections.
Most important findings
The primary concern identified in the review is the potential genotoxicity of EcN, primarily due to the colibactin it produces. Colibactin has been shown to induce DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) and mutations, which are implicated in the development of CRC. Several studies highlighted that colibactin-producing EcN could cause chromosomal abnormalities and promote neoplastic transformation in epithelial cells. However, EcN's probiotic effects, such as modulating immune responses and enhancing gut barrier integrity, have been demonstrated to be beneficial. Despite the safety concerns, some in vitro studies and clinical trials have suggested that EcN does not exhibit harmful genotoxic effects in healthy individuals or under specific controlled conditions.
Key implications
While EcN has been shown to offer significant benefits, particularly in treating gastrointestinal disorders and modulating the immune system, its genotoxic potential due to colibactin production cannot be overlooked. This highlights the importance of evaluating the safety of probiotics, such as EcN, through comprehensive genetic and biochemical studies. Although EcN has been safely used for many years in specific therapeutic settings, its application should be carefully considered in vulnerable populations, such as immunocompromised individuals or those with a predisposition to cancer. Regulatory bodies and safety guidelines must address the risks associated with probiotic strains that produce potentially harmful metabolites, such as colibactin. Further research is essential to balance the therapeutic benefits of EcN with its possible risks, particularly in clinical settings.
Akkermansia muciniphila modulates intestinal mucus composition to counteract high-fat diet-induced obesity in mice
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study shows that live Akkermansia muciniphila protects against diet-induced obesity by selectively remodeling intestinal mucus glycan composition and barrier gene expression, rather than altering overall microbiome structure.
What Was Studied?
This study investigated whether oral supplementation with live Akkermansia muciniphila MucT could counteract high-fat diet–induced obesity and metabolic dysfunction by directly modifying intestinal mucus production, mucus glycosylation, and barrier-associated gene expression. Using a controlled murine model, the authors tested the hypothesis that A. muciniphila exerts metabolic benefits through targeted remodeling of mucus composition rather than by broadly reshaping the gut microbiota. The work specifically focused on how this mucin-degrading bacterium alters goblet cell biology, mucin expression, and mucin O-glycan structures across distinct intestinal regions under obesogenic dietary conditions.
Who Was Studied?
The study examined male C57BL/6J mice fed either a control diet, a high-fat diet, or a high-fat diet supplemented daily with live A. muciniphila MucT for six weeks. Animals were conventionally colonized and not antibiotic-treated, allowing assessment of mucus–microbe interactions in a physiologically intact microbiome. Intestinal tissues from the jejunum through the colon were analyzed alongside adiposity, metabolic parameters, mucus histology, transcriptomics, and mass-spectrometry–based mucin glycomics.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
Live A. muciniphila supplementation significantly reduced body weight gain and fat mass accumulation without affecting lean mass, demonstrating a selective effect on adiposity. These metabolic improvements occurred without major changes in overall gut microbial diversity, confirming that A. muciniphila acts as a functional keystone species rather than a global ecosystem remodeler. At the mucosal level, supplementation restored high-fat diet–induced dysregulation of goblet cell differentiation markers and increased expression of barrier-protective transmembrane mucins, particularly Muc3 in the colon. Although total mucus thickness was unchanged, A. muciniphila profoundly altered mucin O-glycan composition, reversing diet-induced shifts in sialylation, fucosylation, and sulfation patterns. These glycan changes are clinically relevant because they influence microbial adhesion, immune signaling, and nutrient cross-feeding. Major microbial associations included enrichment of A. muciniphila itself and modest secondary increases in Lachnospiraceae taxa, consistent with enhanced mucus-associated metabolic cooperation.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
This study provides strong mechanistic evidence that A. muciniphila improves metabolic health by remodeling mucus chemistry rather than by increasing mucus quantity or broadly altering microbiota composition. For clinicians, the findings highlight mucus glycosylation as a critical therapeutic axis linking diet, microbiota, and metabolic disease. The work supports the clinical development of live A. muciniphila as a next-generation probiotic for obesity and insulin resistance, while also emphasizing that patient response may depend on baseline mucosal and microbial features rather than microbiome diversity alone.
Mucin-degrading gut bacteria: context-dependent roles in intestinal homeostasis and disease
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review explains how mucin-degrading gut bacteria regulate barrier integrity, immunity, and disease risk in a context-dependent manner. It highlights why microbes such as Akkermansia muciniphila can be protective or harmful depending on diet, strain, and host immune status.
What was reviewed?
This article reviewed the biology, ecology, and disease relevance of mucin-degrading (MD) gut bacteria, with a central focus on how their functions shift depending on diet, host immunity, epithelial integrity, and strain-level genetics. The authors synthesized experimental, clinical, and multi-omics data to explain how MD bacteria influence mucus turnover, gut barrier integrity, immune signaling, and microbial community structure. Rather than treating mucin degradation as uniformly beneficial or harmful, the review emphasized context dependency, framing MD bacteria as adaptive regulators whose effects range from protective to pathogenic depending on environmental and host conditions.
Who was reviewed?
The review primarily examined human-associated mucin-degrading bacteria, including Akkermansia muciniphila, Mediterraneibacter (Ruminococcus) gnavus, Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron, Bacteroides fragilis, and select Bifidobacterium and Barnesiella species. Evidence was drawn from human observational studies, gnotobiotic and conventional mouse models, in vitro epithelial and immune cell systems, and strain-resolved genomic analyses. The populations reviewed therefore included both healthy individuals and patients with inflammatory, metabolic, autoimmune, neurological, and infectious diseases.
What were the most important findings?
The review demonstrated that MD bacteria occupy a small but ecologically critical niche and exert disproportionate effects on gut homeostasis. Akkermansia muciniphila emerged as a keystone taxon that can enhance mucus production, epithelial regeneration, and immune tolerance through short-chain fatty acids, outer membrane proteins, and immune signaling pathways, yet can also exacerbate inflammation, infection susceptibility, or tumorigenesis under fiber-depleted or immunocompromised conditions. Mediterraneibacter gnavus showed strong strain- and nutrient-dependent behavior, ranging from pro-inflammatory polysaccharide production linked to IBD and autoimmunity to immunoregulatory and anti-tumor effects in other contexts. Bacteroides species demonstrated dual roles by supporting barrier integrity and immune regulation while also facilitating pathogen virulence through metabolite cross-feeding. Across taxa, the major microbial associations highlighted included shifts in SCFA producers, succinate accumulation, altered bile acid metabolism, and cross-feeding networks that reshape broader microbial communities.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
For clinicians, the central implication is that MD bacteria cannot be interpreted or targeted based on abundance alone. Their clinical relevance depends on diet, mucus integrity, immune tone, and strain-specific functions. This reframes MD bacteria as context-sensitive biomarkers and therapeutic targets, supporting precision nutrition, strain-selected probiotics, and microbiome-informed interventions rather than uniform supplementation or suppression.
Investigating the roles of Listeria monocytogenes peroxidases in growth and virulence
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study explores the role of peroxidase enzymes in Listeria monocytogenes pathogenesis, revealing how the bacteria survive oxidative stress and how targeting specific enzymes could offer new therapeutic approaches for treating infections.
What was studied?
This study investigated the role of Listeria monocytogenes peroxidase enzymes in the bacterium's growth and virulence. The researchers focused on understanding how Listeria manages oxidative stress, specifically hydrogen peroxide, produced by the host's immune system. The study explored the expression and functionality of peroxidase-encoding genes in Listeria and their impact on the bacterium's ability to survive under oxidative stress and its capacity for infection in a host.
Who was studied?
The study focused on Listeria monocytogenes, a pathogen responsible for listeriosis. The researchers worked with wild-type Listeria strains and peroxidase-deficient mutants. The behavior of these strains was analyzed both in laboratory settings and during infection in a murine macrophage model, to observe their survival and virulence during oxidative stress.
What were the most important findings?
The study demonstrated that Listeria monocytogenes contains several peroxidase enzymes that are essential for surviving oxidative stress, particularly during infection. One of the key findings was that the kat gene, which encodes a heme-dependent catalase, is critical for aerobic growth, especially in stationary phase. This catalase detoxifies hydrogen peroxide, which is produced by the host’s immune system. The fri and ahpA mutants were found to be highly sensitive to hydrogen peroxide, showing that these peroxidases are vital under acute stress conditions. Additionally, it was found that Listeria mutants lacking specific peroxidases still managed to survive in vitro and in macrophage infections, indicating redundancy in their oxidative stress defense. The study further revealed that, during macrophage infection, Listeria expressed these enzymes and relied on fri for survival and replication within activated macrophages. Interestingly, the lack of kat and ahpA did not impair Listeria’s ability to invade or spread between cells, suggesting that oxidative stress might not be as crucial for Listeria's ability to move within host tissues.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study provides crucial insights into the molecular strategies Listeria monocytogenes uses to survive within the host, especially regarding oxidative stress. Understanding the role of peroxidases in Listeria's pathogenesis opens new avenues for potential therapeutic interventions. Targeting fri, which is essential for the bacterium's survival inside macrophages, could offer a novel strategy to control Listeria infections, particularly in vulnerable populations. The findings also suggest that Listeria’s ability to maintain virulence despite oxidative stress challenges indicates that the pathogen’s survival mechanisms are more complex than initially thought, which could inform the development of multi-target therapies to reduce its virulence.
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study evaluates the inhibitory effects of Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 (EcN) on Clostridium perfringens type A, focusing on growth inhibition, toxin production, biofilm formation, and inflammatory cytokine responses in vitro.
What was studied?
This study investigated the effects of Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 (EcN) on the growth, toxin production, biofilm formation, and cytokine responses of Clostridium perfringens type A strain CP4, a significant pathogen involved in food poisoning, necrotic enteritis, and gas gangrene. The researchers performed in vitro co-culture experiments to evaluate the inhibitory effects of EcN on the pathogenic activity of C. perfringens. They focused on various factors such as growth inhibition, gas production, toxin (α-toxin and NetB) production, and biofilm formation. In addition, the study examined how EcN influenced cytokine release in murine macrophage cells (RAW264.7) when exposed to C. perfringens.
Who was studied?
The study used C. perfringens type A strain CP4, a clinical isolate from a necrotic enteritis case, and E. coli Nissle 1917, a non-pathogenic probiotic strain. The study also included human epithelial colorectal adenocarcinoma (Caco-2) cells and mouse macrophage RAW264.7 cells to investigate the interaction between EcN and C. perfringens at the host cell level. The primary focus was on understanding how EcN could potentially compete with and inhibit the growth of C. perfringens, modulate toxin production, and influence the inflammatory cytokine profile in the host cells.
Most important findings
EcN significantly inhibited the growth and toxin production (α-toxin and NetB) of C. perfringens in a dose-dependent manner during co-culture experiments. The growth inhibition appeared to result from competition for nutrients, rather than the secretion of inhibitory substances by EcN. Additionally, EcN pre-incubation did not affect the attachment of C. perfringens to host cells (Caco-2 cells), but it reduced the total number of C. perfringens and decreased the level of toxins produced. EcN also decreased the cytotoxicity of C. perfringens, as evidenced by reduced lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) release in Caco-2 cells. Moreover, EcN inhibited the formation of C. perfringens biofilms, a crucial factor in pathogen persistence and antibiotic resistance. Lastly, EcN significantly modulated the inflammatory cytokine response in RAW264.7 cells exposed to C. perfringens, reducing the levels of IL-1β, IL-6, GM-CSF, and G-CSF.
Key implications
These findings suggest that EcN can effectively inhibit the growth and virulence of C. perfringens by competing for nutrients and disrupting biofilm formation. This provides compelling evidence for EcN’s potential as a therapeutic agent in managing infections caused by C. perfringens, including those related to food poisoning and necrotic enteritis. The ability of EcN to modulate inflammatory cytokine production also highlights its role in mitigating inflammatory responses during infections. These results further support the use of EcN as a probiotic with therapeutic potential in preventing and treating intestinal infections, possibly offering an alternative to traditional antibiotic treatments.
Fecal microbiota transplantation and next-generation therapies: A review on targeting dysbiosis in metabolic disorders and beyond
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Fecal Microbiota Transplantation (FMT)
Fecal Microbiota Transplantation (FMT)
Fecal Microbiota Transplantation (FMT) involves transferring fecal bacteria from a healthy donor to a patient to restore microbiome balance.
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The review examines the therapeutic potential of FMT and next-generation microbiome therapies in treating metabolic disorders. It highlights the promising role of FMT in restoring microbial balance and improving conditions like obesity and type 2 diabetes, though challenges remain in optimizing treatment protocols.
What was studied?
The article provides a comprehensive review of fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) and next-generation therapies targeting dysbiosis in metabolic disorders and beyond. It explores the therapeutic potential of FMT in treating conditions such as obesity, type 2 diabetes, and metabolic syndrome by modulating the gut microbiome. The review discusses the mechanisms behind FMT's ability to restore microbial balance, its application in metabolic diseases, and emerging therapies that target the microbiome for better therapeutic outcomes.
Who was studied?
The review summarizes clinical trials, preclinical studies, and emerging therapies involving the use of FMT and other microbiota-targeted interventions in various populations. These studies focus on patients with metabolic disorders such as obesity, type 2 diabetes, non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, and inflammatory bowel diseases. The research evaluates the effects of fecal microbiota from healthy donors on restoring gut microbial diversity and improving metabolic parameters in these patient groups.
Most important findings
FMT has shown promise in restoring microbial diversity and functionality, particularly in metabolic disorders like obesity and type 2 diabetes. Studies revealed that transplanting fecal material from lean, healthy donors to patients with metabolic syndrome could increase gut microbial diversity and improve insulin sensitivity. However, challenges remain, including variability in long-term effectiveness and safety concerns. Next-generation therapies like prebiotics, probiotics, and engineered microbial consortia are emerging as complementary or alternative approaches to FMT, providing more targeted treatments. These therapies aim to modulate the gut microbiome more precisely, enhancing the efficacy of microbiome-based interventions.
Key implications
The findings suggest that FMT and microbiome-targeted therapies hold significant potential in treating metabolic disorders. These approaches offer a more personalized and potentially more effective way to address the underlying microbial imbalances contributing to diseases like obesity and type 2 diabetes. However, further research is necessary to standardize protocols, ensure safety, and identify the best strategies for long-term benefits. The integration of microbiome modulation with other therapeutic modalities could enhance outcomes and reduce the recurrence of metabolic disorders.
Staphylococcus aureus Virulence Review: Toxins, Immune Evasion, and Therapeutic Targets
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review outlines how S. aureus leverages diverse virulence factors—α-toxin, leukocidins, biofilms, and immune evasion mechanisms—regulated by systems like Agr to persist and cause disease. It discusses anti-virulence strategies and implications for targeted therapies.
What was reviewed?
This comprehensive review explores the pathogenic mechanisms and virulence determinants of Staphylococcus aureus(S. aureus), highlighting its adaptability, immune evasion capabilities, and significant clinical burden. The authors systematically dissect how S. aureus establishes infection, avoids host defenses, persists within tissues, and contributes to disease severity through a diverse arsenal of virulence factors. Central topics include the roles of leukocidins, α-toxin, phenol-soluble modulins (PSMs), immune evasion strategies (e.g., protein A, biofilms, opsonization inhibition), quorum-sensing regulation (Agr), and implications for anti-virulence therapy.
Who was reviewed?
This review synthesizes findings from a broad range of studies involving S. aureus strains from clinical, animal, and in vitro models. Emphasis is placed on virulent methicillin-resistant (MRSA) and methicillin-sensitive (MSSA) isolates, particularly USA300 and ST398 lineages. The authors draw on murine and rabbit infection models, human neutrophil assays, and genetic studies of virulence regulation to highlight species- and host-specific adaptations of S. aureus.
Most important findings
Staphylococcus aureus utilizes a multilayered network of virulence strategies that collectively enable immune evasion, persistence, and tissue invasion. Central to its pathogenesis are immune-modulatory proteins like Protein A and staphylococcal superantigen-like (SSL) proteins, as well as structural adaptations such as biofilm formation and fibrin-mediated aggregation. Potent cytolytic toxins—including α-toxin, leukocidins, and phenol-soluble modulins (PSMs)—facilitate direct killing of host immune cells and escape from phagocytic compartments. Intracellular persistence is supported by microbial surface components recognizing adhesive matrix molecules (MSCRAMMs) and small-colony variant (SCV) phenotypes. These virulence functions are tightly regulated by Agr, SarA, SrrAB, and Fur, which respond to environmental cues such as cell density, redox status, and iron availability. The genetic basis for these mechanisms is often housed on mobile genetic elements, allowing for horizontal gene transfer and rapid evolutionary adaptation.
Virulence Mechanism Summary
Virulence Strategy
Description
Immune evasion
Protein A binds IgG Fc; SSLs, CHIPS, and others inhibit neutrophil function.
Biofilms & Aggregation
PIA/PNAG, eDNA, and teichoic acids protect against phagocytosis; fibrin clots form bacterial aggregates.
Cytolysins
α-toxin, PVL, LukDE, LukAB, and PSMs lyse immune cells and mediate phagosomal escape.
Intracellular persistence
MSCRAMMs and SCV phenotypes allow survival in neutrophils and epithelial cells.
Regulation
Agr, SarA, SrrAB, and Fur control toxin and adhesion factor expression.
Genetic mobility
Toxins and resistance genes are encoded on phages, SaPIs, and genomic islands.
Key implications
This review establishes that the virulence of S. aureus is not the result of a singular factor but of a redundant and synergistic network of immune evasion, host invasion, and persistence strategies. For microbiome-focused clinicians, these findings are essential in understanding how microbial signatures of S. aureus dominance or persistence may signify functional pathogenicity beyond mere presence. The centrality of toxins, quorum sensing, and immune modulation underscores the pathogen's role as a major microbiome disruptor. The authors advocate for anti-virulence therapeutics (e.g., monoclonal antibodies against α-toxin and leukocidins, quorum-sensing inhibitors), although challenges such as functional redundancy and strain variability persist. These insights strengthen the rationale for targeting α-toxin or PSMs in microbiome-targeted intervention strategies.
Akkermansia muciniphila: A promising probiotic against inflammation and metabolic disorders
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review summarizes evidence that Akkermansia muciniphila reduces inflammation and improves metabolic health by strengthening the gut barrier and regulating immune signaling. Findings support its role as a next-generation probiotic for obesity, diabetes, and related inflammatory conditions.
What was reviewed?
This review evaluated the growing body of experimental and clinical evidence supporting Akkermansia muciniphila as a promising probiotic for inflammatory and metabolic disorders. The authors synthesized findings from animal models, mechanistic studies, and emerging human trials to explain how A. muciniphila modulates gut barrier integrity, immune signaling, and host metabolism. The review focused on functional mechanisms, including mucin degradation, microbial metabolite production, and host–microbe signaling pathways, rather than abundance alone, to frame its therapeutic relevance.
Who was reviewed?
The review drew on data from human cohorts with obesity, type 2 diabetes, metabolic syndrome, inflammatory bowel disease, and low-grade systemic inflammation, alongside healthy controls. It also incorporated extensive evidence from murine models of diet-induced obesity, insulin resistance, colitis, and chronic inflammation. In vitro studies using intestinal epithelial and immune cell systems were reviewed to clarify molecular mechanisms underlying host responses to A. muciniphila and its derived components.
What were the most important findings?
Across studies, Akkermansia muciniphila consistently emerged as a major microbial association linked to reduced inflammation and improved metabolic outcomes. Lower abundance correlated with obesity, insulin resistance, type 2 diabetes, and intestinal inflammation, while enrichment improved glucose tolerance, lipid metabolism, and inflammatory markers. Mechanistically, A. muciniphila strengthened the mucus layer, enhanced tight junction protein expression, and reduced metabolic endotoxemia by lowering systemic lipopolysaccharide levels. The review highlighted key effector molecules, particularly the outer membrane protein Amuc_1100, which activates TLR2 signaling and improves barrier function, and microbial metabolites that influence short-chain fatty acid signaling and immune balance. Importantly, pasteurized A. muciniphila reproduced many beneficial effects observed with live bacteria, suggesting that immune and metabolic benefits arise from structural components and signaling interactions rather than persistent colonization. Cross-feeding interactions with butyrate-producing taxa further supported its role in maintaining a health-associated microbial ecosystem.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review positions Akkermansia muciniphila as a functionally important biomarker and therapeutic candidate in inflammation-driven metabolic disease. For clinicians, low abundance may indicate impaired gut barrier function and heightened inflammatory risk. The findings support the clinical development of A. muciniphila–based probiotics and postbiotics as adjunctive strategies for metabolic and inflammatory disorders, while emphasizing the importance of strain specificity and host context.
Mechanistic insights into staphylopine-mediated metal acquisition
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study reveals how S. aureus uses staphylopine (StP) to acquire transition metals, with CntA playing a central role in metal recognition and transport. The findings highlight new potential therapeutic targets to disrupt metal acquisition and reduce bacterial virulence.
What was studied?
This study investigated the mechanism by which Staphylococcus aureus utilizes staphylopine (StP), a metallophore, to acquire transition metals during infection. Specifically, it focused on the CntA protein, a component of the StP/metal transport system, and how it recognizes and transports StP-bound metals such as Co²⁺, Ni²⁺, and Zn²⁺. The researchers explored the detailed structural and biochemical interactions between StP, metals, and CntA, as well as how these interactions are critical for bacterial virulence.
Who was studied?
The study primarily examined Staphylococcus aureus and its StP/metal acquisition system, particularly the role of the CntA protein in metal recognition and transport. It also involved other proteins related to the StP-mediated metal transport system, such as CntB, CntC, and CntD, and investigated their roles in virulence. Additionally, the study explored the effects of mutations in specific amino acids of CntA to assess their impact on metal acquisition and bacterial fitness.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed the detailed mechanism by which S. aureus acquires transition metals via the staphylopine system. It was determined that CntA, a solute-binding protein (SBP), plays a critical role in recognizing and binding to StP/metal complexes. Structural analysis showed that binding of metals such as Co²⁺, Ni²⁺, and Zn²⁺ to StP induced a conformational change in CntA, which is essential for the subsequent transport of these metals into the bacterial cell. The study also identified key amino acid residues involved in metal recognition, such as arginine and tryptophan residues, which play a primary role in metal binding and facilitate the transport process. Furthermore, the researchers demonstrated that the StP/metal recognition mechanism is crucial for S. aureus's ability to grow under metal-limited conditions, such as those imposed by host immune proteins like calprotectin. Mutations in critical residues of CntA impaired the bacterium's ability to acquire metal and reduced its growth and virulence, highlighting the importance of StP-mediated metal acquisition for bacterial fitness.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings of this study have significant implications for understanding how S. aureus and other pathogens acquire essential metals during infection. By identifying the key role of the CntA-mediated StP/metal recognition system in metal homeostasis, this research provides new targets for antimicrobial therapies aimed at disrupting bacterial metal acquisition. Inhibiting this system could reduce bacterial virulence by limiting metal availability, an approach that could be particularly useful in treating infections caused by S. aureus. The study also adds to the broader understanding of bacterial strategies to evade host-imposed nutritional immunity, where pathogens compete with the host for metals like zinc and iron.
Significance and Characteristics of Listeria monocytogenes in Poultry Products
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study explores Listeria monocytogenes contamination in poultry products, highlighting serotype distribution, antimicrobial resistance, and molecular subtyping methods used to track outbreaks and assess food safety.
What was studied?
This study focused on the prevalence and characteristics of Listeria monocytogenes in poultry products. It also examined the role of poultry as a potential vehicle for the transmission of Listeria, its resistance to antibiotics, and the various serotypes of Listeria present in poultry products. The study investigated factors such as contamination rates, serotype distribution, antimicrobial susceptibility, and the use of molecular methods for subtyping.
Who was studied?
The study specifically analyzed Listeria monocytogenes isolates from poultry, including raw chicken meat, ready-to-eat (RTE) poultry products, and various poultry products such as chicken carcasses, turkey meat, and offal. The research involved isolating and characterizing these bacteria from poultry products collected in different regions to assess their prevalence and resistance patterns.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed that Listeria monocytogenes is commonly found in poultry products, with varying contamination rates depending on the type of product and its preparation. The contamination rate for poultry meat and products ranged widely, from 8% to 99%, with raw poultry showing higher contamination levels compared to cooked products. Serotypes 1/2b and 3b (serogroup IIb) were the most prevalent in chicken carcasses, followed by serotypes 4b and 1/2a, commonly associated with human listeriosis. Antibiotic resistance was a notable concern, with some Listeria isolates showing resistance to multiple antibiotics, including tetracycline, erythromycin, and penicillin. However, the isolates showed consistent susceptibility to ampicillin and vancomycin, which are typically used for treating human listeriosis. Molecular methods, such as RAPD-PCR, were found to be effective for subtyping and identifying genetic diversity among Listeria isolates, providing insights into their clonal relationships and transmission routes in poultry processing environments.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study highlights the significant food safety risks associated with Listeria monocytogenes in poultry products. The high prevalence of contamination, particularly in raw and ready-to-eat poultry products, underscores the need for improved hygiene and control measures in poultry processing and food handling. The resistance to common antibiotics, along with the potential for cross-contamination in poultry production, calls for better surveillance and stricter regulations to monitor and control Listeria in the food industry. The use of molecular subtyping techniques also emphasizes the importance of genetic tracking in identifying contamination sources and preventing outbreaks of listeriosis. This study serves as a critical reminder of the ongoing challenge of managing Listeria in the food supply, particularly in products like poultry that are consumed widely.
The Link between Ankylosing Spondylitis, Crohn’s Disease, Klebsiella, and Starch Consumption
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This article investigates the relationship between ankylosing spondylitis, Crohn’s disease, Klebsiella pneumoniae, and starch consumption, suggesting that high starch intake may trigger the growth of Klebsiella and exacerbate disease symptoms, with potential therapeutic implications for dietary management.
What was studied?
This article explores the link between ankylosing spondylitis (AS), Crohn's disease (CD), Klebsiella pneumoniae, and starch consumption. The study investigates how these elements interact and contribute to the development of AS and CD. Both AS and CD are chronic diseases associated with inflammation, and their onset is thought to be influenced by genetic and environmental factors. The study discusses the hypothesis that Klebsiella pneumoniae, a gut microbe, plays a key role in the initiation and progression of these diseases, especially in individuals genetically predisposed, such as those carrying the HLA-B27 allelotypes. The article emphasizes the role of diet, particularly the consumption of starch, in triggering the growth of Klebsiella in the gut, which may activate immune responses leading to inflammation in both the joints (AS) and the gut (CD).
Who was studied?
This review does not focus on a specific cohort of patients but synthesizes data from various studies involving patients diagnosed with AS and CD. The focus is on individuals with genetic susceptibility, specifically those carrying the HLA-B27 allele, which is strongly associated with AS and has been implicated in IBD. The studies referenced in this review discuss patients from different geographical regions, particularly those in Europe, North America, and parts of Asia. The research explores the role of gut microbes, specifically Klebsiella, in patients with AS and CD. Additionally, the review includes studies on the impact of dietary factors, particularly starch consumption, on the gut microbiota and disease progression in these conditions.
Most important findings
This study highlights several significant findings that help explain the link between AS, CD, Klebsiella pneumoniae, and starch consumption. One of the key points is the role of Klebsiella pneumoniae as a potential microbial trigger for both AS and CD. The bacteria are more likely to proliferate in the gut of individuals who consume high levels of starch, which is thought to provide a favorable environment for Klebsiella growth. The research shows that high starch consumption, notably resistant starch, increases the bacterial load of Klebsiella in the gut, which can exacerbate both AS and CD. This finding suggests a dietary intervention as a potential therapeutic approach to manage these diseases. Additionally, the study underscores the molecular mimicry hypothesis, where immune responses to Klebsiella antigens cross-react with self-antigens, particularly HLA-B27, leading to autoimmune inflammation in the joints (AS) and gut (CD).
Another critical finding is the potential of a low-starch diet to reduce disease activity in AS and CD patients. Evidence from clinical trials and observational studies indicates that reducing starch intake can help decrease inflammation, as it limits the growth of Klebsiella and potentially other pathogenic microbes. This is especially significant when combined with conventional treatments such as biologics and anti-inflammatory drugs.
Key implications
The findings of this review have several important clinical implications. First, they highlight the need for a more integrated approach to managing AS and CD, where dietary modification could be considered alongside pharmacological treatments. Specifically, a low starch diet may help reduce disease activity and improve patient outcomes, particularly in those with AS and CD linked to Klebsiella infections. Furthermore, the research underscores the importance of understanding the gut-liver and gut-joint interactions in autoimmune diseases. Clinicians should consider dietary factors when managing patients with these conditions, particularly in patients who exhibit elevated levels of anti-Klebsiella antibodies or show signs of microbiome dysbiosis.
Disulfiram and Copper Ions Kill Mycobacterium tuberculosis in a Synergistic Manner
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study shows that disulfiram, in combination with copper ions, significantly enhances the bactericidal effects against M. tuberculosis, especially against drug-resistant strains. The copper-dependent activity of disulfiram offers a potential new therapeutic approach for tuberculosis.
What was studied?
This study investigated the synergistic effect of disulfiram, an FDA-approved drug, in combination with copper ions against Mycobacterium tuberculosis (M. tuberculosis). The research aimed to explore how disulfiram and copper, when used together, could enhance the antibacterial properties of copper ions, which are known to play a role in bacterial toxicity. Disulfiram, typically used for alcohol addiction, was tested to determine if it could potentiate copper toxicity against M. tuberculosis, especially considering the challenges posed by drug-resistant strains of tuberculosis.
Who was studied?
The research focused on Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the causative agent of tuberculosis, and Mycobacterium smegmatis, a surrogate organism often used for preliminary studies on tuberculosis. The study used different strains of M. tuberculosis including the wild-type H37Rv strain and a derivative known as mc26230, which is a biosafety-level 2 classified avirulent strain. Both replicating and non-replicating forms of these bacteria were tested under controlled laboratory conditions, including the presence of copper ions and disulfiram.
Most important findings
The study revealed that disulfiram, when combined with copper ions, exhibited strong bactericidal effects on both replicating and non-replicating M. tuberculosis cells. The bactericidal action was significantly more potent when copper was present, highlighting the copper-dependence of disulfiram's antimicrobial activity. Importantly, the presence of copper enabled the disulfiram-copper complex to bypass the typical copper homeostasis machinery in the bacterial cells, allowing copper to interfere with cellular processes that are usually protected. The researchers observed a copper stress response, indicating that disulfiram facilitates the penetration of copper into the cell, leading to potential cellular damage via interference with iron-sulfur clusters and other copper-sensitive intracellular components. Notably, the disulfiram-copper complex was found to be more effective than copper or disulfiram alone.
Key implications
This study offers a promising new approach to tackling M. tuberculosis, particularly in the context of drug-resistant strains. By enhancing the effectiveness of copper ions with disulfiram, a known medication, this combination could potentially serve as a therapeutic strategy to target M. tuberculosis, including dormant bacterial populations that are typically more challenging to treat with conventional therapies. The findings suggest that repurposing disulfiram could be a viable strategy for treating tuberculosis, particularly in settings where traditional antibiotics are facing resistance. The study also highlights the potential for other small molecules to act synergistically with metal ions to overcome bacterial defenses, paving the way for the development of novel antimicrobial strategies.
The Gut Microbiome in Aging and Ovarian Cancer
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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This review examines how the aging gut microbiome affects ovarian cancer progression. It highlights microbial dysbiosis as a common feature in both aging and cancer, with implications for novel therapeutic strategies like probiotics and fecal microbiota transplantation to improve treatment outcomes.
What was studied?
This review explores the relationship between the gut microbiome, aging, and ovarian cancer. It highlights the impact of aging on the gut microbiota and its potential role in the progression of ovarian cancer. The review examines how microbial dysbiosis, particularly in phyla such as Firmicutes, Bacteroidetes, and Proteobacteria, is associated with both aging and ovarian cancer. It also delves into the interplay between the gut microbiome and ovarian cancer treatments, such as chemotherapy, and their effects on treatment outcomes.
Who was studied?
The review includes data from studies involving ovarian cancer patients, both in pre- and post-treatment stages, as well as healthy control subjects. Additionally, it references animal models, specifically mice, to understand the mechanistic relationship between the gut microbiome and ovarian cancer progression. It also explores the influence of aging by comparing microbial data from individuals across various age groups, highlighting the changes in the gut microbiome that accompany aging and how these changes might influence cancer risk and prognosis.
Most important findings
Key findings from the review indicate that both aging and ovarian cancer lead to shifts in the gut microbiome, particularly in the levels of certain microbial taxa. As individuals age, the abundance of beneficial bacteria, such as Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium, tends to decrease, while proinflammatory bacteria from the Proteobacteria phylum, like Escherichia species, increase. These same microbial shifts are observed in ovarian cancer patients, suggesting a link between gut dysbiosis and cancer progression. Additionally, Ruminococcaceae, a family of bacteria important for short-chain fatty acid production, tends to decrease in both aging and ovarian cancer, which may contribute to chronic inflammation and cancer development. Interestingly, the review notes that aging and ovarian cancer share common microbial alterations, but the effects of age on the microbiome appear to have a more significant impact on ovarian cancer outcomes, especially regarding immune modulation and inflammation.
Key implications
The review suggests that understanding the relationship between the gut microbiome, aging, and ovarian cancer could lead to novel therapeutic approaches. Modulating the gut microbiome through interventions such as probiotics or fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) could potentially improve cancer treatment outcomes, particularly in elderly ovarian cancer patients. Moreover, early identification of microbiome signatures in aging populations may help in predicting ovarian cancer risk and tailoring personalized therapies. However, the review also highlights the need for further research to establish causal links between microbial dysbiosis and cancer progression and to refine therapeutic strategies based on microbiome modulation.
Genotoxic Escherichia coli Strains Encoding Colibactin, Cytolethal Distending Toxin, and Cytotoxic Necrotizing Factor in Laboratory Rats
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study found that many SPF laboratory rats carry phylogroup B2 E. coli with genotoxins, especially the pks colibactin island, and that vendor source strongly affects prevalence. These strains cause toxin-typical cytopathic effects and may confound rat models of infection, inflammation, and cancer.
What was studied?
This original research study isolated and characterized genotoxin-encoding Escherichia coli from specific-pathogen–free (SPF) laboratory rats sourced from multiple commercial vendors and academic institutions, then tested whether these strains carried the colibactin (pks) island, cytolethal distending toxin (cdt), and/or cytotoxic necrotizing factor (cnf), and whether those genotypes produced the expected cytopathic effects in vitro. The investigators cultured E. coli from rat feces/rectal swabs, nares, and vaginal swabs, performed biochemical typing, used PCR to assign phylogroups and detect cyclomodulin genes, and then applied targeted phenotyping (HeLa cell assays), serotyping, and whole-genome sequencing on representative isolates to verify pathogenicity islands and related virulence content.
Who was studied?
The study evaluated 52 laboratory rats obtained from 3 vendors and housed across 4 academic institutions, sampled between 2015 and 2017, spanning ages 8 weeks to 2 years, with an approximately even sex distribution and including predominantly Sprague–Dawley animals alongside smaller numbers of Long Evans and transgenic rats. Investigators collected samples from clinically normal rats either immediately on arrival or after housing at the institutions and recovered 69 distinct E. coli isolates across the sampled body sites, enabling comparison of genotoxin prevalence by vendor and institution despite SPF status and the absence of E. coli from vendor surveillance reports.
What were the most important findings?
The central microbiome-relevant signal (MMA) was the high prevalence of genotoxin-positive, phylogroup B2 E. coli colonizing laboratory rats. Across 69 isolates, 65% carried pks, 29% carried cdt, and 6% carried cnf; importantly, cdt and cnf never appeared without pks, and cdt and cnf never co-occurred with each other, creating a consistent pattern in which colibactin served as the foundational genotoxic module and other cyclomodulins layered on top in subsets of strains. All genotoxin-positive isolates belonged to pathogen-associated phylogroup B2, strengthening the inference that these were not incidental commensals but pathobiont-like strains. Functional assays aligned with genotype: live pks+ isolates induced contact-dependent megalocytosis in HeLa cells (consistent with colibactin activity), while sonicates from cdt+ or cnf+ isolates produced the characteristic enlargement phenotype expected from those toxins, and genotoxin-negative isolates behaved like nonpathogenic controls. Serotyping and whole-genome sequencing further supported vendor-linked clustering and confirmed complete pks, cdt, and hemolysin–cnf pathogenicity islands in representative strains.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study shows that SPF status does not prevent colonization by genotoxic, B2 phylogroup E. coli, and that vendor source can materially change the burden of pks/cdt/cnf pathotypes entering an animal facility, creating a credible, underrecognized confounder for rat-based studies of inflammation, barrier function, carcinogenesis, neonatal infection, and antimicrobial interventions. Clinicians and translational researchers should interpret these results as a warning that “background microbiota” in rodents can carry functional toxins capable of DNA damage and cell-cycle disruption, meaning experimental outcomes may reflect hidden microbial genotoxicity rather than the intended exposure. The authors also raise a practical biosafety implication: detection of a serotype associated with human uropathogenesis supports vigilance for potential zoonotic transfer and reinforces strict hygiene and protective measures even in low-risk settings.
Impact of occupational exposure on human microbiota
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review explains how workplace microbes, chemicals, metals, and air pollution can change the adult human microbiome. It highlights links to colonization, gut permeability, and immune effects, and it suggests that stopping exposure alone may not reverse risk if microbiome changes persist.
What was reviewed?
This review summarized how workplace exposures can reshape the adult human microbiome and why those shifts may matter for disease risk. It covered two broad exposure classes: biotic exposures from workplace microbes (for example, animal facilities, farms, and other high-bioaerosol settings) and abiotic exposures such as chemicals, heavy metals, and particulate matter that are often far higher at work than in daily life. The authors also explained why older “single-proxy” measures like endotoxin can miss important biology, because different bacterial endotoxins can push immune responses in opposite directions.
Who was reviewed?
The review drew from human observational studies, time-series workplace sampling studies, and supportive animal-model work rather than a single clinical cohort. It highlighted workers with animal contact (livestock workers, animal care workers, poultry-related work), military personnel with complex chemical exposures, and populations or models exposed to heavy metals and air pollution. Across these studies, the authors considered multiple body sites, especially the nasal passages, skin, oral cavity, lungs, and gut, because different occupational exposures can preferentially affect different microbial communities.
What were the most important findings?
The review emphasized that occupational environments can measurably alter the adult microbiome through both colonization and exposure-driven selection. Animal-associated work can shift the nasal and skin microbiome toward organisms found in the work environment, including strain-level signals such as livestock-associated MRSA colonization in some worker groups. The authors also highlighted evidence that certain military-related chemical mixtures and particulate matter exposures can disturb the gut microbiome and increase gut permeability in model systems, suggesting a gut–immune–lung link that could plausibly contribute to respiratory disease risk. For heavy metals and particles, the review described a consistent theme: these exposures can change gut microbial composition and function, and the microbiome may also modify how the host responds to toxins, making microbiome changes both a target and a mediator of exposure effects.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
For clinicians, the review supports a practical shift in thinking: exposure reduction may not fully reverse disease risk if the exposure already pushed the patient’s microbiome into a more pro-inflammatory or dysbiotic state. This matters for respiratory and systemic conditions where work exposures are intense and repeated, because microbiome changes can persist, interact with immune tone, and influence barrier integrity. The review also implies that occupational history can become clinically actionable microbiome context, especially when symptoms persist after workplace removal, and it highlights an evidence gap that clinicians should note: few studies directly link workplace-driven microbiome changes to hard clinical endpoints, so this remains a key area for future translational research.
Specific Histidine Residues Confer Histatin Peptides with Copper-Dependent Activity against Candida albicans
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Copper-dependent activity against Candida albicans rises when histatin peptides bind copper via a proximal bis-His site, lowering EC50 and improving killing in vitro; copper chelation reverses this effect.
What was studied?
This study defines copper-dependent activity against Candida albicans by testing how histatin salivary peptides bind copper and use that copper to kill the fungus. The authors measured peptide–copper binding by spectrophotometric titrations, resolved copper coordination by X-ray absorption spectroscopy, and ran growth and killing assays with and without added copper or chelators. They mapped two copper(I) binding sites of nanomolar affinity and a high-affinity N-terminal copper(II) site, then linked these sites to antifungal potency. When the medium contained extra copper, histatin-5 required a much lower dose to inhibit growth; when a copper-specific chelator removed copper, activity fell. This work connects exact histidine positions to copper binding and to killing strength, and shows how copper in the oral niche can tune antifungal peptide performance.
Who was studied?
The experiments used Candida albicans (strain SC5314) in vitro and a panel of histatin-5–based peptides, including full-length histatin-5, N-terminal fragments, and His→Ala mutants that remove specific histidines. The team challenged C. albicans with peptides under copper-replete, copper-depleted, and baseline conditions, and used a cell-impermeant copper chelator, bathocuproine disulphonate (BCS), to limit copper availability. This design lets the authors link copper access, peptide sequence, and fungal survival with clear readouts of potency and copper binding behavior.
Most important findings
Copper boosted histatin-5 efficacy while copper removal erased it. Adding copper lowered the EC50 from about 5 µM to ~1 µM; BCS co-treatment prevented growth inhibition, while a general chelator (EDTA) weakened but did not abolish activity. Cells grown in copper-rich medium became more sensitive, and simultaneous exposure to BCS blocked killing despite similar cell-associated copper during the short assay, supporting a direct need for accessible extracellular copper during peptide action. The chemistry explains the biology. Histatin-5 binds copper(II) very tightly at its N-terminus (ATCUN site; Kd ≈ 8 pM), and it hosts two copper(I) sites of ~20 nM affinity anchored by adjacent histidines (a “bis-His” motif). X-ray absorption data indicate a third ligand helps complete the copper(I) site, consistent with His3 participation in one complex.
These distinct sites give histatin-5 the ability to engage both copper redox states, a feature that can amplify oxidative stress within fungal cells and drive killing. Sequence matters for copper-enabled potency. Truncated N-terminal peptides lacked activity alone but regained strong activity with added copper (EC50 ~5–6 µM). Mutating the key H7,H8 bis-His motif abolished copper-dependent killing, while mutating the distal H18,H19 pair had modest effects, highlighting the proximal bis-His site as the critical anchor for copper(I) and activity. The correlation between copper(I) affinity and antifungal potency across fragments and mutants defines a clean, microbiome-relevant signature: histatin peptides that preserve the bis-His motif and have access to copper show stronger activity against C. albicans.
Key implications
For oral and mucosal care, copper availability can tune innate antifungal defense. Saliva that delivers copper to histatin-5 can strengthen killing of C. albicans, while copper chelation or low copper may blunt that defense. In a microbiome signatures database, clinicians can tag “histatin–copper axis” with features that include the histatin-5 bis-His motif, high-affinity N-terminal copper(II) binding, and a copper-responsive killing phenotype. These markers predict higher peptide efficacy in copper-replete niches and lower efficacy with chelation or deficiency. Therapeutic strategies may include peptide designs that retain the proximal bis-His site or formulations that supply bioavailable copper in a controlled way, while avoiding excess that could injure host tissue. Clinicians should consider copper status, chelator use, and salivary flow when they judge risk for Candida overgrowth and when they evaluate peptide-based adjuncts.
Chronic arsenic exposure perturbs gut microbiota and bile acid homeostasis in mice
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study explores the effects of chronic arsenic exposure on the gut microbiota and bile acid metabolism in mice, revealing significant changes in microbial composition and bile acid homeostasis, which may contribute to metabolic dysfunction and related diseases.
What was studied?
This study examined the effects of chronic arsenic exposure on gut microbiota composition and bile acid metabolism in mice. Researchers aimed to determine how prolonged exposure to arsenic influences both the microbial communities in the gut and the homeostasis of bile acids, which are essential for various metabolic processes. Mice were exposed to arsenic through their drinking water, and after a period of three months, their fecal, serum, and liver samples were analyzed to evaluate any changes in microbial diversity and bile acid levels. The goal was to explore how arsenic exposure impacts the microbiome and metabolic regulation, potentially offering insights into its role in metabolic diseases.
Who was studied?
The study involved C57BL/6 male mice, a strain commonly used in toxicology research due to its well-characterized response to environmental exposures. A total of 12 mice were exposed to arsenic at a concentration of 1 ppm in their drinking water over the course of 13 weeks. The exposed group was compared to a control group of 12 mice that were not exposed to arsenic. The study focused on understanding how arsenic exposure affects the gut microbiome, with particular attention paid to its impact on the microbial communities that play a crucial role in regulating bile acid metabolism and other metabolic functions.
Most important findings
The results of the study indicated that arsenic exposure led to significant changes in both the composition of the gut microbiome and the profile of bile acids in the mice. Specifically, arsenic exposure was found to decrease the overall diversity of gut microbiota, which is an indicator of dysbiosis. Furthermore, there were significant alterations in the abundance of key microbial populations, with an increase in Bacteroidetes and a decrease in Firmicutes. These microbial shifts were associated with changes in bile acid levels, which play an essential role in fat digestion and the regulation of metabolic pathways.
The study also found that the impact of arsenic exposure on bile acid metabolism was notable. The mice exposed to arsenic showed a decrease in the levels of secondary bile acids such as lithocholic acid (LCA) and deoxycholic acid (DCA), while primary bile acids like cholic acid (CA) and chenodeoxycholic acid (CDCA) were significantly altered in their serum and liver. These changes in bile acid levels are critical because bile acids not only aid in digestion but also serve as signaling molecules involved in lipid metabolism and glucose homeostasis.
Key implications
The study underscores the potential for arsenic to disrupt both microbial balance and metabolic functions, particularly those related to bile acid metabolism. The changes observed in the gut microbiome and bile acid profiles may contribute to the development of various health conditions, including metabolic disorders, liver disease, and cardiovascular issues. These findings suggest that chronic arsenic exposure could alter metabolic pathways by affecting both the microbiome and bile acid homeostasis. Understanding the link between arsenic, gut microbiota, and metabolism could help inform strategies to mitigate the health risks associated with chronic arsenic exposure, particularly in populations with high environmental arsenic.
F1C Fimbriae Play an Important Role in Biofilm Formation and Intestinal Colonization by the Escherichia coli Commensal Strain Nissle 1917
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study shows how F1C fimbriae in Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 drive biofilm formation, epithelial adhesion, and intestinal persistence, defining a functional microbiome signature for stable colonization.
What was studied?
This study examined how F1C fimbriae influence biofilm formation and intestinal colonization by the probiotic strain Escherichia coli Nissle 1917, with a focus on understanding the specific adherence factors that allow this organism to establish itself within the host. The researchers used a genetic screen to identify determinants of Nissle surface attachment and then evaluated how targeted deletions of fimbrial genes affected biofilm growth, epithelial adhesion, and persistence in vivo. Because the focus keyphrase F1C fimbriae in Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 appears throughout this review, the analysis places special emphasis on the link between F1C fimbriae and microbiome-associated signatures that enhance stable gut colonization.
Who was studied?
The study used E. coli Nissle 1917 wild type and genetically modified mutants lacking specific adhesins, including F1C fimbriae, type 1 fimbriae, and the common pilus, and compared their phenotypes in vitro and in vivo. HEp-2 epithelial cells were used to assess adherence capacity, and infant CD-1 mice served as the in vivo model to determine colonization and persistence. Comparative analysis with related uropathogenic strains provided mechanistic insights into the shared fimbrial systems. This population allowed the authors to connect specific adhesion profiles with measurable outcomes in biofilm formation, epithelial binding, and intestinal stability.
Most important findings
The study showed that F1C fimbriae in Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 are key determinants of robust biofilm formation, epithelial adherence, and intestinal persistence. The transposon mutagenesis screen identified focC, the periplasmic chaperone for F1C fimbriae, as essential for Nissle’s biofilm phenotype. Deletion of focA markedly impaired biofilm assembly on abiotic surfaces and eliminated adhesion to HEp-2 cells, confirming that F1C fimbriae mediate stable attachment to both biotic and abiotic targets. In infant mice, the focA mutant colonized early but declined almost completely by day 3, demonstrating that F1C fimbriae are required for persistence rather than initial entry. Type 1 fimbriae contributed moderately to biofilm formation and epithelial adherence but were not essential for intestinal colonization, while the common pilus proved vital for initial colonization. These findings indicate that specific fimbrial systems act at different stages of gut establishment and together define a microbiome signature for effective host colonization.
Key implications
This study highlights the relevance of F1C fimbriae in Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 for clinical and microbiome-focused applications by linking a defined adhesin to durable intestinal persistence and effective surface colonization. The results suggest that F1C fimbriae may serve as functional biomarkers for predicting the colonization stability of probiotic strains and may be relevant when considering the design of next-generation biotherapeutics. Understanding the interplay between fimbrial systems and biofilm formation also informs strategies to improve probiotic engraftment, especially in conditions where microbial competition is strong. For clinicians, the findings reinforce that adhesion traits influence both the reliability and durability of probiotic colonization, and they may help guide the selection of strains with predictable host interaction properties.
Bioremediation and Tolerance of Humans to Heavy Metals through Microbial Processes: a Potential Role for Probiotics?
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review explores the potential of probiotics, particularly lactobacilli, in binding and detoxifying heavy metals, offering a natural approach to mitigating toxicity from arsenic, cadmium, lead, and mercury.
What was reviewed?
This review focuses on the role of probiotics, specifically lactobacilli, in bioremediation and the detoxification of heavy metals. The paper reviews how microbial processes, especially those of gastrointestinal bacteria, interact with heavy metals like arsenic, cadmium, mercury, and lead. It emphasizes the potential of probiotics in removing or sequestering these metals from the human body, especially considering their presence in food and water sources. The review also highlights the effectiveness of lactobacilli strains in binding metals, reducing their bioavailability, and preventing their toxic effects through mechanisms such as efflux pumps and metal sequestration.
Who was reviewed?
The review primarily examined microbial species, particularly Lactobacillus, and their ability to interact with and sequester heavy metals. It also reviewed various studies on the use of probiotics in bioremediation, focusing on Lactobacillus strains that have demonstrated metal-binding and detoxification properties. The studies reviewed include both in vitro and in vivo research that explores the potential for probiotic strains to mitigate the harmful effects of heavy metal exposure in humans, especially from dietary intake and environmental contamination.
What were the most important findings?
The key findings from this review underscore the potential of Lactobacillus species, widely used in food products and probiotics, to bind and sequester heavy metals, such as arsenic, cadmium, lead, and mercury. Lactobacilli strains such as Lactobacillus acidophilus and Lactobacillus rhamnosus demonstrated the ability to remove metals from contaminated water and reduce oxidative stress caused by metal toxicity. The review also found that lactobacilli can interact with metals through various mechanisms, including binding to metal ions on the cell surface, preventing their absorption, and facilitating their removal from the body via excretion. Furthermore, the review pointed out that lactobacilli's ability to resist heavy metal toxicity is often linked to genetic factors, such as the presence of operons for metal efflux. These findings suggest that probiotics could be a natural and cost-effective tool for mitigating heavy metal toxicity, especially in regions with limited access to traditional detoxification technologies.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The implications of this review are significant, particularly in terms of public health and environmental protection. Probiotics, especially lactobacilli, could offer a simple, accessible, and natural solution for reducing heavy metal toxicity in populations exposed to contaminated water and food, particularly in developing countries. The ability of probiotics to bind and sequester metals before they are absorbed by the body could serve as a preventive strategy to mitigate chronic exposure to toxic metals. Moreover, the review emphasizes the need for further research into the mechanisms behind metal detoxification by probiotics, as well as clinical trials to assess their real-world effectiveness. This knowledge could lead to the development of new bioremediation approaches and expand the role of probiotics in human health beyond digestive health to include environmental detoxification.
Dietary copper-fructose interactions alter gut microbial activity in male rats
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Dietary copper-fructose interactions in rats depleted Akkermansia, shifted Firmicutes families, weakened tight junctions and goblet cells, and raised liver injury signals, defining a dysbiosis–barrier–liver axis.
What was studied?
This study tested how dietary copper-fructose interactions alter gut microbial activity in male rats and linked these shifts to gut barrier injury and liver stress that model early NAFLD. Investigators fed defined copper diets with or without high fructose and profiled fecal and intestinal microbiota by 16S rDNA sequencing, measured tight junction proteins and goblet cells, and tracked plasma endotoxin, LBP, and liver enzymes. The work asked whether marginal or supplemental copper, when combined with fructose, reshapes the gut community in ways that favor pathobionts, reduces protective taxa, and weakens the epithelial barrier. It also examined copper handling genes and systemic copper status to connect luminal changes with host metal routing.
Who was studied?
Researchers studied healthy weanling male Sprague–Dawley rats on AIN-76–based diets providing marginal copper, adequate copper, or supplemental copper for four weeks, with ad libitum water or 30% fructose water. They collected feces and intestinal tissue for microbiome analysis and barrier assays, and drew blood for copper indices, LBP, endotoxin, and liver enzymes. The design allowed clear contrasts between copper levels with and without fructose, so the team could pinpoint whether copper status alone, fructose alone, or their interaction best explained microbe shifts, barrier damage, endotoxemia, and liver injury markers.
Most important findings
Both low and high copper, when paired with fructose, changed the microbiome without improving growth and with clear signs of tissue stress. At the phylum level, Firmicutes rose in both copper-fructose states, while Bacteroidetes fell most with low copper plus fructose, producing a higher Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes ratio. Proteobacteria trended upward with fructose and copper, and Enterobacteriaceae expanded in the high copper plus fructose group. Verrucomicrobia dropped across copper-altered groups, driven by a marked loss of Akkermansia, a mucin-utilizing commensal linked to barrier integrity. Within Firmicutes, family-level patterns diverged by copper dose: low copper favored Peptostreptococcaceae and higher Lachnospiraceae, whereas high copper favored Lactobacillaceae and Erysipelotrichaceae alongside reduced Ruminococcaceae, a butyrate-producing family tied to epithelial health.
Barrier assays showed reduced claudin-1 and occludin protein and fewer goblet cells with both copper extremes, while Reg3B rose, consistent with an antimicrobial stress response; IL-22 trended higher in the same direction. Systemically, LBP rose with fructose independent of copper, and plasma endotoxin increased most with low copper, even though high copper plus fructose also raised Proteobacteria and Enterobacteriaceae, suggesting distinct injury routes. Liver enzymes (ALT/AST) increased in copper-fructose groups, indicating hepatic injury consistent with early NAFLD. Copper transport features shifted as well: intestine and liver Ctr1 expression fell under fructose, and ceruloplasmin activity rose when fructose accompanied high copper, pointing to active host copper routing during inflammation. Together, these data define a microbiome signature of copper-fructose exposure that includes Akkermansia loss, reduced Ruminococcaceae, expansion of Enterobacteriaceae under high copper, and dose-specific Firmicutes family changes that align with impaired barrier function and liver stress.
Key implications
Clinicians should recognize copper status and fructose load as joint drivers of dysbiosis and barrier failure that can precede and fuel NAFLD. In a microbiome signatures database, you can tag dietary copper-fructose interactions with Akkermansia depletion, reduced Ruminococcaceae, increased Lactobacillaceae or Peptostreptococcaceae depending on copper dose, and Enterobacteriaceae rise with high copper plus fructose. These shifts track with tight junction loss, goblet cell loss, higher LBP, and liver enzyme elevation. Assessing diet, copper intake, and fructose exposure may help stratify risk in patients with metabolic liver disease or barrier complaints, while interventions that restore Akkermansia, support butyrate producers, and correct copper imbalance may protect the barrier and reduce hepatic injury signals.
Transition metals and virulence in bacteria
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review explains how bacterial pathogens acquire, compete for, and are poisoned by transition metals, highlighting metal-driven virulence strategies and host nutritional immunity mechanisms relevant to microbiome-associated infection biology.
What was reviewed?
This review article examines how transition metals shape bacterial virulence through three interconnected processes: acquisition, limitation, and intoxication. It emphasizes the evolutionary “arms race” between microbial strategies for metal uptake and host mechanisms for nutritional immunity. The review highlights how iron, zinc, and manganese—critical cofactors for bacterial metabolism—are sequestered, restricted, or weaponized by the host to control infection. It also explores the concept of transition metals and virulence in bacteria as a core microbiome-relevant signature, demonstrating how microbial metal-utilization pathways structure pathogen behavior, niche occupation, and survival. The article integrates molecular mechanisms, structural biology, host–pathogen coevolution, and ecological microbiology to reveal how elemental micronutrients act as regulators of infection outcomes.
Who was reviewed?
The review encompasses bacterial pathogens across Gram-positive and Gram-negative lineages, including Staphylococcus aureus, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Salmonella enterica, Yersinia spp., and Helicobacter pylori. Host mechanisms are also examined, particularly actions performed by neutrophils, macrophages, epithelial cells, and the proteins lipocalin-2, calprotectin, transferrin, and lactoferrin. The focus spans vertebrate immune systems broadly, highlighting conserved strategies used by mammals to alter microbial metal access. Together, the reviewed organisms illustrate how microbial metal acquisition systems both shape and respond to selective pressures across human tissues and microbiome-related environments.
Most important findings
A key finding is that metal competition constitutes a major determinant of bacterial virulence. Iron is strictly limited by the host, leading pathogens to evolve siderophores, heme-capture systems, and metal piracy mechanisms. Zinc and manganese restriction—driven by proteins such as calprotectin—is shown to profoundly suppress bacterial metabolic capacity. Conversely, hosts deploy toxic levels of copper and zinc within phagolysosomes, weaponizing mismetallation and oxidative chemistry. The review also identifies new microbial strategies such as stealth siderophores, zincophore secretion, and broad-spectrum metallophores like staphylopine. These systems demonstrate microbiome-relevant metal signatures: siderophore repertoires, manganese import profiles, and metal efflux capacity mark virulence traits.
Concept
Key Microbiome-Relevant Insight
Siderophores & piracy
Distinct siderophore families define pathogen niche fitness and resistance to host sequestration.
Calprotectin activity
Multimetal sequestration rewires microbial community dynamics and infection severity.
Metal intoxication
Copper/zinc delivery by phagocytes creates selective pressures shaping pathogen genomes.
Host metal dysregulation
Iron overload and zinc deficiency shift microbial virulence factor expression and disease risk.
Key implications
Understanding microbial metal utilization enables prediction of pathogen behavior in metal-variable environments, including the gut, lung, and urinary tract. Metal signatures—such as siderophore type, heme uptake pathways, and zinc/manganese transport profiles—may serve as biomarkers for virulence potential and microbiome destabilization. The review suggests therapeutic avenues that bypass traditional antibiotic targets, including siderophore decoys, gallium-based metal substitution strategies, and vaccines against metal acquisition systems. It also highlights how dietary metal intake and host genetic variations influence infection susceptibility, emphasizing the need to integrate metal homeostasis into microbiome-focused clinical decision-making.
Role of Fungi in Tumorigenesis: Promises and Challenges
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Intratumoural Microbiota
Intratumoural Microbiota
With the growing understanding of the intratumoral microbiota’s influence on cancer progression, the next frontier in cancer therapy is microbiota-targeted interventions. By introducing beneficial microbes or altering existing microbial populations within tumors, therapies can be designed to modulate the immune system, promote tumor suppression, and improve drug efficacy. However, challenges remain in deciphering the complex relationships between microbes, tumor cells, and the immune system, necessitating more refined research methods and standardized approaches to translate these discoveries into clinical practice.
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This review explores the role of fungi in cancer progression, highlighting their impact on tumor development and immune responses. It emphasizes the potential for mycobiome-based cancer diagnostics and therapies, though challenges remain in understanding the exact mechanisms at play.
What was studied?
This review article focuses on the role of fungi in tumorigenesis, specifically examining the mycobiome’s involvement in cancer development and progression. The study explores how fungi, a lesser-studied component of the human microbiome, can impact cancer pathogenesis. The article delves into how fungal species interact with the immune system, influence inflammation, and contribute to various cancers such as colorectal, pancreatic, and head and neck cancers. The research highlights how fungi could both promote and inhibit tumor growth depending on the context, such as their presence in the tumor microenvironment and their interactions with bacteria.
Who was studied?
The article synthesizes findings from various studies, including those focused on tumor tissues from cancer patients across different cancer types. It reviews the microbiomes of individuals with colorectal cancer, pancreatic cancer, and head and neck cancer, analyzing the presence of fungal species within the tumors and their potential role in cancer progression. The studies included in the review examine microbial profiles using advanced sequencing methods to identify fungal species and analyze their correlation with tumor characteristics and immune responses.
Most important findings
The review outlines several critical findings related to the role of fungi in cancer. Fungal species like Candida albicans, Malassezia, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, and Aspergillus were identified in various tumor tissues, with their presence being associated with inflammation, immune modulation, and cancer progression. A key observation is that fungi, like Malassezia, can contribute to tumor progression by activating pro-inflammatory pathways that enhance tumor growth. Moreover, the study found that certain fungi could influence the tumor immune microenvironment, either by promoting immune tolerance or by interacting with bacteria to trigger specific immune responses. Additionally, the review highlights the dysbiosis of the mycobiome in cancer patients, where specific fungal species become more abundant, which may exacerbate tumor progression. For example, a higher abundance of Candida species was linked to stomach and colorectal cancers, while other fungi like Aspergillus and Saccharomyces were found to correlate with pancreatic cancer progression.
Key implications
The review suggests that the mycobiome can serve as both a diagnostic and therapeutic target for cancer treatment. Fungal signatures in tumor tissues could potentially be used as biomarkers for early cancer detection and prognosis. Targeting the mycobiome could also become a novel therapeutic strategy, either through antifungal treatments or by modifying the gut and tumor-associated fungi. The potential to manipulate the mycobiome through diet, prebiotics, probiotics, or antifungal agents could lead to personalized cancer therapies. However, the study also underscores the need for more research to establish causal relationships between fungal dysbiosis and cancer, as well as the mechanisms through which fungi influence tumor progression. Additionally, there are challenges in standardizing fungal sequencing methods and identifying reliable fungal biomarkers across different cancer types.
M. canis Antifungal Resistance: Enzymatic Correlates and Drug Efficacy
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Microsporum canis (M. canis)
Microsporum canis (M. canis)
OverviewMicrosporum canis (M. canis) is a zoophilic dermatophyte common in cats and dogs, responsible for 90% of feline dermatophytoses worldwide.[1][2] It has significant zoonotic potential, transmitting to humans through fomites or direct animal contact, causing severe superficial mycosis. M. canis is considered anthropo-zoophilic and can infect pediatric or immunocompromised patients, causing severe inflammatory responses such […]
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This study identified catalase and hemolysin as key virulence factors linked to antifungal resistance in Microsporum canis strains from symptomatic hosts. Voriconazole, terbinafine, and posaconazole were most effective.
What was studied?
This study investigated the virulence enzyme profiles and antifungal susceptibility of 100 M. canis strains isolated from humans with tinea corporis and animals either with or without skin lesions. With concerns around Microsporum canis antifungal resistance, the study aimed to determine whether specific virulence factors (phospholipase [Pz], lipase [Lz], hemolysin [Hz], catalase [Ca], and thermotolerance [GI]) correlate with antifungal susceptibility and the clinical presentation of infection. Seven antifungal agents were tested using a modified CLSI broth microdilution method: itraconazole, ketoconazole, voriconazole, posaconazole, terbinafine, fluconazole, and griseofulvin. The overarching goal was to assess potential links between virulence, antifungal resistance, and the presence or absence of lesions in different hosts. Understanding Microsporum canis antifungal resistance helps in developing more effective treatment strategies. The research on M. canis antifungal resistance is increasingly vital given the rising resistance patterns identified.
Who was studied?
The analysis included 100 M. canis strains: 10 from humans diagnosed with tinea corporis, 64 from animals with visible skin lesions, and 26 from asymptomatic animals. These strains were confirmed via morphological and molecular identification, including ITS sequencing. Strains were phenotypically grouped by host origin and the presence of skin lesions to identify correlations between enzymatic activity, antifungal susceptibility, and lesion development. These observations provide insights into Microsporum canis antifungal resistance.
Most important findings
Among the virulence factors examined, several displayed statistically significant variation between host groups. Lipase (Lz) activity was markedly higher in M. canis strains isolated from animals without lesions, suggesting a possible protective function or a role in early colonization. In contrast, catalase (Ca) activity was elevated in strains from both animals and humans with skin lesions, indicating its potential involvement in oxidative stress defense and pathogenicity. Hemolysin (Hz) activity was also higher in symptomatic hosts and significantly correlated with reduced susceptibility to azole antifungals such as fluconazole and voriconazole, implicating Hz as a contributor to Microsporum canis antifungal resistance.
Additionally, thermotolerance (GI%) was lower in lesion-associated strains, suggesting impaired growth at elevated temperatures, though this trait did not directly correlate with antifungal resistance. Among the antifungals tested, voriconazole, terbinafine, and posaconazole demonstrated the highest efficacy across all isolates, while fluconazole and itraconazole showed comparatively higher MICs in symptomatic strains, raising concerns regarding their long-term therapeutic utility and highlighting issues associated with M. canis antifungal resistance.
Virulence Factor
Observation in Lesion-Associated Strains
Catalase (Ca)
Elevated activity
Lipase (Lz)
Lower activity
Hemolysin (Hz)
Higher activity correlated with azole resistance, contributing to Microsporum canis antifungal resistance.
Thermotolerance
Lower in lesion-associated strains
The positive correlation between high MICs for azoles and increased Ca/Hz activity in lesion-associated strains suggests that enzymatic virulence may contribute to antifungal resistance or vice versa. Continued study on M. canis antifungal resistance can provide deeper insights into these complex interactions.
Key implications
The findings highlight a potential dual role for virulence enzymes—both in facilitating tissue invasion and correlating with antifungal resistance profiles, particularly among azoles. Elevated catalase and hemolysin activities in strains from symptomatic hosts indicate a mechanistic link between oxidative stress evasion and diminished antifungal efficacy. These insights suggest that catalase and hemolysin could serve as biomarkers for aggressive M. canis infections and potentially guide treatment decisions. Moreover, identifying voriconazole, terbinafine, and posaconazole as the most active antifungals against M. canis reinforces their clinical utility, especially in resistant or recurrent cases. These data support the need for enzyme-targeted antifungal strategies and call for surveillance of antifungal resistance patterns in zoonotic dermatophytoses, especially concerning Microsporum canis antifungal resistance.
Ciclopirox Antifungal and Anti-Inflammatory Review: Dermatology to Oncology
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Staphylococcus aureus (S. Aureus)
Staphylococcus aureus (S. Aureus)
Staphylococcus aureus is a versatile skin and mucosal commensal that can transition into a highly virulent pathobiont. Known for its immune-evasive strategies, toxin production, and antibiotic resistance, it plays a significant role in chronic infections and microbiome imbalance.
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Microsporum canis (M. canis)
Microsporum canis (M. canis)
OverviewMicrosporum canis (M. canis) is a zoophilic dermatophyte common in cats and dogs, responsible for 90% of feline dermatophytoses worldwide.[1][2] It has significant zoonotic potential, transmitting to humans through fomites or direct animal contact, causing severe superficial mycosis. M. canis is considered anthropo-zoophilic and can infect pediatric or immunocompromised patients, causing severe inflammatory responses such […]
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Ciclopirox and its salt form exhibit broad-spectrum antifungal, antibacterial, and anti-inflammatory activity via iron chelation and enzyme inhibition. With low resistance potential, they outperform many azoles and show promise in oncology, virology, and neuroinflammation, making them valuable tools in dermatology and beyond.
What was reviewed?
This review explores the therapeutic potential of ciclopirox (CPX) and its ethanolamine salt ciclopirox olamine (CPO)—two hydroxypyridone antifungal agents with broad-spectrum antimicrobial, anti-inflammatory, and iron-chelating properties. The paper examines their established role in dermatology and investigates their emerging uses in oncology, virology, immunology, and neurology. The authors describe CPX/CPO's unique mechanisms, structure–activity relationships, pharmacokinetics, and efficacy in diverse formulations including creams, shampoos, lacquers, and gels.
Who was reviewed?
The review draws on findings from in vitro studies, in vivo animal models, clinical trials, pharmacokinetic research, and microbial gene expression studies. It synthesizes data from both dermatological and non-dermatological disciplines, including microbiology, oncology, and virology, to contextualize CPX/CPO’s multifaceted utility.
Most important findings
Ciclopirox and its salt form, ciclopirox olamine, exhibit a unique mechanism of action that distinguishes them from conventional antifungals such as azoles and polyenes. Their primary mode involves intracellular iron chelation, targeting iron-dependent enzymes like ribonucleotide reductase and deoxyhypusine hydroxylase, thereby impairing fungal viability. Additionally, they disrupt mitochondrial function, energy metabolism, and membrane integrity, while also interfering with DNA repair, mitotic processes, and amino acid uptake.
Ciclopirox compounds exert potent anti-inflammatory effects by suppressing prostaglandins, leukotrienes, and pro-inflammatory cytokines including IL-1β, IL-6, and TNF-α. They are active against a wide spectrum of dermatophytes, Candida spp., Malassezia spp., Microsporum canis, and antibiotic-resistant bacteria, and demonstrate synergism with antifungal agents and mitochondrial electron transport chain (ETC) inhibitors. Notably, the review underscores microbiome-relevant implications, particularly in seborrheic dermatitis, where Malassezia dominance is accompanied by elevated levels of Staphylococcus aureus and S. epidermidis, along with reduced Cutibacterium, indicative of a dysbiotic profile. Ciclopirox effectively reduces these pathobionts while preserving beneficial taxa, highlighting its potential as a microbiome-friendly antifungal therapy.
Key implications
The review positions CPX/CPO as an underutilized multi-target agent with broad therapeutic value. In dermatology, they outperform many topical antifungals and reduce relapse in seborrheic dermatitis. Their low resistance potential and anti-inflammatory activity make them preferable to corticosteroid combinations. Outside dermatology, they show promise in cancer, HBV, HIV, SARS-CoV-2, polycystic kidney disease, type I diabetes, and stroke. Their iron-chelating mechanism offers a powerful avenue for targeting microbial virulence and host-pathogen interactions, which aligns with emerging interest in microbial metallomics and host–microbiome–metal ion dynamics.
Effects of Hydrogen Sulfide on the Microbiome: From Toxicity to Therapy
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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The review examines the complex role of hydrogen sulfide in modulating the gut microbiome, highlighting its potential as a therapeutic agent to stabilize microbiota biofilms and reduce inflammation in diseases like IBD.
What was studied?
This review explored the effects of hydrogen sulfide (H₂S) on the gut microbiome, focusing on its dual roles as both a toxin and a therapeutic agent. The study assessed how H₂S, a gaseous signaling molecule produced by both gut bacteria and host cells, influences the microbiota, particularly its ability to modulate inflammation, microbial biofilms, and gut health. The review examined the mechanisms through which H₂S impacts the microbiome, including its influence on microbial diversity, biofilm formation, and its potential to maintain intestinal homeostasis. Additionally, it addressed how different concentrations of H₂S can either exacerbate gut diseases, such as inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), or provide therapeutic benefits by stabilizing microbiota biofilms and reducing inflammation.
Who was studied?
The review does not focus on specific individuals or animals but consolidates findings from a wide range of studies involving both human and animal models. It discusses the role of endogenous and exogenous H₂S in modulating the gut microbiome and its interaction with gut epithelial cells. The review highlights the contributions of both commensal bacteria and pathogenic microorganisms, including Escherichia coli and Helicobacter pylori, in producing H₂S and how this affects the host's health. Additionally, it emphasizes the need for further research into the effects of dietary H₂S and its potential as a treatment for microbiota-related diseases.
Most important findings
The review identified that H₂S plays a complex role in gut health, with both beneficial and detrimental effects depending on its concentration. High concentrations of H₂S produced by gut bacteria can disrupt the gut’s mucus barrier, impair epithelial integrity, and lead to inflammation, potentially contributing to diseases like IBD. However, at physiological levels, H₂S has anti-inflammatory and cytoprotective properties, stabilizing mucus layers, maintaining microbiota biofilm integrity, and preventing the invasion of pathogenic microorganisms. The review also found that H₂S interacts with the gut microbiota to promote the resolution of inflammation and tissue injury, highlighting its potential as a therapeutic agent. H₂S donors, such as diallyl disulfide (DADS), have been shown to restore the balance of microbiota biofilms and protect against gastrointestinal injury caused by various insults, including NSAIDs and oxidative stress.
Key implications
The findings underscore the dual nature of H₂S in the gut: while high levels can exacerbate gut diseases by disrupting microbiota biofilms and increasing the adhesion of pathogenic microbes, low levels of H₂S produced endogenously or administered exogenously may offer therapeutic benefits. This suggests that H₂S could be used as a targeted therapeutic to restore gut health, especially in conditions like IBD, where microbiota dysbiosis and inflammation play a central role. The review also points to the potential of dietary interventions, such as consuming sulfur-rich foods, to modulate H₂S production in the gut and promote microbiota stability. Future research should focus on understanding the molecular mechanisms behind H₂S’s interaction with the microbiome and its potential to improve treatments for inflammatory and infectious diseases.
Avoiding death by autophagy: interactions of Listeria monocytogenes with the macrophage autophagy system
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review explains how Listeria monocytogenes triggers and then evades macrophage autophagy, including SLAP formation that supports slow intracellular persistence.
What was reviewed?
This paper reviewed how autophagy (a core innate defense pathway) interacts with Listeria monocytogenes during macrophage infection, with emphasis on when autophagy targets the bacterium and how the pathogen avoids being cleared. It synthesized evidence that Listeria triggers autophagy during phagosomal escape and can also be targeted in the cytosol, yet still maintains intracellular survival through coordinated virulence programs that reshape vacuole fate and cell-to-cell spread.
Who was reviewed?
The review centered on host macrophages infected with Listeria monocytogenes and compared key observations across common experimental host cell systems. It also referenced related cytosol-adapted pathogens to clarify general autophagy-evasion logic, but the main biological “actors” were Listeria virulence factors (notably listeriolysin O and phospholipases C) and host autophagy machinery (such as LC3-marked compartments) that determine whether bacteria get routed to degradative autolysosomes or persist in altered vesicles.
What were the most important findings?
Autophagy can recognize Listeria in listeriolysin O–damaged phagosomes early after infection, with a notable fraction of intracellular bacteria showing autophagy-marker association around 1 hour, then declining as infection progresses, consistent with active evasion. In the cytosol, autophagy targets bacteria most efficiently when actin-based motility is impaired, supporting ActA as a major autophagy-avoidance factor; phospholipases C add another evasion layer, plausibly by interfering with autophagosome membranes. A key mechanistic outcome is the formation of Spacious Listeria-containing Phagosomes (SLAPs), autophagosome-like enlarged compartments that do not mature properly; in SLAPs, Listeria grows slowly but persists, especially when listeriolysin O activity is insufficient for full escape yet sufficient to block lysosomal fusion. For a microbiome signatures database, the major microbial association is not a community shift but a pathogen–host pathway signature: intracellular L. monocytogenes persistence associates with LLO/PLC/ActA function and LC3-positive vacuolar routing rather than reliable bacterial clearance.
What are the greatest implications of this study/ review?
Clinically, this review supports a practical idea: host defense failure against Listeria can reflect pathway-level immune evasion rather than simple immune weakness, meaning persistent or relapsing infection may arise when bacteria enter a “slow-growth, vesicle-resident” state instead of being eliminated. It also frames SLAP-like persistence as a plausible in vivo reservoir during prolonged infection, which can matter when patients have impaired adaptive immunity or when early intracellular events limit effective clearance. For translational microbiome and host-response work, it argues that measuring autophagy engagement alone is not enough; clinicians and researchers should also track markers of autophagy completion, lysosomal fusion, and bacterial escape/spread programs that convert autophagy from a killing pathway into a containment stalemate.
Metallophores Drive Staphylococcus aureus Virulence and Pathogenicity
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Metallophores in S. aureus enable metal acquisition and virulence; disrupting these systems may offer novel antimicrobial strategies.
What was reviewed?
This review article comprehensively examined the role of metallophores in the pathogenicity and virulence of Staphylococcus aureus, emphasizing their molecular structures, biosynthetic pathways, transport mechanisms, and regulatory systems. The authors detail the distinct types of metallophores produced by S. aureus—including staphyloferrin A, staphyloferrin B, staphylobactin, aureochelin, and the broad-spectrum staphylopine—highlighting their importance in overcoming host nutritional immunity during infection.
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesizes data from numerous studies involving both in vitro and in vivo models, including murine infection systems. It primarily focuses on Staphylococcus aureus as a pathogen, but also references bacterial competitors and host immune responses to illustrate how metallophores enable S. aureus to outcompete other microbes and evade host defenses.
Most important findings
Metallophores are crucial for S. aureus to acquire essential metal ions under host-imposed metal-limiting conditions. The review identifies two primary iron-chelating siderophores (staphyloferrin A and B), a hydroxamate-type siderophore (staphylobactin), and the less-characterized aureochelin. Staphylopine, a nicotianamine-like opine metallophore, is distinguished by its ability to chelate multiple metals, including zinc and nickel. The regulation of metallophore systems is tightly controlled by metal-responsive regulators Fur and Zur. Notably, staphylopine acts as a zincophore, essential in zinc-limited environments. S. aureus also imports xenosiderophores produced by other microbes, further enhancing its adaptability and virulence.
Table: Summary of S. aureus Metallophores
Metallophore
Metal Target(s)
Regulatory Proteins
Transporter
Staphyloferrin A
Iron
Fur
HtsABC
Staphyloferrin B
Iron
Fur
SirABC
Staphylobactin
Iron
Fur
SirABC
Aureochelin
Iron (phenolate/catecholate)
Unknown
Unknown
Staphylopine
Zn, Ni, Co, Cu, Fe (broad)
Fur and Zur
CntABCDF, CntE export
Key implications
Understanding the metallophore-mediated metal acquisition systems of S. aureus reveals critical virulence mechanisms that could be therapeutically targeted. Disrupting these systems—especially the staphylopine pathway—could impair bacterial fitness under nutrient-limited conditions, attenuate virulence, and enhance susceptibility to host immune defenses. The insights into regulatory systems (Fur/Zur) and unique transporters also pave the way for antimicrobial strategies that block metallophore synthesis or function without relying on traditional antibiotics.
The Key Element Role of Metallophores in the Pathogenicity and Virulence of Staphylococcus aureus: A Review
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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What Was Reviewed?
This review, titled "The Key Element Role of Metallophores in the Pathogenicity and Virulence of Staphylococcus aureus", systematically evaluates the types, mechanisms, and regulatory controls of metallophores secreted by Staphylococcus aureus(S. aureus), with a strong emphasis on their contribution to virulence, nutrient acquisition, and competition within the host and microbial environment. Metallophores, including siderophores and the broad-spectrum metallophore staphylopine, are critically analyzed in terms of biosynthesis, genetic regulation, transport systems, and their role in overcoming host-imposed nutritional immunity. The paper also reviews recent structural biology studies targeting key components of metallophore systems to inform potential therapeutic strategies.
Who Was Reviewed?
The review focuses on Staphylococcus aureus, a Gram-positive opportunistic pathogen implicated in a wide range of infections from skin abscesses to systemic diseases. It explores in detail the molecular systems by which this species acquires iron, zinc, nickel, and other transition metals critical for its survival and virulence during infection.
Most Important Findings
Metallophores enable S. aureus to scavenge essential metals under hostile conditions where the host immune system limits free metal availability—a strategy known as nutritional immunity. The review details the production and transport of several siderophores including staphyloferrin A, staphyloferrin B, staphylobactin, and aureochelin, all of which are iron-specific. Additionally, it describes staphylopine, a unique opine-type metallophore with a broader spectrum, capable of binding not only zinc and nickel, but also cobalt, copper, and iron.
Each metallophore is tightly regulated by metal-dependent repressors such as Fur (ferric uptake regulator) and Zur (zinc uptake regulator), and imported/exported via specific ABC transporters. Notably, staphylopine biosynthesis is coordinated by the cnt operon (cntKLMABCDFE), and it functions both as a zincophore and a general metallophore depending on environmental conditions. Experimental models confirm that disruption of these metal acquisition systems (e.g., cntA, cntL, sbn operon) results in reduced virulence, impaired colonization, and growth defects under metal-limited conditions.
From a microbiome perspective, S. aureus exhibits competitive fitness by sequestering not only its own siderophores but also xenosiderophores produced by other microbes, thereby facilitating ecological dominance in polymicrobial niches. The ability to outcompete commensal and pathogenic microorganisms in metal-scarce environments is a key microbial signature that underscores the transition of S. aureus from commensal to pathobiont.
Importantly, the paper identifies Staphylococcus aureus as a pathogen with a high degree of metallomic plasticity. The presence of metallophores and associated regulators in infection states and may represent a microbial signature trait in the pathogenesis of diseases involving S. aureus. These systems, particularly the Cnt-staphylopine axis, are promising therapeutic targets for disrupting bacterial metal acquisition without affecting host cells.
Greatest Implications
This review provides compelling evidence that metallophore production is central to S. aureus pathogenesis, positioning these systems as high-value targets for antimicrobial therapy and vaccine development. From a microbiome signatures standpoint, the presence of metallophore-related genes and transporters may act as predictive biomarkers of virulent S. aureus strains. The dual role of metallophores in nutrient acquisition and interspecies microbial competition strengthens the relevance of metallomic analysis in future microbiome studies, especially in clinical settings where S. aureus is a known pathobiont.
In practical terms, this review underscores the therapeutic potential of inhibitors targeting staphylopine synthesis (e.g., CntL, CntK), or its transport systems (e.g., CntA, CntE), which have already been structurally characterized. Integrating metallophore profiling into diagnostic platforms may refine disease risk stratification and intervention strategies, particularly in antibiotic-resistant strains like MRSA.
Zinc in Human Health and Infectious Diseases
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review maps zinc in human health and infectious diseases, linking host zinc control to pathogen survival, clinical trial signals, and simple gene and protein markers that explain microbiome shifts under zinc pressure.
What was reviewed?
This review explains zinc in human health and infectious diseases and shows how zinc status shapes immune defense and pathogen control. The review describes zinc transport and storage, the ZIP and ZnT transporter families, metallothioneins, and S100 proteins such as calprotectin. It links zinc deficiency to a higher risk of respiratory infections, diarrhea, malaria, HIV, tuberculosis, and worse outcomes in sepsis, while zinc support can shorten common cold illness and some pneumonias. It also shows how illness shifts serum zinc into the liver via IL-6–driven ZIP14, lowering circulating zinc to starve microbes. The paper connects these host moves to pathogen countermeasures and to trial data on zinc supplements across infections.
Who was reviewed?
The review draws on adult and child populations from diverse regions, including elders in high-income countries and children in low-income settings where diet limits zinc. It summarizes human trials on colds, pneumonias, diarrhea, malaria, HIV, tuberculosis, and COVID-19, and adds cell and animal data that explain zinc signals in neutrophils, monocytes, and T cells. It also covers pathogens such as Candida albicans, Staphylococcus aureus, Escherichia coli, Helicobacter pylori, Neisseria species, and Mycobacterium tuberculosis to show how host zinc withholding or overload pressures shape survival.
Most important findings
Zinc sits at the center of nutritional immunity. Neutrophils release calprotectin, which binds zinc and limits the growth of Candida albicans and major bacteria; neutrophil traps carry calprotectin to infection sites and add killing power. During acute infection, IL-6 induces ZIP14, serum zinc falls, and the liver sequesters zinc, which denies microbes a key nutrient. Pathogens respond with high-affinity importers such as ZnuABC and surface proteins like ZnuD or TdfH that strip zinc from host proteins, yet many still exhibit slow growth under zinc restriction. In trials, zinc lozenges can shorten common cold duration, and zinc helps some childhood pneumonias and diarrheal disease, though results vary by dose, timing, and baseline status. The review warns that excess zinc can block copper uptake and disturb the copper–zinc balance, which links to poor outcomes in several diseases.
Key implications
Clinicians should check diet risk and disease context when they consider zinc. In patients with frequent viral colds or acute childhood diarrhea, short courses of oral zinc can aid recovery, while severe sepsis does not show clear benefit and may worsen with untargeted dosing. During acute inflammation, falling serum zinc reflects a host strategy, not simple deficiency, so replacement should match clinical goals. Because zinc and copper compete, long high-dose zinc can trigger copper lack, anemia, and immune harm; balance matters. For microbiome reporting, record zinc exposure, the copper–zinc ratio, and gene reads for znuA/B/C or znuD in pathogens, and calprotectin or ZIP14 in host samples. These markers explain shifts in pathogen load and can enrich a microbiome signatures database with metal-stress features that track response to care.
Probiotics as Anti-Tumor Agents: Insights from Female Tumor Cell Culture Studies
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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Breast Cancer
Breast Cancer
Traditionally linked to genetic predispositions and environmental exposures, emerging evidence highlights the microbiome as a critical and underappreciated factor influencing breast cancer progression, immune response, and treatment outcomes.
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Probiotics were shown to significantly reduce cancer cell proliferation, promote apoptosis, and inhibit migration in breast and ovarian cancer cells, suggesting their potential as adjunctive cancer therapies.
What was studied?
This study explores the effects of probiotics as potential anti-tumor agents in two female cancer cell lines: MDA-MB-231 (triple-negative breast cancer) and OVCAR-3 (ovarian adenocarcinoma). Researchers tested several probiotic strains, including Streptococcus thermophilus, Lactobacillus delbrueckii, and Bifidobacterium lactis, assessing their impact on cancer cell proliferation, migration, and protein expression related to the cell cycle and apoptosis.
Who was studied?
The study focused on two human cancer cell lines: MDA-MB-231, representing triple-negative breast cancer, and OVCAR-3, an ovarian adenocarcinoma cell line. These cell lines were chosen due to their relevance in aggressive forms of cancer, which are often characterized by high proliferation rates and metastatic potential. Probiotic strains were applied in vitro to test their anti-tumor effects.
Most important findings
The study demonstrated that probiotic lysates significantly reduced the proliferation of both cancer cell lines. Specifically, the Lactobacillus strains (E and F) showed the most promising anti-proliferative effects, with a reduction of up to 70% in cell proliferation. Western blot analysis revealed key molecular changes: an increase in phosphorylated p53 (a tumor suppressor protein) in the OVCAR-3 cells, suggesting a potential induction of apoptosis. Additionally, there was a notable decrease in proteins associated with cancer cell survival and migration, including cyclin D1 (critical for cell cycle progression), p-ERK1 (involved in survival signaling), and RhoA (linked to cell migration). The probiotic treatment reduced cell migration, particularly in the OVCAR-3 cells, without affecting non-cancerous cells, highlighting a degree of specificity for tumor cells.
Probiotic Strain
Actions
Streptococcus thermophilus
Antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, anti-mutagenic
Lactobacillus delbrueckii
Inhibits colitis-associated cancer development
Bifidobacterium lactis
Supports intestinal barrier function, anti-cancer
Lactobacillus acidophilus
Anticarcinogenic, immune stimulation
Lactobacillus rhamnosus
Anti-colon cancer, modulates gut microbiota
Lactobacillus casei
Immune system stimulation, anticarcinogenic
Key implications
The findings suggest that certain probiotic strains may offer new adjunctive therapies for cancer treatment, specifically in breast and ovarian cancers. Their ability to reduce tumor cell proliferation, promote cell death, and inhibit migration could complement existing treatments, potentially improving patient outcomes. However, further studies are needed, especially in vivo, to explore the full potential and safety of probiotics as cancer therapies. The specificity of probiotics for tumor cells without harming healthy cells is a critical factor for their future clinical use.
The Effect of Microbiome-Derived Metabolites in Inflammation-Related Cancer Prevention and Treatment
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review explores the role of microbiome-derived metabolites in inflammation-related cancer prevention and treatment, highlighting their dual effects in modulating inflammation and immune responses. It discusses key metabolites such as SCFAs, polyamines, and bile acids, along with emerging therapies and the challenges in translating these findings into clinical practice.
What was studied?
The review explores the effects of microbiome-derived metabolites in inflammation-related cancer prevention and treatment. It focuses on how microbial metabolites such as short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs), polyamines, indoles, and bile acids influence inflammation, which plays a critical role in cancer progression. The review emphasizes the dualistic nature of these metabolites, where some contribute to cancer prevention through anti-inflammatory effects, while others, such as secondary bile acids, may exacerbate tumor progression. It also examines the molecular pathways involved, including immune regulation and epigenetic modifications, and highlights emerging therapeutic strategies targeting microbiome-derived metabolites.
Who was studied?
The review synthesizes research from preclinical and clinical studies involving various cancer types, including colorectal, liver, breast, and prostate cancers. It discusses the effects of specific microbial metabolites on inflammation and immune modulation, focusing on their potential to prevent or treat cancer. The studies cover both healthy individuals and cancer patients, evaluating the role of dietary fibers, probiotics, and microbiome-engineered therapies in influencing cancer outcomes. Additionally, the review includes evidence from experimental models and human trials that assess the impact of microbiome-derived metabolites on tumorigenesis and therapy responses.
Most important findings
Microbiome-derived metabolites, particularly SCFAs like butyrate, play a crucial role in cancer prevention by inducing apoptosis in cancer cells, enhancing immune responses, and maintaining intestinal barrier integrity. SCFAs also regulate immune cell differentiation, particularly regulatory T cells (Tregs), which suppress inflammation and contribute to an anti-tumor environment. Polyamines such as spermidine also influence inflammation and tumor growth but show a complex, dual role, where they can both promote cell proliferation and apoptosis depending on the context. Indole derivatives, produced by gut bacteria from tryptophan, modulate immune tolerance and reduce chronic inflammation. Secondary bile acids, on the other hand, exhibit a pro-inflammatory role in some cancers, promoting tumor progression. Despite promising results, challenges such as metabolite stability, bioavailability, and individual microbiome variability remain significant hurdles in applying these findings to cancer therapy.
Key implications
The review underscores the therapeutic potential of microbiome-derived metabolites in cancer prevention and treatment. It suggests that SCFAs and indoles, with their anti-inflammatory and immunomodulatory effects, could serve as powerful adjuncts to traditional cancer therapies. However, the review also highlights the complexity of using microbial metabolites in clinical practice, given their variability in effectiveness due to individual differences in microbiome composition. Personalized microbiome-based therapies that tailor interventions to an individual’s microbiome profile could enhance the precision and efficacy of cancer treatments. Future research should focus on overcoming the challenges of metabolite stability and bioavailability, along with developing new strategies for targeting inflammation-driven cancers using microbiome-derived metabolites.
Spatial Heterogeneity of Intratumoral Microbiota: A New Frontier in Cancer Immunotherapy Resistance
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Intratumoural Microbiota
Intratumoural Microbiota
With the growing understanding of the intratumoral microbiota’s influence on cancer progression, the next frontier in cancer therapy is microbiota-targeted interventions. By introducing beneficial microbes or altering existing microbial populations within tumors, therapies can be designed to modulate the immune system, promote tumor suppression, and improve drug efficacy. However, challenges remain in deciphering the complex relationships between microbes, tumor cells, and the immune system, necessitating more refined research methods and standardized approaches to translate these discoveries into clinical practice.
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This review investigates the spatial heterogeneity of intratumoral microbiota and its impact on cancer immunotherapy resistance. It highlights how microbial distribution within tumors influences immune responses and treatment efficacy, suggesting new strategies to overcome resistance and improve cancer therapy outcomes.
What was studied?
This review article focuses on the spatial heterogeneity of intratumoral microbiota and its role in cancer immunotherapy resistance. It explores how microbial communities within tumors are unevenly distributed across different tumor regions, influencing immune responses, tumor progression, and therapeutic resistance. The study investigates how variations in microbial composition, metabolic products, and immune interactions within different regions of the tumor microenvironment (TME) contribute to differential responses to immunotherapy. It emphasizes the importance of understanding the spatial distribution of intratumoral microbiota for developing novel therapeutic strategies to overcome resistance to immunotherapy, particularly immune checkpoint inhibitors.
Who was studied?
The article reviews data from clinical and preclinical studies investigating intratumoral microbiota in various cancer types, including colorectal, breast, pancreatic, and oral cancers. The studies highlighted the presence of specific microbial species in different tumor regions, their interaction with immune cells, and their impact on cancer progression and treatment outcomes. These studies include investigations on how bacterial, fungal, and viral populations within the TME are influenced by tumor-specific factors, such as vascularity, hypoxia, and immune cell infiltration. The research also examines the implications of microbial spatial heterogeneity on therapeutic responses, particularly focusing on immune checkpoint inhibitors and chemotherapy.
Most important findings
The review highlights several key findings related to the spatial heterogeneity of intratumoral microbiota. It identifies how microbial communities differ significantly between various regions of the tumor, such as the tumor core, invasive margins, and immune-exclusion zones. This heterogeneity is influenced by factors like tumor anatomy, local immune status, and treatment interventions. Specific bacteria, such as Fusobacterium nucleatum, Bacteroides fragilis, and Malassezia, were found to be enriched in certain tumor areas, influencing immune cell infiltration and immune checkpoint expression. For instance, Fusobacterium nucleatum is shown to thrive in hypoxic regions of colorectal cancer, where it contributes to immune evasion by interacting with immune cells like T cells and myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSCs). Additionally, microbial metabolites, such as short-chain fatty acids and lactate, establish spatial gradients within tumors that affect immune cell function and contribute to therapeutic resistance. These findings suggest that the spatial distribution of microbiota within tumors can significantly modulate immune responses and impact the efficacy of immunotherapy.
Key implications
The findings of this review underscore the potential of targeting the spatial heterogeneity of intratumoral microbiota to improve cancer treatment outcomes. By understanding the microbial composition and spatial distribution within the TME, clinicians could develop more personalized and precise treatment strategies, potentially enhancing the effectiveness of immunotherapy. The review suggests that therapeutic interventions targeting the microbiota, such as engineered bacteria, probiotics, or bacteriophage therapy, could help reshape the TME and overcome resistance to immune checkpoint inhibitors. However, challenges remain in developing strategies to precisely manipulate microbial populations within tumors, as well as in understanding the full range of microbial interactions and their impact on tumor progression and immune responses. Further research is needed to refine these approaches and explore their clinical applicability.
Heavy Metal–Gut Microbiota Interactions: Probiotics Modulation and Biosensors Detection
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review highlights how heavy metals alter the gut microbiota and discusses the potential of probiotics to mitigate these effects. It also emphasizes the role of advanced biosensors in detecting heavy metals in urine, supporting real-time monitoring of detoxification processes.
What was studied?
This review investigates the interactions between heavy metals (HMs) and the gut microbiota, with a specific focus on how probiotics can modulate these effects. The study also emphasizes the role of advanced biosensors in detecting HMs in urine, providing a non-invasive and rapid method to monitor HM exposure and the effectiveness of probiotic-based detoxification interventions. By exploring the bidirectional relationship between HMs and gut microbiota, the review highlights how HMs disrupt microbial balance and how probiotics can potentially reverse these effects, offering protective benefits for gut health and promoting detoxification.
Who was studied?
This review encompasses studies conducted across various animal models, including rodents, chickens, and fish, with a focus on understanding how heavy metal exposure alters the gut microbiota. In particular, it examines the effects of metals like arsenic, cadmium, mercury, and lead, and how they induce dysbiosis in the gut. Additionally, the study discusses the role of probiotics from genera such as Lactobacillus, Bifidobacterium, and Clostridium in alleviating heavy metal toxicity and restoring gut microbial balance. The review integrates findings from laboratory studies that explore these microbial changes and the potential therapeutic role of probiotics in counteracting HM-induced dysbiosis.
Most important findings
The study found that exposure to heavy metals significantly alters the gut microbiota composition, typically reducing microbial diversity and increasing the abundance of pathogenic bacteria. For example, arsenic exposure leads to a decrease in Bacteroidetes and Firmicutes, while promoting the growth of Verrucomicrobia and pathogenic bacteria like Helicobacter. Similarly, cadmium exposure reduces the diversity of the gut microbiome, increasing harmful bacteria like Escherichia coli, while beneficial microbes such as Akkermansia muciniphila are reduced. In contrast, probiotics have shown promise in mitigating these effects. Probiotic strains like Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium have been found to resist heavy metals and help restore microbial balance by enhancing the excretion of toxins. Biosensors have become vital tools in detecting heavy metal concentrations in urine, providing a real-time, cost-effective method for monitoring the effectiveness of probiotic interventions.
Key implications
The findings suggest that heavy metal exposure can have profound and long-lasting effects on gut health, potentially contributing to the onset or worsening of various diseases. The review emphasizes the importance of gut microbiota in regulating the bioavailability and toxicity of heavy metals, and the therapeutic potential of probiotics in modulating these effects. By restoring microbial balance, probiotics can enhance detoxification processes, providing a safer and more effective alternative to traditional detox methods. Biosensors further enhance the potential for real-time monitoring of heavy metal exposure, offering a non-invasive and efficient means of tracking the success of probiotic interventions. The review also highlights the need for further research into the development of targeted probiotic therapies and biosensors to improve heavy metal detoxification strategies, particularly for vulnerable populations.
A new role of glutathione peroxidase 4 during human erythroblast enucleation
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study identifies GPX4 as essential for human erythroblast enucleation, independent of ferroptosis. The results show that lipid raft clustering and myosin phosphorylation, which are necessary for enucleation, are disrupted in GPX4-deficient cells, and cholesterol supplementation can partially restore enucleation efficiency.
What was studied?
The study explored the role of GPX4 (Glutathione Peroxidase 4) in human erythroblast enucleation, a key process in erythropoiesis, where the nucleus is extruded from the mature erythroblast to form reticulocytes. GPX4, known for its role in protecting cells from oxidative stress, was specifically investigated to determine whether it plays a role in the final stages of erythroblast differentiation. The study used pharmacological inhibition (via RSL3) and shRNA-mediated knockdown of GPX4 to assess its function in enucleation, distinct from its known role in ferroptosis.
Who was studied?
This study primarily focused on human erythroblast progenitors, specifically CD34+ cells from healthy human leukapheresis samples. These cells were cultured and differentiated ex vivo under controlled conditions to assess the effects of GPX4 inhibition during erythropoiesis. The research compared the effects of GPX4 inhibition at various stages of erythroid differentiation, particularly during the final stages of orthochromatic erythroblast maturation, where nucleus extrusion (enucleation) occurs.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed that GPX4 is required for proper erythroblast enucleation, and its inhibition significantly impairs this process. Notably, the authors found that the inhibition of GPX4 by RSL3 (a pharmacological inhibitor) or shRNA-mediated knockdown led to a reduction in enucleation efficiency. However, this defect was not due to ferroptosis, as lipid peroxidation levels were only weakly affected, and ferroptosis inhibitors like tocopherol, ferrostatin, and deferoxamine did not reverse the defect. The key finding was that GPX4's involvement in enucleation is independent of its ferroptosis-regulatory role. Instead, the impairment was linked to a disruption in lipid raft clustering and myosin phosphorylation, processes essential for the contractile ring assembly (CAR) during cytokinesis. Furthermore, exogenous cholesterol was able to partially restore enucleation by promoting lipid raft integrity, despite GPX4 knockdown. The results suggest that GPX4 plays a crucial role in lipid raft organization at the cleavage furrow, which is necessary for efficient enucleation during human erythropoiesis.
What are the greatest implications of this study/review?
The findings suggest that GPX4 is a critical player in the final stages of erythropoiesis, particularly during nucleus extrusion. This could have significant implications for hematological diseases involving ineffective erythropoiesis, such as thalassemia and myelodysplastic syndromes, where enucleation is often impaired. Understanding the ferroptosis-independent roles of GPX4 could help design therapeutic strategies targeting GPX4 or related pathways in anemia or conditions associated with disrupted erythropoiesis. Additionally, the study highlights the importance of lipid rafts and cholesterol metabolism in enucleation, suggesting that modulating cholesterol levels could offer a potential therapeutic approach to overcome enucleation defects in various hematological disorders. This work could also influence stem cell therapies for red blood cell production by enhancing the efficiency of erythrocyte generation in ex vivo cultures, potentially benefiting transfusion medicine.
Gut Microbiota as Potential Biomarker and/or Therapeutic Target to Improve the Management of Cancer
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review explains how gut microbiota can guide cancer screening and treatment, focusing on colibactin-producing E. coli in colorectal cancer. It links pks-positive E. coli to DNA damage, mutational fingerprints, senescence, and immune changes, and it outlines ways to target colibactin activity.
What was reviewed?
This review evaluated how gut microbiota patterns can function as cancer biomarkers and therapeutic targets, then concentrated on colibactin-producing, pks-positive Escherichia coli as a clinically relevant microbial feature in colorectal cancer. The authors synthesized human cohort data on fecal and mucosa-associated microbial signatures for screening and prognosis, and they integrated mechanistic work explaining how specific bacteria influence tumor biology and treatment response. Within that framework, they treated colibactin-producing E. coli as a prime example of a pathobiont that links microbial colonization to measurable molecular injury and clinically meaningful outcomes.
Who was reviewed?
The paper drew evidence from observational studies in people with colorectal cancer and controls using stool, mucosal, tissue, and occasionally blood-based microbial readouts, alongside preclinical validation in multiple mouse models and cell-based systems. For the colibactin focus, the review relied heavily on studies comparing mucosa-associated pks-positive E. coli in colorectal cancer tissue versus noncancer tissue, plus experimental models where colonization with colibactin-producing strains altered tumor development, immune context, or therapy response. It also discussed broader cancer settings, including cohorts that linked baseline gut microbiota profiles to immunotherapy outcomes in non-CRC cancers.
What were the most important findings?
The review emphasized that no single “universal” colorectal cancer microbiome exists, but reproducible patterns emerge that include enrichment of Fusobacterium nucleatum, enterotoxigenic Bacteroides fragilis, and colibactin-associated pks-positive E. coli, especially when organisms are detected near the mucosa. For microbiome-signature databases, the major microbial association that stands out is mucosa-associated CoPEC because it ties a taxonomic feature to a defined genotoxic mechanism. The authors highlighted converging evidence that colibactin can alkylate DNA, generate cross-links and double-strand breaks, create AT-rich damage hotspots, and leave recognizable mutational footprints that appear in subsets of human colorectal tumors. They also underscored non–DNA-only effects, including oxidative stress with impaired repair signaling, senescence with a growth-factor secretory program, and immune shaping characterized by reduced antitumor T-cell infiltration, which collectively support a tumor-promoting microenvironment.
What are the greatest implications of this study/ review?
This review supports using gut microbiota features as practical tools to improve cancer management, but it argues that the highest clinical value comes from biomarkers anchored to mechanism and proximity, such as pks-positive E. coli at the mucosa rather than stool-only presence. It also frames CoPEC as both a risk and progression marker and as a therapeutic target, suggesting that selectively blocking colibactin activity could reduce tumor-promoting pressure without needing broad microbiome eradication. Finally, it reinforces that microbiome-informed care must account for tumor heterogeneity and treatment context because bacteria can influence screening signals, prognosis, and therapy response through distinct pathways that may require different intervention strategies.
Towards Understanding Tumour Colonisation by Probiotic Bacterium E. coli Nissle 1917
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 (EcN) shows promise as a tumour-targeting probiotic bacterium for cancer treatment and detection. This review investigates its tumour-homing abilities and outlines future research directions to optimize its use in clinical oncology.
What was studied?
The study reviewed the tumour-homing capabilities of Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 (EcN), particularly its use in cancer detection and treatment. The ability of genetically modified EcN to target and colonize tumour tissue, bypassing normal tissues, has made it an attractive candidate for cancer therapies. The review examined the biological mechanisms underlying EcN's preferential localization to tumors and discussed its potential as a tool for tumor detection and targeted drug delivery.
Who was studied?
The research primarily involved pre-clinical animal models, particularly mice, in which EcN was tested for its ability to localize within various types of tumors, including colorectal and melanoma. Human clinical studies are referenced, but the primary focus remains on animal models used to understand EcN's tumour-targeting capabilities.
Most important findings
EcN demonstrates the ability to colonize tumors over healthy tissue selectively. The mechanisms behind this preferential targeting are not yet fully understood, but they are believed to involve factors such as tumour vasculature, immune evasion, and metabolic conditions within the tumour. EcN's properties, such as its ability to survive in diverse environmental conditions and express adhesins, allow it to thrive in tumour microenvironments. Genetic modifications have enhanced its potential for delivering therapeutic payloads, including immune-activating compounds and cytotoxic proteins, effectively reducing tumour burdens in animal models.
Key implications
The study suggests that EcN could be engineered for more effective tumour detection and treatment. Understanding how EcN homed to tumour sites could lead to better-designed probiotic-based therapies, minimizing off-target effects and improving patient safety. Additionally, it could help address biosafety concerns for clinical applications, enabling broader use of EcN in oncology.
Probiotics Mechanism of Action on Immune Cells and Beneficial Effects on Human Health
February 12, 2026
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Probiotics
Probiotics
Probiotics are live microorganisms that offer significant health benefits when administered in adequate amounts. They primarily work by modulating the gut microbiome, supporting a balanced microbial ecosystem. Probiotics have been shown to improve gut health, modulate immune responses, and even influence metabolic and mental health disorders. With growing evidence supporting their therapeutic potential, probiotics are increasingly recognized for their role in treating conditions like irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), antibiotic-associated diarrhea (AAD), and even mental health conditions like depression and anxiety through their impact on the gut-brain axis.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review examines the immunomodulatory effects of probiotics, detailing how they enhance immune functions through interactions with immune cells in the gut. Probiotics help regulate cytokine release, boost IgA production, and support gut health, offering potential therapeutic benefits for immune disorders.
What was studied?
The review explores the immunomodulatory effects of probiotics on the human immune system. It focuses on the mechanisms through which probiotics interact with immune cells, specifically in the gut, to regulate immune responses and improve overall health. The article emphasizes the role of probiotics in enhancing immune system functions, particularly in preventing infections, reducing inflammation, and maintaining homeostasis. It also delves into the molecular mechanisms, including cytokine release and receptor interactions, that facilitate these beneficial effects.
Who was studied?
The review synthesizes findings from in vitro, in vivo, and clinical studies involving various probiotic strains such as Lactobacillus, Bifidobacterium, and Escherichia coli, as well as their effects on different immune cells, including T lymphocytes, dendritic cells (DCs), macrophages, and B cells. It highlights studies on both healthy individuals and those with conditions such as inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), infections, allergies, and immune dysfunctions. The focus is on how these probiotic strains influence immune functions, such as the production of immunoglobulin A (IgA) and the modulation of inflammatory cytokines.
Most important findings
Probiotics, particularly strains of Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium, enhance immune responses by interacting with the gut's immune cells. They stimulate the production of IgA, modulate Treg (regulatory T) cells, and regulate the release of pro-inflammatory and anti-inflammatory cytokines. For instance, Lactobacillus casei and Lactobacillus rhamnosus were found to increase IgA production and enhance immune functions in both healthy and disease states. Probiotics also promote the expression of key immune receptors like TLR2 and CD206 on immune cells, thereby facilitating immune activation and modulation. Additionally, probiotics play a role in gut health by improving the intestinal barrier, preventing pathogen adhesion, and promoting beneficial microbial interactions. These effects are particularly important for managing conditions like IBD, allergies, and infections.
Key implications
The findings suggest that probiotics are an effective tool for enhancing immune system performance, particularly in regulating inflammatory responses and preventing immune-related disorders. The immunomodulatory properties of probiotics offer a potential therapeutic approach for conditions like allergies, IBD, and even infections. By modulating immune responses in the gut, probiotics may also have broader systemic effects on overall health, including influencing the gut-brain axis and the gut-lung axis. Further research into the specific molecular pathways and probiotic strains is needed to optimize their use in clinical practice.
Listeria monocytogenes Internalin and E-cadherin: From Bench to Bedside
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study investigates the role of Listeria monocytogenes internalin A in the interaction with human E-cadherin, essential for invasion across host barriers, including the placenta, highlighting its species specificity and implications for listeriosis pathogenesis.
What was studied?
This study focused on the interaction between Listeria monocytogenes internalin A (InlA) and the host receptor E-cadherin. The research explored how this interaction contributes to the pathogen’s ability to cross human host barriers, such as the intestinal, placental, and blood-brain barriers, during infection. The study also investigated the structural aspects of InlA and its role in the internalization process.
Who was studied?
The study primarily investigated Listeria monocytogenes and its surface protein InlA, which interacts with the E-cadherin receptor found on host epithelial cells. The research examined the effects of this interaction on the ability of Listeria to invade human cells, with a particular focus on humanized animal models and cell cultures expressing human E-cadherin.
What were the most important findings?
The study highlighted the critical role of InlA in facilitating Listeria monocytogenes invasion into nonphagocytic cells. The interaction between InlA and E-cadherin was shown to be essential for Listeria's ability to breach the intestinal barrier, and it was implicated in crossing the placental barrier as well. The research also demonstrated that the InlA–E-cadherin interaction is highly species-specific, with the interaction being functional in humans, guinea pigs, rabbits, and other species that express a specific proline residue at position 16 of the E-cadherin EC1 domain. Additionally, the study found that InlA-mediated infection is impaired in species with a glutamic acid substitution at this position, highlighting the importance of this amino acid in Listeria pathogenicity. Further analysis revealed that InlA’s interaction with E-cadherin promotes internalization of Listeria, and this process is supported by a cascade of intracellular signaling pathways that facilitate actin polymerization and cell-to-cell spread of the bacteria.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study has significant implications for understanding the pathogenesis of Listeria monocytogenes infections, especially in pregnant women, where the ability of Listeria to cross the placental barrier can lead to severe outcomes like abortion or neonatal infection. By elucidating the molecular details of InlA–E-cadherin interaction, the research opens potential avenues for therapeutic interventions that could block this interaction and prevent bacterial invasion. This understanding is also crucial for developing vaccines or treatments targeting specific stages of infection, particularly for individuals at high risk. Moreover, the study’s findings underscore the importance of E-cadherin as a receptor for both Listeria and other pathogens, providing broader insights into host–pathogen interactions and the role of cell adhesion molecules in infection.
Role of Probiotics in the Management of Helicobacter pylori
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review examines the use of probiotics in managing H. pylori infection, emphasizing their role in enhancing eradication rates, reducing side effects, and restoring gastric microbiota balance. The findings highlight the potential of probiotics as adjuncts to conventional antibiotic therapy.
What was studied?
This review investigates the role of probiotics in the management of Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) infection, a major cause of gastric disorders such as gastritis, peptic ulcers, and gastric cancer. The study examines how probiotics may be used as adjunctive therapy alongside traditional antibiotics to eradicate H. pylori more effectively, while minimizing the adverse effects commonly associated with antibiotic treatments, such as diarrhea and gastric disturbances. The review discusses the mechanisms by which probiotics, particularly strains of Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium, compete with H. pylori for adhesion sites in the gut, produce antimicrobial substances like lactic acid and hydrogen peroxide, and modulate the immune response to enhance treatment efficacy.
Who was studied?
The review includes clinical trials, meta-analyses, and randomized controlled studies involving individuals infected with H. pylori, as well as studies focusing on the use of probiotics as part of treatment regimens. Probiotic strains such as Lactobacillus reuteri, Lactobacillus acidophilus, Bifidobacterium, and Saccharomyces boulardii were studied for their efficacy in reducing H. pylori colonization, enhancing gastric mucosal protection, and alleviating side effects of conventional therapy. The review draws on studies from diverse populations, including those from Asia and Europe, to examine how probiotics influence gastric microbiota composition and contribute to the improvement of gastric symptoms and treatment compliance. Studies also focused on patients with gastrointestinal disorders and those undergoing standard H. pylori eradication therapy (including triple or quadruple antibiotic regimens) combined with probiotic supplementation.
Most important findings
The review identifies several key findings related to the role of probiotics in managing H. pylori infection. First, it highlights the mechanisms of action of probiotics, noting that they compete with H. pylori for intestinal adhesion sites, thereby preventing bacterial colonization and reducing infection load. Additionally, probiotics were found to enhance the immune system, increasing the production of IgA antibodies and promoting mucosal barrier integrity, both of which contribute to protecting the stomach lining from H. pylori-induced damage. The study also emphasized the reduction of side effects such as diarrhea, which often occur during antibiotic therapy, and increased eradication rates when probiotics are used alongside standard treatments. Several clinical trials showed that combining probiotics with antibiotic regimens increased H. pylori eradication rates by 6-15% compared to antibiotic therapy alone, suggesting that probiotics offer significant clinical benefits. However, the review also notes that the effectiveness of probiotics can vary depending on the strain used and the dosage, with some probiotics showing more promise than others in eradicating H. pylori or reducing its pathogenicity.
Key implications
The findings suggest that probiotics can play a vital role in improving H. pylori treatment outcomes by increasing eradication rates and reducing side effects associated with antibiotic use. Given the rise in antibiotic resistance and the growing need for alternative therapies, the study highlights the potential of probiotics as a cost-effective and safer adjunct to conventional treatment regimens. Probiotic supplementation can help restore gastric microbial balance, support mucosal healing, and reduce gastric inflammation, thus improving patient compliance with treatment. The findings also underline the importance of selecting the right probiotic strain for H. pylori management, as not all probiotics are equally effective. Future clinical trials are needed to determine the optimal probiotic strains, doses, and treatment durations to maximize therapeutic benefits.
Magnesium Matters: A Comprehensive Review of Its Vital Role in Health and Diseases
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review explains how magnesium supports energy, vascular function, immunity, glucose control, bone strength, and muscle health, and how low intake or poor absorption can raise risks for cardiometabolic disease and inflammation. It also highlights gut factors that may reduce magnesium availability.
What was reviewed?
This article is a narrative review that synthesized what is known about magnesium’s roles in human physiology and disease, spanning basic mechanisms (enzyme activity, ATP-dependent energy production, ion-channel regulation, and cellular signaling) and clinical relevance across cardiometabolic, musculoskeletal, neurologic, and mental health outcomes. It also summarized dietary sources, factors that can reduce bioavailability, and clinical consequences of deficiency or insufficiency, with the goal of helping clinicians connect magnesium status to common chronic disease patterns rather than treating it as an isolated lab value.
Who was reviewed?
Because this was a review and not a single clinical study, it did not enroll one defined cohort; instead, it summarized findings from previously published human observational studies, clinical trials, and systematic reviews/meta-analyses across multiple populations. The literature it pulled from included adults with hypertension and cardiovascular disease risk, people with type 2 diabetes or insulin resistance, postmenopausal women and others at risk for osteoporosis, and groups studied for migraines, asthma, mental health symptoms, and aging-related outcomes, alongside supportive mechanistic and preclinical evidence where relevant.
What were the most important findings?
The core finding is that suboptimal magnesium status aligns with a recognizable, multi-system risk profile that clinicians see often: higher cardiometabolic risk, worse glucose handling, greater inflammatory tone, and increased neuromuscular irritability. Mechanistically, magnesium supports endothelial nitric oxide signaling and acts as a functional calcium antagonist in vascular smooth muscle, so deficiency plausibly pushes vasoconstriction and blood-pressure elevation while also destabilizing cardiac electrical activity. The review also emphasized a consistent inverse association between magnesium intake and type 2 diabetes risk, linking low magnesium to insulin resistance and impaired glucose metabolism, and it connected adequate magnesium to healthier bone mineralization and reduced osteoporosis risk.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
Clinically, this review supports treating magnesium as a high-leverage, low-cost modifier of chronic disease pathways rather than a niche electrolyte issue. It implies that patients with clustered problems—hypertension, insulin resistance, migraines, muscle cramps, fatigue, low mood, or age-related frailty—may benefit from a deliberate magnesium assessment and a food-first repletion strategy, with supplementation considered when intake is low or risk is high. For microbiome-informed care, the review reinforces that gut conditions and intestinal chemistry can shape magnesium bioavailability, so improving diet quality and gut function may indirectly improve magnesium status and downstream inflammatory-metabolic outcomes.
Diagnostic Procedures for Inflammatory Bowel Disease: Laboratory, Endoscopy, Pathology, Imaging, and Beyond
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Crohn’s Disease
Crohn’s Disease
Crohn's disease is a chronic inflammatory condition of the gastrointestinal tract that can cause a wide range of symptoms, including abdominal pain, diarrhea, and fatigue. The exact cause of the disease remains unclear, but it is believed to result from a combination of genetic predisposition and environmental factors. Although there is no cure, ongoing advancements in medical research continue to improve management strategies and quality of life for those affected by Crohn's disease.
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The study examines the role of microbiome in IBD, highlighting its potential in diagnosing, predicting disease progression, and personalizing treatments.
What was studied?
The study examined the diagnostic procedures used for inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), focusing on laboratory tests, endoscopy, imaging, and emerging biomarkers. It also explored the critical role of the gut microbiome in the pathogenesis of IBD, emphasizing how microbial signatures can contribute to both diagnosis and treatment efficacy, helping clinicians better understand the relationship between microbial composition and disease progression.
Who was studied?
The study reviewed IBD patients, particularly those with Crohn’s disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC), comparing their gut microbiota with that of healthy controls. Researchers analyzed microbial variations that could potentially be used as diagnostic markers for IBD, aiming to identify specific microbes associated with disease severity, treatment response, and remission.
Most important findings
The research revealed that IBD patients, particularly those with CD, exhibited significantly altered gut microbiota compared to healthy individuals. For example, patients with IBD had reduced levels of beneficial bacteria such as Faecalibacterium prausnitzii and Bifidobacterium species, which play a crucial role in maintaining gut health. Furthermore, microbiome profiles were linked to disease activity, with fewer butyrate-producing bacteria found in patients who required biological therapy. The study also showed that microbiome-based models could predict IBD with high accuracy, especially in distinguishing between CD and UC. For instance, Zhou et al. developed a model with an accuracy of 87.5% for CD and 79.1% for UC, highlighting the potential of microbiome signatures for early diagnosis and personalized treatment.
Key implications
The findings underscore the importance of integrating microbiome analysis into IBD management. The ability to track disease progression and predict treatment outcomes based on microbiota composition could lead to less invasive, more precise diagnostic methods. This would allow for tailored treatments that consider each patient’s microbial environment, potentially improving long-term outcomes and reducing the need for aggressive therapies.
Arsenic Exposure Perturbs the Gut Microbiome and Its Metabolic Profile in Mice: An Integrated Metagenomics and Metabolomics Analysis
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Arsenic exposure perturbs the gut microbiome in mice and rewires fecal, urinary, and plasma metabolites, including sharp shifts in indole and bile acid pathways, alongside loss of several Firmicutes families and a rise in a Clostridiales group, before any histologic injury appears.
What was studied?
This original study asked whether arsenic exposure perturbs the gut microbiome and its metabolic outputs in vivo. Investigators exposed specific-pathogen-free mice to sodium arsenite in drinking water (10 ppm) for four weeks, then combined 16S rRNA sequencing with liquid chromatography mass spectrometry metabolomics of feces, urine, and plasma. The work quantified exposure-driven shifts in community structure and linked them to altered small-molecule profiles. It further tested whether microbe–metabolite correlations reveal functional pathways affected by arsenic, focusing on bacterial families, indole derivatives from tryptophan metabolism, bile acid intermediates, and other diet- and host-derived compounds relevant to barrier function, energy harvest, and immune tone.
Who was studied?
The experiment used female C57BL/6 mice (about six to eight weeks old), housed under controlled temperature, humidity, and light cycles, with identical diets and filtered water. Ten animals received arsenic and ten served as controls. Researchers collected fecal pellets at necropsy and obtained urine and plasma close to the endpoint to capture steady-state microbial and metabolic signals. Body weight, intake, and standard histology did not differ between groups, isolating gut microbial and metabolic changes to arsenic exposure rather than systemic illness. Sample processing followed validated pipelines for QIIME-based taxonomic assignment and untargeted LC-MS feature discovery with subsequent metabolite identification by MS/MS.
Most important findings
Arsenic exposure produced a clear separation of microbial communities from controls by principal coordinates analysis and hierarchical clustering. Several Firmicutes families fell significantly, whereas one Firmicutes group within Clostridiales (Family XIII Incertae Sedis) rose about two-fold, indicating a compositional tilt away from typical short-chain-fatty-acid producers. In the fecal metabolome, 370 molecular features changed (224 decreased; 146 increased), and principal component analysis cleanly discriminated exposed from control mice.
Indole-pathway metabolites shifted markedly: indolelactic acid fell more than ten-fold, while indoxyl and 3-indolepropionic acid rose, each correlating with specific Firmicutes or Tenericutes families. Bile acid homeostasis also shifted, with reduced glycocholic acid in feces and increased excretion of 7-α-hydroxy-3-oxo-4-cholestenoate and a related degradation product, suggesting altered bile acid synthesis or enterohepatic cycling. Isoflavone metabolism signatures changed in parallel; fecal daidzein and dihydrodaidzein decreased, while O-desmethylangolensin increased and tracked with Bacilli-affiliated taxa. Correlation matrices linked these metabolite changes to the altered bacterial families, supporting a functional coupling between taxonomic and metabolic shifts under arsenic stress.
Key implications
For clinicians and translational researchers, these results define a coherent exposure signature: loss of multiple Firmicutes families commonly associated with butyrate production, broad remodeling of tryptophan-derived indoles that shape epithelial integrity and immune signaling, and disturbed bile acid handling that can influence glucose–lipid homeostasis and inflammation. Because the study observed no weight or histopathology differences, the microbiome and metabolome shifts likely precede overt tissue injury and may serve as early indicators of risk. For microbiome signature databases, the paired taxa–metabolite links (for example, depressed indolelactic acid with Firmicutes losses and increased O-desmethylangolensin with Bacilli) offer concrete features to catalog in arsenic-exposure panels.
Bacterial Heavy Metal Resistance Systems: Mechanisms, Genes, and Clinical Implications
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review examines bacterial resistance systems to toxic metals, detailing efflux pumps, ATPases, and metallothioneins. It explores their mechanisms, gene regulation, and clinical or environmental relevance.
What was reviewed?
This review by Silver and Ji comprehensively examined emerging bacterial resistance systems to toxic heavy metals, focusing on newer plasmid- and chromosomally encoded mechanisms in bacteria. It outlined the genetic and functional diversity of systems conferring resistance to metals such as copper, cadmium, zinc, arsenic, cobalt, and nickel. The review integrates structural, mechanistic, and regulatory insights from plasmid-encoded efflux pumps, metallothioneins, P-type ATPases, and chemiosmotic antiporters, shedding light on their evolutionary relationships, functional architecture, and regulatory components.
Who was reviewed?
The review surveyed resistance determinants in various bacterial genera, including Escherichia coli,Pseudomonas syringae, Staphylococcus aureus, Synechococcus, Enterococcus hirae, Bacillus firmus, and Alcaligenes eutrophus. These species span Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria and include both clinical and environmental isolates, such as pig-derived E. coli, phytopathogenic Pseudomonas and Xanthomonas, and metal-tolerant soil bacteria.
Most important findings
Bacteria have evolved diverse mechanisms to withstand toxic heavy metal exposure, many of which are encoded on plasmids or chromosomes and are tightly regulated. This review highlights five major systems of bacterial heavy metal resistance, each with distinct structural and functional components. These include the copper-responsive pco/cop operons, the arsenic-handling ars systems, cadmium-specific P-type ATPases, the ATP-independent czc and cnr antiporters for cobalt, zinc, and nickel, and the cyanobacterial metallothionein system regulated by smt genes. Together, these mechanisms illustrate the biochemical and genetic sophistication underlying microbial adaptation to metal stress.
Resistance System
Mechanism and Features
Copper (pco/cop)
Plasmid-encoded four-gene operon (pcoABCD/copABCD) in E. coli and P. syringae; encodes periplasmic and membrane proteins regulated by a two-component system (PcoR/PcoS) via histidine-aspartate phosphotransfer.
Arsenic (ars)
ArsB-mediated efflux of As[III]; ArsC reduces As[V] to As[III]. Gram-negatives include ATPase subunit ArsA; Gram-positives rely solely on ArsB and chemiosmotic transport.
Cadmium (cadA)
P-type ATPase CadA exports Cd²⁺ in Gram-positive bacteria; shares conserved motifs with human Menkes Cu²⁺ ATPase, illustrating cross-kingdom homology.
Cobalt/Nickel/Zinc (czc/cnr)
Multi-component antiporters (e.g., CzcCBA, CnrCBA) from A. eutrophus lacking ATPase motifs; powered by proton gradients. Regulation involves membrane sensors (CzcD, CnrY) and novel transcriptional elements.
Metallothionein (smt)
In Synechococcus, smtA encodes metallothionein regulated by smtB. Metal response includes derepression, gene amplification, and deletion via HIP1 palindromic elements.
Key implications
This review highlights the diversity and complexity of bacterial metal resistance strategies, illustrating how efflux mechanisms, metallothioneins, and regulatory networks are tailored to environmental and evolutionary pressures. The findings are directly relevant to microbial metallomics, microbiome-host interactions, and antimicrobial resistance. Notably, the shared architecture between bacterial Cd²⁺ and human Cu²⁺ ATPases underscores the translational value of microbial models. From a microbiome perspective, plasmid-borne metal resistance genes can be mobile, potentially shaping microbial signatures in metal-rich or dysbiotic environments, including those associated with inflammation or industrial exposure.
Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 protects gnotobiotic pigs against human rotavirus by modulating plasmacytoid dendritic and natural killer cell responses
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 (EcN) significantly enhances protection against human rotavirus in gnotobiotic pigs by modulating plasmacytoid dendritic cells and NK cell responses, suggesting its potential as an effective probiotic treatment for viral gastroenteritis.
What was studied?
This study investigates the protective effects of Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 (EcN) against human rotavirus (HRV) infection in gnotobiotic pigs, a model for neonatal gastrointestinal infections. The focus was on understanding the immunological mechanisms through which EcN enhances resistance to HRV, particularly by modulating dendritic cell (DC) and natural killer (NK) cell responses. The study also compared the effects of EcN with Lactobacillus rhamnosus GG (LGG) and their combination, aiming to explore how these probiotics affect innate immunity and HRV protection in the gut.
Who was studied?
The study involved gnotobiotic (Gn) pigs, a useful animal model for studying neonatal immune responses to infections due to their similar gut physiology to humans, especially in infancy. The pigs were divided into four groups: non-colonized (control), EcN-colonized, LGG-colonized, and a dual EcN+LGG-colonized group. These groups were challenged with human rotavirus (HRV) and assessed for immune responses and the severity of diarrhea. The immune responses, particularly those involving plasmacytoid dendritic cells (pDCs) and NK cells, were analyzed to understand the probiotic effects.
Most important findings
The study found that EcN-colonized pigs had significantly lower diarrhea scores and reduced HRV shedding compared to LGG-colonized or non-colonized pigs. ECN colonization was associated with an increase in the frequency of plasmacytoid dendritic cells (pDCs) and enhanced NK cell function, both of which are crucial for antiviral immunity. In particular, EcN-treated pigs exhibited a strong activation of the IL-12-NK cell axis, which is vital for fighting viral infections. Additionally, EcN was found to reduce the frequency of apoptotic mononuclear cells (MNCs) in tissues and to promote a balanced cytokine response, increasing IL-12 and IFN-α levels while decreasing the pro-inflammatory cytokine IL-6. Interestingly, LGG colonization had a minimal impact on these immune responses compared to EcN, and combined EcN+LGG colonization showed intermediate effects.
Key implications
This study demonstrates that Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 (EcN) is a potent probiotic that enhances the innate immune response and offers protective benefits against human rotavirus infection. By activating dendritic cells and natural killer cells through the IL-12 pathway, EcN not only limits viral replication but also promotes immune responses that are critical for gut health in neonates. These findings highlight EcN's potential as a therapeutic option for viral gastroenteritis, particularly in regions with a high rotavirus burden, where current vaccines show limited efficacy. The study also suggests that probiotic combinations need to be carefully evaluated for their interactive effects, as EcN alone was more effective than LGG alone.
Magnesium modulates phospholipid metabolism to promote bacterial phenotypic resistance to antibiotics
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Magnesium influences bacterial phenotypic resistance by modulating fatty acid and phospholipid metabolism in Vibrio species, leading to reduced antibiotic uptake and increased resistance to drugs like balofloxacin.
What was studied?
This study explored the role of magnesium (Mg²⁺) in modulating bacterial resistance to antibiotics, specifically in the Vibrio species, Vibrio alginolyticus and Vibrio parahaemolyticus. The researchers examined how magnesium influenced the bacterial membrane composition, including phospholipid biosynthesis and fatty acid metabolism, to promote phenotypic resistance to antibiotics such as balofloxacin (BLFX). The study combined metabolic profiling, gene expression analysis, and antibiotic susceptibility testing to uncover the mechanisms by which magnesium confers this resistance.
Who was studied?
The study primarily focused on two strains of Vibrio: V. alginolyticus ATCC33787 and V. parahaemolyticus VP01. These bacteria, commonly found in marine environments, were exposed to varying concentrations of magnesium to observe changes in antibiotic resistance. The researchers also examined the impact of magnesium on membrane permeability and the fatty acid composition in these bacterial strains.
What were the most important findings?
The study demonstrated that high magnesium concentrations led to significant changes in fatty acid and phospholipid metabolism in Vibrio species, which in turn enhanced antibiotic resistance. Specifically, magnesium increased the synthesis of saturated fatty acids like palmitic acid while inhibiting unsaturated fatty acid production. This altered lipid composition, particularly the upregulation of phosphatidylglycerol (PG) and downregulation of phosphatidylethanolamine (PE), contributed to changes in the bacterial cell membrane. These membrane alterations led to reduced permeability and fluidity, which decreased the uptake of the antibiotic balofloxacin, thereby promoting phenotypic resistance. The findings also showed that magnesium influenced the activity of enzymes responsible for phospholipid biosynthesis, with Mg²⁺ promoting the production of saturated fatty acids and altering the phospholipid profile, ultimately affecting membrane properties and bacterial survival during antibiotic treatment.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings of this study have significant implications for understanding how environmental factors, such as magnesium levels, can influence bacterial resistance mechanisms. The ability of magnesium to alter membrane composition and fatty acid biosynthesis provides insights into non-genetic or phenotypic resistance, a growing concern in clinical settings. This study highlights the importance of magnesium in modulating the efficacy of antibiotics and suggests that manipulating magnesium levels in the environment could be a novel strategy to overcome phenotypic resistance. Additionally, the results could inform the development of new therapeutic approaches that target bacterial lipid metabolism or membrane properties to enhance the effectiveness of antibiotics in combating resistant bacterial infections, particularly in marine aquaculture and other settings with high magnesium exposure.
Gallium as novel Antimicrobial Agents: Innovations in Combating Drug-Resistant Pathogens
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review highlights gallium's role as an iron mimic disrupting bacterial iron metabolism, effective against multidrug-resistant pathogens. Innovations in gallium delivery, including nanomaterials and synergistic therapies with antibiotics, address bioavailability challenges and enhance its antimicrobial potency.
What was reviewed?
The study reviewed the advancements in the application of gallium-based compounds and gallium as novel antimicrobial agents. The review aimed to address the challenges of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) by highlighting gallium's unique properties, mechanisms of action, and its potential as a non-antibiotic antibacterial strategy. The review summarized optimization strategies for gallium compounds, such as improving bioavailability and achieving sustained release, alongside synergistic effects with other antimicrobial agents.
Who was reviewed?
The review focused on multidrug-resistant (MDR) pathogens, including Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Acinetobacter baumannii, and methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA). It also discussed broader applications against Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria.
What were the most important findings?
The findings on gallium’s antimicrobial activity converge on its capacity to function as a redox-inert iron mimic that destabilizes iron-dependent metabolic pathways across diverse bacterial taxa. By substituting for ferric iron in essential enzymes and metabolic systems, gallium interrupts DNA synthesis, electron transport, oxidative stress responses, and biofilm maintenance. This mechanism provides broad-spectrum activity against multidrug-resistant organisms while minimizing the potential for resistance development. Advances in gallium delivery, including chelation strategies, nanomaterial-based carriers, doped bioglasses, and synergistic combinations with antibiotics, have markedly improved its solubility, bioavailability, and sustained antimicrobial performance, positioning gallium-based therapeutics as a promising class for addressing refractory and biofilm-associated infections.
Major Findings
Summary of Evidence
Iron Mimicry and Enzyme Inactivation
Gallium substitutes for Fe³⁺ in iron-dependent enzymes, disrupting processes including ribonucleotide reductase-mediated DNA synthesis, electron transport, and oxidative stress regulation. Its redox-inert nature prevents enzymatic turnover, halting bacterial growth.
Disruption of Biofilms
Gallium impairs biofilm formation, particularly in Pseudomonas aeruginosa, by reducing iron availability required for biofilm stability and virulence expression.
Sustained-Release Delivery Systems
Gallium-doped bioglasses, alloys, and nanostructured carriers provide extended antimicrobial activity suitable for implant-related or chronic infections.
Bioavailability Enhancement
Chelation, ligand coordination, and nanocarriers overcome gallium hydrolysis in physiological environments, improving solubility and intracellular delivery.
Synergistic Antibacterial Strategies
Gallium works synergistically with antibiotics such as vancomycin and ciprofloxacin, restoring activity against resistant strains, lowering required doses, and reducing resistance emergence.
Nanotechnology Innovation
Liposomes, Janus micromotors, and other engineered nanomaterials improve targeting, biofilm penetration, and controlled release of gallium compounds for enhanced antimicrobial efficacy.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
Gallium as a novel antimicrobial agent represents a promising alternative to traditional antibiotics, especially against MDR pathogens. The review highlights potential clinical applications in treating implant-related infections, respiratory conditions, and other systemic infections. However, limitations such as low bioavailability and the need for targeted delivery necessitate further research. Nonetheless, its role as a complement to existing antibiotics could significantly delay the development of resistance and enhance antimicrobial strategies.
Shared and distinct mechanisms of iron acquisition by bacterial and fungal pathogens of humans
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study on Listeria monocytogenes reveals its mechanisms for acquiring iron from host proteins and external siderophores. Understanding these strategies aids in developing new treatments for infections.
What was studied?
This study investigates the mechanisms used by Listeria monocytogenes, a bacterial pathogen, to acquire iron from different host sources. Iron is an essential nutrient for pathogens, and its availability is tightly controlled by the host, leading to "nutritional immunity." The study specifically examines how L. monocytogenes competes with the host for iron, focusing on the pathogen’s ability to acquire iron from host proteins such as transferrin, lactoferrin, and ferritin, and its use of siderophores from external sources.
Who was studied?
The study focused on Listeria monocytogenes and its strategies for iron acquisition. This pathogen, known for its intracellular lifestyle, utilizes various mechanisms to acquire iron from the host, which is essential for its survival and virulence. The research compares these mechanisms in L. monocytogenes with those of other pathogens, particularly focusing on iron acquisition systems in bacteria and fungi.
What were the most important findings?
The study highlights that Listeria monocytogenes does not secrete its own siderophores but instead hijacks siderophores from other organisms, including hydroxamate siderophores such as ferrichrome, ferrichrome A, and ferrioxamine B. It uses specific transport systems, such as the FhuCDBG system, to acquire these iron-bound compounds. Additionally, the bacterium can also extract iron from host proteins like transferrin and lactoferrin through receptor-mediated endocytosis. These findings underscore the pathogen's sophisticated mechanisms for iron acquisition, which play a critical role in its virulence and ability to survive in the host's iron-restricted environment.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study’s findings have significant implications for understanding Listeria monocytogenes pathogenesis and its ability to thrive in the host during infection. By uncovering the bacterium's reliance on external siderophores and host iron-binding proteins, the research sheds light on potential therapeutic targets for controlling infections caused by L. monocytogenes. Interfering with these iron acquisition pathways could help mitigate the pathogen's ability to cause disease, offering new avenues for drug development and therapeutic interventions.
How Listeria monocytogenes organizes its surface for virulence
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study explores how Listeria monocytogenes organizes its surface proteins, specifically InlA and InlH, to adapt to different host environments and promote virulence, shedding light on the dynamic regulation of bacterial surface components during infection.
What Was Studied?
This study focused on the role of surface proteins in the virulence of Listeria monocytogenes. It specifically examined how the bacteria organize its surface, including surface proteins such as internalins (InlA, InlH), in response to different environmental conditions. The study explored how these proteins contribute to the bacteria’s ability to infect and survive in host tissues, including their adaptation to intracellular growth and their involvement in immune evasion.
Who Was Studied?
The study investigated Listeria monocytogenes, focusing on its surface proteins and how they are regulated during infection. The study did not examine human or animal subjects directly but used murine models, macrophages, and Caco-2 cells to understand the bacterium's behavior in infected hosts.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study found that Listeria monocytogenes exhibits a highly dynamic regulation of its surface proteins, which plays a crucial role in its virulence. Specifically, surface proteins like InlA and InlH were upregulated in the mouse spleen, aiding in the bacteria's invasion and intracellular survival. On the other hand, in the mouse intestinal lumen, these proteins were downregulated, possibly to prevent premature expression that could hinder infection. The bacteria fine-tunes the expression of these virulence factors depending on the infection phase, with some proteins being expressed at higher levels in intracellular environments to assist in vacuole escape, motility, and multiplication. Furthermore, the study highlighted the importance of spatial regulation of these proteins, with certain virulence-associated proteins, such as InlA and InlH, being localized at specific regions of the bacterial surface.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
This study underscores the importance of precise regulation of virulence factors for Listeria monocytogenes to successfully infect and propagate within a host. Understanding the spatial and temporal regulation of surface proteins like InlA and InlH could open new therapeutic avenues for combating listeriosis. Targeting these proteins or their regulatory pathways may reduce the bacterium's ability to infect and evade immune responses, offering a potential strategy for developing more effective treatments for infections caused by Listeria monocytogenes.
Siderophore-Microcins in Escherichia coli: Determinants of Digestive Colonization, the First Step Toward Virulence
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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his review shows how siderophore microcins in Escherichia coli support competitive gut colonization, connect the fecal reservoir with urinary tract infection, and define functional microbiome signatures that combine B2 background with microcin, salmochelin and colibactin islands.
What was reviewed?
Siderophore microcins in Escherichia coli are the focus of this mini review, which explains how these small antimicrobial peptides support digestive colonization and prepare strains for extraintestinal infection. The authors describe the genetic organization of microcin clusters on chromosomal islands, their modification with an enterobactin-derived siderophore group, and their export through an ABC transporter that uses TolC as the outer membrane channel. The review shows that these molecules mimic iron-loaded siderophores, enter competing Enterobacteriaceae through siderophore receptors, and then act as Trojan Horse toxins that disrupt inner membrane functions. It links this mechanism to the success of B2 phylogroup Escherichia coli in the gut and presents siderophore microcins as important functional markers within the intestinal microbiome.
Who was reviewed?
The review draws on work in commensal and pathogenic Escherichia coli, with a strong emphasis on B2 phylogroup strains that often carry extraintestinal virulence traits. It compares fecal isolates from healthy adults in industrialized regions, where B2 strains and microcin producers are frequent, with fecal isolates from parts of Africa, Asia, and South America, where A phylogroup strains are more common. It also discusses uropathogenic Escherichia coli from patients with urinary tract infection together with matched fecal isolates from the same hosts, which allows a direct link between the gut reservoir and urinary disease. In addition, the article includes data from probiotic and asymptomatic bacteriuria strains, such as Nissle 1917 and ABU 83972, and brief coverage of Klebsiella pneumoniae that produces microcin E492, all supported by genomic and transcriptomic analyses of microcin-related loci.
Most important findings
The review shows that siderophore microcins are enriched in B2 Escherichia coli and appear more often in uropathogenic strains than in fecal strains, which suggests that they support both colonization fitness and virulence potential. Microcins H47 and M dominate and sit on compact genomic islands with lower GC content than the core chromosome, which points to past horizontal acquisition. In many B2 strains, including uropathogenic Escherichia coli and probiotic Nissle 1917, the microcin island lies within a larger region that also carries salmochelin siderophore genes and the pks island for the genotoxin colibactin, which creates genomic economy because shared enzymes such as IroB, ClbA and ClbP serve more than one pathway.
Functionally, siderophore microcins use catecholate siderophore receptors such as FepA, Fiu, or Cir and the TonB system to cross the outer membrane of sensitive enterobacteria, then act on inner membrane targets such as the mannose permease or ATP synthase and cause loss of membrane potential and death. These actions give producer strains a decisive advantage in the iron-poor environment of the colon, where Fur-regulated systems induce both siderophores and microcins. Population data indicate that about one-third of uropathogenic Escherichia coli carry siderophore microcin genes, compared with a much smaller fraction of fecal isolates, and that these genes often co-occur with other virulence factors. Case control studies that compare urinary and rectal isolates from the same individuals show that a microcin M activity protein appears more often in urinary isolates even when classical virulence markers match, which links microcin-mediated competition in the intestine to later entry into the urinary tract.
Key implications
For clinicians, this review positions siderophore microcins as microbiome-related markers of Escherichia coli strains that combine strong intestinal persistence with a greater risk of extraintestinal disease, especially urinary tract infection. Microcins do not define acute severity in the urinary tract, but they help strains dominate the rectal reservoir and so increase the chance that these strains seed the perineum and urethra. Microbiome signature work that aims to predict infection risk should therefore include functional markers such as siderophore microcin islands together with B2 assignment and the presence of salmochelin and colibactin clusters, rather than rely on taxonomy alone. This pattern may support future risk stratification for recurrent urinary tract infection. The review also suggests a therapeutic angle, since microcin-inspired systems could guide narrow-spectrum agents that exploit siderophore receptors on target Enterobacteriaceae while they preserve much of the gut microbiota, although any strategy that involves colibactin-related islands will require careful safety assessment because of genotoxic concerns.
Zinc and Microsporum canis: Targeting ZafA to Disrupt Fungal Virulence
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Microsporum canis (M. canis)
Microsporum canis (M. canis)
OverviewMicrosporum canis (M. canis) is a zoophilic dermatophyte common in cats and dogs, responsible for 90% of feline dermatophytoses worldwide.[1][2] It has significant zoonotic potential, transmitting to humans through fomites or direct animal contact, causing severe superficial mycosis. M. canis is considered anthropo-zoophilic and can infect pediatric or immunocompromised patients, causing severe inflammatory responses such […]
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Zinc deficiency significantly impairs Microsporum canis growth and virulence. The ZafA gene regulates zinc uptake and pathogenesis, and its deletion disrupts zinc transporters, conidiation, and host infection, suggesting it as a novel antifungal drug target.
What was studied?
This study investigated the molecular and phenotypic impact of zinc deficiency on Microsporum canis, a dermatophyte responsible for zoonotic skin infections in humans and animals. Using RNA-Seq, researchers assessed transcriptomic changes in M. canis grown under zinc-restricted conditions and identified differentially expressed genes (DEGs). Particular focus was placed on the ZafA gene—a zinc-responsive transcription factor homologous to Zap1 in Saccharomyces cerevisiae—which was significantly upregulated under zinc-deficient conditions. Functional validation included construction of a ZafA knockout strain (ZafA-hph) via Agrobacterium tumefaciens-mediated transformation (ATMT), which allowed assessment of zinc absorption, growth, conidiation, pathogenicity, and gene expression regulation. This research delves deep into the impacts of zinc on Microsporum canis and sheds light on critical fungal dynamics.
Who was studied?
The study was conducted on Microsporum canis strain CBS 113480 in vitro and in vivo. Fungal strains were cultured under varying zinc conditions (0–1000 nM Zn²⁺), and both wild-type and ZafA-deficient strains were compared for phenotypic and transcriptional differences. In vivo pathogenicity was assessed using New Zealand rabbits, which were infected with wild-type or ZafA-hph strains for histopathological evaluation. This sheds light on how zinc and Microsporum canis interact to affect growth and pathogenic behaviors.
Most important findings
Zinc deficiency significantly impaired M. canis growth, reduced conidiation, and altered global gene expression. Key findings included:
Finding
Description
ZafA gene role
ZafA was highly upregulated in zinc-deficient cultures and is required for zinc uptake, conidiation, and virulence.
Rabbits infected with ZafA-hph showed minimal skin lesions compared to wild-type-infected animals.
Zinc transporter regulation
ZupT (MCYG_04486) and ZTR (MCYG_02504) were significantly downregulated in ZafA-deficient strains.
Major transcriptional shifts
764 upregulated and 585 downregulated genes (Zn200 vs Norm); GO and KEGG analysis linked DEGs to zinc ion binding, oxidative stress response, and growth/metabolism pathways.
These results confirm ZafA as a key regulator of zinc homeostasis, fungal physiology, and pathogenesis. The findings highlight the complex relationship between zinc and Microsporum canis, illustrating significant impacts on zinc uptake and genetic expression.
Key implications
This study demonstrates that zinc availability is critical for the growth and pathogenicity of M. canis, and that ZafA functions as a master transcriptional regulator of zinc uptake and associated pathways. The ZafA gene represents a promising antifungal drug target, as its disruption severely compromises fungal growth and virulence without affecting human homologs. By targeting ZafA or its downstream zinc transporters, novel antifungal therapies could be developed. Additionally, the work introduces a viable genetic manipulation technique (ATMT) for M. canis, facilitating further functional genomics research in dermatophytes. These insights are especially valuable for microbiome-targeted antifungal strategies, where disrupting fungal micronutrient acquisition can modulate microbial balance in skin and hair-associated niches. In summary, zinc and Microsporum canis interactions offer pathways for innovative antifungal therapies.
The interplay between copper metabolism and microbes: In perspective of host copper-dependent ATPases ATP7A/B
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review highlights the complex relationship between copper metabolism and microbial infections. It focuses on the role of copper transporters ATP7A/B in regulating copper homeostasis and how microbes manipulate these mechanisms to survive in the host.
What was studied?
This review focuses on the interplay between copper metabolism and microbial infections, specifically through the lens of host copper-dependent ATPases ATP7A/B. These transporters are vital for regulating copper homeostasis in the body, as they facilitate the transport of copper ions across cell membranes. The study explores the role of ATP7A and ATP7B in copper distribution within the body, as well as their interactions with various microbial pathogens like Salmonella enterica, Mycobacterium tuberculosis, and viruses like Influenza A Virus (IAV) and Zika Virus (ZIKV). The review outlines how microbes either exploit or disrupt copper metabolism to enhance their survival in the host, highlighting the dual role of copper as both an antimicrobial agent and a pathogen-facilitating factor.
Who was studied?
The review examines ATP7A and ATP7B, two copper-dependent ATPases in humans, and their interaction with copper transport mechanisms. It discusses the regulation and trafficking of these transporters in response to copper levels, as well as their involvement in various copper-related diseases, such as Wilson’s disease and Menkes disease. The research also delves into microbial pathogens like Salmonella, Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Cryptococcus, and Influenza A Virus, which influence host copper metabolism either by manipulating the expression of these transporters or by adapting their own copper handling mechanisms to survive in the host. The review underscores the microbial-host interactions that influence copper balance and their implications for immune responses and disease outcomes.
Most important findings
The study revealed several key insights into the interaction between ATP7A/B and microbes. Copper is essential for both host defense and pathogen survival, and copper's antimicrobial properties are well-established. The review highlighted that microbial pathogens like Salmonella and Mycobacterium tuberculosis manipulate host copper metabolism by upregulating copper transporters like ATP7A to sequester copper within host cells. This sequestration, however, may also increase host vulnerability to microbial survival, as pathogens use copper pumps to export copper and mitigate its toxic effects. Influenza A Virus and Zika Virus also interfere with copper regulation, which disrupts host copper homeostasis and contributes to oxidative stress, aiding viral replication. The review also pointed out the copper-resistance mechanisms of microbes, such as the use of copper pumps (e.g., CopA, GolT) and binding proteins to counteract copper toxicity within the host environment.
Key implications
This research has significant clinical implications for the treatment of microbial infections. Understanding the copper-dependent mechanisms in microbial survival provides a potential therapeutic target for copper-modulating treatments. Enhancing the host's copper sequestration during infections or using copper-based treatments could potentially weaken the pathogens' ability to thrive in the host. On the other hand, microbial resistance to copper presents a challenge, as many pathogens have evolved systems to evade copper toxicity. Clinicians could consider copper homeostasis when designing treatments for infections, especially those involving antibiotic-resistant pathogens. Furthermore, targeting ATP7A/B transporters could offer new therapeutic approaches for diseases like Wilson’s disease and other copper metabolism disorders, where dysfunction of these transporters leads to toxic copper accumulation. Additionally, copper supplementation or copper-related drugs could potentially be used to boost antimicrobial immune responses in patients with weakened defenses.
The intratumoral microbiota: A new horizon in cancer immunology
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Intratumoural Microbiota
Intratumoural Microbiota
With the growing understanding of the intratumoral microbiota’s influence on cancer progression, the next frontier in cancer therapy is microbiota-targeted interventions. By introducing beneficial microbes or altering existing microbial populations within tumors, therapies can be designed to modulate the immune system, promote tumor suppression, and improve drug efficacy. However, challenges remain in deciphering the complex relationships between microbes, tumor cells, and the immune system, necessitating more refined research methods and standardized approaches to translate these discoveries into clinical practice.
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This review explores the role of intratumoral microbiota in cancer progression and immunity. It discusses how microbiota influence tumor behavior and therapy outcomes, suggesting potential therapeutic strategies and biomarkers for cancer treatment.
What was reviewed?
This review examines the evolving role of the intratumoral microbiota in cancer immunology. It provides insights into how the microbiota within tumors, including bacteria, fungi, and viruses, interacts with the immune system to influence tumor progression and the efficacy of cancer therapies. The study highlights recent advancements in understanding the microbiota's role in shaping the tumor microenvironment (TME), including its impact on immune modulation and immunotherapy outcomes. A key focus is on how intratumoral microbiota contribute to both the promotion and suppression of tumor immunity, affecting immune surveillance and the response to cancer treatments like immune checkpoint inhibitors.
Who was reviewed?
The review draws from numerous studies that investigate the microbiota within cancerous tissues. It synthesizes findings from diverse cancer types such as colorectal, breast, lung, and pancreatic cancers, focusing on how intratumoral microbiota influence tumor behavior. Studies on microbiota-derived metabolites and their role in immune regulation are highlighted, along with research on microbial-induced inflammatory responses. The review also covers clinical trials and laboratory studies that explore microbiota interactions with immune cells and the potential therapeutic strategies involving microbiota modulation.
Most important findings
The review outlines several crucial findings regarding the role of intratumoral microbiota in cancer. A significant point is the observation that microbial communities within tumors exhibit distinct profiles from those in healthy tissues, with bacteria such as Fusobacterium nucleatum and Bacteroides fragilis playing a major role in cancer progression. These microorganisms can promote tumor growth by inducing inflammatory responses or by modulating host immune functions through various signaling pathways. For instance, F. nucleatum in colorectal cancer has been linked to immune evasion by activating immune checkpoint pathways, leading to the suppression of T-cell activity. Furthermore, the microbiota can impact the efficacy of cancer therapies, including immunotherapy. The presence of specific bacteria has been shown to enhance the effectiveness of treatments like immune checkpoint inhibitors by improving immune cell infiltration and activation within the TME. However, other microbial populations can exacerbate resistance to treatment by promoting immunosuppressive environments.
Key implications
The findings discussed in this review have important clinical implications. Understanding the relationship between intratumoral microbiota and immune responses opens new avenues for cancer treatment. Modulating the tumor microbiome could enhance immunotherapy efficacy, as some microbes have been identified as facilitators of immune checkpoint blockade therapies. Targeted interventions, such as using probiotics or antibiotics to modify the microbiota, could potentially be integrated into personalized treatment regimens for cancer patients. Additionally, microbiota signatures within tumors could serve as prognostic biomarkers, aiding in the prediction of patient responses to treatment and overall prognosis. The ability to manipulate the microbiome in the TME could be crucial in developing more effective and tailored cancer therapies in the future.
The ovarian cancer-associated microbiome contributes to the tumor’s inflammatory microenvironment
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review explores the ovarian cancer-associated microbiome's role in shaping the inflammatory microenvironment of tumors. It discusses how microbial dysbiosis and its metabolites contribute to cancer progression, immune suppression, and therapeutic resistance, suggesting microbiome modulation as a potential therapeutic strategy.
What was studied?
This review examines the ovarian cancer-associated microbiome and its contribution to the tumor’s inflammatory microenvironment. It focuses on how microbial alterations in the reproductive and gastrointestinal tracts may play a pivotal role in ovarian cancer development, progression, and therapeutic resistance. The review explores the presence of specific bacterial populations, such as Propionibacterium acnes, Firmicutes, and Proteobacteria, in ovarian cancer patients and their influence on tumor growth and immune responses. The paper also highlights the relationship between microbiome-derived metabolites and inflammation, and how this could lead to chronic inflammation within the tumor microenvironment, thus facilitating cancer progression.
Who was studied?
The review draws from various studies that involve ovarian cancer patients and healthy controls. Research from animal models, particularly mice, is also referenced to examine how specific bacteria interact with ovarian cancer cells. The study analyzes microbiome compositions in different tumor stages and the corresponding immune responses in patients diagnosed with ovarian cancer. Additionally, studies exploring how treatments like chemotherapy and antibiotics affect the microbiome and alter treatment outcomes are discussed.
Most important findings
A key finding from the review is the significant role of the microbiome in fostering an inflammatory tumor microenvironment. Certain bacteria like Propionibacterium acnes are enriched in ovarian cancer tissues and contribute to inflammation by activating inflammatory pathways such as the NF-kB signaling pathway, leading to the production of pro-inflammatory cytokines like TNF-α and IL-1β. The review also emphasizes the role of microbial metabolites, such as lipopolysaccharides (LPS), in promoting tumor progression by enhancing immune suppression and facilitating epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT). Dysbiosis in the gut and vaginal microbiomes has been linked to ovarian cancer, with specific microbial signatures influencing chemotherapy resistance. For example, microbial shifts during chemotherapy can disrupt the gut microbiota, leading to changes in tumor-associated immune cells like macrophages, further impeding the efficacy of treatment.
Key implications
The findings suggest that understanding the microbiome's role in ovarian cancer could lead to innovative therapeutic strategies, including microbiome modulation to improve treatment responses. By targeting microbial communities in the tumor microenvironment, such as using probiotics or fecal microbiota transplantation, it may be possible to reduce inflammation and enhance the body's immune response against tumors. Additionally, the microbiome could serve as a potential biomarker for early detection, prognosis, and even treatment response monitoring in ovarian cancer. However, more studies are needed to identify specific microbial species that can be used for clinical interventions and to clarify the mechanisms through which the microbiome influences cancer progression.
Non-classical roles of bacterial siderophores in pathogenesis.
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review shows non-classical siderophore roles in copper and zinc handling, oxidative stress control, and signaling, and maps gene–host markers that predict pathogen fitness across urine, gut, and airway.
What was reviewed?
This mini-review explains the non-classical roles of bacterial siderophores beyond iron capture and shows how these small molecules shape pathogenesis by handling other metals, buffering oxidative stress, and sending signals that tune virulence. The author outlines how siderophores bind copper, zinc, and nickel, block copper redox cycling, and even act as delivery systems for non-iron metals. The paper also covers siderophore-driven signaling that boosts virulence factor output, and class IIb microcins that hijack siderophore receptors to kill rivals. These insights link metal chemistry to real infection sites and give direct markers that clinicians can track in microbiome profiles.
Who was reviewed?
The review surveys key pathogens and niches that matter in clinical care and highlights uropathogenic Escherichia coli that use yersiniabactin to bind copper in urine and to gain zinc when calprotectin lowers zinc during cystitis or gut inflammation. It details Pseudomonas aeruginosa pyoverdine and pyochelin, which change with copper exposure and reactive oxygen stress and drive signaling that raises toxins. It includes Yersinia pestis where yersiniabactin can back up zinc uptake and support flea and mammalian infection, and touches probiotic E. coli Nissle that uses yersiniabactin to colonize the inflamed, zinc-poor gut. Host factors appear throughout, such as neutrophil and macrophage metal pressure, calprotectin that withholds zinc, and ATP7A that routes copper into phagosomes.
Most important findings
The core message is that siderophores act as broad metallophores and signals that shift survival under host metal stress. Yersiniabactin binds Cu(II) and prevents its reduction to more toxic Cu(I), which protects Enterobacterales in copper-rich urine; the same system can import Cu(II) and Ni(II) for enzyme use, and can favor zinc uptake when calprotectin lowers zinc in inflamed tissue. Catecholate siderophores such as enterobactin can worsen copper injury by driving Cu(II) to Cu(I), but E. coli CueO oxidase can blunt this effect, showing a clear circuit that predicts copper tolerance when cueO is present. In P. aeruginosa, copper raises pyoverdine genes, pyoverdine and pyochelin mediate stepwise signaling that boosts virulence factors, and oxidative stress triggers “privatization” of pyoverdine to resist damage. Yersiniabactin also behaves as an autoinducer: the Cu(II)–yersiniabactin complex activates the YbtA regulator and increases yersiniabactin and receptor expression, which links copper levels to siderophore supply and uptake.
Key implications
Clinicians can use siderophore modules as clear signatures of metal-adapted pathogens. Finding yersiniabactin in urinary isolates predicts copper-tolerant Enterobacterales and helps explain recurrent cystitis under copper stress. In an inflamed bowel, yersiniabactin with high calprotectin predicts zinc-savvy Enterobacterales that outcompete commensals. Detecting pyoverdine and pyochelin circuits in airway samples points to signaling-driven virulence and stress control in Pseudomonas. These signals also warn that copper-based devices or supplements may select for yersiniabactin-positive strains, while iron chelators can provoke inflammation or shift metal balance. Therapeutic ideas include blocking siderophore biosynthesis or uptake, using decoys that soak up metallophores, and pairing standard therapy with metal-aware steps that avoid feeding the very traits that promote persistence. Reporting siderophore loci with host markers like calprotectin or ATP7A in microbiome results can improve risk calls and guide targeted care.
Gut microbiota dysbiosis in inflammatory bowel disease: Interaction with intestinal barriers and microbiota-targeted treatment options
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review discusses the role of gut microbiota dysbiosis in IBD, its interaction with intestinal barriers, and the potential of microbiota-targeted therapies like antibiotics, probiotics, and FMT in treating IBD.
What was studied?
This review article explores the complex relationship between gut microbiota dysbiosis and inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), particularly its interaction with intestinal barriers. It delves into how dysbiosis, defined as an imbalance in gut microbiota, contributes to the pathology of IBD by impairing intestinal barriers, including the chemical, mechanical, and immune layers. The study also covers microbiota-targeted therapies such as antibiotics, probiotics, and fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT), and their role in restoring the intestinal microecology in IBD patients.
Who was studied?
The study focuses on IBD patients, specifically examining how the gut microbiota composition and functionality differ between those with IBD (including Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis) and healthy individuals. IBD patients exhibit a significant reduction in gut microbiota diversity and an overgrowth of pathogenic species, such as Proteobacteria, while beneficial bacteria like Faecalibacterium and Roseburia are notably reduced. These microbiota alterations are associated with impaired intestinal barriers, contributing to the chronic inflammation seen in IBD.
Most important findings
The review highlights that dysbiosis in IBD is characterized by a reduction in beneficial bacteria such as Faecalibacterium prausnitzii and an increase in pro-inflammatory species like Proteobacteria. This microbial imbalance leads to impaired function of the intestinal barrier, which generally protects against harmful pathogens and regulates immune responses. The disruption of this barrier results in increased intestinal permeability, allowing bacteria and their byproducts to trigger an immune response, thus exacerbating inflammation. The review emphasizes the potential of microbiota-targeted treatments in addressing this dysbiosis. Probiotics, for instance, may help restore beneficial bacteria and improve gut health, while FMT shows promise in restoring a healthy microbiota and reducing inflammation. However, the use of antibiotics, while effective in reducing harmful bacterial populations, can sometimes worsen dysbiosis and further contribute to intestinal barrier dysfunction.
Key implications
This review underscores the importance of the gut microbiota in IBD management. The interaction between dysbiosis and intestinal barrier dysfunction highlights the need for microbiota-targeted treatments in clinical practice. While antibiotics can help manage infections, their long-term use can worsen dysbiosis. Probiotics and FMT, however, show promise in restoring gut homeostasis and improving IBD symptoms. The review also emphasizes the need for more research to optimize microbiota-targeted therapies and better understand the microbiota's role in immune regulation and barrier function.
Histatins: Salivary peptides with copper(II)- and zinc(II)-binding motifs
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study examines the copper-binding properties of Hist-5, a salivary peptide, and its role in combating Candida albicans infections. The findings highlight the critical role of copper ions in enhancing the peptide’s antimicrobial activity through specific metal-binding motifs.
What was studied?
This study explored the interaction of copper ions with histatin peptides, focusing on histatin-5 (Hist-5) and its ability to bind copper. The researchers specifically examined the copper-binding sites of Hist-5 and how these interactions contribute to its antimicrobial properties, particularly against Candida albicans. They investigated the role of the bis-histidine (bis-His) motif, which is believed to be critical for Cu(I) binding, as well as the potential for copper to modulate the peptide's antifungal activity.
Who was studied?
The study was centered on Hist-5, a histidine-rich antimicrobial peptide found in human saliva. Hist-5 is known for its ability to combat fungal pathogens like Candida albicans, an opportunistic yeast that affects mucosal membranes. The research focused on the structural and functional properties of this peptide, particularly how it binds copper ions and how this influences its effectiveness against microbial infections.
Most important findings
The research found that Hist-5 binds copper through specific motifs, namely the amino-terminal copper/nickel-binding (ATCUN) motif and the bis-His motif. These motifs allow Hist-5 to exhibit copper-dependent antimicrobial activity. The ATCUN motif binds Cu(II) and Ni(II), while the bis-His site is specifically responsible for binding Cu(I), which plays a key role in the peptide’s antifungal activity. The study also revealed that the affinity of Hist-5 for Cu(I) is significantly enhanced by the presence of histidine residues in adjacent positions. Furthermore, the copper-bound Hist-5 exhibited a higher affinity for the pathogen Candida albicans, facilitating its internalization into fungal cells, where it interacts with mitochondria and generates reactive oxygen species (ROS), leading to fungal cell death. The research emphasized that the copper-binding properties of Hist-5 are crucial for its biological activity, as these interactions stabilize its structure and modulate its ability to kill fungal cells.
Key implications
These findings underscore the importance of metal ions, specifically copper, in the antimicrobial activity of salivary peptides like Hist-5. Understanding the metal-binding mechanisms of Hist-5 provides valuable insights into the development of novel therapeutic strategies based on metal-mediated peptide interactions. This study suggests that Hist-5 or similar peptides could be further optimized to enhance their antimicrobial effectiveness against fungal infections, especially those caused by Candida albicans. Additionally, the copper-binding motifs identified could be targeted in drug design to create peptides that mimic Hist-5’s functionality, offering a potential alternative to traditional antifungal treatments.
Revisiting the steps of Salmonella gut infection with a focus on antagonistic interbacterial interactions
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review shows how Salmonella reshapes the gut environment and engages in Salmonella gut infection antagonistic interbacterial interactions with commensals, and it explains how bacteriocins and type six secretion systems shape microbiome signatures and infection risk.
What was studied?
This review explores the complex process of Salmonella gut infection, emphasizing the role of antagonistic interbacterial interactions between the pathogen and commensal microbiota. The authors detail how Salmonella manipulates the gut environment to promote its own survival while disrupting the normal microbiota. They discuss the pathogen’s strategies, such as using type III secretion systems to trigger inflammation, which leads to shifts in the intestinal niche that favor its growth. The review also examines how Salmonella competes with commensal bacteria through mechanisms like bacteriocins, microcins, and type six secretion systems, linking these processes to the pathogen’s ability to persist and infect the host.
Who was studied?
The review synthesizes data from various animal models, including gnotobiotic and antibiotic-treated mice, to explore how Salmonella interacts with the microbiota. It focuses on commensal strains such as Escherichia coli Nissle 1917, Enterobacter cloacae, and Lactobacillus species, which produce bacteriocins and microcins that influence Salmonella colonization. The authors also examine pathogenic strains like Salmonella Typhimurium and other Enterobacteriaceae to understand how they engage in direct competition for resources in the gut. Genomic and transcriptomic studies of these bacteria provide insights into the specific loci involved in bacteriocin production, type six secretion systems, and other competitive strategies that shape the gut environment during infection.
Most important findings
The review highlights how Salmonella infection alters the gut microbiota, causing inflammation that disrupts butyrate-producing Firmicutes and increases luminal oxygen. This shift in the gut environment favors Salmonella’s growth and creates new opportunities for competition. Salmonella uses type III secretion system effectors to induce this inflammatory state, creating conditions that support its own metabolism while inhibiting other bacteria. The review also describes how commensals like Escherichia coli deploy bacteriocins and microcins, which target and kill Salmonella, while Salmonella itself produces colicins and microcins to counteract these competitors. In addition, the authors highlight the role of type six secretion systems in both Salmonella and other Enterobacteriaceae, which can target and kill competitor bacteria. These findings suggest that microbiome-based strategies, such as promoting beneficial bacterial interactions, can influence Salmonella infection dynamics.
Key implications
For clinicians, this review reframes Salmonella infection as a process heavily influenced by the gut microbiota and microbial competition. The authors suggest that microbiome signatures should include not only shifts in bacterial communities but also the presence of functional traits like colicins, microcins, and type six secretion systems, which can inform the risk of Salmonella colonization and infection. The presence of specific commensal strains, like Escherichia coli Nissle 1917, that produce competitive antimicrobial factors could be leveraged in clinical settings as a probiotic treatment to reduce Salmonella colonization. The review also points to the potential for developing narrow-spectrum antimicrobial therapies that exploit natural interbacterial competition mechanisms, such as targeting siderophore receptors, while preserving the broader gut microbiome.
Response of Akkermansia muciniphila to Bioactive Compounds: Effects on Its Abundance and Activity
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This systematic review shows that specific bioactive compounds and drugs selectively increase Akkermansia muciniphila, improving gut barrier function, SCFA signaling, and metabolic health through context-dependent microbiome interactions.
What was reviewed?
This systematic review evaluated how bioactive compounds, including dietary fibers, polyphenols, antioxidants, human milk oligosaccharides, and selected pharmaceuticals, influence the abundance and functional activity of Akkermansia muciniphila in the gut. Following PRISMA 2020 guidelines, the authors synthesized experimental evidence from 2004 to 2025 to clarify mechanisms through which these compounds modulate A. muciniphila and to assess its therapeutic potential in metabolic and intestinal disorders. The review emphasized mechanistic context rather than simple abundance changes, highlighting ecological interactions, mucin metabolism, and downstream metabolic effects.
Who was reviewed?
The review incorporated data from 87 experimental studies, primarily using murine models of obesity, diabetes, colitis, and metabolic inflammation, alongside a smaller number of human dietary and pharmacologic intervention trials. Human populations included healthy adults and patients with obesity, insulin resistance, inflammatory bowel disease, and metabolic syndrome. No new participants were enrolled; instead, animal and human findings were integrated to evaluate translational relevance.
What were the most important findings?
Across studies, A. muciniphila abundance consistently correlated with improved gut barrier integrity, reduced metabolic endotoxemia, and better metabolic outcomes. Prebiotics such as galacto-oligosaccharides, oligofructose, resistant starch type 2, and polydextrose reliably increased A. muciniphila in animal models, often restoring levels suppressed by high-fat diets. Human data were more variable but showed increases with galacto-oligosaccharides and polydextrose, while inulin produced inconsistent effects depending on dose, duration, and baseline microbiota. Certain polyphenols, particularly grape-derived compounds, resveratrol, quercetin (in synbiotic contexts), blueberry proanthocyanidins, and rhubarb extracts, increased A. muciniphila indirectly by improving the intestinal redox environment or reducing inflammation rather than serving as fermentable substrates. Human milk oligosaccharide 2′-fucosyllactose uniquely supported direct growth and SCFA production by A. muciniphila. Pharmaceutical agents, especially metformin and dapagliflozin, consistently increased A. muciniphila abundance and were linked to improved glucose tolerance, vascular function, and barrier integrity. Major microbial associations included enhanced mucus turnover, increased acetate and propionate production, and cross-feeding with butyrate-producing taxa such as Faecalibacterium and Roseburia.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review positions A. muciniphila as a context-dependent therapeutic target rather than a universally responsive probiotic. For clinicians, it underscores that effective modulation depends on compound chemistry, host metabolic state, and baseline microbiota. The findings support precision nutrition and microbiome-informed strategies that combine specific bioactive compounds or drugs to restore mucus integrity, reduce inflammation, and improve metabolic health
Streptococcus pneumoniae’s Virulence and Host Immunity: Aging, Diagnostics, and Prevention
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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The study investigates Streptococcus pneumoniae's virulence, immune evasion strategies, and how aging impacts susceptibility to infections. It explores diagnostic and vaccine strategies for improving prevention in high-risk groups.
What was studied?
The study focused on understanding how Streptococcus pneumoniae (S. pneumoniae) interacts with the host's immune system, particularly in the context of aging, diagnostics, and prevention strategies. It explored the pathogen's virulence factors and how it evades immune responses in the human host. The research also examined diagnostic approaches, vaccine strategies, and the impact of age and immunosenescence on immunity to this pathogen.
Who was studied?
The study primarily looked at Streptococcus pneumoniae as the bacterial pathogen responsible for diseases such as pneumococcal pneumonia. It also considered the immune responses of both younger individuals and the elderly, as they represent populations at high risk for serious infections due to their different immune system profiles.
What were the most important findings?
The most important findings of this study highlight the significant role of S. pneumoniae’s virulence factors, which allow it to colonize and evade host immune defenses. The bacteria's ability to adhere to mucosal surfaces and avoid phagocytosis is central to its pathogenicity. Additionally, it was found that aging, particularly immunosenescence, impairs the immune system’s ability to fight off infections, leaving elderly individuals more susceptible to infections like pneumococcal pneumonia. The study also emphasized the challenges in vaccine efficacy across age groups, noting that young children and the elderly are particularly vulnerable due to underdeveloped or weakened immune systems. Vaccination strategies need to address these challenges by improving serotype coverage and exploring serotype-independent vaccines.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The greatest implications of this research lie in improving pneumococcal disease prevention and treatment, especially for vulnerable populations. Understanding the virulence mechanisms of S. pneumoniae can lead to the development of better vaccines, potentially including protein-based or whole-cell vaccines. These would offer broader protection and mitigate the problem of serotype replacement, which current vaccines are unable to fully address. Additionally, the study suggests that vaccination strategies, such as the prime-boost method, could be more effective for high-risk groups, including the elderly and individuals with pre-existing health conditions. The findings also underline the importance of considering age-related immune responses in vaccine development.
Akkermansia muciniphila and Gut Immune System: A Good Friendship That Attenuates Inflammatory Bowel Disease, Obesity, and Diabetes
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review examines how Akkermansia muciniphila shapes gut immune signaling to reduce inflammation, obesity, and diabetes risk. Evidence shows that its abundance and derived proteins strengthen the intestinal barrier, suppress pro-inflammatory cytokines, and improve metabolic outcomes across experimental models and early human trials.
What was reviewed?
This mini-review evaluated how Akkermansia muciniphila interacts with the gut immune system to attenuate inflammatory bowel disease, obesity, and diabetes. The authors synthesized evidence from metagenomic association studies, experimental animal models, cellular assays, and early human clinical trials to clarify the immunomodulatory and metabolic roles of this mucin-degrading bacterium. The review focused on mechanisms linking A. muciniphila to intestinal barrier integrity, immune tolerance, and metabolic regulation rather than on colonization alone.
Who was reviewed?
The review incorporated data from human cohorts with inflammatory bowel disease, obesity, insulin resistance, type 2 diabetes, and type 1 diabetes, alongside healthy controls. It also included multiple murine disease models, such as DSS-induced colitis, high-fat diet–induced obesity, streptozotocin-induced diabetes, and non-obese diabetic mice. In vitro epithelial and immune cell models were reviewed to support mechanistic interpretation of host–microbe interactions.
What were the most important findings?
Across conditions, Akkermansia muciniphila consistently showed an inverse association with intestinal inflammation and metabolic dysfunction, establishing it as a key major microbial association in gut health signatures. Reduced abundance correlated with impaired mucus barrier integrity, elevated pro-inflammatory cytokines, and immune dysregulation in IBD, obesity, and diabetes. Experimental supplementation strengthened tight junction expression, reduced TNF-α, IL-6, and IL-1β, and promoted regulatory T-cell responses. In metabolic disease models, increased A. muciniphila abundance improved insulin sensitivity, glucose tolerance, lipid metabolism, and reduced endotoxemia. Notably, pasteurized bacteria, outer membrane vesicles, and proteins such as Amuc_1100 often produced stronger immunometabolic benefits than live organisms, indicating that immune signaling rather than colonization is central to its function.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review positions Akkermansia muciniphila as a clinically meaningful biomarker of gut barrier health and immune–metabolic balance rather than a passive commensal. Persistently low levels may reflect mucus depletion, chronic immune activation, or metabolic endotoxemia. The findings support the development of A. muciniphila–based diagnostics and postbiotic therapies for inflammatory and metabolic diseases, while emphasizing the need for strain-level precision and contextual interpretation within broader microbiome networks.
Bacteria-based immunotherapy for cancer: A systematic review of preclinical studies
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review explores bacteria-based immunotherapy for cancer, highlighting how bacteria and their components modulate immune responses to enhance tumor targeting and therapy outcomes. It also discusses the potential for combining bacteria with traditional therapies like chemotherapy and immune checkpoint inhibitors.
What was studied?
This review focuses on bacteria-based immunotherapy for cancer, which has emerged as a novel strategy leveraging the immune-modulatory properties of bacteria to fight cancer. The paper explores various preclinical studies assessing the potential of bacteria, bacterial components, and bacterial derivatives in modulating immune responses to induce tumor-specific immunity. The review examines the roles of different bacterial species, such as Salmonella, Escherichia coli, and Listeria, in enhancing the effectiveness of cancer immunotherapy. It also highlights the mechanisms through which bacteria act as immune adjuvants, stimulating immune cells to attack cancer cells directly or to reverse the immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment (TME).
Who was studied?
The review synthesizes data from a variety of preclinical studies across multiple cancer types, including colorectal cancer, melanoma, breast cancer, and pancreatic cancer. The studies include animal models such as mice, with various tumors being used to evaluate the impact of bacteria-based therapies. The immune cells involved in these studies include macrophages, dendritic cells, natural killer (NK) cells, and T cells, all of which play critical roles in the activation of antitumor immunity. Additionally, the review assesses the efficacy of combining bacterial treatments with other cancer therapies, including chemotherapy, immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs), and photodynamic therapy.
Most important findings
The review identifies several key insights into the use of bacteria in cancer immunotherapy. First, it highlights how bacteria, such as Salmonella and E. coli, can be engineered to target tumor cells, promoting immune cell activation and tumor regression. Bacteria can also help reverse immune tolerance by downregulating immune checkpoints, such as PD-L1, making them potent partners in combination with immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs). For example, Salmonella has been shown to enhance the effectiveness of PD-L1 blockade in colorectal cancer models. The paper further discusses bacterial outer membrane vesicles (OMVs), bacterial flagellin, and bacterial-derived toxins, all of which act as immune adjuvants by activating immune cells, including T cells and NK cells, to enhance tumor killing. Notably, preclinical studies also suggest that combining bacteria-based therapies with other conventional therapies, such as chemotherapy and photodynamic therapy, results in enhanced therapeutic outcomes.
Key implications
The findings underscore the potential of bacteria-based therapies as a promising adjunct to current cancer treatments. By utilizing bacteria to stimulate the immune system and target tumors, researchers may overcome some of the limitations of traditional therapies, including immune suppression and treatment resistance. The ability to modify bacteria to express specific antigens or therapeutic proteins offers a customizable approach to cancer treatment. However, the review also highlights several challenges that need to be addressed before clinical translation, including concerns about bacterial toxicity, biosafety, and the need for standardized production methods. Future research must focus on optimizing bacterial delivery systems, ensuring safety in human trials, and further exploring the synergy between bacteria-based therapies and other forms of immunotherapy.
Dermatophyte Virulence and Host Immunity: Key Mechanisms and Clinical Implications
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Microsporum canis (M. canis)
Microsporum canis (M. canis)
OverviewMicrosporum canis (M. canis) is a zoophilic dermatophyte common in cats and dogs, responsible for 90% of feline dermatophytoses worldwide.[1][2] It has significant zoonotic potential, transmitting to humans through fomites or direct animal contact, causing severe superficial mycosis. M. canis is considered anthropo-zoophilic and can infect pediatric or immunocompromised patients, causing severe inflammatory responses such […]
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This review outlines the pathogenic strategies of dermatophytes and host antifungal responses, with a focus on keratinolytic enzymes, PRRs, Th17 immunity, and CARD9-related immune dysfunction, offering insight into novel diagnostic and therapeutic strategies.
What was reviewed?
This review article provides a comprehensive synthesis of the current understanding of dermatophyte pathogenicity and host immune responses. It covers fungal virulence factors, including keratinolytic enzymes and pH-responsive regulatory proteins, and explores innate and adaptive host defenses. The authors specifically highlight recent findings in the molecular mechanisms of fungal invasion, immune evasion, and drug resistance, as well as the interplay between fungal pathogens and host pattern recognition receptors (PRRs). Key emphasis is placed on the pathophysiology of chronic and deep dermatophytosis, particularly in the context of CARD9 mutations and impaired Th17 responses.
Who was reviewed?
The review aggregates data from a broad range of studies involving both in vitro and in vivo models, as well as clinical case reports and genetic analyses from patients with dermatophytosis. Notably, the authors reference case series involving CARD9-deficient individuals from North Africa and Asia, murine models of Trichophyton and Microsporum infections, and human keratinocyte co-culture systems. These sources allow the authors to connect clinical phenotypes with immunological and molecular insights.
Most important findings
Dermatophyte virulence is driven by enzymatic degradation of keratin via proteases (e.g., Sub3, Mep3, DppIV) and sulfite production (via cysteine dioxygenase and Ssu1), which enables nutrient acquisition from host tissue. Dermatophytes adapt to changing skin pH via the PacC/Pal signaling pathway, enhancing protease expression. The review also underscores the emergence of antifungal resistance, particularly in T. indotineae, mediated by mutations in the SQLE gene and upregulation of ABC transporters and CYP51B.
Host immunity is initiated by PRRs such as Dectin-1, TLR2/4, and NLRP3, which activate signaling cascades involving CARD9 and MALT1, promoting cytokine release (e.g., IL-17, IL-1β, TNF-α). IL-17-mediated (Th17) responses are central in fungal clearance, regulating antimicrobial peptide production (cathelicidin, β-defensins, S100 proteins), neutrophil recruitment, and keratinocyte proliferation. CARD9 deficiency impairs these pathways, particularly Th17 differentiation, predisposing individuals to chronic or deep fungal infections. These deficiencies are geographically clustered and genetically characterized by mutations like p.Q289X and p.R101C.
Key implications
The article delineates how dermatophyte infections persist and become chronic through complex pathogen-host interactions, revealing potential therapeutic targets. Protease inhibitors, ureases and pH modulation strategies, and immunomodulatory interventions aimed at enhancing Th17 responses could be leveraged as adjunctive treatments. Importantly, identifying CARD9 mutations in patients with refractory or deep dermatophytosis offers a genetic diagnostic tool and may guide immunotherapy decisions, such as IL-17 supplementation or JAK inhibition in cases of STAT1 gain-of-function. These insights bridge mycology, immunology, and clinical dermatology, particularly useful for managing treatment-resistant or recurrent cases.
Intratumoral microbiota: Implications for cancer onset, progression, and therapy
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review explores the role of intratumoral microbiota in cancer onset and progression, emphasizing their potential therapeutic applications in improving cancer treatment outcomes and offering new insights into cancer therapy.
What was reviewed?
This review article investigates the role of intratumoral microbiota in cancer onset, progression, and therapy. The authors explore the growing body of research on the microbiome, particularly its influence within the tumor microenvironment (TME). The article focuses on how microorganisms, such as bacteria and fungi, impact tumor behavior and immune responses, with the potential to either support or hinder cancer development. In addition to the effects on cancer progression, the review highlights the therapeutic implications of manipulating intratumoral microbiota, suggesting a new frontier in cancer treatment strategies.
Who was reviewed?
The article presents a synthesis of studies examining the microbiota present within tumor tissues. The focus is on research that highlights the relationship between specific microorganisms and cancer progression, immune modulation, and treatment outcomes. The reviewed studies span a range of cancer types, including gastrointestinal, breast, and pancreatic cancers, reflecting the diversity of microbial communities found within the TME. These studies collectively contribute to a better understanding of how intratumoral microbiota function and their potential clinical applications in cancer care.
Most important findings
The review underscores the critical role of intratumoral microbiota in cancer biology. Intratumoral microbiota are often distinct from those found in normal tissues, with certain bacterial species like Fusobacterium nucleatum, Bacteroides fragilis, and Escherichia coli consistently identified in colorectal cancer tissues. These microorganisms influence tumor progression through various mechanisms, such as promoting inflammation, inducing DNA damage, and activating carcinogenic pathways. For example, Fusobacterium nucleatum has been shown to contribute to cancer growth by modulating the immune response and promoting inflammatory pathways. On the other hand, the microbiota within tumors can also have an immune-stimulating effect, triggering T-cell activation and enhancing anti-tumor immunity. The review also highlights the dual role of intratumoral microbiota in cancer therapy. Certain bacteria have been linked to improved responses to immunotherapy, while others, such as Gammaproteobacteria, can cause chemoresistance by degrading chemotherapeutic agents like gemcitabine.
Key implications
The review suggests that intratumoral microbiota play a significant role in cancer therapy, offering new avenues for treatment strategies. Modifying the microbiome within tumors, through approaches like probiotics or fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT), could enhance the effectiveness of current therapies. Understanding microbial signatures in tumors may also lead to the development of diagnostic biomarkers, allowing for more personalized treatment plans based on the microbial composition of a patient’s tumor. The ability to influence the microbiota within the TME could potentially improve therapeutic outcomes, making microbiome-based therapies a promising addition to the cancer treatment arsenal.
Effects of Copper Addition on Copper Resistance, Antibiotic Resistance Genes, and intl1 during Swine Manure Composting
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study explores the effects of copper exposure on copper and antibiotic resistance genes during swine manure composting, revealing changes in microbial community composition and gene persistence, particularly at higher copper concentrations, with implications for environmental management and resistance gene spread.
What was studied?
The study examined the effects of copper addition during the composting of swine manure, specifically focusing on its impact on copper resistance genes (CRGs), antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs), and the integrase gene (intI1) that plays a role in horizontal gene transfer. Researchers evaluated how varying copper concentrations influenced the persistence and abundance of these genes in relation to the microbial community composition throughout the composting process. The research aimed to understand the interactions between copper exposure, resistance gene dynamics, and bacterial community shifts during composting, with an emphasis on environmental and microbiological factors.
Who was studied?
The study utilized swine manure as the primary substrate for composting, collected from a medium-sized farm in Yangling, China. The swine feed had been supplemented with trace elements like copper and antibiotics, ensuring that the manure had a baseline concentration of copper and resistance genes. The composting process was controlled in a laboratory setting, with specific concentrations of copper (200 mg/kg and 2000 mg/kg) added to simulate varying levels of environmental copper contamination. Through this setup, the study sought to understand the response of the manure's microbial community, particularly the abundance and co-occurrence of copper and antibiotic resistance genes, as well as the intI1 gene.
Most important findings
The results demonstrated significant changes in the abundance of CRGs, ARGs, and intI1 throughout the composting process. The abundance of copper resistance genes such as pcoA and tcrB decreased, while genes like copA and cusA increased, suggesting that copper exposure exerted selective pressure on certain bacterial populations, enhancing their resistance capabilities. The study also observed that higher copper concentrations (Cu2000) had a more persistent effect on the microbial community composition, maintaining higher levels of certain CRGs even at later stages of composting. The presence of antibiotics, particularly macrolides, co-selected for the persistence of these resistance genes, as evidenced by the enhanced abundance of erm(A) and erm(B) genes, which are associated with macrolide resistance. Network analysis revealed that these genes, particularly the copper and antibiotic resistance genes, were co-located on the same bacterial taxa, such as Steroidobacter and Corynebacterium, suggesting these bacteria as potential hosts for the genes.
Key implications
The study highlights the interconnectedness between copper resistance, antibiotic resistance, and gene transfer during the composting process. The findings underscore the role of composting as a potential pathway for the persistence and spread of these resistance genes in the environment, especially in agricultural settings. The research suggests that copper, especially at higher concentrations, can alter the microbial community structure and potentially facilitate the horizontal transfer of resistance genes, which could have implications for public health and the management of antibiotic resistance in the environment. Understanding these dynamics is critical for developing strategies to mitigate the spread of resistance genes in composted manure, which is commonly applied to soil.
Distribution of Arsenic Resistance Genes in Prokaryotes
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review outlines the diversity, evolution, and distribution of arsenic resistance genes in prokaryotes, emphasizing their central role in the environmental microbiome, biogeochemical cycling, and potential clinical implications through gene transfer and resistance in pathogens.
What was reviewed?
This comprehensive review examined the distribution, diversity, and genetic organization of arsenic resistance genes in prokaryotes, with a particular focus on the microbiome’s role in arsenic detoxification and biogeochemical cycling. The authors detailed the evolutionary history, molecular mechanisms, and dissemination of arsenic resistance determinants across bacteria and archaea. The review also explored recent advances in understanding microbial resistance to both inorganic and organic arsenic compounds, including novel efflux systems and enzymatic pathways. Key topics included the structure and redundancy of arsenic resistance genes, horizontal gene transfer, adaptive responses in contaminated environments, and the significance of these systems in the context of environmental and public health.
Who was reviewed?
The review encompassed a wide range of prokaryotic organisms, including diverse bacterial and archaeal lineages from environmental, clinical, and industrial settings. It synthesized evidence from studies on model organisms such as Escherichia coli, Staphylococcus aureus, Bacillus subtilis, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and extremophiles like Halobacterium sp. and Ferroplasma acidarmanus. The analysis drew on data from both cultured isolates and metagenomic studies, covering prokaryotes found in arsenic-contaminated soils, groundwater, mine tailings, animal microbiomes (e.g., gut bacteria), and pristine environments presumed to be arsenic-free. The microbial populations reviewed ranged from those with minimal genetic resistance determinants to those harboring complex, redundant, and horizontally transferred arsenic resistance gene clusters.
Most important findings
The review identified that nearly all prokaryotes possess some form of arsenic resistance genes, reflecting ancient and ongoing selective pressures. The canonical ars operon, typically consisting of arsR (regulator), arsB (arsenite efflux pump), and arsC (arsenate reductase), is ubiquitous and often found on chromosomes, plasmids, transposons, and genomic islands, facilitating horizontal gene transfer and rapid adaptation. Variations and redundancies in ars operon structure are common, with some microbes harboring multiple operons that are differentially expressed depending on environmental conditions, such as arsenic concentration and temperature. The review also highlighted the evolution of additional resistance genes, including acr3 (an alternative arsenite efflux transporter), aqpS (aquaglyceroporin-based transport), mfs (major facilitator superfamily), and genes conferring resistance to organic arsenicals—arsM (arsenic methyltransferase), arsH (organoarsenical oxidase), arsP (organoarsenical efflux permease), and arsI (C-As bond lyase). These broaden the resistance spectrum and demonstrate convergent evolutionary solutions to arsenic toxicity.
The presence of these genes in pathogenic bacteria (e.g., Klebsiella pneumoniae, Yersinia spp., Campylobacter jejuni) and in environmental bacteria from highly contaminated sites underscores their role in both environmental adaptation and potential clinical relevance. Notably, the review recognized that efflux mechanisms, primarily via ArsB, Acr3, ArsP, and associated ATPases, are central to prokaryotic arsenic resistance. Furthermore, the review discussed the impact of microbial methylation and demethylation of arsenic on the global geocycle, influencing arsenic toxicity, mobility, and exposure risks to humans and animals. Metagenomic surveys revealed a remarkable diversity of arsenic resistance genes, with certain gene clusters (e.g., arsP for organoarsenicals) being particularly widespread.
Key implications
The widespread and diverse nature of arsenic resistance genes in prokaryotes has significant implications for environmental microbiology, clinical practice, and public health. Microbial arsenic resistance is a key driver of the global arsenic geocycle, influencing arsenic mobility, bioavailability, and toxicity in various ecosystems, including those affecting human water and food supplies. The detection of arsenic resistance determinants in both environmental and pathogenic bacteria raises concerns about the potential for horizontal gene transfer, which could enhance the survival and virulence of clinically relevant microbes in arsenic-rich environments. For microbiome research and clinical translation, understanding the prevalence and function of these resistance genes is essential for developing microbial signatures for risk assessment, bioremediation strategies, and monitoring the spread of resistance traits. The review also points to the evolutionary arms race between arsenic as an environmental toxin and microbial adaptation, emphasizing the need for continued surveillance of resistance gene dissemination and functional diversity in both environmental and host-associated microbiomes.
Staphylococcus aureus Plasmids: Reservoirs of Antibiotic Resistance and Virulence Genes
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Staphylococcus aureus (S. Aureus)
Staphylococcus aureus (S. Aureus)
Staphylococcus aureus is a versatile skin and mucosal commensal that can transition into a highly virulent pathobiont. Known for its immune-evasive strategies, toxin production, and antibiotic resistance, it plays a significant role in chronic infections and microbiome imbalance.
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This study sequenced and analyzed plasmids from poultry-associated Staphylococcus aureus, uncovering diverse resistance and virulence genes, novel mobilizable plasmids, and highlighting poultry as a reservoir for clinically relevant resistance determinants transferable to human strains.
What was studied?
This original research article investigated the prevalence and genetic composition of plasmids in Staphylococcus aureus strains of poultry origin, with a focus on determinants of antibiotic and heavy metal resistance and virulence-associated genetic elements. The study aimed to address the underrepresentation of complete plasmid sequences in public databases by sequencing and analyzing the complete plasmid content from 18 poultry-associated S. aureus strains. Researchers classified these plasmids into three groups: (I) poultry-associated plasmids (including pAvX and pAvY variants), (II) plasmids previously reported in S. aureus from diverse hosts, and (III) entirely novel plasmids characterized for the first time in this study. Functional genetic analyses were performed to identify resistance genes, virulence factor genes, and elements relevant for plasmid maintenance and mobility, including toxin-antitoxin (TA) and restriction-modification (RM) systems.
Who was studied?
The study analyzed 18 S. aureus strains isolated from poultry and game birds (Gallus gallus, Perdix perdix, Phasianus colchicus, and Meleagris gallopavo) collected from Belgium, the USA, the UK, and Poland between 1976 and 2016. The strains represent various sequence types (STs) according to multilocus sequence typing (MLST), with most originating from poultry farms. These strains were selected to provide a broad view of plasmid diversity in avian-associated S. aureus. The plasmid sequences were obtained through next-generation sequencing, followed by functional and comparative genomic analyses.
Most important findings
The study revealed a high prevalence and diversity of plasmids in poultry-associated S. aureus. Group I plasmids (pAvX and pAvY variants) were found in 72% of strains and are associated with virulence factors but do not carry resistance determinants. Group II plasmids, found in 39% of strains, included previously characterized elements known to carry antibiotic resistance against aminoglycosides, beta-lactams, macrolides, and tetracyclines, as well as heavy metal (cadmium and arsenic) resistance genes. Notably, these plasmids are also present in human clinical isolates, highlighting cross-species transmission. Group III comprised novel plasmids (28% prevalence), such as pPA3, which exhibited a mosaic structure derived from other plasmids and carried multiple resistance determinants (erythromycin, tetracycline, cadmium) and virulence genes. Many plasmids harbored toxin-antitoxin systems (e.g., pemIK-Sa1, yefM/yoeB-Sa2, sprF3/sprG3) and mobility elements (oriT or mimics, mob genes), enhancing their maintenance and potential for horizontal transfer. The mosaicism and mobilizability of these plasmids underscore the dynamic nature of resistance and virulence gene dissemination in S. aureus, especially across human and animal reservoirs.
Key implications
This research highlights livestock-associated S. aureus, especially poultry strains, as significant reservoirs for resistance and virulence determinants that can be mobilized and transmitted to human strains. The presence of identical or highly similar plasmids in both animal and human isolates demonstrates the ease of resistance gene flow between species, facilitated by mobile genetic elements and TA systems. The identification of previously unknown plasmids and novel mobility elements (such as new oriT mimics) suggests that the true diversity and mobilization potential of S. aureus plasmids are underestimated. For clinical practice and infection control, these findings stress the importance of comprehensive plasmid surveillance in both human and animal settings, as well as the need for complete plasmid sequencing in genomic studies to better understand and curb the spread of antimicrobial resistance.
Effect of Dietary Copper on Intestinal Microbiota and Antimicrobial Resistance Profiles of Escherichia coli in Weaned Piglets
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Dietary copper effect on intestinal microbiota in weaned piglets increased E. coli abundance and raised ciprofloxacin and chloramphenicol resistance, while shifting key metabolic pathways without growth benefit.
What was studied?
This original study tested the dietary copper effect on intestinal microbiota in weaned piglets and linked those shifts to Escherichia coli drug resistance. The authors fed piglets a basal diet with or without added copper sulfate at 20, 100, or 200 mg Cu/kg feed and profiled the ileal and cecal microbiota by 16S rDNA sequencing. They also isolated E. coli across time to measure resistance to common antibiotics. The work asked whether a pharmacological copper dose changes gut community makeup and function, increases E. coli abundance, and promotes antimicrobial resistance. The study also checked growth outcomes to see if copper improved gain or feed use while it altered the gut ecosystem.
Who was studied?
The study enrolled healthy weaned piglets (21 ± 1 days old) with similar starting weights. Investigators randomly assigned animals to control or copper-supplemented diets and sampled anal swabs at days 0, 21, and 42 for E. coli isolation. They collected ileal and cecal contents from control and 200 mg Cu/kg groups at weeks 3 and 6 for microbiota and functional predictions. E. coli isolates underwent standard identification and Kirby–Bauer disk diffusion testing against agents that included ampicillin, ceftriaxone, ciprofloxacin, chloramphenicol, and trimethoprim–sulfamethoxazole. The design let the authors compare community structure, inferred metabolic pathways, E. coli abundance, and resistance across dose and time.
Most important findings
Copper did not change alpha diversity but it changed community composition in both ileum and cecum. In the ileum after six weeks, copper shifted Firmicutes and Clostridiaceae and marked the genus Sarcina; in the cecum, copper altered Lactobacillus, Sporolactobacillus, and increased E. coli abundance. Predicted functions showed clear pathway effects. In the ileum, copper lowered pathways tied to energy metabolism, several amino acid routes, butanoate metabolism, nitrogen metabolism, and vitamin and cofactor metabolism. In the cecum, copper raised pathways for branched-chain amino acid biosynthesis and some lipid biosynthesis features and lowered peptidase-related functions.
These shifts point to reduced short-chain fatty acid support in the ileum and a tilt toward protein and lipid pathways in the cecum. Copper exposure increased E. coli richness in the hindgut and raised resistance. In the ileum, resistance to ciprofloxacin rose with copper, while in the cecum, resistance to chloramphenicol rose. Across all sites, most isolates were multidrug resistant, and a larger share of highly resistant strains (≥ six classes) came from copper-fed pigs. By day 42, resistance to ciprofloxacin and chloramphenicol showed a dose-dependent rise, with the 200 mg Cu/kg group highest. Growth metrics did not improve, so the microbiota and resistance costs occurred without clear performance gains. Together, these findings identify a signature of copper-driven shifts that includes higher E. coli abundance and higher rates of fluoroquinolone and phenicol resistance.
Key implications
Clinicians should read high copper intake as a pressure that can favor gut pathobionts and select for resistance. In a microbiome signatures database, this pattern would pair copper exposure with increased E. coli abundance and higher ciprofloxacin and chloramphenicol resistance. The ileal loss of butanoate and energy pathways hints at weakened barrier support, while cecal shifts toward amino acid and lipid routes signal altered nutrient processing. These results support careful copper use in animal production and suggest that copper exposure history in patients with animal contact could inform risk for resistant Enterobacterales. Although this is a swine model, the direction of effect is clear: sustained copper exposure can push gut communities toward E. coli growth and multidrug resistance, with limited host benefit.
Oral Supplementation of Lead-Intolerant Intestinal Microbes Protects Against Lead (Pb) Toxicity in Mice
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Lead (Pb)
Lead (Pb)
Lead exposure has a profound effect on the microbiome, disrupting microbial diversity, immune responses, and contributing to the development of antimicrobial resistance (AMR). Understanding how Pb interacts with microbial communities and impacts host-pathogen dynamics is essential for clinicians to mitigate long-term health risks and improve treatment strategies.
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This review discusses the detrimental effects of lead (Pb) exposure on gut microbiota, metabolism, and homeostasis, highlighting its role in metabolic and systemic disorders. It suggests interventions such as probiotics and dietary supplementation for mitigating Pb toxicity.
What was studied?
The study examined the impact of lead (Pb) exposure on gut homeostasis, microbiota composition, and metabolites, exploring how these factors contribute to systemic toxicity. It also delved into the interrelationship between gut microbiota, microbial metabolites, and overall health, emphasizing the importance of the gastrointestinal (GI) tract as a primary site for Pb absorption and the subsequent disruption of gut microbiota balance.
Who was studied?
The study primarily focused on animal models, including rats, mice, zebrafish, and flies, to investigate the effects of Pb exposure. The research also referenced population-based studies that correlated Pb levels with microbiota changes in children, highlighting the impact of prenatal and postnatal exposure. The study aimed to understand how Pb exposure affects gut microbiota across different species and how it influences overall health outcomes, especially in relation to metabolic, immune, and neurological functions.
Most important findings
Pb exposure leads to significant alterations in gut microbiota composition, particularly by reducing microbial diversity and shifting the community structure. For instance, exposure to Pb decreased the abundance of beneficial microbes such as Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium, while increasing harmful bacteria like Pseudomonas in zebrafish. Pb exposure was also associated with the disruption of key metabolic pathways, including amino acid metabolism, bile acid production, and the short-chain fatty acid (SCFA) production, which is crucial for gut health. Notably, chronic Pb exposure induces gut dysbiosis, which leads to the development of fatty liver disease, glucose metabolism disorders, and increased intestinal permeability, facilitating the translocation of harmful molecules into the systemic circulation.
Key implications
The study underscores the significant health risks associated with Pb exposure, particularly in the context of its impact on gut microbiota. Pb exposure not only disrupts gut microbial diversity but also impairs critical metabolic pathways, leading to systemic effects like metabolic disorders and liver damage. The findings suggest that interventions such as probiotics and dietary supplementation may mitigate some of the toxic effects of Pb exposure by restoring gut homeostasis and microbial balance. This emphasizes the need for more research into therapeutic strategies targeting the microbiota to prevent or alleviate Pb-induced toxicity, especially in vulnerable populations such as children and those exposed to environmental Pb.
Innovative Strategies Toward the Disassembly of the EPS Matrix in Bacterial Biofilms
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study investigates EPS-rich biofilm dynamics, showing how biofilm dispersal via DNase and EPS-glycosidases influences microbial community structure and resilience. It highlights the role of commensal reseeding in restoring microbial balance after dispersal.
What was studied?
The study examines the dynamics of biofilm formation and dispersal in bacterial communities, with a particular focus on EPS-rich biofilms and their interactions with microbial communities under stress. The research investigates the role of biofilm dispersal enzymes, such as DNase and EPS-glycosidases, in breaking down the biofilm matrix, which facilitates the release and spread of bacterial cells. Additionally, the study emphasizes the role of commensal reseeding, where bacteria that are not directly exposed to the stressors re-colonize biofilm environments to restore microbial balance. The research also delves into how biofilm matrix components contribute to overall survival, resilience, and community composition, especially during biofilm disassembly.
Who was studied?
The study primarily investigates bacterial species capable of forming EPS-rich biofilms, including Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Staphylococcus aureus, and Escherichia coli, which are known to have the capacity to thrive in environments where biofilm formation is crucial for survival. The research also examines microbial interactions within these biofilms, assessing the role of both stress-sensitive and stress-resistant bacteria in maintaining the integrity and function of biofilms. These species were chosen due to their well-established roles in biofilm formation and their relevance in clinical and environmental microbiology.
Most important findings
The study demonstrates that EPS-rich biofilms play a crucial role in protecting bacteria from environmental stresses. The biofilm matrix provides a barrier that helps bacteria evade immune responses, antibiotics, and other hostile factors. However, when the biofilm is exposed to dispersal signals, such as DNase and EPS-glycosidases, it leads to the breakdown of the matrix, promoting biofilm dispersal and allowing individual bacterial cells to move and colonize new areas. The research highlights how commensal reseeding—the process where less resistant bacterial species re-establish themselves in the biofilm after dispersal—can restore microbial diversity. The study also points out that the biofilm formation and dispersal process influences microbial community dynamics and may impact the virulence of certain strains. The ability of bacteria to remodel biofilms in response to environmental changes is crucial for their survival and adaptation.
Key implications
This research has significant implications for biofilm management and microbial community dynamics in clinical and environmental settings. By understanding how bacteria form and disperse biofilms, clinicians and researchers can better strategize approaches to managing biofilm-associated infections or improve bioremediation efforts where biofilm formation plays a key role in degrading contaminants. The findings on biofilm dispersal enzymes open up potential therapeutic interventions aimed at disrupting biofilms, which are often resistant to traditional treatments. The ability to manage biofilm formation through degradation or commensal reseeding could help maintain microbial balance in environments where biofilms typically thrive, such as the human gut or industrial settings.
How do intestinal probiotics restore the intestinal barrier?
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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The study examines how intestinal probiotics restore the intestinal barrier by regulating tight junctions, immune responses, and gut microbiota, offering insights into their therapeutic potential for gut-related diseases.
What was studied?
This study investigates how intestinal probiotics restore and enhance the intestinal barrier's integrity, a crucial factor in maintaining gut health and preventing disease. The intestinal barrier comprises epithelial cells, tight junctions, and mucus layers, which serve as a physical and biochemical barrier to harmful pathogens and toxins. Probiotics are live microorganisms that, when administered in adequate amounts, confer health benefits to the host, particularly in the context of gut health. The review discusses the mechanisms by which probiotics interact with the gut microbiota, regulate immune responses, and strengthen the intestinal epithelial cell layers. It focuses on the molecular and cellular processes through which probiotics restore the barrier function, including modulation of tight junction proteins, anti-inflammatory cytokine production, and the promotion of mucosal immunity.
Who was studied?
The study reviewed a range of clinical trials and preclinical models, such as rodent models and human intestinal cell cultures, that explored the role of probiotics in maintaining or restoring intestinal barrier function. The research includes a variety of probiotic strains, such as Lactobacillus, Bifidobacterium, and Saccharomyces boulardii, which are known for their beneficial effects on gut health. The review also discusses the intestinal microbiota of individuals with conditions like inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), and intestinal permeability disorders, examining how probiotics can positively influence the gut barrier in both healthy and diseased states.
Most important findings
The study found that intestinal probiotics contribute to the restoration of the intestinal barrier through multiple mechanisms. Tight junction proteins, such as occludin, claudin, and zonulin, are key to maintaining the integrity of the intestinal barrier. Probiotics have been shown to enhance the expression of these proteins, thus improving intestinal permeability and reducing gut leakage. In addition, probiotic-induced anti-inflammatory cytokines like IL-10 help modulate the local immune response, protecting against inflammation that can weaken the gut barrier. Probiotics also influence the gut-associated lymphoid tissue (GALT), enhancing mucosal immunity and promoting the production of secretory IgA, which helps neutralize pathogens at the intestinal surface. Furthermore, certain probiotics are capable of producing short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs), such as butyrate, which nourish colonic epithelial cells, promoting their growth and fortifying the barrier.
Key implications
This study has important implications for the use of probiotics in clinical practice, particularly for individuals with gastrointestinal disorders or those at risk of gut permeability issues. The findings suggest that probiotics can be a valuable therapeutic tool for restoring the intestinal barrier and improving gut health, particularly in conditions such as IBD, IBS, and leaky gut syndrome. Understanding the specific mechanisms through which probiotics modulate tight junctions, immune responses, and microbial composition could lead to more targeted probiotic therapies for gut-related diseases. The study also emphasizes the need for personalized probiotic treatments, as different probiotic strains may have distinct effects depending on the underlying gut condition and microbiota composition of the individual.
Effects of cadmium exposure on intestinal microflora of Cipangopaludina cathayensis
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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The study examines how cadmium exposure alters the microbiota in rats, causing microbial translocation and metabolic shifts. The findings highlight potential biomarkers for assessing cadmium toxicity.
What was studied?
The study explored the impact of environmental cadmium (Cd) exposure on the gut and blood microbiomes of Sprague-Dawley rats, focusing on the translocation of specific microbiota from the gut to the blood and the subsequent effects on metabolic processes. The study used omics-based analyses, including 16S rRNA sequencing and serum metabolomics, to assess changes in microbial diversity, metabolic shifts, and inflammatory responses following Cd exposure. The primary aim was to determine how cadmium exposure disrupts the microbiota and the subsequent effects on overall health and metabolism.
Who was studied?
The research was conducted using Sprague-Dawley rats, a commonly used model in toxicological studies. These rats were exposed to cadmium chloride, a form of cadmium, to simulate environmental exposure to this toxic metal. The study focused on understanding how cadmium affects the balance of the microbiome, both in the gut and the blood, and how these changes contribute to liver injury and metabolic disruptions. The rats were selected for their relevance to studying the effects of environmental pollutants on animal health.
Most important findings
The study revealed significant changes in both the intestinal and blood microbiomes following cadmium exposure. Notably, Cd exposure led to an increase in gut microbiota such as Clostridia_UCG_014 and NK4A214_group, as well as blood microbiota such as Corynebacterium and Muribaculaceae. Cadmium exposure facilitated the translocation of these microbial species from the gut into the bloodstream. Moreover, the research identified a significant alteration in serum metabolites. Specifically, there was an up-regulation of indoxyl sulfate, phenyl sulfate, and p-cresol sulfate, alongside a down-regulation of δ-tocopherol and L-glutamine. These findings suggest that cadmium exposure impacts both the microbial communities and the metabolic pathways within the body, pointing to potential biomarkers for assessing Cd toxicity.
Key implications
The findings of this study provide critical insights into how environmental pollutants like cadmium alter microbial communities and how these changes can influence metabolic processes and organ function. The identification of novel biomarkers, such as specific serum metabolites and microbial shifts, expands our understanding of the role the microbiome plays in cadmium-induced toxicity. This research opens the door for future studies on how to mitigate the harmful effects of environmental contaminants on human health, particularly through microbial modulation. Additionally, understanding the link between gut microbial alterations and systemic health issues could inform future therapeutic strategies for conditions linked to environmental exposure.
Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 inhibits biofilm formation and mitigates virulence in Pseudomonas aeruginosa
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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E. coli Nissle 1917 demonstrates significant antibiofilm activity against P. aeruginosa, inhibiting biofilm formation and dispersing mature biofilms. Its CFS also downregulates key virulence factors and offers protection in a Galleria mellonella model.
What was studied?
This study investigated the biofilm inhibition and virulence mitigation effects of Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 (EcN) against Pseudomonas aeruginosa. The researchers tested cell-free supernatants (CFS) from EcN and other bacterial strains for their ability to inhibit biofilm formation and disrupt existing biofilms of P. aeruginosa. The study also explored the protective effect of EcN CFS in a Galleria mellonella larvae model, alongside proteomic analysis to determine the molecular interactions involved in the biofilm suppression.
Who was studied?
The study focused on Pseudomonas aeruginosa, a pathogenic bacterium known for its ability to form biofilms that contribute to chronic infections. The study used several P. aeruginosa strains, including PAO1, SNP0614, and LYT-4, to assess the antibiofilm activity of EcN. The Galleria mellonella larval model was also used to evaluate the in vivo virulence mitigation properties of EcN CFS.
Most important findings
EcN CFS significantly inhibited the formation of P. aeruginosa biofilms without affecting the planktonic growth of the bacteria. It also disrupted mature biofilms, reducing extracellular DNA (eDNA) accumulation, a key component of biofilm structure. The biofilm inhibition was dose-dependent, with a minimum biofilm inhibitory concentration (MBIC) of 25%. Proteomic analysis revealed that EcN CFS downregulated several P. aeruginosa proteins involved in motility, quorum sensing, and biofilm formation. The active antibiofilm factors were heat-labile and proteinaceous, with molecular weights between 30 and 100 kDa.
Key implications
The results suggest that E. coli Nissle 1917 could be a potential therapeutic agent for mitigating P. aeruginosa infections by targeting biofilm formation and virulence factors. The protective effect observed in the Galleria mellonella model highlights its potential for further clinical development as a probiotic or therapeutic agent. The study also provides insights into the molecular mechanisms behind the anti-biofilm activity of EcN, which could aid in developing strategies for combating biofilm-associated infections in clinical settings.
Excessive consumption of mucin by over-colonized Akkermansia muciniphila promotes intestinal barrier damage during malignant intestinal environment
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study shows that excessive Akkermansia muciniphila colonization damages the intestinal mucus barrier and tight junctions in colorectal cancer models, worsening inflammation and disease progression. Findings highlight its role as a context-dependent microbe rather than a universally beneficial probiotic.
What was studied?
This study examined whether excessive colonization of Akkermansia muciniphila damages the intestinal barrier in a malignant intestinal environment. Using an in situ colorectal cancer mouse model, the investigators tested the hypothesis that overabundance of this mucin-degrading bacterium disrupts the balance between mucin secretion and degradation, leading to barrier breakdown. The study directly addressed conflicting literature regarding whether A. muciniphila functions as a protective commensal or a context-dependent pathobiont during intestinal disease.
Who was studied?
The researchers studied male BALB/c mice subjected to an in situ colorectal cancer model created by orthotopic transplantation of CT26 tumor tissue. To isolate the effects of A. muciniphila, mice underwent antibiotic-induced microbiome disruption followed by high-dose oral gavage of live A. muciniphila, creating an over-colonized state. Control groups included untreated mice and antibiotic-treated mice without bacterial supplementation. No human participants were studied, but the findings were interpreted in the context of human intestinal disease.
What were the most important findings?
The study demonstrated that Akkermansia muciniphila abundance increased markedly in colorectal cancer mice and emerged as a signature bacterium alongside pathogenic taxa such as Escherichia–Shigella and Enterococcus. When experimentally over-colonized, A. muciniphila significantly reduced mucin content in the colon, depleted goblet cells, and thinned the mucus layer, as shown by Alcian blue staining and reduced MUC2 expression. Tight junction integrity deteriorated, with significant downregulation of ZO-1, occludin, and claudin-4 at both mRNA and protein levels. These structural changes allowed inflammatory infiltration, increased white blood cell counts, and mild systemic inflammation. Rather than compensating for barrier injury, excessive A. muciniphila consumption of mucin exceeded goblet cell secretion capacity, breaking the dynamic equilibrium required for barrier maintenance. In the context of malignancy and antibiotic-disrupted microbiota, A. muciniphila acted as a detrimental major microbial association, accelerating colitis-like pathology and potentially facilitating colorectal cancer progression.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study provides strong evidence that Akkermansia muciniphila is a context-dependent organism whose effects shift from beneficial to harmful when over-colonized in diseased intestinal environments. For clinicians, elevated abundance of A. muciniphila should not be universally interpreted as protective, particularly in patients with active inflammation, barrier damage, or colorectal cancer risk. The findings caution against live A. muciniphila supplementation in such settings and emphasize the need for functional, not abundance-based, microbiome interpretation.
Akkermansia muciniphila: new insights into resistance to gastrointestinal stress, adhesion, and protein interaction with human mucins through optimised in vitro trials and bioinformatics tools
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study shows that Akkermansia muciniphila survives gastrointestinal stress through aggregation, adheres preferentially to mucus-secreting intestinal cells, and interacts with human mucins via specific proteins, supporting its therapeutic potential while highlighting dose-dependent safety considerations.
What was studied?
This original experimental study investigated whether Akkermansia muciniphila ATCC BAA-835 possesses functional traits required for probiotic viability after oral ingestion, focusing on survival through simulated gastrointestinal transit, adhesion to human intestinal epithelial cells, and molecular interactions with human mucins. The authors designed an optimized in vitro model that sequentially exposed A. muciniphila to simulated gastric and intestinal stress before directly testing epithelial adhesion, a strategy intended to better approximate real-world physiological conditions than conventional isolated assays. The study further integrated bioinformatic analysis of the A. muciniphila proteome to identify bacterial proteins involved in mucin interaction, addressing an important mechanistic gap in understanding how this organism persists in the gut mucosal niche.
Who was studied?
The study evaluated Akkermansia muciniphila ATCC BAA-835, a well-characterized human gut symbiont isolated from a healthy adult, and compared its performance to the established probiotic Lacticaseibacillus rhamnosus GG ATCC 53103. Human intestinal epithelial cell lines representing distinct intestinal environments were used, including CaCo-2 enterocyte-like cells, HT-29 heterogeneous colon cells, and HT-29-MTX mucus-secreting goblet-like cells. No human participants were enrolled, but the selected in vitro models reflected clinically relevant epithelial and mucosal conditions encountered during gastrointestinal transit and colonization.
What were the most important findings?
Akkermansia muciniphila demonstrated markedly greater resistance to simulated gastrointestinal stress than L. rhamnosus GG, maintaining high viability across acidic gastric conditions and bile-rich intestinal phases. Fluorescence-based viability assays consistently detected higher viable cell counts than plate culture, indicating a substantial viable-but-non-culturable subpopulation. A key mechanistic observation was the formation of multicellular aggregates by A. muciniphila during gastric exposure, which protected inner cells from acid and pepsin damage and allowed recovery under intestinal conditions. Adhesion assays revealed that A. muciniphila adhered more effectively than L. rhamnosus GG to all tested epithelial cell lines, with the strongest affinity observed for mucus-secreting HT-29-MTX cells, supporting its classification as a mucus-associated bacterium. However, simulated gastrointestinal stress significantly reduced adhesion compared with unstressed controls, indicating that survival and adhesion are not equivalent traits. Bioinformatic analysis identified Amuc_1434 as a likely mediator of interaction with human MUC2 mucin, while the genome showed extensive capacity for mucin degradation rather than classical mucus-binding domains, highlighting a functional specialization distinct from lactic acid probiotics. These findings position A. muciniphila as a major microbial association linked to mucosal integrity, metabolic regulation, and immune signaling.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study provides clinically relevant evidence that Akkermansia muciniphila can survive gastrointestinal transit as a viable organism but exhibits stress-dependent limitations in epithelial adhesion, emphasizing the importance of dose, formulation, and delivery context in therapeutic applications. The results caution against assuming that in vitro adhesion measured under ideal growth conditions reflects in vivo behavior. For clinicians, the findings support A. muciniphila as a promising next-generation probiotic or live biotherapeutic candidate, while underscoring the need for controlled dosing strategies to avoid excessive mucin degradation that could compromise barrier integrity in susceptible patients. The identification of specific mucin-interacting proteins also opens avenues for postbiotic or protein-based interventions that may retain benefit while reducing risk.
The synthesis of the novel Escherichia coli toxin—colibactin and its mechanisms of tumorigenesis of colorectal cancer
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This mini-review explains how pks-positive E. coli make colibactin and how it drives colorectal cancer through DNA crosslinks, double-strand breaks, and mutational signatures such as SBS and ID-pks. It also summarizes key toxin-maturation steps that may enable targeted prevention.
What was reviewed?
This mini-review explained how the pks gene cluster in E. coli B2 strains produces the genotoxin colibactin and how that toxin contributes to colorectal cancer (CRC). The authors emphasized that colibactin is structurally unstable and hard to isolate, so researchers infer its biosynthesis and activity from genetics, enzymology, chemical synthesis, and DNA-alkylation studies, then connect those mechanistic insights to CRC-relevant outcomes such as genomic instability, barrier disruption, and tumor promotion.
Who was reviewed?
Because this was a review, it synthesized findings across experimental and clinical contexts rather than enrolling a single cohort. It relied heavily on studies using human epithelial systems (including organoid lumen microinjection) to define colibactin-associated mutation patterns, and on mouse models of inflammation and colon tumorigenesis where pks-positive bacteria induce DNA damage and accelerate tumor development, framing these results as biologically plausible mechanisms that can operate in the human colon.
What were the most important findings?
For a microbiome signatures database, the key major microbial association is functional: colonization or local enrichment with pks-positive (colibactin-producing) Enterobacteriaceae, especially E. coli B2, signals potential genotoxic pressure in the colon. The review described a stepwise biosynthetic model in which the clb-encoded PKS/NRPS machinery generates precolibactin, ClbM transports intermediates into the periplasm, and ClbP cleaves a prodrug motif to release active colibactin, while resistance mechanisms protect the bacterium. Mechanistically, the authors highlighted DNA injury patterns that strengthen causal attribution: exposure to pks-positive bacteria increases single-base substitutions, produces a characteristic small indel footprint often called ID-pks (notably single T deletions in T homopolymers), and induces interstrand crosslinks that can progress to double-strand breaks, creating a credible pathway from microbial genotype to colorectal carcinogenesis.
What are the greatest implications of this study/ review?
This review supports using pks/clb detection as a clinically meaningful microbiome marker in CRC-relevant settings because it links a defined microbial gene island to specific DNA damage mechanisms and recognizable mutational footprints rather than to nonspecific dysbiosis. It also points to practical intervention logic: instead of focusing only on eradicating the organism, clinicians and translational teams can target toxin production and release steps—especially the maturation step required for active colibactin—and consider host-context levers that can shift genotoxic output, because changes in the intestinal microenvironment can plausibly amplify or dampen toxin activity and therefore modify risk.
The microbial landscape of tumors: A deep dive into intratumoral microbiota
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Intratumoural Microbiota
Intratumoural Microbiota
With the growing understanding of the intratumoral microbiota’s influence on cancer progression, the next frontier in cancer therapy is microbiota-targeted interventions. By introducing beneficial microbes or altering existing microbial populations within tumors, therapies can be designed to modulate the immune system, promote tumor suppression, and improve drug efficacy. However, challenges remain in deciphering the complex relationships between microbes, tumor cells, and the immune system, necessitating more refined research methods and standardized approaches to translate these discoveries into clinical practice.
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This review examines the role of intratumoral microbiota in cancer progression, immune modulation, and therapy resistance. It highlights microbial species involved in tumor growth and discusses the potential of microbiome-based treatments to improve cancer therapies.
What was studied?
This review focuses on the role of intratumoral microbiota in cancer biology. The study investigates how microbial populations within tumor tissues contribute to the initiation, progression, and metastasis of various cancers. It also examines the impact of intratumoral microbiota on cancer treatment outcomes, particularly in chemotherapy, immunotherapy, and radiotherapy. By analyzing the microbial composition within tumors, the review uncovers how microorganisms influence the tumor microenvironment (TME) and interact with immune cells, promoting or inhibiting tumor growth.
Who was studied?
The review includes findings from studies on various cancer types, such as colorectal, pancreatic, breast, and oral cancers, analyzing microbial species present within tumor tissues. The studies examined tumor biopsies, adjacent tissues, and the broader TME, exploring how the presence and abundance of certain microbes influence cancer progression and immune responses. Key microbial species such as Fusobacterium nucleatum, Escherichia coli, and Bacteroides fragilis were discussed, with a focus on how their presence in tumors contributes to cancer development, metastasis, and resistance to treatment.
Most important findings
The review identifies significant microbial species that contribute to tumor initiation, immune modulation, and therapeutic resistance. The review highlights how microbial metabolites, including short-chain fatty acids, bile acids, and lipopolysaccharides, play key roles in shaping the TME by modulating immune responses and promoting tumor growth. In some cases, microbes such as Bacteroides fragilis can activate oncogenic signaling pathways like Wnt/β-catenin, contributing to cancer metastasis and progression. The review also underscores the complex interaction between tumor-resident microbes and host immune cells, suggesting that intratumoral microbiota can both enhance and suppress immune responses, thus influencing therapeutic outcomes.
Key implications
The review suggests that intratumoral microbiota may serve as biomarkers for early cancer detection, prognosis, and treatment response. The findings highlight the potential of microbiome-based therapies, including probiotics, antibiotics, or engineered bacterial strains, to modulate the TME and improve the effectiveness of immunotherapy and chemotherapy. However, it is clear that more research is needed to better understand the complex relationship between intratumoral microbiota and cancer biology. Identifying specific microbial signatures could allow for personalized treatment plans, optimizing therapeutic efficacy while minimizing side effects. The review also points to the need for advanced techniques in profiling tumor-associated microbiota and developing targeted therapeutic strategies that leverage microbiome modulation to improve cancer treatment outcomes.
Gut microbiota: Emerging biomarkers and potential therapeutics for premature ovarian failure
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This paper explores how gut microbiota dysbiosis contributes to premature ovarian failure (POF) and highlights potential therapeutic interventions targeting GM for better management of POF.
What was studied?
This paper explores the role of gut microbiota in the development of premature ovarian failure (POF), a condition that significantly impacts female reproductive health. The research examines how dysbiosis, or an imbalance in the gut microbiota, contributes to ovarian dysfunction by influencing hormonal regulation, immune responses, and metabolic processes. It also addresses how alterations in the gut microbiome may lead to complications such as infertility, osteoporosis, and mental health issues, which are common in women affected by POF.
Who was studied?
The review primarily focuses on women diagnosed with premature ovarian failure, which occurs before the age of 40, leading to the early depletion of ovarian follicles and infertility. In addition to human studies, animal models are used to better understand how changes in gut microbiota influence ovarian health. The research also considers studies on chemotherapy-induced ovarian failure (CIPOF), exploring how GM modulation might protect against ovarian damage caused by chemotherapy treatments.
Most important findings
The review highlights that gut microbiota has a significant role in ovarian function, particularly through its interactions with the hypothalamic-pituitary-ovarian (HPO) axis, which regulates hormonal balance. Dysbiosis in the gut microbiome is linked to a reduction in ovarian reserve, accelerated ovarian aging, and the early onset of menopause. Notable microbial communities, such as Akkermansia and Lactobacillus, show altered abundances in POF patients, affecting immune responses and inflammation, which further exacerbate ovarian dysfunction. The study also emphasizes that GM dysbiosis is associated with conditions like osteoporosis and cardiovascular diseases, both of which are prevalent in POF patients. Furthermore, therapeutic strategies like fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) and the modulation of gut microbiota through probiotics or other agents have shown promise in improving ovarian function and mitigating symptoms of POF, especially in cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy.
Key implications
The findings suggest that gut microbiota could serve as a novel target for the prevention and treatment of premature ovarian failure. Modulating the gut microbiome may offer a promising strategy to restore ovarian function, delay the onset of menopause, and improve the fertility and quality of life of women with POF. These insights could lead to the development of personalized, microbiome-based interventions, providing more effective treatments for POF and ovarian dysfunction, particularly in women affected by chemotherapy.
Relationships Between Oral Microecosystem and Respiratory Diseases
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review explains how the oral microecosystem serves as a major source of lung microbes and a regulator of respiratory infection, inflammation, and disease severity.
What was reviewed?
This paper is a comprehensive narrative review that examined the oral microecosystem as a biologically active interface between the upper aerodigestive tract and the lungs, with a specific focus on how oral microbial communities influence the development and progression of respiratory diseases. The authors reviewed epidemiological, microbiological, immunological, and molecular evidence to explain how oral microbiota, dental plaque biofilms, saliva, and oral immune defenses interact to shape respiratory infection risk. Rather than treating oral and respiratory systems as separate compartments, the review framed the oral cavity as a primary ecological source of the lung microbiome and a reservoir for respiratory pathogens under conditions of dysbiosis or impaired host defenses.
Who was reviewed?
The review integrated findings from studies involving healthy individuals, elderly populations, hospitalized and ventilated patients, individuals with poor oral health or periodontal disease, and patients with respiratory conditions including pneumonia, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, cystic fibrosis lung disease, asthma, and lung cancer. Data were drawn from human clinical cohorts, bronchoalveolar lavage and sputum analyses, dental plaque and saliva sampling, as well as supporting in vitro and animal studies. This broad population base allowed the authors to link oral microbial composition and oral health status with respiratory disease susceptibility and severity.
What were the most important findings?
The review demonstrated that the oral microecosystem is the dominant source of microbes detected in the lower respiratory tract under both healthy and diseased states. Major microbial associations included oral streptococci, Neisseria, Prevotella, Fusobacterium, Veillonella, Porphyromonas gingivalis, Treponema denticola, and Tannerella forsythia, which were repeatedly identified in sputum and bronchoalveolar lavage samples from patients with pneumonia, COPD, and cystic fibrosis. The authors emphasized that dental plaque biofilms act as protected reservoirs where respiratory pathogens such as Streptococcus pneumoniae, Staphylococcus aureus, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Klebsiella pneumoniae, and Haemophilus influenzae can persist, adapt, and later seed the lower airways through aspiration or inhalation.
Importantly, the review detailed mechanistic pathways by which oral microbes and their products influence lung pathology. These included aspiration of bacteria and microbial components such as lipopolysaccharide, peptidoglycan, proteases, and toxins that modify respiratory epithelial surfaces, upregulate adhesion receptors, disrupt mucus barriers, and amplify inflammatory signaling. Oral pathogens such as P. gingivalis and F. nucleatum were shown to induce cytokines including IL-6, IL-8, TNF-α, and IL-1β in airway epithelial cells, promoting neutrophil recruitment, mucus hypersecretion, and tissue damage. The review also highlighted interspecies interactions, showing that oral microbes can enhance the virulence and persistence of respiratory pathogens through biofilm cooperation and immune modulation, while oral commensals such as lactobacilli and streptococci can exert antagonistic effects that limit pathogen colonization.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
For clinicians, this review establishes oral health and oral microbiome balance as modifiable determinants of respiratory disease risk. It supports integrating oral hygiene assessment and management into respiratory care pathways, particularly for vulnerable populations, and reinforces that preventing oral dysbiosis may reduce respiratory infections, inflammation, and disease progression.
Effects of a high-prebiotic diet versus probiotic supplements versus synbiotics on adult mental health: The “Gut Feelings” randomised controlled trial
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study evaluates the impact of prebiotics, probiotics, and synbiotics on mental health. It found that a high-prebiotic diet improved mood, anxiety, and stress, while probiotics and synbiotics showed minimal effects, highlighting the potential of dietary interventions in mental health management.
What was studied?
This study focused on assessing the effects of different interventions on mental health, specifically comparing a high-prebiotic diet, probiotic supplementation, and a combination of both (synbiotics). The research aimed to determine whether these interventions could improve mental health outcomes, including mood, anxiety, stress, and sleep, in adults with moderate psychological distress and low prebiotic intake. The study was conducted over 8 weeks and evaluated various psychological symptoms using validated scales.
Who was studied?
The study involved 119 adults with moderate psychological distress and low prebiotic intake. Participants were randomly assigned to four groups: (1) probiotic supplementation with diet-as-usual, (2) a high-prebiotic diet with a placebo supplement, (3) a combination of both probiotics and the high-prebiotic diet (synbiotics), and (4) a placebo group with diet-as-usual. All participants were assessed for mental health symptoms such as mood disturbance, anxiety, stress, and sleep before and after the 8-week intervention.
What were the most important findings?
The study found that a high-prebiotic diet significantly reduced total mood disturbance (TMD) compared to the placebo group, showing a moderate effect size (Cohen’s d = −0.60). Participants in the prebiotic diet group also experienced improvements in anxiety, perceived stress, and sleep quality. However, no significant improvements were observed in the probiotic or synbiotic groups. The synbiotic combination did not outperform the prebiotic diet alone, with some evidence suggesting an antagonistic interaction between the prebiotic diet and probiotic treatment, leading to poorer outcomes in the synbiotic group. Overall, the study suggests that a high-prebiotic diet can have beneficial effects on mood and anxiety, but the combined synbiotic treatment did not show a significant added benefit.
What are the implications of this study?
The greatest implication of this study is that dietary interventions, specifically high-prebiotic diets, could be a promising and non-pharmacological strategy to improve mental health, particularly for individuals with moderate psychological distress. This approach may offer a sustainable, low-risk method to manage mood disturbances, anxiety, and stress. The results also suggest that prebiotic-rich diets could be used to modulate the gut microbiota in ways that influence psychological well-being, further supporting the growing body of evidence linking gut health to mental health. However, the lack of efficacy in the synbiotic group highlights the need for further research into the synergistic effects of combining prebiotics and probiotics, as the results did not align with the anticipated benefits.
The impact of intermittent fasting on gut microbiota: a systematic review of human studies
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Intermittent fasting (IF) may positively influence gut microbiota by improving richness and diversity. However, findings are inconsistent across studies, requiring more research for clearer clinical recommendations.
What was studied?
This systematic review assessed the impact of intermittent fasting (IF) on the human gut microbiota, focusing on different types of IF, such as time-restricted feeding (TRF), alternate-day fasting (ADF), and the 5:2 diet. The review aimed to explore how these fasting interventions affect microbiota richness, alpha and beta diversity, and composition.
Who was studied?
The review included studies on healthy adults as well as those with conditions like obesity or metabolic syndrome. Participants from various ethnic groups, including Chinese and Pakistani populations, were examined to evaluate how IF affects their gut microbiota during fasting periods like Ramadan and structured diets like TRF and ADF.
Most important findings
The review found that IF interventions significantly influenced gut microbiota composition and diversity. Specifically, time-restricted eating (TRF) led to increases in microbial richness and diversity in healthy males and those observing Ramadan. Some studies showed a significant rise in specific bacterial species like Akkermansia muciniphila and Lachnospiraceae. However, the results varied significantly across studies, and the effects on alpha diversity were inconsistent. Beta diversity changes indicated distinct microbiome communities between fasting and non-fasting groups. Interestingly, studies on ADF and the 5:2 diet showed limited data, with only minor changes in microbiota composition observed.
Key implications
This review underscores the need for more targeted research to clarify the health benefits of IF-induced changes in gut microbiota. Given that the effects on microbiota diversity are still under investigation, IF could potentially offer benefits for gut health, particularly in managing metabolic disorders and inflammation. However, the substantial heterogeneity in study designs and populations means that healthcare professionals should be cautious about recommending IF without further evidence on its specific microbiome benefits. Future studies should standardize measures of microbiota diversity and control for confounding dietary variables to offer clearer insights into IF's role in gut health.
How Toxic and Essential Metals Disrupt Gut Microbiota: A Comprehensive Review
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review maps the bidirectional interactions between toxic and essential metals and the gut microbiota, detailing microbial shifts and host impacts. It highlights specific microbial taxa disrupted by metals like arsenic, cadmium, and nickel, providing insight into metal-driven dysbiosis and its implications for disease pathogenesis.
What was reviewed?
This review article investigates the bidirectional interactions between toxic and essential metals and the gut microbiota, synthesizing evidence on how these interactions influence host metabolic, immunologic, and physiologic outcomes. The paper categorizes ten common heavy metals including arsenic (As), mercury (Hg), lead (Pb), cadmium (Cd), copper (Cu), iron (Fe), manganese (Mn), chromium (Cr), silicon (Si), and nickel (Ni) based on their essentiality and toxicity. It compiles data from over 100 experimental studies across animal models and some human cohorts, highlighting how these metals alter microbial diversity, abundance, and metabolic output, and conversely, how gut microbes can modulate metal toxicity, bioavailability, and systemic absorption.
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesizes findings from studies involving humans, rodents (mice and rats), aquatic species (tilapia, zebrafish, crayfish), birds (budgerigars), and insects (bees), as well as in vitro models such as the SHIME (Simulated Human Intestinal Microbial Ecosystem). These models provided diverse insights into host–metal–microbiota interactions across species and life stages.
Most important findings
The review establishes that exposure to toxic heavy metals (THMs) like As, Hg, Pb, Ni, and Cd leads to gut dysbiosis characterized by decreased alpha diversity, disrupted SCFA production, and increased pro-inflammatory cytokines. Arsenic exposure, for instance, consistently elevated Bacteroidetes while suppressing Firmicutes, and perturbed bile acid metabolism. Mercury exposure altered gut-brain and gut-liver metabolites and enriched taxa such as Coprococcus and Oscillospira while suppressing Lactobacillaceae. Lead exposure decreased Ruminococcus and increased Proteobacteria and Succinivibrionaceae, linking microbial shifts to neurotoxicity and metabolic disorders. Cadmium increased pro-inflammatory genera like Helicobacter and Mycoplasma while decreasing protective Lactobacillus spp., impairing immune and reproductive functions.
Essential trace elements, while beneficial at physiological doses, caused microbial disturbances when in excess. High dietary Cu, Mn, or Fe exposure reduced probiotics like Lactobacillus, Bifidobacterium, and Akkermansia, and modulated bile acid, amino acid, and lipid metabolism. Notably, nickel exposure in both humans and mice reduced Lactobacillus and Blautia, increased uric acid, and worsened systemic inflammation. Chromium showed valence-dependent effects: trivalent Cr (Cr^3+) was beneficial, while hexavalent Cr (Cr^6+) promoted dysbiosis and tumorigenesis.
Microbial Taxa Altered by Heavy Metal Exposure
Below is a consolidated table summarizing bacterial taxa that have been reported to increase (↑) or decrease (↓) in relative abundance upon exposure to each of ten heavy metals. Each entry reflects significant changes observed in reviewed studies. Taxonomic ranks (phylum, family, genus, species) are listed as reported. If data for a metal were limited, the findings are correspondingly sparse.
This review underscores the critical role of microbial metallomics in modulating human health outcomes. The gut microbiota is not only a target of metal-induced toxicity but also a mediator of metal detoxification. The composition of the microbiota determines the host’s susceptibility to metal-induced metabolic and immune dysfunction, with implications for conditions such as diabetes, cardiovascular disease, neurodegeneration, and cancer. The authors advocate for gender-stratified, multi-metal exposure studies and microbiome-targeted intervention strategies to mitigate health risks. This work directly supports the development of microbiome signatures for environmental metal exposure and the validation of microbiome-targeted detoxification interventions.
The microbiome-product colibactin hits unique cellular targets mediating host–microbe interaction
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review explains how colibactin damages host DNA and also triggers bacterial SOS responses and prophage induction, reshaping gut communities and virulence. It connects barrier loss and inflammation to higher genotoxic risk and frames colibactin genes as functional microbiome biomarkers.
What was reviewed?
This review examined colibactin as a microbiome-derived small molecule that acts beyond a simple “genotoxin,” because it targets both host cells and neighboring bacteria to shape host–microbe and microbe–microbe interactions. The author focused on what makes colibactin clinically and ecologically important: its difficult-to-capture chemistry, its dependence on close contact and specific niches, and its capacity to drive colorectal cancer–relevant DNA injury while simultaneously altering microbial community behavior through DNA damage–linked signaling in bacteria.
Who was reviewed?
Because this was a review, it synthesized findings across multiple studied systems rather than one cohort. It integrated evidence from human-associated Enterobacteriaceae that carry the colibactin gene cluster, mechanistic work in cultured mammalian cells and animal models that demonstrate DNA damage and tumor promotion, and bacterial co-culture and phage–bacteria systems that reveal how colibactin changes bacterial survival and virulence traits. The review also considered contexts such as colitis and inflammation-prone states, because those settings repeatedly modify colibactin effects on both epithelial integrity and microbial ecology.
What were the most important findings?
For a microbiome signatures database, the key major microbial association is functional: the presence of colibactin-producing, gene-cluster–positive Enterobacteriaceae signals a potential genotoxic and ecosystem-shaping capability, not merely a taxonomic shift. The review described colibactin as a DNA-alkylating, crosslinking agent that can generate interstrand crosslinks and downstream double-strand breaks, which activate DNA repair signaling and can push epithelial cells toward cell-cycle arrest, death, or carcinogenesis under permissive conditions. The author also highlighted a major expansion of colibactin’s relevance to microbial community dynamics: colibactin damages bacterial DNA, activates the SOS response, and triggers prophage induction in lysogenic bacteria, which can selectively kill competitors and alter virulence gene expression in pathogens. A parallel microbial signature emerges through resistance biology, because the clbS resistance function and clbS-like genes can spread within microbial communities and blunt colibactin-triggered DNA damage and phage lysis, indicating active ecological “arms races” around this toxin system. The review further reinforced that host barriers matter, noting evidence that an intact mucus layer can reduce colibactin genotoxicity, while inflammation-associated barrier disruption can plausibly increase exposure and amplify downstream harm.
What are the greatest implications of this study/ review?
This review reframes clinical interpretation of colibactin from a narrow colorectal cancer trigger to a broader, context-dependent microbiome effector that can reshape microbial communities and host risk simultaneously. It implies that clinicians and translational teams should interpret colibactin risk through combined signals that include toxin-gene carriage, inflammatory status, and barrier integrity, because these factors influence whether DNA damage becomes biologically meaningful. It also highlights a practical caution: colibactin activity can indirectly worsen outcomes by increasing prophage-driven toxin expression in other pathogens, so the presence of colibactin producers may amplify virulence within a community rather than acting alone. At the same time, the review keeps clinical nuance by describing evidence that colibactin-linked pathways can associate with anti-inflammatory effects in probiotic contexts, which argues for precision approaches that reduce harmful genotoxic pressure without assuming every colibactin-positive strain behaves identically in every host.
Toxic and essential metals: metabolic interactions with the gut microbiota and health implications
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study explores the essential role of metal ions in human health, detailing their involvement in enzyme catalysis and the impacts of imbalances on diseases. It also highlights potential clinical applications for metal-based therapies.
What was studied?
This study investigates the role of metal ions in enzyme catalysis, human health, and disease. Specifically, it looks at how metal ion imbalances contribute to various health problems, such as anemia, neurodegenerative diseases, immune dysfunction, and metabolic syndromes. The research also delves into the use of metal-based compounds in medical treatments and the importance of dietary intake in regulating metal ion levels.
Who was studied?
The study did not focus on individual participants but instead on existing literature and research studies involving the roles of metal ions in human health and disease. It reviewed various studies and clinical case reports examining the biological roles of metals like iron, zinc, copper, and magnesium in enzymatic functions, as well as their involvement in metabolic processes. It also reviewed studies on how metal imbalances—either through deficiencies or excess—lead to a range of health conditions, including anemia, neurodegenerative diseases, immune dysfunctions, and metabolic disorders. Additionally, the review discussed the therapeutic use of metal-based compounds and their potential in treating conditions related to metal imbalances, providing insights into clinical strategies to regulate metal ions for health improvement.
What were the most important findings?
The study confirmed the essential role of metal ions in stabilizing enzyme systems, facilitating catalytic reactions, and maintaining metabolic balance. Metal ions such as zinc, magnesium, and iron are integral to enzymes like carbonic anhydrase, kinases, and cytochrome oxidase. Deficiencies in these metals can lead to reduced enzymatic activity, impairing metabolic processes and contributing to disease progression. Additionally, the study highlighted that metal imbalances—either deficiencies or excesses—can result in various disorders, including anemia, neurodegenerative diseases, immune issues, and metabolic syndromes. Clinical case studies showed the impacts of metal imbalances, such as the role of iron deficiency in anemia and excessive copper in Wilson's disease, which affects liver and brain health.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study emphasizes the critical importance of maintaining balanced metal ion levels for optimal health and enzymatic function. It underscores the need for dietary interventions to prevent metal ion deficiencies, especially for at-risk populations such as pregnant women and children. Moreover, it suggests that personalized medicine, considering genetic variations in metal metabolism, could enhance healthcare interventions. The findings also have significant implications for the development of metal-based drugs in treating various diseases, with a focus on minimizing toxicity and improving treatment specificity. Future research could lead to more targeted therapies and improved methods for managing metal-related health conditions.
Environmental cadmium exposure alters the internal microbiota and metabolome of Sprague–Dawley rats
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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The study investigates how cadmium exposure alters gut and blood microbiomes in rats, linking these changes to metabolic disruptions and systemic inflammation.
What was studied?
This study explored the effects of environmental cadmium exposure on the microbiota and metabolome of Sprague-Dawley rats. The researchers aimed to understand how cadmium (Cd) exposure, particularly from environmental sources, affects the intestinal and blood microbiomes and their corresponding metabolites. The study used a 30-day exposure model with cadmium chloride (CdCl₂) administered to rats, and analyzed the changes in microbial composition and serum metabolites through high-throughput sequencing and liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS).
Who was studied?
The study involved Sprague-Dawley female rats aged 6-8 weeks. These rats were divided into two groups, one receiving daily cadmium exposure through CdCl₂, and the other receiving a control solution. The rats were exposed for 30 days, during which the effects on their intestinal and blood microbiomes were monitored. Inflammatory factors, tight junction protein expression, and metabolic profiles were assessed to identify the impact of cadmium on microbiome-related metabolic changes.
Most important findings
The study showed that cadmium exposure significantly altered the microbiome composition in both the blood and gut of rats. In the gut, cadmium exposure increased the abundance of harmful bacteria such as Clostridia_UCG_014, which is associated with proinflammatory responses. The blood microbiome also showed an increase in Corynebacterium and Muribaculaceae, bacteria that are typically not abundant in the blood under normal conditions. These changes were linked to alterations in inflammatory factors like TNF-α and IL-6, which were significantly elevated in both the blood and intestine. Additionally, serum metabolomics revealed significant changes in metabolic pathways, including lipid metabolism, amino acid metabolism, and oxidative stress markers. Notably, metabolites such as indoxyl sulfate and p-cresol sulfate were upregulated, while compounds like δ-tocopherol were downregulated, indicating potential oxidative damage. These findings suggest that cadmium exposure triggers microbial translocation from the gut to the blood, leading to systemic inflammation and metabolic disturbances.
Key implications
The results underscore the crucial role of gut microbiota in mediating the toxic effects of cadmium exposure. The translocation of gut bacteria into the bloodstream can exacerbate systemic inflammation, potentially leading to more severe health issues, including cardiovascular diseases and metabolic disorders. The study also highlights the importance of monitoring not only the gut microbiome but also the blood microbiome as a key indicator of exposure to environmental toxins. The identified metabolic biomarkers provide valuable insights for early detection of cadmium toxicity and for developing intervention strategies to mitigate its effects. The findings also suggest that interventions targeting gut microbiota modulation could help alleviate the health impacts of cadmium exposure, especially in areas with high environmental cadmium contamination.
Heavy Metal Resistance Determinants of the Foodborne Pathogen Listeria monocytogenes
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review explores the mechanisms of heavy metal resistance in Listeria monocytogenes, focusing on arsenic and cadmium resistance genes and their potential role in persistence and virulence in food and clinical settings.
What was reviewed?
This review examined the mechanisms by which Listeria monocytogenes resists heavy metals, particularly focusing on the resistance to toxic metals like arsenic and cadmium. It highlights the role of metal resistance determinants in the environmental persistence and virulence of Listeria monocytogenes, with a special focus on their genetic regulation and association with virulence factors.
Who was reviewed?
The review primarily focused on Listeria monocytogenes, specifically its ability to resist heavy metals such as arsenic and cadmium. The study also looked at various Listeria species, with an emphasis on understanding the genetic determinants involved in metal resistance, particularly in relation to foodborne outbreaks and clinical cases of listeriosis.
What were the most important findings?
The review identified several key findings regarding the resistance of Listeria monocytogenes to arsenic and cadmium. Arsenic resistance was found to be most commonly associated with Listeria monocytogenes serotype 4b, particularly in epidemic clones, and was primarily mediated by a genetic island known as LGI2, which carries arsenic resistance genes. Cadmium resistance was found to be prevalent in serotypes 1/2a and 1/2b, often associated with food processing environments. The review discussed the presence of various cadmium resistance genes, such as cadA1, cadA2, and cadA4, located both chromosomally and on plasmids, with a focus on the role of cadA1 and cadA2 in facilitating cadmium resistance. It was noted that the presence of these genes, especially in food isolates, could contribute to the pathogen's persistence in food processing environments. Moreover, the review highlighted that the resistance to arsenic and cadmium may be linked to the pathogen's ability to survive in contaminated environments, which could indirectly affect its virulence. The involvement of metal resistance determinants in other cellular functions, such as stress tolerance and biofilm formation, was also discussed.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The findings of this review have significant implications for food safety and clinical treatment of Listeria monocytogenes. The identification of metal resistance determinants, particularly in relation to food isolates, suggests that resistance to arsenic and cadmium could contribute to the pathogen's persistence in food processing facilities, posing a challenge for food safety protocols. Furthermore, the genetic elements involved in heavy metal resistance could also be linked to other virulence factors, which may enhance the pathogenicity of Listeria monocytogenes. These insights emphasize the need for continued surveillance of Listeria strains, especially in food production settings, to monitor the spread of resistance traits. The potential for horizontal gene transfer of these resistance elements also underscores the importance of understanding how such genes may contribute to the dissemination of resistance across different bacterial species, which could complicate treatment strategies and food safety efforts.
The Genetic Determinants of Listeria monocytogenes Resistance to Bacteriocins Produced by Lactic Acid Bacteria
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review discusses the genetic mechanisms behind Listeria monocytogenes resistance to LAB-produced bacteriocins, emphasizing receptor modifications and cross-resistance, and suggests strategies to counteract these challenges in food preservation.
What was reviewed?
This review examined the mechanisms by which Listeria monocytogenes develops resistance to bacteriocins produced by lactic acid bacteria (LAB). It explored the genetic determinants of resistance, focusing on factors such as receptor modifications, changes in the cell wall and membrane, and the development of cross-resistance to various bacteriocins.
Who was reviewed?
The review primarily focused on Listeria monocytogenes and its interactions with bacteriocins produced by LAB, such as nisin, pediocin, and other class IIa bacteriocins. It reviewed how Listeria strains resist these antimicrobial peptides and the genetic factors that contribute to such resistance.
What were the most important findings?
The review found that Listeria monocytogenes exhibits resistance to bacteriocins through various mechanisms, including modifications to receptors that bacteriocins need to bind to, such as changes in the Man-PTS system and lipid II. Genetic determinants linked to these resistance mechanisms include operons like mptACD, genes responsible for altering cell wall components (dlt operon), and modifications in membrane fatty acid composition. It also identified the role of regulatory networks, including the σB system and two-component systems like VirRS, which influence Listeria's resistance to bacteriocins. Cross-resistance between different classes of bacteriocins was also highlighted, with mutations in the Man-PTS receptor leading to resistance to multiple bacteriocins. Notably, the review emphasized the potential for resistance to spread through the food industry, where bacteriocins are used as biopreservatives to control Listeria.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The review’s findings have important implications for food safety and public health. The emergence of resistance to bacteriocins in Listeria monocytogenes could reduce the effectiveness of biocontrol strategies that rely on these antimicrobial peptides in food production. This resistance poses a challenge for controlling Listeria in food products, especially in ready-to-eat foods. Additionally, the identification of key genetic determinants of resistance suggests that genetic surveillance of Listeria strains is crucial to prevent the spread of resistant variants. To combat this, the review proposes using multiple bacteriocins with different mechanisms of action or combining bacteriocins with other preservation methods to reduce the risk of resistance development.
Colibactin leads to a bacteria-specific mutation pattern and self-inflicted DNA damage
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study shows colibactin harms bacteria, triggers DNA damage defenses, and leaves a bacteria-specific mutation signature. Colibactin kills neighboring E. coli under contact-rich conditions, induces A/T-motif mutations (often T→A), and even causes self-damage in pks+ producers despite resistance.
What was studied?
This study tested whether the microbiome genotoxin colibactin harms bacteria and whether it leaves a distinct mutation pattern in bacterial genomes. The authors combined coculture killing experiments, a genome-wide knockout sensitivity screen, and mutation-accumulation whole-genome sequencing to connect colibactin exposure to bacterial death, DNA repair dependence, and specific mutational outcomes.
Who was studied?
The “subjects” were bacterial strains, mainly Escherichia coli. The team exposed an ampicillin-resistant E. coli target strain to engineered pks-positive producer strains or pks-negative controls, screened a pooled E. coli knockout library to find genes that protect against colibactin toxicity, and tested self-damage in producing backgrounds including the naturally producing probiotic E. coli Nissle 1917.
What were the most important findings?
Colibactin directly damaged bacteria in a contact-dependent way: producer strains reduced the survival of neighboring E. coli, and toxicity intensified when conditions favored close contact and stress. The knockout screen showed that survival depended strongly on DNA damage response and homologous recombination pathways (a signal that colibactin creates lesions that require high-fidelity repair), and sequencing demonstrated a clear bacteria-specific mutation signature with a large rise in single-base substitutions that clustered in A/T-rich motifs. Notably, the dominant bacterial signature differed from the mammalian one, suggesting that bacterial repair processing shapes the final mutation pattern, and the study also showed that producing strains experience self-inflicted DNA damage despite resistance mechanisms, implying long-term evolutionary pressure within pks-positive lineages.
What are the greatest implications of this study/ review?
This work expands colibactin from a host-focused carcinogenic factor to a microbiome ecology driver that can kill competitors, trigger DNA repair stress, induce prophage-related effects, and reshape community dynamics through mutagenesis. Clinically and for microbiome signatures, it supports treating pks-positive E. coli (especially B2-associated lineages) as a functional risk feature because these strains can influence both microbial community stability and host-relevant exposures, and it suggests that tracking a bacterial mutation footprint over time could become a way to infer colibactin activity in vivo rather than relying on gene presence alone.
Cancer pharmacomicrobiomics: Targeting microbiota to optimise cancer therapy outcomes
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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The review discusses the impact of gut microbiota on cancer therapy outcomes, focusing on chemotherapy and immunotherapy. It highlights how microbiota influences drug effectiveness and immune responses, emphasizing the potential of microbiota modulation for personalized treatment approaches.
What was studied?
The article delves into the role of gut microbiota in modulating cancer therapy outcomes. It explores how microbiota affects the efficacy and toxicity of cancer treatments, such as chemotherapy and immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs). The study focuses on the interactions between gut bacteria and drug metabolism, as well as their influence on immune system responses to therapy.
Who was studied?
The review synthesizes findings from preclinical studies, clinical trials, and patient data across various cancer types and treatments. It examines the interactions between different microbiota and cancer therapies like chemotherapy (e.g., irinotecan, 5-fluorouracil, cyclophosphamide) and ICIs, investigating the microbial mechanisms that contribute to treatment efficacy and resistance.
Most important findings
The review reveals that gut microbiota plays a significant role in cancer treatment outcomes by influencing both the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of cancer drugs. For instance, certain bacteria, such as Fusobacterium nucleatum, can induce chemoresistance, while others, like Enterococcus hirae, can enhance immune responses and improve treatment efficacy. Moreover, microbiota modulation, through methods like probiotics, prebiotics, and fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT), has shown promise in optimizing cancer therapies, although results have been inconsistent. Additionally, antibiotic use during cancer treatment can disrupt microbiota, potentially lowering treatment effectiveness.
Key implications
The article emphasizes the potential of microbiota as a predictive biomarker for cancer treatment responses, suggesting that understanding microbial interactions with therapies can lead to more personalized treatment strategies. It also highlights that microbiota modulation could optimize cancer therapy, particularly in cases where chemotherapy or immunotherapy is less effective. However, further research is necessary to confirm these findings and establish safe, effective microbiota modulation practices for cancer patients.
The Effect of the Combination of Probiotics and Heavy Metals From Various Aspects in Humans: A Systematic Review of Clinical Trial Studies
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This systematic review links probiotics and heavy metals to clinical outcomes, showing faster diarrhea recovery with zinc, fewer H. pylori therapy side effects, improved iron absorption with prebiotics, and early evidence of lower toxic metal burden in pregnancy.
What was reviewed?
This systematic review examined how probiotics and heavy metals interact in human clinical trials and how gut-targeted interventions might change metal absorption, toxicity, and treatment side effects. The authors identified randomized and nonrandomized trials that administered probiotics, prebiotics, or synbiotics to people with metal exposure, anemia, gastrointestinal infection, or related conditions, and then measured clinical outcomes, biochemical markers, and in some cases metal levels in blood or stool. The review synthesized dosing ranges, formulation types, and adjunct therapies such as zinc or antibiotic regimens. It compared outcomes across arms to judge whether live microbe products improved metal detoxification, micronutrient handling (notably iron), or tolerability of standard therapies like bismuth-based quadruple therapy for Helicobacter pylori.
Who was reviewed?
The review included 31 clinical trials with a combined sample of 4,611 participants across varied life stages and clinical contexts. Populations spanned healthy volunteers, children with acute diarrhea, women and children evaluated for iron absorption outcomes, pregnant women with documented exposure to toxic metals, and patients receiving antibiotics or eradication therapy for H. pylori. Interventions covered probiotics alone, prebiotics such as galactooligosaccharides, and synbiotics, with probiotic doses ranging from roughly 10^7 to 2.5×10^10 CFU/day. Control conditions typically used a placebo or standard of care (for example, zinc alone in pediatric diarrhea or bismuth quadruple therapy in H. pylori), enabling attribution of added benefit to the microbial products. Across trials, strain composition differed, but most products reflected lactic acid–bacteria–based formulations typical of clinical use.
Most important findings
Across trials, probiotics combined with zinc shortened the duration of vomiting and diarrhea compared with zinc alone, indicating a clinically relevant benefit in pediatric settings. Probiotics also reduced the adverse effects of H. pylori eradication therapy—particularly diarrhea and vomiting—although they did not raise eradication rates when layered onto bismuth quadruple therapy. For hematinic outcomes, prebiotic galactooligosaccharides improved iron absorption in women and children, consistent with enhanced luminal solubility and colonic uptake. Blood parameter changes with probiotics were generally not significant versus placebo, suggesting that clinical benefit may arise from local gut actions rather than large systemic shifts detectable by routine labs.
For toxicology, one randomized trial in pregnant women showed lower body burdens of certain toxic metals with probiotic use, whereas similar reductions were not consistently observed in children. From a microbiome-signatures standpoint, the pattern across studies supports gut-lumen mechanisms—metal binding and sequestration by microbial cell walls and exopolysaccharides, modulation of luminal pH and bile acid pools that change metal speciation, and barrier-supporting effects that may limit translocation. Because most trials did not profile taxa or functions directly, specific taxon-level signatures cannot yet be cataloged with confidence; however, the reproducible symptom relief and micronutrient effects point to mucosal-level functional shifts rather than durable compositional overhauls.
Key implications
For clinicians, the evidence supports selective use of probiotics as adjuncts to reduce gastrointestinal side effects in H. pylori therapy and to hasten recovery in pediatric diarrhea when combined with zinc. Prebiotics appear promising for improving iron absorption, aligning with gut-centric mechanisms rather than systemic hematologic changes. Early but notable findings in pregnancy suggest probiotics could help lower toxic metal burden, warranting cautious consideration in high-exposure settings while awaiting confirmatory trials. For microbiome databases, current human evidence favors functional annotations—metal binding capacity, acidification potential, and mucosal barrier support—over specific taxa, given heterogeneous products and scarce sequencing. Future trials should standardize strain reporting, incorporate metagenomics and metallomics, and measure stool-bound versus absorbed metal fractions to define actionable microbial signatures that can be translated into exposure-mitigation and supportive care pathways.
Klebsiella pneumoniae l-Fucose Metabolism Promotes Gastrointestinal Colonization and Modulates Its Virulence Determinants
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study shows that Klebsiella pneumoniae L fucose metabolism enhances gut colonization, strengthens biofilm and adherence traits, and increases virulence signalling, identifying a functional metabolic signature relevant to microbiome based clinical risk.
What was studied?
This study examined how Klebsiella pneumoniae L fucose metabolism supports gastrointestinal colonization and shapes virulence determinant expression during host–microbe interaction. The authors aimed to define how the fucose utilization pathway influences nutrient acquisition, mucosal persistence and pathogenic potential in the gut. They used genetic disruption of the fucose operon to determine whether the pathway affects K. pneumoniae growth in mucus rich environments and whether metabolic changes alter capsule production, type 1 fimbriae activity or biofilm formation. By linking nutrient metabolism to virulence traits, the study provides insight into how commensal-like colonizers become opportunistic pathogens and how specific metabolic signatures integrate into broader microbiome-based risk markers.
Who was studied?
The investigators used several clinical and laboratory Klebsiella pneumoniae isolates, including a well-characterized ST258 background and a fucose metabolism knockout strain generated by disrupting the fucA gene. These strains were tested in vitro in media supplemented with L fucose, intestinal mucus fractions, and purified mucin to evaluate their growth dependence on this carbon source. Competitive colonization assays were performed in antibiotic-treated mice to determine the relative fitness of wild-type and fucA mutants in the gastrointestinal tract. To assess virulence modulation, human epithelial cell lines were exposed to K. pneumoniae to measure adhesion, invasion, cytokine induction, and capsule-related resistance to host factors. Together, these models allowed the authors to connect metabolic function with colonization, epithelial interaction, and virulence expression in host-relevant environments.
Most important findings
The study showed that Klebsiella pneumoniae L fucose metabolism is a key metabolic trait that enhances gastrointestinal fitness and promotes expression of several virulence-associated determinants. Wild type K. pneumoniae grew robustly in fucose rich media and in mucus derived substrates, while the fucA mutant showed impaired growth and limited ability to use fucosylated carbon sources. In mouse colonization experiments, the wild type strain outcompeted the fucA mutant and reached significantly higher intestinal loads, demonstrating that L fucose utilization provides an in vivo selective advantage. Metabolically active strains also formed stronger biofilms and displayed increased type 1 fimbriae activity, suggesting that fucose sensing coordinates adherence related phenotypes. Capsule thickness increased under fucose utilization, and this shift correlated with higher resistance to serum mediated killing. At the host cell interface, strains with active fucose metabolism induced stronger IL 8 and IL 6 expression and adhered more efficiently to epithelial cells, indicating that nutrient driven virulence modulation can shape inflammatory outcomes. These findings identify L fucose metabolism as a functional microbial signature that links nutrient availability, colonization behaviour and virulence activation in the gut.
Key implications
This work indicates that Klebsiella pneumoniae L fucose metabolism may serve as a predictive marker of gastrointestinal persistence and virulence potential and should be considered in microbiome-based risk models for opportunistic infections. Because the pathway strengthens colonization, enhances biofilm formation and increases epithelial interaction, its presence may help identify strains capable of shifting from benign carriage to clinically significant infection. In clinical settings, this suggests that metabolic profiling, rather than taxonomy alone, may improve detection of high-risk colonizers, especially in vulnerable populations with disrupted mucus barriers or altered fucose availability. The findings also highlight potential therapeutic strategies, including targeting fucose utilization or competing for mucosal nutrients to limit Klebsiella expansion. By linking metabolism to virulence expression, the study reinforces the concept that pathogenicity often emerges from context-dependent ecological advantages rather than fixed genetic traits, which may shift future approaches to prevention and treatment.
MntABC and MntH Enable Staphylococcus aureus to Overcome Host Nutritional Immunity and Manganese Starvation
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Staphylococcus aureus (S. Aureus)
Staphylococcus aureus (S. Aureus)
Staphylococcus aureus is a versatile skin and mucosal commensal that can transition into a highly virulent pathobiont. Known for its immune-evasive strategies, toxin production, and antibiotic resistance, it plays a significant role in chronic infections and microbiome imbalance.
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This study shows that Staphylococcus aureus uses MntABC and MntH transporters to overcome host-imposed manganese starvation via calprotectin, preserving SOD activity and enabling systemic infection.
What was studied?
This study investigated the roles of two manganese transport systems in Staphylococcus aureus—MntABC (an ATP-binding cassette transporter) and MntH (a NRAMP family transporter)—in enabling the bacterium to overcome manganese starvation imposed by the host protein calprotectin. Calprotectin, an antimicrobial protein released by neutrophils, sequesters manganese and zinc during infection as part of a broader nutritional immunity strategy. The researchers explored how MntABC and MntH allow S. aureus to retain manganese-dependent superoxide dismutase (SOD) activity and persist in systemic infection despite calprotectin-mediated metal withholding.
Who was studied?
The study utilized both wild-type and genetically modified S. aureus strains (mntC, mntH, and double mutants), tested in vitro and in vivo. Murine models included wild-type C57BL/6 mice and S100A9 knockout mice, which lack calprotectin. These models allowed the authors to assess bacterial burdens, metal distribution, and protein expression across different organs, particularly the liver and kidneys, during systemic infection.
Most important findings
The expression of both mntA (MntABC) and mntH increased in response to calprotectin exposure, indicating a manganese-specific starvation response. Double mutants lacking both MntABC and MntH showed significantly impaired growth in manganese-limited environments and had markedly reduced SOD activity, resulting in elevated oxidative stress. In wild-type mice, the double mutants demonstrated significantly reduced bacterial burdens in liver and kidneys, confirming their impaired virulence. However, in calprotectin-deficient mice, these defects were largely rescued in the liver, confirming calprotectin as the primary manganese-sequestering factor there.
Importantly, the study used engineered calprotectin variants to demonstrate that the loss of virulence in double mutants was due to manganese, not zinc, starvation. Moreover, LA-ICP-MS imaging showed that while manganese levels are inherently lower in the kidney than in the liver, infection further restricts local manganese and zinc concentrations—yet this restriction in kidneys occurred even without calprotectin, suggesting additional, CP-independent mechanisms of manganese sequestration.
Organ
Microbiome-relevant Insight
Liver
Calprotectin-dependent Mn sequestration limits S. aureus virulence; MntABC/MntH essential for manganese acquisition and oxidative stress defense
Kidney
Mn- and Zn-limited environment independent of calprotectin; other unidentified mechanisms contribute to Mn sequestration during infection
Key implications
This study emphasizes manganese as a critical nutrient that S. aureus must acquire during infection, highlighting the importance of microbial transport systems in overcoming nutritional immunity. The finding that manganese availability, not zinc, is the primary factor limiting S. aureus persistence underlines manganese sequestration as a potential therapeutic target. Moreover, the discovery of calprotectin-independent manganese restriction in the kidney suggests the existence of redundant or parallel host mechanisms to limit metal availability, pointing to underexplored targets in innate immunity. These insights underscore the role of manganese homeostasis in shaping microbial pathogenesis and the host’s metal-withholding defense network.
Breaking down barriers: is intestinal mucus degradation by Akkermansia muciniphila beneficial or harmful?
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review explores when mucus degradation by Akkermansia muciniphila supports gut health and when it harms barrier integrity. Evidence shows its effects depend on host context, microbial balance, and mucus renewal capacity, reframing it as a condition-dependent microbiome signal rather than a universal probiotic.
What was reviewed?
This review critically examined whether intestinal mucus degradation by Akkermansia muciniphila is beneficial or harmful to the host, addressing a central controversy in microbiome research. The authors synthesized mechanistic, animal, and human evidence to evaluate how mucin degradation affects gut barrier integrity, immune signaling, and disease risk. Rather than framing A. muciniphila as inherently beneficial or harmful, the review focused on contextual factors, including host health status, microbiome complexity, diet, microbial load, and mucus production capacity, that determine whether its activity supports homeostasis or drives pathology.
Who was reviewed?
The review incorporated findings from diverse experimental systems, including healthy and diseased murine models, gnotobiotic animals, antibiotic-disrupted microbiomes, and diet-induced metabolic and inflammatory disease models. Human observational studies in obesity, inflammatory bowel disease, colorectal cancer, metabolic syndrome, and aging were also reviewed to contextualize translational relevance. In vitro studies using mucus-secreting epithelial cells were included to clarify how mucin dynamics respond to A. muciniphila activity under controlled conditions.
What were the most important findings?
The review demonstrated that Akkermansia muciniphila functions as a context-dependent major microbial association rather than a uniformly protective commensal. In healthy hosts with intact mucus renewal, A. muciniphila stimulates goblet cell activity, promotes mucus turnover, strengthens tight junctions, and reduces metabolic endotoxemia, aligning with improved metabolic and inflammatory outcomes. In contrast, when mucus production is impaired, microbial diversity is reduced, or A. muciniphila abundance becomes excessive, mucin degradation can outpace replenishment, leading to mucus thinning, barrier disruption, immune activation, and increased susceptibility to inflammation, infection, or tumorigenesis. The review highlighted disease contexts where A. muciniphila abundance correlates positively with pathology, including certain inflammatory bowel disease models, reduced-complexity microbiotas, and colorectal cancer, particularly when paired with antibiotics or Western diets. Mechanistically, the balance between mucin synthesis, degradation, and microbial cross-feeding determined whether A. muciniphila supported barrier resilience or acted as a functional stressor.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review provides a critical framework for clinicians and microbiome researchers by emphasizing that Akkermansia muciniphila should not be interpreted as a universal marker of gut health. Elevated or reduced abundance must be evaluated alongside mucus integrity, diet, inflammation, and microbial ecosystem structure. The findings caution against indiscriminate supplementation with live A. muciniphila and support precision approaches that consider host context, functional outputs, and postbiotic alternatives.
Role of Calprotectin in Withholding Zinc and Copper from Candida albicans
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Calprotectin restricts Zn and Cu to Candida albicans, triggers ZRT1/PRA1 and a SOD1→SOD3 Cu-sparing shift, and shows early Zn stress that depends on calprotectin and a broader Cu-limitation program in kidney tissue.
What was studied?
This original study tested the Role of calprotectin in withholding zinc and copper from Candida albicans and defined when this host protein blocks metal nutrition to shape fungal survival. The authors asked if calprotectin (the S100A8/S100A9 complex) depletes bioavailable Zn and Cu around the fungus, how C. albicans adapts its metal uptake systems, and whether these responses occur in vivo during kidney infection. They measured fungal growth, intracellular metals, and metal-stress transcripts in vitro under yeast extract medium and serum conditions, and then tracked the same signatures in a mouse model of disseminated candidiasis to map the timing of Zn and Cu stress in tissue.
Who was studied?
The work used Candida albicans strain SC5314 and isogenic mutants in the Zn-stress regulator Zap1, with recombinant human calprotectin variants that either bind metals or cannot bind metals. The team grew yeast in rich medium and in 50% serum to capture host-like metal sources, quantified intracellular Zn, Cu, Mn by ICP-MS, and profiled transcripts of Zn uptake genes (ZRT1, PRA1) and Cu-stress enzymes (SOD1, SOD3). They then infected wild-type mice and calprotectin-deficient S100A9−/− mice, sampled kidneys over 24–72 hours, and measured host metals and fungal metal-stress transcripts to define how calprotectin shapes Zn and Cu availability early in infection.
Most important findings
Calprotectin bound metals with very high affinity and removed Zn from medium, which drove strong induction of C. albicans ZRT1 and PRA1 and held intracellular Zn steady through several divisions despite severe extracellular depletion; Zap1 loss increased calprotectin toxicity, and Zn supplementation reversed growth arrest, proving Zn withholding as the main stressor. In serum, calprotectin also withheld Cu: it blocked fungal acquisition of serum Cu, induced the classic Cu-sparing switch with SOD1 down and SOD3 up, and modestly increased CTR1, consistent with a Cu-starvation response.
Competition assays showed sub-picomolar Cu(II) binding at both calprotectin metal sites, explaining direct Cu sequestration. In vivo, kidney infection revealed distinct time courses: Zn-starvation markers (ZRT1, PRA1) spiked at 24 hours and depended on calprotectin, then faded by 72 hours as total kidney Zn rose; Cu-starvation markers (SOD1 down, SOD3 up) developed across 24–72 hours and did not require calprotectin at late timepoints, matching a fall in total kidney Cu that was calprotectin-independent. Together these data define a microbiome signature of early calprotectin-driven Zn withholding plus a broader, evolving Cu-limitation program in kidney tissue.
Key implications
Clinicians can read calprotectin as an early metal gatekeeper that restricts Zn and, in serum-rich niches, Cu, reshaping fungal metabolism and fitness. In a microbiome signatures database, pair calprotectin exposure with acute C. albicans ZRT1/PRA1 induction and the Cu-sparing SOD1→SOD3 switch, and note the temporal split: calprotectin drives early Zn stress, while kidney Cu limitation expands over time via additional host routes. These markers help judge risk for dissemination and guide supportive steps that avoid unintended metal supplementation in serum or devices. They also highlight why metal content and pH of local fluids, and neutrophil influx that delivers calprotectin, can tip colonization toward or away from invasive disease.
Listeria monocytogenes Flagella Are Used for Motility, Not as Adhesins, To Increase Host Cell Invasion
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study examines the role of flagella in Listeria monocytogenes invasion, concluding that motility, not adhesion, is crucial for host cell invasion and early colonization.
What was studied?
This study examined the role of flagella in Listeria monocytogenes invasion of host cells, focusing on whether flagella function as adhesins or are primarily used for motility to increase host cell invasion. The study utilized both motile and nonmotile mutants to analyze the effect of flagella on adhesion, invasion, and early colonization of the intestinal tract in mice.
Who was studied?
The study focused on Listeria monocytogenes, specifically analyzing various strains, including motile wild-type strains, nonmotile flagellin-deficient strains (flaA mutants), and flagellated but nonmotile strains (motBD23A mutants). Human epithelial cells (Caco-2) were used for adhesion and invasion assays, and mice were used for in vivo infection studies.
What were the most important findings?
The study concluded that flagella in Listeria monocytogenes do not function as adhesins but are essential for motility, which significantly enhances invasion into human epithelial cells. While flagellated bacteria did not adhere better to host cells than nonflagellated bacteria, motility was crucial for invasion, as nonmotile bacteria showed reduced invasion capabilities. Additionally, the presence of flagella increased the ability of Listeria to outcompete nonmotile strains during early colonization of the mouse intestines and liver, suggesting that motility facilitates initial tissue colonization after oral infection. Flagellated but nonmotile bacteria did not show increased adhesion or invasion, indicating that the physical force generated by motility aids in host cell invasion. Overall, the flagellar filament functions as a motility device rather than as an adhesion factor, and motility is important for effective Listeria monocytogenes infection, particularly at early stages.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study has important implications for understanding the pathogenicity of Listeria monocytogenes and its ability to cause infection. The findings suggest that interventions targeting flagella-mediated motility could help reduce Listeria’s ability to invade host tissues, offering potential strategies for controlling Listeria infections. Additionally, understanding that flagella are not adhesins challenges previous assumptions about how Listeria adheres to host cells and provides new insights into the role of bacterial motility in infection. The study also highlights the need to consider motility in the development of new therapeutic approaches and food safety measures to combat foodborne pathogens like Listeria monocytogenes.
Role of F1C Fimbriae, Flagella, and Secreted Bacterial Components in the Inhibitory Effect of Probiotic Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 on Atypical Enteropathogenic E. coli Infection
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study shows how Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 inhibitory mechanisms act through adhesion and suppression of EPEC virulence, defining a strong microbiome signature of pathogen interference.
What was studied?
This study investigated how Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 inhibitory mechanisms act against atypical enteropathogenic E. coli by analyzing the contribution of F1C fimbriae, flagella, and secreted bacterial components during early infection steps. The researchers examined how EcN affects aEPEC adhesion, microcolony formation, and type 3 secretion system activity to identify the determinants of EcN’s protective effect. Because the focus keyphrase Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 inhibitory mechanisms appears within this section, the analysis emphasizes adhesion-linked interactions that represent meaningful microbiome signatures relevant to colonization resistance and pathogen exclusion.
Who was studied?
The study used EcN wild-type strains, deletion mutants lacking F1C fimbriae, type 1 fimbriae, or flagella, and control E. coli strains with distinct adhesion profiles. Atypical EPEC strain P2005/03 and typical EPEC strain E2348/69 served as infection models in porcine intestinal epithelial IPEC-J2 cells. This population enabled the authors to compare the colonization behavior of tightly adherent probiotics with that of pathogenic strains while controlling for fimbrial and flagellar expression. Supporting experiments using secreted-protein preparations added mechanistic resolution regarding EcN’s interference with virulence-associated secretion.
Most important findings
The study showed that Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 inhibitory mechanisms rely on a combination of adhesion traits and interference with pathogen virulence. EcN strongly reduced aEPEC adhesion and microcolony formation when present before infection, demonstrating that early colonization steps are critical for inhibition. F1C fimbriae were essential for stable epithelial adhesion, as their deletion removed nearly all adherence and abolished the inhibitory effect. Flagella provided a complementary function by forming a filamentous network that improved surface retention and strengthened competitive positioning. Secreted factors contributed to inhibition during coinfection, with culture supernatants from EcN and control strains reducing aEPEC infection, indicating a non-EcN-specific diffusible inhibitor. EcN supernatants suppressed the secretion of EspA, EspB, and Tir from the EPEC type 3 secretion system, while control strain supernatants produced weaker inhibition.
Key implications
This work suggests that Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 inhibitory mechanisms depend on its strong epithelial adherence and its ability to block early virulence events in atypical EPEC, which provides clinicians with a mechanistic basis for EcN’s efficacy in pathogen-associated diarrhea. The dual action of adhesive structures and secreted components highlights EcN’s capacity to interfere with global features of enteric pathogenesis rather than pathogen-specific traits. These findings reinforce the relevance of adhesion-associated microbiome signatures when identifying or engineering probiotic strains with predictable pathogen exclusion activity. They also indicate that sufficient colonization density is necessary for clinical efficacy, suggesting that dosing strategies that favor early adhesion may enhance therapeutic outcomes in infections involving attaching-effacing pathogens.
Role of Copper Efflux in Pneumococcal Pathogenesis and Resistance to Macrophage-Mediated Immune Clearance
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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The study highlights the crucial role of the copA copper efflux system in the virulence of Streptococcus pneumoniae by protecting it from macrophage-mediated copper toxicity, a key immune defense.
What was studied?
This study explores the role of copper efflux systems, particularly the copA gene, in the pathogenesis of Streptococcus pneumoniae and its ability to resist copper toxicity during infection. The copA gene encodes a copper efflux pump that is crucial for bacterial survival under conditions of excess copper. The research investigates how S. pneumoniae uses copper efflux to avoid macrophage-mediated killing, a key host immune defense. By studying the mutant strains of S. pneumoniae that lack the copA gene, the researchers assess the bacterium’s ability to survive copper-induced stress and its overall virulence in different infection models.
Who was studied?
The study focused on Streptococcus pneumoniae, a bacterium responsible for diseases like pneumonia, meningitis, and otitis media. The researchers used the S. pneumoniae strain TIGR4 for their experiments and created mutant strains lacking the copA, cupA, and copY genes. They also assessed macrophage-mediated killing of these strains in vitro to determine the role of copper efflux in bacterial survival under immune attack. The experiments included both wild-type and mutant strains of S. pneumoniae to compare their ability to withstand copper toxicity in host tissues.
Most important findings
The study found that the copper efflux system, specifically the copA gene, plays a critical role in the virulence of S. pneumoniae. The copA mutant exhibited a significantly reduced ability to survive in animal models, with lower bacterial counts in the lungs and bloodstream compared to the wild-type strain. This suggests that copper efflux is essential for the bacterium’s ability to resist copper toxicity during infection. The study also showed that the copA mutant was more susceptible to macrophage-mediated killing, although the bacteria were still engulfed by macrophages at similar rates as the wild-type strain. This indicates that copper efflux is crucial for resisting the toxic effects of copper within macrophages, which is part of the host's immune defense strategy.
When macrophages were depleted in the infected mice, the virulence defect of the copA mutant was partially rescued, further confirming the role of copper efflux in immune evasion. Interestingly, while the copA and cupA mutants both showed increased sensitivity to copper in vitro, only the copA mutant displayed significant attenuation of virulence in vivo. This highlights that the efflux of copper, rather than simply copper sensitivity, is essential for S. pneumoniae's ability to cause disease.
Key implications
The findings underscore the importance of copper homeostasis in bacterial pathogenesis, specifically how S. pneumoniae utilizes copper efflux to avoid the toxic effects of copper and survive within the host. The copA copper exporter plays a vital role in this process by preventing copper accumulation and enabling the bacteria to resist macrophage-mediated copper toxicity. These insights provide potential targets for new therapeutic strategies aimed at disrupting copper homeostasis in S. pneumoniae. Targeting the copper efflux systems could help weaken the pathogen’s ability to survive in the host and enhance the effectiveness of the immune response, particularly by preventing the bacterium from evading copper-induced toxicity.
Two Zinc Uptake Systems Contribute to the Full Virulence of Listeria monocytogenes during Growth In Vitro and In Vivo
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study examines how Listeria monocytogenes uses two zinc uptake systems (ZurAM and ZinABC) to survive within the host, highlighting their importance for growth and virulence during infection.
What was studied?
This study focused on the role of two zinc uptake systems, ZurAM and ZinABC, in the virulence of Listeria monocytogenes. The researchers investigated how these systems contribute to the bacterium's ability to grow both in vitro and in vivo, particularly under zinc-limited conditions, which are commonly encountered within the host during infection. The study explored the impact of these zinc transport systems on Listeria's growth in defined media, its ability to survive inside host cells, and its virulence in a mouse model.
Who was studied?
The study investigated Listeria monocytogenes and its two major zinc uptake systems: ZurAM and ZinABC. The research involved using wild-type Listeria strains as well as mutants lacking either or both zinc uptake systems. Additionally, the study assessed the bacterial strains in various growth conditions, including those with limited zinc availability, and during infection in a mouse model and in HeLa cells.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed that both the ZurAM and ZinABC zinc uptake systems play critical roles in the virulence of Listeria monocytogenes. Although deletion of either the zurAM or zinA gene had minimal effect on bacterial growth in zinc-supplemented media, the double mutant (lacking both systems) was unable to grow in the absence of zinc. This growth defect was complemented by zinc supplementation. Moreover, the ZurAM system was found to be essential for Listeria's ability to grow inside host cells, especially HeLa cells, while ZinABC contributed less significantly under these conditions. In vivo, both systems were required for full virulence in an oral mouse model, where the Listeria strains with disrupted zinc uptake systems showed reduced survival rates. Furthermore, the double mutant strain was defective in actin-based motility and failed to spread from cell to cell, indicating that zinc acquisition is vital for the bacterium's ability to replicate intracellularly and spread within tissues.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings highlight the crucial role of zinc acquisition in Listeria monocytogenes pathogenesis and its survival in zinc-limited environments within the host. Targeting the ZurAM and ZinABC zinc uptake systems could offer a novel therapeutic approach to control Listeria infections, particularly in immunocompromised individuals or pregnant women, who are most vulnerable to listeriosis. The identification of these systems also suggests that disrupting bacterial zinc acquisition could be a strategy to prevent Listeria's ability to replicate within host cells and to halt its spread. Moreover, the study underscores the broader concept of nutritional immunity, where pathogens and hosts compete for essential nutrients, and targeting such systems could shift the balance in favor of the host.
Metalloprotease Gene Family in Microsporum canis Identified as Potential Virulence Factors
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Microsporum canis (M. canis)
Microsporum canis (M. canis)
OverviewMicrosporum canis (M. canis) is a zoophilic dermatophyte common in cats and dogs, responsible for 90% of feline dermatophytoses worldwide.[1][2] It has significant zoonotic potential, transmitting to humans through fomites or direct animal contact, causing severe superficial mycosis. M. canis is considered anthropo-zoophilic and can infect pediatric or immunocompromised patients, causing severe inflammatory responses such […]
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This study identified a metalloprotease gene family in Microsporum canis and confirmed in vivo expression of MEP2 and MEP3 during infection. MEP3, a keratinolytic enzyme, was expressed recombinantly and may contribute to fungal virulence, supporting its use in vaccine development.
What was studied?
This study characterized a family of secreted metalloprotease genes in Microsporum canis, a zoophilic dermatophyte responsible for dermatophytosis in cats, dogs, and humans. The authors identified three homologous genes—MEP1, MEP2, and MEP3—encoding zinc-dependent metalloproteases containing the canonical HEXXH motif. These genes were isolated using a genomic probe derived from the Aspergillus fumigatus MEP gene. Among these, MEP3 was confirmed to encode the previously described 43.5-kDa keratinolytic metalloprotease and was successfully expressed in Pichia pastoris as a recombinant enzyme. To assess potential involvement in pathogenesis, the in vivo expression of MEP1–3 during infection was evaluated using RT-nested PCR on RNA extracted from infected guinea pig hair samples.
Who was studied?
The experimental infection model involved two 3-month-old female guinea pigs (Hartley strain) infected with M. canis strain IHEM 15221. Hair samples were harvested from infected and control animals at 14 and 21 days post-infection for molecular analysis of MEP gene expression. Additionally, P. pastoris was employed as a heterologous expression system to produce recombinant MEP3 for biochemical characterization.
Most important findings
The study provided the first genomic and functional characterization of a metalloprotease gene family in Microsporum canis, implicating these enzymes in fungal virulence. All three identified MEP genes—MEP1, MEP2, and MEP3—encode zinc-dependent metalloproteases belonging to the M36 (fungalysin) family. Among them, MEP3 demonstrated broad proteolytic activity, including keratinolytic, elastinolytic, and collagenolytic functions, distinguishing it from its Aspergillus homologs, which cleave only collagen. In vivo expression analysis via RT-nested PCR confirmed that MEP2 and MEP3, but not MEP1, are transcribed in infected hair samples during the phase of lesion development. MEP3 was further expressed in Pichia pastoris as a recombinant enzyme, yielding approximately 40 µg/mL and retaining native proteolytic activity. N-terminal sequencing of the recombinant protein matched the native MEP3, validating accurate folding and post-translational processing in the heterologous system.
Metalloprotease
In Vivo Expression
Proteolytic Activities
Gene Product Verified
MEP1
Not detected
Unknown
Not purified
MEP2
Detected
Unknown
Not purified
MEP3
Detected
Collagen, keratin, elastin
Recombinant confirmed
Key implications
This work demonstrates that M. canis expresses multiple metalloproteases during infection, with MEP3 likely contributing to keratin degradation and host tissue invasion. Given the evidence for its in vivo expression and enzymatic activity, MEP3 emerges as a strong candidate virulence factor and a potential immunogen for vaccine development. The absence of MEP1 expression in vivo suggests a temporally or spatially restricted role or low expression levels. The identification of this gene family lays the groundwork for functional genetic studies, including gene knockouts to verify roles in pathogenicity, and may facilitate the development of diagnostic or therapeutic tools targeting metalloproteases in zoonotic dermatophytosis.
A Comprehensive Review of Progress in Preventing Urinary Infections Associated with the Use of Urinary Catheters: A Dual Analysis of Publications and Patents.
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review analyzes the advancements in preventing urinary catheter-related infections (CAUTIs) through scientific publications and patents, highlighting innovations like antimicrobial-coated catheters and biofilm-resistant materials, with implications for clinical practice and healthcare systems.
What was studied?
This review provides a comprehensive analysis of progress in preventing urinary infections associated with the use of urinary catheters (CAUTIs), focusing on both scientific publications and patents. It examines various strategies and technologies developed to prevent or reduce CAUTIs, including antimicrobial coatings, novel catheter materials, and new catheter insertion techniques. The study employs bibliometric methods to analyze trends in research and innovation over the past decade, from 2014 to 2024, providing insights into the effectiveness and commercialization of these technologies. The review also explores global patterns in CAUTI prevention research and the impact of patents on advancing healthcare solutions.
Who was studied?
The review included scientific publications from peer-reviewed journals, as well as patents related to urinary catheter technology and the prevention of CAUTIs. Researchers, healthcare professionals, and innovators from around the world contributed to the advancements in this area, as reflected in the citations and patents reviewed. The data spanned studies from global institutions, ranging from basic research to clinical trials, with a focus on catheter-related infections, particularly in hospitalized and long-term care settings where catheter use is prevalent. The analyzed patents were those related to novel devices, antimicrobial technologies, and catheter materials aimed at reducing infection rates.
Most important findings
The review identified a significant increase in both research publications and patent filings related to CAUTI prevention in recent years. Key advancements in the field include the development of antimicrobial-coated catheters, materials that resist biofilm formation, and new insertion techniques that reduce the risk of infection. Additionally, there was a marked trend toward incorporating antimicrobial peptides, silver ions, and other antimicrobial agents into catheter designs. Despite these innovations, challenges persist in translating them into widespread clinical use due to cost, regulatory hurdles, and variable effectiveness. The study also highlighted the growing interest in preventing healthcare-associated infections (HAIs) as a critical public health issue, as CAUTIs remain one of the most common and costly hospital-acquired infections.
Key implications
Clinicians can leverage the insights from this review better to understand the evolving landscape of CAUTI prevention technologies. While significant progress has been made, the review emphasizes that there is still a need for more effective, cost-efficient, and universally applicable solutions. Clinicians should consider incorporating these new technologies into their practice where feasible, particularly in high-risk populations. Furthermore, the study suggests that patents play a vital role in encouraging innovation; however, their commercialization must be carefully managed to ensure that these solutions are accessible to healthcare systems worldwide. The ongoing challenge remains to balance technological innovation with practical, cost-effective implementations in clinical settings.
Investigation of Antimicrobial Resistance Genes in Listeria monocytogenes from 2010 through to 2021
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study analyzes antimicrobial resistance in Listeria monocytogenes isolates from 2010 to 2021, finding no significant increase in resistance and highlighting key AMR genes.
What was studied?
This study investigated antimicrobial resistance (AMR) genes in Listeria monocytogenes isolates over a period from 2010 to 2021. The research analyzed the frequency and trends of AMR genes within Listeria monocytogenes samples sourced from multiple regions using data from the National Pathogen Detection Isolate Browser (NPDIB).
Who was studied?
The study focused on Listeria monocytogenes, a pathogenic bacterium responsible for listeriosis, affecting the immunocompromised, elderly, and pregnant women. Isolates were drawn from clinical and environmental sources across different regions, including North America, Europe, Australia/New Zealand, Asia, South Africa, and the UK/Ireland.
What were the most important findings?
The study identified the most frequently occurring AMR genes in Listeria monocytogenes, including fosX, lin, abc-f, and tet(M). The genes fosX and lin were found in nearly all samples, while abc-f and tet(M) were also notably frequent. The analysis revealed no significant increase in AMR genes over the 2010-2021 period, indicating stability in the prevalence of resistance within the bacterium. Interestingly, certain resistance genes, such as those related to vancomycin (vanC, vanR, vanS, vanT, and vanXY-C), spiked in 2014 and 2016 but were not observed in recent years. The study also highlighted that Listeria monocytogenes isolates in clinical settings predominantly contained fosX, lin, and abc-f, while environmental isolates had a broader diversity of AMR genes. The research confirmed that Listeria monocytogenes strains resistant to ampicillin and gentamicin were not common, suggesting the continued effectiveness of current treatment regimens.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study provides critical insight into the ongoing monitoring of AMR in Listeria monocytogenes, especially in foodborne infections. Despite the widespread presence of certain AMR genes, the stability of resistance levels in recent years suggests that the threat to first-line treatment antibiotics, like ampicillin and gentamicin, remains low. However, the presence of specific resistance genes, especially in environmental sources, signals the importance of continued surveillance to track emerging resistance patterns. Additionally, the identification of frequently occurring AMR genes lays the groundwork for developing targeted strategies to prevent the spread of resistance and ensure effective treatment in clinical and food safety settings.
Candida albicans Shields Porphyromonas gingivalis and Suppresses Host Immunity in Mixed-Species Periodontal Biofilms
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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C. albicans protects P. gingivalis from immune detection by enhancing gingipain activity, suppressing cytokine signaling, and promoting chronic bacterial persistence. Mixed biofilms weaken macrophage and fibroblast responses and alter infection severity in vivo, demonstrating a cross-kingdom partnership that reshapes periodontal disease pathogenesis.
What was studied?
This study investigated how Candida albicans alters the host’s ability to recognize and respond to Porphyromonas gingivalis, a keystone periodontal pathogen, during mixed-species biofilm formation. Using in vitro models (THP-1 macrophages and primary gingival fibroblasts) and an established mouse subcutaneous chamber model, the authors examined whether C. albicans shields P. gingivalis from immune recognition, enhances bacterial persistence, and modulates inflammatory responses. A major focus was the effect of dual-species interactions on gingipain activity, cytokine degradation, biofilm development, and the establishment of chronic infection in host tissues.
Who was studied?
THP-1 monocyte-derived macrophages and primary gingival fibroblasts obtained from healthy individuals and from patients with severe periodontitis were used to examine host cell responsiveness to fungal and bacterial factors. The in vivo portion utilized C57BL/6 mice implanted with subcutaneous titanium chambers into which P. gingivalis, C. albicans, or both organisms were introduced. Fibroblasts from periodontitis patients served as a disease-altered host reference to evaluate secondary susceptibility to fungal virulence factors. All microbial strains, host inocula, and virulence factor conditions are derived directly from the study’s controlled infection models.
Major findings and microbiome-relevant details
The study demonstrates that C. albicans significantly alters P. gingivalis pathogenicity by shielding the bacterium from host immune detection. THP-1 macrophages exposed to supernatants from mixed biofilms showed profoundly altered cytokine profiles. IL-1β increased dramatically, consistent with early inflammasome-linked responses, but IL-8 production was nearly abolished, consistent with gingipain-mediated cytokine degradation. As visualized in the ELISA data on pages 3–4, dual-species biofilms created an environment where Rgp gingipain activity rose up to ten-fold under normoxic conditions, leading to accelerated digestion of cytokines critical for neutrophil recruitment. The Western blots on page 6 confirm substantial upregulation of gingipain protein abundance in mixed biofilm conditions, supported by increased rgpA, rgpB, hagA, and kgp transcript levels.
The in vivo mouse chamber model revealed that C. albicans markedly reduces mortality associated with P. gingivalis infection, yet paradoxically enables bacterial persistence by blunting acute inflammatory responses. Survival curves and CFU data on pages 6–8 show reduced systemic dissemination of P. gingivalis when C. albicans is present, but significantly prolonged local bacterial colonization, consistent with a chronic infection phenotype. Neutrophil elastase and MPO activity remained blunted throughout co-infection (page 8), indicating impaired neutrophil activation and trafficking. This supports the concept that the fungal matrix provides physical and biochemical protection, enabling P. gingivalis to maintain high local viability without inducing strong inflammatory clearance mechanisms.
Fibroblasts from periodontitis patients exhibited markedly decreased IL-1β, IL-6, IL-8, and TNF-α production in response to purified C. albicans virulence factors (page 10), indicating long-term immune dampening resulting from chronic exposure to gingipains in vivo. This suggests that chronic periodontal environments reshape fibroblast responsiveness, likely through degradation of critical receptors such as CD14, as described in the discussion referencing gingipain-dependent receptor loss.
From a microbiome-signatures perspective, this study identifies a robust cooperative MMA pattern between C. albicans and P. gingivalis. Their co-aggregation shapes gingival ecological niches by creating low-oxygen microenvironments, altering immune responses, and promoting chronicity. This represents a prototypical cross-kingdom MMA where fungal biofilm physiology directly enhances bacterial virulence and immune evasion.
Greatest implications
The study provides compelling evidence that mixed fungal–bacterial communities fundamentally alter host–pathogen interactions. For clinicians and microbiome researchers, the findings show that P. gingivalis virulence cannot be fully understood outside the context of cross-kingdom interactions, and that C. albicans acts as a structural and immunomodulatory partner that supports chronic infection even while reducing acute mortality. This establishes a strong rationale for including fungal organisms in periodontal microbiome signatures, revising diagnostic models to account for synergistic virulence, and considering antifungals as strategies in cases of recalcitrant periodontal disease. Mechanistically, the study demonstrates that gingipain activity is not static but instead upregulated and stabilized within fungal matrices, suggesting that future microbiome targeted interventions (MBTIs) must account for the biofilm’s composite biology, and that drug repurposing interventions like fluconazole may offer a novel treatment for gingivitis.
The Intestinal Microbiota: Impacts of Antibiotics Therapy, Colonization Resistance, and Diseases
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review explains how antibiotics disrupt gut microbiota, weaken colonization resistance, and increase infection and disease risk through metabolic and immune mechanisms.
What was reviewed?
This paper reviewed how the intestinal microbiota mediates colonization resistance, how antibiotic therapy disrupts this protective function, and how these changes contribute to infectious and non-infectious diseases. The authors synthesized molecular, microbial, immunological, and clinical evidence to explain how trillions of resident microbes normally maintain intestinal homeostasis and suppress pathogen expansion. The review emphasized that colonization resistance is not a single mechanism but an emergent property of microbial diversity, metabolic output, and immune crosstalk. Antibiotic exposure was positioned as a central destabilizing force that alters microbial composition, reduces beneficial taxa, enriches antibiotic resistance genes, and creates ecological niches that favor opportunistic and multidrug-resistant organisms. The paper integrated microbiome science with clinical observations from hospital settings, immunocompromised populations, and antibiotic-treated patients, framing dysbiosis as a mechanistic driver of disease rather than a secondary association.
Who was reviewed?
The review drew on evidence from human clinical populations, including healthy adults, infants, hospitalized patients, immunocompromised individuals, transplant recipients, and patients receiving chemotherapy or prolonged antibiotic therapy. These human data were complemented by findings from animal models such as germ-free mice, antibiotic-treated mice, and gnotobiotic systems that enabled causal evaluation of microbiota–pathogen interactions. The authors also reviewed studies involving pediatric populations to highlight the long-term developmental consequences of early-life antibiotic exposure. This broad scope allowed comparison between controlled mechanistic insights and real-world clinical outcomes.
What were the most important findings?
The review demonstrated that effective colonization resistance depends on both direct microbial antagonism and indirect immune-mediated mechanisms. Major microbial associations linked to protection included members of the phyla Firmicutes, Bacteroidetes, and Actinobacteria, particularly butyrate-producing Clostridia, Bifidobacterium species, Lactobacillus species, and commensal Escherichia coli strains such as E. coli Nissle 1917. These organisms restricted pathogen growth through bacteriocin and microcin production, nutrient competition, iron sequestration, and secretion of short-chain fatty acids that directly inhibited pathogens such as Clostridioides difficile, Salmonella enterica, vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus, and pathogenic E. coli. Secondary bile acid production by Clostridia emerged as a critical metabolic barrier against spore germination and vegetative growth of C. difficile. The review further highlighted immune reinforcement mechanisms, including microbiota-driven induction of antimicrobial peptides such as defensins and Reg3 lectins, stimulation of IgA secretion, and regulation of cytokines such as IL-10, IL-17, and IL-22 that maintain epithelial integrity and pathogen clearance. Antibiotic therapy consistently disrupted these mechanisms, reduced microbial diversity, increased pathobiont abundance, and promoted expansion of antibiotic-resistant organisms.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The key clinical implication is that many infectious complications arise from microbiome disruption rather than unavoidable pathogen exposure. The findings strongly support antibiotic stewardship, microbiome-preserving therapies, and microbiota restoration strategies such as targeted probiotics or fecal microbiota transplantation in selected patients. For clinicians, the review reinforces that maintaining colonization resistance is central to preventing infection, limiting antimicrobial resistance, and improving outcomes in vulnerable populations.
The Connection between Czc and Cad Systems Involved in Cadmium Resistance in Pseudomonas putida
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study explored how the CzcRS3 two-component system regulates cadmium resistance in P. putida by controlling efflux pump gene expression. The findings emphasize the role of CadR in regulating this system and offer insights into potential bioremediation strategies.
What was studied?
The study focused on understanding how the CzcRS and Cad systems contribute to cadmium resistance in Pseudomonas putida. The Czc system, regulated by the two-component system CzcRS, and the Cad system, which includes CadR and CadA, are known to be vital for bacterial resistance to heavy metals, especially cadmium. Researchers investigated how the CzcRS3 system regulates the expression of efflux pumps like CzcCBA, and how CadR interacts with the CzcRS3 promoter to mediate cadmium resistance. The study aimed to clarify the molecular relationship between these systems in P. putida and their contribution to metal ion homeostasis.
Who was studied?
Pseudomonas putida KT2440, a well-known environmental bacterium, was the subject of the study. This strain is widely studied for its ability to resist various environmental pollutants, including heavy metals like cadmium. P. putida strains, such as KT2440, are beneficial in bioremediation processes due to their ability to tolerate and degrade hazardous substances. In the study, genetically modified P. putida strains, including the deletion mutant ∆czcRS3 and an overexpressed strain, were used to examine the role of the CzcRS3 system in cadmium resistance.
Most important findings
The study identified the critical role of the CzcRS3 system in cadmium resistance. The deletion of CzcRS3 resulted in a significant reduction in cadmium resistance, as evidenced by a four-fold decrease in the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) of cadmium. Conversely, overexpression of CzcRS3 restored and even enhanced the cadmium resistance beyond the wild-type levels. This shows that CzcRS3 is crucial for regulating the expression of the efflux pump genes CzcCBA1 and CzcCBA2, which expel excess cadmium from the cell. Furthermore, the study revealed that the CzcRS3 system is directly regulated by CadR, which is activated by Cd2+, Zn2+, and Pb2+, highlighting a complex regulatory network between the Czc and Cad systems. The findings also underscored that CzcR3 has a weak regulatory effect on its own promoter, but this does not impact its overall functionality in cadmium resistance.
Key implications
The study provides new insights into the intricate regulatory mechanisms behind cadmium resistance in P. putida. Understanding the interaction between the Czc and Cad systems could open up new possibilities for environmental bioremediation strategies, especially in areas contaminated by heavy metals. By enhancing the expression of the CzcRS3 system, bacteria like P. putida could be engineered for better resistance to cadmium and potentially other heavy metals. This research also emphasizes the importance of multi-component efflux systems in bacteria, which can be leveraged in biotechnological applications aimed at heavy metal cleanup.
CtpB Facilitates Mycobacterium tuberculosis Growth in Copper-Limited Niches
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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CtpB tailors Mycobacterium tuberculosis growth to copper-limited niches, boosts fitness in adipocytes, and raises copper stress risk during phagosomal surges, yielding a clear gene–niche signature for clinical use.
What was studied?
This original study tested how CtpB Facilitates Mycobacterium tuberculosis Growth in Copper-Limited Niches and mapped when this P-type ATPase helps or harms the bacillus during host metal stress. The authors asked whether CtpB supports growth when copper is scarce, how its expression responds to copper chelation, and whether CtpB activity changes fitness when copper surges in host cells. They used controlled overexpression, targeted deletion, genetic complementation, and infection models to link CtpB function to copper import or directed copper delivery to cuproenzymes. The work places CtpB within nutritional immunity, where macrophages first starve bacteria of copper and later flood phagosomes with copper, and it tests if CtpB tunes survival across these swings.
Who was studied?
Researchers worked with Mycobacterium tuberculosis Erdman and M. bovis BCG strains and created ∆ctpB mutants and complemented strains. They expressed M. tuberculosis ctpB or ctpV in M. smegmatis under an inducible promoter to test gain-of-function in copper-rich media. Strains were passed through copper-free Sauton medium to deplete internal copper and then assayed growth with or without copper supplementation. They infected 3T3-L1 adipocytes, a copper-poor niche, and measured replication with or without added copper. They also tested virulence by intravenous infection of DBA/2 mice and monitored survival. Transcription studies probed ctpB induction under copper chelation and the role of sigma factor SigC.
Most important findings
CtpB responds to copper starvation and supports growth in copper-poor settings, yet it can sensitize cells when copper is high. Copper chelation induced ctpB transcription about eight-fold, while forced ctpB expression in M. smegmatis reduced growth only when copper was abundant, a pattern that fits copper import or high-affinity delivery to copper enzymes. Deleting ctpB produced no early defect but, after serial passage in copper-free medium, caused clear growth loss that copper addition partly rescued; the same pattern occurred in Erdman and BCG and reversed with complementation. In adipocytes, ∆ctpB showed a delayed replication defect that copper supplementation removed, and Erdman raised ctpB expression in low copper but not with added copper or zinc.
In DBA/2 mice, ∆ctpB infection shortened median survival by about 42% versus wild type despite similar organ burdens at death, which suggests faster disease progression and a “just-enough copper” advantage when CtpB is absent during copper spikes in vivo. CtpB is highly conserved in the M. tuberculosis complex and other intracellular mycobacteria, consistent with a niche-specific role in host metal pressure. These signals define a microbiome-relevant signature in which CtpB links copper-poor tissue niches (such as adipose) to mycobacterial fitness and ties copper surges in phagosomes to potential toxicity when import runs ahead of efflux and storage.
Key implications
Clinicians can read CtpB as a fitness factor in copper-limited niches and a liability during copper surges. In a microbiome signatures database, pairing ctpB with copper-handling loci (such as ctpV and mymT) and with host contexts that alter copper (adipose stores, activated macrophages) can refine risk for persistence or rapid disease. The adipocyte data support adipose as a copper-poor reservoir where CtpB helps growth, while the mouse survival data suggest that blocking CtpB could slow growth in copper-poor tissue yet might reduce copper-intoxication during phagosome transitions; any intervention should balance these effects. Gene-level reporting that flags ctpB together with sigC-linked import systems and copper efflux capacity can help predict where M. tuberculosis will thrive, when it will face copper injury, and how tissue site and inflammation state shape those outcomes.
Antibacterial MccM as the Major Microcin in Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 against Pathogenic Enterobacteria
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study shows that Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 microcin MccM is the key factor driving EcN’s inhibition of Salmonella, improving pathogen suppression, reducing cell invasion, and lowering inflammatory cytokine responses.
What was studied?
This study investigated how the probiotic Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 microcin MccM contributes to antibacterial activity against pathogenic enterobacteria, with a primary focus on Salmonella species. The researchers examined whether MccM acts as the dominant antimicrobial factor by comparing wild-type EcN with mutants lacking microcin genes and with a strain engineered to overexpress MccM. This work aimed to clarify how EcN exerts microbiome-mediated antagonism within the gut and to define the specific molecular contributions of MccM to competitive fitness, colonization resistance, and inflammatory modulation.
Who was studied?
The study used laboratory strains of Escherichia coli Nissle 1917, including wild type, three CRISPR-generated microcin knockout mutants, and an engineered MccM overproducer. These were tested against clinically relevant pathogens, including EHEC O157:H7, Salmonella enterica, and Salmonella Typhimurium. In vitro cell line models involving murine RAW264.7 macrophages and epithelial cells were used to evaluate inflammatory responses, adhesion, and invasion. The design enabled a controlled evaluation of how microcin-dependent interactions shape microbial competition and host immune signaling.
Most important findings
The study showed that Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 microcin MccM is the major determinant of EcN’s antagonistic effect against Salmonella. MccM knockout sharply reduced EcN’s ability to inhibit Salmonella growth, while overexpression of mcmA produced stronger inhibition than wild-type EcN. EcN::mcmA reduced Salmonella adhesion and invasion far more effectively, lowering invasion by over fifty percent and enhancing impairment of adhesion relative to wild type. The engineered strain also suppressed LPS-induced IL1β, TNFα, and IL6 expression in macrophages, indicating an added immunomodulatory effect. Increased siderophore production in EcN::mcmA supported a competitive iron sequestration mechanism, aligning MccM activity with a Trojan horse strategy through siderophore-linked uptake pathways. These findings highlight a clear microbiome signature in which MccM shapes pathogen exclusion and host response within an iron limited intestinal environment.
Key implications
The results show that enhancing Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 microcin MccM expression can significantly improve probiotic suppression of Salmonella, offering a strong foundation for engineered microbiome-targeted therapies. The data suggest that MccM-driven iron competition and translocation mechanisms represent actionable targets for preventing colonization by enteric pathogens. The observed reduction in inflammatory cytokine production also indicates that MccM-enhanced EcN may help limit pathogen-induced inflammation. These insights expand the functional profile of EcN and support precision engineering of probiotic strains to reinforce colonization resistance and improve clinical outcomes.
Virulence Factors of Microsporum canis: Enzymes, Genes, and Clinical Implication
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Microsporum canis (M. canis)
Microsporum canis (M. canis)
OverviewMicrosporum canis (M. canis) is a zoophilic dermatophyte common in cats and dogs, responsible for 90% of feline dermatophytoses worldwide.[1][2] It has significant zoonotic potential, transmitting to humans through fomites or direct animal contact, causing severe superficial mycosis. M. canis is considered anthropo-zoophilic and can infect pediatric or immunocompromised patients, causing severe inflammatory responses such […]
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This review details the enzymatic and genetic virulence arsenal of Microsporum canis, highlighting understudied factors like biofilms and dipeptidylpeptidases. Greater insight into these mechanisms could improve treatment and prevention strategies.
What was reviewed?
This systematic review examined the phenotypic virulence factors of Microsporum canis, a dermatophyte responsible for superficial fungal infections in humans and animals. The authors compiled and synthesized data from 46 original research articles published between 1988 and 2023, focusing on enzymatic and non-enzymatic factors that contribute to fungal adhesion, invasion, immune evasion, and survival within keratinized tissues. Key attention was given to extracellular and intracellular virulence mechanisms, associated gene expression, and implications for infection control and antifungal resistance.
Who was reviewed?
The review drew upon experimental and clinical studies investigating M. canis strains isolated from both symptomatic and asymptomatic animals (especially cats and dogs) and human hosts, including pediatric and immunocompromised individuals. The reviewed studies encompassed diverse methodological approaches—ranging from enzymatic profiling and gene expression analyses to in vivo and in vitro infection models using tissues from humans, cats, and guinea pigs.
Most important findings
The review identified a broad range of virulence factors grouped into extracellular and intracellular categories. Among the extracellular factors, three key protease classes—keratinases, metalloproteases (fungalisins), and subtilisins—were most frequently characterized. These enzymes enable M. canis to degrade host keratin, collagen, and elastin, facilitating nutrient acquisition and tissue colonization. Subtilisin Sub3 was notably linked to fungal adhesion and chronic infection persistence. Other extracellular factors included dipeptidylpeptidases (DppIV, DppV), aminopeptidases (Lap1, Lap2), aspartyl proteases, catalases, hemolysins, ureases, and serine hydrolases, each contributing variably to tissue invasion, immune modulation, and environmental stress resistance. Biofilm formation and thermotolerance were also identified as phenotypes enhancing antifungal resistance and deeper tissue penetration.
The review also highlighted a set of intracellular virulence genes, including:
Collagen and elastin degradation, nutrient acquisition
LAP1/LAP2
Aminopeptidases
Conversion of long-chain peptides to amino acids
SSU1
Sulfite efflux pump
Detoxification of sulfur metabolites
PacC
pH-responsive TF
Regulation of proteolytic gene expression
Key implications
The review underscores the complexity and adaptability of M. canis as a pathogen, facilitated by its diverse enzymatic arsenal and environmentally responsive gene expression. While keratinases, subtilisins, and metalloproteases are well-characterized, less attention has been given to dipeptidylpeptidases, biofilm formation, thermotolerance, and sulfite detoxification—all of which may be crucial for chronicity, deep invasion, and treatment resistance. The authors emphasize the need to expand research beyond the canonical virulence enzymes to uncover novel targets for antifungal therapy. This has clinical relevance not only for treating dermatophytosis but also for addressing M. canis as an emerging threat in immunocompromised populations.
Siderophore Biosynthesis Inhibitors: A Novel Strategy Against Microbial Virulence and Resistance
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review outlines current strategies targeting siderophore biosynthesis as a therapeutic approach to microbial infections, emphasizing enzyme-specific inhibitors, nanoparticle delivery, and CRISPR-based interventions to impair iron acquisition and reduce virulence.
What was reviewed?
This comprehensive review explores the inhibition of siderophore biosynthesis as a promising antimicrobial strategy, particularly in the context of increasing resistance to conventional antibiotics. Siderophores—small, high-affinity iron-chelating compounds secreted by microbes—are essential for pathogenic survival under iron-limited conditions. The review delineates three main siderophore biosynthetic pathways: nonribosomal peptide synthetase (NRPS)-dependent, polyketide synthase (PKS)-based, and NRPS-independent (NIS) systems. It presents siderophore production as a key virulence factor and offers an extensive analysis of enzyme targets, including NRPS adenylation domains, phosphopantetheinyl transferases (PPTases), salicylate synthases, and siderophore transport systems. Recent advances in rational drug design, nanoparticle delivery systems, and CRISPR-based genetic manipulation are also explored as innovative tools to suppress microbial iron acquisition. This review consolidates a fragmented literature base, presenting a unified therapeutic framework for antimicrobial intervention by targeting microbial iron uptake pathways.
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesizes data from a broad range of microbial taxa, including bacteria such as Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Staphylococcus aureus, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Bacillus anthracis, and fungi such as Aspergillus fumigatus. These organisms span both Gram-negative and Gram-positive pathogens and include non-tuberculous mycobacteria (NTMs). Emphasis is placed on their shared reliance on siderophore systems for iron acquisition and pathogenesis. The microbial targets are selected based on their clinical relevance in antimicrobial resistance, virulence, and capacity to biosynthesize diverse siderophore classes.
Most important findings
The review identifies and characterizes a wide array of inhibitors and intervention strategies that target siderophore biosynthesis, grouped by enzyme class and mechanism of action. The review also highlights: Use of CRISPR-Cas9 to disrupt siderophore biosynthetic genes. Nanoparticles (e.g., zinc oxide, gold) as delivery tools and direct inhibitors of siderophore-mediated virulence. The distinction between bactericidal and antivirulence approaches, where the latter may reduce selective resistance pressures. Below is a condensed summary in table format:
Enzyme Target
Inhibitor Class
Example Compound(s)
IC₅₀ Range
Target Organism(s)
PPTase (NRPS)
Allosteric Inhibitors
ML267
0.29 µM
S. aureus, B. subtilis
PPTase (PptT in M. tb)
Amidino-urea analogues
Compounds 1–10
0.018–8.29 µM
M. tuberculosis
Adenylation domains (NRPS)
Salicyl-AMS & derivatives
Salicyl-AMS, Compound 15
10.7–12 nM
M. tuberculosis, Y. pestis
Salicylate Synthase (MbtI)
Furanic inhibitors
Compounds 19–22
2.6–12.1 µM
M. tuberculosis, M. abscessus
DHB Adenylation Domains
Bisubstrate analogs
DHB-AMS, Compound 23
4.5–85 nM
E. coli, B. subtilis
NIS Synthetase
Natural products
Baulamycin A & B
4.8–200 µM
S. aureus, B. anthracis
SidA (fungal hydroxylase)
Natural product (noncompetitive)
Celastrol
11 µM
A. fumigatus
FAAL/FACL (PKS-like enzymes)
Fatty acyl-AMS analogues
Hexanoyl-AMS, etc.
NA
M. tuberculosis
Key implications
Targeting siderophore biosynthesis presents a viable strategy for next-generation antimicrobial therapies, especially against multidrug-resistant organisms. Inhibitors that act on PPTases, adenylation domains, and salicylate synthases can impair iron acquisition and attenuate virulence without necessarily killing the pathogen, potentially reducing evolutionary pressures for resistance. The specificity of some inhibitors, such as ML267 and Salicyl-AMS analogues, enables narrow-spectrum approaches, while nanoparticle systems offer targeted delivery and immune synergy. The integration of genetic tools such as CRISPR enables mechanistic dissection of iron acquisition and opens avenues for strain engineering in microbial therapeutics. However, challenges remain in achieving selectivity, in vivo stability, and delivery to biofilm-embedded pathogens. Further exploration of NIS and fungal-specific pathways is warranted to diversify the antimicrobial toolkit.
Citation
Rocha BM, Pinto E, Sousa E, Resende DISP. Targeting siderophore biosynthesis to thwart microbial growth. Int J Mol Sci. 2025;26(8):3611. doi:10.3390/ijms26083611
The combined actions of the copper-responsive repressor CsoR and copper-metallochaperone CopZ modulate CopA-mediated copper efflux in the intracellular pathogen Listeria monocytogenes
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study explores copper resistance in Listeria monocytogenes, identifying how the csoR-copA-copZ operon, regulated by CsoR and CopZ, contributes to copper tolerance.
What was studied?
This study investigated the copper resistance mechanisms in Listeria monocytogenes, particularly focusing on the copper-responsive operon csoR-copA-copZ. It examined the role of CsoR, a copper-sensing transcriptional repressor, in regulating the operon and how CopA, a copper-exporting ATPase, helps Listeria resist copper toxicity. The researchers also explored the regulatory functions of CopZ, a copper metallochaperone, in the operon’s expression.
Who was studied?
Listeria monocytogenes was the primary organism studied, specifically its copper resistance operon. The research involved creating mutants of Listeria monocytogenes that lacked certain genes (csoR, copA, copZ) and assessing their responses to copper exposure. Both wild-type and mutant strains were analyzed in vitro for copper sensitivity, copper accumulation, and operon regulation.
What were the most important findings?
The study confirmed that the csoR-copA-copZ operon in Listeria monocytogenes is specifically induced by elevated copper levels. CsoR, a copper-sensing transcriptional repressor, regulates this operon by binding to the promoter region of copA. The presence of copper derepresses the operon, allowing for the expression of CopA, which acts as a copper efflux pump to expel excess copper from the bacterium. In mutants lacking CopA, Listeria was highly sensitive to copper and accumulated excessive amounts. The role of CopZ was also explored, revealing that CopZ does not directly deliver copper to CsoR, but rather, it modulates CsoR's access to copper, thus tempering the transcriptional response to copper exposure. Additionally, it was discovered that CopZ did not significantly affect copper tolerance but helped regulate the transcription of the operon in response to copper levels.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings underscore the critical role of copper homeostasis in Listeria monocytogenes and its ability to resist copper toxicity during infection. Understanding how Listeria manages copper stress could inform therapeutic strategies targeting bacterial resistance to copper, which is particularly relevant in environments where copper is used as an antimicrobial agent. The study also provides insight into bacterial adaptation mechanisms to host-imposed copper stress, which could lead to the development of novel drugs targeting copper resistance systems in pathogens.
The molecular mechanisms of listeriolysin O-induced lipid membrane damage
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study reveals how Listeria monocytogenes uses listeriolysin O (LLO) to disrupt host cell membranes, aiding in bacterial survival and spread. It highlights the potential for LLO-targeted therapies and biotechnological applications.
What was studied?
The study explores the role of listeriolysin O (LLO), a cholesterol-dependent cytolysin produced by Listeria monocytogenes, in the pathogen's ability to invade host cells, disrupt membranes, and facilitate intracellular survival. The focus is on LLO's interactions with lipid membranes, its pore-forming mechanism, and its influence on the host immune response.
Who was studied?
The study primarily investigates the bacterial virulence factor Listeriolysin O (LLO) in the context of Listeria monocytogenes infection, examining its role in membrane damage and intracellular activities.
What were the most important findings?
LLO is integral to Listeria monocytogenes' ability to disrupt host cell membranes and propagate intracellularly. The toxin functions by forming pores in host cell membranes, specifically targeting cholesterol-rich lipid bilayers. The mechanism involves the binding of LLO to membranes, oligomerization into arc-shaped complexes, and insertion into the lipid membrane to create functional pores of varying sizes. These pores facilitate the escape of Listeria from phagosomes, enabling bacterial replication in the cytosol. The activity of LLO is highly pH-dependent and regulated by factors such as cholesterol availability in the host cell membranes. This regulation ensures that the toxin does not cause excessive damage to the bacterial replicative niche. The presence of specific structural motifs in LLO, such as the PEST-like sequence, contributes to its degradation and prevents excessive cytotoxicity, promoting bacterial survival and limiting host damage during infection.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
Understanding LLO’s role in bacterial pathogenesis provides insights into the molecular mechanisms of Listeria monocytogenes infection. This knowledge is crucial for developing therapeutic strategies targeting LLO or its membrane-binding activity. By targeting LLO, it may be possible to reduce the pathogen’s ability to invade host cells and replicate intracellularly, potentially leading to more effective treatments for listeriosis. Additionally, the study suggests that LLO could be harnessed in biotechnology and medical applications, such as vaccines or drug delivery systems, due to its potent immunogenic properties and ability to selectively target cellular membranes.
The MgtR regulatory peptide negatively controls expression of the MgtA Mg2+ transporter in Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study shows that the Salmonella peptide MgtR directly limits the MgtA magnesium transporter during Mg2+ starvation. Deleting mgtR raises MgtA protein levels and makes MgtA appear earlier, which improves growth in low magnesium when other transporters are absent.
What was studied?
This study tested whether MgtR, a tiny 30–amino acid regulatory peptide encoded in the Salmonella mgtCBR operon, also controls the MgtA magnesium transporter in addition to its known role in targeting the virulence protein MgtC. The authors examined MgtA regulation specifically under Mg2+-depleted conditions, because Salmonella only produces MgtA when magnesium is scarce. They asked three practical questions that matter for bacterial fitness in host-like environments: does MgtR change how much MgtA protein accumulates, does it change when MgtA appears after Mg2+ starvation begins, and does it act at the transcriptional level or by direct protein interaction.
Who was studied?
The study evaluated bacterial strains and proteins, not human participants. The authors used Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium strains engineered to express MgtA with a C-terminal HA tag from its native chromosomal position so they could measure true physiological expression. They compared wild-type strains to mgtR deletion strains, plus strains that overexpressed MgtR from a plasmid, and they also used a reduced-transporter background that removed corA and the mgtCB genes to unmask growth effects attributable to MgtA control in low magnesium.
What were the most important findings?
The authors showed that MgtR functions as a negative, posttranscriptional regulator of MgtA protein abundance and timing during Mg2+ starvation. When Salmonella grew in low magnesium (10 µM), deleting mgtR increased MgtA protein levels, while inducing MgtR expression reduced MgtA protein, and neither condition produced detectable MgtA at high magnesium (1 mM), which fits the known rule that MgtA is a low-Mg2+ transporter. Timing mattered: after cells shifted from high to low magnesium, the mgtR deletion strain began accumulating MgtA earlier (about 30 minutes) than wild type (about 45 minutes), and MgtA remained higher at subsequent time points, meaning MgtR acts like a “brake” that prevents premature or excessive transporter buildup during magnesium stress. Importantly, qRT-PCR showed that MgtR did not change mgtA mRNA levels, so it did not act by turning transcription off; instead, a bacterial two-hybrid assay supported direct binding between MgtR and MgtA in vivo, which matches how MgtR targets MgtC. Functionally, the lack of MgtR improved growth in low magnesium when other magnesium import routes were removed, indicating that MgtR-mediated restraint on MgtA has real fitness consequences.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This work shows that Salmonella uses very small peptides to control magnesium transport capacity, which helps the pathogen balance “too little” magnesium against the cost and risk of overexpressing membrane transporters during stress. Clinically, it strengthens the idea that host-driven magnesium limitation does not just restrict growth; it triggers a regulated virulence-adaptation state where Salmonella calibrates transporter output and stress programs to fit the niche. Translationally, it points to anti-virulence opportunities: disrupting MgtR–MgtA interactions could force maladaptive magnesium uptake timing or overload stress responses, lowering pathogen fitness without relying on bactericidal pressure. It also adds a useful microbiome lens, because micronutrient limitation in inflamed tissues can select for organisms with refined magnesium-sensing and peptide-controlled transporter tuning, even when overall community composition changes are subtle.
De-coding the complex role of microbial metabolites in cancer
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review explores the complex role of microbial metabolites in cancer, focusing on their impact on tumor initiation, progression, metastasis, and therapy response. It highlights how microbial products influence the tumor microenvironment and immune modulation, suggesting new avenues for cancer therapy.
What was studied?
This review explores the role of microbial metabolites in cancer initiation, progression, metastasis, and therapy resistance. The study investigates how microbial products influence cellular mechanisms, including DNA damage, chronic inflammation, and epithelial barrier function, which contribute to cancer. It also discusses how microbial metabolites modulate the tumor microenvironment (TME) and impact the response to cancer therapies, particularly chemotherapy and immunotherapy. By examining bacterial-derived metabolites such as short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs), bile acids, hydrogen sulfide (H2S), and reactive oxygen species (ROS), the review highlights their dual roles as both promoters and inhibitors of cancer.
Who was studied?
The review focuses on studies that analyze various cancer types, particularly colorectal cancer (CRC), liver cancer, prostate cancer, and breast cancer, as they are strongly influenced by microbial metabolites. It discusses the microbiomes of primary tumors and metastatic tissues, providing insights into the microbial communities present in different tumor regions. Specific bacteria and their associated metabolites, such as Fusobacterium nucleatum, Escherichia coli, and Bacteroides fragilis, were studied for their role in tumor progression and metastasis. The review also includes data on the metabolic changes that occur in cancer cells and how microbial metabolites interact with these changes.
Most important findings
The review identifies several key findings regarding the role of microbial metabolites in cancer. It emphasizes how microbial metabolites contribute to DNA damage, chronic inflammation, and epithelial barrier disruption, leading to cancer initiation. For instance, certain bacterial species produce genotoxic metabolites, such as colibactin, which induce DNA damage and mutations, contributing to tumorigenesis. Additionally, microbial metabolites like butyrate and SCFAs are shown to regulate the immune response, reducing inflammation and suppressing tumor progression. However, other metabolites like deoxycholic acid (DCA) promote cancer progression by increasing DNA damage and destabilizing the epithelial barrier. The review also highlights how metabolites influence the TME by modulating immune cell activity and promoting or inhibiting cancer metastasis. Furthermore, microbial metabolites such as succinate and H2S can influence cell metabolism, further driving cancer development and therapeutic resistance.
Key implications
The review’s findings suggest that microbial metabolites are promising therapeutic targets for cancer prevention and treatment. Targeting specific microbial metabolites, either through dietary interventions or pharmacological agents, could help modulate the TME and improve responses to cancer therapy. The review suggests that the dual nature of microbial metabolites, acting both as tumor promoters and suppressors, requires careful consideration when developing treatments aimed at manipulating the microbiome. Furthermore, understanding the metabolic profiles of tumors and their associated microbiota could aid in personalized cancer therapies. The review also stresses the need for further research into how microbial metabolites influence cancer therapy resistance, as this could reveal new strategies to overcome treatment failures.
Copper in microbial pathogenesis: Meddling with the metal
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Copper (Cu)
Copper (Cu)
Copper serves as both a vital nutrient and a potential toxin, with its regulation having profound effects on microbial pathogenesis and immune responses. In the body, copper interacts with pathogens, either supporting essential enzyme functions or hindering microbial growth through its toxicity. The gastrointestinal tract, immune cells, and bloodstream are key sites where copper plays a crucial role in controlling infection and maintaining microbial balance. Understanding copper’s interactions with the microbiome and host defenses allows for targeted clinical strategies.
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This review explores copper's role in microbial pathogenesis, highlighting its use by hosts as an antimicrobial weapon and the resistance mechanisms developed by pathogens. It discusses copper's involvement in immune defense and fungal virulence, offering insights into potential therapeutic strategies.
What was studied?
The study examines the role of copper (Cu) in microbial pathogenesis, particularly its dual role as both a necessary cofactor for microbial enzymes and a toxic element that the host uses to limit microbial growth. It reviews how the host utilizes Cu as a weapon and how pathogens have evolved mechanisms to resist its toxicity.
Who was studied?
This research focuses on a variety of pathogens, including bacteria like Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and Salmonella enterica, as well as fungi such as Cryptococcus neoformans. The study explores how these microorganisms interact with copper during infection and how they have developed resistance strategies to cope with copper's toxic effects.
Most important findings
Copper plays a significant role in the immune defense against microbial infections. In mammals, Cu is used to restrict pathogen growth, particularly through its accumulation in the phagolysosome of macrophages, which enhances antimicrobial activity. At the same time, pathogens have developed sophisticated mechanisms to mitigate Cu toxicity. For example, Salmonella and E. coli utilize the Cue and CopA systems to export excess Cu, while fungi like Cryptococcus neoformans use Cu-dependent enzymes like laccase for melanin production, which helps the pathogen evade host immune defenses. The study also highlights that Cu resistance is critical for the virulence of pathogens, where Cu homeostasis is tightly regulated.
Key implications
The findings suggest that Cu is a crucial part of the host's immune response, and understanding how pathogens resist its toxic effects could lead to new therapeutic strategies. Enhancing copper's antimicrobial properties might offer a novel approach for treating infections. The study also underscores the complexity of copper regulation in microbes, which could inform the development of drugs that target these resistance mechanisms.
Probiotic Bacteria Reduce Salmonella Typhimurium Intestinal Colonization by Competing for Iron
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Probiotic Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 iron competition reduced Salmonella in inflamed murine gut by using lipocalin-2–resistant siderophores and by dampening mucosal inflammation, showing a nutritional immunity route for probiotic therapy.
What was studied?
This study evaluated how probiotic Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 iron competition limits intestinal colonization by Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium in mouse models of acute and chronic colitis. The authors asked a simple question. Can EcN utilize the same iron sources that Salmonella requires during inflammation, thereby starving the pathogen? They measured gut iron levels during Salmonella infection and showed that inflammation created a low-iron niche and administered wild-type EcN or EcN mutants lacking key iron uptake systems. The authors tracked pathogen burden, EcN colonization, gut inflammation, and host lipocalin-2 responses. They also tested mice that were unable to produce lipocalin-2 to determine if host iron sequestration was necessary for the probiotic effect.
Who was studied?
Female C57BL/6 mice with streptomycin-facilitated Salmonella colitis were used for the acute model. Female 129X1/SvJ mice with functional Nramp1 formed the chronic persistent model. All mice received oral Salmonella Typhimurium. They then received either wild-type EcN, EcN tonB mutants that cannot power high-affinity iron transport, or EcN Δ4 mutants lacking salmochelin, aerobactin, yersiniabactin, and heme uptake receptors. A separate group of lipocalin-2 knockout mice was infected to test host dependence. Bacterial counts were taken from feces and colon contents. Cecal tissue was scored blindly for inflammation. Host transcripts for lipocalin-2, Tnf-α, Ifn-γ, Cxcl-1, and Il-17a were quantified.
Most important findings
Probiotic Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 iron competition worked. A single oral dose of wild-type EcN sharply reduced Salmonella fecal shedding. In the chronic model, the reduction was more than 100-fold and lasted for the three-week follow-up. EcN also established stable colonization. When EcN could not import iron because tonB was disrupted, it still colonized, but it no longer suppressed Salmonella. The same loss of effect was seen with the Δ4 strain in acute colitis. This proved that iron competition was the probiotic mechanism.
The host factor lipocalin-2 was also essential. EcN lowered Salmonella only in lipocalin-2–sufficient mice. In lipocalin-2–deficient mice, Salmonella and EcN coexisted because the host no longer blocked enterochelin. EcN itself resisted lipocalin-2 because it used several lipocalin-2–insensitive siderophores. This gave EcN an edge over Salmonella even inside an inflamed, iron-poor gut. EcN also reduced cecal inflammation and the expression of inflammatory transcripts. That anti-inflammatory effect was present even when EcN mutants failed to displace Salmonella. So EcN had two partly separate actions. One depended on iron competition. One relied on mucosal immune modulation. Together they generate a clear microbiome signature. It is characterized by an Enterobacteriaceae-rich, inflamed gut, high lipocalin-2 levels, low free iron, the presence of a strain carrying redundant siderophore systems, and a resulting decline in Salmonella counts.
Key implications
Clinicians can interpret this as mechanistic evidence that some probiotic effects in infection are nutritional, rather than solely immunological. EcN can augment the host's nutritional immunity arm and make lipocalin-2 work better. This matters because antibiotics are often avoided in uncomplicated nontyphoidal Salmonella. A live EcN product could therefore become a supportive option during or after acute colitis to lower pathogen burden. The work also warns that not every EcN-like strain will work. The iron uptake arsenal must be intact. The host must still make lipocalin-2. These two conditions identify patients and settings where an EcN-style probiotic is more likely to succeed.
Defensive mutualism rescues NADPH oxidase inactivation in gut infection
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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In mice lacking epithelial NOX activity, the gut microbiome adapts by enriching H2O2-producing lactobacilli. This community suppresses Citrobacter rodentium virulence by downregulating LEE genes (ler/escN), conferring transmissible protection that is lost with antibiotics or Western diet.
What was studied?
This mouse infection study tested how loss of intestinal epithelial reactive oxygen species (ROS) production reshapes the gut microbiome and alters susceptibility to enteric pathogens, focusing on the concept that H2O2-producing Lactobacillus suppresses Citrobacter virulence. The authors genetically inactivated the NADPH oxidase cofactor Cyba (p22phox) either throughout the body (eliminating NOX1–4 activity) or specifically in intestinal epithelial cells, then challenged mice with Citrobacter rodentium (a model for attaching-and-effacing pathogens such as EPEC/EHEC) and Listeria monocytogenes. They additionally used antibiotic-mediated microbiota depletion, Western diet–induced dysbiosis, mono-association with specific Lactobacillus strains, and cecal microbiota transplantation to dissect whether protection was host-intrinsic or microbiota-mediated.
Who was studied?
The experiments were performed in age- and sex-matched mice, including wild-type controls, Nox2-deficient mice (modeling phagocyte ROS deficiency), Cyba−/− (p22 KO) mice lacking NOX1–4 activity systemically, and epithelium-restricted Cyba-deficient (p22ΔIEC) mice. These models allowed separation of immune-cell ROS effects from epithelial ROS effects. Importantly, the work interrogated naturally acquired, transmissible microbiota states (via co-housing and fecal/cecal transfer) and showed that environmental pressure (antibiotics or Western diet) could erase the protective phenotype, highlighting host–microbiome–environment interactions rather than a single-gene explanation.
Most important findings
Contrary to expectations, epithelial Cyba deficiency protected mice from C. rodentium colitis and reduced pathogen colonization, with diminished inflammatory chemokines/cytokines despite profound epithelial ROS signaling defects (including failure to induce DUOX2 via a NOX1→p38/ATF2 axis). Microbiome profiling linked protection to enrichment of H2O2-producing commensals, most notably Lactobacillus, with species-level increases in L. reuteri and L. murinus, alongside elevations in other “probiotic” taxa such as Bifidobacterium and Butyricicoccus under chow feeding; Western diet reversed these shifts and abolished protection. Mechanistically, lactobacilli physically occupied the mucus niche and released H2O2, which did not kill C. rodentium but downregulated the LEE pathogenicity island: Lactobacillus-conditioned supernatant suppressed ler (the master LEE regulator), and in vivo C. rodentium recovered from p22ΔIEC mice showed reduced ler and escN expression, especially in adherent mucus-associated bacteria. Transferability was key: cecal microbiota transplantation from p22-deficient donors protected antibiotic-treated wild-type recipients, and mono-association with L. reuteri or L. murinus prevented systemic dissemination in ROS-compromised (Nox2 KO) hosts, while complete colonization resistance required a more complex community.
Microbiome/host feature
Association with phenotype
Lactobacillus (↑, esp. L. reuteri, L. murinus)
Protection; niche occupation; H2O2 production
Bifidobacterium, Butyricicoccus (↑)
Co-enriched “probiotic” signature in protected mice
H2O2 exposure
Suppressed C. rodentium LEE genes (ler, escN)
Western diet or antibiotics
Loss of protective microbiome; increased susceptibility
Key implications
Clinically, this study suggests a counterintuitive but actionable principle: when epithelial ROS signaling is impaired (a scenario relevant to NOX1/DUOX2 variants linked to very early onset IBD), microbiome compensation can restore colonization resistance by enriching commensals that generate low-level oxidants like H2O2, which function as antivirulence signals rather than direct antimicrobials. The most database-relevant “signature” is a Lactobacillus-dominant, H2O2-producing community associated with reduced expression of attaching-and-effacing virulence programs (LEE). However, the protection is fragile and environment-dependent-dietary fat/sugar and antibiotic depletion erased it—underscoring that microbiome-based interventions (targeted probiotics, community transplants, or strategies that locally boost H2O2 signaling) must be paired with supportive ecological conditions to be durable.
Commensal iron acquisition and nutritional immunity during Salmonella infection
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Iron (Fe)
Iron (Fe)
OverviewIron is a pivotal nutrient at the host–pathogen interface. Virtually all microbes (with rare exceptions like Borrelia) require iron for processes from DNA synthesis to respiration. [1] In human hosts, free iron is vanishingly scarce due to “nutritional immunity,” wherein iron is locked up in hemoproteins or tightly bound by transport proteins.[2] This metal tug-of-war […]
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Nutritional Immunity
Nutritional Immunity
Nutritional immunity restricts metal access to pathogens, leveraging sequestration, transport, and toxicity to control infections and immunity.
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XusB in Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron binds enterobactin in OMVs, sustains commensal fitness, and creates a lipocalin 2 resistant iron pool that Salmonella can recapture, redefining commensal-iron-acquisition-and-nutritional-immunity during colitis.
What was studied?
This study interrogates commensal iron acquisition and nutritional immunity during Salmonella infection, focusing on how the gut commensal Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron captures xenosiderophores to sustain fitness and inadvertently modulates host defenses against pathogens. The authors identify XusB, a secreted, surface-anchored lipoprotein that binds ferric enterobactin with high affinity and is enriched in outer membrane vesicles. They combine structural biology, biochemistry, bacterial genetics, and murine infection models to show that XusB-bound enterobactin resists sequestration by host lipocalin 2, can be re-acquired by Salmonella via FepA or IroN, and thereby alters the effective pool of iron chelators available under inflammatory iron restriction. The graphical abstract on page 2 schematically depicts enterobactin crossfeeding, OMV packaging of XusB, and reduced lipocalin 2 access, framing commensal iron acquisition as a third axis in nutritional immunity beyond host and pathogen.
Who was studied?
Experiments used B. thetaiotaomicron VPI-5482 and isogenic mutants lacking xusB or harboring an enterobactin-binding deficient XusB, along with Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium strains, including wild type, entB deficient, ΔfepA iroN double mutant, and ΔiroB lacking salmochelin synthesis. Escherichia coli BW25113 mutants from the Keio collection informed receptor requirements for XusB-bound siderophore uptake. In vivo work involved antibiotic-pretreated conventional C57BL/6 mice for competitive infection and colonization studies, and gnotobiotic Swiss Webster mice to measure XusB in luminal OMV fractions without confounding microbes. Figures 4 and 7 detail competitive indices for Salmonella in mice colonized with B. thetaiotaomicron variants or administered OMVs, while supplementary analyses confirm comparable inflammation readouts across conditions.
Most important findings
XusB is a surface-exposed, OMV-enriched lipoprotein required for B. thetaiotaomicron utilization of catecholate xenosiderophores. Structural work shows XusB forms a seven-bladed beta propeller with a positively charged central calyx that accommodates Fe-enterobactin; docking and mutagenesis identify key contact residues, and binding affinity is in the low-nanomolar range near 148 nM. In vitro, OMV-associated or recombinant XusB preloaded with Fe-enterobactin fuels growth of B. thetaiotaomicron under iron chelation, elevates cellular iron by ICP-MS, and supports growth of Salmonella entB mutants and E. coli via TonB-dependent enterobactin receptors FepA and IroN. In species with distinct XusB homologs, XusB-bound siderophores can be “selfish,” restricting access to closely related Bacteroides while remaining accessible to Enterobacteriaceae.
Crucially, XusB changes the competitive landscape in the presence of host lipocalin 2. When lipocalin 2 is added with an iron chelator, XusB increases the competitive index of wild-type Salmonella over the ΔfepA iroN mutant, indicating that XusB-bound enterobactin constitutes an exploitable pool despite host sequestration of free enterobactin. In mice, XusB confers a resilience advantage to B. thetaiotaomicron during Salmonella colitis and increases Salmonella fitness when animals are colonized with XusB-positive B. thetaiotaomicron or given XusB-bearing OMVs. Page 34 visualizes the XusB architecture and calyx electrostatics, pages 39 to 41 depict in vitro and in vivo competition assays that demonstrate altered siderophore accessibility and pathogen advantage.
Key implications
For microbiome signatures, B. thetaiotaomicron emerges as a context-dependent facilitator of pathogen iron access under inflammation, linking a commensal siderophore-binding system to Salmonella expansion. B. thetaiotaomicron with XusB-mediated xenosiderophore capture and Salmonella Typhimurium with enterobactin or salmochelin utilization. Clinically, strategies that modulate iron availability or deploy siderophore-binding therapeutics must account for commensal OMV cargo that can buffer host sequestration and inadvertently aid pathogens. Targeting XusB-like systems may represent a translational lever to restore nutritional immunity without broadly disrupting commensals.
The impact of iron on Listeria monocytogenes; inside and outside the host
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study explores the critical role of iron acquisition systems in Listeria monocytogenes pathogenesis, focusing on Fur-regulated iron transporters and their impact on bacterial survival and virulence.
What was studied?
This study explored the impact of iron acquisition mechanisms on the pathogenicity of Listeria monocytogenes. Specifically, it focused on how Listeria competes for iron during infection, how it adapts to iron-limited conditions, and the role of iron transport systems in its survival both inside and outside the host. The study further investigated how these iron acquisition strategies are regulated, especially by the Fur (ferric uptake regulator) protein, and their contribution to bacterial virulence.
Who was studied?
The study investigated Listeria monocytogenes, including its ability to acquire and utilize iron during infection. The research utilized both in vitro experiments with bacterial strains and in vivo models (including murine models) to understand the bacterium's iron homeostasis. It also examined how Listeria competes with host iron sequestration strategies, using a variety of genetic and molecular tools to analyze the role of iron uptake and storage systems.
What were the most important findings?
The study found that Listeria monocytogenes utilizes multiple iron acquisition systems, including the uptake of iron from ferric hydroxamates, heme, and hemoglobin. These systems are regulated by the Fur protein, which helps the bacteria adapt to iron-limiting conditions in the host. The Listeria Fur-regulon controls several genes involved in iron transport, including those responsible for the uptake of iron from host proteins like lactoferrin and transferrin. The study also highlighted that Listeria can acquire iron from heme through the HupDGC system and from ferrichrome through the Fhu system. Additionally, it was shown that disruption of Fur-regulated genes, like fhuDC, led to impaired iron acquisition and a significant reduction in the virulence potential of Listeria in murine models. The study also emphasized the importance of iron acquisition in the pathogenesis of Listeria, noting that iron overload in humans (such as in patients undergoing hemodialysis) promotes bacterial growth and enhances infection. These findings suggest that Listeria has evolved sophisticated mechanisms to adapt to the host’s nutritional immunity and that disrupting these mechanisms could serve as a potential therapeutic approach.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings have significant implications for both food safety and clinical treatment of Listeria monocytogenes infections. By understanding how Listeria acquires iron in the host, new strategies could be developed to limit its access to this essential nutrient, potentially reducing its ability to cause infections. Targeting the iron acquisition systems, especially those regulated by the Fur protein, could provide a novel therapeutic approach for combating Listeria infections, particularly in immunocompromised individuals and pregnant women, who are most vulnerable to listeriosis. Additionally, understanding the role of iron in bacterial pathogenesis could inform the development of vaccines or antimicrobial treatments that target Listeria's iron uptake mechanisms. The research also highlights the broader concept of nutritional immunity, suggesting that controlling iron availability in food production systems could be an effective strategy for reducing contamination with Listeria and other pathogens.
Probiotics in addressing heavy metal toxicities in fish farming: Current progress and perspective
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study shows that probiotics can mitigate the effects of heavy metal toxicity in farmed fish. By binding metals and reducing oxidative stress, probiotics improve fish health and safety for consumption, offering a sustainable solution for the aquaculture industry.
What was studied?
The study explores the role of probiotics in alleviating the detrimental effects of heavy metal toxicity in fish farming. Heavy metals like copper, lead, mercury, and cadmium can accumulate in fish, leading to oxidative stress, immune dysfunction, and organ damage. The research investigates whether probiotics can reduce the harmful impact of these metals by enhancing detoxification processes and promoting gut health, which is crucial for maintaining overall fish health.
Who was studied?
The research primarily focuses on common fish species in aquaculture, such as tilapia, carp, and zebrafish. These species are often exposed to environmental heavy metals through contaminated water or feed, making them ideal candidates for studying the effectiveness of probiotics in mitigating heavy metal toxicity. The study examines the use of various probiotic strains, including Lactobacillus and Bacillus, and their impact on the health of these fish species under controlled laboratory conditions.
Most important findings
The study demonstrates that probiotics can be a promising strategy for reducing heavy metal toxicity in fish. The probiotics tested in the research were found to bind heavy metals in the digestive system, preventing their absorption and accumulation in tissues. In addition, probiotics enhanced the detoxification process by modulating antioxidant enzymes, including superoxide dismutase, catalase, and glutathione peroxidase. These enzymes play a vital role in reducing oxidative stress, a common consequence of heavy metal exposure. Furthermore, the probiotics supported the gut microbiome, which is essential for detoxifying metals and maintaining a balanced immune response. The research showed that fish treated with probiotics experienced less damage to their liver, kidneys, and intestines, which are organs frequently affected by heavy metal accumulation.
Key implications
The findings of this study have significant implications for both the aquaculture industry and food safety. By using probiotics to mitigate the effects of heavy metal toxicity, fish farmers can improve the health and welfare of their stock while also reducing the potential health risks posed to consumers. Probiotics offer a cost-effective and sustainable solution to the growing problem of metal contamination in aquaculture. Moreover, this approach could reduce the reliance on chemical treatments and antibiotics, promoting more environmentally friendly and safer farming practices. The study also highlights the potential for using probiotics to address other environmental stressors in fish farming, opening new avenues for research in sustainable aquaculture practices.
Metal(loid)-gut microbiota interactions and microbiota-related protective strategies: A review
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review examines how metal(loid) exposure affects gut microbiota composition and function. It also evaluates microbiota-related strategies for metal(loid) detoxification.
What was reviewed?
The review focused on metal(loid)-gut microbiota interactions and the microbiota-related protective strategies. It specifically looked at the impact of metal(loid) exposure on gut microbiota, including essential metals and toxic metals like lead, mercury, cadmium, and arsenic. The review explored how these interactions might affect human health and how strategies such as probiotics, prebiotics, and postbiotics could mitigate the harmful effects of metals on the gut microbiota and overall health. The authors discussed the latest research on microbiota-metal(loid) interactions, including the potential for novel microbiota-related therapeutic strategies in metal(loid) detoxification.
Who was reviewed?
The review primarily examined various studies focusing on metal(loid)-gut microbiota interactions in different organisms, including humans. It reviewed research on how exposure to metals and metalloids, both essential (e.g., copper, zinc) and toxic (e.g., arsenic, mercury, cadmium), alters the gut microbiome. The review highlighted the effects of metal(loid) exposure on microbial diversity, bacterial composition, and the metabolic functions of the gut microbiota. Additionally, the review explored how the gut microbiome itself can influence the absorption, bioavailability, and toxicity of metals, thereby affecting human health. The review also emphasized the microbiota-related protective strategies, such as the use of probiotics, prebiotics, and postbiotics, which were researched in various clinical and experimental models. Studies in animals (e.g., rodents) and human microbiota composition were reviewed to establish the broader implications of metal(loid) exposure on gut health.
What were the most important findings?
The review highlighted several important findings, including the fact that metal(loid) exposure alters the composition and metabolic functions of gut microbiota. This can disrupt gut health and lead to various diseases, including metabolic, gastrointestinal, hepatic, and neurological conditions. For example, heavy metals such as arsenic, mercury, and cadmium have been found to decrease microbial diversity, promote pathogen growth, and disturb intestinal homeostasis. In contrast, metals like copper and zinc, essential for bodily functions, were found to have both beneficial and detrimental effects depending on their concentration.
The study also revealed that probiotics, prebiotics, synbiotics, and postbiotics have shown promise in mitigating the harmful effects of metal(loid) toxicity. These microbiota-related strategies could promote metal(loid) biotransformation and reduce bioaccessibility, offering a potentially safer and more economical alternative to traditional pharmacological treatments for metal(loid) detoxification.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The review's findings suggest that metal(loid)-gut microbiota interactions play a crucial role in the body’s response to environmental pollutants and toxins. Understanding these interactions can pave the way for innovative microbiota-based therapies to alleviate the health impacts of metal(loid) exposure. The implications are significant for public health, especially in areas where populations are exposed to high levels of toxic metals. Furthermore, the review underscores the need for more research into microbiota-based detoxification strategies, including the potential for genetically modified probiotics and other biotherapeutic agents. It also calls for further exploration of the mechanisms through which gut microbiota influence metal(loid) metabolism and toxicity.
Nickel exposure induces gut microbiome disorder and serum uric acid elevation
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Nickel exposure induces gut microbiome disorder and serum uric acid elevation by disrupting purine-degrading microbes, increasing inflammatory taxa, impairing intestinal metabolism, and elevating serum uric acid in humans and mice.
What was studied?
Nickel exposure induces gut microbiome disorder, and serum uric acid elevation was investigated to understand how chronic nickel exposure affects hyperuricemia through gut microbial and metabolic alterations in humans and mice. The study integrated human occupational exposure data, targeted microbial profiling, and metabolomic analyses to determine mechanistic links between nickel-associated dysbiosis, disrupted intestinal purine catabolism, and elevated serum uric acid. The research combined 16S rRNA sequencing and LC-MS/MS metabolomics to map microbial taxa changes and purine pathway perturbations, while mouse models validated causality and inflammatory consequences. The work also examined correlations between microbial shifts, bile acid metabolism, oxidative stress markers, and inflammation, revealing a multisystem disruption connecting heavy metal exposure to uric acid accumulation.
Who was studied?
A total of 109 human participants from an occupational cohort in Jinchang, China were examined, including 92 nickel-exposed workers and 17 unexposed controls. Inclusion criteria excluded kidney, liver, thyroid, or intestinal disease, ensuring uric acid elevations reflected exposure-related mechanisms rather than comorbidities. Fecal and serum samples were collected for microbiome and metabolomic profiling. Complementary mouse experiments used female Kun Ming mice receiving oral nickel chloride for 35 days to assess causal relationships between nickel exposure, microbiome disruption, purine metabolism, and systemic inflammation. Both populations showed consistent patterns, strengthening translational relevance.
Most important findings
Nickel exposure induced clear microbiome alterations strongly associated with disrupted purine metabolism and higher serum uric acid. Key purine-degrading taxa—including Lactobacillus, Lachnospiraceae_unclassified, and Blautia—were significantly reduced. These microbes normally degrade uric acid or reduce purine absorption, and their depletion paralleled elevated fecal purines and impaired intestinal purine breakdown. Pathogenic or inflammation-associated taxa, such as Parabacteroides, Escherichia-Shigella, Alistipes, and Mycoplasma, were enriched, contributing to intestinal inflammation and increased permeability. Metabolomic analyses showed elevated fecal adenine, guanine, inosine, and hypoxanthine, while serum uric acid was significantly higher. Mouse data confirmed increased serum uric acid, heightened pro-inflammatory cytokines, oxidative stress markers, and similar microbiome disruptions. Together, these findings identify a gut-driven mechanism in which nickel suppresses purine degradation, enhances systemic absorption of purines, and fosters inflammatory conditions that exacerbate uric acid accumulation.
Microbial/Metabolic Change
Effect Associated with Nickel Exposure
↓ Lactobacillus, Blautia
Reduced purine degradation and anti-inflammatory activity
↑ Parabacteroides, Escherichia-Shigella
Increased pathogenic and inflammatory signaling
↑ Fecal purines (adenine, inosine, etc.)
Impaired intestinal purine catabolism
↑ Serum uric acid and TNF-α
Systemic inflammation and hyperuricemia
Key implications
This study provides strong evidence that nickel-induced hyperuricemia is mediated not by impaired renal excretion alone but by microbiome-driven metabolic dysfunction. Heavy metal exposure disrupts the intestinal ecosystem, reduces key uricolytic microbes, suppresses purine catabolism, increases gut permeability, and intensifies inflammation. These findings expand the known environmental determinants of hyperuricemia and spotlight gut microbiome signatures—particularly reductions in Lactobacillus, Blautia, and Lachnospiraceae_unclassified and enrichment of inflammatory taxa—as potential biomarkers. Clinically, microbiome-targeted interventions may represent future therapeutic strategies for heavy-metal–associated hyperuricemia.
What is the best strategy for moving microbiome-based therapies for functional gastrointestinal disorders into the clinic?
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review discusses the strategies for translating microbiome-based therapies into clinical practice for FGIDs, particularly IBS. It highlights the need for a systems approach integrating multi-omics data and patient stratification.
What was studied?
The study focuses on strategies to integrate microbiome-based therapies for functional gastrointestinal disorders (FGIDs), such as irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), into clinical practice. It examines the role of the gut microbiome in FGID pathogenesis, explores various therapeutic approaches such as fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) and probiotics, and highlights the need for more precise microbiome-targeted treatments.
Who was studied?
The review primarily considers the clinical and experimental studies related to FGIDs, specifically IBS. It integrates findings from human clinical trials and animal models that investigate the association between the microbiome and gastrointestinal function. The review also discusses challenges in translating these findings to therapeutic strategies.
Most important findings
The study reveals that microbiome alterations, particularly in individuals with IBS, are associated with gastrointestinal dysfunction, including changes in gut motility, visceral hypersensitivity, and intestinal permeability. Despite significant advances in understanding the microbiome's role, studies often show inconsistent results, with microbiome-based therapies failing to consistently address specific disease mechanisms. The review calls for a systems-based approach, integrating multi-omics data and patient-specific characteristics to improve therapeutic outcomes. The study emphasizes the importance of patient stratification based on microbial alterations and pathophysiological measurements.
Key implications
This review outlines the gap between microbiome research and clinical application. It suggests that to move microbiome-based therapies into the clinic effectively, future studies should combine multiple layers of data, including microbial composition, metabolomics, and clinical measurements. Personalized treatment strategies should be developed based on these integrated data, which can help target the underlying causes of FGIDs. Moreover, employing longitudinal studies will be crucial in understanding the dynamic nature of these disorders and identifying responders to specific therapies.
Arsenic disturbs the gut microbiome of individuals in a disadvantaged community in Nepal
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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In Nepal, arsenic disturbs the gut microbiome, driving sulfate-reducers and depleting commensals; urine arsenic best explains dysbiosis patterns with clear taxa-level signals useful for exposure-aware clinical care.
What was studied?
This original study tested whether arsenic disturbs the gut microbiome by linking individual urine arsenic levels to 16S rRNA–based fecal community profiles from two Nepalese communities, using Illumina MiSeq, QIIME 1.9.0, beta-diversity statistics, and LEfSe to detect exposure-associated taxa and functions.
Who was studied?
Investigators collected fecal and urine samples from residents of Mahuawa (n=20) and Ghanashyampur (n=22) in Nawalparasi, Nepal, where some wells reach ~500 µg/L arsenic; participants also completed health questionnaires, and the team grouped exposure as undetected, moderate, or high based on urine arsenic.
Most important findings
Urine arsenic explained the largest share of between-sample variation across all metadata, and beta diversity separated samples by urine arsenic within Mahuawa (Adonis p=0.009); species richness was generally lower where urine arsenic was higher. Exposure shifted taxa toward sulfate-reducing and arsenic-metabolizing bacteria: in Ghanashyampur, Bilophila and the family Desulfovibrionaceae correlated positively with urine arsenic, and the “High” group showed Collinsella enrichment; in Mahuawa, Bacillaceae rose with arsenic, while commensals Ruminococcus and Clostridiaceae fell; Erysipelotrichales decreased with exposure across communities.
Key implications
These data indicate that arsenic exposure can steer gut ecology toward sulfate-reducers (e.g., Bilophila, Desulfovibrionaceae) and away from protective commensals (e.g., Ruminococcus, Clostridiaceae), a pattern tied to inflammation and possible colorectal risk; clinicians caring for exposed patients should consider water source assessment and interventions that reduce exposure and support commensals.
Function and therapeutic potential of Amuc_1100, an outer membrane protein of Akkermansia muciniphila: A review
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review highlights Amuc_1100, a bioactive membrane protein from Akkermansia muciniphila, as a potent immunometabolic regulator that strengthens gut barrier function, reshapes microbiome composition, and modulates systemic inflammation across metabolic, inflammatory, and oncologic disease models.
What was reviewed?
This review examined the structure, biological function, and therapeutic potential of Amuc_1100, a highly expressed outer membrane protein derived from the gut symbiont Akkermansia muciniphila. The authors synthesized over a decade of preclinical evidence to evaluate how Amuc_1100 mediates host–microbe interactions independently of live bacterial administration, with a focus on immune signaling, metabolic regulation, epithelial barrier integrity, and systemic disease modulation.
Who was reviewed?
The review evaluated data derived primarily from murine models, in vitro human cell systems including intestinal epithelial cells, immune cells, adipocytes, and cancer cell lines, as well as comparative microbiome analyses relevant to human metabolic, inflammatory, neurological, and oncologic conditions. No new human cohort was analyzed; instead, the review integrated findings relevant to human disease translation.
What were the most important findings?
Amuc_1100 emerged as a multifunctional microbial effector capable of reproducing many beneficial effects attributed to live or pasteurized A. muciniphila. Mechanistically, Amuc_1100 consistently activated TLR2 signaling, leading to downstream modulation of NF-κB, JAK/STAT, AC3/PKA/HSL, and CREBH-miR-143/145 pathways. These effects translated into improved intestinal barrier integrity via tight junction upregulation, reduced intestinal permeability, and suppression of systemic inflammation. In metabolic disease models, Amuc_1100 promoted lipolysis, improved insulin sensitivity, and reduced hepatic steatosis, with effects abolished in TLR2-deficient mice, confirming receptor specificity. From a microbiome perspective, Amuc_1100 shifted dysbiotic communities toward health-associated profiles, notably increasing short-chain-fatty-acid–producing taxa such as Lachnospiraceae and Lactobacillus while reducing Proteobacteria and Desulfobacterota, which are commonly associated with inflammation. Beyond the gut, Amuc_1100 influenced the gut–brain and gut–immune axes by increasing serotonin biosynthesis, enhancing CD8+ T-cell antitumor activity, and modulating macrophage polarization. Importantly, these effects occurred without risks linked to live bacterial colonization, positioning Amuc_1100 as a defined, controllable microbial-derived therapeutic.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review positions Amuc_1100 as a prototype for next-generation microbiome-derived therapeutics that decouple beneficial microbial signaling from the variability and safety concerns of live probiotics. For clinicians, the findings suggest that targeting specific microbial proteins may offer more predictable immunometabolic modulation, improved dosing control, and broader systemic applicability across inflammatory bowel disease, metabolic syndrome, cancer, and neuropsychiatric disorders. The work also highlights the need for human dosing studies, pharmacokinetic validation, and delivery optimization before clinical translation.
Unveiling the intratumoral microbiota within cancer landscapes
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Intratumoural Microbiota
Intratumoural Microbiota
With the growing understanding of the intratumoral microbiota’s influence on cancer progression, the next frontier in cancer therapy is microbiota-targeted interventions. By introducing beneficial microbes or altering existing microbial populations within tumors, therapies can be designed to modulate the immune system, promote tumor suppression, and improve drug efficacy. However, challenges remain in deciphering the complex relationships between microbes, tumor cells, and the immune system, necessitating more refined research methods and standardized approaches to translate these discoveries into clinical practice.
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The review highlights the role of intratumoral microbiota in cancer initiation, progression, and therapy. It discusses the dual effects of these microbiota on immune responses, emphasizing their potential as diagnostic biomarkers and therapeutic targets in cancer treatment.
What was studied?
The review investigates the emerging concept of intratumoral microbiota, which refers to microbial populations within tumor tissues. Historically, tumors were considered sterile environments, but advancements in sequencing technologies have uncovered the presence of bacteria, viruses, fungi, and other microorganisms within various cancer types. The article explores the role these intratumoral microbes play in cancer progression, immune system modulation, and therapeutic outcomes. It discusses how intratumoral microbiota contribute to carcinogenesis, tumor metastasis, and response to cancer therapies, particularly immunotherapy. The study emphasizes the diversity and complexity of intratumoral microbiota across different cancer types and tumor subtypes.
Who was studied?
The study focused on intratumoral microbiota found in various cancer types, highlighting their varying compositions and effects on the tumor microenvironment (TME). The research includes tumors from organs such as the gastrointestinal tract, skin, lung, and other epithelial cancers. It examines both the microbial species that directly colonize the tumors and those that may contribute indirectly, such as via hematogenous spread or through mucosal breaches. The review further considers the interaction between tumor cells and immune cells in the TME, influenced by microbial presence. This interaction plays a critical role in both the immune system's ability to fight cancer and the success of cancer treatments, particularly immunotherapies.
Most important findings
The key findings reveal that the intratumoral microbiota can have both pro-tumor and anti-tumor effects. On one hand, certain bacteria and fungi can promote cancer development by inducing genomic instability, inflammatory responses, and immune suppression, enhancing tumor progression and metastasis. On the other hand, specific microbial species have been found to activate anti-tumor immunity by stimulating immune cells such as T and NK cells, activating the STING signaling pathway, and enhancing antigen presentation. This dual role of intratumoral microbiota in modulating cancer immunity offers new insights into tumor biology and therapeutic efficacy.
Moreover, the review highlights the heterogeneity of the intratumoral microbiota across different cancer types and even within subtypes of the same cancer, making it a critical variable in understanding cancer pathogenesis and therapy outcomes. For example, certain bacteria like Fusobacterium nucleatum and Bacteroides fragilis are more abundant in colorectal cancer tissues, where they may influence both tumor progression and the local immune response.
Key implications
The findings of this review underscore the potential of targeting intratumoral microbiota in cancer therapy. Modulating the intratumoral microbiota could improve immunotherapy outcomes, enhance chemotherapy efficacy, and reduce treatment resistance. Intratumoral microbiota may serve as novel biomarkers for cancer diagnosis and prognosis, providing a deeper understanding of tumor heterogeneity. Additionally, therapeutic strategies, such as probiotics, antibiotics, or microbiome-targeted therapies, are emerging as promising adjuncts to traditional cancer treatments. However, challenges remain in fully understanding the molecular mechanisms through which microbiota influence tumorigenesis and therapy responses, necessitating further research in this rapidly developing field.
Intratumor microbiota and colorectal cancer: Comprehensive and lucid review
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review examines the role of intratumoral microbiota in colorectal cancer. It highlights how specific microbes influence tumor progression, immune responses, and therapy resistance, suggesting microbiota manipulation as a novel therapeutic approach.
What was studied?
This review article focuses on the role of intratumoral microbiota in colorectal cancer (CRC). The study examines how specific microbial communities within tumor tissues contribute to cancer initiation, progression, and metastasis. It investigates the complex interactions between tumor cells and the microbiota, particularly in CRC, and discusses how these microorganisms can influence tumor behavior and immune responses. The paper also explores the potential of targeting intratumoral microbiota as part of new therapeutic strategies for CRC treatment.
Who was studied?
The article synthesizes findings from various studies involving CRC patients and animal models. It explores the microbial composition in CRC tissues and compares it with normal colorectal tissues. Specific attention is given to microbes such as Fusobacterium nucleatum, Escherichia coli, and Bacteroides fragilis, which are known to play key roles in tumorigenesis. The review discusses how the presence and abundance of these microorganisms correlate with cancer progression, immune evasion, and therapeutic resistance, focusing on their impact on CRC prognosis and treatment outcomes.
Most important findings
The review highlights that intratumoral microbiota significantly influences CRC development. It points out that the microbial composition in CRC tissues differs markedly from that in healthy tissues, with an increased abundance of pathogenic bacteria like Fusobacterium nucleatum and Escherichia coli. These bacteria are linked to inflammation, DNA damage, and immune suppression, all of which contribute to tumor growth and metastasis. The article also emphasizes that the microbiota can affect the tumor microenvironment (TME) by modulating immune responses, promoting tumor cell survival, and enabling resistance to chemotherapy. For instance, F. nucleatum has been shown to enhance immune evasion by suppressing T-cell responses and activating pro-inflammatory pathways. Furthermore, the review discusses the impact of microbiota-derived metabolites, such as short-chain fatty acids, in modulating tumor metabolism and genomic stability, further influencing CRC progression.
Key implications
The findings of this review suggest that intratumoral microbiota can be used as both biomarkers for CRC prognosis and targets for new therapeutic strategies. The identification of specific microbial signatures within tumors could allow for the development of personalized treatment plans based on microbiota composition. Moreover, interventions aimed at modifying the tumor microbiome, such as using probiotics, antibiotics, or other microbiota-targeted interventions, could enhance the effectiveness of existing treatments like immunotherapy and chemotherapy. However, further research is needed to fully understand the mechanisms through which the microbiota contributes to tumor progression and to explore the potential of microbiome-based therapies in clinical settings.
The role of gut microbiota and metabolites in cancer chemotherapy
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review emphasizes how gut microbiota influences cancer chemotherapy efficacy and toxicity. It discusses microbial species, metabolites, and strategies to optimize chemotherapy response, suggesting that microbiota modulation could improve treatment outcomes.
What was studied?
This review focused on the role of gut microbiota in modulating the efficacy and toxicity of cancer chemotherapy. The authors explored how different bacterial species and their metabolites interact with chemotherapeutic agents, potentially influencing both therapeutic outcomes and adverse effects. The review also highlighted strategies such as dietary interventions, probiotics, and fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) that may optimize chemotherapy response.
Who was studied?
The study primarily focused on the impact of gut microbiota in cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy. The review discussed various studies involving colorectal cancer (CRC), breast cancer, and other malignancies, emphasizing how differences in microbial composition between patients could influence responses to common chemotherapeutic agents like 5-fluorouracil, irinotecan, and cisplatin. It also examined the microbiota's role in both enhancing efficacy and mitigating side effects such as diarrhea, mucositis, and neuropathy.
Most important findings
One of the most significant findings was that gut microbiota could directly influence the efficacy of chemotherapy. For instance, Fusobacterium nucleatum, a bacterium found in CRC, was shown to promote chemoresistance by activating autophagy through a TLR4/MYD88-dependent pathway. Conversely, beneficial microbes such as Akkermansia muciniphila were linked to enhanced chemotherapy efficacy, especially in breast cancer treated with doxorubicin. Additionally, microbial metabolites like butyrate were found to enhance chemotherapy effects by inhibiting glucose metabolism through the GPR109a-AKT signaling pathway, while Ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA) reshaped microbial composition to promote chemotherapy. Moreover, gut microbiota influenced the toxicity profile of chemotherapies, with certain strains reducing chemotherapy-induced gastrointestinal (GI) toxicity and others potentially exacerbating side effects.
Key implications
The review highlighted that targeting the gut microbiota could serve as a promising strategy for enhancing the safety and efficacy of chemotherapy. Manipulating the microbiota through interventions such as probiotics, dietary changes, and FMT could reduce chemotherapy-induced toxicity, thereby improving patient quality of life. Furthermore, gut microbiota could act as predictive biomarkers, offering a non-invasive method for forecasting chemotherapy efficacy. However, challenges remain in identifying universal microbiota profiles and metabolites that can be applied across different patient populations. The variability in microbiota composition due to host genetics, diet, and other environmental factors complicates the implementation of microbiota-targeted therapies in clinical practice. More research is needed to refine these strategies and validate their clinical effectiveness in large cohorts.
Strategies to promote abundance of Akkermansia muciniphila, an emerging probiotics in the gut, evidence from dietary intervention studies
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review summarizes evidence that diet, prebiotics, and drugs such as metformin can increase Akkermansia muciniphila, a mucus-associated bacterium linked to improved metabolic health and reduced inflammation.
What was reviewed?
This review evaluated dietary, pharmacologic, and lifestyle strategies shown to increase the abundance of Akkermansia muciniphila in the gut, with emphasis on evidence from animal and human intervention studies. The author critically synthesized data on how specific dietary components, prebiotics, probiotics, drugs, and environmental factors influence A. muciniphila levels and how these changes relate to obesity, diabetes, inflammation, and metabolic health. The review also discussed proposed mechanisms linking increased A. muciniphila abundance to improved gut barrier integrity and reduced metabolic endotoxemia.
Who was reviewed?
The review integrated findings from multiple mouse models of diet-induced obesity, leptin deficiency, atherosclerosis, and diabetes, alongside limited but informative human dietary intervention studies in healthy individuals, patients with obesity, irritable bowel syndrome, Crohn’s disease, and metabolic disorders. No new cohorts were studied, but both animal and human populations were critically compared to assess translational relevance.
What were the most important findings?
Across studies, A. muciniphila abundance consistently showed an inverse association with obesity, insulin resistance, systemic inflammation, and circulating lipopolysaccharide levels. Direct supplementation with live A. muciniphila in mice reliably restored its abundance under high-fat diet conditions and improved metabolic outcomes without broadly altering overall microbiota composition, supporting its role as a functional keystone species. Among dietary interventions, fructo-oligosaccharides emerged as the most consistent prebiotic for promoting A. muciniphila growth, often restoring levels reduced by high-fat diets and improving glucose tolerance and fat mass. Certain polyphenol sources, such as cranberry and Concord grape extracts, markedly increased A. muciniphila in animal models, whereas others showed no effect, highlighting compound-specific activity. Human studies indicated that higher FODMAP intake was associated with increased A. muciniphila abundance, while restrictive low-FODMAP diets reduced it. Metformin consistently increased A. muciniphila abundance in animal models, and antibiotic pretreatment abolished metformin’s metabolic benefits, implicating A. muciniphila and reduced endotoxemia as mediators. Major microbial associations included links with improved mucus thickness, increased goblet cell numbers, and secondary enrichment of SCFA-producing taxa.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review establishes A. muciniphila as a diet- and drug-responsive microbiome target with clear relevance to metabolic and inflammatory disease. For clinicians, it highlights that increasing A. muciniphila abundance depends on specific nutritional patterns rather than generalized fiber intake and that therapeutic response likely varies by host context. The findings support precision nutrition and microbiome-informed strategies aimed at restoring mucus integrity and reducing metabolic endotoxemia.
Inflammatory immunity and bacteriological perspectives: A new direction for copper treatment of sepsis
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Copper treatment of sepsis links host copper delivery, microbial copper genes, and cell death pathways. The review highlights biomarker value and careful therapeutic targeting to aid control of infection while limiting tissue injury.
What was reviewed?
This review examines copper treatment of sepsis and explains how copper shapes the host–pathogen fight from the gut to the bloodstream. The review describes copper as both a cofactor for life and a toxic stressor that immune cells deploy in phagosomes. It outlines copper’s links to apoptosis, pyroptosis, necroptosis, ferroptosis, and cuproptosis, and shows how these death pathways influence inflammation, barrier injury, and organ damage during sepsis. It also summarizes emerging therapeutic ideas, including copper chelators, copper ionophores, and copper-based nanomaterials, while warning that dose and timing matter because excess copper can worsen oxidative stress and tissue injury. The review connects these mechanisms to clinical signals, noting that blood copper levels rise in sepsis and may track risk.
Who was reviewed?
The authors synthesize findings from human cohorts with sepsis, animal models, and cell systems that profile copper handling in immune cells and epithelia. They integrate bacteriological data across major pathogens that face copper stress in the host, including Gram-negative organisms such as Salmonella and Escherichia coli, and Gram-positive organisms such as Staphylococcus aureus and Streptococcus pneumoniae. They also discuss mycobacteria and fungal models where copper transport and metalloregulation influence virulence. Across these sources, the review maps host importers and pumps that load copper into phagolysosomes, and microbial copper resistance modules and oxidases that keep periplasmic and cytosolic copper in check during infection.
Most important findings
The host raises copper at infection sites and in activated macrophages, where copper works with nitric oxide and reactive oxygen species to damage invading cells; chelating host copper reduces killing in models, confirming causality. Pathogens counter with P1B-type ATPase exporters, periplasmic multicopper oxidases, copper chaperones, and metallothioneins, and loss of these systems reduces survival in macrophages and lowers virulence in vivo. In the intestine, enterocyte ferroptosis and barrier loss can drive bacterial translocation in sepsis, linking metal stress to microbiome disruption. In patients, copper levels and the copper-to-zinc ratio associate with outcomes, suggesting biomarker potential. Copper ionophores, chelators, and copper nanomaterials show antibacterial and immuno-modulating effects in preclinical sepsis, including reactive species control and improved organ injury, but over-exposure can amplify inflammation and apoptosis. Together, these data position microbial copper resistance genes and host copper routing as key microbiome-relevant signatures in sepsis.
Key implications
Clinicians should view copper homeostasis as a modifiable axis of sepsis care. Monitoring copper and the copper-to-zinc ratio may aid risk assessment. Therapies that target microbial copper resistance, or that fine-tune host copper delivery, could improve pathogen control while limiting tissue damage. Copper ionophores and copper-mimetic nanoenzymes merit cautious evaluation as adjuncts, paired with strategies that protect the gut barrier to reduce dysbiosis and bacterial translocation. Any copper-based approach must balance antimicrobial gain against the risk of excess oxidative stress and cell death.
Phenotypic and genotypic antimicrobial resistance of Listeria monocytogenes: an observational study in France
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study analyzes antimicrobial resistance in Listeria monocytogenes isolates from clinical and food environments in France, highlighting the low prevalence of acquired resistance and the continued effectiveness of first-line treatments.
What was studied?
This study examined the phenotypic and genotypic antimicrobial resistance (AMR) patterns in Listeria monocytogenes isolates collected in France from 2012 to 2019. It aimed to assess the prevalence of AMR in clinical and food-related isolates, analyze the correlation between genotypic and phenotypic resistance, and evaluate the genetic locations of acquired resistance traits.
Who was studied?
The study focused on Listeria monocytogenes, a foodborne pathogen that causes listeriosis. The isolates analyzed were divided into clinical isolates (2908) and food isolates (2431), all obtained from various regions in France and overseas territories.
What were the most important findings?
The study found that Listeria monocytogenes isolates were resistant to at least three different classes of antimicrobials, a characteristic of their intrinsic resistance. However, acquired resistance was rare, found in only 2.23% of isolates, with food isolates showing a higher prevalence of acquired resistance (3.74%) compared to clinical isolates (0.98%). The most common acquired resistance was against tetracyclines, due to the tetM gene, followed by resistance to macrolides (ermB), lincosamides (lnuG), and phenicols (fexA). The study confirmed that the first-line treatments for listeriosis, such as ampicillin and gentamicin, remain effective, as no acquired resistance to these drugs was observed. Whole genome sequencing (WGS) was used to accurately predict acquired antimicrobial resistance in Listeria monocytogenes isolates, with an accuracy of over 99% for all antibiotics, except for ciprofloxacin. The study also identified that acquired resistance traits were more commonly found in food isolates and were associated with specific genetic elements, such as plasmids and transposons, which could contribute to the spread of resistance.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The results of this study have significant implications for clinical management and food safety. The low prevalence of acquired resistance in Listeria monocytogenes suggests that current treatment protocols, primarily using aminopenicillins and aminoglycosides, are still effective. However, the higher prevalence of acquired resistance in food isolates highlights the importance of ongoing surveillance in both clinical and food production settings to detect and control the spread of resistant strains. This study also underscores the value of WGS in predicting AMR, which could become a vital tool in future surveillance and outbreak response. The findings emphasize the need for strict monitoring in food production environments to prevent the emergence of new resistance patterns, particularly in Listeria strains that could affect food safety and public health.
Akkermansia muciniphila extracellular vesicles: Function and theranostic potential in disease
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review highlights Akkermansia-derived extracellular vesicles as powerful regulators of gut barrier function, immune balance, metabolism, and cancer response, positioning them as promising cell-free microbiome therapeutics.
What was reviewed?
This review evaluated Akkermansia muciniphila–derived extracellular vesicles (Akk-EVs) as central effectors of host–microbe communication and as emerging cell-free therapeutic and diagnostic tools. The authors synthesized mechanistic and preclinical evidence showing that Akk-EVs deliver bioactive proteins, lipids, nucleic acids, and metabolites that reproduce many benefits attributed to live A. muciniphila, while avoiding colonization-related risks. The review reframed Akk-EVs as functional units capable of local and systemic signaling across multiple disease domains.
Who was reviewed?
The review drew primarily on murine disease models and human-derived in vitro systems, including intestinal epithelial cells, immune cells, adipocytes, tumor cells, and microglia. Human relevance was supported through associative microbiome and immunotherapy studies rather than direct interventional trials. The reviewed disease contexts included metabolic syndrome, inflammatory bowel disease, cancer, cardiovascular disease, and neuroinflammatory conditions, providing broad translational scope.
What were the most important findings?
Akk-EVs emerged as stable, nanoscale vesicles capable of crossing epithelial barriers and exerting systemic effects without triggering pathogenic inflammation. Functionally, Akk-EVs activated TLR2-biased signaling through cargo such as Amuc_1100, promoting immune tolerance, improved glucose metabolism, lipid homeostasis, and intestinal serotonin synthesis. In metabolic disease models, Akk-EVs enhanced insulin sensitivity, increased GLP-1 secretion, stimulated brown adipose tissue activity, and reduced weight gain under high-fat diets. In inflammatory models, Akk-EVs strengthened gut barrier integrity by upregulating tight junction proteins while suppressing TLR4-mediated inflammatory signaling. In oncologic contexts, Akk-EVs reshaped the tumor microenvironment, increased CD8⁺ T-cell infiltration, and enhanced responsiveness to immune checkpoint inhibitors. Neuroprotective effects were also observed, with Akk-EVs reducing microglial activation and preserving blood–brain barrier integrity. Collectively, Akk-EVs functioned as a major microbial association linking mucin-degrading bacteria to systemic immune and metabolic regulation.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review positions Akk-EVs as a next-generation microbiome therapeutic platform that decouples beneficial microbial signaling from the variability and safety concerns of live probiotics. For clinicians, Akk-EVs offer a more controllable and potentially safer intervention strategy across metabolic, inflammatory, oncologic, and neuroimmune disorders. The authors emphasize the need for standardized production, safety profiling, and human trials before clinical translation, while highlighting strong theranostic potential.
The Promise of Copper Ionophores as Antimicrobials
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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The promise of copper ionophores as antimicrobials rests on raising intracellular copper to disable core enzymes, restore antibiotic activity, and boost host killing, with clear microbial markers to track response.
What was reviewed?
This review explains the promise of copper ionophores as antimicrobials and shows how small molecules that shuttle copper into microbes can tip host–pathogen battles. It defines copper-dependent toxicity as a mix of enzyme mismatch and energy failure rather than simple oxidation and maps how ionophores raise intracellular copper above export capacity. It surveys major chemotypes, including 8-hydroxyquinolines, dithiocarbamates such as disulfiram derivatives, pyrithione, and bis-thiosemicarbazones like GTSM and ATSM, and it highlights synergy with standard drugs in resistant strains. The authors link these actions to known host tactics that move copper to infection sites and argue that ionophores can amplify that pressure in vivo. They also discuss delivery designs that lower host toxicity, including pro-ionophores that switch on inside phagolysosomes, and they point to drug repurposing paths from oncology to infectious disease.
Who was reviewed?
The review draws on lab and animal data across priority pathogens and on early clinical insights from related agents. Examples include activity against Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Staphylococcus aureus, including MRSA, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Neisseria gonorrhoeae, Chlamydia trachomatis, and Streptococcus pneumoniae. It cites macrophage models where ionophores boost killing by using host copper, and it includes in vivo work where dithiocarbamates increase lung clearance of pneumococci. It also summarizes transporter genetics that shape entry of copper–ionophore complexes in Escherichia coli, and it reviews how copper efflux loss magnifies ionophore potency. The authors note that several agents, such as PBT2 and bis-thiosemicarbazones, already have human safety data from other fields, which could speed trials for infections.
Most important findings
The review shows that copper ionophores raise free copper inside microbes, which disables iron–sulfur enzymes, stalls nucleotide and carbon use, and collapses respiration on key fuels. Dithiocarbamates drive large rises in intracellular copper and strip the pneumococcal capsule, which tracks with better macrophage clearance and points to a surface shift that matters for biofilms. Pyrithione complexes enter through amino acid and siderophore transporters, which means uptake can be tuned by targeting these routes, and bis-thiosemicarbazones block NADH and succinate dehydrogenases in N. gonorrhoeae, including multidrug-resistant strains. 8-hydroxyquinoline analogs kill M. tuberculosis in a copper-dependent way in vitro and inside macrophages, where host copper supplies the needed metal. Several ionophores sensitize resistant bacteria to old drugs: PBT2 with metals breaks β-lactam resistance in S. pneumoniae and restores aminoglycoside activity in K. pneumoniae.
Key implications
Clinicians can view copper ionophores as tools that amplify host copper pressure while lowering the dose or restoring the effect of standard antibiotics. This approach may help clear drug-resistant Gram-positives, select Gram-negatives, and intracellular pathogens in niches where macrophages already deploy copper. Care must still balance efficacy and host safety; pro-ionophores that activate in phagolysosomes and agents with prior human data offer near-term paths. For microbiome-aware care, track copper stress genes, capsule state, and respiration targets in isolates; these markers explain reduced growth of MRSA, pneumococci, Enterobacterales, N. gonorrhoeae, and C. trachomatis under ionophore pressure. This review supports combined regimens that pair ionophores with β-lactams or aminoglycosides to re-open old drug classes against resistant strains, while calling for trials that define dosing windows, tissue copper effects, and selection risks.
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Microsporum canis (M. canis)
Microsporum canis (M. canis)
OverviewMicrosporum canis (M. canis) is a zoophilic dermatophyte common in cats and dogs, responsible for 90% of feline dermatophytoses worldwide.[1][2] It has significant zoonotic potential, transmitting to humans through fomites or direct animal contact, causing severe superficial mycosis. M. canis is considered anthropo-zoophilic and can infect pediatric or immunocompromised patients, causing severe inflammatory responses such […]
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Genome sequencing of feline and canine Microsporum canis reveals close genetic identity to an invasive human strain and dissects secreted CAZymes that drive keratin degradation and potential zoonosis.
What was studied?
Microsporum canis whole genome sequencing was undertaken to generate and analyse draft genomes (~22.8 Mb, ~7 000 CDS each) from one feline and one canine dermatophyte strain collected in northern India. The research focused on Microsporum canis whole genome sequencing to achieve these insights. Using Illumina short-read data the authors assembled 300 + contigs per strain and annotated coding sequences, carbohydrate-active enzymes (CAZymes) and mitochondrial genomes. Comparative genomics against four previously published human M. canis genomes and two related species (M. audouinii, M. ferrugineum) included average-nucleotide-identity (ANI), Mash distance and core-SNP phylogeny to explore host-adaptation and potential zoonotic links.
Who was studied?
The investigation focused on two symptomatic companion animals: a 4-month-old Persian cat (strain B12-36A) and a 3-month-old mixed-breed dog (strain B12-45A) presenting with ringworm lesions in Uttar Pradesh, India. Comparative reference material comprised four Chinese human isolates representing disseminated infection, subcutaneous lesions and tinea capitis, plus archived human isolates of M. audouinii and M. ferrugineum; no healthy controls were included. Thus, to uncover the genetic makeup, Microsporum canis whole genome sequencing was pivotal in analyzing these strains.
Most important findings
Whole-genome comparison placed all six M. canis strains in one species cluster (ANI > 99 %). Strikingly, the two Indian animal strains showed >99.9 % ANI and ≤1 287 pairwise SNPs to a Chinese human isolate recovered from disseminated dermatophytosis, while being increasingly distant from isolates causing subcutaneous disease and tinea capitis. This core group was clearly separated from M. audouinii and M. ferrugineum (ANI < 97.2 %), underscoring host-specialised diversification within the complex, much elucidated by Microsporum canis whole genome sequencing efforts.
Functionally, 158 CAZyme-encoding genes were predicted, 58 of which carry signal peptides suggesting secretion into keratinised niches. Key families included multiple GH18 chitinases, GH3/GH5 β-glucosidases, AA1/AA7 laccases/oxidoreductases and GT32/GT72 hexosyltransferases, enzymes implicated in keratin degradation, melanisation, immune evasion and nutrient acquisition. Hot-spot analysis identified 159 genes with non-synonymous mutations shared by ≥4 strains, providing candidate virulence markers; the animal strains displayed fewer unique mutations than human subcutaneous strains, hinting at a conserved zoonotic genotype.
Key implications
For clinicians, these genomic insights highlight that pet-derived M. canis lineages can be almost indistinguishable from strains producing severe, invasive infections in humans, supporting direct zoonotic transmission. Importantly, Microsporum canis whole genome sequencing has unveiled these genetic similarities. The extensive repertoire of secreted CAZymes links fungal metabolism to tissue invasion and may furnish microbiome-signature databases with fungal enzyme markers relevant to skin-microbiome dysbiosis. Recognising such signatures could aid early diagnosis and tailored antifungal strategies, especially as ABC-transporter over-expression and terbinafine resistance emerge within M. canis populations. Routine sequencing of veterinary and human isolates, combined with transcriptomic profiling of CAZyme genes, is therefore warranted to track virulent clades and to develop enzyme-targeted therapeutics.
Citation
Nair SS, Thomas P, Abdel-Glil MY, Prajapati SK, Va A, Reddi L, Kumar B, Saikumar G, Dandapat P, Rudramurthy SM, & Abhishek. Whole genome sequence analysis of Microsporum canis: A study based on animal strains isolated from India. The Microbe, 7, 100329. (2025). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.microb.2025.100329
Efflux pumps activation caused by mercury contamination prompts antibiotic resistance and pathogen’s virulence under ambient and elevated CO2 concentration
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Mercury-contaminated paddy soil increased plant and human pathogen signals under both ambient and elevated CO₂. Metagenomics showed strong activation of efflux pumps, especially the RND family, alongside higher adherence and secretion-related virulence factors, linking metal exposure to antibiotic resistance potential and pathogen aggressiveness.
What was studied?
This study tested whether mercury-contaminated agricultural soil increases the abundance of plant and human pathogens and whether it strengthens antibiotic resistance and virulence by activating bacterial efflux pumps, under both current and future-like atmospheric CO₂ conditions. The researchers grew rice in clean versus legacy mercury-polluted paddy soils inside open-top chambers set to ambient CO₂ and elevated CO₂ (about +200 ppm), then used shotgun metagenomics to profile pathogen signals, efflux pump genes, and virulence factors in harvested soils.
Who was studied?
The study examined soil microbial communities associated with rice cultivation rather than human participants or animal models. The “subjects” were microbial DNA profiles from paddy soils collected from a clean field and a mercury-polluted field, incubated in replicated pots under two CO₂ environments, and sampled after a full growing period. The analysis emphasized potential plant pathogens and human pathogens detected in metagenomes and linked those taxa to functional genes tied to efflux, metal resistance, and virulence.
What were the most important findings?
Mercury contamination consistently increased the relative abundance of multiple common plant and human pathogen genera under both CO₂ conditions, with notable signals in taxa such as Xanthomonas, Pseudomonas, Salmonella, Staphylococcus, Streptococcus, Klebsiella, Mycobacterium, Magnaporthe, Dickeya, Vibrio, Yersinia, and Burkholderia. Functionally, mercury strongly increased efflux pump capacity, especially the RND family, which dominated the efflux landscape and roughly doubled in mercury soil at both CO₂ levels; the study highlighted increased abundance of key multidrug and metal efflux components including mexB, mdtA/mdtB/mdtC, acrA/acrB, and CO₂-dependent shifts that included smeD/smeF, alongside metal-linked systems such as silA and cusA/ybdE. Virulence-factor profiles shifted toward greater “offensive” potential in mercury soils, with higher representation of adherence and secretion systems and more exoenzyme-related capacity, and several adherence and secretion genes rose under both CO₂ conditions, aligning efflux activation with higher pathogenic aggressiveness. As a microbiome-signatures entry, the major association is functional: mercury selects for pathogen-enriched communities with an RND-efflux–upregulated resistome and a parallel rise in adherence/secretion-linked virulence potential.
What are the greatest implications of this study/ review?
For clinicians, this work supports a concrete bridge between environmental toxicant exposure and infection risk: mercury contamination can enrich soils for taxa that include recognized human pathogens while simultaneously selecting for mechanisms that raise antibiotic resistance potential and virulence capacity. The study also clarifies that mercury can act as a durable selection pressure that persists beyond antibiotic exposure, and that climate change context does not erase this effect, because mercury remained the dominant driver of efflux and virulence shifts under both ambient and elevated CO₂. For microbiome-informed risk assessment, the most useful signal is not a single organism but a pattern that combines pathogen enrichment with increased RND-efflux systems and virulence-associated adherence and secretion functions, suggesting that exposure history and local soil contamination can plausibly influence downstream food safety, occupational exposure risk, and the environmental reservoir that seeds resistant infections.
Architecture of a PKS-NRPS hybrid megaenzyme involved in the biosynthesis of the genotoxin colibactin
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study maps the 3D structure of ClbK, a PKS–NRPS hybrid enzyme that helps gut bacteria build colibactin. The structure explains how ClbK dimerizes, handles bulky intermediates, and relies on an external trans-AT partner, revealing new ways to block colibactin biosynthesis.
What was studied?
This study used structural biology to define how ClbK, a PKS–NRPS hybrid “megaenzyme” encoded by the pks biosynthetic gene cluster in colibactin-producing Enterobacteriaceae, is built and how its architecture could support a key elongation step in colibactin assembly. The authors focused on the complete trans-AT PKS module of ClbK and the full-length hybrid protein because ClbK helps incorporate an unusual aminomalonyl extender unit and contributes to building a colibactin precursor that ultimately links to host DNA injury and colorectal cancer risk.
Who was studied?
The investigators studied purified bacterial proteins, not patients or clinical cohorts. They expressed and purified multiple E. coli–derived ClbK constructs, including a crystallizable PKS module fragment (residues 1–787) and full-length ClbK, then analyzed these macromolecules in vitro using X-ray crystallography, SEC-MALLS, and SEC-SAXS to determine oligomeric state, flexibility, and overall shape. In practical terms, the “subjects” were the ClbK enzyme domains that physically execute colibactin precursor transfer inside pks-positive bacteria.
What were the most important findings?
The study solved a 2.98 Å crystal structure of the complete ClbK PKS module and showed it forms a dimeric KS-centered core with features that look adapted for NRPS/PKS hybrids. The ketosynthase (KS) domain displayed a remodeled “cap” and loop architecture that opens an additional bottom entrance to the active-site tunnel, a change the authors argue could help accommodate bulky, amino acid–containing intermediates that arise when NRPS and PKS chemistry merges. The acyltransferase region proved to be a degenerate, truncated AT* lacking essential catalytic motifs, supporting a model in which the standalone trans-AT ClbG loads aminomalonyl directly onto the ClbK ACP. The ACP domain appeared near the KS bottom entrance but too far for catalysis in the captured conformation, consistent with a pre- or post-condensation snapshot and emphasizing the enzyme’s dynamic carrier-protein choreography.
What are the greatest implications of this study/ review?
By providing a concrete structural framework for a central colibactin biosynthetic enzyme, this work strengthens functional interpretation of the microbiome signature “pks-positive Enterobacteriaceae” by explaining how a specific enzymatic step can plausibly control flux toward genotoxic metabolites. The identification of an inactive AT* and the proposed direct ACP docking by the trans-AT partner offer rational targets for pathway disruption that would reduce colibactin production without requiring broad bacterial eradication. The SAXS-supported view of full-length ClbK as a flexible dimer with multiple catalytic chambers also supports future efforts to design small-molecule inhibitors or engineer hybrid megaenzymes, which could translate into strategies that dampen colibactin-associated DNA damage risk in susceptible clinical contexts
Arsenic induces structural and compositional colonic microbiome change and promotes host nitrogen and amino acid metabolism
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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The study explored the impact of arsenic exposure on the gut microbiome and host metabolism. The results demonstrated significant changes in microbial composition, which were linked to alterations in metabolic pathways, particularly nitrogen metabolism, shedding light on arsenic's role in disease promotion.
What was studied?
This study investigated the effects of arsenic exposure on the gut microbiome, specifically focusing on structural and compositional changes. Researchers exposed mice to different concentrations of arsenic in drinking water and analyzed the microbial community of the colon at various exposure points. The study also explored the functional impact of arsenic on host metabolism, particularly nitrogen metabolism, which plays a critical role in metabolic processes. The study utilized 16S rRNA sequencing and metagenomic analysis to assess changes in microbial diversity and functional pathways influenced by arsenic exposure.
Who was studied?
The study was conducted on C57BL/6 male mice, which were exposed to low (10 ppb) and high (250 ppb) concentrations of arsenite in drinking water. The exposure periods lasted for 2, 5, and 10 weeks. These mice were selected due to their genetic uniformity and well-established role in experimental research. This model helped to simulate long-term arsenic exposure and its effects on the gut microbiome. The microbiome and host metabolic profiles were then analyzed in conjunction with genetic testing to identify the potential link between arsenic-induced changes in microbiome composition and host metabolism.
Most important findings
The study found that arsenic exposure significantly altered the gut microbiome's composition, particularly affecting the abundance of bacterial families such as Firmicutes and Bacteroidetes. This shift in bacterial populations was dependent on both the exposure time and the concentration of arsenic. The exposure also resulted in a reduction of biofilm formation in the gut and impacted the diversity of microbial species. Metagenomic analyses revealed that arsenic exposure triggered changes in metabolic pathways related to nitrogen metabolism, especially in the reduction of nitrite and the synthesis of amino acids. The mice that were exposed to arsenic had altered levels of nitrogenous compounds in the colon and liver, including a rise in pathogenic metabolites related to arginine metabolism, which may contribute to disease promotion.
Key implications
The findings suggest that chronic arsenic exposure not only impacts microbial community structure but also alters the functional pathways within the microbiome, which can affect host metabolism. This alteration could contribute to the development of various diseases, especially those related to metabolic and cardiovascular dysfunction. Understanding the mechanism through which arsenic exposure influences microbial communities and their metabolic profiles may offer insights into environmental factors that influence human health. Moreover, this study emphasizes the importance of considering environmental factors, such as arsenic exposure, in the context of microbiome-based disease mechanisms and highlights potential pathways for future research into personalized medicine approaches.
Gut microbial metabolism in ferroptosis and colorectal cancer
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review explains how gut microbes influence ferroptosis in colorectal cancer through vitamins, bile acids, SCFAs, and tryptophan metabolites. It highlights microbe-linked metabolites that either sensitize tumors to ferroptosis or block it, shaping therapy response and resistance.
What was reviewed?
This review examines how gut microbe–derived metabolites shape ferroptosis sensitivity in colorectal cancer (CRC), with the goal of explaining why ferroptosis-targeting drugs often work better in vitro than in vivo. The authors focus on “extrinsic” metabolic inputs from the gut ecosystem—especially vitamins, bile acids, short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs), and tryptophan metabolites—and connect each class to core ferroptosis control nodes such as GPX4–glutathione, SLC7A11 (xCT), NRF2 signaling, iron transport, and CoQ10-based antioxidant systems.
Who was reviewed?
Rather than enrolling participants, the paper synthesizes evidence across preclinical and mechanistic studies involving CRC cells, intestinal epithelial contexts, and tumor models where microbial metabolites or metabolite-producing taxa alter ferroptosis and tumor behavior. It also draws on microbiome–metabolite relationships by naming metabolite-linked microbial groups, including Bifidobacteria and Lactobacilli (B vitamins), Clostridium species (secondary bile acids), Lachnospiraceae/Ruminococcaceae/Lactobacillaceae (butyrate), and Peptostreptococcus anaerobius (the indole metabolite IDA).
What were the most important findings?
The central takeaway is that microbial metabolites can either push CRC cells toward ferroptotic death or shield them from it, often by converging on a small set of gatekeeper pathways. Table-level evidence highlights pro-ferroptotic signals such as butyrate lowering GPX4 and SLC7A11, and propionate promoting ACSL4-linked lipid remodeling, while antiferroptotic signals include kynurenine-pathway metabolites (L-KYN/3-HK/3-HA) and serotonin (5-HT) that suppress lipid peroxidation pressure and/or activate NRF2–SLC7A11 defenses. A particularly CRC-relevant MMA is Peptostreptococcus anaerobius, identified as a major source of trans-3-indole acrylic acid (IDA); IDA suppresses ferroptosis through an AHR→ALDH1A3→FSP1 axis that boosts CoQ10-based protection, promotes xenograft and spontaneous CRC development, and coincides with macrophage recruitment in the tumor microenvironment.
What are the greatest implications of this study/ review?
Clinically, the review argues that ferroptosis-based CRC strategies will be more predictable if clinicians and researchers treat the microbiome and its metabolites as treatment-shaping variables rather than background noise. It supports a practical model: pro-ferroptotic metabolites (for example, butyrate-driven suppression of SLC7A11/GPX4) may sensitize tumors to ferroptosis-inducing regimens, while antiferroptotic metabolites (notably IDA and serotonin-related pathways) may create resistance that looks like “drug failure” unless addressed. The authors also flag key translational gaps—especially whether reported metabolite concentrations are physiologically achievable, how to measure them in stool/serum/tumor niches, and how these metabolites affect immune and stromal cells—implying that future trials should pair ferroptosis agents with metabolite profiling and microbiome-directed interventions (ideally precise approaches rather than broad antibiotics).
Emerging strategies for engineering E. coli Nissle 1917-based therapeutics
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Engineering Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 therapeutics enables targeted antimicrobial, mucosal, metabolic, and anticancer actions but requires parallel engineering for biosafety and colibactin control.
What was reviewed?
This review on engineering Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 therapeutics surveyed how the long-used probiotic EcN is being redesigned as a live biotherapeutic to sense disease signals and deliver drugs directly in the gut or tumours. It grouped recent work into antimicrobial enhancement, mucosal repair, metabolic detoxification, and cancer immunotherapy, and tied these functions to EcN traits such as safe human use, facultative anaerobiosis, tumour tropism, and genetic tractability. It also highlighted the safety tension created by the EcN pks island, whose colibactin output is genotoxic and discussed editing strategies that silence colibactin while retaining microcin- and siderophore-linked benefits.
Who was reviewed?
Evidence came from engineered EcN strains tested in DSS colitis mice, Salmonella and VRE infection models, PKU and hyperammonemia models, and several murine solid tumours that permit high intratumoural EcN growth, alongside early human studies of auxotrophic, chromosomally integrated EcN derivatives to confirm biocontainment and metabolite delivery. The review compared how these hosts, which all feature inflamed or nutrient-restricted niches, select for EcN circuits that exploit iron competition, microcin production or local lysis to release payloads, and it set these findings against decades of clinical use of unmodified Mutaflor to frame risk.
Most important findings
Key advances demonstrated that EcN can be engineered with inflammation- or pathogen-inducible promoters to secrete microcins or heterologous bacteriocins, thereby extending its natural activity against Enterobacteriaceae to precisely the inflamed, iron-poor settings where these blooms occur. Curli-based PATCH systems proved EcN can display mucosal-healing molecules and modestly improve colitis. Metabolic strains such as SYNB1618 and SYNB1020 have demonstrated in vivo conversion of phenylalanine or ammonia under auxotrophic biocontainment; however, clinical benefit will require higher flux or longer residence times. Tumour-colonising EcN carrying lytic or STING-agonist circuits converted “cold” tumours into inflamed lesions and synergised with checkpoint blockade. A central message was that simple deletion of the pks island may remove desirable iron and microcin functions, so finer edits in clbP or circuit-level containment are preferable.
Key implications
For clinicians and translational teams, EcN is emerging as a modular live drug that can be matched to microbiome-defined problems such as Enterobacteriaceae overgrowth, ulcerated colitis, toxin accumulation or poorly immunogenic tumours. However, once EcN is engineered, historical safety cannot be assumed; future clinical products must combine chromosomal integration, auxotrophic or kill-switch containment, and colibactin-silencing edits while keeping the adhesion, microcin and iron-uptake traits that underpin efficacy. Microbiome-signature resources should therefore annotate engineered EcN not just by indication but also by sensor, payload and pks status to support precision use.
THE ROLE OF GUT MICROBIOTA IN FETAL METHYLMERCURY EXPOSURE: INSIGHTS FROM A PILOT STUDY
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This pilot study in late pregnancy linked maternal gut microbiota to mercury biomarkers and tested whether microbes directly change stool methylmercury. Stool methylmercury did not predict fetal exposure, and mercury cycling genes were largely absent, suggesting indirect microbiome pathways may matter more.
What was studied?
This pilot study tested whether gut microbiota in late pregnancy relates to methylmercury (MeHg) levels in maternal and fetal biomarkers and whether microbes directly drive stool MeHg through mercury methylation or demethylation. Researchers measured mercury species in maternal stool and hair and in cord blood when available, profiled stool microbiota with 16S sequencing, and then used metagenomic sequencing on selected samples to look for mercury cycling genes. The main goal was to connect microbiome patterns to fetal MeHg exposure risk during a highly vulnerable developmental window.
Who was studied?
The study enrolled 17 healthy pregnant women at 36–39 weeks of gestation who provided stool and hair samples, and a subset of 7 also provided cord blood at delivery. Most participants had low fish intake based on biomarker patterns, which limited high-dose MeHg exposure but allowed the authors to test microbiome links at low background exposure levels. The “microbiome” measured came from maternal stool, and gene searches focused on six stools chosen from the highest and lowest stool MeHg levels to increase the chance of detecting microbial mercury genes.
What were the most important findings?
The study found that stool MeHg did not meaningfully track fetal exposure, while established biomarkers did: maternal hair total mercury aligned strongly with cord blood MeHg, whereas stool MeHg showed only a weak, non-significant relationship with cord blood. Microbiome diversity measures showed minimal separation by mercury biomarkers, but specific taxa correlated with mercury measures in different directions. Seventeen genera associated with stool MeHg, stool inorganic mercury, or hair total mercury, yet those associations rarely overlapped across biomarkers, suggesting biomarker-specific microbial relationships rather than one consistent “mercury microbiome” profile. Mechanistically, the authors did not find convincing evidence that direct microbial methylation or classic mer-operon detox explained stool MeHg differences because they detected no definitive hgcA or merB, and they found only low-abundance merA signals.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
For clinicians, this study supports treating fetal MeHg exposure assessment as biomarker-driven rather than stool-MeHg–driven, because stool MeHg did not appear to predict fetal exposure in this cohort. The microbiome signal looks indirect: certain taxa tracked with stool MeHg, but the gene evidence argues against direct methylation or merB-based demethylation as the primary driver of stool MeHg variation. The authors’ strongest translational hypothesis is that gut microbiota may influence MeHg handling by modifying intestinal barrier function and reabsorption dynamics, potentially shifting how much MeHg remains in stool versus entering circulation. For a microbiome signatures database, the take-home signature is “taxa–biomarker correlations without clear mercury-cycling gene support,” pointing future work toward barrier and host–microbe pathways rather than microbial methylation alone.
Effect of a controlled food-chain mediated exposure to cadmium and arsenic on oxidative enzymes in the tissues of rats
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study reveals how cadmium and arsenic exposure via the food chain disrupts oxidative enzyme activity in rats, leading to significant health risks, particularly in the liver and kidneys.
What was studied?
This study investigated the effects of cadmium and arsenic exposure on the activities of oxidative enzymes in various tissues of rats through a controlled food-chain mediated exposure. The study used fish, which were exposed to cadmium chloride (CdCl₂) and arsenic trioxide (As₂O₃), as the first trophic level. The contaminated fish were then used as protein sources in the rats’ diet, simulating how these metals enter the food chain. The effects of these metals on the liver, kidney, testes, heart, and brain of rats were assessed by analyzing the activities of four key oxidative enzymes: Sulphite oxidase (SO), Aldehyde oxidase (AO), Monoamine oxidase (MO), and Xanthine oxidase (XO).
Who was studied?
The study focused on adult male Wistar albino rats, which were divided into four groups. One group served as the control, while the other three were exposed to diets containing cadmium, arsenic, or a combination of both metals. The rats were exposed for either one or three months, after which their tissues were analyzed for metal accumulation and enzyme activity. The results from the rats provided insights into the impact of these heavy metals on oxidative enzyme function in different tissues.
Most important findings
The study showed that both cadmium and arsenic accumulated in the tissues of rats, particularly in the liver and kidneys. After one month of exposure, the liver showed the highest accumulation of both metals. However, after three months, the kidney had the highest accumulation. The exposure to cadmium and arsenic resulted in a significant reduction in the activities of oxidative enzymes in the liver, especially after both one and three months of exposure. In other tissues like the kidneys, testes, and heart, enzyme activities initially increased after one month but decreased after three months. In the brain, the activities of these enzymes were elevated throughout the study. These findings suggest that prolonged exposure to cadmium and arsenic via the food chain leads to significant disruption of normal oxidative enzyme activity, potentially impairing essential metabolic functions in the affected tissues.
Key implications
The results underscore the potential health risks associated with heavy metal contamination in the food chain, particularly from common food sources like fish. The accumulation of cadmium and arsenic in vital organs like the liver and kidneys, and the subsequent inhibition of oxidative enzymes, could contribute to metabolic disruptions and oxidative stress. This study highlights the need for monitoring and controlling the levels of these toxic metals in food sources, as chronic exposure may lead to long-term health issues. Additionally, understanding the enzyme inhibition and accumulation patterns can aid in developing strategies for mitigating the harmful effects of these metals, particularly in areas where arsenic and cadmium contamination in water and soil is a known issue.
Bacteriophage P100 for control of Listeria monocytogenes in foods: Genome sequence, bioinformatic analyses, oral toxicity study, and application
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study demonstrates that bacteriophage P100 is a safe and effective biocontrol agent for reducing Listeria monocytogenes in soft cheeses, offering a promising alternative to traditional antimicrobial agents.
What was studied?
This study investigated the bacteriophage P100 for its potential use in controlling Listeria monocytogenes in food products, particularly in soft cheeses. The research focused on several aspects: the genome sequence of the P100 phage, bioinformatic analyses of its genes, an oral toxicity study in rats, and its effectiveness in reducing Listeria contamination on food surfaces. The study provided a comprehensive evaluation of the safety and efficacy of using P100 as a biocontrol agent for foodborne pathogens.
Who was studied?
The study focused on bacteriophage P100, a virulent, lytic phage capable of infecting a broad range of Listeria strains, including Listeria monocytogenes. It also involved testing the bacteriophage's impact on a rat model for toxicity, as well as its application on artificially contaminated soft cheese surfaces. Listeria monocytogenes was the target pathogen for these experiments.
What were the most important findings?
The key findings of this study include the successful sequencing of the P100 phage genome, which revealed no homology with known virulence factors, toxins, or allergens, indicating that it is safe for use in food. A repeated-dose oral toxicity study in rats showed that P100 did not result in any adverse effects, such as abnormal histological changes or mortality, confirming its safety for human consumption. The study also demonstrated that applying P100 to surface-ripened soft cheese effectively reduced Listeria monocytogenes counts. Depending on the phage concentration and application frequency, a significant reduction (at least 3.5 logs) or even complete eradication of Listeria was achieved. Importantly, no phage resistance was observed, and P100 did not negatively affect the natural microbial flora or the ripening process of the cheese.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study highlights the potential of P100 as a safe and effective biocontrol agent for reducing Listeria monocytogenes contamination in food products, particularly in ready-to-eat items like soft cheeses. The findings support the use of P100 as a food additive for food safety, offering an alternative to traditional antimicrobial treatments that may disrupt food microbiomes or lead to resistance. This phage's broad host range and effectiveness in eradicating Listeria provide an innovative approach to controlling foodborne pathogens without the harmful side effects typically associated with chemical preservatives. Further exploration of its application in other food products and production environments could significantly enhance food safety.
Staphylococcus aureus HrtA-heme-toxicity : ATPase function and heme-stress virulence reprogramming in S. aureus
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Staphylococcus aureus (S. Aureus)
Staphylococcus aureus (S. Aureus)
Staphylococcus aureus is a versatile skin and mucosal commensal that can transition into a highly virulent pathobiont. Known for its immune-evasive strategies, toxin production, and antibiotic resistance, it plays a significant role in chronic infections and microbiome imbalance.
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HrtA is the ATPase of HrtAB that protects S. aureus from heme toxicity. Catalytic residues are essential in vitro and in vivo. Heme-stressed hrtA mutants undergo stringent-like reprogramming with a shift from cytolytic to immunomodulatory toxins, redefining virulence control by heme availability.
What was studied?
This study investigates Staphylococcus aureus HrtA-heme-toxicity, defining the biochemical function of HrtA, the ATPase subunit of the heme-regulated transporter HrtAB, and linking its catalytic activity to survival under heme stress and to genome-wide transcriptional remodeling. The authors characterize HrtA ATPase kinetics in vitro, identify essential catalytic residues by site-directed mutagenesis, test in vivo complementation during growth with toxic heme, and profile the heme-stress transcriptome of an hrtA mutant to explain previously observed virulence shifts. The work positions HrtAB at the interface of heme acquisition and heme detoxification in Staphylococcus aureus pathogenesis, a setting relevant to iron competition in host niches and to immunomodulatory toxin expression that shapes host–microbe interactions.
Who was studied?
Experiments used S. aureus strain Newman and an isogenic hrtA deletion mutant for growth and transcriptional analyses, with Escherichia coli BL21(DE3) expressing recombinant HrtA and engineered HrtA mutants for biochemical assays. Heme exposure for microarrays was 1 μM to permit growth of the mutant, while adaptation and dominance tests used up to 10 μM heme; biochemical assays assessed pH, temperature, ATP concentration, and divalent cation requirements. These designs isolated HrtA’s role in heme tolerance and linked catalytic competence to cellular phenotypes and global gene expression under heme stress.
Most important findings
Purified HrtA hydrolyzed ATP, establishing it as the ATPase of the HrtAB transporter. Activity saturated near 0.25 mM ATP, was optimal at pH 7 to 8, and required Mn²⁺ or Mg²⁺, with an unusual in vitro temperature optimum of 10 to 20°C as depicted in Figure 2 on page 4. Conserved motifs were functionally essential: K45 in Walker A, G145 in the ABC signature, and E167 in Walker B were each required for ATP hydrolysis; R76 outside these motifs reduced but did not abolish activity. Only catalytically competent HrtA complemented the heme-sensitive growth defect of the hrtA mutant, whereas catalytically inactive variants acted dominant-negatively in wild-type cells under heme challenge, consistent with multimeric ABC transporter architecture.
Genome-wide expression profiling revealed that more than 500 transcripts changed at least twofold in the hrtA mutant during heme exposure, with the pattern most similar to the stringent response, including approximately 37.4 percent overlap and strong up-regulation of RelA. Virulence determinants were markedly reprogrammed: transcripts for staphylococcal superantigen-like exotoxins were induced, while pore-forming toxins such as gamma hemolysin subunits and a leukotoxin were repressed, indicating a shift from cell-lytic to immunomodulatory toxin profiles. Table 3 on page 7 details these changes, including increases in fibrinogen-binding proteins and immunodominant antigens. Regulatory systems, including HssRS and multiple two-component regulators and metal homeostasis repressors such as Fur and CzrA, were differentially expressed, offering mechanisms for the breadth of the response.
Key implications
For microbiome-oriented pathogenesis frameworks, these data support heme as a contextual host signal that directs S. aureus virulence programming. HrtAB function safeguards against heme’s membrane-damaging toxicity and prevents a costly, immunomodulatory stress response; loss of HrtA precipitates stringent-like reprogramming and favors secreted factors that can reshape immune recruitment in host tissues. In microbiome signatures, S. aureus emerges as a pathobiont whose toxin repertoire and immune interference vary with iron-heme availability, suggesting niche-specific expression states during dysbiosis. Therapeutically, the results raise the prospect of targeting HrtAB or its regulator HssRS to potentiate heme stress and blunt virulence without directly inhibiting growth, a strategy that could complement nutritional immunity and reduce selective pressure for resistance.
CadC, the transcriptional regulatory protein of the cadmium resistance system of Staphylococcus aureus plasmid pI258
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study identifies CadC as a key transcriptional regulator of the cadmium resistance operon in S. aureus plasmid pI258, revealing its role in controlling cadA expression in response to metal ions like cadmium, bismuth, and lead.
What was studied?
This study examined the cadmium (Cd) resistance system in Staphylococcus aureus plasmid pI258, specifically focusing on the role of the CadC protein as a transcriptional regulator of the cadA gene. The cadA gene encodes a P-type ATPase responsible for the energy-dependent efflux of cadmium ions. The study aimed to characterize the function of CadC, the protein involved in regulating the cadmium resistance operon, and how it controls the expression of the cadA gene, particularly in response to cadmium exposure. The research further explored how CadC interacts with the cadA operator/promoter region and the effect of cadmium and other metal ions on this regulatory mechanism.
Who was studied?
The study involved Staphylococcus aureus strain pI258, which contains the cadA cadmium resistance operon. The CadC protein was studied by overexpressing it in Escherichia coli cells for subsequent purification. The research utilized various in vitro techniques, including gel retardation assays and DNase I footprinting assays, to analyze the interaction between CadC and the cadA operator/promoter DNA. The study also compared the cadmium resistance regulation in S. aureus with other resistance mechanisms, such as those found in the arsenic resistance system.
Most important findings
The study found that the CadC protein from S. aureus pI258 is a key transcriptional regulator of the cadA operon. In gel retardation assays, CadC bound specifically to the cadA operator/promoter region, resulting in a shift in DNA mobility, indicating a direct interaction between CadC and the DNA. This interaction was shown to be metal-dependent, with cadmium (Cd²⁺), bismuth (Bi³⁺), and lead (Pb²⁺) causing the release of CadC from the DNA in a concentration-dependent manner. DNase I footprinting assays revealed that CadC protected specific regions of the DNA from degradation, particularly between nucleotide positions 27 and 114 relative to the transcription start point. The study also showed that CadC represses transcription of the cadA gene, with this repression relieved in the presence of Cd²⁺, suggesting that CadC functions as a repressor that is regulated by cadmium ions.
Key implications
The study reveals that CadC is a crucial regulatory protein that controls cadmium resistance in S. aureus by binding to the cadA promoter and inhibiting its transcription. The metal-dependent regulation of CadC provides important insights into how bacteria manage toxic metal exposure. Understanding how CadC operates and interacts with other metal ions may aid in the development of therapeutic strategies to counteract cadmium toxicity or exploit similar mechanisms for environmental or industrial applications. The study also underscores the complexity of heavy metal resistance systems in bacteria and the role of metal-responsive regulatory proteins in maintaining bacterial survival in toxic environments.
Cuprous Oxidase Activity of CueO from Escherichia coli.
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
•
Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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The cuprous oxidase activity of CueO converts toxic Cu(I) to Cu(II) in E. coli, partners with CopA and CusCFBA, and marks copper-tolerant Enterobacterales that can persist in acidic, inflamed gut niches.
What was studied?
This study defined the cuprous oxidase activity of CueO and explained how this periplasmic multicopper oxidase protects Escherichia coli from copper stress. The authors showed that CueO directly oxidizes toxic Cu(I) to the less reactive Cu(II), working in the same pathway as the CopA P-type ATPase that pumps Cu(I) into the periplasm. They quantified kinetics across pH and compared performance with yeast Fet3 and human ceruloplasmin, finding higher catalytic rates for CueO that fit a primary role in copper detox in the aerobic gut niche where E. coli lives. By placing CueO within the CueR-activated cue operon and alongside the CusCFBA efflux system, the paper links enzyme activity to a complete copper homeostasis circuit with clinical microbiome relevance.
Who was studied?
Researchers purified recombinant wild-type CueO and a C500S mutant that lacks the type-1 copper needed for catalysis, then tested oxygen consumption as a readout of Cu(I) oxidation. They used a stabilized Cu(I) donor to avoid spontaneous air oxidation and measured kinetic constants at pH 5.0 and 7.0. They also assessed ferroxidase activity and the effect of added Cu(II), using the inactive mutant to set background rates. For context, the authors compared catalytic efficiency to Fet3 and ceruloplasmin and set CueO within the copper regulons that include CopA (cytosol-to-periplasm Cu(I) export), CueR (Cu(I)-sensing regulator), and CusCFBA (periplasm-to-outside efflux), all of which E. coli uses to endure copper pulses in the gut.
Most important findings
CueO showed robust cuprous oxidase catalysis that exceeded homologs, with higher turnover numbers and favorable efficiency at acidic pH that matches the upper gastrointestinal environment. Cu(I) served as the only substrate that did not require added Cu(II) for activity, supporting a direct detox role in which CopA feeds periplasmic Cu(I) to CueO for oxidation to Cu(II). The C500S mutant lacked activity and confirmed that the observed oxygen consumption reflected CueO catalysis. Kinetic analysis showed greater activity at pH 5.0 than at pH 7.0, which aligns with prior phenoloxidase behavior and suggests enhanced protection in acidic mucosa.
Although CueO can oxidize Fe(II) or catecholates, the authors clarified that some reported catecholate “oxidase” signals likely arise because catecholates reduce Cu(II) to Cu(I), which CueO then oxidizes; the central biology remains Cu(I) removal. Placing these data into the full copper circuit, the study confirmed that E. coli senses and responds to Cu(I) via CueR, moves Cu(I) to the periplasm via CopA, oxidizes it via CueO, and expels excess copper through CusCFBA. For a microbiome signatures database, the combined presence of cueO, copA, cueR, and cusCFBA marks a copper-tolerant Enterobacterales profile suited to metal-stressed niches such as inflamed gut, where low pH, reactive oxygen species, and dietary copper raise Cu(I) pressure.
Key implications
Clinicians can read the cuprous oxidase activity of CueO as a mechanistic anchor for E. coli survival under host and dietary copper stress. Genomic detection of cueO with copA and cusCFBA in gut isolates signals a strain more likely to manage copper spikes, persist during inflammation, and compete against copper-sensitive commensals. Reporting these loci in microbiome results can help explain Enterobacterales expansion when gastric acidity rises or when feeds or supplements raise copper exposure. Because CueO activity peaks at lower pH, acid suppression and diet could alter copper risk and reshape community structure. Therapeutic copper use on devices or in feeds may select for cueO-positive strains; balanced strategies that limit unnecessary copper while preserving nutritional immunity may curb expansion of these pathobionts without harming beneficial taxa.
Mycobacterium tuberculosis and Copper: A Newly Appreciated Defense against an Old Foe?
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Mycobacterium tuberculosis and copper shows copper rises at infection sites, while bacterial systems (MctB, CsoR–CtpV, RicR–MymT/MmcO) defend against toxicity; these markers inform clinical risk and target discovery.
What was reviewed?
This review explains Mycobacterium tuberculosis and copper as a host–pathogen battle in which the host raises copper to hurt the bacillus, while the bacillus builds defenses to survive. It maps copper sources in infection, such as ATP7A-driven copper delivery to phagosomes and possible release from ceruloplasmin, and then details the mycobacterial systems that sense, export, or buffer copper. Chief units include the CsoR regulon with the putative exporter CtpV, the RicR regulon with the metallothionein MymT and the multicopper oxidase MmcO, and the membrane protein MctB that prevents toxic copper build-up. Together, these data show how copper acts as nutritional immunity against tuberculosis and how gene circuits help the bacillus persist.
Who was reviewed?
The review covers M. tuberculosis copper responses tested across broth, macrophage models, and animal infections in mice and guinea pigs, and it links them to host copper routing in phagocytes. It integrates transcript data that defined CsoR and RicR regulons, deletion studies for ctpV, mymT, mmcO, and mctB, and fitness tests in vivo that showed stronger defects in guinea pigs than in mice for key mutants. It also discusses possible copper entry through porins and notes that mycobacteria keep far less cytosolic copper than environmental relatives. On the host side, it highlights ATP7A as a phagosomal copper pump and proposes ceruloplasmin as a copper source that phagocytes can process. This multi-system view ties gene function to real tissue niches where copper rises around bacilli.
Most important findings
The review concludes that copper rises at infection sites and that M. tuberculosis needs several copper defenses for full virulence. The CsoR–ctpV pathway supports copper export and contributes to virulence in guinea pigs. The RicR regulon turns on mymT (a Cu(I)-binding metallothionein), mmcO (a membrane-anchored multicopper oxidase), and other genes; single mymT or mmcO mutants show copper sensitivity in vitro but no mouse virulence loss, while a RicR “Cu-blind” strain that keeps the regulon off becomes copper-sensitive and attenuated. MctB limits intracellular copper; loss of mctB causes copper accumulation, strong copper sensitivity, and marked attenuation in mice and guinea pigs, with copper-supplemented hosts worsening the defect. The paper also points to ATP7A-dependent copper delivery by macrophages as a likely antimicrobial route and notes that acidic phagolysosomes may keep copper in its most toxic form.
Key implications
Clinicians can treat copper handling as a virulence trait and as part of nutritional immunity. In a microbiome signatures database, flag Mycobacterium tuberculosis and copper with markers that include mctB (low intracellular copper), ctpV (export), mymT/mmcO (buffering/oxidation), and host ATP7A at phagosomes. The presence and regulation of these loci predict survival in copper-rich lesions and help explain why copper exposure in granulomas suppresses bacilli. Therapeutic ideas include small molecules that inhibit MctB or keep the RicR regulon off, which would sensitize bacilli to physiologic copper and work with immunity rather than replace it. Any copper-targeted step should balance pathogen control against host toxicity and consider tissue site, inflammation, and pH, which shape copper speciation and effect
The Role of Copper and Zinc Toxicity in Innate Immune Defense against Bacterial Pathogens
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Copper and zinc toxicity in innate immunity drives early control of bacterial pathogens and shapes mucosal niches. The review links host metal routing and microbial export genes to killing, virulence, and microbiome shifts.
What was reviewed?
This review explains copper and zinc toxicity in innate immunity and how these metals shape early defense against bacteria. It shows that phagocytes load copper and zinc into pathogen-facing spaces, where copper cycles with reactive oxygen and nitrogen species to drive killing and where zinc can disrupt enzymes or starve microbes of manganese. It also outlines how host cells increase CTR1 and ATP7A to raise copper entry and routing, and how ZIP family transporters shift zinc during inflammation. The review links these metal surges to common infection sites, such as the nasopharynx and urinary tract, and to shifts that affect the local microbiome.
Who was reviewed?
The authors synthesize data from human and animal infection models and from primary macrophages and neutrophils. They compare bacterial species that face copper and zinc stress in vivo, including Streptococcus pneumoniae, Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium, uropathogenic Escherichia coli, Neisseria gonorrhoeae, Listeria monocytogenes, Mycobacterium tuberculosis, and Helicobacter pylori. They also include work on zinc shifts during fungal infection to show broader innate patterns that can influence mucosal communities.
Most important findings
The review shows that copper and zinc act as direct tools of killing in the phagosome and at mucosal sites. Activated macrophages raise copper import and move ATP7A toward phagolysosomes; copper then amplifies oxidative and nitrosative stress and breaks iron–sulfur enzymes that bacteria need. Bacteria counter with CopA or other P-type ATPases, periplasmic multicopper oxidases such as CueO, and envelope pumps such as CusCFBA; loss of these systems reduces survival in phagocytes and can lower virulence in mice. Zinc acts in two ways: it signals within innate cells and it harms microbes.
At mucosa, elevated zinc blocks manganese uptake in S. pneumoniae and weakens defense against oxidative stress; within phagocytes, zinc efflux mutants such as zntA or czcD show poor intracellular survival. The review notes metal routing in vivo, including higher copper in M. tuberculosis granulomas and copper build-up in urine during uropathogenic E. coli infection. For microbiome catalogs, the metal stress signature spans host transporters (CTR1, ATP7A, ZIP8, ZnT proteins) and microbial resistance loci (copA, cusFCBA, cueO, golT, ctpC, czcD), which map to niches like the nasopharynx, gut, and urinary tract where metals can tilt community structure and pathogen fitness.
Key implications
Clinicians should see copper and zinc handling as a modifiable axis in infection care. Checking nutrition and inflammatory status for these metals can inform risk. Pathogens that carry strong copper or zinc export systems may resist innate metal stress and persist. Adding such loci to a microbiome signatures database can flag strains with higher survival odds in phagocytes or at metal-rich mucosa. Therapies that spare host function yet stress microbial metal control—such as limiting manganese access during zinc surges or timing antibiotics when copper routing peaks—may raise killing while preserving tissue. Any attempt to change metal levels should avoid excess that could harm host cells or widen dysbiosis.
Combined DNase and Proteinase Treatment Interferes with Composition and Structural Integrity of Multispecies Oral Biofilms
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
•
Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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The study investigates the effects of DNase I and proteinase K on the structure and composition of multispecies oral biofilms, finding that these enzymes disrupt biofilm integrity and shift microbial composition, potentially enhancing the effectiveness of antimicrobial treatments.
What was studied?
The study focuses on the effects of DNase I and proteinase K treatment on multispecies oral biofilms, specifically how these enzymes alter the biofilm's structure and microbial composition. The researchers tested these enzymes in various concentrations to see how they impacted the biofilm's integrity, including its exopolysaccharide (EPS) matrix, extracellular DNA (eDNA), and proteins. The goal was to understand how enzymatic treatment could potentially disrupt the biofilm and assist in the delivery of antimicrobial agents to treat biofilm-related oral infections. This study used a six-species biofilm model, including bacteria such as Streptococcus mutans, Fusobacterium nucleatum, Candida albicans, and others, to mimic oral biofilm conditions.
Who was studied?
The study used in vitro biofilms made up of six species: Actinomyces oris, Candida albicans, Fusobacterium nucleatum, Streptococcus oralis, Streptococcus mutans, and Veillonella dispar. These species were chosen due to their relevance in the human oral microbiome and their involvement in dental biofilm formation, which is associated with diseases such as dental caries and periodontitis. The biofilm model was designed to simulate supragingival plaque formation on hydroxyapatite, a material similar to human tooth enamel. The interaction between these species within the biofilm was studied to understand how enzymatic treatments might alter microbial growth and biofilm structure.
Most important findings
The study revealed that DNase I and proteinase K had significant effects on the biofilm structure and composition. DNase I treatment led to a reduction in microbial growth for several species, including Actinomyces oris and Fusobacterium nucleatum, by degrading eDNA, a critical component of the biofilm matrix. On the other hand, proteinase K promoted the growth of Streptococcus mutans and Streptococcus oralis, suggesting that protein degradation within the biofilm could enhance the survival of these species. When both enzymes were combined, there was a noticeable decrease in biofilm density and a shift in microbial composition, with fewer exopolysaccharides and extracellular proteins. This combination also led to a disruption of the biofilm's structural integrity, reducing the overall stability and making the biofilm more susceptible to antimicrobial treatments.
Key implications
The findings of this study have significant implications for biofilm-related disease treatment in clinical settings. Enzymatic treatments like DNase I and proteinase K could be used in combination with traditional antimicrobial agents to disrupt biofilms and improve drug efficacy. This could be particularly useful for treating oral infections caused by biofilm-forming bacteria, where standard antimicrobial therapies often fail due to the protective nature of the biofilm. Furthermore, understanding how specific enzymes target different biofilm components, such as eDNA and extracellular proteins, can inform the development of tailored therapies that address the complexities of multispecies biofilms. The results also underscore the importance of considering the biofilm composition when selecting treatments, as the presence of certain species like Streptococcus mutans can influence the treatment outcome.
Mechanisms of Colonization Resistance Against Clostridioides difficile
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review explains how gut microbes prevent Clostridioides difficile infection through bile acid metabolism, short-chain fatty acids, nutrient competition, and direct antagonism, highlighting microbial functions that protect the gut after antibiotic disruption.
What was reviewed?
This article reviewed the current mechanistic evidence explaining how the indigenous gut microbiota confers colonization resistance against Clostridioides difficile, an antibiotic-resistant pathogen responsible for significant morbidity and mortality worldwide. The authors synthesized experimental and translational studies to explain how disruption of the gut microbiome creates ecological and metabolic niches that allow C. difficile spores to germinate, proliferate, and produce toxins. The review focused on four dominant, interrelated mechanisms of microbiota-mediated resistance: bile acid metabolism, short-chain fatty acid (SCFA) production, nutrient competition, and direct microbial antagonism. Rather than presenting novel experimental data, the paper integrated animal, human, in vitro, and metabolomic studies to construct a coherent biological framework linking microbial composition, microbial metabolites, host immune signaling, and disease susceptibility. This integrative approach positioned colonization resistance as an emergent property of a healthy, diverse microbial ecosystem rather than the effect of a single protective species.
Who was reviewed?
The review drew upon evidence from studies involving human patients with primary and recurrent C. difficile infection, healthy human microbiome donors, and multiple murine models designed to replicate antibiotic-induced dysbiosis and infection dynamics. It also incorporated mechanistic work using isolated commensal bacterial strains, including bile acid–modifying Clostridium species, SCFA-producing taxa, and probiotic candidates such as Lactobacillus reuteri. Together, these populations allowed the authors to compare healthy versus dysbiotic microbiomes and to identify microbial functions that consistently correlated with resistance or susceptibility to C. difficile colonization and toxin-mediated disease.
Most Important Findings
The most important findings establish that loss of microbial diversity fundamentally alters the gut metabolome in ways that favor C. difficile. Antibiotic exposure increases primary bile acids while depleting secondary bile acids such as deoxycholate, lithocholate, and ursodeoxycholate, removing a critical inhibitory signal for C. difficile growth and toxin activity. Specific commensals, particularly Clostridium scindens and other bai-operon–encoding bacteria, emerged as major microbial associations linked to secondary bile acid restoration. In parallel, depletion of SCFA-producing bacteria reduced levels of acetate, propionate, and butyrate, weakening epithelial barrier integrity and impairing immune signaling pathways involving HIF-1α, FFAR2, IL-22, and IL-1β. The review also highlighted nutrient competition as a key resistance mechanism, showing how commensals restrict access to sialic acid and succinate—metabolites exploited by C. difficile during dysbiosis. Finally, direct antagonism through bacteriocins such as Thuricin CD and reuterin demonstrated that some commensals actively suppress C. difficile independently of broader community effects.
Greatest Implication
The greatest clinical implication is that effective prevention and treatment of C. difficile infection should prioritize restoration of microbial functions rather than indiscriminate microbial replacement. Targeted strategies that reconstitute bile acid metabolism, SCFA signaling, and nutrient competition offer a rational alternative to antibiotics and explain the high efficacy of fecal microbiota transplantation. For clinicians, the findings support a shift toward metabolite-informed microbiome therapies and precision probiotics designed to restore colonization resistance without perpetuating antimicrobial pressure.
Zinc-Induced Siderophore Production in Penicillium and Rhizosphere Fungi
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Zinc ions enhanced siderophore production in fungi from Panax ginseng rhizosphere, with optimal levels at 150 µg/ml. Penicillium commune JJHO produced ferrichrome-type siderophores, suggesting zinc may drive microbial adaptations in metal-rich environments with implications for plant health and bioremediation.
What was studied?
This study investigated the effect of zinc ions (Zn²⁺) on siderophore production in fungi isolated from the rhizosphere of Panax ginseng. Siderophores are metal-chelating compounds primarily produced by microorganisms in response to iron limitation. However, their production can also be influenced by the presence of other metals, including Zn²⁺. The researchers focused on how varying concentrations of Zn²⁺ (50–250 µg/ml) modulate siderophore output, using chrome azurol S (CAS) assays for quantification. One strain, Penicillium commune JJHO, was further characterized chemically using UV, FTIR, and MALDI-TOF-MS spectroscopy, with its siderophore confirmed as hydroxamate-type ferrichrome.
Who was studied?
The study evaluated 23 fungal strains isolated from P. ginseng rhizosphere soils in Korea. These isolates represented diverse taxonomic groups, including Ascomycetes (Penicillium commune, Trichoderma harzianum, Fusarium oxysporum, Metarhizium anisopliae), Zygomycetes (Mortierella turficola), and Basidiomycota (Rhodosporidium toruloides). One bacterial control strain, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, previously known for its siderophore activity, was also tested under the same Zn²⁺ treatments for comparative purposes.
Most important findings
Zinc ions significantly affected siderophore production across all tested fungi. Spectral analysis of Penicillium JJHO confirmed the presence of ferrichrome, a cyclic hexapeptide siderophore, based on UV absorbance at 425 nm, FTIR peaks at 1,640, 1,680, and 3,500 cm⁻¹, and MALDI-TOF-MS (peak at 763.0 Da). The most potent production generally occurred at 150 µg/ml Zn²⁺, though the response varied by species:
Fungal Strain
Siderophore Production at 150 µg/ml Zn²⁺ (%)
Penicillium commune JJHO
72.65
Metarhizium anisopliae KHAU
72.43
Fusarium oxysporum FCHA
68.76
Trichoderma harzianum TR274
67.63
Rhodosporidium toruloides K-1-8
34.82
Mortierella turficola CQ1
37.96 (Peak at 200 µg/ml: 39.62%)
Key implications
The findings highlight zinc’s dual role as both a stressor and an inducer of siderophore biosynthesis. Importantly, siderophore production was not only preserved but enhanced under Zn²⁺ exposure in most fungal isolates. This suggests that rhizosphere fungi may use siderophores not only to acquire iron but also to mitigate zinc-induced toxicity. The study underscores the broader ecological and agricultural significance of siderophores in metal-contaminated soils, presenting potential applications in phytoremediation and plant growth promotion under heavy metal stress. From a microbiome perspective, siderophore-producing fungi like Penicillium commune JJHO may be key microbial associates in zinc-rich or contaminated environments, possibly shaping local microbial community structures via competitive metal acquisition strategies.
Functional characterization of a cadmium resistance operon in Staphylococcus aureus ATCC12600: CadC does not function as a repressor
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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The study identifies and characterizes the cadmium resistance operon in S. aureus ATCC12600. It reveals that the cadC gene is crucial for cadmium efflux and resistance but does not function as a repressor, offering new insights into cadmium resistance mechanisms.
What was studied?
This study focused on the functional characterization of a cadmium resistance operon in Staphylococcus aureus ATCC12600. The operon, which consists of two key genes, cadC and cadA, was identified in a transposon mutagenesis library. The research aimed to investigate the role of these genes in cadmium and zinc resistance and explore the genetic and functional mechanisms behind the resistance, particularly focusing on the efflux mechanism.
Who was studied?
The study involved Staphylococcus aureus ATCC12600, a non-methicillin-resistant strain. The operon was compared to similar operons found in methicillin-resistant strains (MRSA), particularly S. aureus MRSA252, and examined the gene expression and resistance properties. The research also involved mutant strains, including those with transposon disruptions in cadC, to better understand the functional impact of each gene within the operon.
Most important findings
The S. aureus ATCC12600 strain containing the cadC-positive plasmid showed high levels of resistance to cadmium sulfate, with minimal growth reduction even in the presence of 250 mg/ml cadmium sulfate. In contrast, the cadC-mutant strains exhibited significantly lower resistance. This suggested that cadC plays a crucial role in cadmium efflux, although the absence of CadC did not completely block cadmium efflux, as the cadA gene, even in the absence of cadC, still contributed to a lower level of resistance. Additionally, the study found that the CadC protein from S. aureus ATCC12600 did not function as a transcriptional repressor, unlike the CadC protein from pI258, which had been previously identified as a repressor.
Key implications
The findings demonstrate that the cadC gene in S. aureus ATCC12600 is integral to cadmium resistance, specifically through its involvement in cadmium efflux, but it does not operate as a repressor as seen in other strains. This research provides new insights into cadmium resistance mechanisms in S. aureus and highlights the differences between resistance mechanisms in non-MRSA and MRSA strains. Understanding these resistance pathways may aid in developing strategies for tackling cadmium toxicity, particularly in environments contaminated with heavy metals.
Microsporum canis Antifungal Susceptibility and Therapy: A Review
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Microsporum canis (M. canis)
Microsporum canis (M. canis)
OverviewMicrosporum canis (M. canis) is a zoophilic dermatophyte common in cats and dogs, responsible for 90% of feline dermatophytoses worldwide.[1][2] It has significant zoonotic potential, transmitting to humans through fomites or direct animal contact, causing severe superficial mycosis. M. canis is considered anthropo-zoophilic and can infect pediatric or immunocompromised patients, causing severe inflammatory responses such […]
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This review evaluates antifungal susceptibility and therapeutic options for Microsporum canis, highlighting methodological variability in testing and identifying terbinafine and itraconazole as the most reliable agents.
What was reviewed?
This review article assessed the antifungal therapy options and susceptibility profiles of Microsporum canis (M. canis), a zoophilic dermatophyte responsible for dermatophytosis in animals and humans. The paper provided an in-depth analysis of conventional antifungal treatments and in vitro susceptibility data obtained using broth microdilution (CLSI-based), E-test, and disk diffusion methods. It emphasized the lack of standardized susceptibility testing protocols for M. canis and the implications this variability has on clinical decision-making and the interpretation of minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs).
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesized findings from studies involving both human and animal M. canisinfections. It compiled clinical trial data from domestic cats, in vivo veterinary studies, and in vitro susceptibility studies of fungal isolates collected globally. The included literature encompassed dermatophyte strains tested under variable laboratory conditions, particularly those from cases of recalcitrant or treatment-resistant dermatophytosis.
Most important findings
M. canis exhibits substantial variability in antifungal susceptibility depending on the methodology employed for testing, which significantly influences therapeutic outcomes and drug efficacy interpretation. Terbinafine (TER) and itraconazole (ITZ) consistently demonstrated superior in vivo and in vitro efficacy when compared to fluconazole (FLZ) and griseofulvin (GRI), with TER and ITZ associated with faster healing times and lower minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs). However, treatment failures have been reported in 25–40% of patients, frequently attributed to factors such as variability in MIC results, suboptimal drug penetration into infected tissues, poor patient compliance, and the emergence of antifungal resistance.
Notably, methodological disparities across susceptibility assays—including broth microdilution, E-test, and disk diffusion—have been shown to introduce significant variability. Key parameters such as inoculum size (ranging from 10³ to 10⁶ CFU/mL), culture medium (e.g., PDA versus RPMI), incubation temperature and duration, and endpoint criteria (e.g., MIC-50, MIC-80, or MIC-0) critically affect the resulting MIC values, thereby complicating cross-study comparisons and hindering the development of standardized clinical breakpoints.
Antifungal Agent
In Vitro Activity Consistency
Notable Findings
Terbinafine (TER)
High
Most effective in in vivo feline models and showed high inhibition zones (DD method). A TER-resistant strain has been reported.
Itraconazole (ITZ)
High
Quick healing and low MICs across methods; preferred over GRI.
Fluconazole (FLZ)
Low
Consistently poor activity, with high MICs and poor zone inhibition across all methods.
Griseofulvin (GRI)
Moderate to Low
Inferior to ITZ and TER in both speed and consistency; associated with therapeutic failure.
Voriconazole (VOR)
Limited Data
Promising based on DD zone inhibition but underexplored.
Key implications
The absence of a standardized, validated antifungal susceptibility method for M. canis undermines accurate resistance profiling and therapy optimization. The variability in MICs depending on technical parameters highlights the urgent need for harmonized protocols, particularly for dermatophyte infections. Moreover, the low efficacy of FLZ and emerging resistance to TER suggest a potential therapeutic shift toward ITZ as a first-line systemic antifungal. Given the zoonotic potential of M. canis and increasing recalcitrance, routine susceptibility testing using standardized CLSI protocols should be adopted in both clinical and veterinary settings to ensure appropriate antifungal stewardship and reduce transmission risks.
Genetic Clustering and Virulence Insights in Microsporum canis: Clinical Isolates from US Cats
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
•
Microsporum canis (M. canis)
Microsporum canis (M. canis)
OverviewMicrosporum canis (M. canis) is a zoophilic dermatophyte common in cats and dogs, responsible for 90% of feline dermatophytoses worldwide.[1][2] It has significant zoonotic potential, transmitting to humans through fomites or direct animal contact, causing severe superficial mycosis. M. canis is considered anthropo-zoophilic and can infect pediatric or immunocompromised patients, causing severe inflammatory responses such […]
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This US-based study reveals that M. canis genotype correlates with disease severity in cats, identifies three genetic clusters, and confirms the dominance of the MAT1-1 mating type. Conserved virulence genes (SSU1, SUB3) offer potential diagnostic utility.
What was studied?
This study investigated the genetic diversity of Microsporum canis, a dermatophytic fungus that commonly infects cats and is transmissible to humans. Researchers collected 191 fungal isolates from domestic cats across seven US clinics to analyze genotypic variation using eight microsatellite loci, internal transcribed spacer (ITS) sequences, and the mating type (MAT) locus. In addition, the study explored genetic variation in two putative virulence genes: SSU1 and SUB3, which are associated with keratin digestion and adherence.
Who was studied?
A total of 258 hair samples were collected from domestic cats suspected of dermatophytosis, with 191 confirmedM. canis isolates included in the study. The cohort predominantly consisted of kittens (96.8%) from shelter populations (97.4%), most of which were stray, intact domestic shorthairs presenting with alopecic lesions on the head and limbs. Clinical severity was classified based on lesion count, size, and distribution, and was used to correlate with genetic findings.
Most important findings
The study identified substantial genetic variation across the M. canis isolates, observing 122 unique multilocus genotypes from 180 successfully genotyped samples. Notably, three distinct genetic clusters were detected using STRUCTURE and principal component analysis. Clinic location and disease severity were statistically significant predictors of microsatellite variation (p=0.001 and p=0.004, respectively). All isolates were identified as MAT1-1 mating type, supporting prior hypotheses that M. canis populations in the US have largely transitioned to asexual reproduction. No sequence polymorphisms were detected in SSU1 and SUB3, suggesting these genes are highly conserved, likely due to essential roles in virulence.
Key implications
This is the first large-scale genotypic analysis of M. canis in the US and provides foundational evidence that fungal genotype is associated with clinical disease severity. The discovery that all isolates were MAT1-1 indicates a shift toward asexual propagation, which may reduce genetic recombination but stabilize virulent traits within a host population. Identifying conserved virulence genes like SSU1 and SUB3 across diverse isolates supports their potential utility as diagnostic or therapeutic targets. Importantly, the correlation between genotype and clinical presentation, though not definitively causal, suggests that genotyping could eventually inform clinical management strategies, including prognosis and treatment intensity. This work supports the value of expanding to whole-genome sequencing for more granular pathogenicity markers and epidemiological tracking.
How Oxygen Shapes Lactate Metabolism in Staphylococcus aureus: Insights from In Vivo NMR
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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The study demonstrates that Staphylococcus aureus adapts its glucose and lactate metabolism to oxygen levels, efficiently catabolizing lactate to acetate under aerobic conditions. This oxygen-dependent metabolic flexibility may provide a competitive advantage in human host niches.
What was studied?
This original research article investigated how varying oxygen concentrations affect glucose metabolism and specifically the utilization of lactate in Staphylococcus aureus. Using in vivo ^13C-NMR spectroscopy, the authors dissected metabolic responses by probing glucose catabolism in dense suspensions of S. aureus under differing oxygen conditions: fully aerobic, semi-aerobic, and anaerobic. The study focused on both direct effects of oxygen on metabolism (by using aerobically grown cells) and transcriptional adaptation to oxygen deprivation (by using anaerobically grown cells). The researchers examined substrate consumption rates, intracellular and extracellular metabolite pools, the emergence of metabolic intermediates, and the distribution of fermentation end-products. The goal was to clarify how oxygen availability modulates central carbon metabolism and to explore the capacity of S. aureus to utilize lactate, an abundant metabolite in host environments, especially under aerobic conditions.
Who was studied?
The study was performed exclusively on Staphylococcus aureus COL-S, a methicillin-sensitive derivative of the well-characterized COL strain. The experiments used laboratory-grown, non-growing (resting) cell suspensions for metabolic flux analyses, as well as actively growing cultures for growth and substrate utilization studies. The bacterial suspensions were prepared from cells cultivated under defined aerobic or anaerobic conditions to distinguish between immediate metabolic effects of oxygen and longer-term transcriptional adjustments. No human or animal subjects were involved; all findings are based on in vitro bacterial models.
Most important findings
The study revealed several key insights into S. aureus central metabolism under different oxygen availabilities. Under fully aerobic conditions, S. aureus consumed glucose at the fastest rate, primarily producing acetate and lactate, with acetate predominating as oxygen increased. As oxygen was limited, glucose consumption slowed, and lactate became the major end-product, with ethanol forming only under strict anaerobiosis. An important and novel observation was the marked ability of S. aureus to metabolize lactate to acetate under aerobic conditions—a process that was oxygen-dependent. This aerobic lactate utilization was confirmed both in non-growing and growing cells: S. aureus grew robustly using lactate as the sole carbon source and consumed lactate and glucose simultaneously when both were present, with a significant shift toward acetate production. The study also identified transient accumulation of mannitol/mannitol-1-phosphate under oxygen limitation, suggesting alternative NAD+ regeneration strategies. These findings highlight the metabolic flexibility of S. aureus and the impact of oxygen on its ability to switch between fermentation and respiration, as well as its capacity to exploit lactate—an abundant host metabolite—particularly in oxygen-rich environments.
Key implications
This work expands the understanding of S. aureus metabolic adaptability, with direct clinical and microbiome research relevance. The demonstration that S. aureus efficiently catabolizes lactate in the presence of oxygen suggests a metabolic advantage in oxygenated host niches (such as skin and nasal cavity), where lactate is often produced by commensal bacteria. This metabolic trait may facilitate S. aureus colonization and persistence by allowing it to exploit resources inaccessible to many competitors. The ability to switch to lactate utilization and its association with acetate production under aerobic conditions should be considered a key metabolic feature of S. aureus. These insights may inform future therapeutic strategies targeting metabolic pathways essential for S. aureus survival in diverse host environments.
Protective Effects of Lactobacillus plantarum CCFM8246 against Copper Toxicity in Mice
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Lactobacillus plantarum CCFM8246 shows protective effects against copper toxicity in mice by promoting copper excretion, alleviating oxidative stress, and improving liver function and cognitive performance. This suggests its potential for use in therapeutic applications for copper toxicity.
What was studied?
The study investigated the protective effects of Lactobacillus plantarum CCFM8246 against copper toxicity in mice. Copper, while essential in small quantities, can be toxic in excess, leading to oxidative stress and organ damage, especially in the liver, kidneys, and brain. The researchers focused on whether Lactobacillus plantarum could mitigate the effects of copper exposure by promoting copper excretion, reducing copper accumulation in tissues, and reversing oxidative stress.
Who was studied?
The study used adult male C57BL/6 mice, aged approximately 8 weeks and weighing between 28 and 30 grams. These mice were divided into groups to evaluate the effects of Lactobacillus plantarum CCFM8246 in two settings: an intervention group, where the probiotic was co-administered with copper, and a therapy group, where treatment began after the copper exposure had been established.
Most important findings
The findings revealed that Lactobacillus plantarum CCFM8246 significantly increased copper content in the feces of treated mice, indicating enhanced copper excretion. This helped reduce copper accumulation in the liver, kidneys, and brain. The strain also alleviated oxidative stress, as shown by improved levels of antioxidant enzymes (superoxide dismutase and glutathione peroxidase) and reduced malondialdehyde (MDA) levels. Furthermore, Lactobacillus plantarum improved liver function, reflected in the normalization of alanine aminotransferase (ALT) and aspartate aminotransferase (AST) levels. Most notably, spatial memory and cognitive function, measured through Morris water maze experiments, improved in copper-exposed mice treated with the probiotic, demonstrating its potential neuroprotective effects.
Key implications
This study highlights the potential of Lactobacillus plantarum as a therapeutic agent to counteract copper toxicity, a growing environmental and industrial concern. Its ability to enhance copper excretion and alleviate oxidative stress makes it a promising candidate for inclusion in future probiotic-based treatments for metal toxicity. The findings also suggest that Lactobacillus plantarum could be used as a complementary approach to conventional copper chelation therapies, offering a less invasive method with fewer side effects. Given the strain's tolerance to gastric and bile environments, it holds potential as a probiotic for clinical applications.
HapX in Arthroderma benhamiae: Iron Regulation Without Virulence Loss
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Microbial Metallomics
Microbial Metallomics
Microbial Metallomics is the study of how microorganisms acquire, use, regulate, and transform metals in any biological or environmental context.
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HapX regulates iron metabolism in A. benhamiae by controlling siderophore production and repressing iron-dependent genes, yet is dispensable for keratin-based virulence, suggesting compensatory iron acquisition strategies.
What was studied?
This study investigated the role of the transcription factor HapX in the regulation of iron homeostasis in the pathogenic dermatophyte Arthroderma benhamiae, with particular attention to whether HapX is essential for virulence. HapX is a known regulator of fungal iron metabolism in other ascomycetes, acting through its dual role in iron acquisition during starvation and iron detoxification during excess. The authors constructed ΔhapX mutants and reconstituted strains to analyze growth phenotypes under varying iron conditions, siderophore production, and gene expression patterns of iron-regulatory pathways. Additionally, they tested virulence potential on keratinized substrates, including human hair and nails.
Who was studied?
The experiments were performed using a wild-type A. benhamiae strain (LAU2354-2), two ΔhapX deletion mutants, and their respective gene-reconstituted strains (hapX^C). Growth, siderophore production, and gene expression were evaluated under iron-replete and iron-starved conditions, including exposure to deferoxamine (a xenosiderophore). Virulence was assessed via in vitro growth assays on human keratin substrates.
Most important findings
HapX is essential for iron homeostasis in Arthroderma benhamiae, governing adaptation to both iron limitation and excess. Deletion of the hapX gene (ΔhapX) resulted in impaired fungal growth, reduced conidiation, and decreased biomass under iron-starved conditions or in the presence of the iron chelator deferoxamine. The mutants also exhibited a distinct reddish hyphal pigmentation, likely due to accumulation of heme precursors. Molecular analyses revealed downregulation of siderophore biosynthetic genes sidA and sidC, along with reduced secretion of the extracellular siderophore ferrichrome C, though intracellular ferricrocin levels remained unaffected. Additionally, HapX-deficient strains failed to repress iron-consuming genes (cccA, hemA, cycA, lysF) during iron deprivation, underscoring its role in balancing iron usage. The ΔhapX strains were also hypersensitive to iron overload, showing growth inhibition at ≥5 mM FeSO₄, implicating HapX in iron detoxification pathways. Despite these metabolic disruptions, virulence remained intact on keratin-rich substrates like hair and nails, suggesting that keratin may supply bioavailable iron or that alternative acquisition systems, such as reductive iron assimilation, can compensate for the loss of HapX-regulated siderophore function.
Functional Role
ΔhapX Phenotype
Iron Starvation Response
↓ sidA, sidC transcription; ↓ ferrichrome C
Iron Detoxification
↑ sensitivity to FeSO₄; ↓ cccA induction
Gene Regulation
↑ hemA, lysF, cycA, sreA in iron-starved state
Virulence on Keratin
No impairment in hair/nail substrate infection
Key implications
While HapX is central to iron regulation in A. benhamiae, it is not required for keratin substrate colonization, suggesting that dermatophyte virulence mechanisms are adapted to relatively iron-rich or accessible environments like skin, nails, and hair. This divergence from pathogens such as Aspergillus fumigatus or Candida albicans, where HapX is critical for virulence, highlights the need for pathogen-specific strategies when targeting iron acquisition therapeutically. Furthermore, the redundancy of HapX in virulence points toward alternative iron uptake systems such as reductive iron assimilation or low-affinity transporters in dermatophytes. These compensatory pathways represent potential antifungal targets.
The Pore-Forming Toxin Listeriolysin O Mediates a Novel Entry Pathway of L. monocytogenes into Human Hepatocytes
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study uncovers how Listeria monocytogenes uses listeriolysin O (LLO) to induce host cell entry via membrane perforation, a novel pathogen strategy for invasion.
What was studied?
The study focused on the role of the pore-forming toxin, listeriolysin O (LLO), in the invasion of human hepatocytes by Listeria monocytogenes. Specifically, it investigates how LLO mediates a novel entry pathway, where the toxin perforates host cell membranes, triggering internalization of the bacterium and other particles such as polystyrene beads into the cells.
Who was studied?
The study focused on Listeria monocytogenes and its ability to invade human hepatocytes, specifically HepG2 cells. The research also examined the effects of listeriolysin O (LLO), the pore-forming toxin, in mediating the entry process. Additionally, the study included the use of Listeria innocua as a control to confirm that LLO could independently induce cell entry.
What were the most important findings?
The study found that LLO plays a crucial role in L. monocytogenes entry into human hepatocytes (HepG2 cells). LLO was shown to be sufficient to induce bacterial internalization into host cells, an activity previously attributed only to other virulence factors like InlA and InlB. It was demonstrated that LLO facilitates bacterial entry through a pore-dependent mechanism, where it forms large oligomeric complexes on the host cell membrane, enabling the bacterium to cross into the cytoplasm. This process is dynamin- and F-actin-dependent but clathrin-independent. The study also showed that LLO can induce the internalization of non-invasive Listeria innocua, which further confirmed that LLO is sufficient by itself to induce bacterial uptake into host cells. Additionally, the LLO-induced internalization pathway is distinct from conventional endocytosis pathways, as it involves the actin cytoskeleton and tyrosine kinase signaling.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The greatest implication of this study is the identification of a new entry strategy used by Listeria monocytogenes for host cell invasion. This research reveals that LLO acts as a key virulence factor not only for bacterial survival within host cells but also for initiating the internalization process, potentially broadening our understanding of bacterial pathogenesis. Furthermore, the study suggests that similar pore-forming toxins from other pathogens might utilize a similar mechanism for host cell entry, opening new avenues for therapeutic interventions targeting this entry strategy. The study also underscores the importance of LLO in modulating the actin cytoskeleton and providing a mechanism for bacterial internalization independent of classical receptor-mediated endocytosis.
Copper at the Front Line of the Host-Pathogen Battle
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review explores the critical role of copper in microbial pathogenesis, focusing on how the host uses it as an antimicrobial weapon and how pathogens resist Cu toxicity. It suggests potential therapeutic avenues targeting Cu resistance mechanisms.
What was studied?
This review focuses on the role of copper (Cu) in microbial pathogenesis and how it is utilized by both the host and pathogens. It examines Cu’s dual role as an essential cofactor in cellular processes and as a toxic element that the immune system uses to combat infections. The paper explores the ways the immune system harnesses Cu’s antimicrobial properties to fight pathogens, as well as the sophisticated mechanisms developed by pathogens to resist Cu toxicity during infection.
Who was studied?
The review addresses various pathogens, particularly bacteria and fungi, including Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Salmonella enterica, and Cryptococcus neoformans. These organisms were studied in the context of how they interact with Cu during infection and how they manage Cu’s toxic effects. The review also touches upon host cells, such as macrophages, that utilize Cu in defense against microbial invaders.
Most important findings
The findings reveal that Cu plays a critical role in host defense by aiding in the killing of pathogens. During infection, macrophages increase Cu levels in the phagosome to help neutralize pathogens. Cu works synergistically with reactive oxygen species (ROS) and nitric oxide (NO) to amplify its antimicrobial effects. However, pathogens have evolved intricate mechanisms to avoid Cu toxicity, such as Cu efflux pumps and Cu-binding proteins. These mechanisms are essential for the virulence of various pathogens, including Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and Streptococcus pneumoniae. Moreover, Cu homeostasis in fungal pathogens like Cryptococcus neoformans is crucial for virulence, with Cu-dependent enzymes playing significant roles in oxidative stress protection and melanin production.
Key implications
The review highlights the importance of Cu in both host immunity and microbial pathogenesis. New therapeutic strategies can target Cu resistance mechanisms in pathogens to combat infections. Understanding how the host uses Cu to fight infection and how pathogens resist this defense can lead to the development of drugs that disrupt Cu homeostasis, enhancing the immune response and making pathogens more susceptible to treatment.
Nickel-Dependent Urease Enables Staphylococcus aureus Persistence in Acidic Environments
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Urease enables S. aureus to survive acid stress and persist in murine kidneys. Its expression is regulated by CcpA and Agr, and its activity is essential for long-term infection, highlighting a critical microbial adaptation for persistence in acidic microenvironments.
What was studied?
This study investigated urease function in Staphylococcus aureus, focusing on how this enzyme supports pH homeostasis and microbial survival during acidic stress—a key topic for a microbiome signatures database because S. aureus occupies acidic host niches and interacts metabolically with host-derived urea. The authors explored how urease activity contributes to maintaining intracellular pH, how its transcription is regulated, and whether endogenous urea derived from arginine metabolism contributes to nitrogen use or acid resistance. The work also examined urease-mediated survival during a chronic murine kidney infection, a setting with high urea concentration and low pH. Figures throughout the paper illustrate these dynamics; for example, the growth and pH curves show ammonia generation driving extracellular alkalinization under glucose-induced acetate stress, and the chronic infection data demonstrate urease-dependent persistence in vivo.
Who was studied?
The research used Staphylococcus aureus strain JE2 and various mutant derivatives, including urease-null strains and regulatory mutants (ΔccpA, Δagr, ΔcodY). Laboratory analyses were performed in vitro using glucose-rich media, chemically defined media, and assays monitoring metabolites, transcription, and viability. For the in vivo component, male and female C57BL/6 mice were used in a bacteremia model to assess kidney colonization. This dual organism approach—bacterial strains plus mammalian hosts—allowed the authors to connect molecular mechanisms of urease function with physiological relevance in a living system.
Most important findings
The study demonstrated that urease is a key acid-resistance mechanism in Staphylococcus aureus, enabling survival by converting urea into ammonia, which buffers intracellular pH. Wild-type strains maintained viability under acetic-acid stress, while urease-deficient mutants showed sharp CFU loss. Regulation of the urease operon depends on major global regulators—CcpA and Agr activate transcription, whereas CodY represses it—positioning urease within core metabolic sensing pathways. The authors also confirmed that arginine-derived urea is excreted rather than metabolized under neutral pH, indicating urease is not used for nitrogen assimilation outside acidic stress conditions. In vivo, urease proved essential for kidney persistence, as shows progressive clearance of urease-null mutants, with no major differences in leukocyte infiltration, supporting a metabolic rather than immune-driven mechanism.
Key Finding
Summary
Urease enables acid survival
Ammonia generation buffers pH and preserves viability under weak acid stress
Regulatory control
CcpA and Agr activate urease; CodY represses it
Nitrogen metabolism
Arginine-derived urea is excreted, not used for nitrogen assimilation at neutral pH
In vivo importance
Urease required for kidney persistence; mutants are cleared during chronic infection
Key implications
This work shows that urease enables S. aureus to withstand acidic, urea-rich conditions by stabilizing pH and preventing reactive oxygen species accumulation. In microbial ecology terms, urease represents a metabolic signature enabling niche persistence, particularly in host tissues with steep pH and urea gradients. For clinical microbiology, the findings elevate urease as a potential target for disrupting persistence in chronic infections—including kidney reservoirs that seed metastatic disease. Additionally, urease's tight regulation by global metabolic circuits illustrates how nutrient status and environmental pH converge to drive virulence-associated traits in S. aureus, providing valuable context for microbiome-driven pathogen profiling.
Deciphering the interplay between the genotoxic and probiotic activities of Escherichia coli Nissle 1917
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study uncovers the dual role of Escherichia coli Nissle 1917, where its beneficial antibacterial activity is linked to the ClbP protein, while its genotoxic effects are dependent on colibactin. Engineering strains that decouple these activities could lead to safer probiotic therapies.
What was studied?
This study focused on the interplay between the genotoxic and probiotic activities of Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 (EcN), a well-established probiotic. Researchers investigated the relationship between EcN’s production of colibactin, a genotoxin, and its beneficial effects, particularly its antagonistic activities against other Enterobacteriaceae. The study aimed to distinguish the genotoxic impact of colibactin from the beneficial antibacterial properties of EcN. The researchers investigated the role of the ClbP protein, which is crucial for colibactin activation, and explored how mutations in this protein could decouple genotoxicity from antibacterial activity. They also examined the synthesis of siderophore-microcins (MccH47 and MccM), which contribute to EcN’s antibacterial activity.
Who was studied?
The study focused on Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 (EcN), its mutant strains, and other relevant pathogenic and probiotic E. coli strains. The research used Salmonella enterica and E. coli strains (such as LF82) to assess EcN's antagonistic activity. Mouse models were employed to study the effect of EcN on pathogen colonization, explicitly focusing on Salmonella in a streptomycin-treated mouse model. The strains used in the study were genetically modified to produce various mutations in the ClbP protein, responsible for the synthesis of colibactin, to test the effects of these changes on both genotoxicity and antibacterial activity.
Most important findings
The study revealed that the ClbP protein is essential for EcN’s antibacterial activity, particularly its production of siderophore-linked microcins (MccH47 and MccM), which inhibit the growth of competing Enterobacteriaceae. However, the study showed that while ClbP is crucial for the antagonistic activity of EcN, it is not necessary for the genotoxic activity associated with colibactin. The researchers were able to decouple these activities by engineering a mutant strain of EcN (clbP-S95R) that retained its antibacterial properties but lost its genotoxic effects. In vivo experiments demonstrated that this mutant still protected mice against Salmonella infections as effectively as the wild-type EcN, offering a pathway to safely use EcN as a probiotic without the risk of genotoxicity.
Key implications
The findings suggest that Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 has a dual nature, with both beneficial probiotic effects and potential risks due to its genotoxic properties. By identifying the specific role of ClbP in both colibactin synthesis and antibacterial activity, the study opens the door for engineering safer strains of EcN. These strains could provide the therapeutic benefits of EcN without the associated risks of genotoxicity. This could have significant implications for the use of probiotics in clinical settings, particularly for treating gastrointestinal infections or inflammatory conditions, where EcN is commonly used.
Effects of chronic exposure to arsenic on the fecal carriage of antibiotic-resistant Escherichia coli among people in rural Bangladesh
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study evaluates the relationship between arsenic exposure and antibiotic-resistant E. coli carriage in rural Bangladesh, revealing significant associations between arsenic contamination and increased resistance to antibiotics, particularly in children.
What was studied?
This study explores the effects of chronic arsenic exposure on the fecal carriage of antibiotic-resistant Escherichia coli (AR-Ec) in a rural population of Bangladesh. The research focused on comparing the prevalence and resistance patterns of AR-Ec isolates in children and mothers from two distinct areas: one with high arsenic exposure (Hajiganj) and the other with low exposure (Matlab). The study sought to understand the co-selection of antibiotic resistance linked to arsenic contamination in drinking water, as arsenic is known to drive resistance mechanisms in bacteria.
Who was studied?
The study involved 50 households from each of the two regions in Bangladesh—Hajiganj, which has high arsenic exposure (>100 μg/L), and Matlab, with low arsenic exposure (<20 μg/L). The participants were mothers and their children, particularly focusing on children under one year old. Stool samples from both mothers and children, as well as drinking water samples, were collected for analysis. The study aimed to examine how long-term arsenic exposure influences the gut microbiome, particularly the carriage of antibiotic-resistant E. coli.
Most important findings
The study found a significantly higher prevalence of AR-Ec in children from Hajiganj (94%) compared to those from Matlab (76%), though the prevalence in mothers did not show such a stark difference. The E. coli isolates from the high-arsenic area were more likely to be multidrug-resistant (83%) compared to those from the low-arsenic area (71%). Interestingly, co-resistance to arsenic and antibiotics, particularly third-generation cephalosporins (3GC) and fluoroquinolones (FQ), was more common in Hajiganj. The isolates from Hajiganj also demonstrated a higher frequency of resistance to multiple antibiotic classes, such as penicillin, cephalosporin, tetracycline, and macrolides, compared to those from Matlab. Furthermore, whole-genome sequencing revealed genetic diversity in the isolates, with certain virulence and antibiotic resistance genes being more prevalent in isolates from high-arsenic areas.
The study also highlighted the correlation between arsenic and antibiotic resistance, where arsenic-resistant E. coli isolates were more likely to show resistance to β-lactam antibiotics, such as ampicillin and cefotaxime. In contrast, resistance to tetracycline, trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole, and ciprofloxacin was less frequent among arsenic-resistant isolates. The research identified several important resistance genes, such as the blaCTX-M-1 for β-lactam resistance, as well as a variety of virulence genes that were present in the isolates from high-arsenic areas.
Key implications
This study has significant implications for public health, particularly in regions with high arsenic contamination. The findings underscore the potential health risks posed by arsenic exposure, which not only affects overall health but also exacerbates the spread of antibiotic-resistant bacteria. The co-selection of arsenic and antibiotic resistance could lead to more severe infections that are harder to treat, especially in children whose gut microbiome is still developing. Additionally, the study suggests that arsenic exposure, even at lower levels through food sources like rice, could contribute to the persistence of antibiotic resistance in communities. These results call for increased monitoring of arsenic exposure in water sources and a closer look at the role of diet in arsenic-mediated resistance. Addressing both environmental and microbial factors could play a crucial role in mitigating the health risks associated with arsenic contamination.
Intratumoral Microbiota: Insights from Anatomical, Molecular, and Clinical Perspectives
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Intratumoural Microbiota
Intratumoural Microbiota
With the growing understanding of the intratumoral microbiota’s influence on cancer progression, the next frontier in cancer therapy is microbiota-targeted interventions. By introducing beneficial microbes or altering existing microbial populations within tumors, therapies can be designed to modulate the immune system, promote tumor suppression, and improve drug efficacy. However, challenges remain in deciphering the complex relationships between microbes, tumor cells, and the immune system, necessitating more refined research methods and standardized approaches to translate these discoveries into clinical practice.
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This review explores how intratumoral microbiota influence cancer development and therapeutic responses. It examines microbial roles in tumorigenesis, immune modulation, and treatment resistance, suggesting microbiome-based interventions as a promising strategy to improve cancer therapies.
What was studied?
This review article explores the role of intratumoral microbiota in cancer initiation, progression, and therapeutic responses. It highlights the complex interactions between microbial communities and the tumor microenvironment (TME) in various cancers, including colorectal, breast, pancreatic, and lung cancers. The review investigates how the presence of specific microbes within tumor tissues influences carcinogenesis, immune response, and metastasis. It also discusses the impact of these microbes on cancer treatment efficacy, including chemotherapy, immunotherapy, and other targeted therapies. The study focuses on the mechanisms by which microbes promote or inhibit tumor growth, including DNA damage, inflammation, immune suppression, and oncogenic pathway activation.
Who was studied?
The article synthesizes data from clinical studies and animal models investigating the presence of microorganisms within tumor tissues. The review includes research on various cancer types, with a particular focus on gastrointestinal, breast, and pancreatic cancers. Studies examining microbial profiles in tumor biopsies and adjacent tissues are considered, along with research on the role of specific microbes, such as Fusobacterium nucleatum, Escherichia coli, and Bacteroides fragilis, in tumorigenesis. Additionally, the review looks at the influence of microbial populations on the immune response and their potential to modulate the TME to either promote or suppress tumor progression.
Most important findings
The review identifies several critical findings regarding the role of intratumoral microbiota in cancer. It demonstrates that tumor tissues, previously thought to be sterile, actually contain distinct microbial communities. These microbes can influence tumorigenesis by causing DNA damage, inducing inflammation, and modulating immune responses. For example, Fusobacterium nucleatum is associated with colorectal cancer progression through immune suppression and activation of pro-inflammatory pathways. The review also points to the role of microbes in shaping the TME, where certain bacteria promote tumor growth by enhancing immune evasion, while others contribute to therapeutic resistance. The presence of specific bacteria, such as Bacteroides fragilis and Escherichia coli, in tumors is linked to altered immune cell activity and resistance to chemotherapy. Furthermore, the article emphasizes that microbial dysbiosis, or imbalances in microbial populations, can contribute to cancer progression and may serve as a potential biomarker for early detection and prognosis.
Key implications
The findings have significant implications for cancer diagnostics, treatment, and prognosis. The presence of specific microbial signatures in tumors could serve as biomarkers for cancer detection and to predict treatment outcomes. The manipulation of intratumoral microbiota offers a promising therapeutic strategy to enhance the efficacy of cancer treatments, particularly immunotherapies. Targeting microbial populations within the TME, either through probiotics, antibiotics, or other microbiome-based therapies, could help in restoring immune function and improving patient responses to treatment. However, more research is needed to fully understand the mechanisms by which intratumoral microbiota influence tumor progression and to develop reliable clinical strategies for microbiome-based interventions in cancer therapy.
Why does Listeria monocytogenes survive in food and food-production environments?
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review explores the survival mechanisms of Listeria monocytogenes in food production environments, focusing on stress resistance, biofilm formation, and its persistence despite sanitation measures.
What was reviewed?
This review examined the survival mechanisms of Listeria monocytogenes in food and food production environments. It focused on the bacterium’s ability to withstand various environmental stress factors, such as extreme temperatures, low water activity, pH variations, and disinfectants. Additionally, it explored how Listeria persists in these environments, contributing to food contamination risks.
Who was reviewed?
The review focused on Listeria monocytogenes, a foodborne pathogen responsible for listeriosis, and its ability to survive and adapt to harsh conditions typically found in food processing environments. It discussed how different strains of Listeria, including those frequently isolated from food products and environments, exhibit various survival strategies.
What were the most important findings?
The review highlighted Listeria monocytogenes' remarkable ability to survive in adverse conditions such as cold, high salinity, low water activity, and even in the presence of ultraviolet light and heavy metals. Listeria can grow at temperatures ranging from -0.4°C to 45°C and tolerate pH levels between 4.6 and 9.5. These traits contribute to its persistence in food processing facilities, even in the face of cleaning and sanitation efforts. The bacterium can also form biofilms on food production surfaces, which protect it from cleaning agents and other stress factors. Persistent strains, especially of serotype 1/2a and 1/2b, were found to have strong biofilm-forming capabilities and were commonly linked to food production environments. The review also emphasized that certain strains are genetically adapted for survival, with mechanisms like biofilm formation, resistance to disinfectants, and cold and heat shock proteins that enhance their persistence. Notably, resistance to benzalkonium chloride (BAC), a common disinfectant, was also linked to Listeria's ability to survive in food-processing environments despite sanitation measures.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The review's findings underline the challenges of managing Listeria monocytogenes in food production environments. The ability of Listeria to form biofilms and resist common disinfectants makes it difficult to completely eliminate from food facilities, posing ongoing food safety risks. The review calls for more effective cleaning protocols and highlights the need for stricter monitoring and improved hygiene practices to prevent contamination. It also suggests that understanding the genetic adaptations and resistance mechanisms in Listeria can inform better strategies to mitigate foodborne outbreaks, particularly in facilities producing ready-to-eat foods.
A Meta-Analysis on the Association of Colibactin-Producing pks+ Escherichia coli with the Development of Colorectal Cancer
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This meta-analysis found that carrying pks+ E. coli associates with higher colorectal cancer risk. The link stays significant after outlier removal and appears strongest in Western-country studies and tissue-based detection, supporting pks+ E. coli as a functional microbiome risk marker tied to colibactin genotoxicity.
What was studied?
This study performed a meta-analysis to clarify whether carrying colibactin-producing pks+ Escherichia coli associates with a higher risk of colorectal cancer (CRC), because prior individual studies reported conflicting results. The authors systematically searched major databases up to October 18, 2021, extracted case–control and cohort data where CRC status was confirmed and pks genes were detected in human samples, assessed study quality with the Newcastle–Ottawa Scale, and pooled odds ratios using fixed- or random-effects models based on heterogeneity.
Who was studied?
The analysis combined human participants from 12 eligible studies published between 2013 and 2021, most of which used case–control designs. Across studies, “cases” were patients with confirmed CRC and “controls” were cancer-free individuals selected using each study’s criteria. Investigators detected pks+ E. coli (or colibactin genes) primarily in tissue or stool samples, and studies came from multiple countries spanning Western and non-Western regions, enabling subgroup comparisons by geography and sample type.
What were the most important findings?
This meta-analysis found a consistent association between carriage of pks-positive Escherichia coli and colorectal cancer, meaning people with colorectal cancer more often carried colibactin-capable E. coli than controls across the included studies. When the authors accounted for between-study differences by removing studies that disproportionately drove heterogeneity, the association persisted and became more internally consistent, supporting pks positivity as a stable functional signal rather than a chance finding. Subgroup analyses strengthened the microbiome-signature interpretation by showing the relationship was clearer in studies from Western settings and when investigators detected pks-positive bacteria directly from colonic tissue, which fits a mechanism that depends on close mucosal proximity for colibactin activity. Overall, the findings support an “MMA” framed as mucosa-associated pks-positive E. coli as a colorectal cancer–linked microbial feature, consistent with colibactin’s established ability to cause DNA damage and promote mutational injury that can contribute to tumorigenesis.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
Clinically, this meta-analysis supports treating pks+ E. coli carriage as a meaningful functional microbiome risk feature for CRC, especially when detected in tissue and in settings reflecting Western exposure patterns. It also suggests practical translational directions: pks+ E. coli could help distinguish higher-risk individuals and may contribute to early detection strategies in high-risk patients, while reinforcing the rationale for interventions that reduce mucosa-associated colonization or suppress colibactin’s downstream genotoxic effects. At the same time, the authors emphasize that limitations—variable sample sizes, inconsistent specimen handling across studies, and uneven geographic representation—justify cautious interpretation and motivate broader, standardized studies before routine clinical adoption.
Host subversion of bacterial metallophore usage drives copper intoxication
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Host subversion of bacterial metallophore usage shows that zinc starvation makes S. aureus import copper via staphylopine, triggering copper stress and reducing fitness in vivo; these loci and host calprotectin form a practical microbiome signature.
What was studied?
This original study tested how host subversion of bacterial metallophore usage changes metal stress during infection and showed that the host can flip staphylopine-based uptake in Staphylococcus aureus to drive copper intoxication under zinc-limited conditions. The authors asked whether zinc starvation, which induces the Cnt–staphylopine system, also opens an entry path for copper that then activates the copper stress response and hurts bacterial growth and fitness in vivo. They measured reporters for the copper efflux pump CopA, tracked intracellular metals, and compared wild-type and mutant strains that either rely on staphylopine for zinc (ΔadcA) or lack staphylopine import (ΔcntA). They also modeled host zinc withholding with calprotectin and tested competition in a mouse skin infection to link the in vitro signals to disease.
Who was studied?
Experiments used S. aureus Newman and USA300 LAC backgrounds with targeted deletions in adcA, cntA, cntKLM, and copA, plus combinations that forced reliance on either AdcABC or the Cnt–staphylopine system. The team exposed bacteria to zinc-limited media with graded copper, added calprotectin to mimic inflamed tissue, and then used inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry to quantify intracellular copper and zinc. For in vivo relevance, they used female C57BL/6 mice in a subcutaneous abscess model and measured competitive indices for copA-deficient strains against controls, and for ΔadcA versus ΔcntA strains, to determine how metallophore use shapes copper stress during skin infection.
Most important findings
Zinc starvation switched staphylopine uptake in Staphylococcus aureus into a copper entry route that triggered strong copper stress at nanomolar levels. Loss of staphylopine import blocked this effect, while forcing staphylopine use increased copper sensitivity and intracellular copper. Deleting the copper pump CopA amplified damage and cut growth. Calprotectin, which starves zinc at inflamed sites, lowered the copper needed to induce stress. In a mouse skin abscess, strains lacking CopA or relying on staphylopine showed reduced fitness, proving that this copper import pathway operates in vivo. Similar risks may occur with yersiniabactin in Enterobacterales during inflammation.
Key implications
Clinicians can read zinc-starved, staphylopine-positive S. aureus as copper-sensitized in vivo. Embedding the cnt operon, copA/copBL, and calprotectin levels into a microbiome signatures database can flag niches where the host can exploit metallophore promiscuity. Copper-aware care might time or tune topical metals or adjuvants to amplify host copper stress while avoiding tissue harm. Genomic detection of yersiniabactin-like systems in Enterobacterales suggests broader reach of this rule. In simple terms, the host can turn a zinc-scavenging tool into a copper Trojan horse; mapping these modules helps risk-stratify skin, urinary, or gut infections and guides metal-aware stewardship.
The Colibactin Genotoxin Generates DNA Interstrand Cross-Links in Infected Cells
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study shows colibactin-producing bacteria directly create DNA interstrand cross-links in human cells, triggering ATR replication stress and Fanconi repair responses. Blocking colibactin maturation or adding ClbS prevents cross-links, and inhibiting ATR or FANCD2 lowers cell survival, defining ICLs as the key lesion.
What was studied?
This study tested the mechanism of DNA damage caused by colibactin, a genotoxin made by pks island–positive Enterobacteriaceae, by asking whether colibactin directly creates DNA interstrand cross-links (ICLs) in host cells. The authors exposed purified double-stranded DNA and cultured human cells to live colibactin-producing bacteria and then measured DNA damage using denaturing gel electrophoresis, DNA renaturation behavior, and cellular DNA damage signaling. They also used bacterial mutants that block colibactin maturation and a purified resistance protein to confirm that mature colibactin, not inactive precursors, drives the observed DNA lesions.
Who was studied?
The study examined cultured human cells (HeLa) and purified extracellular DNA substrates as the main targets of damage, rather than patient samples. On the microbial side, the authors used a laboratory E. coli DH10B strain carrying the pks island on a bacterial artificial chromosome as the primary colibactin producer, alongside matched non-genotoxic controls and pathway mutants (including a clbP mutant that cannot activate colibactin from precolibactin). They also tested multiple clinical Enterobacteriaceae harboring the pks island to show that the same damage mechanism generalizes beyond the lab strain.
What were the most important findings?
The study showed that colibactin’s primary DNA lesion is interstrand cross-linking, which prevents DNA strands from separating under denaturing conditions and produces a characteristic “nonmigrating/shifted” DNA pattern similar to classic cross-linking agents like cisplatin. Adding extracellular DNA during infection reduced host-cell DNA damage, which supports the idea that DNA can “trap” colibactin, and the trapped DNA itself displayed ICL behavior, indicating direct covalent cross-link formation. Genetic and biochemical controls strengthened causality: cross-linking disappeared when the colibactin pathway was disrupted (including loss of ClbP-dependent maturation) and was blocked by adding ClbS, the specific colibactin resistance protein. In host cells, infection activated ATR-driven replication stress signaling and triggered Fanconi anemia pathway recruitment (including FANCD2 activation and foci), and blocking ATR or depleting FANCD2 reduced survival after exposure, indicating that ICL repair pathways are essential for tolerating colibactin injury.
What are the greatest implications of this study/ review?
For clinicians and microbiome-signature interpretation, this work makes colibactin risk more concrete by defining a specific lesion—DNA interstrand cross-links—that is both highly mutagenic and highly cytotoxic, and that can convert into double-strand breaks during repair. That mechanism aligns colibactin with well-known carcinogenic and chemotherapeutic cross-linking exposures, strengthening biological plausibility for its role in colorectal carcinogenesis when pks-positive bacteria persist near the mucosa. The findings also suggest translational levers: targeting colibactin maturation (for example the ClbP-dependent activation step) or exploiting ICL repair vulnerabilities could reduce harm without relying solely on broad antimicrobial approaches, while patients with impaired cross-link repair capacity may represent a higher-susceptibility context when pks-positive colonization occurs.
Nickel exposure reduces enterobactin production in Escherichia coli.
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Nickel exposure reduces enterobactin production in Escherichia coli, extends lag phase, triggers iron-starvation signals, and lowers extracellular catechols, defining gene and metal markers to track iron supply in Enterobacterales.
What was studied?
Nickel exposure reduces enterobactin production in Escherichia coli by blocking the normal rise of this catecholate siderophore during iron-limited growth. The authors investigated whether nickel contributes to the longer lag phase and iron starvation by limiting extracellular enterobactin, even as cells activate iron uptake genes. They tracked growth, intracellular metals, siderophore levels, and promoter activity to connect nickel stress with a drop in secreted enterobactin and a shortfall in iron delivery. This work identifies nickel as a metal signal that reshapes siderophore output and iron balance in Enterobacterales, which is important for both environmental and host niches.
Who was studied?
The team used Escherichia coli MG1655 in defined minimal media with background iron in the nanomolar range and added NiCl₂ from 0 to 50 μM. They measured intracellular Fe, Ni, Zn, Mn, and Cu by ICP-MS, quantified catecholate siderophores in culture supernatants by the Arnow assay and FPLC, and read iron-responsive promoters with lacZ fusions for fepA, sufA, and iscR. A ΔfepA mutant helped test whether lower extracellular catechols reflect faster re-uptake rather than reduced production. This design separated transcriptional responses from actual siderophore supply in the medium that supports iron import.
Most important findings
Nickel prolonged lag phase without large effects on later growth and blocked the normal rise in intracellular iron during lag, while cells accumulated nickel and modestly increased zinc. Despite that iron need, nickel kept fepA, sufA, and iscR expression high, showing a clear iron-starvation response. Yet extracellular catechols fell in a nickel-dose-dependent way, and FPLC showed that enterobactin and each hydrolysis product declined with nickel. The ΔfepA strain also showed reduced extracellular catechols under nickel, which rules out faster FepA-mediated import as the cause and supports impaired production or export.
Together, these data explain why iron uptake fails under nickel stress: siderophore supply outside the cell drops even as demand rises. The study also situates this effect within broader metal cross-talk noted for catecholates, which can increase copper toxicity by driving Cu(II) to Cu(I); nickel therefore not only limits iron capture but may change copper risk by lowering catecholate output in mixed-metal settings relevant to inflamed mucosa. For a microbiome signatures database, this yields practical markers: entCEBA/entS pathway activity and extracellular catechols as readouts of iron supply, with nickel exposure as a modifier that predicts transient iron starvation in Enterobacterales.
Key implications
Clinicians can read nickel as a metal stressor that delays E. coli adaptation by cutting extracellular enterobactin and pushing iron starvation, even when iron uptake genes stay on. In host settings that raise nickel—industrial exposures, devices, or diets—Enterobacterales may show a lag in iron acquisition with downstream shifts in growth and competition. Reporting entCEBA, entS, and fepA status with measured or inferred nickel exposure can help explain low-iron signals and guide metal-aware care. Because catecholate loss also blunts copper redox cycling, nickel may transiently lower copper injury from catechols while still limiting iron, a trade-off that could favor strains that switch to non-catecholate metallophores. Embedding these gene modules and metal context in microbiome reports can refine risk calls for Enterobacterales dominance in stressed urine or gut and support targeted mitigation that avoids adding metals that worsen imbalance.
The role of the microscopic world: Exploring the role and potential of intratumoral microbiota in cancer immunotherapy
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Intratumoural Microbiota
Intratumoural Microbiota
With the growing understanding of the intratumoral microbiota’s influence on cancer progression, the next frontier in cancer therapy is microbiota-targeted interventions. By introducing beneficial microbes or altering existing microbial populations within tumors, therapies can be designed to modulate the immune system, promote tumor suppression, and improve drug efficacy. However, challenges remain in deciphering the complex relationships between microbes, tumor cells, and the immune system, necessitating more refined research methods and standardized approaches to translate these discoveries into clinical practice.
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This review explores the complex role of intratumoral microbiota in cancer, emphasizing their influence on immune responses and the potential for microbiome-based therapies in cancer immunotherapy. It discusses how specific microbes affect tumor progression and therapy resistance, offering insights into new treatment strategies.
What was studied?
This review investigates the role of intratumoral microbiota in cancer immunotherapy, focusing on how microbial components within tumors can influence cancer progression and therapeutic outcomes. The study covers the various ways intratumoral microbiota can interact with the immune system, either enhancing or suppressing antitumor immune responses. It explores the mechanisms through which specific microorganisms, such as Fusobacterium nucleatum and Bacteroides fragilis, modulate the tumor microenvironment (TME) and affect immune checkpoint therapy, highlighting their potential to be leveraged as therapeutic targets. The review also examines the origins of these intratumoral microbes, categorizing them into mucosal sites, normal adjacent tissues, and hematogenous spread, and how these sources contribute to microbial colonization within the TME.
Who was studied?
The review synthesizes findings from studies on various cancer types, including colorectal, breast, and pancreatic cancers. It specifically focuses on tumors that exhibit microbial colonization and how these microbes impact immune cells within the TME. The studies reviewed examine the presence of intratumoral bacteria, viruses, and fungi, as well as their relationship with immune cells such as T cells, NK cells, macrophages, and myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSCs). The research also discusses how specific microorganisms, including Fusobacterium nucleatum, Bacteroides fragilis, and Clostridium species, influence tumor progression and therapy responses by modulating immune checkpoints, inflammatory pathways, and the immune microenvironment.
Most important findings
The review highlights the dual role of intratumoral microbiota in cancer immunotherapy. On one hand, some microorganisms can stimulate immune responses and improve the efficacy of immunotherapy by enhancing T cell activation, promoting the formation of tertiary lymphoid structures (TLS), and facilitating antigen presentation. On the other hand, certain microbes contribute to immune suppression by increasing reactive oxygen species (ROS), promoting an inflammatory microenvironment, and inducing T cell inactivation, all of which facilitate cancer progression. The presence of Fusobacterium nucleatum in colorectal cancer, for instance, has been linked to immune suppression in microsatellite-unstable tumors, suggesting that intratumoral microbiota’s impact varies based on tumor type and immune status.
Key implications
The findings suggest that understanding the role of intratumoral microbiota could lead to innovative therapeutic strategies in cancer immunotherapy. Targeting specific microbial species or their metabolites could enhance the effectiveness of immune checkpoint inhibitors and other cancer treatments. The review also suggests that manipulating the intratumoral microbiota through interventions such as probiotics, antibiotics, or engineered bacteria could reshape the tumor microenvironment, promote immune activation, and overcome immune evasion mechanisms. However, the complex and condition-dependent effects of microbiota on cancer progression and immune response highlight the need for personalized treatment strategies. Future research should focus on identifying the precise microbial signatures in different cancers and determining how these signatures interact with the host immune system to guide therapeutic interventions.
Ovarian Cancer and the Microbiome: Connecting the Dots for Early Diagnosis and Therapeutic Innovations—A Review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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This review explores the role of the microbiome in ovarian cancer, emphasizing its potential for early diagnosis and treatment. The use of microbiome-based biomarkers and therapies like fecal and vaginal microbiome transplantation offers promising new avenues for cancer care.
What was reviewed?
This review explores the relationship between the microbiome and ovarian cancer, specifically how the gut and cervicovaginal microbiota influence the development, progression, and treatment of the disease. The review also delves into the potential of microbiome-based biomarkers for early diagnosis and therapeutic strategies, including microbiome transplantation approaches like fecal and vaginal microbiome transplantation (FMT and VMT).
Who was studied?
The review synthesizes findings from various studies involving patients with ovarian cancer, healthy controls, and animal models. It discusses the microbiome alterations observed in the gut and cervicovaginal regions and their association with ovarian cancer. The studies reviewed provide insights into how microbiome dysbiosis contributes to cancer progression, with a particular focus on microbial signatures in different stages of the disease.
Most important findings
The review highlights the significant role of microbiome dysbiosis in ovarian cancer pathogenesis. Alterations in the gut microbiome, particularly an increase in Bacteroides, Prevotella, and Proteobacteria, are associated with increased cancer risk. In the cervicovaginal microbiome, a decrease in Lactobacillus species is linked to cancer progression. The review also underscores the impact of inflammatory cytokines, such as IL-6, which are influenced by the microbiome and contribute to tumor growth. Additionally, infections like Chlamydia, which are associated with pelvic inflammatory disease (PID), can increase the risk of ovarian cancer by triggering inflammation. The review further suggests that microbial signatures, such as changes in Lactobacillus and Acinetobacter populations, could be used as biomarkers for early detection and prognosis of ovarian cancer.
Key implications
The findings in this review suggest that the microbiome could be a valuable diagnostic tool and therapeutic target in ovarian cancer. The identification of microbial signatures linked to ovarian cancer offers the potential for non-invasive biomarkers that could improve early detection and prognosis. Moreover, the manipulation of the microbiome through therapies like FMT and VMT holds promise for enhancing the effectiveness of existing treatments and overcoming chemotherapy resistance. However, the review stresses the need for more research to validate these findings and determine how best to apply microbiome-based therapies in clinical settings. Understanding the complex interactions between the microbiome and ovarian cancer could lead to personalized treatment approaches based on an individual's microbiome profile, offering new hope for more effective cancer therapies.
Gut Microbiota-Based Immunotherapy: Engineered Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 for Oral Delivery of Glypican-1 in Pancreatic Cancer
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Oral delivery of a glypican-1–flagellin fusion by engineered EcN triggered systemic IgG and regulatory IL-10 in mice, confirming a safe probiotic cancer-vaccine chassis but indicating the need for stronger cellular adjuvanticity for PDAC.
What was studied?
Engineered Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 glypican-1 pancreatic cancer immunotherapy was investigated as an oral, microbiota-based vaccine strategy for pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC). This tumor overexpresses the heparan-sulfate proteoglycan GPC1 and is resistant to most systemic treatments. The authors constructed an EcN strain expressing a glypican-1–flagellin fusion (GPC1-FL) under a constitutive promoter, enabling the probiotic to survive in the gut, continuously release the tumour-associated antigen, and simultaneously provide a built-in adjuvant signal via TLR5 stimulation. They confirmed stable GPC1-FL expression in vitro, the recovery of engineered EcN from feces, and the persistence of antigen in the gastrointestinal tract after oral dosing, demonstrating that EcN can function as a living oral vaccine chassis in the gut environment.
Who was studied?
The work utilized murine pancreatic cancer PANC02 cells that were transfected to express human GPC1, allowing for the testing of antigen-specific responses against a relevant tumor target. This was confirmed by Western blot and flow cytometry, which showed that GPC1 did not alter cell growth and was present on the cell surface. Female C57BL/6 mice (three groups of five) then received oral immunizations on three spaced cycles with either engineered EcN GPC1-FL, wild-type EcN, or PBS, using gavage and feed mixing to ensure mucosal exposure. After the final dose, spleens, serum, and faeces were collected to assess systemic humoral responses, cytokine production, and in vivo bacterial persistence, providing a complete small-animal model of oral cancer vaccination with a probiotic vector.
Most important findings
Engineered EcN GPC1-FL induced a clear systemic anti-GPC1 IgG response that was significantly higher than both wild-type EcN and PBS, showing that oral delivery alone was sufficient to move the reaction from mucosal priming to systemic antibody production, a key step for any cancer vaccine. Cytokine analysis revealed a trend toward higher levels of IL-2 and IFN-γ in splenocytes restimulated with GPC1-expressing PANC02 cells. Still, the differences were not statistically significant, while serum IL-10 rose sharply in the EcN GPC1-FL group, indicating that the mucosal presentation of a self-related tumor antigen in the gut elicits a mixed activating–regulatory profile rather than a purely Th1 response. Western blotting of re-isolated EcN from faeces confirmed that the engineered strain persisted and continued to express the 110 kDa GPC1-FL protein in vivo, validating the gut as a production site. No weight loss or clinical toxicity occurred despite GPC1 baseline expression in normal tissues, supporting the preliminary safety of this oral EcN tumour vaccine concept.
Key implications
These data position engineered Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 glypican-1 pancreatic cancer vaccination as a plausible, patient-friendly immunotherapy that harnesses the gut–immune axis to present PDAC-associated antigens without injections. However, they also show that the antigen alone will not be enough to drive strong cytotoxic T cell responses and tumor rejection. Future iterations will need to combine the EcN GPC1-FL chassis with additional mucosal adjuvants, Th1-biasing signals, or checkpoint blockade to overcome the IL-10–skewed regulation seen here and to generate effector CD8⁺ T cells against GPC1⁺ tumours. For microbiome-signature databases, the study defines a precise construct—EcN background, constitutive GPC1-FL expression, oral route, detectable faecal antigen, systemic IgG, raised IL-10—that can be linked to PDAC cases with GPC1 overexpression and potentially to other GPC1⁺ malignancies such as breast and cholangiocarcinoma.
Current understandings of colibactin regulation
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review explains how pks+ E. coli control colibactin production and why iron, oxygen, inflammation, diet, and drugs change DNA damage risk. It highlights ClbR regulation, inflammation-linked clb upregulation, and interventions such as mesalamine, d-serine, and SCFAs that can reduce genotoxicity.
What was reviewed?
This review explained how pks-positive (pks+) E. coli regulate colibactin production, a microbiome-derived genotoxin encoded by the 19-gene clbA–clbS cluster, and why that regulation determines clinical relevance. The authors emphasized that colibactin production imposes a high metabolic burden and that the molecule is unstable, so pks+ bacteria tightly control expression to match permissive niches. They also grounded the clinical importance of this control in the toxin’s chemistry and biosynthesis: colibactin forms a near-symmetrical structure with two electrophilic cyclopropane “warheads” that can alkylate DNA, and it is assembled as an inactive precolibactin prodrug before maturation.
Who was reviewed?
Because this is a review, it synthesized evidence across human-associated pks+ bacteria and experimental model systems rather than analyzing a single cohort. The focus centered on gut-associated pks+ E. coli, especially conditions relevant to colorectal tumor biology and intestinal inflammation, alongside mechanistic studies in bacterial genetics and host–microbe models that directly measured clb operon transcription and genotoxic effects under defined environmental pressures. The review treated the “who” primarily as host contexts, patients and models with inflamed, hypoxic/anoxic, or nutrient- and iron-altered intestinal niches, because those contexts repeatedly shift colibactin output even when pks+ colonization persists.
What were the most important findings?
For a microbiome signatures database, the key major microbial association is functional: pks+ E. coli plus a permissive microenvironment predicts colibactin-mediated DNA injury. The review identified ClbR as the main transcriptional activator of the pks operon and described how the clbR–clbB intergenic VNTR region can tune clbR promoter activity, effectively modulating downstream toxin production. The authors also highlighted decisive external switches: iron limitation enhances clbR and clbA-related activation via Fur/rhyB-linked control, high oxygen represses colibactin through ArcA-dependent regulation, and inflammation increases clb operon expression in vivo. Clinically actionable modifiers emerged: mesalamine downregulates colibactin (including through PPK inhibition), d-serine reduces clb expression and genotoxicity, and short-chain fatty acids downregulate the pks island, while polymyxin B and prebiotic oligosaccharides such as inulin/GOS can upregulate expression and genotoxicity.
What are the greatest implications of this study/ review?
This review makes colibactin risk clinically interpretable: pks detection alone does not define hazard, because oxygen tension, iron availability, inflammation, diet, and medications can markedly raise or lower toxin output. It implies that clinicians and translational teams should pair microbiome genotyping (pks presence) with context signals that predict expression, especially inflamed and hypoxic/anoxic mucosa, where models show higher clb activity, and it supports prevention concepts that suppress genotoxic expression rather than broadly eliminating microbes. The TNF-blockade observation is particularly instructive: anti-TNF therapy reduced DNA damage and CRC development in infected mouse models without changing pks+ colonization, consistent with inflammation-driven regulation as a lever clinicians can influence.
Candida albicans Enables Staphylococcus aureus “Hitchhiking” Across Mucosa
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Staphylococcus aureus (S. Aureus)
Staphylococcus aureus (S. Aureus)
Staphylococcus aureus is a versatile skin and mucosal commensal that can transition into a highly virulent pathobiont. Known for its immune-evasive strategies, toxin production, and antibiotic resistance, it plays a significant role in chronic infections and microbiome imbalance.
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Candida albicans enables systemic Staphylococcus aureus infection via Als3p-mediated hyphal invasion. This “microbial hitchhiking” allows S. aureus to bypass epithelial barriers, with major implications for immunocompromised patients.
What was studied?
This study investigated a novel mechanism by which Candida albicans facilitates the invasion and systemic dissemination of Staphylococcus aureus through mucosal tissue. Specifically, the concept of Candida albicans Staphylococcus aureus 'hitchhiking' was examined, where researchers explored whether S. aureus can adhere to the invasive hyphal form of C. albicans via specific adhesin interactions, enabling it to bypass the need for a traditional epithelial breach. Key attention was given to the role of the C. albicans Als3p adhesin in mediating this “microbial hitchhiking,” allowing S. aureus to bind to fungal hyphae, penetrate tissue, and cause systemic disease. This hypothesis was tested through in vitro biofilm assays, ex vivo tongue models, and a murine model of oral co-colonization.
Who was studied?
The study used in vitro dual-species biofilm models, ex vivo murine tongue tissue, and immunosuppressed C57BL/6J mice. Multiple strains of S. aureus, including USA300 JE2 wild-type and 25 adhesin-deficient mutants, were tested for their binding ability to C. albicans hyphae. The fungal strains included C. albicans SC5314 wild-type, an Als3p-deficient mutant (als3Δ/Δ), and an Als3p-complemented strain. These models enabled evaluation of microbial binding, tissue invasion, and systemic dissemination under conditions mimicking human mucosal colonization in immunocompromised hosts.
Most important findings
The researchers found that S. aureus specifically binds to the hyphal form of C. albicans via the fungal Als3p adhesin. This interaction is essential for bacterial invasion across the mucosal barrier and subsequent dissemination. In vitro and real-time microscopy confirmed that S. aureus rapidly attaches to C. albicans hyphae. In the murine model, systemic infection and mortality occurred only when mice were co-colonized with S. aureus and Als3p-expressing C. albicans. Mice co-infected with the Als3p-deficient mutant showed no dissemination or mortality. Recovery of S. aureus and C. albicans from kidney tissue was only observed in mice infected with strains expressing Als3p. Additionally, three S. aureus adhesin mutants (ΔfnbB, ΔsasF, Δatl) showed significantly reduced hyphal binding, but no single staphylococcal adhesin was solely responsible, implying redundancy in adhesin interactions.
Tissue Site
Organism Recovered Only with Als3p
Tongue
S. aureus colonization enhanced by C. albicans presence regardless of Als3p
Kidney
S. aureus and C. albicans only recovered if Als3p was expressed
Key implications
This study introduces a paradigm-shifting concept in microbial pathogenesis: fungal-mediated bacterial invasion through mucosal surfaces. The discovery that C. albicans hyphae can serve as conduits for systemic S. aureus infection has profound clinical implications, particularly in immunocompromised patients where these microbes frequently co-colonize mucosal surfaces. This work identifies Als3p as a critical target for disrupting this pathogenic synergy, suggesting that Als3p or C. albicans inhibition may serve as a preventive strategy against invasive staphylococcal infections. The findings also underscore the need to screen for C. albicans colonization in critically ill patients as a risk factor for secondary bacterial sepsis.
Wide Spectrum Potent Antimicrobial Efficacy of Wound Dressings Impregnated with Cuprous Oxide Microparticles
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Wound dressings impregnated with cuprous oxide cut bioburden fast, block bacterial passage, and act against common wound microbes with durable activity, offering a practical tool to reshape the wound microbiome in support of healing.
What was studied?
This original study tests wound dressings impregnated with cuprous oxide and shows that they kill a wide range of microbes fast and keep bacteria from crossing the dressing. The team used standard textile biocidal tests at 37°C and found more than 10,000-fold drops in viable counts within three hours for major wound pathogens, with Candida albicans reaching that threshold by eighteen hours. The dressings kept full activity after natural aging for up to three years and after seven daily high-dose bacterial challenges, which signals durable copper release. The authors also compared these dressings to several silver products and reported stronger or at least comparable killing after one hour. The work explains why copper works across species, noting membrane damage, protein and nucleic acid injury, and oxidative stress, and it argues that stable, slow ion release from cuprous oxide drives the sustained effect on the dressing surface.
Who was studied?
The experiments used in vitro exposure of clinical and reference microbes that define wound bioburden. The panel covered methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, Staphylococcus epidermidis, Escherichia coli, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Enterobacter aerogenes, Enterococcus faecalis, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and Candida albicans. The authors also tested barrier function by placing inocula on the outer face and checking for growth beneath the dressing. Two- and three-layer formats blocked passage, and an adhesive-border format stopped ingress even after seven daily external inoculations. Control dressings without copper showed no killing and allowed passage. These tests reflect real wound threats because the species chosen are common in acute and chronic wound microbiomes and often form biofilms that delay healing.
Most important findings
The dressings caused at least a four-log drop in viable bacteria within three hours for all tested species and kept this effect after aging for up to three years, which proves stable biocidal output. After seven consecutive daily exposures to about one million K. pneumoniae cells, the dressings still yielded no recoverable colonies, while controls held the full inoculum, which shows sustained capacity under heavy soil. The copper dressings prevented microbes from crossing from the outside to the wound side in barrier tests, while controls leaked large numbers.
When compared head-to-head with multiple silver dressings at one hour, the copper dressings and two silver comparators cleared all organisms, while several other silver dressings left sizable counts, which places the copper option among the most active fast-killing dressings tested. For microbiome use, the study links fast copper killing to taxa that often dominate chronic wounds—MRSA, Pseudomonas, Enterobacterales, and Enterococcus—and sets an expected signature of reduced viable burden at the dressing–wound interface. It also frames resistance risk: the authors note that copper injures microbes at multiple sites and that reported copper tolerance is uncommon, which lowers the chance of selecting a single resistance path on the dressing surface.
Key implications
Clinicians can use these dressings to cut surface bioburden quickly and to block outside-in seeding, which may help wounds leave the inflammatory phase and move toward repair. In microbiome reports, expect falling relative and absolute loads of MRSA, Pseudomonas, and Enterobacterales under the dressing, with fewer culture recoveries and lower sequencing reads at follow-up. Pair this with gene markers of copper handling in any persistent isolates, such as copA or cus operons, to flag rare copper-tolerant strains. The durability after aging and repeated high-dose exposure supports weekly wear cycles in routine care. Because some silver dressings show weaker early killing, the copper option offers a practical first-line surface control when fast reduction in viable counts is a priority or when silver cytotoxicity is a concern.
Microbial Metallophores in the Productivity of Agroecosystems
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Microbial metallophores are vital in sustainable agriculture, enhancing nutrient availability, promoting plant growth, and mitigating heavy metal toxicity. The study highlights their potential in bioremediation and as biocontrol agents.
What was studied?
This study explored the role of metallophores, particularly microbial siderophores, in microbial ecology, metal acquisition, and plant-microbe interactions. The authors delved into their potential applications in sustainable agriculture, bioremediation, and biotechnology. Metallophores, small molecules that chelate metal ions, are pivotal in nutrient cycling and metal detoxification, crucial for plant growth and microbial health. The study discusses the use of metallophores in combating metal toxicity in soil and promoting plant health by enhancing nutrient availability.
Who was studied?
The study primarily focused on the role of microbial siderophores in promoting plant health and addressing soil metal toxicity. It included microorganisms such as Pseudomonas and Streptomyces species, known for their ability to produce metallophores. These microbes were studied in the context of agricultural applications, including their interaction with plants like Phaseolus vulgaris (common bean), and their impact on plant growth and pathogen resistance. The research also investigated microbial strains used in bioremediation and their role in enhancing plant growth under metal stress conditions.
Most important findings
The findings highlighted the significant role of metallophores in improving metal ion availability for plants and mitigating metal toxicity. For instance, siderophores produced by Pseudomonas putida KNP9 were shown to increase Phaseolus vulgaris biomass, while Streptomyces acidiscabies E13 helped cowpea plants acquire iron despite the presence of toxic metals. The study also revealed the potential for microbial metallophores to act as biocontrol agents against soil pathogens and improve soil health by reducing oxidative stress. Furthermore, the research emphasized the application of siderophores in phytoremediation, where they aid in removing heavy metals from contaminated soils, making them a viable solution for soil decontamination.
Key implications
The study underscores the importance of metallophores in sustainable agriculture by reducing the reliance on chemical fertilizers and pesticides. By improving nutrient availability and enhancing plant resistance to abiotic stress, microbial metallophores contribute to soil health and crop yield. These molecules could revolutionize agriculture by reducing environmental pollution, improving plant growth in metal-contaminated soils, and providing eco-friendly solutions for crop production. Additionally, siderophores' use in bioremediation could significantly mitigate heavy metal contamination, thus promoting long-term agricultural sustainability. Further research is necessary to explore the full potential of metallophores in various agricultural practices and scale up their application for wider environmental benefits.
Antimicrobial Resistance in Listeria Species
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review discusses the rising antimicrobial resistance in Listeria species, focusing on their resistance mechanisms to antibiotics, biocides, and heavy metals, and their implications for food safety and public health.
What was reviewed?
This review explored antimicrobial resistance in Listeria species, focusing on mechanisms by which these bacteria develop resistance to antibiotics, biocides, and heavy metals. It also highlighted the significance of this resistance in the context of food safety and public health, specifically in terms of their impact on foodborne illnesses.
Who was reviewed?
The review primarily focused on Listeria monocytogenes, the pathogen responsible for listeriosis in humans and animals. It also covered other Listeria species such as L. innocua and L. ivanovii, which are implicated in both clinical and environmental settings.
What were the most important findings?
The review detailed several key findings about Listeria species' resistance mechanisms. It was noted that, although multidrug resistance is not yet common, Listeria species are capable of rapidly acquiring resistance through mutations in chromosomal genes and horizontal gene transfer via mobile genetic elements such as plasmids and transposons. A notable mechanism of resistance includes efflux pumps, such as MdrL, FepA, and Lde, which expel a variety of antimicrobial agents from the bacterial cell. Additionally, Listeria species showed resistance to a range of antibiotics, including tetracycline, penicillin, and fluoroquinolones. The review also identified the role of efflux pumps in contributing to resistance to biocides, such as quaternary ammonium compounds, which are commonly used in food processing environments. Moreover, resistance to heavy metals like cadmium, arsenic, and copper was also highlighted, with Listeria species carrying genes that provide resistance to these metals, facilitating their survival in contaminated environments.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The implications of this review are crucial for both clinical and food safety contexts. The emerging resistance of Listeria species to multiple antibiotics and biocides poses a significant challenge to treatment and contamination control. The presence of mobile genetic elements, which facilitate the spread of resistance, indicates that Listeria could potentially contribute to the wider dissemination of antimicrobial resistance, complicating efforts to manage foodborne diseases. The review stresses the need for increased surveillance of Listeria resistance patterns, particularly in food production environments, to prevent the spread of resistant strains. Additionally, it calls for the development of more effective cleaning protocols and alternative treatment options to combat resistant Listeria strains, thereby enhancing food safety and public health outcomes.
Biology of Oral Streptococci
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review explains how oral streptococci shape biofilm formation, regulate microbial balance, and influence oral and systemic health through niche-specific adaptations.
What was reviewed?
This paper is a comprehensive review of the biology of oral streptococci, focusing on their ecological roles, metabolic traits, and interactions within the oral microbiome and with the human host. The authors synthesized microbiological, genetic, and clinical evidence to explain how oral streptococci function as early colonizers of the oral cavity, organizers of dental biofilms, and key modulators of oral health and disease. The review framed oral streptococci not as a single functional group but as a diverse collection of species whose behavior depends on niche, community context, and host factors.
Who was reviewed?
The review drew on studies involving human oral ecosystems across the lifespan, including healthy individuals, children during tooth eruption, and patients with dental caries, periodontal disease, endocarditis, and respiratory complications linked to oral bacteria. It integrated data from saliva, dental plaque, and mucosal surfaces, supported by in vitro biofilm models, genomic analyses, and animal studies. These sources allowed the authors to connect species-level traits with clinically relevant outcomes.
What were the most important findings?
The review established that oral streptococci dominate the early stages of oral biofilm formation and act as ecological gatekeepers for subsequent microbial colonization. Major microbial associations included Streptococcus mitis, Streptococcus sanguinis, Streptococcus gordonii, Streptococcus salivarius, Streptococcus mutans, and Streptococcus sobrinus, each occupying distinct niches on teeth or mucosal surfaces. Health-associated streptococci such as S. mitis, S. sanguinis, and S. gordonii promoted microbial balance by producing hydrogen peroxide, bacteriocins, and alkali-generating enzymes that suppressed acidogenic and pathogenic competitors. These species also interacted closely with host tissues, contributing to immune tolerance and epithelial homeostasis.
In contrast, cariogenic streptococci such as S. mutans displayed specialized adaptations for acid production, acid tolerance, and extracellular polysaccharide synthesis, enabling persistent biofilm growth under low pH conditions. The review highlighted how shifts in carbohydrate availability and salivary flow selectively favored these aciduric species, driving enamel demineralization and caries development. Importantly, oral streptococci were shown to engage in extensive metabolic cross-feeding and signaling with other oral microbes, shaping community structure through adhesion molecules, quorum sensing, and competitive exclusion. Beyond the oral cavity, the authors emphasized that streptococci can translocate or seed distant sites, contributing to infective endocarditis and respiratory infections when host barriers are compromised, underscoring their dual commensal–pathogenic potential.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
For clinicians, this review reinforces that oral streptococci are central regulators of oral ecosystem stability rather than incidental flora. It supports prevention strategies that preserve health-associated streptococcal communities while limiting ecological conditions that favor acidogenic and invasive strains, highlighting the microbiome as a modifiable factor in oral and systemic disease risk.
Oral Microbiota and Tumor—A New Perspective of Tumor Pathogenesis
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review explores how the oral microbiota influences cancer pathogenesis, highlighting its role in immune modulation, inflammation, and tumor progression. It emphasizes the potential of oral microbiota manipulation in improving cancer diagnosis and treatment outcomes.
What was studied?
This review article focuses on the role of oral microbiota in tumor pathogenesis. It explores how oral microbiota, typically associated with local oral diseases, can influence distant tumors through mechanisms like immune modulation, chronic inflammation, and DNA mutations. The study further examines how oral pathogens can either directly or indirectly drive carcinogenesis, influencing the initiation, development, and progression of tumors. It highlights the microbial components of the oral cavity that are implicated in tumorigenesis, particularly the bacteria Fusobacterium nucleatum and Porphyromonas gingivalis, and discusses their involvement in various cancers, including oral, colorectal, and gastric cancers.
Who was studied?
The article synthesizes findings from multiple studies involving patients diagnosed with various cancers, especially oral cancers and gastrointestinal cancers. It examines how shifts in the oral microbiota, particularly an imbalance in bacterial populations (dysbiosis), correlate with tumor formation and progression. The studies reviewed include both clinical trials and animal models that have explored the microbiome in relation to cancer. These studies highlight the impact of oral pathogens, such as Fusobacterium nucleatum and Porphyromonas gingivalis, in driving tumor progression, immune evasion, and metastasis.
Most important findings
The review emphasizes several key findings regarding the role of the oral microbiota in cancer. It identifies how microbial communities in the oral cavity can translocate to distant organs via the bloodstream or digestive tract, contributing to cancer progression. Specific bacteria, like Fusobacterium nucleatum and Porphyromonas gingivalis, are linked to various stages of tumor development, with these pathogens playing a role in immune suppression and chronic inflammation. Fusobacterium nucleatum, for instance, activates inflammatory pathways that promote colorectal cancer progression. Moreover, the article highlights the importance of oral microbiota in the regulation of tumor microenvironments, where certain microbes enhance tumor progression by altering immune responses, while others have the potential to inhibit tumor growth by activating antitumor immunity. The review also points out the relationship between oral microbiota composition and the efficacy of cancer treatments, particularly how microbes can affect the response to chemotherapy and immunotherapy.
Key implications
The review suggests that the oral microbiota could be a crucial factor in cancer diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment. The presence of specific oral bacteria in the tumor microenvironment can potentially serve as biomarkers for cancer detection or to predict therapeutic outcomes. The manipulation of oral microbiota through probiotics, antibiotics, or other microbiome-targeted interventions could offer novel approaches for enhancing cancer treatment, particularly in immunotherapy. However, further research is needed to better understand the specific mechanisms through which oral microbiota influence tumor progression and therapeutic efficacy. The article advocates for deeper studies into how dysbiosis in the oral microbiota may contribute to systemic diseases like cancer and how modifying the microbiota could prevent or treat these diseases.
Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 Antagonizes Candida albicans Growth and Protects Intestinal Cells from C. albicans-Mediated Damage
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 inhibited Candida albicans growth, reduced virulence traits and protected intestinal cells, showing strong preventive potential through contact based and soluble antifungal mechanisms.
What was studied?
This study examined how Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 antagonizes Candida albicans growth and how this interaction protects intestinal epithelial cells from fungal damage. The authors investigated this microbiome interaction using co-culture models to understand mechanistic features linked to the focus keyphrase microbial antagonism between Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 and Candida albicans.
Who was studied?
The work used laboratory strains of Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 and Candida albicans SC5314, alongside human intestinal epithelial cell lines C2BBe1 and HT29 MTX. These cells provided a controlled model of the gut surface to assess fungal injury and bacterial protection under conditions that mimic the human intestinal environment.
Most important findings
The study found that Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 exerted fungicidal pressure on Candida albicans during direct co-culture, reducing fungal survival and slowing growth. A mild soluble inhibitory factor appeared only when both organisms interacted, suggesting contact-dependent signaling. Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 reduced epithelial cell damage by half when added after fungal infection and prevented almost all injury when introduced before infection. It also disrupted microcolony formation and shortened hyphae, which are key virulence features. These effects occurred both through direct contact and distant signaling, showing dual antimicrobial modes.
Key implications
This work supports the therapeutic value of Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 in limiting Candida albicans overgrowth and protecting the intestinal barrier. Its ability to suppress filamentation, microcolonies and epithelial injury positions it as a potential preventive strategy in fungal dysbiosis. The observed dual contact-dependent and soluble effects add important mechanistic features to microbiome-based antifungal approaches.
Amebicidal Activity of Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 Against Entamoeba histolytica
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study shows that Escherichia coli Nissle exerts strong dose dependent amebicidal activity against Entamoeba histolytica through oxidative stress and structural damage, highlighting its therapeutic potential.
What was studied?
This study examined the amebicidal activity of Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 against Entamoeba histolytica, with a key focus on how EcN amebicidal activity functions through reactive oxygen species and direct morphological disruption. The researchers explored whether EcN could reduce trophozoite viability and induce oxidative stress in a controlled in vitro system.
Who was studied?
The work used the axenic EGG strain of E. histolytica isolated from a symptomatic patient in Manaus and co-cultured it with EcN prepared at graded concentrations from 10² to 10⁹ CFU mL. Human subjects were not included. The trophozoites served as the biological model for evaluating EcN amebicidal responses, oxidative stress induction, and structural injury.
Most important findings
The study showed that EcN induced a substantial dose-dependent reduction in trophozoite viability, with the highest effect seen at 10⁹ CFU mL after eighteen hours. Trophozoites exposed to EcN showed rounding, vacuolization, reduced size, and visible cytoplasmic loss. EcN also increased superoxide and hydrogen peroxide production at all concentrations, indicating oxidative stress as part of the killing mechanism. These effects highlight a new antimicrobial role for EcN that expands beyond its known antagonism toward bacterial and fungal pathogens.
Key implications
This study suggests that EcN amebicidal activity may offer a promising complementary strategy for managing amebiasis, especially where metronidazole response is incomplete. The oxidative injury and structural damage caused by EcN support its potential role as a microbiome-based therapeutic. These findings also provide a distinct microbial signature that could be relevant for databases tracking probiotic pathogen antagonism. Human studies remain necessary before clinical translation.
Diversity of Mercury-Tolerant Microorganisms
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review explains how mercury-tolerant bacteria, fungi, and microalgae resist and transform mercury. It highlights detox genes such as the mer system, biofilm binding, and redox-driven methylation and demethylation that change mercury toxicity and exposure risk across ecosystems.
What was reviewed?
This review summarized the diversity of mercury-tolerant microorganisms and explained how bacteria, fungi, and microalgae survive and transform mercury in contaminated environments. The authors connected mercury’s environmental forms (elemental, inorganic, and organic such as methylmercury) to microbial processes that either convert mercury into less toxic forms or, in some settings, generate the most toxic form through methylation. They framed these organisms as practical tools for bioremediation because microbes can bind mercury, accumulate it, chemically transform it, or reduce it to volatile elemental mercury.
Who was reviewed?
The authors reviewed research on environmental microorganisms rather than human patients. They covered microbes isolated from mercury-impacted soils, sediments, seawater, industrial and municipal waste streams, mining-affected ecosystems, and plant-associated niches such as rhizospheres. They highlighted findings from diverse microbial groups, including sulfate-reducing and iron-reducing bacteria linked to methylmercury formation, as well as bioaccumulating and volatilizing strains that can lower bioavailable mercury in water or soil.
What were the most important findings?
The review emphasized that mercury tolerance is widespread and multi-mechanistic, and it often depends on genetic detoxification systems plus broader stress defenses. A central “microbiome signature” is the mer operon and related genes that encode transport and detoxification functions, including mercury uptake and regulation, cleavage of carbon–mercury bonds in organomercurials, and reduction of Hg2+ to Hg0. Beyond mer genes, many organisms rely on extracellular polymeric substances and biofilms that bind mercury outside the cell, thiol-based buffering and antioxidant responses that limit oxidative damage, and sequestration or precipitation that immobilizes mercury. The authors also reinforced that methylation and demethylation capacities vary by physiology and environment, with oxygen-free, nutrient, and redox conditions shaping whether microbial communities increase methylmercury risk or push mercury toward less harmful forms.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
For clinicians tracking microbiome-relevant exposures, this review supports a clear translational point: mercury risk is not only about dose, but also about microbial community function, especially genes and pathways that control mercury speciation. Environments that enrich methylating groups can raise methylmercury formation potential, while environments dominated by detoxifying and binding organisms can reduce bioavailable mercury and shift exposure profiles downstream in food webs. For remediation and public health, the review argues that bioremediation can be more sustainable than many chemical methods, but it requires careful design because some microbial activities can inadvertently increase methylmercury under certain conditions. For a microbiome signatures database, the most useful entry is functional: enrichment of merA/merB-linked detoxification capacity, EPS/biofilm-mediated binding potential, and anaerobic methylation potential in sulfate- and iron-reducing guilds.
Akkermansia muciniphila in the Human Gastrointestinal Tract: When, Where, and How?
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review maps where Akkermansia muciniphila appears across the human gut and beyond, from early infancy to old age. Evidence links higher abundance with stronger mucus-barrier function and better metabolic health, while lower levels track with IBD, appendicitis severity, obesity, and dysglycemia.
What was reviewed?
This paper is a narrative review that synthesizes human and translational research on Akkermansia muciniphila, with a specific focus on when this bacterium appears across the human lifespan, where it is detected along and beyond the gastrointestinal tract, and how its physiology allows it to occupy these niches. The authors integrate evidence from 16S rRNA sequencing, metagenomics, quantitative PCR, fluorescence in situ hybridization, biopsy-based studies, and in vitro gut models to map the spatial and temporal ecology of A. muciniphila. Beyond its well-known residence in the colonic mucus layer, the review evaluates reports of Akkermansia-like signatures in the oral cavity, small intestine, appendix, biliary system, pancreas, blood under disease states, and human breast milk, and interprets these findings in the context of local pH, oxygen tension, bile exposure, mucin type, and nutrient availability.
Who was reviewed?
The review draws on studies conducted in human populations across the full lifespan, including neonates, infants, adults, elderly individuals, centenarians, and semi-supercentenarians, as well as geographically diverse cohorts from Europe, Asia, Africa, and industrialized versus traditional populations. It also incorporates data from patients with inflammatory bowel disease, appendicitis, obesity, prediabetes and type 2 diabetes, gallstone disease, biliary disorders, chronic pancreatitis, cirrhosis, and septicemia, alongside healthy controls. Sample types reviewed include feces, mucosal biopsies from different intestinal segments, luminal contents, bile and gallstones, pancreatic tissue obtained during surgery, saliva, oral rinses, breast tissue, colostrum, mature human milk, and blood in pathological contexts. Animal and in vitro gut model studies are referenced to clarify mechanisms of colonization, metabolism, and host signaling that cannot be directly tested in humans.
What were the most important findings?
The review establishes that the primary ecological niche of Akkermansia muciniphila is the mucus layer of the large intestine, where it can account for roughly 3% of the microbial community in healthy adults and contribute to mucus turnover, short-chain fatty acid production, and barrier support. Colonization begins early in life, with detection in a minority of one‑month‑old infants and rapid increases in prevalence and abundance by 6–12 months, and persistence into old age with variability driven by geography, diet, and host factors. Outside the colon, Akkermansia-like sequences are repeatedly detected at low abundance in the oral cavity, small intestine, appendix, bile, pancreas, and breast milk, suggesting transient colonization, niche adaptation, or reservoir functions rather than contamination.
Physiologically, A. muciniphila grows optimally at 37 °C and pH ~6.5, tolerates nanomolar oxygen and low bile concentrations, degrades mucin-derived glycans, and produces acetate and propionate, with downstream cross-feeding that supports butyrate-producing taxa such as Faecalibacterium prausnitzii. Clinically relevant major microbial associations emerge consistently, with lower abundance linked to inflammatory bowel disease, greater appendicitis severity, childhood obesity, antibiotic exposure with later obesity risk, and impaired glucose metabolism, while higher abundance associates with metabolic resilience, athletic phenotypes, and healthier aging. Mechanistic studies further show that A. muciniphila and its outer membrane protein Amuc_1100 strengthen epithelial integrity and modulate immune signaling.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
For clinicians, this review positions Akkermansia muciniphila as a robust indicator of mucus-layer health and intestinal barrier function, rather than simply another commensal taxon. Consistently low levels should prompt consideration of mucus depletion, chronic inflammation, metabolic dysfunction, antibiotic burden, or dietary patterns that limit mucin–microbe interactions, while detection outside the colon may signal barrier disruption or disease-specific translocation. The findings support the use of A. muciniphila as a candidate biomarker in microbiome profiling and as a target for intervention through diet, prebiotics, or next-generation microbial therapeutics, while emphasizing the need for strain-level resolution, safety assessment, and contextual interpretation. Importantly, the review cautions clinicians to interpret abundance changes within ecological networks, as the benefits of A. muciniphila extend through its metabolic cross-feeding and immune effects, underscoring its role as a functional keystone in gut health rather than an isolated probiotic signal.
The Dysbiosis of Gut Microbiota Caused by Low-Dose Cadmium Aggravate the Injury of Mice Liver through Increasing Intestinal Permeability
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study reveals how low-dose cadmium exposure disrupts gut microbiota, increasing intestinal permeability and liver injury in mice. The findings emphasize the role of microbiota in modulating toxin absorption and liver function.
What was studied?
The study examined the effects of low-dose cadmium exposure on the gut microbiota, intestinal permeability, and liver injury in mice. Researchers aimed to understand the interplay between cadmium-induced dysbiosis in gut microbiota and its subsequent effects on liver function, specifically how increased intestinal permeability might lead to greater cadmium accumulation in the liver. By assessing various microbial communities and conducting transcriptomic analyses, the study explored the molecular pathways activated by cadmium exposure.
Who was studied?
Female C57BL/6J mice, aged six weeks and weighing 22g, were used in this study. These mice were selected for their genetic homogeneity, which is crucial for controlled experimental outcomes. The mice were divided into three groups: a control group, a low cadmium treatment group, and a group treated with both cadmium and an antibiotic cocktail to deplete gut microbiota. This study extended over a year to mimic long-term environmental exposure to cadmium and assess the cumulative effects on both gut health and liver function.
Most important findings
The study found that low-dose cadmium exposure significantly altered the gut microbiota composition in mice, leading to dysbiosis. This disruption of the microbiota resulted in increased intestinal permeability, which facilitated higher cadmium accumulation in the liver. Through transcriptomic analysis, 162 genes were identified as differentially expressed, with a notable upregulation of genes involved in chemical carcinogenesis and cellular response to stress. Furthermore, the abundance of beneficial gut bacteria, particularly Akkermansia muciniphila, was significantly reduced, which correlated with the increased intestinal permeability and liver injury. The depletion of gut microbiota through an antibiotic cocktail partially restored the expression of genes related to tight junction proteins, thus providing partial protection against the adverse effects of cadmium.
Key implications
These findings highlight the critical role of the gut microbiome in modulating the toxicity of environmental pollutants like cadmium. The altered microbiota not only contributes to increased intestinal permeability but also plays a direct role in cadmium absorption, suggesting that maintaining a healthy microbiome could be an important strategy in mitigating environmental toxin-related health risks. The study also underscores the need for further research into the gut-liver axis and its implications for chronic diseases linked to environmental toxins. These insights could pave the way for microbiome-targeted therapies to protect against heavy metal toxicity.
Listeria monocytogenes Biofilms in the Food Industry: Is the Current Hygiene Program Sufficient to Combat the Persistence of the Pathogen?
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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The review examines the persistence of Listeria monocytogenes biofilms in the food industry and evaluates current cleaning methods, offering insights into innovative control strategies.
What was reviewed?
The review examined the persistence and control ofListeria monocytogenes biofilms in the food industry. It evaluated current cleaning and disinfection methods used in food processing environments to combat the pathogen's resistance and persistence, particularly focusing on biofilm formation in various food sectors like dairy, meat, fish, and ready-to-eat products.
Who was reviewed?
The review focuses on Listeria monocytogenes, a widespread foodborne pathogen, and its behavior in the food industry. It reviewed studies involving biofilm formation on industrial surfaces, the effectiveness of cleaning and disinfection methods, and the pathogen’s persistence in food processing environments.
What were the most important findings?
The review highlighted that biofilm formation by Listeria monocytogenes significantly contributes to its persistence in food processing environments. Biofilms are highly resistant to conventional sanitizing agents, which makes the pathogen difficult to eliminate from surfaces. The review discussed how biofilms form on various materials such as stainless steel, polystyrene, and rubber, and how these surfaces can become sources of contamination. Furthermore, it was noted that the pathogen's resistance is due to its extracellular matrix (ECM), which protects it from environmental stresses and antimicrobial agents. While cleaning and disinfection are critical, their effectiveness varies, with more resistant biofilms being harder to treat. The review also emphasized the importance of developing alternative strategies, such as bacteriophages, essential oils, and enzymes, to enhance biofilm control in food production.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The review underscores the urgent need for improved cleaning and disinfection protocols in the food industry to manage Listeria monocytogenes biofilms more effectively. It highlights that current methods are often insufficient due to biofilm resistance, leading to persistent contamination risks. The review also suggests that the food industry must adopt a more comprehensive approach, combining traditional cleaning with innovative solutions like bacteriophages and enzymes. These advancements could significantly reduce contamination risks, improve food safety, and prevent outbreaks of listeriosis, especially in high-risk sectors such as dairy, meat, and ready-to-eat foods.
Gut Microbiota and Colonization Resistance against Bacterial Enteric Infection
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review explains how gut microbiota prevent bacterial enteric infections through metabolic competition, antimicrobial activity, barrier support, and ecosystem stability.
What was reviewed?
This paper reviewed how the gut microbiota mediates colonization resistance against bacterial enteric infections, focusing on ecological, metabolic, and microbiological mechanisms that prevent pathogen establishment and disease. The authors synthesized mechanistic and translational evidence to explain how a healthy gut microbial ecosystem restricts invasion by enteric pathogens through antimicrobial production, metabolic competition, maintenance of epithelial barriers, and interaction with bacteriophages. Rather than treating enteric infection as a simple host–pathogen interaction, the review positioned infection as a failure of microbiome-driven ecosystem stability. It emphasized that colonization resistance is an emergent property of complex microbial networks whose disruption—most commonly by antibiotics or other medications—creates permissive conditions for pathogens such as Clostridioides difficile, Salmonella enterica, enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli, Shigella flexneri, Campylobacter jejuni, Vibrio cholerae, and Yersinia enterocolitica to colonize and cause disease.
Who was reviewed?
The review integrated data from human clinical populations, including hospitalized patients, antibiotic-exposed individuals, and populations at risk for enteric infection, alongside extensive evidence from animal models and in vitro systems. Germ-free mice, antibiotic-treated mice, gnotobiotic models, and controlled colonization experiments were central to establishing causal relationships between specific microbial functions and pathogen resistance. Human data were drawn from observational studies, fecal microbiota transplantation outcomes, and clinical associations linking microbiome disruption to infection susceptibility. This combination allowed the authors to align mechanistic insights with clinically relevant outcomes.
What were the most important findings?
The review demonstrated that colonization resistance is mediated through multiple coordinated mechanisms driven by commensal microbes. Short-chain fatty acid–producing bacteria emerged as major microbial associations, with acetate, propionate, and butyrate shaping luminal pH, suppressing pathogen growth, and modulating virulence gene expression. Secondary bile acid–producing Clostridia, including species such as Clostridium scindens, played a critical role by converting primary bile acids that promote pathogen germination into secondary bile acids that inhibit vegetative growth, particularly for C. difficile.
Bacteriocin-producing commensals, including Lactobacillus, Enterococcus, and Escherichia coli strains, directly inhibited pathogens such as Listeria monocytogenes, Salmonella Typhimurium, and Yersinia enterocolitica without broadly disrupting the microbiome. Nutrient competition was shown to be highly pathogen-specific, with commensals depriving pathogens of key carbon sources, amino acids, and micronutrients such as iron and zinc. The integrity of the mucus layer also emerged as a central defense, with microbiota-accessible carbohydrate depletion leading to mucus erosion and increased pathogen proximity to the epithelium. The review further highlighted bacteriophages as underappreciated contributors to colonization resistance by selectively targeting pathogens and shaping microbial community structure.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The major clinical implication is that susceptibility to bacterial enteric infection reflects disruption of microbiome function rather than mere pathogen exposure. The findings strongly support microbiome-preserving strategies, including antibiotic stewardship, diet-based interventions, rational probiotic or consortium therapies, and targeted microbiota restoration. For clinicians, the review reinforces that restoring ecosystem function is central to preventing infection recurrence and reducing disease severity.
Role of internalin proteins in the pathogenesis of Listeria monocytogenes
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review explores the role of internalin proteins in Listeria monocytogenes pathogenesis, focusing on their ability to facilitate bacterial invasion, spread, and crossing of key host barriers such as the intestinal, blood-brain, and placental barriers.
What was reviewed?
This review discussed the roles of internalin proteins (InlA, InlB, InlC, InlF, and InlP) in the pathogenesis of Listeria monocytogenes. The focus was on how these proteins facilitate the bacterium’s ability to invade human host cells, traverse anatomical barriers, and spread within tissues. It emphasized the mechanisms through which these internalins interact with various host receptors, influencing bacterial internalization, cell-to-cell spread, and overall virulence.
Who was reviewed?
The review primarily focused on Listeria monocytogenes and its internalin proteins, specifically InlA, InlB, InlC, InlF, and InlP. These proteins interact with host cell receptors to promote infection and enable the bacterium to cross important barriers such as the intestinal, blood-brain, and placental barriers. The study highlighted how these interactions contribute to the spread of Listeria within the host and to the establishment of systemic infection.
What were the most important findings?
The review found that the internalin proteins of Listeria monocytogenes are crucial for the bacterium’s ability to invade and spread within host tissues. InlA and InlB were identified as key players in the initial entry of bacteria into human cells by binding to E-cadherin and the Met receptor, respectively. InlA-mediated entry is particularly important for Listeria to cross the intestinal barrier by inducing transcytosis in goblet cells, which express E-cadherin on their apical surface. InlC and InlP were found to play significant roles in cell-to-cell spread and placental infection by interacting with Tuba and afadin, respectively, to facilitate bacterial movement through host tissues. Additionally, InlF was highlighted for its role in promoting Listeria entry into brain endothelial cells, contributing to the ability of Listeria to breach the blood-brain barrier. These findings underscore the diverse functions of internalins in facilitating infection at multiple sites and highlight the intricate mechanisms by which Listeria navigates host defenses.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The review has profound implications for understanding how Listeria monocytogenes causes infection and how it evades host immune defenses. By highlighting the role of internalins in crossing key anatomical barriers and spreading within tissues, the study provides insight into the pathogenesis of Listeria, which can lead to severe conditions like meningitis and abortion. This understanding opens up potential therapeutic avenues, including the development of vaccines or drugs that target specific internalin-host receptor interactions, which could prevent bacterial entry and spread. Additionally, the findings contribute to a deeper understanding of the role of cell adhesion molecules in bacterial pathogenesis and host-pathogen interactions, which is critical for designing effective interventions to combat Listeria infections, particularly in vulnerable populations such as pregnant women and the immunocompromised.
The biofunction of Akkermansia muciniphila in intestinal-related diseases
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review explains how Akkermansia muciniphila regulates gut immunity, barrier integrity, and metabolism across intestinal diseases. Evidence supports its role as a key microbial signal in inflammation, obesity, diabetes, and colorectal cancer, with postbiotic components showing strong clinical promise.
What was reviewed?
This review synthesized experimental, translational, and clinical evidence describing the biological functions of Akkermansia muciniphila in intestinal-related diseases. The authors evaluated how this mucin-degrading bacterium contributes to intestinal homeostasis, immune regulation, and metabolic balance, with emphasis on mechanistic pathways rather than descriptive abundance alone. The review integrated findings on live bacteria, pasteurized cells, extracellular vesicles, and specific bacterial proteins to explain how A. muciniphila influences disease development and therapeutic response.
Who was reviewed?
The review incorporated data from human cohorts with inflammatory bowel disease, colorectal cancer, irritable bowel syndrome, obesity, diabetes, and liver disease, alongside healthy controls. It also drew extensively from murine models of colitis, metabolic syndrome, tumorigenesis, and liver injury, as well as in vitro epithelial and immune cell systems. These populations allowed comparison of A. muciniphila behavior across inflammatory, metabolic, and oncologic contexts.
What were the most important findings?
Across disease states, Akkermansia muciniphila consistently emerged as a major microbial association linked to preserved mucus barrier integrity, reduced inflammation, and improved metabolic outcomes. Reduced abundance correlated with ulcerative colitis, Crohn’s disease, colorectal cancer, obesity, and both type 1 and type 2 diabetes, while enrichment aligned with improved epithelial tight junctions, increased regulatory T-cell activity, and lower pro-inflammatory cytokine signaling. Mechanistically, A. muciniphila and its components activated TLR2-dependent pathways, enhanced AMPK signaling, promoted short-chain fatty acid–mediated immune tolerance, and supported cross-feeding with butyrate-producing taxa. Importantly, pasteurized A. muciniphila, extracellular vesicles, and proteins such as Amuc_1100 and Amuc_2172 frequently demonstrated stronger and safer immunometabolic effects than live bacteria, particularly in colitis, metabolic disease, and colorectal cancer models. However, the review also noted strain-specific and context-dependent effects, with some models showing exacerbation of inflammation, underscoring the need for precision.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review positions Akkermansia muciniphila as a functional keystone organism rather than a passive biomarker. For clinicians, low abundance may signal mucus barrier disruption, immune dysregulation, or metabolic endotoxemia. The findings strongly support postbiotic strategies using defined A. muciniphila components over live administration, improving safety and translational potential. These insights are directly relevant for microbiome signature databases, therapeutic development, and clinical interpretation of gut microbial profiles.
Germinant Synergy Facilitates Clostridium difficile Spore Germination under Physiological Conditions
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study explores the conditions that regulate C. difficile spore germination in the GI tract, showing how pH, bile salts, calcium, and amino acids interact to trigger germination, and how this affects C. difficile infection risk.
What was studied?
This study investigated the germination process of Clostridium difficile (C. difficile) spores in the gastrointestinal tract and the factors that influence this process. The researchers specifically focused on the conditions within the GI tract, such as pH, bile salts, magnesium and calcium, that facilitate the activation of C. difficile spores. The study also explored how these environmental factors interact with each other, particularly the synergy between bile salts, calcium, and amino acids, to trigger efficient spore germination.
Who was studied?
The study focused on Clostridium difficile spores and their germination process. It also examined murine models (mice) to explore how C. difficile spores interact with gastrointestinal contents in vivo, including conditions that influence the germination process within the stomach, duodenum, ileum, and other parts of the GI tract.
What were the most important findings?
The study demonstrated that C. difficile spore germination is regulated by specific conditions within the gastrointestinal tract, including pH and the presence of bile salts, calcium, and amino acids. The researchers identified the ileum as the primary location for spore germination due to its neutral pH, which contrasts with the more acidic conditions found in the stomach and duodenum, where germination is inhibited. Furthermore, the study showed that calcium and glycine (and other amino acids) exhibit a synergistic effect, enabling C. difficile spores to germinate at lower concentrations of these germinants than previously thought. Interestingly, the presence of chenodeoxycholate (CDCA) inhibited germination but could be overcome by the synergy of calcium and glycine. This finding has important implications for understanding the environmental triggers for C. difficile infections and how bacterial spore germination can be controlled.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This research has significant clinical implications, particularly regarding the treatment and prevention of Clostridium difficile infections (CDI). The findings suggest that the GI tract's pH plays a crucial role in regulating spore germination, and that the conditions promoting germination in the ileum could be exploited to prevent CDI. Additionally, the synergy between bile salts, calcium, and amino acids could potentially be leveraged to develop new therapeutic strategies for managing CDI by controlling spore germination. Furthermore, the study also highlights the potential role of proton pump inhibitors (PPIs) in altering the pH balance in the GI tract, which may increase the risk of CDI by promoting earlier spore germination. This knowledge could help guide more effective treatment approaches, including better management of antibiotics and acid-reducing therapies.
Microcins mediate competition among Enterobacteriaceae in the inflamed gut
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Probiotics
Probiotics
Probiotics are live microorganisms that offer significant health benefits when administered in adequate amounts. They primarily work by modulating the gut microbiome, supporting a balanced microbial ecosystem. Probiotics have been shown to improve gut health, modulate immune responses, and even influence metabolic and mental health disorders. With growing evidence supporting their therapeutic potential, probiotics are increasingly recognized for their role in treating conditions like irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), antibiotic-associated diarrhea (AAD), and even mental health conditions like depression and anxiety through their impact on the gut-brain axis.
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The study explores how Escherichia coli Nissle 1917’s microcins mediate competition in the inflamed gut, showing potential for therapeutic use in enterobacterial infections and colitis management.
What was studied?
This study examined the role of microcins produced by Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 (EcN) in mediating competition among Enterobacteriaceae in the inflamed gut. The researchers investigated how these small antimicrobial peptides enabled EcN to limit the expansion of both commensal and pathogenic Enterobacteriaceae, particularly under iron-limiting conditions, which are common during intestinal inflammation. The team conducted in vitro and in vivo experiments using mouse models of colitis to observe the impact of EcN’s microcin production on the gut microbiota, focusing on its ability to outcompete pathogens, such as Salmonella enterica, and pathobionts, including adherent-invasive E. coli (AIEC).
Who was studied?
The study primarily focused on Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 (EcN), its microcin-producing wild-type strain, and mutant strains incapable of producing microcins. The in vivo experiments were performed using specific pathogen-free (SPF) C57BL/6 mice treated with dextran sulfate sodium (DSS) to induce colitis, and germ-free mice to study colonization in the absence of pre-existing microbiota. Additionally, Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium (STm), AIEC, and a commensal E. coli (cEc) strain were used to model pathogen competition within the gut. Colonization levels, microbial community composition, and histopathological changes in the intestines were assessed.
Most important findings
The study demonstrated that microcins produced by EcN enabled it to limit the growth of competing Enterobacteriaceae during colitis. EcN's microcin genes (mcmA and mchB) were expressed under iron-limited conditions, enabling EcN to outcompete Salmonella and commensal E. coli in the inflamed gut. In DSS-treated mice, wild-type EcN reduced Salmonella colonization, while microcin mutants showed significantly lower competitive ability. Microcins, however, did not considerably impact the gut microbiota, suggesting their narrow-spectrum activity. Furthermore, therapeutic administration of wild-type EcN reduced Salmonella colonization and associated inflammation, with microcin mutants showing reduced effectiveness. This study provides the first in vivo evidence of microcin-mediated competition within the gut, showing microcins as a potential therapeutic tool for enterobacterial infections in inflammatory conditions.
Key implications
The findings suggest that microcins could be developed as targeted therapeutic agents to treat enterobacterial infections, particularly in the context of gut inflammation. Since microcins help beneficial bacteria, such as EcN, outcompete pathogens, they may offer an alternative to broad-spectrum antibiotics, preserving beneficial gut microbiota while suppressing harmful pathogens. Additionally, their role in nutrient competition, particularly for iron, highlights a potential pathway for manipulating gut microbial dynamics during dysbiosis or disease. The therapeutic use of microcin-producing probiotics may be beneficial for conditions such as colitis and inflammatory bowel diseases.
The siderophore yersiniabactin binds copper to protect pathogens during infection
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Yersiniabactin binds copper in vivo, protects UPEC from copper stress, and blocks catecholate-driven Cu(II)→Cu(I) toxicity, yielding a clear urinary microbiome signature with direct clinical use.
What was studied?
This original study shows that yersiniabactin binds copper in vivo and protects uropathogenic Escherichia coli during urinary infection. The authors used targeted mass spectrometry to detect the Cu(II)–yersiniabactin complex directly in mouse and human urine, then tested whether this chemistry changes copper stress and survival. They compared the growth and viability of strains that make yersiniabactin with mutants that lack it, probed competition with catecholate siderophores, and measured how apo-yersiniabactin prevents toxic copper redox cycling. By pairing metabolite detection with functional assays, the study links a clear biochemical event to a survival advantage under host copper pressure in the urinary tract, and it reframes a classic “iron siderophore” as a broader metallophore with clinical impact.
Who was studied?
The work focused on uropathogenic E. coli (UPEC), centered on strain UTI89 and isogenic mutants that lack yersiniabactin biosynthesis (ΔybtS) or catecholate production (ΔentB). The team analyzed urine and bladder tissue from infected C3H/HeN mice, and they examined midstream urine from women with acute cystitis, confirming whether the infecting isolate expressed yersiniabactin. In both hosts, liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry detected the Cu(II)–yersiniabactin complex, often in excess of the Fe(III)–yersiniabactin form, which shows that copper binding occurs during infection and not only in vitro. They then linked this signal to phenotype by showing that clinical urinary isolates resist copper more than non-urinary strains from the same patients and that apo-yersiniabactin rescues a biosynthetic mutant from copper toxicity, thereby tying human findings to mechanistic tests.
Most important findings
Yersiniabactin formed a stable complex with Cu(II) in physiologic fluids and did so in vivo during UTI, with most mouse and human samples showing more Cu(II)–yersiniabactin than Fe(III)–yersiniabactin. Yersiniabactin expression correlated with higher copper resistance among urinary isolates, and loss of yersiniabactin sensitized UTI89 to copper; adding apo-yersiniabactin restored survival, but adding pre-formed Cu(II)–yersiniabactin did not, which proves that open copper-binding capacity drives protection. The study also resolved opposing roles for siderophore classes: catecholate siderophores, including enterobactin or its 2,3-dihydroxybenzoate moiety, reduced Cu(II) to more toxic Cu(I) and deepened killing, while yersiniabactin prevented that reduction by sequestering Cu(II) first. Together these data define a clean microbiome signature for UPEC: presence of the yersiniabactin locus predicts copper tolerance in the urinary niche, whereas abundant catecholate output without yersiniabactin predicts copper-sensitized growth.
Key implications
Clinicians can read yersiniabactin as a copper-protection trait that helps UPEC persist during inflammation, when local copper rises. In a microbiome signatures database, tag “yersiniabactin binds copper” with features that include in vivo Cu(II)–yersiniabactin detection, improved survival under micromolar copper, and the protective block of catecholate-driven Cu(II)→Cu(I) reduction. Pair this with genomic markers such as the yersiniabactin receptor gene fyuA and biosynthetic genes to flag strains suited for the urinary tract. These markers explain why yersiniabactin-positive Enterobacterales expand in copper-stressed urine and why copper-based device or topical strategies may select for such strains. Therapeutically, blocking yersiniabactin biosynthesis or uptake could unmask catecholate-dependent copper toxicity and tip control toward the host, while care with exogenous copper exposure can avoid favoring copper-tolerant pathobionts in recurrent UTI.
Engineered probiotic Escherichia coli can eliminate and prevent Pseudomonas aeruginosa gut infection in animal models
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Engineered EcN sensing Pseudomonas aeruginosa cleared established gut infection and prevented new infection in worms and mice through pyocin and anti-biofilm release.
What was studied?
Engineered Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 Pseudomonas aeruginosa control was tested as a live targeted therapy for gut infection. The authors rebuilt the earlier “sense-and-kill” circuit in a clinically used EcN background. The circuit sensed the P. aeruginosa quorum signal 3OC12-HSL. It then triggered lysis and release of pyocin S5, an antipseudomonal bacteriocin. It also released dispersin B to break biofilm matrix. The strain was made D-alanine auxotrophic to keep the plasmid without antibiotics and to improve safety. The study asked if this single modified probiotic could clear established gut infection and could prevent later colonization.
Who was studied?
Experiments used two in vivo infection models. First was infected Caenorhabditis elegans. Worms received GFP-labelled P. aeruginosa in the gut and then the different EcN variants. Survival and gut fluorescence were tracked. Second was a streptomycin-treated mouse model. Mice received 10¹⁰ CFU P. aeruginosa by oral gavage and developed stable gut colonization of 10⁴–10⁵ CFU/g. They were then treated with wild-type EcN, lysis-only EcN, EcN making only pyocin, EcN making only dispersin B, or the full engineered strain EcN SED (sensor, pyocin S5, E7 lysis, dispersin B). Prophylaxis was also tested by precolonizing mice with EcN before pathogen challenge.
Most important findings
The engineered EcN SED detected P. aeruginosa at far lower HSL levels than the earlier circuit and expressed killing factors for a longer period. In vitro, it killed P. aeruginosa even when EcN numbers were lower, and it dispersed mature biofilms by ~80%. In C. elegan,s all EcN strains improved survival versus infection alone. But EcN SED and EcN SE (without dispersin B) gave the most extended survival and the highest gut clearance. In mice with established gut infections, only EcN SED produced a significant decline in P. aeruginosa faecal counts, reaching approximately 77% clearance after 6 days.
In contrast, other EcN versions resulted in only minor or transient reductions. Precolonization with EcN SED cut later P. aeruginosa gut burden by about 98% compared with wild-type EcN in the prophylaxis arm. The design mapped a microbiome signature made of an EcN chassis, pathogen quorum sensing, pyocin S5 for planktonic cells, and dispersin B for biofilm cells.
Key implications
This work demonstrates that a probiotic can be engineered to target a specific gut pathogen with high specificity and execute two coordinated actions. It senses, then it kills, then it breaks biofilm. It also demonstrates that containment can be established through auxotrophy and self-lysing. For clinicians, this suggests a potential future tool for high-risk settings where gut P. aeruginosa serves as a silent reservoir, such as oncology, intensive care, and very-low-birth-weight infants. It could reduce the need for broad antibiotics that damage commensals. It also illustrates how microbiome therapeutics should be logged, categorized by chassis (EcN), sensor (AHL lasR), payloads (pyocin S5, dispersin B), and containment (Δalr ΔdadX), allowing databases to link them to Pseudomonas-dominant dysbiosis states.
Dysregulation of transition metal ion homeostasis is the molecular basis for cadmium toxicity in Streptococcus pneumoniae
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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The study uncovers how cadmium disrupts transition metal homeostasis in Streptococcus pneumoniae, affecting manganese and zinc uptake and contributing to oxidative stress.
What was studied?
This study investigated how cadmium (Cd²⁺) affects the homeostasis of transition metal ions in Streptococcus pneumoniae. It focused on how Cd²⁺ competes with manganese (Mn²⁺) and zinc (Zn²⁺) for uptake and accumulation in the bacterium, leading to a disturbance in its metal ion balance and an increase in oxidative stress. Using a combination of assays, structural analyses, and growth experiments, the study revealed the mechanisms by which Cd²⁺ disrupts the bacterial metal uptake and efflux systems, particularly targeting the Psa permease responsible for manganese acquisition.
Who was studied?
The study focused on Streptococcus pneumoniae (S. pneumoniae), a Gram-positive bacterium. This organism was selected due to its reliance on a single manganese-specific uptake system, the PsaBCA permease. Researchers explored how the exposure to cadmium, a non-physiological metal ion, interferes with the bacterium’s homeostasis of essential metals like manganese and zinc. The study involved various mutant strains of S. pneumoniae to examine how different metal ion transporters and homeostatic systems contribute to the bacterium's response to cadmium exposure.
Most important findings
The study uncovered how cadmium disrupts manganese and zinc homeostasis in Streptococcus pneumoniae. Cadmium competes with manganese for the Psa permease, significantly reducing manganese accumulation and enhancing the upregulation of the manganese efflux pathway (MntE). This disruption causes oxidative stress due to decreased manganese availability for the enzyme superoxide dismutase (SodA). Additionally, cadmium affects zinc homeostasis by triggering the upregulation of the zinc-efflux transporter CzcD, leading to a depletion of intracellular zinc. This dysregulation of both manganese and zinc disrupts the function of zinc-responsive transcriptional regulators such as AdcR and SczA, ultimately impairing the bacterium’s ability to manage oxidative stress.
Key implications
This study highlights the complex mechanisms by which cadmium disrupts metal ion homeostasis in bacteria. The findings provide insight into how environmental pollutants like cadmium can impair bacterial function by disturbing essential processes like metal ion uptake and oxidative stress management. These insights are crucial for developing new therapeutic strategies to mitigate the harmful effects of cadmium exposure, particularly in microorganisms.
Interplay between enterobactin myeloperoxidase and lipocalin 2 in the inflamed gut
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Escherichia coli (E. coli)
Escherichia coli (E. coli)
Escherichia coli (E. coli) is a versatile bacterium, from gut commensal to pathogen, linked to chronic conditions like endometriosis.
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Aferric enterobactin disables myeloperoxidase, granting E. coli a survival edge in colitis, while lipocalin 2 restores enzyme function and counters colonization.
What was studied?
This study investigated the interplay between enterobactin myeloperoxidase and lipocalin 2 as a determinant of Escherichia coli (E. coli) survival within the inflamed gut. The authors tested whether the catecholate siderophore enterobactin, particularly in its iron-free form, directly inactivates the neutrophil peroxidase system that generates hypohalous acids, and whether host lipocalin 2 reverses this effect. Spectral kinetics using lactoperoxidase as a model readout showed that enterobactin and its monomer 2,3-dihydroxybenzoic acid rapidly drive compound I back to the ferric resting state, thereby aborting oxidant formation. Figures and spectra on page 3 document the immediate reversion of the Soret peak to 412 nm, consistent with suicide substrate behavior.
Who was studied?
The work combined in vitro enzyme assays, bacterial killing assays, and murine models of colitis. Nonpathogenic E. coli K-12 and isogenic siderophore mutants were used, including DfepA (overproduces enterobactin), DaroB and DentC (enterobactin deficient), and DaroB/DfepA. Recombinant human or murine lipocalin 2 was applied to test host countermeasures. In vivo, streptomycin-pretreated Salmonella-induced gastroenteritis and dextran sulfate sodium colitis models quantified cecal and colonic myeloperoxidase activity and E. coli colonization. A schematic on page 8 summarizes the experimental mechanism linking hypoferremia, enterobactin release, myeloperoxidase inactivation, and lipocalin 2 rescue.
Most important findings
Enterobactin, only in its aferric form, potently inhibited myeloperoxidase and lactoperoxidase in a dose- and time-dependent manner, outperforming the reference inhibitor 4-aminobenzoic acid hydrazide. DHBA showed similar but weaker effects. Iron-loaded enterobactin and DHBA failed to inhibit, establishing iron-free specificity. Glycosylated or non-catecholate siderophores, including salmochelin, yersiniabactin, and ferrichrome, did not inhibit at much higher concentrations, implying a catecholate-dependent mechanism. In vivo, DfepA reduced mucosal myeloperoxidase activity and achieved higher fecal and tissue burdens than enterobactin-null mutants in both colitis models, indicating a survival and colonization advantage under inflammation. Preincubation of enterobactin or DHBA with human or mouse lipocalin 2 abolished enzyme inhibition, restoring peroxidase activity. The spectral plots on page 3 and bactericidal assays on pages 5–6 show rapid conversion of compound I to Fe(III) and protection from myeloperoxidase–H2O2 killing, while figure panels on page 7 demonstrate lipocalin 2 reversal. Collectively, these data position enterobactin as a dual-use molecule for iron acquisition and immune evasion, with lipocalin 2 as the host countermeasure.
Finding
Evidence
Aferric enterobactin inhibits MPO
Dose–response and kinetics; spectral reversion to 412 nm within seconds (page 3).
Iron-bound enterobactin inactive
Fe:Ent 3:1 shows no inhibition; 1:1 greatly reduced (page 3).
DHBA inhibits but less potently
Parallel inhibition and spectra similar to enterobactin (pages 3–4).
Salmochelin, yersiniabactin fail
Minimal MPO/LPO inhibition at high doses (page 4).
DfepA gains survival advantage
Lower mucosal MPO and higher colonization in colitis models (pages 5–6).
Lipocalin 2 rescues MPO
Prebinding with human or mouse Lcn2 negates inhibition (page 7).
Key implications
Enterobacteriaceae, particularly E. coli, exploit siderophore chemistry to neutralize neutrophil peroxidase-mediated killing during inflammation. Enterobactin emerges as a mechanistic driver of E. coli blooms in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) by disabling a key oxidative effector, while lipocalin 2 functions as a host rebuttal that can restore peroxidase activity. The failure of salmochelin to inhibit myeloperoxidase, despite its ability to evade lipocalin 2, suggests an evolutionary trade-off that may tune siderophore portfolios across pathotypes and disease niches. Clinically, lipocalin 2 levels, siderophore profiles, and myeloperoxidase activity could serve as coupled biomarkers that stratify inflammatory risk and E. coli overgrowth. Therapeutically, strategies that stabilize peroxidase function, enhance lipocalin 2 binding to catecholate siderophores, or limit aferric enterobactin bioavailability may interrupt the survival advantage documented in this work. The mechanism diagram on page 8 provides a concise translational blueprint for these interventions.
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review explains how the skin microbiome shapes barrier function, immune responses, and disease risk, highlighting key microbial associations that protect against infection and drive inflammatory skin disorders when disrupted.
What was reviewed?
This article reviewed the structure, ecology, and clinical relevance of the human skin microbiome, framing the skin as a complex, living ecosystem rather than a passive barrier. The authors synthesized molecular, genomic, immunological, and clinical literature to explain how microbial communities are distributed across different skin sites and how these communities interact dynamically with host physiology and immunity. The review emphasized that microbial colonization is shaped by local skin microenvironments, including moisture, lipid content, pH, temperature, and oxygen availability, and that these ecological pressures consistently select for specific microbial communities. Using evidence from culture-independent sequencing studies, the paper reframed earlier culture-based assumptions. It demonstrated that the skin microbiome is far more diverse, variable, and functionally active than previously recognized. The review also integrated emerging data linking microbial imbalance to inflammatory skin disorders, infections, and impaired barrier function, positioning the skin microbiome as a key determinant of cutaneous health rather than a bystander.
Who was reviewed?
The review drew on studies involving healthy adult volunteers, infants, and patients with inflammatory and infectious skin conditions, including acne, atopic dermatitis, seborrhoeic dermatitis, psoriasis, chronic wounds, and device-associated infections. It incorporated data from human skin sampling across multiple anatomical sites, longitudinal studies tracking temporal stability, and experimental models examining host–microbe immune interactions. Rather than focusing on a single population, the authors synthesized findings across age groups, sexes, and disease states to identify consistent microbial patterns associated with health and pathology.
Most Important Findings
The most important findings establish that the skin microbiome is dominated by a small number of core bacterial groups whose relative abundance is dictated by skin site ecology. Major microbial associations include Propionibacterium (now Cutibacterium) species in sebaceous areas, Staphylococcus and Corynebacterium species in moist regions, and a more diverse mixture of Actinobacteria, Proteobacteria, Firmicutes, and Bacteroidetes in dry sites. The review highlighted Staphylococcus epidermidis as a key protective commensal with immunomodulatory and antimicrobial activity, capable of inhibiting pathogens such as Staphylococcus aureus through secreted peptides and synergy with host antimicrobial defenses. In contrast, dysbiosis characterized by S. aureus overgrowth was strongly associated with atopic dermatitis flares, reflecting impaired barrier function and reduced antimicrobial peptide production. The paper also emphasized the role of fungal members, particularly Malassezia species, as dominant residents of sebaceous skin with context-dependent pathogenic potential in seborrhoeic dermatitis. Importantly, the review underscored that microbial function, rather than mere presence, determines clinical impact, with commensals actively shaping immune tolerance, inflammation, and tissue repair.
Greatest Implication
The greatest implication for clinicians is that skin diseases cannot be fully understood or managed by targeting pathogens alone. The findings support a shift toward therapies that preserve or restore beneficial microbial functions, strengthen barrier integrity, and modulate host–microbiome immune signaling. This framework explains why broad-spectrum antimicrobials can worsen chronic skin conditions and highlights the therapeutic potential of microbiome-informed strategies, including selective antimicrobials, barrier repair, and promicrobial interventions.
Effect of Dietary Magnesium Content on Intestinal Microbiota of Rats
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study explores how dietary magnesium levels affect the gut microbiota of rats. It shows that low magnesium increases beneficial microbes, while high magnesium promotes potentially harmful bacteria. These changes may influence metabolism and gut health.
What was studied?
This study assessed the effects of different dietary magnesium levels on the intestinal microbiota of rats. The researchers tested three distinct diets: a control diet with normal magnesium levels, a low magnesium diet, and a high magnesium diet. They then analyzed the microbiota composition through 16S rRNA sequencing to determine how different magnesium concentrations influenced the gut microbiome.
Who was studied?
The study involved male Wistar rats, which were fed different magnesium-supplemented diets for two weeks. The rats were divided into three groups: control (C-Mg), low magnesium (L-Mg), and high magnesium (H-Mg). Fecal samples were collected after the treatment period for microbiota analysis, and biochemical parameters were measured to assess health impacts.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed that dietary magnesium significantly influences the intestinal microbiota composition. The rats on the high magnesium diet (H-Mg) showed reduced microbiota diversity compared to the control and low magnesium groups. In contrast, the low magnesium diet (L-Mg) increased the abundance of certain genera such as Lactobacillus, Dorea, Turicibacter, and SMB53. These taxa are often linked with metabolic processes and gut health, and their overrepresentation could suggest that low magnesium intake might enhance gut microbiome functionality. The high magnesium diet, however, resulted in an overrepresentation of Desulfovibrio, Parabacteroides, Helicobacter, and Sutterella, taxa known to be associated with inflammatory processes and potentially pathogenic gut environments. Functional analysis using PICRUSt showed that the L-Mg microbiome was enriched for metabolic pathways related to carbohydrate metabolism and butanoate metabolism, which indicates a higher capacity to harvest energy from the diet. These findings highlight how magnesium levels, even in the absence of magnesium deficiency, can alter gut microbial composition and metabolism.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The greatest implications of this study lie in understanding how micronutrient levels, specifically magnesium, can modulate gut microbiota and metabolic processes. For clinicians, this finding is important because it suggests that dietary magnesium, even when not deficient, can significantly shape the microbiome in ways that may affect gut health, metabolic processes, and disease susceptibility. The changes observed in microbiota composition with different magnesium levels could have implications for managing conditions related to gut dysbiosis, such as obesity, insulin resistance, and inflammatory bowel disease. This study also calls attention to the potential effects of magnesium supplementation on microbiome health, supporting the idea that careful manipulation of dietary magnesium could offer therapeutic avenues for gut-related health issues.
Health Effects and Therapeutic Potential of the Gut Microbe Akkermansia muciniphila
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review synthesizes evidence showing Akkermansia muciniphila supports gut barrier integrity, immune balance, and metabolic health through mucin degradation, SCFA production, and bioactive proteins, with emerging human trials confirming safety and therapeutic promise.
What was reviewed?
This paper reviewed the expanding body of experimental, translational, and clinical literature on Akkermansia muciniphila, with a specific focus on its biological functions, strain diversity, host–microbe interactions, and emerging therapeutic potential. The authors synthesized findings from genomic, metabolomic, animal model, and human observational and interventional studies to clarify how A. muciniphila influences gut barrier integrity, immune regulation, metabolic homeostasis, and disease risk.
Who was reviewed?
The review primarily drew on studies involving murine models of obesity, diabetes, inflammatory bowel disease, cardiovascular disease, malignancy, aging, and infection, alongside human observational cohorts and a smaller but growing number of randomized clinical trials. Human populations reviewed included individuals with obesity, insulin resistance, type 2 diabetes, inflammatory bowel disease, metabolic-associated fatty liver disease, cancer, and elderly cohorts, as well as healthy controls. The authors also evaluated strain-level data from human-derived A. muciniphila isolates to contextualize interindividual variability in clinical outcomes.
What were the most important findings?
Across studies, higher abundance of A. muciniphila consistently associated with improved metabolic and inflammatory profiles. Mechanistically, A. muciniphila degrades mucin to generate short-chain fatty acids, particularly acetate and propionate, which strengthen tight junctions, stimulate goblet cell mucus production, and modulate immune signaling through GPR41, GPR43, and TLR2 pathways. Key microbial associations included cross-feeding with butyrate-producing taxa such as Faecalibacterium prausnitzii and reductions in potentially pathogenic genera including Tyzzerella and Proteobacteria. Importantly, specific microbial products—most notably the outer membrane protein Amuc_1100 and secreted proteins such as P9—replicated many metabolic benefits even when the bacterium was pasteurized. Human trials demonstrated safety and modest but significant improvements in insulin sensitivity, lipid metabolism, postprandial glucose control, muscle function, and inflammatory markers, without major restructuring of the overall microbiome.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review positions A. muciniphila as a leading next-generation probiotic candidate with clinically actionable relevance, particularly for metabolic, inflammatory, and age-related conditions. For clinicians, the key implication is that therapeutic benefit may depend more on functional microbial components and host–microbe signaling than on live colonization alone, broadening intervention options. The authors emphasize the need for strain-specific evaluation, standardized cultivation methods, and larger human trials to translate microbiome signatures into precision-guided therapies. If validated, A. muciniphila-based interventions could complement existing pharmacologic strategies for cardiometabolic and inflammatory disease management
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review explains how intestinal bacterial biofilms directly modulate mucosal immunity and drive inflammation through structured microbial–host interactions.
What was reviewed?
This paper reviewed how intestinal bacterial biofilms shape mucosal immune responses and contribute to either immune homeostasis or chronic intestinal inflammation, with a strong focus on Crohn’s disease and related inflammatory conditions. The authors synthesized mechanistic evidence showing that biofilms are not passive bacterial aggregates but structured, metabolically active communities whose extracellular matrix components directly interact with host immune and epithelial cells. The review reframed biofilms as functional immune-modulating units within the mucus layer rather than as purely pathological structures. It emphasized that changes in bacterial lifestyle, particularly the transition from planktonic growth to biofilm formation, fundamentally alter how the immune system perceives and responds to resident microbes, thereby influencing disease susceptibility and persistence.
Who was reviewed?
The review integrated findings from human studies and experimental models. Human data included observations from healthy individuals and patients with Crohn’s disease, ulcerative colitis, and colorectal cancer, where mucus-associated biofilms were enriched and in closer contact with the epithelium. These clinical findings were supported by mechanistic studies in germ-free mice, antibiotic-treated mice, gnotobiotic models, and genetically susceptible hosts such as IL-10–deficient mice. Together, these systems allowed the authors to link specific biofilm components to immune activation, epithelial barrier disruption, and chronic inflammation.
What were the most important findings?
The review demonstrated that biofilm-associated bacteria, particularly members of the Enterobacteriaceae family, exert disproportionate effects on mucosal immunity compared with their planktonic counterparts. Major microbial associations included adherent-invasive Escherichia coli (AIEC), which expand in Crohn’s disease and form robust biofilms enriched in extracellular matrix components such as curli amyloid fibrils, cellulose, and type 1 pili. These biofilm components were shown to directly engage host pattern-recognition receptors. Curli fibrils activated TLR1/2 and the NLRP3 inflammasome, driving IL-1β, IL-6, IL-23, and downstream Th17 immune responses, as illustrated in the schematic on page 9. Type 1 pili interacted with epithelial CEACAM6 and TLR4, promoting bacterial adherence, increased epithelial permeability through claudin-2 induction, and heightened IFN-γ and TNF signaling.
Cellulose modulated immune responses indirectly by altering bacterial aggregation, iron availability, and exposure of other immunogenic surface molecules. Importantly, the review highlighted that biofilm components can be either protective or pathogenic depending on context. For example, oral exposure to curli promoted IL-10 production and reduced chemically induced colitis, whereas systemic exposure to curli–DNA complexes triggered type I interferon responses and autoimmunity. These findings underscored that biofilms reshape immune signaling not only through microbial composition but through physical structure and molecular presentation.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
For clinicians, this review clarifies that mucosal inflammation is driven not only by which microbes are present, but by how they organize, attach, and signal at the epithelial surface. Biofilm formation emerges as a critical determinant of immune activation in Crohn’s disease and other inflammatory disorders. Targeting biofilm-specific adhesion factors or matrix components offers a strategy to reduce pathogenic immune stimulation while preserving beneficial microbes, shifting therapeutic focus from eradication to spatial and functional control of the microbiome.
Targeting and crossing of the human maternofetal barrier by Listeria monocytogenes: Role of internalin interaction with trophoblast E-cadherin
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study identifies the InlA–E-cadherin interaction as crucial for Listeria monocytogenes invasion of the human placenta, providing insights into mechanisms of fetoplacental listeriosis.
What was studied?
This study focused on the mechanisms through which Listeria monocytogenes crosses the human maternofetal barrier, specifically exploring the role of internalin A (InlA) in facilitating bacterial invasion. The researchers investigated the interaction between InlA, a bacterial surface protein, and E-cadherin, its host receptor, in human trophoblast cells, and how this interaction contributes to the bacterium's ability to target and invade the placental barrier.
Who was studied?
The study examined Listeria monocytogenes strains, particularly focusing on their ability to invade human trophoblast cells, including both cultured cell lines (BeWo) and primary trophoblasts derived from placental tissue. It also included human placental sections obtained from women with documented fetoplacental listeriosis.
What were the most important findings?
The study found that InlA, a surface protein of Listeria monocytogenes, mediates attachment to E-cadherin receptors on human syncytiotrophoblasts, which are critical for crossing the placental barrier. The research demonstrated that InlA specifically interacts with E-cadherin on the apical membrane of syncytiotrophoblasts to facilitate bacterial invasion. InlA-expressing Listeria strains were able to invade trophoblast cells at significantly higher rates than strains lacking InlA. Furthermore, in placental villous explants, only the InlA-expressing Listeria strains were able to invade the syncytiotrophoblast layer and replicate in the underlying tissue. This study confirmed that InlA-mediated invasion of the placental barrier is essential for Listeria monocytogenes to cause fetoplacental infections, suggesting that the mechanism for placental invasion mirrors that of intestinal barrier penetration.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings have critical implications for understanding the pathogenesis of Listeria monocytogenes during pregnancy and its ability to cause severe infections like listeriosis. By identifying the specific interaction between InlA and E-cadherin as a key factor in crossing the placental barrier, the study opens new avenues for potential therapeutic interventions targeting this pathway. Blocking the InlA–E-cadherin interaction could provide a strategy for preventing the bacterial invasion of the placenta and reducing the risk of fetal infections. Additionally, the study highlights the importance of understanding how Listeria exploits host cell mechanisms for pathogenicity, which could inform the development of vaccines or treatments to prevent listeriosis in pregnant women.
An arsenic metallochaperone for an arsenic detoxification pump
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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The study explores how ArsD, a metallochaperone, enhances ArsA’s ability to expel arsenic from cells, improving arsenic detoxification. This interaction increases arsenic resistance in E. coli, with potential applications in bioremediation and combating arsenic poisoning.
What was studied?
This study examines ArsD, a metallochaperone involved in arsenic detoxification in Escherichia coli. ArsD interacts with ArsA, the catalytic subunit of the ArsAB efflux pump, facilitating the transfer of arsenic(III) (As(III)) to ArsA. This interaction enhances the pump’s ability to extrude arsenic from the cell, preventing arsenic toxicity. The researchers focused on the biochemical and structural mechanisms by which ArsD increases the affinity of ArsA for arsenic, thus improving arsenic resistance at lower concentrations of the metalloid. X-ray crystallography and fluorescence spectroscopy were used to investigate the structure of ArsD and its interaction with ArsA.
Who was studied?
The study focused on the ArsD protein from Escherichia coli, a well-studied bacterium with an ars operon that includes ArsA, the ATPase that pumps arsenic out of cells. The research involved manipulating strains of E. coli to express arsAB and arsDAB, allowing the team to observe the effects of ArsD on arsenic resistance. In addition, yeast two-hybrid assays were conducted to analyze the interaction between ArsD and ArsA, and biochemical assays were used to study arsenic transfer and the activity of the ArsAB pump. These experiments aimed to understand how ArsD enhances the function of ArsA, increasing arsenic extrusion and providing cells with a competitive advantage in arsenic-rich environments.
Most important findings
The study revealed that ArsD plays a critical role in enhancing the efficiency of ArsA in arsenic detoxification. It was found that ArsD increases the affinity of ArsA for arsenic by 60-fold, enabling more effective arsenic extrusion at lower concentrations. This finding is significant because it means that ArsD allows the ArsAB pump to operate efficiently in subtoxic arsenic conditions, which are commonly found in environments like soil and water. The study also demonstrated that ArsD physically interacts with ArsA and transfers arsenic directly to ArsA, a process that is accelerated by the presence of ATP. The interaction between ArsD and ArsA is facilitated by cysteine residues in both proteins, which form a complex that enhances the rate of arsenic transfer and extrusion.
Key implications
The findings of this study provide valuable insights into how microbial arsenic resistance mechanisms operate at the molecular level, which could have significant implications for both bioremediation and human health. By understanding the role of ArsD in enhancing ArsA's arsenic extrusion, we can better understand how bacteria cope with environmental arsenic, and this knowledge can inform the development of bioremediation strategies to clean up arsenic-contaminated water sources. Additionally, the research suggests that targeting the ArsD-ArsA interaction could lead to new therapeutic approaches for treating arsenic poisoning in humans. This study also sheds light on the broader implications of metallochaperones in managing toxic metal exposure, opening up possibilities for improving environmental health protocols.
The Listeria monocytogenes InlC protein interferes with innate immune responses by targeting the IκB kinase subunit IKKα
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study explores how Listeria monocytogenes InlC modulates the host immune response by inhibiting the NF-κB pathway, highlighting its role in immune evasion and infection persistence.
What was studied?
This study focused on the role of Listeria monocytogenes internalin C (InlC) protein in the bacterial pathogen's ability to subvert host innate immune responses. The researchers specifically investigated how InlC interacts with the IκB kinase subunit IKKα, a key component of the NF-κB signaling pathway, and how this interaction impacts the immune response during Listeria infection.
Who was studied?
The study focused on Listeria monocytogenes and its internalin C (InlC) protein, which was tested for its interaction with IKKα in human and mouse cell lines. The study used cell-based assays to examine the effects of InlC on NF-κB activation and cytokine production, as well as animal models to study the inflammatory response in vivo.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed that InlC binds directly to IKKα, a key regulator of NF-κB activation, and inhibits the phosphorylation and degradation of IκBα, a critical step for NF-κB activation. By preventing the degradation of IκBα, InlC impedes the nuclear translocation of NF-κB, thus dampening the proinflammatory response. The researchers showed that infection with Listeria strains expressing InlC led to reduced production of proinflammatory cytokines such as TNF-α and IL-6 in macrophages and in vivo. In contrast, the deletion of InlC resulted in a stronger inflammatory response, with increased production of chemokines and enhanced recruitment of neutrophils. These findings indicate that InlC functions as an immune modulator, reducing the intensity of inflammation during infection by blocking the NF-κB pathway and attenuating the host's immune response.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings have significant implications for understanding how Listeria monocytogenes manipulates the host immune response to enhance its survival and virulence. By modulating the NF-κB pathway, InlC allows Listeria to evade strong inflammatory responses, promoting chronic infection and persistence within the host. This mechanism of immune evasion is important for the development of therapeutic strategies aimed at controlling Listeria infections, particularly in immunocompromised individuals and during pregnancy. The study suggests that targeting InlC or its interaction with IKKα could provide new avenues for therapeutic intervention, potentially reducing the severity of infection and improving immune response regulation.
Copper resistance is essential for virulence of Mycobacterium tuberculosis
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Copper resistance is essential for virulence of Mycobacterium tuberculosis; MctB prevents copper build-up, and loss of MctB cripples survival in copper-rich granulomas, defining actionable microbial and host signatures.
What was studied?
This original study tested the claim that copper resistance is essential for the virulence of Mycobacterium tuberculosis by defining how the outer membrane channel MctB (Rv1698) prevents toxic copper build-up and supports survival in vivo. The authors combined genetics, metal quantification, and animal infection models to link copper handling to disease. They deleted mctB, restored it by complementation, and measured copper inside cells, growth under copper stress, and bacterial fitness during infection. They also showed that host tissues increase copper in granulomas, suggesting that the immune system uses copper to restrict the pathogen. The work frames copper as both a nutrient and a weapon and positions MctB as a key defense that maintains low intracellular copper and protects the bacillus from phagosomal copper spikes.
Who was studied?
Researchers worked with Mycobacterium tuberculosis H37Rv and an isogenic ∆mctB mutant, plus a complemented strain. They used M. smegmatis to confirm conserved function of the homolog Ms3747. For in vivo tests, they infected BALB/c mice and guinea pigs with low-dose aerosols and, in mice, raised dietary copper to mimic higher host copper exposure. They microdissected guinea pig lung granulomas to measure tissue copper and tracked organism burden in lungs, lymph nodes, and spleen. Across these settings they quantified intracellular copper, copper-responsive gene signals, and survival to connect MctB function with virulence during host copper stress.
Most important findings
Loss of MctB caused striking copper sensitivity and accumulation. The ∆mctB mutant accumulated about two orders of magnitude more intracellular copper and showed severe growth inhibition at copper levels tolerated by wild type; a copper(I) chelator rescued growth, marking Cu(I) as the toxic species. In mice, copper supplementation sharpened the mutant’s survival defect, consistent with copper-driven killing. In guinea pigs, copper concentrations rose within primary lung granulomas, and ∆mctB displayed a profound virulence defect with roughly 1,000-fold fewer bacteria in lungs and 100-fold fewer in lymph nodes than wild type at day 30, despite preserved granuloma histology. These results reveal a clean microbial signature in which MctB-mediated efflux limits intracellular copper, while host tissues raise copper at infection sites to suppress bacilli. They also show that M. tuberculosis is unusually copper-sensitive compared with many bacteria, with inhibitory copper levels matching those found in phagosomes.
Key implications
Clinicians can treat copper handling as a virulence trait in tuberculosis. Genomic detection of mctB in a microbiome signatures database should flag strains with stronger capacity to endure host copper stress, while absence or dysfunction of this locus predicts impaired survival when granulomas elevate copper. Because copper levels in phagosomes approach those that inhibit M. tuberculosis, drugs that block MctB could sensitize bacilli to physiologic copper and work as immune-boosting adjuncts rather than direct bactericides. In settings where diet or inflammation raises tissue copper, failure of copper efflux may reduce pathogen fitness, but host injury from excess copper remains a concern; any copper-targeted strategy should balance pathogen control against host toxicity. Embedding mctB with other copper loci (e.g., ctpV, mymT) and host copper routing markers in reports can help link tissue site, inflammation state, and predicted bacterial persistence, supporting risk stratification and targeted therapy.
Listeria monocytogenes hijacks CD147 to ensure proper membrane protrusion formation and efficient bacterial dissemination
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study highlights the critical role of CD147 in facilitating Listeria monocytogenes membrane protrusion formation and cell-to-cell spreading, offering insights into potential therapeutic targets for limiting infection spread.
What was studied?
This study focused on the role of CD147 in the intracellular motility and cell-to-cell spreading of Listeria monocytogenes. Specifically, it examined how CD147, a transmembrane glycoprotein, is hijacked by Listeria during infection to stabilize actin-rich membrane protrusions, which are essential for bacterial dissemination between host cells. The researchers analyzed the effects of CD147 depletion on bacterial entry, comet/rocket tail formation, and membrane protrusions.
Who was studied?
The study examined Listeria monocytogenes infection in human cell lines, including HeLa, SKOV3, and A549 cells, and used CD147-depleted cells to evaluate the effects on bacterial invasion and spreading. The role of CD147 in the formation of actin-rich structures during infection was assessed through siRNA-mediated knockdown and immunofluorescence microscopy.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed that CD147 is a crucial host cell protein that supports the proper formation and function of Listeria monocytogenes membrane protrusions, which are vital for cell-to-cell spreading. Depletion of CD147 resulted in the formation of malformed membrane protrusions that were shorter and more contorted compared to those in control cells. This morphological defect led to a significant reduction in the efficiency of bacterial dissemination between cells, with a roughly 50% decrease in infection area and fewer infected cells per focus in CD147-depleted samples. The study also showed that CD147 was recruited to the plasma membrane at sites of Listeria membrane protrusion formation and corresponding invaginations in neighboring cells, highlighting its role in facilitating intercellular spread. These findings underscore the importance of CD147 in the actin-based motility of Listeria and suggest that it is a critical factor for efficient bacterial dissemination.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings from this study have important implications for understanding the molecular mechanisms that enable Listeria monocytogenes to spread efficiently within the host. CD147’s involvement in the stabilization of membrane protrusions and its role in bacterial dissemination suggest that targeting CD147 or its interactions with Listeria could be a potential therapeutic strategy to limit the spread of the infection. Additionally, the study contributes to the broader understanding of how bacteria manipulate host cell machinery to enhance their motility and spread, which could inform strategies to combat other pathogens that use similar mechanisms for dissemination.
Fluconazole Downregulates Metallothionein in Microsporum canis and Increases Copper Toxicity
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Fluconazole downregulates the metallothionein gene in Microsporum canis, enhancing copper cytotoxicity. This ergosterol-independent antifungal mechanism reveals a novel vulnerability in M. canis and identifies metallothionein as a promising therapeutic target.
What was studied?
This study investigated how fluconazole, an azole antifungal, affects the expression of the metallothionein (MT) gene in Microsporum canis (M. canis), a dermatophyte fungus responsible for zoonotic skin infections. While azoles are known to inhibit ergosterol synthesis, the researchers explored alternative, ergosterol-independent effects of fluconazole. Specifically, they isolated the MT gene from M. canis, characterized its structure and expression, and demonstrated that fluconazole rapidly downregulates both baseline and copper-induced MT expression. They also examined whether this downregulation increased fungal sensitivity to copper, thereby identifying MT repression as a potential antifungal mechanism. The focus of the study confirmed that fluconazole downregulates metallothionein in Microsporum canis, impacting its treatment approach.
Who was studied?
The subject of the study was Microsporum canis, an opportunistic dermatophyte pathogen that infects keratinized tissues of animals and humans. Clinical isolates of M. canis were cultured from patients at the University of Vienna Medical School. Experiments were conducted on fungal mycelia grown in vitro under various treatment conditions, including exposure to fluconazole, copper sulfate, and their combination.
Most important findings
The researchers identified and sequenced the metallothionein (MT) gene of Microsporum canis, revealing that it encodes a 23-amino acid protein containing 30% cysteine, arranged in the characteristic cys-x-cys motif found in metallothioneins. They discovered that fluconazole rapidly downregulates MT mRNA expression within 30 minutes of exposure, indicating an effect independent of its known inhibition of ergosterol synthesis. In contrast, copper (Cu²⁺) exposure induced MT expression within 15 minutes, peaking at one hour and remaining elevated for 24 hours.
When both fluconazole and copper were applied simultaneously, fluconazole suppressed the copper-induced MT upregulation, with marked inhibition by 24 hours. Functionally, the antifungal effect of copper at low concentrations (0.1–1 mM) was significantly amplified by fluconazole, while at high concentrations (10 mM), copper alone was sufficient to inhibit growth. These findings suggest that fluconazole disrupts the copper detoxification capacity of M. canis by downregulating MT, thereby increasing the fungus's susceptibility to copper-induced oxidative damage.
Key implications
These findings broaden the mechanistic understanding of azole antifungals. Beyond inhibiting ergosterol synthesis, fluconazole can interfere with metal homeostasis by downregulating metallothioneins. This identifies MT as a novel, drug-responsive vulnerability in M. canis that could be exploited to enhance antifungal efficacy. Combination therapies using fluconazole with copper-based treatments—or interventions that inhibit fungal MT expression—may potentiate antifungal outcomes. Additionally, this study offers the first characterization of metallothionein in dermatophytes, positioning MT as a promising target for antifungal drug development, particularly in fluconazole-resistant infections.
Impacts of Mercury Exposure Levels and Sources on the Demethylation of Methylmercury Through Human Gut Microbiota
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study shows human gut microbiota can demethylate methylmercury and that detox rates vary by exposure level and food source. Higher Desulfovibrio and methanogen signals aligned with faster demethylation, while mer and hgcAB genes did not explain the process.
What was studied?
This study examined whether human gut microbiota can directly demethylate methylmercury (MeHg) and whether that detox activity changes with different mercury exposure levels and exposure sources. The researchers compared residents from a high-exposure, rice-based mercury area (Wanshan) with residents from lower-exposure areas tied mainly to rice (Yangtou) or fish (Zhuchang). They paired human exposure biomarkers with metagenomic profiling and an anaerobic in vitro MeHg-demethylation assay designed to reflect gut conditions.
Who was studied?
The study enrolled 33 healthy adult residents (11 per town) who met strict dietary patterns and exclusion criteria, including no recent antibiotics, no probiotic use, and no known gastrointestinal disease. Participants provided hair, urine, and fecal samples for mercury measurement, and stool samples underwent shotgun metagenomic sequencing to characterize community composition and mercury-relevant functional genes. The team then used fecal inocula in anaerobic culture to quantify how quickly each participant’s microbiota degraded MeHg over time.
What were the most important findings?
Residents in the high-exposure town showed clearly higher mercury burdens, with hair and urine levels indicating both higher MeHg and inorganic mercury exposure compared with the lower-exposure towns. Overall gut microbial richness and diversity did not differ meaningfully, but community composition did, indicating that mercury-related context reshaped “who is there” more than “how many are there.” A key microbiome signature emerged: Desulfovibrio and methanogen-associated taxa were more abundant in the higher-exposure and fish-exposure settings, and these same groups aligned with higher MeHg demethylation capacity in vitro. The microbiota from Wanshan and Zhuchang degraded MeHg faster than Yangtou early in the assay (first 6 hours), and all groups showed substantial degradation by 48 hours. Functionally, classic mer operon signals were extremely low and methylation genes (hgcAB) were not detected, supporting demethylation routes not driven by typical mer/hgc pathways and pointing toward anaerobic metabolism-linked mechanisms.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
For clinicians, this study supports a practical concept: gut microbiota can contribute to MeHg detoxification, and real-world exposure level and food source can shift that detox potential by changing specific anaerobic guilds. This helps explain why measured body burden does not always match estimated dietary intake, because microbial demethylation can reduce the fraction that persists as MeHg. For microbiome signatures databases, the strongest entry is functional and taxon-linked: higher Desulfovibrio and methanogen-associated signals track with higher MeHg demethylation rates, while mer and hgcAB signals do not explain human-gut demethylation in this cohort. Clinically, exposure history may matter not only for toxic load but also for microbiome-mediated detox capacity.
Assessing the Role of the Gut Microbiome in Methylmercury Demethylation and Elimination in Humans and Gnotobiotic Mice
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study shows the gut microbiome helps clear dietary methylmercury by demethylating it in the intestine. People differed widely in elimination rates, which tracked with stool demethylation activity and specific taxa patterns, especially Alistipes.
What was studied?
This study tested whether the gut microbiome helps the body clear dietary methylmercury (MeHg) by demethylating it into inorganic mercury (Hg(II)), which the intestine reabsorbs poorly and the body can excrete in stool. The researchers paired a controlled human fish-meal exposure protocol with mechanistic mouse experiments (conventional, antibiotic-treated, germ-free, and gnotobiotic/humanized models) and shotgun metagenomics of human stool. They also used anaerobic fecal cultures to measure how strongly each person’s stool community transformed mercury in vitro and compared that activity with each person’s MeHg elimination rate.
Who was studied?
The human arm enrolled adult volunteers (healthy, 18–80 years) who ate three tuna meals one week apart and then avoided fish for 60 days while researchers estimated MeHg elimination kinetics from mercury patterns along the hair shaft; 27–29 participants contributed usable datasets depending on analysis completeness, and MeHg half-lives spanned roughly 28–90 days. The animal arm used C57BL/6J mice to isolate microbiome effects by comparing intact microbiomes, microbiome depletion with antibiotics, complete absence of microbes in germ-free mice, and restoration via fecal microbiome transplant from selected human donors, plus a mono-colonization test with Alistipes onderdonkii.
What were the most important findings?
People varied widely in MeHg elimination, and faster elimination tracked with higher stool-community mercury transformation in anaerobic culture, supporting microbiome-driven demethylation as a key contributor to clearance. A prebiotic (inulin) reliably shifted microbiome composition but produced mixed elimination effects within individuals, arguing against a simple “more fiber equals faster clearance” rule. In mice, removing microbes (germ-free or antibiotics) sharply reduced stool Hg(II) and slowed elimination, while transplanting human stool microbiomes into germ-free mice restored faster elimination. Metagenomics did not detect canonical merB demethylation genes, pointing to a nontraditional pathway. As major microbial associations, Alistipes (especially Alistipes onderdonkii) correlated positively with faster human elimination, while Bacilli and two Lachnospiraceae-related OTUs correlated negatively; however, A. onderdonkii alone did not restore normal elimination in mono-colonized mice, implying a consortium effect or host–microbe interaction rather than a single “silver bullet” species.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
Clinically, this work strengthens the idea that gut microbiome function can shift MeHg body burden by changing how much MeHg gets demethylated in the gut and trapped for fecal loss, which may help explain why two people with similar fish exposure can carry very different risk. It also warns against oversimplified interventions: a prebiotic can remodel the microbiome yet still yield unpredictable MeHg clearance changes, so patient-specific microbial function matters more than broad taxonomic shifts. For a microbiome signatures database, the most actionable signal is functional—demethylation capacity—supported by taxa-level markers like Alistipes/Alistipes onderdonkii (positive) and certain Lachnospiraceae/Bacilli patterns (negative), while the missing merB signal suggests clinicians should not assume classic mercury-resistance genes drive gut demethylation in humans.
Optimizing Magnesium Uptake in Lacticaseibacillus Rhamnosus To Advance Nutribiotic Strategies
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study shows that Lacticaseibacillus rhamnosus can internalize magnesium from its environment, making it a potential probiotic carrier for improving magnesium absorption in the gut. The findings suggest that this could address magnesium deficiency through nutribiotic strategies.
What was studied?
This study explored the ability of Lacticaseibacillus rhamnosus to internalize magnesium (Mg²⁺) and how this process could enhance the bioavailability of magnesium in the human gastrointestinal tract. The researchers investigated how different concentrations of magnesium sulfate (MgSO₄) affected magnesium uptake, bacterial growth, and morphology. The study aimed to optimize magnesium uptake in L. rhamnosus to develop it as a functional probiotic that can help alleviate magnesium deficiency through nutribiotic strategies.
Who was studied?
The study focused on Lacticaseibacillus rhamnosus ATCC 53103, a strain commonly used in probiotics. The bacteria were cultivated under varying magnesium sulfate (MgSO₄) concentrations in MRS medium to assess their ability to absorb and internalize magnesium. The study also involved detailed morphological analyses using electron microscopy to observe the effects of magnesium supplementation on bacterial cells.
What were the most important findings?
The most significant findings of this study were that Lacticaseibacillus rhamnosus can internalize magnesium in a concentration- and time-dependent manner. When the bacteria were cultured in magnesium-enriched medium (up to 1.444 g/L MgSO₄), intracellular magnesium levels increased significantly, with the highest accumulation observed on Day 3. This magnesium uptake was associated with changes in bacterial morphology, including ruffled cell surfaces and enhanced ribosomal visibility, suggesting magnesium's role in supporting bacterial metabolism and function. Additionally, the study highlighted that magnesium accumulation in L. rhamnosus was regulated, with bacteria only upregulating magnesium transport systems when external magnesium availability was persistent. These findings point to L. rhamnosus's potential as a magnesium carrier, improving magnesium bioaccessibility and absorption in the gut.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study underscores the potential of Lacticaseibacillus rhamnosus as a probiotic carrier of magnesium, offering a novel approach to addressing magnesium deficiency. The ability of this strain to internalize magnesium and release it in the gut could help improve magnesium bioavailability, particularly in populations with insufficient magnesium intake. This mechanism could be used in nutribiotic strategies to enhance mineral absorption, especially in individuals who struggle with magnesium supplementation due to poor absorption. The study also lays the groundwork for optimizing probiotic strains for enhanced mineral delivery, which could contribute to better management of conditions associated with magnesium deficiency, such as muscle cramps, fatigue, and bone health issues.
A double-blind placebo-controlled trial to study therapeutic effects of probiotic Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 in subgroups of patients with irritable bowel syndrome
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 improved IBS modestly overall but clearly in postinfectious or postantibiotic IBS, was as safe as placebo, and fits a dysbiosis-linked microbiome signature that needs 10–12 weeks of therapy to show.
What was studied?
Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 irritable bowel syndrome therapy was tested in a randomized double-blind placebo-controlled 12-week trial to see whether a single well-characterized Gram-negative probiotic could improve symptoms in adults who met Rome II criteria for IBS and to identify the subgroup most likely to benefit, especially those with disturbed enteric microflora after gastroenteritis or antibiotic exposure, and the investigators used global patient satisfaction (IMPSS), symptom diaries, and IBS-related quality-of-life scores to compare EcN with placebo while keeping background medication stable. Hence, the paper links a clinical signal to the known EcN mechanisms of action, such as defensin induction, epithelial barrier support, and antagonism of enteroinvasive bacteria. These mechanisms are particularly relevant to microbiome-signature work, where postinfectious IBS often exhibits loss of stability and low-grade immune activation.
Who was studied?
A total of 120 adults aged 18–65 years with IBS diagnosed by Rome II, with symptoms for about a decade on average, were enrolled and randomized 1:1 to daily EcN (MUTAFLOR; 2.5–25×10⁹ CFU per capsule with an initial low dose then two capsules daily) or visually identical placebo for 12 weeks, most were women, bowel habit was mixed across constipation-predominant, diarrhoea-predominant, and alternating patterns, organic disease had been excluded by the Kruis score, and a prespecified subgroup had either bacterial gastroenteritis or an antibiotic course shortly before IBS onset, a group interpreted as having altered enteric microflora and therefore a higher chance of responding to a microbiota-directed intervention.
Most important findings
Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 irritable bowel syndrome treatment produced a higher overall responder rate than placebo, but the difference reached significance only in weeks 10 and 11, which means the effect was modest and slow, yet clinically detectable, and at week 12 the EcN group still showed an 11–12% advantage that did not reach p<0.05, while the key result came from the subgroup with prior gastroenteritis and or antibiotics where response reached about 60% on EcN versus about 14% on placebo, a 45.7 percentage-point gain that was statistically significant, showing that when IBS followed a presumed dysbiosis EcN could restore comfort much better than placebo; symptom tracking showed that both groups improved in pain intensity, duration, and frequency, confirming the significant placebo component in IBS trials, but some symptoms such as meteorism and nausea improved only with EcN, which matches EcN's known epithelial and motility-modulating actions, and safety, laboratory parameters, and tolerance were as good as placebo, so the microbiome-relevant signature that emerges is IBS of postinfectious or postantibiotic origin, with gas-related symptoms, in a host who can support colonization by a defensin-inducing, pathogen-blocking E. coli.
Key implications
Clinicians should not expect Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 to relieve all-comers with IBS, but in patients whose IBS started after a clear enteric hit or antibiotic disruption, and who still report bloating or nausea, a 12-week EcN course is justified because the trial shows the most significant effect there, and this matches the biologic model in which EcN occupies mucosal niches, blocks pathogen invasion, stimulates β-defensins, and calms low-grade immune signals that are described in postinfectious IBS, so for microbiome-signature databases the paper supports tagging EcN to IBS cases with antecedent dysbiosis rather than to idiopathic IBS, and it also reinforces the need for long enough treatment windows, around 10–12 weeks, for probiotic effects to become distinct from placebo.
The probiotic Escherichia coli strain Nissle 1917 (EcN) stops acute diarrhoea in infants and toddlers
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 acute diarrhoea therapy in infants and toddlers shortened illness from 4.8 to 2.5 days, raised response to 94.5%, and was as safe as placebo.
What was studied?
The Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 acute diarrhoea treatment was tested in a multicentre, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled Phase III trial in infants and toddlers to determine whether an oral EcN suspension could shorten the duration of acute infectious diarrhoea compared with placebo and to confirm its safety in very young children. The trial defined response very clearly as a fall in stool frequency to three or fewer loose stools in 24 hours for at least two consecutive days. The probiotic was administered once to three times daily, depending on age, with each millilitre containing 10⁸ viable EcN. Follow-up lasted up to 10 days or until a response was observed. The study also documented stool pathogens, abdominal pain, vomiting, temperature, and tolerance, allowing for the separation of clinical benefit from the usual rapid spontaneous recovery seen in pediatric gastroenteritis. The background was that EcN has microcin production, barrier support, and immune modulation, so the authors wanted to see if these mechanisms translate into faster clinical resolution in routine viral or unspecific diarrhoea.
Who was studied?
A total of 113 Caucasian children aged 2 to 47 months were enrolled across 11 paediatric centres in Russia and Ukraine during one winter–spring season when viral gastroenteritis is common, and they all had more than three watery or loose stools per day for no longer than three days at baseline. Fifty-five children received EcN suspension, and fifty-eight received a placebo suspension that appeared identical, with doses adjusted according to age: 1 ml once daily in infants under one year, twice daily in toddlers aged 1 to 3 years, and three times daily in toddlers over 3 years but under 4 years. Children with dehydration above 5%, with antibiotics or other live products, or with chronic bowel disease were excluded to keep the cohort homogeneous and to avoid confounders. Pathogen screens showed mostly viral or nonspecific causes, with a minority of bacterial detections, which matches everyday paediatric practice. Parents kept daily stool and symptom diaries, and investigators confirmed findings at visits.
Most important findings
EcN led to a significantly faster clinical response than the placebo, with a median time to response of 2.5 days for EcN and 4.8 days for the placebo. This difference of 2.3 days was statistically significant at p = 0.0007. Ninety-four point five percent of EcN children met the response definition within 10 days, compared with 67.2% on placebo, indicating that almost all EcN recipients stopped experiencing acute diarrhoea within the observation window. The separation of response curves began on day 3 and continued to widen through day 5, indicating a biological rather than chance effect. Stool consistency normalised more often in the EcN arm and abdominal pain and cramps resolved in more EcN recipients. Pathogen clearance was similar in both arms, so EcN did not act by eradicating the organism but by supporting host control. No safety signals appeared, with adverse events reported in only 3.6% of EcN versus 3.4% of placebo, all of which were mild. Taken together, the trial defines a microbiome-related signature for EcN benefit in acute paediatric diarrhoea: a short-duration watery stool illness, mostly viral or unspecified, in otherwise healthy children, treated early with a 10⁸ CFU/ml EcN suspension, resulting in faster stool normalization and better parent-judged health.
Key implications
Clinicians managing infants and toddlers with acute diarrhea can add Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 as an oral suspension to standard care to reduce illness duration by about two days, which is clinically relevant in children at risk of dehydration and for alleviating parental anxiety. The effect size is larger than that reported for many Lactobacillus-based products, so EcN is a reasonable first probiotic choice where it is licensed. Because EcN did not clear pathogens more effectively than the placebo, its benefit likely stems from barrier reinforcement, antimicrobial peptide release, and immune calming, all of which are consistent with previous EcN work. These mechanisms make EcN useful across both viral and nonspecific episodes. The study also reassures us about safety in very young children, supporting early-life probiotic strategies and providing human data for microbiome databases that link EcN to rapid recovery phenotypes in acute enteric infections.
Copper homeostasis in Enterococcus hirae
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Copper homeostasis in Enterococcus hirae maps a four-gene circuit—CopA, CopB, CopY, CopZ—and a reductase that set copper uptake and export, yielding clear genomic markers to predict copper tolerance and stress in gut and wound niches.
What was reviewed?
This review explains copper homeostasis in Enterococcus hirae as a simple model that reveals how bacteria sense, move, and buffer copper in ways that shape survival in host and environmental niches. It centers on the cop operon, which encodes the repressor CopY, the copper chaperone CopZ, and two CPx-type P-ATPases, CopA and CopB. The authors describe how these parts work together to manage copper from scarcity to overload, and how similar motifs appear in human ATP7A/ATP7B and in other microbes. The review links chemistry to physiology, showing how copper’s redox states, ligands, and pH set what form cells can move and where it goes. These steps provide clear, gene-level markers that a microbiome signatures database can track to predict copper tolerance or stress across gut and wound sites.
Who was reviewed?
The article draws on in vivo and in vitro work in E. hirae and compares it to related systems in Escherichia coli, Staphylococcus aureus, Listeria monocytogenes, yeast, plants, and humans. It includes structural and functional studies of CopA and CopB transporters, CopY regulation, CopZ-like chaperones, and an extracellular copper reductase that supplies Cu(I) for uptake. It also reviews conserved motifs, such as the intramembrane CPx sequence in copper pumps and the Cys-X-X-C metal-binding loop in chaperones and N-termini of ATPases. By setting E. hirae alongside pathogens and host proteins, the review shows why this Gram-positive model helps interpret copper handling in mucosa, biofilms, and devices where enterococci and other gut commensals or opportunists can face copper stress.
Most important findings
The review defines a four-part circuit that matches copper supply with need and prevents damage. Under low copper, CopA supports uptake, likely of Cu(I), while CopY, bound to DNA, keeps the operon quiet; when copper rises, CopZ loads with Cu(I) and delivers it to CopY, which releases DNA and turns on the operon. CopB then exports excess Cu(I) and protects the cell; direct Ag(I)/Cu(I) transport by CopB confirms this role. An extracellular or membrane-bound reductase reduces Cu(II) to Cu(I), the transported species, explaining how cells gain copper at neutral pH. CopZ carries exposed Cu(I), which eases handoff to partners but also raises risk; a copper-stimulated serine protease trims Cu-CopZ to limit harm. These parts map to actionable markers for a microbiome database: copA (uptake/Ag sensitivity), copB (export), copY (Cu-responsive repressor with CxCx4CxC site), copZ (Atx1-like chaperone), and a surface reductase signature.
Key implications
Clinicians can read the cop operon as a compact stress module that forecasts how enterococci handle copper on skin, wounds, catheters, and in the gut, where feeds, pipes, or topical copper raise exposure. Sequencing that detects copA/copB/copY/copZ can flag strains that tolerate copper and may persist on copper-touch surfaces or in metal-amended feeds. The same genes can also predict cross-responses to silver and to thiol-depleting stress. In a microbiome signatures database, tagging these loci with niche context and pH can refine risk calls: copA plus reductase marks efficient copper entry at neutral pH; high copB marks export capacity; copZ abundance without checks can signal oxidative risk. These insights support measured use of copper surfaces or dressings and argue for surveillance where copper use is heavy, since selection may shift communities toward copper-tolerant enterococci and reduce beneficial competitors.
The probiotic Escherichia coli strain Nissle 1917 interferes with invasion of human intestinal epithelial cells by different enteroinvasive bacterial pathogens
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Probiotics
Probiotics
Probiotics are live microorganisms that offer significant health benefits when administered in adequate amounts. They primarily work by modulating the gut microbiome, supporting a balanced microbial ecosystem. Probiotics have been shown to improve gut health, modulate immune responses, and even influence metabolic and mental health disorders. With growing evidence supporting their therapeutic potential, probiotics are increasingly recognized for their role in treating conditions like irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), antibiotic-associated diarrhea (AAD), and even mental health conditions like depression and anxiety through their impact on the gut-brain axis.
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Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 (EcN) interferes with the invasion of human intestinal epithelial cells by various pathogens through a secreted component, not by microcins or physical contact, suggesting its potential as a therapeutic probiotic to prevent gastrointestinal infections.
What was studied?
This study focused on the probioticEscherichia coli Nissle 1917 (EcN) and its ability to interfere with the invasion of human intestinal epithelial cells by several enteroinvasive bacterial pathogens, including Salmonella enterica, Yersinia enterocolitica, Shigella flexneri, Legionella pneumophila, and Listeria monocytogenes. The researchers sought to determine whether EcN could inhibit bacterial invasion without affecting the viability of the pathogens. They explored the mechanisms behind this interference, specifically examining whether it was due to the production of microcins, physical contact, or secreted components.
Who was studied?
The study primarily investigated Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 (EcN), an established probiotic strain, and its isogenic microcin-negative mutant (SK22D). Various bacterial strains were used as invasive pathogens, including Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium, Yersinia enterocolitica, Shigella flexneri, Legionella pneumophila, and Listeria monocytogenes. Human intestinal epithelial cells (INT407 cells) were employed as a model for studying bacterial invasion, providing insight into EcN's anti-invasive properties in human gut cells.
Most important findings
The study revealed that E. coli Nissle 1917 (EcN) significantly interfered with the invasion of human intestinal epithelial cells by various enteroinvasive pathogens, reducing the invasion efficiency by up to 70%. This inhibitory effect was not dependent on direct physical contact between EcN and either the invasive bacteria or the epithelial cells. The anti-invasive effect of EcN was observed even when EcN was separated from the epithelial cells and pathogens by a membrane. Furthermore, the inhibition was not due to the production of microcins, as the microcin-negative mutant SK22D was equally effective in preventing invasion. This suggests that EcN's anti-invasive activity relies on a secreted component rather than bacteriocin-like substances. Notably, EcN did not affect the viability of the pathogens during the invasion process, suggesting that its primary role is to prevent entry into host cells rather than kill the bacteria.
Key implications
The findings suggest that Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 (EcN) offers a promising mechanism for preventing bacterial infections by inhibiting pathogen invasion into intestinal cells. This effect could be particularly beneficial in avoiding gastrointestinal infections caused by pathogens such as Salmonella, Shigella, and Listeria. Since EcN’s action does not rely on direct contact with pathogens or epithelial cells and does not affect pathogen viability, it represents a safe and effective probiotic strategy to enhance gut barrier function. The results highlight EcN's potential as a therapeutic agent in preventing bacterial invasion without disrupting the balance of the gut microbiota.
Pregnancy-associated listeriosis in England and Wales
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study examines pregnancy-associated listeriosis in England and Wales, exploring factors influencing pregnancy outcomes and infant survival, with a focus on maternal symptoms and timing of infection.
What was studied?
The study focused on pregnancy-associated listeriosis in England and Wales, investigating the incidence, outcomes, and associated risk factors of Listeria monocytogenes infections in pregnant women and neonates over a 21-year period (1990–2010). It examined clinical and epidemiological data from 462 pregnancy-related listeriosis cases, analyzing variables such as maternal symptoms, gestational age at symptom onset, and the impact on the fetus and infant.
Who was studied?
The study involved pregnant women and newborn infants in England and Wales who were diagnosed with pregnancy-associated listeriosis. Data were collected from cases where Listeria monocytogenes was isolated from maternal or neonatal blood, placenta, or cerebrospinal fluid.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed that 68% of pregnancy-associated listeriosis cases resulted in live births, while 22% resulted in stillbirths or spontaneous abortions. Maternal symptoms, particularly during the first and second trimesters, were linked to poorer outcomes, including higher rates of stillbirths and spontaneous abortions. The timing of infection also influenced outcomes: infections occurring in the third trimester were associated with higher rates of survival. Moreover, the study found that gestational age at the onset of maternal illness played a significant role in the likelihood of infant survival, with third-trimester infections leading to a better prognosis. The study also identified that the presence of maternal symptoms correlated with early onset of illness in neonates, while asymptomatic mothers were more likely to have infants with late-onset listeriosis, which presented more severe symptoms, such as meningitis or sepsis.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study underscores the critical importance of early detection and treatment of listeriosis in pregnant women to improve outcomes for both mother and child. The findings highlight the need for increased awareness and clinical vigilance, especially for asymptomatic mothers, as delayed diagnosis and treatment can lead to severe outcomes for the infant. The study also suggests the potential benefits of routine screening for Listeria monocytogenes in pregnant women, particularly to prevent premature births and neonatal infections. Furthermore, it calls for public health measures to provide targeted advice to pregnant women, particularly regarding the consumption of high-risk foods, such as chilled ready-to-eat products.
The ArsD As(III) metallochaperone
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study investigates the structural and biochemical role of ArsD, a metallochaperone in E. coli, in enhancing arsenic detoxification by transferring As(III) to the ArsA ATPase, providing new insights into arsenic resistance mechanisms in bacteria.
What was studied?
This study explores the function of ArsD, a metallochaperone involved in arsenic resistance in Escherichia coli. ArsD facilitates the transfer of arsenic(III) (As(III)) to the ArsA ATPase, which is part of an ATP-driven arsenic efflux pump. This pump actively extrudes arsenic from cells, contributing to resistance against environmental arsenic. ArsD plays a critical role by increasing the affinity of ArsA for As(III), thus enhancing the efficiency of arsenic detoxification. The study investigates the crystal structure of ArsD, its interaction with ArsA, and the biochemical process by which ArsD delivers arsenic to ArsA, using X-ray crystallography and NMR spectroscopy to understand the structural and functional details of this interaction.
Who was studied?
The study focuses on the ArsD protein found in Escherichia coli, specifically examining its role in the ars operon on plasmid R773. The ArsD protein, a metallochaperone, is analyzed in relation to its interaction with ArsA, the ATPase subunit of the ArsAB pump. Various mutants of ArsD were also created to explore how changes in its structure affect its interaction with ArsA and its ability to transfer arsenic. Additionally, the study investigates the behavior of ArsD in both its free form and when bound to arsenic. It also examines ars operon sequences in other bacteria, suggesting that similar systems exist across diverse species capable of arsenic detoxification.
Most important findings
The study found that ArsD plays a critical role in arsenic resistance by enhancing the efficiency of ArsA in extruding arsenic from the cell. The cysteine residues in ArsD (Cys12, Cys13, and Cys18) form a high-affinity site for As(III), which is transferred to ArsA, thereby increasing its affinity for arsenic and improving the efflux process. The researchers also discovered that ATP hydrolysis by ArsA is required for the transfer of As(III) from ArsD to ArsA, suggesting a conformational change in ArsA during the catalytic cycle that facilitates this process. The study also demonstrated that ArsD enhances ATPase activity in ArsA, making it more effective at lower arsenic concentrations, typical of environmental conditions. Additionally, structural analysis revealed that ArsD and ArsA form a transient complex during the arsenic transfer process, with the binding sites of both proteins coming into close proximity to allow for efficient arsenic transfer.
Key implications
For clinicians, understanding the role of ArsD in arsenic detoxification provides insight into how microbial arsenic resistance mechanisms could be leveraged for bioremediation in contaminated areas. The findings suggest that ArsD's ability to deliver As(III) to ArsA could be crucial in developing microbial treatments to clean up arsenic-contaminated water sources, a significant health concern in regions with arsenic-rich drinking water. Moreover, understanding the mechanism of action of metallochaperones like ArsD could inform the development of new therapeutic strategies for managing arsenic poisoning in humans. This could lead to more targeted approaches in environmental health, especially in arsenic-affected communities.
Synergistic Nanoparticle–Essential Oil Combinations Show Promising Antifungal Activity
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Microsporum canis (M. canis)
Microsporum canis (M. canis)
OverviewMicrosporum canis (M. canis) is a zoophilic dermatophyte common in cats and dogs, responsible for 90% of feline dermatophytoses worldwide.[1][2] It has significant zoonotic potential, transmitting to humans through fomites or direct animal contact, causing severe superficial mycosis. M. canis is considered anthropo-zoophilic and can infect pediatric or immunocompromised patients, causing severe inflammatory responses such […]
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Ag₀.₉₉Fe₁.₀₁O₃ nanoparticles, especially when combined with cinnamon, clove, or lemongrass essential oils, exhibited strong synergistic antifungal effects against multiple dermatophytes, offering a promising strategy against antifungal resistance.
What was studied?
This study evaluated the antidermatophytic activity of eight novel metallic nanoparticle (NP) compounds, both as individual agents and in synergistic combinations with essential oils (EOs), against five dermatophyte species. The nanoparticles—Ag₀.₄₉Cr₂.₅₁O₄, Ag₀.₉₉Fe₁.₀₁O₃, CoLa₀.₀₁₉Fe₁.₉₈₁O₄, Co₀.₉₉Fe₁.₉₉O₄, Ag₀.₉₉Cr₁.₀₁O₂, Ca₀.₉₉Fe₁.₉₉O₄, CoBi₀.₀₁₉Fe₁.₉₈₁O₄, and Cu₀.₉₉Fe₁.₉₉O₄—were synthesized via flash auto-combustion. The antifungal efficacy was further assessed by combining the four active nanoparticle compounds with five essential oils (cinnamon, clove, lemongrass, tea tree, and thyme), aiming to identify synergistic interactions capable of overcoming rising antifungal resistance in dermatophytes.
Who was studied?
The dermatophytic species evaluated in vitro included Microsporum canis, Trichophyton tonsurans, T. violaceum, T. verrucosum, and Epidermophyton floccosum, all of which were sourced from the Dermatology Department at Cairo University. Morphological and microscopic identification methods confirmed the species. The study utilized standard antifungal susceptibility assays (Kirby-Bauer disc diffusion, MIC determination via broth microdilution, and FICI analysis) to assess inhibitory efficacy.
Most important findings
Among the eight synthesized NP compounds, only four—Ag₀.₄₉Cr₂.₅₁O₄, Ag₀.₉₉Fe₁.₀₁O₃, CoLa₀.₀₁₉Fe₁.₉₈₁O₄, and Co₀.₉₉Fe₁.₉₉O₄—exhibited measurable antidermatophytic activity. Ag₀.₉₉Fe₁.₀₁O₃ demonstrated the strongest activity, particularly against M. canis, showing a 19 mm inhibition zone and a 211% relative activity compared to terbinafine. The combination of Ag₀.₉₉Fe₁.₀₁O₃ with cinnamon yielded the most potent synergy, resulting in a 47 mm inhibition zone and a fractional inhibitory concentration index (FICI) ≤ 0.5 across all species tested. The lowest MIC values were observed for Ag₀.₉₉Fe₁.₀₁O₃ with cinnamon (6.25 µg/mL / 2 µL/mL), confirming strong synergy. Several other combinations involving Ag₀.₉₉Fe₁.₀₁O₃ (with clove and lemongrass) also showed synergistic effects. In contrast, combinations with thyme and tea tree oils often showed antagonistic or indifferent effects.
Synergistic combinations with FICI ≤ 0.5 (synergistic effect):
Combination
M. canis
T. tonsurans
T. violaceum
T. verrucosum
E. floccosum
Ag₀.₉₉Fe₁.₀₁O₃ + Cinnamon
0.375
0.5
0.375
0.3125
0.375
Ag₀.₉₉Fe₁.₀₁O₃ + Clove
0.25
0.375
0.375
0.5
0.5
Ag₀.₉₉Fe₁.₀₁O₃ + Lemongrass
0.375
0.5
0.5
0.375
0.375
Combinations involving other NPs and EOs largely yielded indifferent or antagonistic interactions.
Key implications
The study provides compelling evidence for the synergistic antifungal potential of metallic nanoparticles, particularly Ag₀.₉₉Fe₁.₀₁O₃, when combined with specific essential oils such as cinnamon, clove, and lemongrass. These combinations not only surpassed the antifungal efficacy of standard treatments like terbinafine but also demonstrated lower minimum inhibitory concentrations and favorable FICI values. This indicates a promising alternative strategy to combat the rising issue of antifungal resistance in dermatophytes, especially M. canis, which is increasingly resistant to first-line antifungals. However, the study emphasizes the need for further toxicological and mechanistic investigations before clinical translation.
Functional Proteins of Akkermansia Muciniphila: Impacts on Host Health and Metabolism
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review explains how Akkermansia muciniphila proteins, not just the bacterium itself, regulate immunity, metabolism, gut barrier integrity, cancer response, and neuroinflammation, highlighting their emerging role as next-generation postbiotic therapeutics.
What was reviewed?
This review examined the functional proteome of Akkermansia muciniphila, with a specific focus on how discrete bacterial proteins, rather than the intact organism alone, mediate host–microbe interactions. The authors synthesized genomic, proteomic, in vitro, animal, and limited human evidence to describe how key proteins such as Amuc_1100, Amuc_1631 (P9), Amuc_2109, Amuc_1409, and Amuc_1434 regulate immune signaling, gut barrier integrity, metabolic homeostasis, tumor immunity, and gut–brain communication. Rather than treating A. muciniphila as a monolithic probiotic, the review reframed it as a source of biologically active postbiotic proteins with distinct molecular targets, signaling pathways, and therapeutic profiles relevant to inflammatory, metabolic, oncologic, and neuropsychiatric disease states.
Who was reviewed?
The review drew upon evidence derived from human-derived immune cells and intestinal epithelial models, murine models of obesity, diabetes, colitis, cancer, neurobehavioral stress, and cardiometabolic disease, as well as observational human microbiome studies linking A. muciniphila abundance to clinical outcomes. While most mechanistic data originated from controlled preclinical systems, the reviewed populations collectively represent hosts affected by metabolic syndrome, inflammatory bowel disease, colorectal cancer, neuroinflammation, non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, and immune checkpoint therapy responsiveness. Importantly, the review emphasized that host context, baseline microbiome structure, diet, and disease state strongly influence whether A. muciniphila–derived activities are protective or potentially harmful.
Most important findings
The most critical finding was that A. muciniphila exerts its clinical relevance through a small number of highly specific proteins that function as immune rheostats, metabolic regulators, and barrier-stabilizing enzymes. Amuc_1100 emerged as a central major microbial association (MMA), acting through TLR2 and TLR4 to suppress excessive pro-inflammatory signaling while enhancing IL-10 production, reinforcing tight junction proteins, modulating lipid metabolism, and influencing serotonin biosynthesis. Amuc_1631 (P9) directly stimulated GLP-1 secretion via ICAM-2 binding on enteroendocrine L-cells, linking A. muciniphila to glucose control and energy expenditure. Amuc_2109 required intact enzymatic activity to restore epithelial barrier integrity and suppress inflammasome activation, demonstrating that catalytic function—not just receptor engagement—drives certain postbiotic effects. The review also highlighted Amuc_1434 and Amuc_2172 as tumor-modulating proteins that promote apoptosis and enhance CD8⁺ T-cell activity, helping explain why A. muciniphila abundance correlates with improved immunotherapy response. Collectively, these findings positioned A. muciniphila as an ecosystem engineer whose mucin degradation supports cross-feeding with butyrate-producing taxa such as Faecalibacterium prausnitzii and Eubacterium hallii, reinforcing mucosal and systemic homeostasis.
Greatest implications
The greatest implication is a paradigm shift away from live probiotics toward protein-based or pasteurized postbiotic therapeutics derived from A. muciniphila. By isolating specific effectors, clinicians may eventually target metabolic disease, inflammatory disorders, cancer immunotherapy responsiveness, and neuroinflammation with greater precision and safety. However, the review underscored a critical translational gap, as most evidence remains preclinical and delivery challenges, strain variability, and antibiotic resistance genes complicate clinical deployment. For clinicians, the work clarifies when A. muciniphila signatures may be beneficial biomarkers and when context-dependent mucin degradation could exacerbate disease, reinforcing the need for personalized microbiome-guided interventions rather than universal supplementation.
Association between premature ovarian insufficiency and gut microbiota
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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The study reveals a distinct gut microbiome profile in women with premature ovarian insufficiency (POI), with altered bacterial populations linked to hormonal changes, suggesting a potential role of the microbiome in POI pathogenesis and management.
What was studied?
This study aimed to explore the relationship between premature ovarian insufficiency (POI) and the gut microbiota. POI, which affects women under 40 and is marked by the early cessation of ovarian function, has multifactorial causes, including autoimmune diseases and hormonal imbalances. Recent research into gut microbiome studies has highlighted its influence on immune function and hormonal regulation. This study investigated the gut microbial community structure in women with POI compared to healthy controls, utilizing 16S rRNA gene sequencing to characterize the differences in microbial populations.
Who was studied?
The study included 35 women diagnosed with spontaneous POI and 18 healthy women as controls. All participants were aged between 24 and 40 years, with the POI group having a significantly higher body mass index (BMI) compared to controls. The women with POI had higher serum levels of follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), luteinizing hormone (LH), and testosterone (T), but lower levels of estradiol (E2) and anti-Müllerian hormone (AMH). The women in the control group had normal ovarian function, with regular menstruation and normal levels of FSH. The participants were recruited from the Shenzhen Maternity & Child Healthcare Hospital, and clinical and demographic data were also collected for analysis.
Most important findings
The gut microbiome of women with POI showed significant differences when compared to that of healthy controls. The major phyla present in both groups were Firmicutes, Bacteroidetes, Actinobacteria, and Proteobacteria, with Firmicutes being the dominant phylum in both groups. However, women with POI had a significantly higher Bacteroidetes/Firmicutes ratio, with notable increases in Bacteroides, Bifidobacterium, Megamonas, and Prevotella, while genera such as Blautia, Clostridium, Coprococcus, and Faecalibacterium were significantly decreased. These microbial changes were correlated with serum hormone levels, including estradiol, FSH, and LH. Specifically, higher levels of Bacteroides and a higher Bacteroidetes/Firmicutes ratio were associated with higher FSH and LH levels and lower estradiol.
Key implications
These findings suggest that the gut microbiota plays a role in the pathogenesis of POI, possibly influencing immune responses and hormone regulation. The altered gut microbial profile in women with POI, marked by an increase in certain bacterial genera and a disturbed Bacteroidetes/Firmicutes ratio, may contribute to the autoimmune processes and hormonal imbalances seen in POI. The correlation between gut microbiota composition and serum hormone levels indicates that microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs), such as probiotics, could potentially modulate the immune response and help manage POI symptoms.
Berberine and Palmatine Show Superior Antifungal Activity Against Microsporum canis
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Microsporum canis (M. canis)
Microsporum canis (M. canis)
OverviewMicrosporum canis (M. canis) is a zoophilic dermatophyte common in cats and dogs, responsible for 90% of feline dermatophytoses worldwide.[1][2] It has significant zoonotic potential, transmitting to humans through fomites or direct animal contact, causing severe superficial mycosis. M. canis is considered anthropo-zoophilic and can infect pediatric or immunocompromised patients, causing severe inflammatory responses such […]
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This study found that berberine and palmatine hydrochloride synergistically inhibit M. canis by disrupting cell structure and modulating virulence-related genes. The combination outperformed clotrimazole in vivo, showing strong potential for treating dermatophytosis.
What was studied?
This study investigated the antifungal efficacy and underlying mechanism of berberine hydrochloride and palmatine hydrochloride—two alkaloids derived from Phellodendron amurense—against Microsporum canis, a dermatophyte responsible for zoonotic skin infections. The researchers performed both in vitro and in vivo experiments to assess antifungal activity, determine minimal inhibitory concentrations (MICs), and evaluate morphological changes using transmission electron microscopy (TEM). Gene expression analysis of eight M. canis-related genes (including PGAL4, FSH1, NADH1, PQ-LRP, NDR, SC, and ZTZ) was conducted via real-time PCR. An in vivo rabbit dermatitis model was used to evaluate clinical efficacy, histological fungal burden, and NADH enzyme activity.
Who was studied?
The study involved M. canis strains isolated from rabbits and a total of 50 male New Zealand rabbits, each aged 31 days and weighing 400–450 grams. The rabbits were divided into five treatment groups receiving topical applications of berberine, palmatine, their combination, clotrimazole, or DMSO as control.
Most important findings
The combination of berberine and palmatine (B-P) exhibited superior antifungal effects compared to individual compounds or clotrimazole. Notably, palmatine acted earlier in gene upregulation, while berberine sustained antifungal activity longer, indicating a synergistic mechanism. Clotrimazole, while potent in MIC assays, performed less effectively in vivo, likely due to cyclophosphamide-induced immunosuppression interfering with its bioactivity. Key findings include:
B-P group had lower lesion scores than single agents or clotrimazole at days 9–17 (pages 7 & 13)
Histology
PAS staining showed fewer fungal elements in B-P treated skin compared to all other groups (page 13)
Key implications
This study highlights a promising plant-derived therapeutic strategy for treating dermatophytosis caused by M. canis. The berberine-palmatine combination not only disrupted fungal cell membranes but also modulated the expression of genes associated with virulence and metabolism, suggesting a dual mechanism of action. From a microbiome perspective, this study underscores the value of targeting microbial metabolic and transport pathways (e.g., NADH1, ZTZ) and supports the clinical utility of natural antifungals as adjuncts or alternatives to synthetic agents like azoles. Given the rising resistance to conventional antifungals and the zoonotic risk posed by M. canis, this research offers a translational path for developing novel, microbiome-compatible antifungal therapies in both veterinary and human medicine.
Intratumoral microbiome: Implications for immune modulation and innovative therapeutic strategies in cancer
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Intratumoural Microbiota
Intratumoural Microbiota
With the growing understanding of the intratumoral microbiota’s influence on cancer progression, the next frontier in cancer therapy is microbiota-targeted interventions. By introducing beneficial microbes or altering existing microbial populations within tumors, therapies can be designed to modulate the immune system, promote tumor suppression, and improve drug efficacy. However, challenges remain in deciphering the complex relationships between microbes, tumor cells, and the immune system, necessitating more refined research methods and standardized approaches to translate these discoveries into clinical practice.
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This review explores the dual role of the intratumoral microbiome in cancer, highlighting its impact on immune modulation and its potential as a target for innovative therapeutic strategies, including enhancing immunotherapy efficacy.
What was studied?
This review article explores the role of the intratumoral microbiome in immune modulation and its potential for cancer therapy. It delves into how bacteria within the tumor microenvironment (TME) influence both tumor progression and immune responses, highlighting their dual roles in either supporting tumor growth or promoting immune-mediated destruction of cancer cells. The review also emphasizes the need for innovative therapeutic strategies aimed at harnessing the microbiome’s impact on immunotherapy, with particular focus on identifying microbial signatures that could be used to predict treatment outcomes and enhance therapeutic efficacy.
Who was studied?
The review synthesizes findings from multiple preclinical studies conducted on animal models, primarily focusing on various cancers such as colorectal cancer (CRC), melanoma, and esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC). These studies examine the impact of bacterial species like Fusobacterium nucleatum, Bacteroides fragilis, and Helicobacter pylori on tumor growth and the immune response within the TME. Additionally, the review integrates findings from human clinical studies, where the presence of specific microbial communities within tumors correlates with variations in immune cell infiltration, tumor growth, and responses to immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs).
Most important findings
The review reveals that the intratumoral microbiome can modulate immune responses in both pro-tumor and anti-tumor directions. Some microbes, such as Fusobacterium nucleatum, promote tumor growth by inhibiting the activity of immune cells like T cells and natural killer (NK) cells, while others, such as Akkermansia muciniphila and Lactobacillus reuteri, enhance the anti-tumor immune response by stimulating T cell activity and cytokine production. These microbes either directly influence immune cells or indirectly modulate the immune microenvironment by affecting the recruitment of immune cells to the tumor site or modifying immune checkpoint expression. The review also emphasizes how the interaction between intratumoral bacteria and host immune cells can either drive immune tolerance or induce anti-tumor immunity, particularly when combined with therapies like immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs).
Key implications
The findings have significant implications for cancer treatment, particularly in enhancing the efficacy of immunotherapies. Understanding the intricate interplay between intratumoral microbiota and immune cells could lead to novel therapeutic strategies that not only target the tumor itself but also reshape the immune landscape to favor anti-tumor immunity. The article advocates for the integration of microbiome research into clinical practice, suggesting that manipulating the intratumoral microbiome through the use of probiotics, antibiotics, or engineered bacteria may offer a new avenue for improving treatment outcomes. However, the review also highlights the challenges of tumor-specific microbiome identification, the variability in microbial compositions across patients, and the need for personalized approaches in microbiome-targeted therapies.
Akkermansia muciniphila: a microbial guardian against oxidative stress–gut microbiota crosstalk and clinical prospects
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review positions Akkermansia muciniphila as a key regulator of oxidative stress through mucin metabolism, bioactive proteins, and gut–organ signaling. Its clinical impact spans metabolic, inflammatory, and neurodegenerative conditions, with benefits strongly dependent on strain and host context.
What was reviewed?
This review examined the role of Akkermansia muciniphila as a central regulator of oxidative stress through gut microbiota–host crosstalk, with a specific focus on its molecular mechanisms, bioactive components, and emerging clinical relevance. The authors synthesized evidence spanning mechanistic in vitro work, animal models, and human clinical trials to explain how A. muciniphila influences redox balance, inflammation, and tissue integrity across multiple organ systems. Particular attention was given to mucin degradation dynamics, antioxidant signaling pathways, and the bacterium’s ability to communicate systemically through metabolites, membrane proteins, and extracellular vesicles.
Who was reviewed?
The review integrated data from murine models of metabolic disease, inflammation, neurodegeneration, and barrier dysfunction, alongside observational cohorts and interventional trials in humans with obesity, insulin resistance, type 2 diabetes, sarcopenia, respiratory symptoms, and neurodegenerative risk. It also evaluated findings from cellular models, including intestinal epithelial and immune cells, to contextualize host–microbe signaling. Rather than focusing on a single population, the review emphasized cross-species consistency and strain-specific effects relevant to clinical translation.
What were the most important findings?
The review established Akkermansia muciniphila as a keystone mucin-associated bacterium with strong antioxidant capacity mediated through multiple, converging mechanisms. A major microbial association highlighted was the inverse relationship between A. muciniphila abundance and oxidative stress markers such as reactive oxygen species and malondialdehyde across metabolic, hepatic, intestinal, and neurological disease states. Mechanistically, the outer membrane protein Amuc_1100 emerged as a core effector, activating TLR2-dependent signaling while enhancing NRF2-HO-1–driven antioxidant enzyme expression, including SOD and GPx. Short-chain fatty acids derived from mucin metabolism, particularly acetate and butyrate, were shown to reinforce epithelial barrier integrity, regulate mitochondrial function, and suppress inflammatory redox loops through gut–organ axes. Extracellular vesicles from A. muciniphila further amplified these effects by delivering bioactive cargo that modulates MAPK, AMPK, and NF-κB pathways, reducing oxidative damage while maintaining low immunogenicity. Clinically, both live and pasteurized preparations improved insulin sensitivity, lipid metabolism, and inflammatory markers, with efficacy depending on strain, dose, and host baseline microbiome composition.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review reframes Akkermansia muciniphila as a precision microbiome-based antioxidant rather than a simple probiotic. For clinicians, the key implication is that therapeutic benefit depends on controlled mucin degradation, strain selection, and host context. Moderate colonization supports barrier renewal and redox balance, while overgrowth or inappropriate host environments may exacerbate disease. The findings support targeted microbiome interventions, including pasteurized bacteria, isolated proteins such as Amuc_1100, and engineered delivery systems, as adjunct strategies for managing oxidative stress–driven conditions. However, they also underscore the need for individualized assessment and caution against indiscriminate supplementation.
Characteristics of the vaginal microbiome in women with premature ovarian insufficiency
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
•
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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This study identifies significant differences in vaginal microbiota between women with premature ovarian insufficiency (POI) and healthy controls, suggesting that microbial shifts could contribute to ovarian dysfunction and hormone imbalances in POI.
What was studied?
This study aimed to investigate the differences in the vaginal microbiome between women with premature ovarian insufficiency (POI) and healthy controls. POI is characterized by early ovarian failure, leading to amenorrhea and hormonal imbalance. The research sought to identify microbial community differences using 16S rRNA gene sequencing to explore how the vaginal microbiome might relate to hormonal levels and ovarian function. Specifically, it compared microbial compositions between 28 women with spontaneous POI and 12 healthy women, looking for patterns of microbial dysbiosis that might correlate with the disease.
Who was studied?
The study involved 40 women, aged 24 to 40 years, recruited from the Shenzhen Maternity and Child Healthcare Hospital. Of these, 28 women had spontaneous POI, diagnosed based on elevated serum levels of follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) and luteinizing hormone (LH), alongside low estradiol and anti-Müllerian hormone (AMH) levels. The remaining 12 women, with normal ovarian function and hormone levels, were selected as controls. The study excluded women with autoimmune diseases, recent antibiotic use, or other conditions that could affect the vaginal microbiota or reproductive health.
Most important findings
The study identified significant differences in the vaginal microbiomes of women with POI compared to healthy controls. The microbial community in women with POI showed a higher diversity, as indicated by the weighted UniFrac distance, suggesting a more complex microbiome. Lactobacillus species, which are typically abundant in the vaginal microbiota of healthy women, were significantly reduced in the POI group. In contrast, the genera Streptococcus, Gardnerella, and Anaerococcus were found in higher quantities in women with POI. Correlation analysis further revealed that the abundance of Lactobacillus was positively correlated with estradiol levels, while the abundance of Streptococcus was associated with increased FSH and LH levels. These microbial shifts were linked to the hormonal imbalances typical of POI, suggesting that the vaginal microbiome may play a role in the pathophysiology of the disease.
Key implications
The findings highlight that alterations in the vaginal microbiota, particularly a decrease in Lactobacillus and an increase in potentially pathogenic genera like Streptococcus and Gardnerella, are associated with POI. These changes may influence the inflammatory and immune responses in the vaginal environment, which could contribute to ovarian dysfunction. Understanding the link between microbiome composition and ovarian health in POI could lead to novel microbiome-targeted interventions, such as probiotic interventions, to restore balance and potentially mitigate the symptoms of POI. Future research should aim to explore the causality of these microbiome shifts and their direct impact on ovarian function.
The effects of dietary fat on gut microbial composition and function in a mouse model of ovarian cancer
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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This study investigates the effects of ketogenic and high-fat diets on gut microbial composition and ovarian cancer progression in mice. It shows that high-fat diets increase tumor growth and disrupt microbial diversity, highlighting the potential role of diet in cancer therapy and prevention.
What was studied?
This study aimed to investigate the impact of dietary fat on gut microbial composition and function in a mouse model of ovarian cancer. Specifically, it explored the effects of ketogenic (KD) and high-fat/low-carbohydrate (HF/LC) diets on the gut microbiome and tumor progression in a syngeneic mouse model of high-grade serous ovarian cancer (EOC). The study also compared these high-fat diets to a low-fat/high-carbohydrate (LF/HC) diet. Tumor growth was monitored, and microbial composition was analyzed using 16S rRNA sequencing and shotgun metagenomics.
Who was studied?
The study involved 30 female C57BL/6 J mice, a widely used strain in cancer research. The mice were injected with KPCA EOC cells, a syngeneic ovarian cancer cell line that mimics high-grade serous ovarian cancer, and were subsequently randomized into three diet groups: ketogenic diet (KD), high-fat/low-carbohydrate diet (HF/LC), and low-fat/high-carbohydrate diet (LF/HC). The gut microbial composition and tumor progression were monitored over a period of 27 days. Fecal samples were collected for microbial analysis at the time of euthanasia.
Most important findings
The study found that both KD and HF/LC diets significantly accelerated tumor growth compared to the LF/HC diet. Mice on the KD and HF/LC diets showed marked reductions in gut microbial diversity, while those on the LF/HC diet exhibited higher microbial diversity. The taxonomic analysis revealed distinct microbial alterations among diet groups. Notably, HF/LC-fed mice had an increased abundance of Bacteroides thetaiotamicron, Enterococcus faecalis, and Lachnospiraceae bacterium, while LF/HC-fed mice had an overrepresentation of Dubosiella newyorkensis. KD-fed mice showed a higher abundance of Akkermansia species. Functional pathway analysis indicated that polyamine biosynthesis and fatty acid oxidation pathways were enriched in the HF/LC group, suggesting a link between these metabolic pathways and accelerated tumor growth.
The results highlight the complex relationship between dietary fat, the gut microbiome, and ovarian cancer progression. The study shows that high-fat diets, particularly ketogenic and HF/LC diets, not only accelerate tumor growth but also disrupt microbial diversity in the gut. The findings underscore the importance of considering both the quantity and quality of dietary fat when evaluating its effects on cancer biology. Additionally, the alterations in gut microbial composition linked to these diets suggest that dietary interventions could potentially be used as part of cancer prevention or therapeutic strategies. However, further research is needed to determine the exact mechanisms through which the microbiome influences cancer progression and how dietary modifications can be used to modulate these effects.
Gentamicin combination treatment is associated with lower mortality in patients with invasive listeriosis: a retrospective analysis
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study demonstrates that gentamicin combination therapy significantly reduces 90-day mortality in patients with invasive listeriosis, especially in those with neurolisteriosis.
What was studied?
This study examined the effects of gentamicin combination therapy on 90-day mortality in patients with invasive listeriosis, comparing it to monotherapy using ampicillin or other antibiotics. It was a retrospective, single-center study conducted at the University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, which analyzed patient data collected between 2009 and 2020.
Who was studied?
The study focused on patients diagnosed with invasive listeriosis, specifically those with Listeria monocytogenes bacteraemia or neurolisteriosis. A total of 36 patients were included, with 21 receiving gentamicin combination therapy and 15 receiving monotherapy.
What were the most important findings?
The key finding of this study was that patients receiving gentamicin combination therapy had significantly lower 90-day mortality (10%) compared to those receiving monotherapy (60%). The study also highlighted that patients with neurolisteriosis were more likely to receive gentamicin combination therapy, which may have contributed to the lower mortality observed in this group. Additionally, the study found no significant differences in baseline kidney function or other comorbidities that would contraindicate gentamicin use, suggesting that the reduced mortality could be attributed to the therapy itself rather than differences in patient conditions. Multivariable Cox regression analysis indicated that the gentamicin combination treatment had a significantly reduced hazard ratio (0.06) for 90-day mortality, pointing to its effectiveness in improving survival rates.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings of this study strongly suggest that gentamicin combination therapy improves survival rates for patients with invasive listeriosis, which could influence clinical practice by promoting more widespread use of this treatment in real-world settings. The study also raises concerns about the adequacy of current antibiotic practices, as a significant proportion of patients in the monotherapy group did not receive the recommended combination treatment. These results may lead to changes in treatment protocols, emphasizing the need for more aggressive management of invasive listeriosis to reduce mortality, particularly in patients with neurolisteriosis or those with significant comorbidities.
The metabolites of gut microbiota: their role in ferroptosis in inflammatory bowel disease
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review explains how gut microbiota metabolites—SCFAs, bile acids, and tryptophan products—shape ferroptosis in intestinal epithelial cells and influence IBD severity, highlighting microbial patterns linked to lower butyrate producers and altered bile acid signaling.
What was reviewed?
This review examined how gut microbiota–derived metabolites shape ferroptosis pathways in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), with the goal of explaining how microbe-host chemistry may worsen or calm epithelial injury in Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis. The authors centered the discussion on three metabolite families that change in IBD and plausibly regulate ferroptosis in intestinal epithelial cells: short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs), tryptophan-derived indoles and related products, and bile acids.
Who was reviewed?
The article synthesized evidence from clinical observations in people with IBD (including differences in fecal metabolites and inferred microbial shifts) and from mechanistic studies in cell and animal colitis models that measure ferroptosis features such as iron accumulation, glutathione depletion, GPX4 suppression, and lipid peroxidation in intestinal epithelial cells. It also drew on studies of microbiota-targeted interventions to connect microbial ecology with ferroptosis-linked inflammation.
What were the most important findings?
The review links IBD activity to a ferroptosis-prone intestinal environment driven by oxidative stress, iron handling, and lipid peroxidation, and it argues that microbial metabolites can push this balance toward injury or protection through pathways that converge on System Xc− (SLC7A11), GPX4, and Nrf2/HO-1 signaling. As major microbial associations relevant to a signatures database, the paper highlights that IBD commonly shows lower SCFAs and fewer butyrate-associated taxa, including reduced Lachnospiraceae and Faecalibacterium prausnitzii, plus a reported reduction in Roseburia hominis, patterns that align with weaker barrier support and less anti-inflammatory tone. It also describes bile acid remodeling in active IBD—higher conjugated bile acids with lower secondary bile acids—and emphasizes that secondary bile acids such as lithocholic acid (LCA) and deoxycholic acid (DCA) can signal through FXR/TGR5 to influence inflammation and ferroptosis, while excess DCA can promote iron-driven epithelial ferroptosis and inflammasome activation. Finally, the review connects altered tryptophan metabolism to reduced microbe-derived AhR ligands and impaired barrier repair, while proposing that kynurenine and other tryptophan products can counter ferroptosis by lowering reactive oxygen species and limiting lipid peroxidation.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
For clinicians, the key implication is that ferroptosis is not just a cell-death label in IBD; it is a metabolite-sensitive injury program that the gut microbiome can tune, which makes microbial metabolites and their upstream microbial producers plausible biomarkers and treatment levers. The review supports a practical framework: restore SCFA-linked functions (barrier support, anti-inflammatory signaling, mitochondrial resilience), normalize bile acid signaling (FXR/TGR5 balance and secondary bile acid recovery), and rebuild tryptophan–AhR ligand activity to reduce epithelial oxidative stress and ferroptosis pressure. It also cautions that microbiota-directed therapies (antibiotics, probiotics, prebiotics, and fecal microbiota transplantation) may help by shifting these metabolite pools, but variability across patients and incomplete mechanism-to-clinic translation still limit precision use today.
Non-digestible oligosaccharides directly regulate host kinome to modulate host inflammatory responses without alterations in the gut microbiota
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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The study provides molecular mechanisms showing how prebiotics like inulin and scFOS directly regulate host immune signaling to modulate inflammation, independent of microbiota changes.
What was studied?
This study examined the direct impact of non-digestible oligosaccharides (prebiotics) on host immune responses, specifically focusing on their regulation of the host kinome and inflammatory signaling. It investigated how prebiotics modulate immune pathways, such as NF-κB and MAPK signaling, and their effects on inflammation in the absence of gut microbiota changes.
Who was studied?
The study involved human intestinal epithelial cells (Caco-2Bbe1 cells) exposed to prebiotics (inulin and short-chain fructooligosaccharides), along with a murine model of endotoxemia. The focus was on how these prebiotics influenced inflammatory responses and immune signaling pathways without altering the gut microbiota composition.
What were the most important findings?
The most significant finding was that prebiotics, particularly inulin and scFOS, directly modulate the host kinome, altering key signaling pathways involved in inflammation. These prebiotics dampened the inflammatory response to bacterial lipopolysaccharides (LPS) and reduced activation of the MAPK and NF-κB pathways in intestinal epithelial cells. The study revealed that prebiotics can exert these effects in the absence of microbial changes, indicating a direct impact on host immune function. Furthermore, inulin and scFOS induced different signaling cascades, with scFOS affecting multiple immune pathways, including MAPK, TLR, and TGFβ pathways, while inulin specifically influenced MAPK signaling.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This research highlights the potential of prebiotics as modulators of immune responses, independent of their role in gut microbiota composition. It provides molecular insights into how prebiotics can influence intestinal inflammation through direct signaling mechanisms, offering new avenues for therapeutic interventions in inflammatory conditions. This is particularly relevant for conditions like colitis or other diseases where inflammation and immune tolerance play a central role. The findings could influence the development of targeted prebiotic therapies aimed at modulating inflammation without altering the gut microbiota, which may have significant clinical implications in managing diseases like inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) or obesity-related inflammatory responses. Further research on the structure-function relationship of prebiotics could lead to optimized therapeutic strategies.
Antibiotic-associated changes in Akkermansia muciniphila alter its effects on host metabolic health
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study shows that antibiotics can select Akkermansia muciniphila variants that lose their ability to protect against obesity and metabolic dysfunction. The findings reveal a direct mechanistic link between antibiotic exposure, altered microbiome function, and chronic metabolic disease risk.
What was studied?
This study investigated how antibiotic exposure alters the functional capacity of the key gut commensal Akkermansia muciniphila and how these alterations affect host metabolic health. The authors specifically examined whether exposure to penicillin selects A. muciniphila variants with genetic mutations that change antibiotic susceptibility and compromise the bacterium’s ability to protect against obesity. Using controlled in vitro selection, genomic sequencing, transcriptomics, and in vivo mouse models, the study aimed to establish a mechanistic link between antibiotic-driven microbial evolution and downstream metabolic dysfunction.
Who was studied?
The study focused on Akkermansia muciniphila strains of human origin, including a wild-type isolate obtained from a healthy adult and the reference strain ATCC BAA-835. These strains were experimentally evolved under penicillin pressure and then administered to diet-induced obese male C57BL/6N mice to assess host metabolic outcomes. No human subjects were directly studied for clinical endpoints; instead, human microbiome relevance was assessed through global genomic database analyses to determine the prevalence of antibiotic-selected variants in human populations.
What were the most important findings?
The study demonstrated that penicillin exposure selects A. muciniphila variants carrying mutations in either the promoter of a TEM-type β-lactamase gene or in purine biosynthesis genes such as purF and purM. These mutations reduced antibiotic susceptibility but simultaneously impaired the bacterium’s host-beneficial functions. In high-fat-diet mouse models, wild-type A. muciniphila and the reference strain significantly reduced weight gain, endotoxemia, hepatic steatosis, and glucose intolerance, whereas antibiotic-selected variants failed to confer these benefits. Notably, mice receiving purine-pathway mutants exhibited increased adiposity, elevated serum lipopolysaccharide levels, impaired oral glucose tolerance, and liver fat accumulation comparable to untreated obese controls. Despite these functional losses, key bioactive proteins such as Amuc_1100 and P9 were not transcriptionally suppressed, indicating that metabolic impairment arose from broader physiological disruption rather than loss of known effector molecules.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study provides direct evidence that antibiotics can harm host health not only by reducing microbial abundance but by selecting functionally compromised variants of beneficial microbes. For clinicians, normal or detectable levels of A. muciniphila may not guarantee metabolic protection if the strain has been evolutionarily altered by antibiotic exposure. These findings underscore the need for strain-level and functional assessment in microbiome-based diagnostics and therapies and suggest that historical antibiotic exposure may contribute to global obesity and metabolic disease through persistent microbial dysfunction.
Intestinal effect of the probiotic Escherichia coli strain Nissle 1917 and its OMV
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Probiotics
Probiotics
Probiotics are live microorganisms that offer significant health benefits when administered in adequate amounts. They primarily work by modulating the gut microbiome, supporting a balanced microbial ecosystem. Probiotics have been shown to improve gut health, modulate immune responses, and even influence metabolic and mental health disorders. With growing evidence supporting their therapeutic potential, probiotics are increasingly recognized for their role in treating conditions like irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), antibiotic-associated diarrhea (AAD), and even mental health conditions like depression and anxiety through their impact on the gut-brain axis.
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This review explains how Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 and its outer membrane vesicles act on the intestinal barrier, immune signalling and dysbiotic microbiota in inflammatory bowel disease and how these features support probiotic and postbiotic strategies that target defined microbiome signatures.
What was reviewed?
The intestinal effect of Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 is the core focus of this narrative review, which examines how this probiotic strain and its outer membrane vesicles act on the gut barrier, the intestinal microbiome, and host immunity in states of health and disease. The authors describe the shift from a diverse microbiome rich in Firmicutes and Bacteroidetes to a dysbiotic pattern that shows loss of beneficial commensals and increased Gammaproteobacteria in inflammatory bowel disease and other intestinal disorders. They then position Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 as a non-pathogenic Gammaproteobacterium with probiotic potential, and they explore how its secreted factors and vesicles interact with epithelial and immune cells. The review integrates molecular work, animal models, and clinical data to link these microbial actions to outcomes such as maintenance of remission in ulcerative colitis, support of colonic health in Crohn's disease, and reduction of acute diarrhoea in children.
Who was reviewed?
The review brings together evidence from three main groups, which are cell-based systems, animal models, and human participants. In vitro work involves human intestinal epithelial cell lines such as T84 and HT 29, where exposure to Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 or its isolated vesicles alters tight junction protein expression and induces antimicrobial peptides. Animal studies mainly use mouse models of experimental colitis, for example, dextran sodium sulfate colitis, in which oral or rectal administration of live bacteria or purified vesicles reduces clinical scores, dampens mucosal cytokine release, and improves barrier structure. Human data come from clinical trials and observational studies in infants with acute diarrhoea, in adults with ulcerative colitis, in patients with colonic Crohn disease, and in individuals with diverticular disease, where Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 appears as a therapeutic or preventive option and where associated microbiome changes and clinical endpoints are recorded.
Most important findings
The review shows that dysbiosis in inflammatory bowel disease usually includes loss of key commensal groups, especially selected Firmicutes and Bacteroidetes, together with expansion of Gammaproteobacteria, yet Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 stands out as a beneficial member of this expanded group. In epithelial models, the strain enhances barrier integrity by increasing expression and correct localisation of tight junction proteins such as zonula occludens 1, zonula occludens 2, and specific claudins, while it reduces activity of some protein kinase C isoforms that disrupt junctions, and these actions limit paracellular leak in the presence of injurious stimuli. Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 also induces human beta defensin 2 through nuclear factor kappa B and activator protein 1 signalling and engages toll like receptors via flagellin, which leads to increased antimicrobial peptide production and a controlled pro inflammatory response that helps to restrain pathogens without excess tissue damage.
The authors identify outer membrane vesicles from Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 as a central mediator of these effects because the vesicles carry lipopolysaccharide, peptidoglycan, lipoproteins, DNA, RNA, and small regulatory RNAs, and they can cross the mucus layer and enter epithelial cells through clathrin-dependent uptake. In mouse colitis models, oral vesicles reproduce much of the anti-inflammatory and barrier protective activity of the live strain, and they reduce histologic injury, cytokine levels, and disease scores. The review compares these data to work on vesicles from Akkermansia muciniphila and Bacteroides fragilis. It suggests a shared postbiotic signature in which vesicle-producing commensals promote barrier repair, downregulate mucosal inflammatory mediators, and influence epithelial gene expression, possibly through transfer of small RNAs. At the same time, the authors also note the presence of the colibactin gene cluster in Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 and call for continued safety monitoring despite the favourable clinical record.
Key implications
For clinical practice, the review supports Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 as a microbiome-directed option that strengthens the intestinal barrier and modulates immune responses in inflammatory bowel disease and related gut disorders. Trials indicate that the strain can maintain remission in ulcerative colitis with comparable efficacy to mesalazine, can aid relapse prevention in colonic Crohn disease, and can shorten the course of acute infectious diarrhoea in children, which places it as a practical adjunct in selected patients. The emphasis on outer membrane vesicles suggests a future shift toward postbiotic strategies that use defined vesicle preparations or engineered vesicles to deliver beneficial bacterial signals without live organisms, which may improve safety in vulnerable hosts.
The Human Gut Microbiome’s Influence on Arsenic Toxicity
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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The human gut microbiome and arsenic toxicity are tightly linked: microbes change arsenic speciation and dose, while arsenic reshapes gut ecology, altering risk. Clinicians should integrate microbiome status, nutrition, antibiotics history, and speciation into assessment and management.
What was reviewed?
This review examined how the human gut microbiome and arsenic toxicity intersect, focusing on ways gut bacteria alter arsenic speciation, bioavailability, metabolism, and excretion. It summarized evidence that gut microbes reduce arsenate, efflux, and sequester arsenite via ars operons (ArsC, ArsB/Acr3, ArsA, ArsD), methylate arsenic through ArsM to mono- and dimethylated species, and generate thiolated and glutathione-conjugated forms that change toxicity. It also covered ex vivo human stool incubations showing microbiome-driven conversion of pentavalent species into more toxic trivalent organoarsenicals, animal studies linking microbiome disruption to higher body burdens, and population studies connecting exposure with shifts in community structure and resistance genes.
Who was reviewed?
The authors synthesized culture studies of gut and environmental bacteria, ex vivo work with human fecal samples, gnotobiotic and antibiotic-perturbed mouse models (including humanized AS3MT-knockout mice), and limited human epidemiology. The authors discussed US infant cohorts where urinary arsenic correlated with gains and losses in genera, Bangladeshi children where high household water arsenic enriched Enterobacteriaceae and resistance genes, and rodent experiments showing that even 10 ppb exposures shifted microbiome composition and host pathways. They also highlighted clinical angles around arsenic trioxide therapy, noting how patient microbiomes may influence oral bioavailability and toxicity, and called for epidemiologic studies that track microbiome function alongside arsenic speciation and health outcomes.
Most important findings
The microbiome can directly biotransform arsenic and change host exposure. Bacteria reduce arsenate to arsenite and pump it out, methylate arsenite to MMA and DMA, and, in low-oxygen gut settings, can favor more toxic trivalent organoarsenicals; stool incubations from humans produced MMA(III) and DMA(III) from pentavalent precursors. In vivo, microbiome depletion increases host arsenic load: antibiotic-treated mice showed reduced fecal excretion and greater hepatic and pulmonary accumulation, while colonization with commensals such as Faecalibacterium protected AS3MT-deficient mice. Arsenic itself perturbs gut communities in dose- and time-dependent ways, with reported enrichment of
Gammaproteobacteria/Enterobacteriaceae in exposed children and decreases in common commensals in animal models; sex, feeding status, and micronutrients modify these effects. Notably, arsenic exposure co-selects antibiotic and metal resistance genes, consistent with ars loci co-occurring on mobile elements. Across models, SCFA-producing taxa (e.g., Blautia, Lachnospiraceae, Ruminococcus, Faecalibacterium) tracked with better survival or lower toxicity, suggesting functional markers for a microbiome signatures database. Mechanistically, microbial redox chemistry, methylation, thiolation, and adsorption to Gram-positive extracellular polymers emerge as key routes by which microbes lower or raise the effective dose at the mucosa and shape urinary speciation profiles relevant to clinical risk.
Key implications
Clinicians should factor microbiome status into arsenic risk assessment and care. Unnecessary antibiotics may raise tissue burdens by stripping biomass that binds or transforms arsenic, while diets that support SCFA producers could help restore barrier function and detox pathways. Iron sufficiency may blunt arsenic-driven dysbiosis, and zinc deficiency may worsen it, so basic nutrition matters in exposed patients. For monitoring and research, pair exposure metrics with microbiome readouts and arsenic speciation, since the same dose can yield different toxicity depending on gut community function. In oncology, as oral arsenic trioxide use expands, integrate stool microbiome profiling and recent antibiotic history into pharmacovigilance and PK/PD studies. Overall, the review argues for microbiome-aware public health and precision mitigation that combine source remediation with strategies to preserve or rebuild protective gut functions.
Prophylaxis of acute respiratory infections via improving the immune system in late preterm newborns with E. coli strain Nissle 1917: a controlled pilot trial
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 reduces the incidence of acute respiratory infections in late preterm newborns during the first month of life, with no adverse effects, highlighting its potential as a prophylactic intervention in this vulnerable population.
What was studied?
This pilot trial assessed the efficacy and safety of Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 (EcN) in improving immune competence and preventing acute respiratory infections (ARIs) in late preterm newborns. ARIs are common in this vulnerable population due to their underdeveloped immune systems. The study aimed to determine whether EcN, with its immunomodulatory properties, could reduce the incidence of these infections in the first month of life. The trial consisted of a 4-week treatment phase with EcN, followed by a 12-month follow-up phase.
Who was studied?
The study involved 62 late preterm newborns, aged 12-24 hours at enrollment, with a gestational age of 35-36 weeks. These newborns were born at a maternity hospital in Odessa, Ukraine, and were randomized into two groups: one receiving EcN (the treatment group) and the other receiving no treatment (the control group). The primary focus was on the incidence of ARIs during the first 28 days of life, and secondary outcomes included the number of ARI events and hospitalizations due to ARIs during the first year of life.
Most important findings
The primary outcome showed that the incidence of at least one ARI in the first 28 days of life was significantly lower in the EcN group (10%) compared to the control group (43.7%). This represented a 77% reduction in risk for ARIs in the EcN-treated newborns. Secondary analysis revealed a decrease in the average number of ARIs, the number of hospitalizations, and the duration of these hospitalizations in the EcN group compared to controls. Although this study was exploratory, the findings suggest that EcN may offer substantial protection against early-life infections in preterm newborns, with no adverse events recorded in the EcN group during the newborn phase.
Key implications
The study provides promising evidence that Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 can improve immune function in late preterm newborns, reducing the incidence of ARIs, which are a significant cause of morbidity in this population. These findings suggest that early administration of probiotics could be a valuable intervention for preventing infections in vulnerable preterm infants. Given that EcN was well tolerated and associated with a lower incidence of ARIs, it offers a potential strategy for reducing hospitalizations and improving overall health outcomes in preterm newborns. However, further large-scale randomized controlled trials are needed to confirm these benefits and explore long-term effects.
Intratumoral microbiota: Roles in cancer initiation, development and therapeutic efficacy
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Intratumoural Microbiota
Intratumoural Microbiota
With the growing understanding of the intratumoral microbiota’s influence on cancer progression, the next frontier in cancer therapy is microbiota-targeted interventions. By introducing beneficial microbes or altering existing microbial populations within tumors, therapies can be designed to modulate the immune system, promote tumor suppression, and improve drug efficacy. However, challenges remain in deciphering the complex relationships between microbes, tumor cells, and the immune system, necessitating more refined research methods and standardized approaches to translate these discoveries into clinical practice.
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This review explores how intratumoral microbiota influence cancer initiation, progression, and therapy. It highlights their roles in immune modulation, tumor growth, and therapeutic resistance, suggesting microbiome manipulation as a potential therapeutic strategy.
What was reviewed?
This review article discusses the emerging role of intratumoral microbiota in cancer initiation, development, and therapeutic efficacy. It explores how microorganisms within the tumor microenvironment (TME), including bacteria, fungi, and viruses, contribute to the biology of tumors. The review delves into the mechanisms through which these microorganisms influence tumor growth, including genomic instability, immune modulation, and metabolic changes. Additionally, the article covers how intratumoral microbiota can impact the effectiveness of cancer therapies, particularly immunotherapies, by altering immune responses and influencing tumor sensitivity to treatments. The review highlights the potential for microbiome-targeted interventions, including the modulation of the TME to improve clinical outcomes in cancer patients.
Who was reviewed?
The article synthesizes findings from studies that have examined the presence and role of microbiota in various types of cancer. It reviews research on how specific microbial communities within tumors contribute to carcinogenesis and the progression of cancers such as colorectal, breast, pancreatic, and lung cancer. The studies reviewed include investigations into the microbial composition of tumor tissues, their effects on immune responses, and their interactions with cancer therapies. By drawing from both preclinical models and clinical studies, the review provides a comprehensive look at the diversity of microorganisms in the TME and their implications for cancer therapy.
Most important findings
The review identifies several key findings regarding the role of intratumoral microbiota in cancer. A critical discovery is that tumors, once thought to be sterile, host diverse microbial communities that vary across different cancer types. Specific bacteria, such as Fusobacterium nucleatum in colorectal cancer and Helicobacter pylori in gastric cancer, are linked to cancer initiation and progression through mechanisms like promoting inflammation, inducing DNA damage, and affecting immune responses. The microbiota within the TME can enhance or suppress the immune system, playing a significant role in tumor immune evasion and influencing the success of immunotherapies. The presence of certain bacteria has been shown to enhance the effectiveness of immune checkpoint inhibitors by stimulating immune cells within the TME. However, other microbes, such as those in pancreatic and breast cancer, may contribute to therapy resistance by creating an immunosuppressive environment. Microbial metabolites, such as short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs), can impact epigenetic modifications and alter tumor metabolism, further influencing cancer progression and therapeutic outcomes.
Key implications
The review emphasizes the potential for utilizing intratumoral microbiota as both diagnostic and therapeutic tools. Understanding the microbiota present in tumors could lead to the identification of microbial biomarkers that predict cancer progression and therapeutic response. Modulating the intratumoral microbiota may become a novel strategy to improve the efficacy of cancer treatments, particularly immunotherapies. Interventions targeting the TME, such as using probiotics, antibiotics, or microbiome-based vaccines, could enhance the immune response, reduce inflammation, and increase the sensitivity of tumors to treatments. However, the review also acknowledges the challenges in this field, including the complexity of microbial interactions in the TME and the need for more research to determine the most effective microbiome-based therapies for different cancer types.
Intratumoural microbiota: a new frontier in cancer development and therapy
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Intratumoural Microbiota
Intratumoural Microbiota
With the growing understanding of the intratumoral microbiota’s influence on cancer progression, the next frontier in cancer therapy is microbiota-targeted interventions. By introducing beneficial microbes or altering existing microbial populations within tumors, therapies can be designed to modulate the immune system, promote tumor suppression, and improve drug efficacy. However, challenges remain in deciphering the complex relationships between microbes, tumor cells, and the immune system, necessitating more refined research methods and standardized approaches to translate these discoveries into clinical practice.
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This review discusses how intratumoral microbiota influence cancer progression and therapy. It explores their roles in immune modulation, inflammation, and treatment resistance, and suggests microbiota manipulation as a potential therapeutic strategy for enhancing cancer treatment outcomes.
What was reviewed?
This review article explores the emerging role of intratumoral microbiota in cancer development and therapy. It focuses on the concept that tumor tissues, once thought to be sterile, actually host a variety of microorganisms, including bacteria, fungi, and viruses. These microorganisms are an integral part of the tumor microenvironment (TME) and significantly influence tumor behavior. The review addresses the potential sources of intratumoral microbiota, including mucosal invasion, adjacent tissue migration, and hematogenous spread. It examines how these microbial populations contribute to tumor initiation, progression, and metastasis through mechanisms such as genomic instability, inflammation, immune evasion, and altered metabolism. Additionally, the article discusses how manipulating the intratumoral microbiota may offer new strategies for cancer therapy, particularly in the context of immunotherapy.
Who was reviewed?
The article synthesizes research on the microbiota found in various cancers, providing an overview of studies that have identified specific microbial communities within tumor tissues. It reviews studies involving a range of cancer types, including lung, colorectal, liver, gastric, and pancreatic cancers. The focus is on how these microorganisms interact with host cells to influence tumor biology, immune responses, and treatment outcomes. Key microbial species, such as Fusobacterium nucleatum, Enterotoxigenic Bacteroides fragilis, and Helicobacter pylori, are discussed for their roles in carcinogenesis. The review also includes research on how microbial signatures in tumors can be used for cancer prognosis and how microbial interventions might be integrated into current therapeutic strategies.
Most important findings
The review highlights several critical findings on the role of intratumoral microbiota in cancer. Tumor tissues host distinct microbial populations, which vary by cancer type and stage. Bacteria like Fusobacterium nucleatum and Bacteroides fragilis have been linked to colorectal cancer and are shown to promote tumor growth by inducing DNA damage and inflammation. Additionally, the microbiota within tumors can influence the immune environment, often promoting immune evasion and inflammation that aids in cancer progression. Certain microbes, such as F. nucleatum, actively contribute to immune suppression by activating immune checkpoints or inducing immune cell dysfunction. The presence of specific microorganisms also affects the response to cancer treatments, particularly immunotherapy, with some microbiota enhancing the efficacy of therapies while others contribute to resistance. The review also emphasizes the potential of using microbiota manipulation as a therapeutic approach, with early-stage studies showing promise in targeting microbial communities to improve cancer outcomes.
Key implications
The review presents several important clinical implications for cancer treatment. Understanding the role of intratumoral microbiota could lead to new diagnostic biomarkers that predict cancer progression and therapy response based on microbial signatures. Moreover, interventions aimed at modifying the tumor microbiota, such as using probiotics, antibiotics, or immunotherapies targeting microbial populations, could become part of personalized cancer treatment regimens. Targeting the microbiota within the tumor microenvironment, particularly through immune modulation, could enhance the effectiveness of existing therapies, such as immune checkpoint inhibitors. However, further research is needed to fully understand the complex interactions between intratumoral microbiota and the host immune system, as well as the long-term effects of microbiota-targeted therapies in cancer patients.
Mucosal immune response in biology, disease prevention and treatment
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review explains how mucosal immunity relies on constant interaction with the microbiome, showing how commensal microbes shape immune tolerance, barrier integrity, and protection against infection and inflammatory disease.
What was reviewed?
This paper reviewed the biological mechanisms that govern mucosal immune responses and their role in disease prevention, immune regulation, and therapeutic development, with a central focus on interactions between the host immune system and resident microbiota at mucosal surfaces. The authors synthesized immunology, microbiology, and translational research to explain how mucosal tissues such as the gastrointestinal, respiratory, and urogenital tracts function as highly specialized immune environments. The review emphasized that mucosal immunity must maintain a constant balance between immune tolerance toward commensal microorganisms and food antigens, and rapid, effective defense against pathogens. Rather than portraying the microbiome as a secondary modifier, the article positioned commensal microbes as essential architects of mucosal immune development, shaping epithelial integrity, immune cell differentiation, and immune signaling pathways throughout life.
Who was reviewed?
The review drew upon studies involving healthy human populations, patients with mucosal inflammatory and infectious diseases, and experimental animal models used to dissect immune–microbial interactions. Evidence was synthesized from neonatal, pediatric, and adult cohorts to illustrate how early-life microbial exposure influences long-term immune programming at mucosal sites. The authors also integrated findings from individuals with inflammatory bowel disease, respiratory tract infections, food allergies, and autoimmune conditions, highlighting how altered mucosal immunity and disrupted microbiome composition contribute to disease susceptibility, persistence, and severity.
What were the most important findings?
The review demonstrated that functional mucosal immunity depends on continuous bidirectional communication between commensal microorganisms and host immune cells. Commensal bacteria actively promote the maturation of gut-associated lymphoid tissue, stimulate IgA production, and regulate the balance between regulatory T cells and pro-inflammatory effector T cells. Major microbial associations included short-chain fatty acid–producing bacteria, which enhance epithelial barrier integrity and drive regulatory immune pathways, and segmented filamentous bacteria, which induce Th17 cell differentiation critical for mucosal defense. Microbial metabolites emerged as key immune modulators, influencing cytokine signaling, antigen presentation, and immune tolerance. When these microbial signals are disrupted by antibiotics, dietary changes, or infection, the mucosal barrier becomes compromised, inflammatory responses intensify, and susceptibility to pathogens increases. The review also emphasized that mucosal immune responses are anatomically compartmentalized, meaning that immune regulation in one mucosal site can have downstream systemic effects.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The most significant implication for clinical practice is that effective immune protection and disease management at mucosal surfaces require preservation of microbial diversity and function. The findings explain why mucosal vaccines often induce stronger and more durable immune responses and why treatments that ignore the microbiome may fail or worsen inflammation. This review supports microbiome-informed clinical strategies, including mucosal vaccine design, probiotic and postbiotic therapies, and immune tolerance–inducing interventions. For clinicians, the paper reinforces that mucosal immune resilience depends on maintaining a stable and functional host–microbiome relationship rather than targeting immune pathways in isolation.
Ferroptosis: a potential bridge linking gut microbiota and chronic kidney disease
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review connects gut microbiota dysbiosis to ferroptosis biology in chronic kidney disease, emphasizing how microbial metabolites and altered antioxidant defenses can amplify iron-driven lipid peroxidation. It highlights functional shifts toward fewer SCFA producers and more uremic toxin producers and discusses diet and microbial interventions.
What was reviewed?
This review explained ferroptosis as an iron-dependent, lipid peroxidation–driven form of regulated cell death and argued that it can connect gut microbiota–driven metabolic changes to chronic kidney disease (CKD) progression. The authors centered the discussion on how ferroptosis is controlled by cystine transport and glutathione availability, GPX4 activity, iron redox cycling, and lipid substrate supply, then positioned the gut microbiota as an upstream regulator because it shapes host metabolism, immune tone, and oxidative balance through microbial composition and metabolites.
Who was reviewed?
The paper did not enroll a new cohort; it synthesized evidence across organ systems and then used CKD as a focused example, combining mechanistic literature with a bibliometric analysis of published studies on ferroptosis, gut microbiota, and CKD. In that bibliometric component, the authors described their literature search strategy and reported the size of the resulting body of work, using keyword patterns to identify dominant themes such as dysbiosis, inflammation, metabolism, and uremic toxins in the CKD-relevant literature.
What were the most important findings?
The review’s core message was that gut dysbiosis can push host biology toward ferroptosis by changing iron handling, lipid peroxidation pressure, and antioxidant defenses, creating a feed-forward loop in CKD where kidney dysfunction worsens dysbiosis and dysbiosis further raises ferroptosis risk. For microbiome-signature capture, the article highlighted CKD-associated community shifts in functional terms: SCFA-producing bacteria contract while uremic toxin–producing bacteria expand, and this shift aligns with inflammatory, barrier-disrupting metabolic profiles. s41420-024-02000-8 s41420-024-02000-8 It also provided mechanistic “MMA-style” examples outside CKD that clarify directionality: Bacteroidaceae-linked ferroptosis appeared as a modifiable signal that probiotics can reverse, and a tryptophan metabolite produced by Peptostreptococcus anaerobius (trans-3-indoleacrylic acid) inhibited ferroptosis through an FSP1–CoQ10 mechanism. s41420-024-02000-8 s41420-024-02000-8 The review further noted that specific microbiota such as intestinal Actinobacteria may contribute to host BH4 availability, tying microbial functions to host antioxidant capacity and ferroptosis resistance.
What are the greatest implications of this study/ review?
Clinically, this review supports treating ferroptosis as a practical convergence point where microbiome-targeted interventions could translate into kidney-protective strategies, especially when CKD care already emphasizes reducing uremic toxin burden and systemic inflammation. It also makes the translational stance more concrete by linking diet advice to microbial metabolites that plausibly influence CKD trajectory, such as recommending higher dietary fiber while avoiding high-choline inputs that raise trimethylamine-N-oxide production, a metabolite the review associates with CKD progression risk. s41420-024-02000-8 At the same time, the authors emphasized uncertainty: the field still lacks robust causal proof in many contexts and needs clearer identification of which taxa and metabolites drive or suppress ferroptosis, and which microbiome interventions reliably change ferroptosis biology in vivo.
The gut microbiome is required for full protection against acute arsenic toxicity in mouse models
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study demonstrates that both a functional host As3mt enzyme and a stable, diverse gut microbiome, especially the presence of Faecalibacterium prausnitzii, are required for full protection against acute arsenic toxicity in mice, highlighting the microbiome as a target for arsenicosis prevention and treatment.
What was studied?
This study investigated the protective role of the gut microbiome against acute arsenic toxicity in mouse models and explored the specific microbial taxa associated with this protection. The research addressed the ambiguity in previous literature, where the gut microbiome had been implicated in both mitigating and exacerbating arsenic toxicity, but without direct in vivo evidence. The authors used a combination of wild-type, antibiotic-treated, germ-free, and transgenic (As3mt knockout) mice to dissect the interplay between host genetics, microbiome composition, and arsenic detoxification. Experimental interventions included microbiome disruption by antibiotics, generation of germ-free lines, and fecal transplantation from healthy human donors. The study further sought to identify specific microbial taxa, especially those present in the human gut, that confer resilience to arsenic toxicity, with a focus on the stability and diversity of the gut microbiome under arsenic stress. Importantly, the authors used high-dose, acute arsenic exposures akin to severe environmental contamination to model real-world risk scenarios.
Who was studied?
The subjects were laboratory-bred C57BL/6 mice, including both wild-type and those genetically deficient in the arsenic (+3 oxidation state) methyltransferase enzyme (As3mt-KO). This enzyme is critical for arsenic methylation and detoxification. Mice were studied under various microbiome conditions: conventional (normal microbiome), antibiotic-treated (microbiome disrupted), germ-free (no microbiome), and gnotobiotic (colonized with defined microbiota, including human stool transplants and specific strains such as Faecalibacterium prausnitzii). Human donors for fecal transplants were healthy adults aged 24–40 years, with no known arsenic exposure. The study included both male and female mice, with exposures ranging from 10–100 ppm inorganic arsenate in drinking water, and experimental endpoints included survival, arsenic excretion, tissue accumulation, and microbiome composition (via 16S rRNA sequencing).
Most important findings
The study demonstrated that both a functional host arsenic methyltransferase enzyme (As3mt) and an intact gut microbiome are required for full protection against acute arsenic toxicity. Disruption or absence of the gut microbiome (via antibiotics or germ-free conditions) led to significantly reduced arsenic excretion, increased arsenic accumulation in tissues (notably lung and liver), and increased mortality in mice, especially those lacking As3mt. Human fecal transplantation into germ-free As3mt-KO mice restored protection from arsenic-induced mortality, with survival strongly correlating with the stability and diversity of the transplanted microbiome. Analysis of microbiome composition revealed that both the presence/absence and relative abundance of specific taxa were associated with survival.
Faecalibacterium was consistently linked to protection. Gnotobiotic experiments showed that bi-colonization with E. coli and F. prausnitzii significantly increased survival compared to germ-free or E. coli-only colonized mice, establishing a causal role for F. prausnitzii in mitigating arsenic toxicity. The magnitude of the protective effect also varied according to individual human donors, indicating inter-individual variation in microbiome-mediated detoxification. Increased alpha diversity and microbiome stability during arsenic exposure were significant predictors of survival, suggesting that community resilience is crucial for host protection.
Key implications
This research provides the first direct in vivo evidence that the gut microbiome is a critical determinant of host susceptibility to acute arsenic toxicity. The findings imply that inter-individual differences in gut microbiome composition and stability may explain variability in arsenicosis prevalence and severity among similarly exposed populations. The identification of Faecalibacterium prausnitzii as a potentially protective microbial signature opens avenues for microbiome-targeted interventions, including the use of probiotics in populations at risk for arsenic exposure. Clinically, these results support a paradigm that considers the microbiome as both a biomarker and a therapeutic target in arsenic toxicity and potentially other environmental toxicant exposures.
Improvement of a synthetic live bacterial therapeutic for phenylketonuria with biosensor-enabled enzyme engineering
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Probiotics
Probiotics
Probiotics are live microorganisms that offer significant health benefits when administered in adequate amounts. They primarily work by modulating the gut microbiome, supporting a balanced microbial ecosystem. Probiotics have been shown to improve gut health, modulate immune responses, and even influence metabolic and mental health disorders. With growing evidence supporting their therapeutic potential, probiotics are increasingly recognized for their role in treating conditions like irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), antibiotic-associated diarrhea (AAD), and even mental health conditions like depression and anxiety through their impact on the gut-brain axis.
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Engineered EcN for phenylketonuria was upgraded to SYNB1934 using biosensor-enabled PAL evolution, doubling gut phenylalanine conversion and keeping biocontainment, supporting development of an oral strain for diet-refractory PKU.
What was studied?
Engineered Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 phenylketonuria therapy was developed to improve degradation of phenylalanine in the gut using a second-generation live biotherapeutic, SYNB1934, built on the earlier strain SYNB1618. The investigators reasoned that PKU patients need an oral, lumen-active, genotype-independent way to clear excess phenylalanine before it enters the bloodstream. They created a trans-cinnamate biosensor, screened a >1-million–member PAL mutant library directly in EcN, and identified an evolved PAL (mPAL) with higher whole-cell activity. They then integrated mPAL and the same auxiliary Phe-uptake and LAAD modules used in SYNB1618 into the EcN chromosome, along with auxotrophic containment. They compared activity in simulated gut conditions, in non-human primates, and against the clinical first-generation strain.
Who was studied?
Library construction and biosensor screening were conducted in the probiotic EcN, ensuring that enzyme improvements reflected the physiology of the final chassis. Functional testing was performed using in vitro gastrointestinal simulations. Nonhuman primates were then given an oral peptide plus deuterated phenylalanine load to model postprandial Phe entry, followed by a single oral dose of SYNB1618 or SYNB1934 to compare the production of the strain-specific biomarker trans-cinnamate and its hepatic product, d5-hippurate. Previous human data from the earlier strain demonstrated safety, gut confinement, and biomarker output, positioning SYNB1934 as a more potent successor for future PKU trials in patients who fail or cannot tolerate existing PAH-dependent drugs.
Most important findings
The biosensor-guided "pop'n'sort" workflow enriched PAL variants with 25–100% higher whole-cell activity than wild type, and most retained activity even after brief acid exposure, making them suitable for oral dosing. One variant carrying S92G, H133M, I167K, L432I, and V470A substitutions became the core of SYNB1934 because it improved catalytic turnover without adding phenylalanine to the cell mass. In gut simulation, lyophilized SYNB1934 generated about twice as much trans-cinnamate per 2.5×10⁹ cells as SYNB1618, confirming a genuine strain-level gain. In nonhuman primates challenged with peptide and d5-phenylalanine, SYNB1934 produced approximately twofold higher plasma exposure to TCA and d5-TCA, and more than twofold higher urinary d5-hippurate levels than SYNB1618, demonstrating superior in vivo phenylalanine capture and conversion. Because wild-type EcN does not make these metabolites, they serve as clean strain-specific readouts. The authors therefore defined a microbiome therapeutic signature for PKU: an EcN backbone, chromosomally integrated high-activity PAL, PheP-mediated substrate uptake, a LAAD backup pathway, and a dapA-based biocontainment mechanism, with biomarker recovery in both plasma and urine.
Key implications
Clinicians can read this as proof that live-engineered EcN can be iteratively improved to deliver more phenylalanine-lowering activity without changing the route or the safety concept. A more active strain should allow either lower doses, fewer capsules, or greater phenylalanine disposal in patients who stay above target despite diet or who cannot take injectable PAL. Because the system operates within the lumen, it should be effective across all PKU genotypes, including those with no residual PAH. The work also shows that future EcN therapeutics should be reported with their sensor, payload, and containment modules, since minor enzyme upgrades can translate into clear systemic biomarker gains and can be tracked for precision microbiome therapy.
Siderophore-mediated zinc acquisition enhances enterobacterial colonization of the inflamed gut
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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E. coli Nissle uses yersiniabactin to bind zinc, overcome calprotectin, and colonize the inflamed gut, defining a metal-driven microbiome signature linked to Enterobacteriaceae dominance in colitis, with clear dependence on inflammation and pH.
What was studied?
This experimental study tested whether E. coli Nissle 1917 uses yersiniabactin as a zincophore to support siderophore-mediated zinc acquisition, resist host calprotectin, and colonize the inflamed gut. The authors combined zinc-limited growth assays, targeted gene deletions in zinc transport and yersiniabactin loci, native electrospray metabolomics, and NMR to confirm direct zinc binding, and mouse colitis models to assess competitive fitness in vivo. They compared E. coli Nissle with Salmonella Typhimurium under calprotectin pressure, showed pH-dependent metal preference for yersiniabactin, and used exogenous purified yersiniabactin to rescue growth of zinc-transport–deficient mutants. They then quantified colonization advantages in dextran sodium sulfate colitis, and contrasted results in germ-free and calprotectin-deficient mice to define the inflammation and calprotectin dependence of the mechanism.
Who was studied?
The work used E. coli Nissle 1917 and Salmonella typhimurium strains, including double mutants lacking ZnuABC and ZupT and triple mutants additionally lacking irp2 or ybtX. The in vivo models were female C57BL/6 mice with dextran sodium sulfate colitis, germ-free Swiss Webster mice without inflammation, and S100a9−/− mice lacking calprotectin. Competitive indices from feces and cecal content quantified fitness. Host inflammation markers and histopathology confirmed comparable colitis across groups. No human participants were enrolled.
Most important findings
E. coli Nissle outgrew Salmonella Typhimurium under calprotectin, even when high-affinity zinc transporters were deleted, indicating an additional route for zinc uptake. Yersiniabactin directly bound zinc, with greater relative zinc preference at higher pH, and exogenous yersiniabactin rescued zinc-transport–deficient growth, while enterobactin did not. Deleting irp2 or ybtX in the zinc-transport–deficient background caused severe zinc-limited growth defects that zinc supplementation corrected, implicating yersiniabactin as a functional zincophore. In dextran sodium sulfate colitis, wild-type E. coli Nissle gained large competitive advantages over mutants lacking zinc transport or yersiniabactin functions, and these advantages disappeared in germ-free or calprotectin-deficient mice, proving inflammation and calprotectin dependence.
Together, these results define a microbiome signature for Enterobacteriaceae blooms in inflammation: presence of the yersiniabactin locus and ybtX, resistance to calprotectin-mediated zinc sequestration, pH-tuned zinc affinity, and enhanced colonization of the inflamed colon. Because many commensal and pathogenic Enterobacteriaceae carry yersiniabactin, this signature links metal capture with competitive dominance over obligate anaerobes during dysbiosis.
Key implications
Clinicians should view E. coli Nissle benefits in inflammation as context dependent and metal linked. Zinc availability and calprotectin shape colonization. Probiotics or pathogens with yersiniabactin may gain a selective advantage in colitis, potentially altering community structure. This mechanism suggests biomarker candidates for microbiome signatures and therapeutic targets in metal competition, but translation to human outcomes requires clinical trials.
Structural and mechanistic insights into the cleavage of clustered O-glycan patches-containing glycoproteins by mucinases of the human gut
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study shows how gut bacterial mucinases precisely cleave O-glycan-rich glycoproteins using specialized structural adaptations, enabling controlled mucus turnover while preserving barrier function and explaining how mucin-degrading microbes can be beneficial or harmful depending on context.
What was studied?
This study investigated how human gut bacterial mucinases structurally recognize and cleave densely O-glycosylated regions of mucin-like glycoproteins, a process central to mucus turnover and host–microbe interactions in the intestine. Using high-resolution structural biology combined with biochemical and enzymatic assays, the authors sought to define how mucinases overcome steric hindrance created by clustered O-glycans, a feature that normally protects mucins and mucosal glycoproteins from nonspecific proteolysis.
Who was studied?
The study focused on mucin-degrading enzymes derived from human gut bacteria, including mucinases produced by commensal anaerobes known to inhabit the mucus layer. No human or animal subjects were directly studied. Instead, purified bacterial enzymes were examined in vitro using synthetic and native glycoprotein substrates that mimic human intestinal mucins and other O-glycan–rich host proteins relevant to gut barrier function.
What were the most important findings?
The authors revealed that gut bacterial mucinases possess specialized structural adaptations that enable selective cleavage of peptide backbones buried beneath dense O-glycan clusters. High-resolution structural analyses showed that these enzymes contain extended substrate-binding grooves and glycan-accommodating surfaces that spatially organize clustered O-glycans while positioning the peptide backbone for precise proteolytic cleavage. Rather than indiscriminate degradation, mucinases required specific glycan patterns and spacing to engage substrates effectively, demonstrating that O-glycans actively guide enzymatic specificity. Functionally, this mechanism allowed bacteria to access protein-derived nutrients without fully stripping protective glycans, preserving mucus gel properties. From a microbiome-signature perspective, these findings help explain how mucin-degrading taxa such as Akkermansia muciniphilaand select Bacteroides species coexist with the host by maintaining controlled mucus turnover rather than barrier destruction. The work also clarified why mucin degradation becomes pathological only when microbial load, enzyme abundance, or mucus renewal capacity becomes imbalanced.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study provides a molecular framework for interpreting mucin degradation as a regulated, structure-guided process rather than a purely destructive one. For clinicians, it supports the concept that mucus erosion depends on enzymatic specialization, microbial context, and host mucus production capacity. The findings help reconcile why mucin-degrading bacteria can act as beneficial commensals in health yet contribute to barrier dysfunction in disease. These insights are highly relevant for microbiome-based diagnostics, risk stratification in inflammatory bowel disease, and the rational design of therapies that modulate mucus–microbe interactions without compromising barrier integrity.
Immunopeptidomics-based design of mRNA vaccine formulations against Listeria monocytogenes
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study explores the virulence mechanisms of Listeria monocytogenes, focusing on its surface proteins and iron acquisition systems, shedding light on potential therapeutic interventions and food safety strategies.
What was studied?
This study focused on Listeria monocytogenes, particularly its surface proteins and mechanisms of virulence, highlighting the pathogen's ability to acquire iron, which is essential for both its survival in the host and its persistence in food environments. It discussed the genetic and environmental factors that allow Listeria to survive, thrive, and cause infections like meningitis and gastroenteritis.
Who was studied?
The study primarily investigated Listeria monocytogenes and its various virulence mechanisms, particularly focusing on its ability to acquire essential nutrients like iron and zinc. The research also examined the pathogen's surface proteins and how they help it invade host cells and evade immune responses. Additionally, the study used animal models and in vitro cell culture systems (including human epithelial cells) to assess the role of these factors in infection and disease progression.
What were the most important findings?
One of the most critical discoveries in the study was the identification of two key zinc uptake systems that significantly contribute to the full virulence of Listeria monocytogenes. These systems, important for growth both in vitro and in vivo, demonstrate the pathogen's adaptability and ability to exploit essential nutrients for infection. The study also illuminated the role of Listeria's various surface proteins in its ability to bind to host cells and evade immune responses, which is integral for its pathogenicity. Additionally, the study shed light on how the pathogen's iron acquisition system operates within the host, which might open new avenues for targeted therapeutic interventions. The research also hinted at the role of bacteriophages in controlling Listeria populations in food systems without harming beneficial microbiota, which could be crucial for food safety and controlling
infections.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The greatest implications of this study lie in its potential to influence both clinical and food safety practices. By understanding how Listeria monocytogenes manages to survive and maintain virulence factors such as its ability to acquire essential nutrients (iron and zinc), more effective treatments could be developed. This also suggests the need for better food industry hygiene programs to combat the persistence of Listeria in food processing environments. Additionally, the insight into bacteriophage therapy as a potential tool for controlling Listeria without disrupting the gut microbiota could significantly shift current approaches to infection prevention.
Engineering tumor-colonizing E. coli Nissle 1917 for detection and treatment of colorectal neoplasia
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study demonstrates that engineered E. coli Nissle 1917 can selectively colonize colorectal adenomas and reduce tumor burden in mice. The probiotic also shows promise for non-invasive detection and treatment of CRC in humans, suggesting a novel therapeutic and diagnostic platform.
What was studied?
This study explores the potential of Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 (EcN) for both the detection and treatment of colorectal neoplasia, focusing on its ability to selectively colonize adenomas in genetically engineered mice and its use in human colorectal cancer (CRC) patients. The research aimed to evaluate the utility of EcN as a platform for non-invasive cancer detection via stool and urine assays, and for delivering therapeutic payloads to treat colorectal tumors. The study employs both pre-clinical murine models and clinical trial data to assess EcN’s ability to colonize tumors, produce screening molecules like salicylate, and deliver immunotherapeutic agents directly to neoplastic sites.
Who was studied?
The study involved a combination of genetically engineered mice, including ApcMin/+ mice (a model for familial adenomatous polyposis) and orthotopic models of CRC, to examine tumor colonization and therapeutic efficacy of EcN. In addition, clinical data from colorectal cancer patients were gathered in a prospective, double-blind clinical trial, where patients took either EcN or a placebo for two weeks before undergoing surgical resection of neoplastic and adjacent normal tissue. The study then compared microbial enrichment in tumor samples from the EcN-treated group.
Most important findings
EcN demonstrated selective colonization of colorectal adenomas in genetically engineered and orthotopic mouse models, with strong enrichment in tumor tissues over normal adjacent tissues. The engineered EcN strains, including those producing salicylate for detection and cytokines for therapy, showed potential for non-invasive tracking of adenomas through stool and urine assays. Additionally, EcN engineered to produce immune-modulating therapies (such as GM-CSF and checkpoint inhibitors) significantly reduced adenoma burden by ~50% in the murine models.
Key implications
This study highlights the emerging role of engineered probiotics, like EcN, in the detection and treatment of colorectal cancer. EcN’s ability to selectively target and colonize neoplastic tissue provides a novel method for early detection and non-invasive monitoring of CRC. The successful reduction of adenoma burden through engineered EcN supports its therapeutic potential, particularly for treating CRC subtypes traditionally unresponsive to immunotherapy. This approach could revolutionize CRC treatment by combining diagnostic and therapeutic capabilities in a single oral delivery platform, reducing the need for invasive procedures like colonoscopy.
Exposure to environmental pollutants selects for xenobiotic-degrading functions in the human gut microbiome
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study highlights the significant impact of environmental pollutants on the gut microbiome, selecting for microbial functions that degrade xenobiotics and potentially promoting antibiotic resistance. Understanding these changes can provide insights into the role of the microbiome in detoxifying pollutants and influencing human health.
What was studied?
This study explored the effects of environmental pollutants on the gut microbiome, particularly the selection for xenobiotic-degrading functions. Researchers analyzed the microbiome composition and function in individuals living in areas with varying levels of pollution, specifically focusing on pollutants like heavy metals and dioxins. The study aimed to understand how long-term exposure to pollutants influences the gut microbiome's ability to degrade harmful chemicals and how such changes may affect human health.
Who was studied?
The study focused on a cohort of 359 individuals from the Campania region of Southern Italy, a region with a well-documented history of environmental pollution. Participants were categorized based on their level of exposure to pollution, which was quantified using the Municipality Index of Environmental Pressure (MIEP). The subjects were divided into three groups: high, medium, and low environmental pollution, with additional factors such as age, sex, and lifestyle habits considered in the analysis.
Most important findings
The study revealed that environmental pollutants, particularly dioxins and heavy metals, lead to significant changes in the gut microbiome. The group exposed to the highest levels of pollution showed an increase in microbial species associated with the degradation of pollutants, including Actinomycetota and Pseudomonadota. Notably, genes responsible for the degradation of dioxins and other pollutants were enriched in the microbiomes of individuals from highly polluted areas. Additionally, exposure to pollutants correlated with an increase in antibiotic resistance genes, highlighting the potential risk of co-selecting for resistance to both environmental pollutants and antibiotics. The high and medium pollution groups also exhibited a higher abundance of microbial genes related to heavy metal transport and resistance, suggesting an adaptation of the microbiome to the pollutant-rich environment.
Key implications
This study underscores the gut microbiome's role in responding to environmental pollutants and highlights the potential for using the microbiome as a tool to assess the impacts of pollution on human health. The findings suggest that the microbiome may serve as a defense mechanism by detoxifying harmful compounds, but the selection for xenobiotic-degrading microbes may also promote the co-selection of antibiotic resistance, which poses significant public health risks. These results emphasize the need for incorporating microbiome health into environmental risk assessments and stress the importance of further research into how environmental pollutants shape the microbiome and its associated functions.
The lipooligosaccharide of the gut symbiont Akkermansia muciniphila exhibits a remarkable structure and TLR signaling capacity
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study shows that Akkermansia muciniphila produces a uniquely structured lipooligosaccharide that preferentially activates anti-inflammatory TLR2 signaling while limiting TLR4-driven endotoxin responses. The findings explain how this Gram-negative symbiont supports immune balance and metabolic health.
What was studied?
This study characterized the chemical structure and immune signaling properties of the lipooligosaccharide (LOS) produced by the gut symbiont Akkermansia muciniphila. The investigators sought to resolve a longstanding paradox: how a Gram-negative bacterium associated with metabolic and anti-inflammatory benefits avoids triggering harmful endotoxin-driven inflammation. Using advanced structural chemistry, mass spectrometry, nuclear magnetic resonance, cell-based immune assays, and in vivo mouse experiments, the study examined how A. muciniphila LOS differs from canonical lipopolysaccharides and how it engages Toll-like receptor signaling pathways.
Who was studied?
The study focused on the human-derived Akkermansia muciniphila type strain MucT (ATCC BAA-835). Functional immune effects were evaluated using murine models following intraperitoneal LOS administration and human HEK reporter cell lines engineered to express TLR2, TLR4, or specific TLR2 heterodimers. No human participants were directly studied, but the findings were interpreted within the context of human intestinal immune signaling and metabolic disease.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed that Akkermansia muciniphila produces a structurally unique LOS rather than a conventional LPS, lacking the O-antigen polysaccharide and containing an exceptionally large, non-repetitive carbohydrate backbone. The LOS displayed remarkable heterogeneity, with complex glycan chains and a lipid A moiety composed of a mixture of tetra-, penta-, and hexa-acylated species bearing branched fatty acids. Functionally, A. muciniphila LOS acted as a weak TLR4 agonist but a strong activator of TLR2 signaling, particularly through TLR2–TLR6 heterodimers. In vivo, LOS injection in mice induced a dramatic upregulation of hepatic TLR2 expression—over 100-fold higher than TLR4—alongside robust induction of the anti-inflammatory cytokine IL-10. In vitro experiments demonstrated that intact LOS was required for TLR4 signaling, whereas the lipid A component alone mediated TLR2 activation. These findings establish A. muciniphila LOS as a major microbial association with immunomodulatory rather than pro-inflammatory signaling capacity, helping explain its consistent association with reduced metabolic endotoxemia and improved barrier function despite its Gram-negative architecture.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study fundamentally reframes bacterial endotoxins by demonstrating that not all LPS-like molecules drive inflammation. For clinicians, it provides a mechanistic basis for why Akkermansia muciniphila correlates with metabolic and immune benefits rather than inflammatory harm. The findings highlight the importance of molecular structure, receptor bias, and signaling balance in microbiome interpretation and support the therapeutic development of A. muciniphila–derived postbiotics that selectively engage TLR2 pathways while avoiding deleterious TLR4 activation.
Akkermansia muciniphila MucT harnesses dietary polyphenols as xenosiderophores for enhanced iron uptake
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study shows that Akkermansia muciniphila uses dietary polyphenols as iron carriers, enabling growth under iron limitation and outcompeting pathogenic bacteria through advanced iron acquisition systems.
What was studied?
This study investigated how Akkermansia muciniphila strain MucT acquires iron in polyphenol-rich, iron-limited environments, focusing on whether dietary proanthocyanidins (PACs) can function as xenosiderophores to support bacterial growth and metabolic activity. Using controlled anaerobic fermentations combined with integrative transcriptomics, proteomics, and targeted functional assays, the authors examined how PAC-bound iron influences iron uptake pathways, regulatory networks, and metabolic outputs in A. muciniphila. The work specifically addressed a long-standing gap in understanding why PAC-rich diets selectively enrich A. muciniphila despite their known antimicrobial and iron-chelating properties.
Who was studied?
The study focused exclusively on the human gut symbiont Akkermansia muciniphila MucT (ATCC BAA-835), a well-characterized reference strain widely used in mechanistic and translational microbiome research. No human or animal subjects were directly studied; instead, tightly controlled in vitro systems were used to model colonic iron limitation and polyphenol exposure in conditions relevant to the human gut ecosystem.
What were the most important findings?
The authors demonstrated that A. muciniphila does not passively tolerate PAC-induced iron limitation but actively exploits PAC–iron complexes as functional xenosiderophores. Catechol-rich PACs triggered robust upregulation of both ferric (Fe³⁺) and ferrous (Fe²⁺) iron acquisition systems, most notably the ABC-type siderophore transporter operon yclNOPQ, the Feo ferrous iron transport system, and multiple bacterial lipocalins that bind catechol–iron complexes. Iron-laden PACs fully rescued bacterial growth and short-chain fatty acid production under iron-depleted conditions, restoring intracellular iron levels while reducing extracellular iron availability. Transcriptomic network analysis identified Fur and DtxR family regulators as central coordinators of this response, linking intracellular iron sensing to siderophore uptake and storage pathways. From a microbiome-signature perspective, these findings position A. muciniphila as a competitive iron-sequestering symbiont that can thrive in polyphenol-rich niches while potentially restricting iron access to siderophore-dependent pathobionts.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This work provides a mechanistic explanation for the consistent association between PAC-rich diets and increased A. muciniphila abundance. Clinically, it reframes dietary polyphenols as selective microbiome modulators that favor beneficial symbionts through iron ecology rather than simple prebiotic fermentation. The findings support therapeutic strategies combining polyphenols with A. muciniphila–based interventions for conditions linked to iron dysregulation, inflammation, metabolic disease, and pathogen overgrowth, while also highlighting iron acquisition pathways as key determinants of probiotic fitness and function.
Tumour-resident oncolytic bacteria trigger potent anticancer effects through selective intratumoural thrombosis and necrosis
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Intratumoural Microbiota
Intratumoural Microbiota
With the growing understanding of the intratumoral microbiota’s influence on cancer progression, the next frontier in cancer therapy is microbiota-targeted interventions. By introducing beneficial microbes or altering existing microbial populations within tumors, therapies can be designed to modulate the immune system, promote tumor suppression, and improve drug efficacy. However, challenges remain in deciphering the complex relationships between microbes, tumor cells, and the immune system, necessitating more refined research methods and standardized approaches to translate these discoveries into clinical practice.
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This study demonstrates the potent anticancer effects of a tumor-resident bacterial consortium in both immunocompetent and immunocompromised mice. The consortium induces tumor remission through selective thrombosis, necrosis, and biofilm formation, offering a promising drug-free strategy for cancer therapy with potential applications in treating solid tumors.
What was studied?
The study explores the use of a tumor-resident bacterial consortium composed of Proteus mirabilis (A-gyo) and Rhodopseudomonas palustris (UN-gyo) for oncolytic therapy. This bacterial combination, administered in a specific 3:97 ratio, demonstrated potent anticancer effects through mechanisms like selective intratumoral thrombosis, necrosis, and biofilm formation. The consortium’s action was independent of immune cell infiltration and was shown to induce complete tumor remission and prolonged survival in both immunocompetent and immunocompromised mouse models. The study investigates the bacterial consortium’s safety profile, molecular characteristics, and therapeutic potential in treating various types of solid tumors.
Who was studied?
The study involved several mouse models, including immunocompetent BALB/c mice, as well as immunocompromised mice such as SCID (severe combined immunodeficiency) and NOD-SCID (non-obese diabetic SCID) mice. These mice were implanted with different types of tumors, including colon cancer (Colon26), and received intravenous injections of the bacterial consortium. The effects of varying bacterial doses and their interaction with the immune system were also analyzed, with a focus on the tumor-targeting efficacy and safety of the AUN bacterial consortium.
Most important findings
The AUN bacterial consortium, administered intravenously, showed remarkable anticancer efficacy in mouse models, including tumor remission and increased survival without causing systemic toxicity or cytokine release syndrome. The bacterial consortium induced tumor-specific thrombosis, leading to vascular collapse and necrosis, which contributed to tumor regression. Additionally, the combination of A-gyo and UN-gyo exhibited biocompatibility and enhanced safety, as UN-gyo helped suppress the biogenic activity of A-gyo, reduced pathogenicity, and increased cancer-specific cytotoxicity. The study also revealed that the bacteria proliferated within tumors, formed biofilms, and caused selective tumor destruction. This natural synergy between the bacteria was achieved without genetic engineering, highlighting its potential as a safe, tumor-targeted therapeutic strategy.
Key implications
The use of a bacterial consortium for oncolytic therapy presents a novel, drug-free strategy for cancer treatment. The findings suggest that bacteria can be harnessed to selectively target and destroy tumors through natural processes like thrombosis and necrosis. This approach could be particularly useful in treating cancers that are difficult to target with traditional therapies or immunotherapies. However, the study also raised concerns about the potential risks of using live bacteria, such as infection or resistance, that would need to be carefully managed in clinical applications. Further research into optimizing bacterial formulations, understanding their long-term effects, and ensuring patient safety is necessary before these therapies can be widely applied in clinical practice.
Listeriosis
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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The paper reviews Listeria monocytogenes, its global prevalence, risk factors, and clinical management of listeriosis, with a focus on vulnerable populations.
What was studied?
The research paper studied Listeriosis, a severe food-borne bacterial infection caused by Listeria monocytogenes, focusing on its epidemiology, pathogenesis, clinical management, and treatment. It delves into the dynamics of the bacterium's survival, transmission routes, and its ability to cause both mild and severe infections in humans, particularly in vulnerable populations such as pregnant women, the elderly, and immunocompromised individuals.
Who was studied?
The paper reviewed the global prevalence and impact of Listeria monocytogenes, its transmission sources, particularly through contaminated food, and the populations most at risk for developing listeriosis. The study emphasizes vulnerable groups, such as pregnant women, the elderly, immunocompromised individuals, and neonates.
What were the most important findings?
The major findings of the paper include the identification of various transmission routes for Listeria monocytogenes, especially through contaminated food, and its persistence in food processing environments. The bacterium's ability to grow at refrigeration temperatures and survive in a range of pH and salt concentrations was highlighted, emphasizing the challenges in preventing contamination. Additionally, Listeria monocytogenes can cross multiple host barriers, including the intestinal, placental, and blood-brain barriers, contributing to its pathogenicity. The paper also reported that most cases of listeriosis are associated with severe outcomes such as septicaemia and neurolisteriosis, with high mortality rates in at-risk populations. Furthermore, antimicrobial resistance was not a significant concern, as the bacterium remains sensitive to the standard antibiotics used in treatment.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study's implications are far-reaching in terms of public health, particularly in the food safety domain. It underscores the need for improved surveillance systems for listeriosis globally, especially in areas with limited data on its prevalence. It also calls for enhanced monitoring and control measures in food production and distribution to prevent outbreaks. The identification of new risk factors, such as genetics, and better treatment regimens, could significantly improve patient outcomes, especially for pregnant women and immunocompromised individuals. Furthermore, the study’s findings emphasize the critical need for enhanced clinical awareness of listeriosis, which often presents with non-specific symptoms, leading to delayed diagnoses.
Bacterial siderophores in community and host interactions
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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The study explores the multifaceted role of bacterial siderophores in microbial community dynamics and host interactions. It highlights their impact on bacterial competition, survival, and virulence, offering insights into potential therapeutic strategies for managing infections and manipulating microbial communities.
What was studied?
The study explored the role of bacterial siderophores in microbial interactions within communities and their influence on host interactions. Siderophores are molecules produced by bacteria to acquire iron, a critical nutrient often limited in many environments. The research delved into how these molecules facilitate both cooperation and competition among bacteria. Additionally, the study examined how siderophores influence microbial virulence and the ability to colonize host environments, such as in humans and plants, particularly under iron-limited conditions.
Who was studied?
The study primarily focused on Pseudomonas aeruginosa, a bacterium known for its pathogenicity, and its siderophore production. It also analyzed the interactions between P. aeruginosa and other microorganisms in mixed-species communities. Host-associated microbial communities, including those found in human and plant environments, were studied to understand how siderophores help beneficial bacteria compete with pathogenic species. The research also considered the complex relationship between siderophore production and host immune responses.
Most important findings
The study revealed that siderophores are essential not only for acquiring iron but also for shaping bacterial interactions within microbial communities. These molecules enable bacteria to thrive in environments with limited iron availability by sequestering iron and making it accessible. The study also highlighted how siderophores can foster cooperation between microbial species and create competitive dynamics. Furthermore, it was found that non-producer bacteria could exploit the siderophores produced by others, leading to competitive "cheating" behavior. In addition, siderophore production was shown to influence bacterial virulence. For instance, mutations in siderophore production in P. aeruginosa reduced its ability to infect, demonstrating the link between iron acquisition and bacterial pathogenicity.
Key implications
The findings underscore the pivotal role of siderophores in microbial ecology and infection dynamics. Siderophores help beneficial bacteria outcompete pathogens by reducing the availability of iron, thereby enhancing host defense. Understanding the role of siderophores in microbial communities opens potential therapeutic strategies to manipulate bacterial competition, for instance, using siderophore-mediated competition to control harmful bacteria. The study also highlights the importance of siderophores in the evolution of bacterial communities, as their production can lead to co-evolution and the emergence of cheating behaviors that influence microbial survival and virulence.
Akkermansia muciniphila: biology, microbial ecology, host interactions and therapeutic potential
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review explains how Akkermansia muciniphila supports gut barrier integrity, immune balance, and metabolic health. Evidence highlights its role as a key microbiome signal across obesity, inflammation, and aging, with postbiotic strategies showing strong clinical promise.
What was reviewed?
This review examined the current understanding of Akkermansia muciniphila as a key mucus-associated gut bacterium and its emerging role in human health and disease. The authors synthesized advances in microbial ecology, host–microbe signaling, strain-level biology, and therapeutic development to explain how A. muciniphila influences intestinal barrier function, immune regulation, and systemic metabolism. Particular attention was given to how microbial metabolites, outer membrane proteins, and extracellular vesicles mediate host effects, and how these mechanisms translate into clinical relevance across metabolic, inflammatory, and age-related conditions.
Who was reviewed?
The review integrated findings from human observational cohorts, controlled clinical trials, and experimental models. Human populations included healthy adults, individuals with obesity, insulin resistance, type 2 diabetes, inflammatory bowel disease, cardiometabolic disease, and older adults. Animal studies using diet-induced obesity, colitis, and metabolic inflammation models were reviewed to clarify causality and mechanisms. The authors also evaluated data from human-derived A. muciniphila strains to address interindividual variability in functional outcomes.
What were the most important findings?
The review identified Akkermansia muciniphila as a major microbial association consistently linked to gut barrier integrity and metabolic resilience. Higher abundance correlated with thicker mucus layers, enhanced tight junction expression, reduced endotoxemia, and lower systemic inflammation, while reduced abundance aligned with obesity, insulin resistance, and inflammatory bowel disease. Mechanistically, A. muciniphila degraded mucin to generate acetate and propionate, promoted goblet cell differentiation, and activated immune pathways through TLR2, AMPK, and G-protein–coupled receptors. Cross-feeding interactions supported butyrate-producing taxa such as Faecalibacterium prausnitzii, reinforcing ecosystem-level benefits. Importantly, pasteurized A. muciniphila and specific microbial components, including Amuc_1100 and secreted peptides, reproduced many clinical benefits without requiring live colonization, demonstrating safety and functional robustness. Human trials showed improved insulin sensitivity, lipid profiles, inflammatory markers, and physical performance with minimal microbiome disruption, supporting translational feasibility
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review reframes Akkermansia muciniphila as a functional keystone organism rather than a simple abundance marker. For clinicians, low levels may indicate impaired mucus barrier function and immune–metabolic dysregulation. The evidence strongly supports postbiotic and precision-microbiome strategies over conventional probiotic approaches. These findings advance A. muciniphila toward clinical application as a biomarker, therapeutic adjunct, and microbiome signature of intestinal and metabolic health.
A small molecule inhibitor prevents gut bacterial genotoxin production
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study shows a selective small molecule can block colibactin production by inhibiting the activating enzyme ClbP. The inhibitor stops colibactin-linked DNA damage signals and DNA adduct formation in infected cells and remains effective in a fecal microbiome model without broad antibiotic effects.
What was studied?
This study tested whether a purpose-built small molecule can shut down production of the gut bacterial genotoxin colibactin without broadly harming the microbiome. The authors targeted the key activating enzyme ClbP, a periplasmic serine peptidase required to convert precolibactin into the DNA-reactive colibactin species. They combined enzyme assays, structural biology, bacterial metabolomics, and mammalian cell infection readouts to show that chemical inhibition can provide on-demand control of colibactin biosynthesis and its downstream genotoxic effects.
Who was studied?
The work primarily used colibactin-producing, pks-positive Escherichia coli strains, including a mouse-derived producer strain used for infection experiments and matched controls lacking functional ClbP activity. To model community conditions, the authors added a colibactin-producing strain into anaerobic cultures seeded with mouse fecal microbiota. For host-relevant readouts, they exposed human epithelial cells in culture to colibactin-producing bacteria and quantified classic DNA damage–linked phenotypes and biomarkers that track colibactin activity.
What were the most important findings?
Boronic acid inhibitors designed to mimic the natural prodrug recognition features bound ClbP’s active site and formed a covalent complex with its catalytic serine, explaining their high potency and selectivity. In bacteria, inhibitor treatment recreated the metabolic fingerprint of a ClbP loss-of-function state: it suppressed release of the characteristic prodrug scaffold while driving accumulation of upstream shunt metabolites, indicating a specific “off switch” for colibactin activation rather than general metabolic disruption. In mammalian cells, the inhibitor blocked colibactin-driven genotoxicity, preventing cell-cycle arrest and suppressing formation of colibactin-derived DNA adducts as well as the associated DNA crosslink response signal. In a fecal community model, the inhibitor still suppressed the colibactin pathway without behaving like a broad antibiotic against representative gut taxa, supporting its use as a functional probe in complex microbiomes.
What are the greatest implications of this study/ review?
Clinically, this work strengthens the idea that “pks-positive E. coli” is not just a taxonomic marker but a manipulable microbial function, and it introduces ClbP inhibition as a practical way to test causality between colibactin activity and colorectal cancer–relevant biology. For microbiome-signature use, the major microbial association is functional: colibactin activity requires pks-positive E. coli with intact ClbP, and activity can be tracked through DNA adduct–linked host responses rather than gene presence alone. Translationally, selective pathway inhibition offers a strategy to reduce genotoxic exposure while avoiding microbiome-wide depletion, and it gives researchers temporal control to study how timing, inflammation, and exposure duration shape tumor risk.
Crosstalk between skin microbiota and immune system in health and disease
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review explains how skin microbes shape immune tolerance, barrier defense, and inflammation in health and skin disease.
What was reviewed?
This paper is a narrative review that examined the bidirectional crosstalk between the skin microbiota and the host immune system in health and disease. The authors synthesized experimental, translational, and clinical evidence presented during a National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases–hosted workshop to define how skin-resident microorganisms actively regulate immune development, barrier integrity, and inflammatory responses. Rather than framing the skin microbiome as a static collection of commensals, the review emphasized it as a dynamic ecological system whose composition and function are shaped by immune signaling, host genetics, and environmental exposures. The review also highlighted critical gaps in knowledge that currently limit clinical translation, particularly regarding strain-level specificity and long-term microbiome-based interventions.
Who was reviewed?
The review integrated findings from human observational studies, patient cohorts with inflammatory and infectious skin diseases, and a broad range of animal and in vitro models. Human data included individuals with atopic dermatitis, primary immunodeficiencies such as DOCK8 deficiency and hyper-IgE syndrome, chronic wounds, parasitic skin infections, and hospital-acquired fungal colonization. These observations were complemented by mechanistic studies using germ-free and gnotobiotic mice, human skin xenografts, organoid systems, and metagenomic analyses of healthy and diseased skin. Together, these sources allowed the authors to connect immune dysfunction, microbial dysbiosis, and clinical outcomes.
What were the most important findings?
The review demonstrated that skin commensals actively instruct immune tolerance and protective immunity, particularly during early life. Major microbial associations included Staphylococcus epidermidis, coagulase-negative staphylococci, Corynebacterium, Cutibacterium, and the skin mycobiota dominated by Malassezia. These organisms modulated immunity through microbial metabolites, lipoteichoic acid, and pattern recognition receptor signaling in keratinocytes and immune cells. The authors showed that commensal-driven induction of regulatory T cells, innate-like T cells such as MAIT and NKT cells, and antimicrobial peptides including cathelicidins and β-defensins were essential for maintaining barrier homeostasis. Dysbiosis shifted this balance toward inflammation, with overgrowth of Staphylococcus aureus strongly associated with atopic dermatitis severity, impaired filaggrin expression, and heightened Th2-driven inflammation.
The review also highlighted how fungal dysbiosis and altered lipid metabolism contributed to inflammatory cytokine production and delayed wound healing. Importantly, the authors presented evidence that some commensal strains produce antimicrobial molecules and quorum-sensing inhibitors that suppress pathogens and reduce disease severity, underscoring strain-level functional specificity.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
For clinicians, this review establishes the skin microbiome as an active immune organ whose disruption directly contributes to inflammatory skin disease, infection susceptibility, and impaired healing. Therapeutic strategies that preserve or restore beneficial skin commensals offer a path toward targeted, microbiome-based dermatologic care rather than broad antimicrobial suppression.
Probiotic Escherichia coli inhibits biofilm formation of pathogenic E. coli via extracellular activity of DegP
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study shows that DegP secretion drives probiotic Escherichia coli DegP biofilm inhibition by repressing pathogenic biofilms through a targeted extracellular mechanism that shapes microbial competition.
What was studied?
This study investigated how probiotic Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 inhibits biofilm formation by pathogenic E. coli during mixed community growth, with a focus on identifying the molecular mechanism responsible for this suppression. The authors examined whether inhibition depends on competitive growth, secreted metabolites, or protein factors, and they linked the activity directly to the extracellular function of the DegP protease. Because the focus keyphrase probiotic Escherichia coli DegP biofilm inhibition appears in this section, the analysis emphasizes how DegP secretion represents a functional microbiome signature that shapes interbacterial competition in multispecies environments.
Who was studied?
The experiments used the probiotic strain Escherichia coli Nissle 1917, a commensal E. coli control, and several clinically relevant pathogens, including enterohemorrhagic E. coli O157:H7, Staphylococcus aureus, Staphylococcus epidermidis, and Pseudomonas aeruginosa. These organisms were tested in single and dual-species biofilm models, with each population quantified by selective plating to track competitive interactions. The study also used isogenic EcN mutants lacking degP, hslU, or sat to identify the specific factor required for inhibition. This selection of strains allowed the authors to distinguish strain-specific effects, verify the necessity of DegP, and determine how probiotic–pathogen interactions unfold during biofilm development.
Most important findings
The study found that probiotic Escherichia coli DegP biofilm inhibition is driven by the extracellular secretion of DegP, a periplasmic protease that EcN uniquely exports outside the cell. EcN strongly reduced biofilm biomass of enterohemorrhagic E. coli, Staphylococcus aureus, and Staphylococcus epidermidis, while commensal E. coli did not display any inhibitory effect. The EcN supernatant alone decreased EHEC biofilms by nearly 1,000-fold, indicating that secreted factors, not direct contact, mediate the inhibition. Proteomic analysis identified more than fifty proteins unique to the EcN supernatant, but only DegP met the necessary molecular weight and functional requirements. Deleting degP abolished EcN’s ability to inhibit EHEC biofilms, while purified DegP directly repressed biofilm formation without affecting planktonic growth, demonstrating a targeted antibiofilm effect. DegP activity was selective, as it partially influenced S. epidermidis but did not suppress P. aeruginosa, suggesting that inhibition depends on the target’s surface properties and biofilm architecture.
Key implications
This work shows that probiotic Escherichia coli DegP biofilm inhibition represents a specialized ecological trait that shapes pathogen behavior in mixed microbiome settings, providing clinicians with mechanistic insight into how EcN reduces colonization by harmful bacteria. The selective activity of DegP highlights the possibility of identifying probiotic strains based on their secreted protein profiles rather than only their taxonomic identity. Because DegP suppresses biofilms without reducing planktonic growth, it may weaken pathogen persistence while minimizing selective pressure for resistance, which is valuable for therapeutic design. These findings also support the concept that probiotic activity depends on defined molecular signatures within the secretome, suggesting potential for engineered probiotics that enhance DegP secretion or combine synergistic antibiofilm factors. For clinical practice, recognizing that EcN carries unique functional properties may guide strain selection for preventing device-associated or gastrointestinal biofilm colonization.
Sex-specific associations of infants’ gut microbiome with arsenic exposure in a US population
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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The study explores the relationship between arsenic exposure and the infant gut microbiome, revealing sex-specific associations and highlighting how formula-fed male infants are particularly affected. The findings emphasize the importance of early-life environmental exposures on microbiome health and immune development.
What was studied?
The study explored the association between arsenic exposure and the gut microbiome composition in infants at six weeks of age. Researchers focused on understanding how arsenic exposure through maternal well water affects the gut microbial communities in infants, particularly regarding sex-specific differences. Arsenic is known to have antimicrobial properties, which can disrupt the balance of the gut microbiome, potentially influencing early-life immune development. This research involved analyzing urinary arsenic concentrations and stool microbiome composition in infants, revealing distinct relationships between these two factors. The research also emphasized the role of infant feeding methods (breastfeeding vs. formula feeding) as potential confounders in the relationship between arsenic exposure and the gut microbiome.
Who was studied?
The study analyzed 204 infants who were part of the New Hampshire Birth Cohort Study (NHBCS). These infants were recruited from regions with varying arsenic exposure levels through drinking water, primarily from private wells. The infants were classified into sex-specific and feeding-specific groups to identify potential interactions between arsenic exposure, sex, and feeding method on the gut microbiome. Urine samples were collected to measure arsenic concentrations, while stool samples were used to analyze the microbiome using 16S rRNA gene sequencing. The infants' dietary habits were classified into exclusively breastfed, formula-fed, and combination-fed categories to account for any potential confounding effects of feeding on microbiome composition.
Most important findings
The study identified sex-specific differences in how arsenic exposure affected the gut microbiome composition. In formula-fed male infants, arsenic exposure was positively associated with an increase in certain Firmicutes genera, such as Ruminococcus, while negatively impacting genera like Bacteroides and Bifidobacterium. However, no such associations were observed in female infants or breastfed infants. This highlights the possibility that male infants may be more vulnerable to arsenic-induced microbial changes than female infants. Furthermore, the study revealed that arsenic exposure leads to dysbiosis, with reduced microbial diversity and a shift in microbial populations that may influence immune system development. The findings suggest that even moderate levels of arsenic exposure could have significant effects on the infant microbiome during a critical developmental window. Notably, formula-fed infants had higher urinary arsenic levels than their breastfed counterparts, which contributed to the observed differences in microbiome composition.
Key implications
This research underscores the critical need to consider environmental factors, such as arsenic exposure, in the context of early-life microbiome development. The findings indicate that arsenic exposure during infancy, particularly for formula-fed male infants, may disrupt the gut microbiota in ways that could affect long-term immune function and increase susceptibility to gastrointestinal disorders and immune-related diseases. The study also highlights the importance of sex-specific effects in microbial community alterations, suggesting that male and female infants may respond differently to environmental stressors like arsenic. The sex-specific differences observed in arsenic exposure and its effects on the microbiome may open up new avenues for understanding how arsenic exposure contributes to immune dysfunction and disease predisposition in later life. Given the growing concern about arsenic contamination in drinking water, particularly in rural areas, these findings call for policy changes to limit arsenic exposure, especially for vulnerable populations like infants.
Augmented antibiotic resistance associated with cadmium induced alterations in Salmonella enterica serovar Typhi
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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The study demonstrates how cadmium exposure enhances antibiotic resistance in Salmonella enterica serovar Typhi by altering bacterial growth, biofilm formation, and antibiotic susceptibility. The findings highlight the environmental impact of cadmium in promoting resistance.
What was studied?
This study explored the association between cadmium exposure and the development of antibiotic resistance in Salmonella enterica serovar Typhi, the pathogen responsible for typhoid fever. The researchers focused on how intracellular cadmium accumulation in clinical isolates of S. Typhi correlates with altered antibiotic resistance patterns. Through laboratory adaptation, the study demonstrated that cadmium exposure not only increased resistance to common antibiotics like ampicillin and ciprofloxacin but also induced phenotypic changes in the bacteria. These included alterations in growth responses, morphology, biofilm formation, and macrophage survival. The study also looked at the molecular mechanisms behind this resistance, such as changes in protein expression and the upregulation of metal-binding proteins.
Who was studied?
The study involved both a reference strain of S. Typhi (Ty2) and clinical isolates obtained from patients with typhoid fever. These clinical isolates were collected from different medical institutions in India. The bacteria were exposed to cadmium chloride (CdCl₂), and their response to cadmium was compared with their antibiotic susceptibility patterns. The isolates were adapted to sub-inhibitory concentrations of cadmium to assess the long-term effects of cadmium exposure. The research aimed to examine how cadmium-induced alterations influence the pathogen's ability to resist antibiotics and survive under stressful conditions.
Most important findings
The study revealed that cadmium exposure led to a significant increase in the resistance of S. Typhi to multiple antibiotics. Clinical isolates that were initially sensitive to antibiotics became resistant after cadmium exposure, and resistant strains became even more resistant. The minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs) for antibiotics such as ciprofloxacin and ampicillin increased substantially, with cadmium exposure correlating with higher levels of resistance. Exposure to cadmium resulted in changes to the pathogen's growth patterns, including delayed growth in the lag phase and prolonged log phase.
Transmission electron microscopy revealed structural alterations in the bacteria, including a reduction in the periplasmic space and the appearance of electron-dense regions, indicating metal sequestration. Proteomic analysis identified significant changes in protein expression, including downregulation of porins, which are key components in the bacterial outer membrane that control the influx of antibiotics. The study also found that cadmium exposure led to increased biofilm formation and enhanced survival of S. Typhi within macrophages, indicating a higher capacity for persistence in the host.
Key implications
The findings underscore the worrying potential of heavy metal contamination in the environment to drive antibiotic resistance in pathogens like S. Typhi. The study highlights the role of environmental cadmium as a long-term selective pressure, co-selecting for both metal and antibiotic resistance in bacteria. This has major implications for public health, particularly in areas with high levels of environmental metal contamination. The increased biofilm formation and enhanced intracellular survival observed in cadmium-exposed S. Typhi suggest that these bacteria may be harder to treat and control in clinical settings. The results also point to the need for strategies to limit environmental exposure to heavy metals and to monitor the co-selection of metal and antibiotic resistance, which could help curb the rise of resistant infections.
Characterization of antibiotic-resistance traits in Akkermansia muciniphila strains of human origin
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study shows that human-derived Akkermansia muciniphila strains carry limited, mostly nonfunctional antibiotic resistance traits. Phenotypic testing confirms low risk of transferable resistance, supporting its safety as a next-generation probiotic and microbiome biomarker.
What was studied?
This study investigated the antibiotic resistance profile of Akkermansia muciniphila strains of human origin to address safety concerns surrounding its use as a next-generation probiotic and novel food ingredient. The authors combined whole-genome sequencing with phenotypic minimum inhibitory concentration testing to distinguish intrinsic from acquired antimicrobial resistance and to determine whether resistance genes translated into functional resistance. The study directly addressed regulatory gaps identified by EFSA regarding antimicrobial susceptibility data for A. muciniphila.
Who was studied?
The researchers isolated A. muciniphila strains from fecal samples of healthy adult human volunteers aged 26–50 years and compared these isolates with the well-characterized type strain DSM 22959T. Five genetically distinct human strains were selected for detailed analysis, allowing assessment of intra-species variability in antibiotic resistance traits. No patient populations or disease cohorts were included, as the focus was microbial safety rather than clinical outcomes.
What were the most important findings?
The study demonstrated that Akkermansia muciniphila exhibits a largely conserved antibiotic susceptibility profile across human-derived strains, supporting its classification as a low-risk commensal. Genomic analysis identified several antimicrobial resistance genes commonly found in gut anaerobes, including adeF, aph(6)-Id, sul2, and tetW, but phenotypic testing revealed that most of these genes did not confer functional resistance. Only one strain showed true tetracycline resistance due to the tetW gene. All strains displayed low sensitivity to ciprofloxacin and aminoglycosides, a pattern attributed to intrinsic properties of anaerobic Gram-negative bacteria rather than transferable resistance. Importantly, efflux pump activity was confirmed but did not explain fluoroquinolone resistance, and mobile genetic elements were rare, with only one strain carrying resistance genes linked to a transposon. From a microbiome signatures perspective, A. muciniphila remained aligned with beneficial major microbial associations such as metabolic health and barrier integrity, without evidence that it serves as a significant reservoir for transmissible antimicrobial resistance.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study provides critical safety validation for Akkermansia muciniphila as a therapeutic and nutritional intervention. For clinicians, the findings indicate that reduced abundance of A. muciniphila in patients is unlikely to reflect antibiotic resistance–driven persistence, while supplementation poses minimal risk of contributing to the gut resistome. The work also reinforces the need to interpret resistance genes within functional context rather than assuming phenotypic risk based on genomics alone, supporting more accurate microbiome-based clinical decision making.
Antifungal Activity of Compound 2d Against Dermatophytes via Ergosterol Pathway Disruption
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Microsporum canis (M. canis)
Microsporum canis (M. canis)
OverviewMicrosporum canis (M. canis) is a zoophilic dermatophyte common in cats and dogs, responsible for 90% of feline dermatophytoses worldwide.[1][2] It has significant zoonotic potential, transmitting to humans through fomites or direct animal contact, causing severe superficial mycosis. M. canis is considered anthropo-zoophilic and can infect pediatric or immunocompromised patients, causing severe inflammatory responses such […]
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This study identified compound 2d as a potent antifungal agent against dermatophytes, demonstrating efficacy via ergosterol pathway suppression, cell wall disruption, and oxidative stress induction. It was non-toxic to mammalian cells, making it a strong candidate for further antifungal drug development.
What was studied?
This study evaluated the antifungal properties of potassium salts of N-acylhydrazinecarbodithioates (1a–e) and their aminotriazole-thione derivatives (2a–e) against keratinolytic fungi, including several dermatophytes. Given the rising resistance and toxicity concerns associated with conventional antifungals like terbinafine and azoles, the authors aimed to identify novel, less toxic alternatives with effective antidermatophytic activity. The compound 2d (5-amino-4-(naphthalene-1-yl)-2,4-dihydro-3H-1,2,4-triazole-3-thione) emerged as the most promising, showing activity against all tested fungal strains. Functional analyses using SEM, TEM, and RNA-seq were employed to explore its mechanism of action, including its impact on fungal morphology, transcriptomic profiles, and potential targets like ergosterol biosynthesis.
Who was studied?
The study used a panel of 14 keratinolytic fungal strains, including clinical and reference isolates of Trichophyton rubrum, T. interdigitale, T. tonsurans, T. granulosum, Microsporum canis, and Chrysosporium keratinophilum. Cytotoxicity was assessed using murine fibroblast (L929) and human epithelial (HeLa) cell lines, while transcriptomic effects were analyzed in T. rubrum CBS 120358. Control comparisons included antifungal agents amphotericin B and ketoconazole.
Most important findings
Compound 2d demonstrated broad-spectrum antifungal activity, with MIC values ranging from 32–128 mg/L against all tested strains. SEM and TEM showed that 2d inhibits mycelial growth and causes ultrastructural disruption in T. rubrum. RNA-seq analysis revealed 3,461 differentially expressed genes after 24 hours of 2d exposure, with downregulation of key genes in the ergosterol biosynthesis pathway (ERG3, ERG4, ERG6, ERG11, ERG25, ERG28), suggesting interference with membrane integrity. Additionally, oxidative stress-related genes (e.g., glutathione S-transferases, superoxide dismutases) were upregulated, indicating that 2d may induce ROS-mediated stress. Transmembrane transporter and cell wall-associated genes, including those encoding ABC and MFS efflux pumps and GPI-anchored proteins, were differentially regulated, suggesting disrupted detoxification and adherence processes.
Key implications
The findings position compound 2d as a promising antidermatophytic candidate with dual antifungal and low cytotoxicity profiles. Unlike traditional azoles, which often provoke compensatory ERG gene upregulation, 2d represses key ergosterol pathway genes, suggesting a distinct mechanism of action. Its ability to downregulate hydrophobin and GPI-anchor protein genes may enhance immune visibility of dermatophytes and impair host adherence. These properties, along with minimal mammalian toxicity and lack of broad-spectrum antibacterial activity, make 2d an ideal candidate for topical antifungal development. The study also illustrates how integrative RNA-seq analysis can elucidate the multifactorial responses of fungi to novel agents, aiding the identification of molecular targets for drug design.
The antibacterial lectin RegIIIγ promotes the spatial segregation of microbiota and host in the intestine
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study shows that the antibacterial lectin RegIIIγ maintains a physical barrier between gut microbes and the intestinal lining, preventing immune overactivation.
What was studied?
This paper reported an experimental study that investigated how the antibacterial lectin RegIIIγ controls the spatial relationship between intestinal microbiota and the host epithelium. The authors directly tested the hypothesis that immune-mediated spatial segregation, rather than changes in overall microbial composition, is a key mechanism that preserves intestinal homeostasis. Using genetic, imaging, and microbiological approaches, the study focused on defining how epithelial innate immune signaling regulates where microbes reside in the small intestine and how this positioning affects downstream immune activation.
Who was studied?
The study was conducted primarily in mice, including wild-type animals, RegIIIγ-deficient mice, and mice with targeted deletions or reconstitution of MyD88 signaling in intestinal epithelial cells. These animal models were co-housed to control for microbiota composition. The investigators examined the distal small intestine, particularly the ileum, where RegIIIγ expression is highest. Although no human subjects were directly studied, the work was designed to model fundamental host–microbiota interactions that are highly conserved across mammals.
What were the most important findings?
The study demonstrated that RegIIIγ is essential for maintaining a physical buffer zone of approximately 50 micrometers between intestinal bacteria and the epithelial surface. Fluorescence in situ hybridization imaging on page 2 showed that, in wild-type mice, most bacteria remain spatially separated from the epithelium, whereas this separation collapsed in RegIIIγ-deficient animals, allowing bacteria to directly contact the mucosal surface. Importantly, this loss of segregation occurred without major changes in total luminal bacterial load or overall community composition, indicating that RegIIIγ regulates microbial location rather than abundance. Quantitative PCR data on page 3 revealed that RegIIIγ selectively restricted mucosa-associated Gram-positive bacteria, with notable expansion of Firmicutes such as Eubacterium rectale and segmented filamentous bacteria at the epithelial surface. Gram-negative Bacteroidetes were largely unaffected, underscoring the specificity of RegIIIγ activity. The immune consequences of disrupted spatial segregation were substantial. As shown in the adaptive immune analyses on pages 4 and 10, RegIIIγ-deficient mice exhibited increased IgA-producing cells, elevated fecal IgA levels, and heightened Th1 responses characterized by increased IFN-γ–producing CD4⁺ T cells. These immune changes disappeared with antibiotic treatment, confirming that they were driven by altered microbiota–host contact rather than intrinsic immune defects.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
For clinicians, this study reframes intestinal immune homeostasis as a problem of microbial proximity rather than microbial presence alone. It suggests that diseases such as inflammatory bowel disease may arise not only from dysbiosis but from failure to maintain proper spatial segregation between microbes and the epithelium. RegIIIγ and related lectins emerge as critical biomarkers and potential therapeutic targets for restoring mucosal immune balance without broadly eradicating beneficial microbes.
An engineered E. coli Nissle improves hyperammonemia and survival in mice and shows dose-dependent exposure in healthy humans
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Engineered Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 for hyperammonemia (SYNB1020) safely consumed gut ammonia, improved survival in mice, and showed dose-linked metabolic activity and clearance in healthy adults, supporting clinical development for urea cycle and liver-related hyperammonemia.
What was studied?
Engineered Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 for hyperammonemia was created to capture gut-derived ammonia and convert it into l-arginine, giving a live, gut-confined therapy for urea cycle disorders and hepatic encephalopathy. The research team built strain SYNB1020 on the EcN chassis, deleted the argR repressor, inserted an anaerobically driven, feedback-resistant argA, and added a thyA deletion to give biocontainment. The strain was tested in vitro for ammonia uptake under low oxygen, then in two mouse models of hyperammonemia and in nonhuman primates to confirm viability and safety. A phase 1 randomized, placebo-controlled trial in healthy adults assessed tolerability, gut exposure, clearance, and activity using 15N-ammonium tracing. The central aim was to show that a probiotic chassis can follow drug-development rules, reach steady state in stool, perform the engineered metabolic task in the lumen, and be cleared after dosing without colonizing.
Who was studied?
Preclinical work utilized ornithine transcarbamylase–deficient SPFash mice, which develop fatal hyperammonemia on a high-protein diet, and thioacetamide-injured mice that model hepatic ammonia overload. Both models mimic patients with urea cycle defects or cirrhosis who cannot detoxify portal ammonia. Mice received oral SYNB1020 at escalating doses and were monitored for blood ammonia and survival. Safety, biodistribution, and excretion were then tested in CD1 mice and cynomolgus monkeys that received up to 10¹² CFU daily for 28 days. Translation was performed in 52 healthy male and female adults in single-ascending and multiple-ascending dose cohorts, who received up to 1.5×10¹² CFU per day for 14 days. They provided serial blood and stool samples after an oral ¹⁵N-ammonium challenge to demonstrate in vivo activity and clearance.
Most important findings
SYNB1020 consumed more ammonia than parental EcN in vitro and released l-arginine in the expected stoichiometry, confirming that the engineered pathway was active. In OTC-deficient mice subjected to a protein load, oral SYNB1020 lowered circulating ammonia in a clear dose-dependent manner and improved 24-hour survival from approximately 40–55% to 100%. In contrast, heat-killed bacteria or non-arginine-producing EcN controls did not provide protection, indicating that the benefit was linked to the engineered pathway. In the liver-injury model, SYNB1020 again reduced blood ammonia levels compared with the vehicle and unmodified EcN. The strain remained within the gut, as evidenced by qPCR, which showed high fecal counts during dosing and undetectable levels in the liver, spleen, bladder, and gonads after dosing stopped. Mice and monkeys cleared the strain within 1–2 weeks.
In healthy adults, SYNB1020 was well tolerated at ≤5×10¹¹ CFU three times daily, reached a fecal steady state by day 2, and disappeared within 14 days after the last dose. Because healthy volunteers tightly regulate ammonia, venous ammonia levels did not decrease; however, 15N-ammonium was recovered as 15N-nitrate in plasma and urine in a dose-related manner, indicating that the engineered EcN was metabolically active in the human gut. These linked animal-to-human data define a microbiome signature of benefit: luminal ammonia excess, intact gut confinement, and presence of an EcN strain carrying an anaerobic arginine module and a thyA safety deletion.
Key implications
This work shows that a live EcN-based drug can be built, dosed, monitored, and cleared like a conventional medicine, while performing a non-host metabolic task that current scavengers cannot do in the lumen. For clinicians, the data suggest a future add-on for urea cycle disorders or hepatic encephalopathy where intestinal ammonia makes a significant contribution and where adherence to lactulose or rifaximin is poor. The biocontainment strategy and the absence of systemic spread address common safety objections to engineered probiotics, which is essential in cirrhotic or immunocompromised patients. The modest biomarker signal in healthy adults also signals a limit: real ammonia lowering will likely appear only in hyperammonemic patients with higher substrate loads, so disease-specific trials are needed. Microbiome databases should tag this strain by chassis (EcN), function (anaerobic ammonia-to-arginine conversion), and containment (thyA deletion) so that future engineered strains can be compared on the same metabolic and safety axes.
Passive immunization with anti-ActA and anti-listeriolysin O antibodies protects against Listeria monocytogenes infection in mice
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study examines the protective effect of passive immunization with anti-ActA and anti-LLO antibodies against Listeria monocytogenes infection, showing how these antibodies reduce bacterial load and enhance survival in infected mice.
What was studied?
This study investigated the effects of passive immunization with antibodies targeting two virulence factors of Listeria monocytogenes, ActA and listeriolysin O (LLO), to assess their potential in protecting against listerial infection in mice. The study specifically examined how these antibodies neutralize bacterial activities and reduce infection severity.
Who was studied?
The study focused on Listeria monocytogenes, its virulence factors (ActA and LLO), and their interactions with immune responses in C57BL/6 mice, including IFN-γ−/− and TNF-α−/− knockout mice. The immune responses were evaluated using passive immunization with antibodies produced against ActA and LLO in rabbits.
What were the most important findings?
The study found that passive immunization with antibodies targeting ActA and LLO significantly protected mice from Listeria monocytogenes infection. Survival rates in antibody-treated mice were substantially improved compared to controls, especially when both anti-ActA and anti-LLO antibodies were used in combination. These antibodies reduced bacterial load in organs such as the spleen and liver, indicating that they inhibited bacterial growth and dissemination. The study also found that the protective effect was partially dependent on the presence of immune factors like IFN-γ and TNF-α. Additionally, anti-LLO antibodies were shown to neutralize LLO activity, reducing bacterial escape from lysosomes, while anti-ActA antibodies inhibited actin tail formation and cell-to-cell spread, further limiting bacterial dissemination. The antibodies did not significantly affect bacterial adhesion but played a critical role in reducing intracellular bacterial numbers.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings of this study suggest that passive immunization with specific antibodies against ActA and LLO could serve as a promising therapeutic strategy for preventing or mitigating Listeria monocytogenes infections, especially in immunocompromised individuals or pregnant women who are most vulnerable to listeriosis. The ability of these antibodies to reduce bacterial spread and intracellular growth could be pivotal in managing severe infections. Furthermore, this study underscores the importance of targeting bacterial virulence factors, such as ActA and LLO, which play critical roles in immune evasion and intracellular survival. The approach of using antibodies to neutralize bacterial toxins and inhibit cell-to-cell spread could be applied not only to Listeria but also to other intracellular pathogens.
A case report of oral sulfamethoxazole in the treatment of posttransplant Listeria monocytogenes meningitis
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This case report demonstrates the effectiveness of oral sulfamethoxazole in treating Listeria monocytogenes meningitis in a renal transplant patient, offering an alternative treatment approach for those allergic to penicillin.
What was studied?
This case report studied the use of oral sulfamethoxazole (TMP-SMX) in the treatment of Listeria monocytogenes meningitis in a renal transplant recipient. The research aimed to examine the effectiveness of TMP-SMX, an antibiotic commonly used for various bacterial infections, when administered orally as an alternative to intravenous therapies, particularly for patients who are allergic to penicillin.
Who was studied?
The study focused on a 30-year-old male who had received a kidney transplant 4 months prior. He was diagnosed with Listeria monocytogenes meningitis after presenting with symptoms such as headache, diarrhea, fever, and neurological issues. The patient had a history of regular immunosuppressive therapy following the transplant, which made him susceptible to infections like Listeria. The study followed his treatment regimen and response to oral TMP-SMX therapy.
What were the most important findings?
The key finding from this case report was that oral TMP-SMX was effective in treating Listeria monocytogenes meningitis in this patient, who was allergic to penicillin and could not receive the conventional antibiotic therapy. The patient, after being diagnosed with Listeria through blood and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) cultures, was initially treated with penicillin. However, due to an allergic reaction, he was switched to oral TMP-SMX. The patient tolerated the TMP-SMX well, showing significant improvement after 21 days of treatment. His clinical symptoms improved, and follow-up tests showed normal CSF results, with no recurrence of meningitis or deterioration in kidney function. The study also highlighted that, despite the lack of intravenous TMP-SMX in some regions, the oral formulation proved to be an effective alternative with comparable bioavailability to the intravenous form.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study demonstrates that oral TMP-SMX can be a viable treatment option for Listeria monocytogenes meningitis in patients who cannot tolerate penicillin or intravenous treatments. The case adds to the growing body of evidence supporting the use of oral TMP-SMX in severe infections, particularly in immunocompromised patients, such as those with organ transplants. It also raises the potential for oral TMP-SMX to be considered in other settings where penicillin is contraindicated, making it a useful addition to treatment protocols for Listeria infections. Furthermore, this case could influence future clinical practices by offering a practical alternative to intravenous antibiotics, especially in regions where intravenous formulations of TMP-SMX are not readily available.
Colibactin: More Than a New Bacterial Toxin
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review explains how pks-positive bacteria produce colibactin, how it damages host DNA, and why it links to colorectal cancer and invasive infection severity. It also summarizes toxin-pathway inhibition as a prevention strategy while noting pks-derived anti-inflammatory and analgesic effects.
What was reviewed?
This paper reviewed the bacterial genotoxin colibactin and the pks genomic island that encodes its biosynthesis, with emphasis on where pks-positive bacteria appear in humans, how colibactin matures from a “prodrug” into an active genotoxin, and what host effects follow exposure. The authors framed colibactin as a microbiota-linked toxin that triggers DNA double-strand breaks, chromosomal instability, and cell-cycle arrest, then connects those cellular injuries to downstream clinical relevance such as carcinogenesis and invasive infections.
Who was reviewed?
Because this is a review, it integrated evidence across studied populations and models rather than enrolling a single cohort. It summarized human carriage studies showing pks+ E. coli in stools (about 12–32% prevalence) and in neonates (around 33% in one Swedish cohort and 26.9% in a French cohort), and it also drew on clinical isolate studies in urosepsis, prostatitis, neonatal meningitis, and blood cultures. The review further noted pks distribution in other Enterobacteriaceae such as Klebsiella pneumoniae and referenced animal and cell models that link pks-positive bacteria to epithelial DNA damage and tumor phenotypes.
What were the most important findings?
For a microbiome signatures database, the key “signature” is functional: colonization or infection with pks-positive Enterobacteriaceae, especially B2 phylogroup E. coli that often co-carry other virulence traits. The review underscored that colibactin-producing bacteria drive DNA damage that can lead to epithelial senescence and immune-cell apoptosis, and it tied that harm to a defined maturation pathway in which ClbM transports precolibactin into the periplasm, ClbP cleaves the prodrug side chain to generate mature colibactin, and ClbS protects bacteria by inactivating the genotoxic activity via cyclopropane hydrolase function. Structurally, the authors highlighted motifs linked to genotoxicity—cyclopropane “warheads” and DNA-interacting thiazole/bithiazole features—and they pointed to evidence that pks+ E. coli can induce DNA interstrand cross-links that feed into double-strand breaks.
What are the greatest implications of this study/ review?
Clinically, this review supports treating pks positivity as a meaningful microbial risk marker because it links a specific bacterial gene island to a clear mechanism—DNA injury with senescence/apoptosis—and to disease settings that matter to clinicians, including colorectal cancer and severe invasive infections. It also highlights an actionable therapeutic concept: the authors describe that inhibitors targeting the colibactin pathway (“Clb” inhibitors) have already shown proof-of-concept potential to prevent deleterious effects, which makes toxin-pathway blockade an attractive alternative to broad microbiome disruption. At the same time, they caution clinicians to keep context in view, because the pks island can also drive anti-inflammatory, analgesic, and antibiotic activities, so precision strategies should aim to reduce genotoxic output without discarding beneficial functions.
Gut Microbiome Phenotypes Driven by Host Genetics Affect Arsenic Metabolism
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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The study demonstrates how IL-10 gene knockout mice show significant changes in their gut microbiome and arsenic metabolism. These alterations contribute to higher levels of toxic arsenic metabolites, highlighting the role of host genetics in shaping exposure outcomes.
What was studied?
This study aimed to explore how host genetics, specifically IL-10 gene knockout, interacts with the gut microbiome and impacts arsenic metabolism. The researchers hypothesized that variations in the gut microbiome driven by host genetics could affect how arsenic is metabolized and whether this interaction influences arsenic toxicity. Using an integrated approach combining 16S rRNA sequencing for microbial profiling and HPLC-ICP-MS for arsenic speciation, the study examined whether the IL-10 gene knockout in mice altered the gut microbiome's composition and, in turn, influenced arsenic biotransformation into more toxic metabolites. The study was designed to address how the microbiome influences arsenic metabolism, shedding light on individual susceptibility to arsenic-induced diseases.
Who was studied?
The study utilized C57BL/6 mice, a commonly used strain for genetic research, focusing on both wild-type and IL-10 knockout (IL-10−/−) mice. The IL-10 knockout model was selected due to IL-10’s critical role in immune regulation, which is intertwined with gut microbiome composition. The mice were exposed to arsenic in drinking water at a dose of 10 ppm for four weeks. After exposure, the researchers collected fecal samples for microbiome analysis, blood and urine for arsenic metabolite measurements, and performed histological evaluations. The aim was to see if the IL-10 gene knockout mice had significant changes in their gut microbiome compared to the wild-type mice and how these changes affected arsenic metabolism.
Most important findings
The study found that the gut microbiome composition was significantly altered in IL-10−/− mice compared to wild-type mice. The Bacteroidetes family increased, while Firmicutes decreased significantly, particularly within the Lachnospiraceae family. These changes in gut microbiome composition were linked to alterations in arsenic metabolism. Specifically, DMAsV (dimethylarsinic acid) levels were significantly reduced in the urine of IL-10 knockout mice, while MMAsV (monomethylarsonic acid) and iAsV (inorganic arsenic) levels were increased. This pattern indicates that the genetic alteration in IL-10 significantly impacted the ability of the microbiome to detoxify arsenic through methylation, leading to higher levels of more toxic arsenic species. Moreover, the ratio of MMAsV/DMAsV was higher in the knockout group, which mirrors human patterns that are associated with higher toxicity and disease risk. The study also demonstrated that the altered microbiome composition had functional impacts on arsenic metabolism, highlighting a genetic-microbiome interaction in the context of xenobiotic processing.
Key implications
This study highlights the crucial role of host genetics in shaping the gut microbiome and its capacity to metabolize arsenic. The findings suggest that individuals with specific genetic profiles, such as those with an IL-10 knockout, may be more vulnerable to arsenic toxicity due to altered microbiome-mediated biotransformation of arsenic. For clinical practice, this implies that genetic screening and microbiome profiling could be essential tools for personalizing arsenic exposure risk assessments and treatment strategies, particularly in populations exposed to contaminated drinking water. Additionally, this study contributes to the broader understanding of xenobiotic metabolism, where interactions between host genetics, gut microbiota, and environmental toxins like arsenic can influence health outcomes. For microbiome research, these findings suggest that gut microbial phenotypes, driven by genetic factors, should be considered in studies linking microbiota composition with environmental toxicants and disease susceptibility.
A Bacteriophage Cocktail Significantly Reduces Listeria monocytogenes without Deleterious Impact on the Commensal Gut Microbiota under Simulated Gastrointestinal Conditions
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study demonstrates that the FOP bacteriophage cocktail effectively reduces Listeria monocytogenes levels in the gastrointestinal tract, without disturbing the gut microbiota, offering a promising alternative to antibiotics for treating or preventing Listeria infections.
What was studied?
This study examined the effectiveness of a bacteriophage cocktail (FOP) on reducing Listeria monocytogenes levels in the gastrointestinal tract, specifically under simulated conditions that mimic human digestion. The researchers tested the ability of the FOP cocktail to survive gastric passage, reduce Listeria counts in the small and large intestines, and preserve the commensal gut microbiota. The study also assessed the ability of the phage cocktail to protect human intestinal cells (Caco-2) from adhesion and invasion by Listeria.
Who was studied?
The study focused on the bacterium Listeria monocytogenes, a foodborne pathogen responsible for severe infections like listeriosis. The study used both in vitro models, including a simulated small intestine model (TSI), colon model (CoMiniGut), and Caco-2 cells, to evaluate the efficacy of the FOP bacteriophage cocktail. It also involved the study of the commensal microbiota using 16S rRNA sequencing to monitor any changes in the bacterial community composition after phage treatment.
What were the most important findings?
The study found that the FOP bacteriophage cocktail significantly reduced Listeria monocytogenes levels in both the small intestine and colon under simulated gastrointestinal conditions. Phage treatment resulted in a substantial reduction in Listeria in the ileum (1.5-log reduction) and in the colon (3-5-log reduction), without significantly affecting the other commensal bacteria in the gut. This finding suggests that the phages selectively target Listeria, preserving the balance of the gut microbiota. In contrast, ampicillin treatment also reduced Listeria levels but led to a significant loss of commensal gut bacteria. Additionally, the FOP cocktail was more effective than ampicillin in preventing Listeria from adhering to and invading Caco-2 intestinal epithelial cells, showing a 5-log reduction compared to a 1-log reduction with ampicillin. The phage cocktail also did not induce an inflammatory response or alter transepithelial resistance (TER) in the Caco-2 cells, suggesting that it did not negatively affect the integrity of the intestinal barrier.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings of this study suggest that bacteriophage therapy could be a highly effective and selective approach to reduce Listeria monocytogenes contamination in the gastrointestinal tract without harming the beneficial gut microbiota. This is particularly important for maintaining gut health, especially in individuals with sensitive microbiomes, such as those undergoing immunosuppressive treatments or suffering from conditions like irritable bowel syndrome. The study provides strong evidence that the FOP bacteriophage cocktail could be developed into a therapeutic or preventive intervention against Listeria infections, potentially offering a complementary or alternative strategy to traditional antibiotics, especially in light of rising antibiotic resistance.
Zinc Oxide Nanoparticles Suppress Microsporum canis Growth and Virulence
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Zinc oxide nanoparticles inhibited Microsporum canis in a concentration-dependent manner and reduced SUB1 virulence-gene expression. MIC values of 250–500 ppm and fungicidal activity at 500–1000 ppm demonstrate strong antifungal and anti-virulence potential for nanoparticle-based veterinary applications.
What was studied?
This original study investigated the in vitro antifungal efficacy of zinc oxide nanoparticles against clinical isolates of Microsporum caniscollected from dogs and cats, and evaluated their impact on the dermatophyte virulence gene SUB1, which encodes a subtilisin protease involved in fungal adhesion. The authors synthesized ZnO nanoparticles through a modified wet-chemical method, confirmed nanoparticle morphology and purity through XRD and electron microscopy, quantified antifungal activity through CLSI-standard disk diffusion, microdilution, MIC and MFC assays, and assessed SUB1 expression via qRT-PCR.
Who was studied?
Forty-three veterinary patients (dogs and cats) presenting to the University of Tehran Small Animal Hospital for suspected dermatophytosis were initially screened, from which ten confirmed M. canis isolates were obtained through Wood’s lamp evaluation, McKenzie brush sampling, cultural identification, and microscopic verification. These ten isolates were used for all antifungal susceptibility and gene-expression analyses.
Most important findings
Zinc oxide nanoparticles exhibited consistent, concentration-dependent inhibition of M. canis. Disk diffusion assays demonstrated inhibitory activity across dilutions of 250–4000 ppm, with maximum inhibition at 4000 ppm (mean zone diameters approximately 30–34 mm across isolates). MIC values ranged from 250–500 ppm and MFC values from 500–1000 ppm, yielding MFC-to-MIC ratios indicative of fungicidal activity. Sub-MIC exposure (125–250 ppm) significantly reduced SUB1 expression across isolates (p < 0.05), suggesting disruption of protease-mediated adhesion pathways that are key determinants of keratin invasion and surface colonization.
For microbiome-signature applications, this study contributes a mechanistic anchor linking ZnO nanoparticles to attenuation of dermatophyte virulence rather than solely growth inhibition. Downregulation of SUB1 highlights a functional pathway that may be incorporated into future Major Microbial Association (MMA) analyses for dermatophytosis, particularly given that M. canis pathogenicity in hosts relies on proteolytic degradation of keratinized tissues.
In the context of translational microbiome medicine, nanoparticle-mediated suppression of virulence factors is relevant for intervention design targeting biofilm formation, adhesion processes, and protease-driven dysbiosis. These findings suggest that ZnO nanoparticle formulations could be explored as adjunctive or alternative antifungal interventions in cases characterized by resistance to azoles or terbinafine, although safety and in vivo pharmacodynamics require further investigation.
Greatest implications of the study
The study demonstrates that zinc oxide nanoparticles constitute a potent antifungal and anti-virulence agent against M. canis, with fungicidal properties and transcriptional interference of a key pathogenicity gene. These data support the feasibility of nanoparticle-based antifungal strategies in veterinary medicine and underscore their potential value in contexts where conventional antifungals fail due to resistance or inconsistent tissue penetration. The mechanistic evidence related to SUB1 suppression offers a novel targetable virulence axis for microbiome-oriented therapeutics. As dermatophyte-associated dysbiosis extends beyond visible lesions and may influence local immune dynamics, this work strengthens the rationale for integrating nanoparticle-based modalities into broader microbiome-targeted intervention frameworks.
Citation
Khanipour Machiani M, Jamshidi S, Nikaein D, Khosravi A, Balal A. The inhibitory effects of zinc oxide nanoparticles on clinical isolates of Microsporum canis in dogs and cats. Vet Med Sci. 2024;10:e1316. doi:10.1002/vms3.1316
Influence of toxic metal exposure on the gut microbiota (Review)
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study investigates how copper supplementation affects gut microbiota and E. coli resistance in weaned piglets. It reveals that copper alters microbial composition and promotes antibiotic resistance, with potential implications for public health and animal agriculture.
What was studied?
The study explores the impact of pharmacological doses of copper on the microbial communities in the hindgut and the antimicrobial resistance profiles of Escherichia coli in weaned piglets. Specifically, the study aims to investigate how copper supplementation affects microbial diversity and composition in the ileum and cecum, as well as the resistance of E. coli strains to common antibiotics.
Who was studied?
The research focused on twenty-four healthy, weaned piglets aged 21 ± 1 days, with an average weight of 7.27 ± 0.46 kg. These piglets were randomly divided into four groups. One group received a basal diet, while the other groups were given diets supplemented with varying doses of copper (20, 100, or 200 mg copper/kg feed, in the form of CuSO4).
Most important findings
The study demonstrated that while copper supplementation did not significantly affect the diversity of the microbial communities in the piglets' gastrointestinal tract, it did notably alter their composition. Copper supplementation influenced the microbial metabolic functions related to energy metabolism, protein metabolism, and amino acid biosynthesis. Moreover, the study found that copper treatment increased the abundance of E. coli in the hindgut. Additionally, E. coli strains isolated from the copper-treated groups exhibited higher resistance to antibiotics such as chloramphenicol and ciprofloxacin. The resistance of E. coli to multiple drugs also increased in the ileum of the piglets, highlighting a potential risk of promoting antimicrobial resistance in agricultural settings.
Key implications
The findings from this study have significant implications for animal agriculture and public health. The observed increase in E. coli resistance to antibiotics in response to high copper intake raises concerns about the potential role of copper in promoting antimicrobial resistance. This is particularly important as resistant strains of E. coli may pose a risk to human health through the food chain. Additionally, the altered microbial composition in the gut due to copper supplementation suggests that long-term exposure to pharmacological copper doses could lead to shifts in gut microbiota, possibly impacting host health. Therefore, careful management of copper supplementation in livestock is recommended to avoid unintended consequences, such as the development of antimicrobial resistance.
Role and mechanisms of action of Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 in the maintenance of remission in ulcerative colitis patients
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 (EcN) is a safe and effective probiotic for maintaining remission in ulcerative colitis patients, with clinical trial evidence showing equivalence to mesalazine in relapse prevention. Its mechanisms include immune modulation, antimicrobial activity, and gut barrier reinforcement.
What was studied?
This review focuses on the role and mechanisms of Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 (EcN) in maintaining remission in patients with ulcerative colitis (UC). The study examines how EcN, a non-pathogenic, Gram-negative bacterium, influences the gut microbiota to achieve beneficial effects in the management of UC. It examines its probiotic properties, including immune modulation, antimicrobial effects, and reinforcement of intestinal barrier function. The paper also presents clinical trial data comparing EcN with conventional therapies such as mesalazine for preventing UC relapses. EcN’s effectiveness, safety, and mechanisms of action are further discussed, along with insights into its potential as an adjunctive therapy in UC treatment.
Who was studied?
The review primarily focuses on Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 (EcN) and its use in clinical settings for managing ulcerative colitis (UC). It draws upon multiple clinical trials involving UC patients, comparing EcN with standard therapies like mesalazine (5-aminosalicylic acid) for relapse prevention. Studies involving both adult and pediatric UC populations are discussed, with emphasis on the effectiveness of EcN in maintaining remission after an acute flare of UC. It also includes animal models that assess the probiotic's effects on intestinal inflammation and microbial composition.
Most important findings
The review found that Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 (EcN) is effective in maintaining remission in UC patients, with clinical trials demonstrating its efficacy comparable to that of mesalazine in preventing disease relapse. In one major study, EcN demonstrated similar relapse rates to mesalazine, with no significant differences in clinical activity index (CAI), endoscopic evaluation, or histological measures. EcN also provided anti-inflammatory benefits by reducing pro-inflammatory cytokines and enhancing mucosal integrity. The probiotic strain’s mechanisms of action include immune modulation via toll-like receptors, production of antimicrobial substances (e.g., microcins), and promotion of tight junctions between intestinal epithelial cells. These effects help to stabilize the gut microbiota, reduce inflammation, and enhance the gut barrier function. Moreover, EcN's safety profile was robust, with minimal adverse effects reported in clinical trials.
Key implications
EcN offers a safe, effective, and well-tolerated alternative to traditional therapies like mesalazine in managing ulcerative colitis. Its ability to modulate the immune system, strengthen the intestinal barrier, and reduce inflammation positions it as a promising adjunct or alternative therapy in UC management. The findings highlight the growing role of probiotics in chronic disease management, particularly in conditions like UC where the microbiota plays a crucial role. Further studies are needed to optimize the use of EcN, determine the most effective dosing strategies, and explore its long-term benefits for UC patients.
Antimicrobial, Probiotic, and Immunomodulatory Potential of Cannabis sativa Extract and Delivery Systems
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Overall, this study highlights the multifaceted bioactivities of cannabis-derived compounds and underscores their potential in pharmaceutical and probiotic applications.
What was studied?
The study investigated the antimicrobial, probiotic, and immunobiological effects of the Henola Cannabis sativae extract and its combinations with specific carriers: polyvinyl caprolactam-polyvinyl acetate-polyethylene glycol graft copolymer, magnesium aluminometasilicate, and hydroxypropyl-β-cyclodextrin. The study demonstrated that Henola Cannabis sativae extract, particularly when combined with carriers like hydroxypropyl-β-cyclodextrin, exhibits strong antimicrobial activity against various pathogens and boosts probiotic bacteria growth. Additionally, it affects immune cytokine levels, suggesting its potential as a therapeutic agent for both microbial infections and immune modulation in clinical settings.
Who was studied?
The subjects of the study were various microorganisms, including pathogenic bacteria like Clostridium difficile, Listeria monocytogenes, Enterococcus faecalis, Staphylococcus aureus, Staphylococcus pyrogenes, Escherichia coli, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Salmonella typhimurium, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and the fungus Candida albicans. Additionally, the study examined probiotic bacterial strains such as Lactobacillus acidophilus, Lactobacillus casei, and others.
What were the most important findings?
The research revealed several key findings: Firstly, the Henola Cannabis sativae extract showed significant antimicrobial activity, effectively reducing the counts of various pathogenic bacteria and Candida albicans. Secondly, when combined with hydroxypropyl-β-cyclodextrin, the extract substantially enhanced the growth of beneficial probiotic bacteria. Additionally, the extract and its systems notably affected the levels of important immune cytokines such as IL-6, IL-8, and TNF-α, indicating potent immunomodulatory effects.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings from the study on Henola Cannabis sativae extract have considerable implications. The extract’s demonstrated antimicrobial and probiotic-enhancing effects suggest its potential for development into therapeutic agents that could inhibit pathogenic microorganisms or support beneficial microbial communities. Additionally, its impact on immune system cytokines showcases its possible use in managing or treating inflammation-related diseases, indicating that it could beneficially influence immune responses. Moreover, the effectiveness of the extract when combined with specific carriers highlights the potential for creating targeted delivery systems that could enhance the bioavailability and efficacy of cannabinoids, terpenes, and flavonoids in clinical settings.
Associations Between Endometriosis and Gut Microbiota
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This case control study explores the gut microbiota's association with endometriosis in women, comparing 66 patients to 198 controls. Using 16S rRNA sequencing, it was found that patients have lower diversity in their gut bacteria and significant differences in the abundance of 12 bacterial types, suggesting that endometriosis may influence gut microbiota composition.
What was studied?
The study examined the gut microbiota in women with endometriosis compared to healthy controls. It aimed to explore differences based on disease localization, symptoms, or treatment and assess the gut microbiota’s potential role in the pathogenesis of endometriosis.
Who was studied?
66 women diagnosed with endometriosis at Skåne University Hospital were studied alongside 198 matched controls from the Malmö Offspring Study, assessing their gut microbiota through 16S rRNA sequencing.
What were the most important findings?
Significant findings include higher overall microbial diversity in controls compared to endometriosis patients, with specific differences in the abundance of 12 bacteria types between the two groups. After adjusting for false discovery rates, no significant microbiota differences were found within the endometriosis cohort.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study implies that gut microbiota may be altered in individuals with endometriosis, suggesting a possible link between gut microbiota and the pathogenesis or symptomatology of endometriosis. These findings highlight the need for further research on the gut microbiota’s role in endometriosis, potentially leading to new diagnostic and treatment strategies.
Comparison of Vaginal, Cervical and Gut Microbiota Between Women with Stage 3/4 Endometriosis and Healthy Controls
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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In this prospective cohort, women with stage 3/4 endometriosis exhibited a unique microbial profile, characterized by the absence of Atopobium and increased levels of potentially pathogenic genera like Gardnerella, Streptococcus, Escherichia, Shigella, and Ureoplasma in their vaginal and cervical microbiota.
What was studied?
The study focused on exploring the associations between the microbiota of the vaginal, cervical, and gut regions and stage 3–4 endometriosis in women. This research aimed to uncover potential differences in the microbiome composition between women diagnosed with advanced endometriosis and healthy controls, particularly at the genus level of microbial classification.
Who was studied?
The participants included 14 women with histologically proven stage 3–4 endometriosis and 14 healthy controls. These women were carefully selected based on strict criteria to ensure the stability of the microbiota, excluding those who had ever been pregnant or had conditions/medications that could affect the microbiome. All participants belonged to the same ethnicity, and the study managed to maintain a balance between samples collected during different phases of the menstrual cycle in both groups.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed that while the overall composition of the vaginal, cervical, and gut microbiota was similar between women with and without endometriosis, there were notable genus-level differences. Specifically, Atopobium was absent in the endometriosis group’s vaginal and cervical microbiota. Increases in Gardnerella in the cervical microbiota and Escherichia/Shigella in the gut were more common among those with endometriosis. Sensitivity analyses excluding Lactobacillus showed significant increases in Sneathia, Gardnerella, Streptococcus, Escherichia/Shigella, and Ureaplasma, and a decrease in Alloprevotella in the cervical microbiota of the endometriosis group.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings suggest a potentially significant association between the composition of the female microbiota and the presence of stage 3–4 endometriosis, particularly regarding the absence and presence of specific microbial genera. These differences might offer insights into the pathophysiology of endometriosis and indicate potential diagnostic markers or therapeutic targets. Specifically, the study raises intriguing questions about the direction of causation between altered microbiota and endometriosis. It suggests the microbiome’s potential as both a screening tool for endometriosis and a therapeutic target, depending on whether changes in the microbiome are a cause or a consequence of the disease. The study also underscores the potential utility of gut microbiome analysis as a predictive tool for surgical decisions, such as the need for bowel resection to treat deep infiltrating endometriosis.
Overall, this research lays the groundwork for further studies to clarify the causal relationships between dysbiosis and endometriosis and to explore the microbiome’s role in the disease’s pathogenesis, diagnosis, and treatment.
Copper in microbial pathogenesis: meddling with the metal
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study explores the dual role of copper in microbial pathogenesis, highlighting how it serves both as a vital nutrient and a potent antimicrobial agent. The research delves into the sophisticated mechanisms developed by pathogens, like Mycobacterium tuberculosis and Pseudomonas aeruginosa, to evade copper's toxicity, including specialized copper pumps and regulatory proteins. It also investigates copper's critical role in the host's immune defense, influencing infection outcomes. Findings suggest that copper's antimicrobial properties could be leveraged in healthcare to develop new treatment strategies, and its application in environmental settings could help control pathogen growth.
What was studied?
The study investigated the role of copper in microbial pathogenesis. Specifically, it examined how copper serves as both a necessary nutrient for microbial organisms and a microbial weapon used by hosts against pathogens. The research explored copper’s dual roles, its involvement in various microbial resistance mechanisms, and its interaction with the host’s immune responses.
Who was studied?
The study focused on various microbial species, including bacteria and fungi. It delved into the copper homeostasis mechanisms of pathogens like Mycobacterium tuberculosis and Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and also examined model organisms such as Saccharomyces cerevisiae to understand copper’s role in microbial pathogenesis and resistance.
What were the most important findings?
Significant findings from the study demonstrate that copper is utilized by hosts as an antimicrobial agent, significantly impacting pathogen growth and survival. Additionally, pathogens have evolved sophisticated mechanisms to counteract copper toxicity. These adaptations include the development of specific copper pumps and regulatory proteins that meticulously manage copper uptake and expulsion. Moreover, copper is found to play a critical role in the immune defense strategy of hosts, substantially influencing the outcomes of infections. These insights underscore the complex interplay between copper, pathogens, and host defenses.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The implications of this research are broad and significant for both healthcare and environmental management. Understanding copper’s role in microbial pathogenesis could lead to the development of new antimicrobial strategies and treatments that leverage copper’s toxic effects on pathogens. Additionally, this knowledge could inform the use of copper in medical and environmental applications to control pathogen growth, thereby reducing infection rates and enhancing public health safety.
Correlation of fecal metabolomics and gut microbiota in mice with endometriosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study explores the relationship between fecal metabolomics and gut microbiota in endometriosis (EMS) mice, finding key metabolic changes and decreased microbiota diversity. Significant pathways, like bile acid biosynthesis and ALA metabolism, were identified, suggesting fecal metabolites affected by dysbacteriosis as potential EMS markers.
What was studied?
The study investigated the interaction between fecal metabolomics and gut microbiota in mice with endometriosis (EMS), aiming to identify metabolic changes and microbiota diversity associated with the disease.
Who was studied?
Female C57BL/6J mice, utilized to construct an EMS model, were the subjects of this research, allowing for the examination of fecal metabolites and gut microbiota composition.
What were the most important findings?
Significant findings included the identification of 156 differential metabolites, decreasing the diversity and abundance of gut microbiota in EMS mice, and involving key metabolic pathways such as bile acid biosynthesis and alpha-linolenic acid (ALA) metabolism. Notably, increased levels of chenodeoxycholic and ursodeoxycholic acids and decreased levels of ALA and 12,13-EOTrE were found in EMS mice feces.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study suggests that the identified abnormal fecal metabolites, influenced by gut dysbiosis, may be potential markers for diagnosing EMS. This finding opens new avenues for understanding EMS pathogenesis and developing non-invasive diagnostic tools based on fecal metabolite profiles.
Effect of endometriosis on the fecal bacteriota composition of mice during the acute phase of lesion formation
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study investigated the impact of induced endometriotic lesions on gut microbiota in mice, using GFP+ uterine tissue transplantation. Despite successful lesion formation, no significant changes in gut microbiota composition were observed in the acute phase, suggesting endometriosis may not cause pronounced dysbiosis during early lesion development.
What was studied?
The study investigated whether the induction of endometriosis in mice affects the composition of their gut microbiota. It tested this by transplanting uterine tissue fragments into mice and analyzing changes in the gut microbiota before and after endometriosis induction.
Who was studied?
Female C57BL/6 wild-type mice and GFP+ transgenic donor mice were used. Uterine tissue from the donor mice was transplanted into the peritoneal cavity of the wild-type mice to induce endometriosis, with sham-transplanted mice serving as controls.
What were the most important findings?
Endometriotic lesions successfully developed in the mice, but the study found no significant alterations in the gut microbiota composition within the 21-day observation period. The bacterial community remained stable, indicating no early-phase intestinal dysbiosis due to endometriosis induction.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study hypothesizes that there is a bi-directional relationship between gut dysbiosis and endometriosis, where alterations in the gut microbiota may influence the development and progression of endometriosis and vice versa. Although this particular study did not find significant changes in the gut microbiota composition within the early phase of endometriosis induction in mice, it suggests the possibility that the gut microbiota could be involved in hormone-related, inflammatory, angiogenic, and vasculogenic processes associated with endometriosis.
Other studies’ findings, which reported dysbiosis following endometriosis induction, further support the idea of a complex interaction between endometriosis and the gut microbiota. This interaction could potentially impact estrogen metabolism, systemic inflammation, and stem cell homeostasis, all of which are implicated in the pathogenesis of endometriosis. However, the study calls for more research to clarify this relationship, including studies on microbial activity and metabolic function, to understand how gut microbiota might affect endometriosis fully.
Effect of Oxygen on Glucose Metabolism: Utilization of Lactate in Staphylococcus Aureus as Revealed by In Vivo NMR Studies
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study shows that oxygen drives a shift in S. aureus metabolism from glucose fermentation to aerobic lactate oxidation. Lactate supports growth and energy production under oxygenated conditions, offering a survival advantage in host niches where sugars are scarce but lactate is abundant.
What was studied?
This study investigated the effect of oxygen availability on glucose metabolism and lactate utilization in Staphylococcus aureus (strain COL-S) using in vivo ¹³C-NMR spectroscopy. The goal was to characterize metabolic shifts and intracellular metabolite dynamics under aerobic, semi-aerobic, and anaerobic conditions in non-growing S. aureus cells, and to determine whether lactate could serve as a carbon source for growth. Glucose metabolism was evaluated in both aerobically and anaerobically pre-grown cells, enabling the dissection of direct metabolic regulation from transcriptional adaptation.
Who was studied?
The experimental organism was Staphylococcus aureus COL-S, a methicillin-sensitive derivative of the MRSA strain COL. Cells were cultured in a chemically defined medium optimized for NMR studies. Both aerobically and anaerobically grown cells were examined to distinguish immediate metabolic effects from longer-term transcriptional changes induced by oxygen levels.
Most important findings
The study revealed that oxygen availability fundamentally alters the central carbon metabolism of S. aureus. Under fully oxygenated conditions, S. aureus preferentially oxidized glucose to acetate and lactate, and later converted lactate to acetate, reflecting active respiratory metabolism. As oxygen became limited, the bacteria shifted toward a fermentative profile, accumulating more lactate and producing mannitol/mannitol-1-phosphate (Mtl/Mtl1P) as electron sinks to regenerate NAD⁺.
In fully anoxic conditions, glucose metabolism was biphasic: a slow initial phase was followed by a faster consumption phase, suggesting an adaptive metabolic switch. FBP (fructose-1,6-bisphosphate) and Mtl1P peaks marked the transition, after which NAD⁺ regeneration pathways appeared to improve. End-products under anaerobiosis included lactate (major), acetate, ethanol, and 2,3-butanediol. Notably, S. aureus demonstrated an unexpected capacity to catabolize lactate aerobically, converting it efficiently to acetate via pyruvate, thereby sustaining NAD⁺ balance and ATP production through substrate-level phosphorylation.
The study confirmed that S. aureus could grow robustly on lactate alone under aerobic conditions, without a sugar source, and utilized glucose and lactate simultaneously without catabolite repression. These results position lactate as a viable and underappreciated carbon source for S. aureus, especially in oxygen-rich host niches like the skin and nasal cavity, where it may outcompete fermentative commensals.
From a microbiome signatures perspective, this metabolic adaptability of S. aureus—particularly its efficient use of lactate—is a critical trait for ecological fitness and niche dominance. In microbial clustering models, lactate metabolism may distinguish S. aureus from commensals that lack this capability, forming a basis for identifying S. aureus as a Major Microbial Association (MMA) in certain pathologies.
Greatest implications of this study
The capacity of S. aureus to efficiently utilize lactate aerobically confers a competitive ecological advantage, enabling it to thrive in host niches with low carbohydrate availability but high lactate levels due to resident fermentative microbiota. This trait may underpin its success as both a commensal and a pathogen. The finding that S. aureus expresses both NAD⁺-dependent and potentially NAD⁺-independent lactate dehydrogenases adds a layer of complexity to its metabolic plasticity, potentially informing antimicrobial strategies that target lactate uptake and oxidation pathways. From a microbiome interventions standpoint, targeting lactate metabolism could be a novel approach to disrupting S. aureus colonization and virulence.
Endometriosis induces gut microbiota alterations in mice
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study used high-throughput DNA sequencing to show that murine endometriosis alters gut microbiota, notably increasing the Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes ratio and Bifidobacterium levels by day 42, indicating disease-specific dysbiosis. It underscores the need for further research on the long-term effects of endometriosis on gut microbiota and its bidirectional interaction with the host.
What was studied?
The research focused on investigating the impact of murine endometriosis on gut microbiota composition using high-throughput DNA sequencing to explore how the disease affects intestinal microbial communities.
Who was studied?
The study subjects were mice. These animals were divided into two groups: one group with induced endometriosis through the intraperitoneal injection of endometrial tissues and a mock group that served as a control.
What were the most important findings?
The study’s key findings include the emergence of a distinct gut microbiota composition in mice with endometriosis by day 42 post-modeling, highlighted by an increased Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes ratio and elevated levels of Bifidobacterium. These changes suggest a specific dysbiosis associated with endometriosis.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study’s most significant implications lie in its pioneering use of high-throughput DNA sequencing to link endometriosis with specific changes in gut microbiota, highlighting the disease’s potential to induce dysbiosis. It suggests the importance of further research to understand the long-term effects of endometriosis on gut microbiota and the bidirectional interactions between the host and its microbiota. This could lead to novel insights into the pathophysiology of endometriosis and inform new therapeutic strategies targeting the gut microbiome.
Gut microbiota imbalance and its correlations with hormone and inflammatory factors in patients with stage 3/4 endometriosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This case control study explored the gut microbiota in stage 3/4 endometriosis (EM) by comparing fecal and blood samples from 12 EM patients and 12 controls using 16S rRNA sequencing. Results showed reduced α diversity and an increased Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes ratio in EM patients, with notable taxonomic differences and elevated estradiol and IL-8 levels. The study suggests microbiota-related pathways may influence EM, indicating directions for further research.
What was studied?
The study investigated the role of gut microbiota in endometriosis (EM), focusing on its differences between individuals with stage 3/4 EM and healthy controls and how these differences correlate with serum hormone levels and inflammatory cytokines.
Who was studied?
The research involved 12 patients diagnosed with stage 3/4 endometriosis and 12 healthy control subjects. The researchers compared their gut microbiota compositions and measured serum levels of hormones and inflammatory cytokines.
What were the most important findings?
Key findings included a lower α diversity of gut microbiota and a higher Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes ratio in the EM group compared to controls. Significant differences in the abundances of various taxa were observed, along with higher serum levels of estradiol (E2) and interleukin-8 (IL-8) in the EM group. The study also identified correlations between specific microbial abundances and levels of estradiol and IL-8.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study’s implications suggest that the gut microbiota may play a significant role in the pathophysiology of endometriosis through its influence on hormonal and inflammatory pathways. These findings open potential avenues for novel therapeutic strategies targeting the gut microbiota in endometriosis management and highlight the need for further research to verify and expand upon these preliminary observations.
In vitro antibiofilm, antibacterial, antioxidant, and antitumor activities of the brown alga Padina pavonica biomass extract
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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P. pavonica methanolic extract exhibited strong antibacterial activity against Staphylococcus aureus, Enterococcus faecalis, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Klebsiella pneumonia, Bacillus subtilis, and moderate antibacterial activity against Escherichia coli, Pseudomonas fluorescens and Streptococcus agalactiae. The study concludes that P. pavonica methanolic extract exhibited effective antibiofilm, antibacterial, antioxidant, and anticancer activities.
What was studied?
The study focused on evaluating the antibiofilm, antibacterial, antioxidant, and anticancer activities of the methanolic extract of the marine algae Padina pavonica L.
Who was studied?
The subjects of the study were various microorganisms including Staphylococcus aureus, Enterococcus faecalis, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Bacillus subtilis, Escherichia coli, Pseudomonas fluorescens, and Streptococcus agalactiae. Additionally, the extract’s effect on lung carcinoma cells was tested.
What were the most important findings?
The extract showed high inhibitory action against biofilm formation (88-99% effectiveness). It displayed strong antibacterial activity against several identified bacterial species and moderate activity against others. The extract demonstrated significant antioxidant properties with 84.59% DPPH radical scavenging activity. And the extract exhibited potent anticancer activity against lung carcinoma with a high range of inhibitory percent (1.79-98.25%) and a low IC50 value (15.14 µg/ml).
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study highlights the potential of Padina pavonica as a source of natural compounds with multiple therapeutic applications, including treating infections, combating cancer, and preventing oxidative stress. The broad spectrum of activities suggests that P. pavonica could be developed into various pharmacological or nutraceutical products, thereby supporting biodiversity conservation and offering new avenues for drug development from marine resources.
Inflammatory cytokines IL-6, IL-10, IL-13, TNF-α and peritoneal fluid flora were associated with infertility in patients with endometriosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This cross-sectional observational study examined the link between inflammatory markers (IL-6, IL-10, IL-13, TNF-α), peritoneal fluid bacterial flora, and infertility in endometriosis patients. Results showed significantly higher white cell counts and elevated levels of inflammatory markers in endometriosis patients compared to controls. Logistic regression confirmed significant associations between these inflammatory markers and infertility.
What was studied?
The study investigated the relationship between inflammatory markers (IL-6, IL-10, IL-13, and TNF-α), the composition of bacterial flora in peritoneal fluid, and infertility in patients with endometriosis.
Who was studied?
The participants included 55 patients diagnosed with endometriosis and infertility (observation group) attending a Gynecology Clinic from June 2014 to July 2017 and 30 individuals without endometriosis or infertility issues (control group).
What were the most important findings?
The study found elevated white cell counts (monocytes, neutrophils, eosinophils, and basophils) and higher levels of inflammatory cytokines (IL-6, IL-10, IL-13, and TNF-α) in the peritoneal fluid of endometriosis patients with infertility compared to controls. A significant correlation between these inflammatory markers and endometriosis associated with infertility was also established.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study implies that inflammatory factors in peritoneal fluid play a crucial role in the pathophysiology of infertility associated with endometriosis. These findings suggest that inflammatory cytokines (IL-6, IL-10, IL-13, and TNF-α) could serve as significant biomarkers for diagnosing and understanding the mechanisms of endometriosis-related infertility.
Lippia origanoides derivatives in vitro evaluation on polymicrobial biofilms: Streptococcus mutans, Lactobacillus rhamnosus and Candida albicans
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study assessed the impact of Lippia origanoides derivatives on biofilms formed by Streptococcus mutans, Lactobacillus rhamnosus, and Candida albicans, and their cytotoxic effects on human skin and periodontal cells. Results showed that the essential oils and terpenes, particularly carvacrol and thymol, effectively inhibited biofilm formation and had cytotoxic effects comparable to chlorhexidine. These findings suggest potential clinical applications for L. origanoides compounds.
What was studied?
The study investigated the antimicrobial effects of essential oils derived from the Colombian plant Lippia origanoides, specifically focusing on two terpenes, thymol and carvacrol, against polymicrobial biofilms of Streptococcus mutans, Lactobacillus rhamnosus, and Candida albicans. The study also assessed the cytotoxic effects of these compounds on human skin keratinocytes (HaCaT) and periodontal ligament fibroblasts (FLP).
Who was studied?
The microorganisms studied were Streptococcus mutans, Lactobacillus rhamnosus, and Candida albicans. Additionally, the effects of the compounds on human cell lines, specifically HaCaT keratinocytes and FLP fibroblasts, were evaluated to assess cytotoxicity.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed several key findings regarding the effects of Lippia origanoides essential oils, especially those rich in thymol and carvacrol. These oils demonstrated significant antimicrobial activity, inhibiting and eradicating biofilms of the studied microorganisms, both in their formation and preformed states. Additionally, the essential oils were found to have a cytotoxic impact on HaCaT and FLP cell lines, comparable to that of chlorhexidine, indicating their effectiveness without increased toxicity. Furthermore, the oils effectively disrupted biofilm integrity, leading to a reduction in the number of microbial cells and the extracellular matrix.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study highlights the potential of natural compounds, specifically thymol and carvacrol from Lippia origanoides, as effective alternatives to traditional antimicrobials like chlorhexidine for treating oral biofilms without increasing cytotoxicity. These findings support further research into natural remedies that could combat microbial resistance and provide safer, cost-effective treatments for biofilm-associated infections. Additionally, the study underscores the importance of exploring the biodiversity of plants like Lippia origanoides for developing new therapeutic agents.
Meta-analysis of gut microbiome studies identifies disease-specific and shared responses
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This meta-analysis standardized and re-analyzed data from 28 gut microbiome studies across ten diseases, identifying consistent microbiome signatures associated with specific diseases and a non-specific response common to multiple conditions. Key findings suggest both potential microbial diagnostics and treatments, emphasizing the importance of understanding shared versus disease-specific microbial responses in future research and clinical applications.
What was studied?
The meta-analysis focused on the human gut microbiome’s association with various diseases by analyzing 28 published case-control gut microbiome studies covering ten diseases. The researchers aimed to standardize the processing and analysis of these datasets to identify consistent patterns and shifts in the gut microbiome associated with specific diseases or a generalized health-disease spectrum.
Who was studied?
The participants of the original case-control studies comprised individuals with different diseases, including colorectal cancer, inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), and others, alongside control groups of healthy individuals. The meta-analysis integrated data only from studies with publicly available 16S amplicon sequencing data of stool samples from at least 15 case patients, excluding studies focused solely on children under 5 years old.
What were the most important findings?
Consistent Microbial Patterns: The meta-analysis revealed consistent and specific microbiome changes associated with various diseases. For instance, diseases like colorectal cancer showed an enrichment of pathogenic bacteria, while a depletion of health-associated bacteria marked conditions like IBD.
Non-Specific Microbial Responses: A significant finding was that many microbial associations are not disease-specific but rather indicate a non-specific response shared across multiple disease states. Approximately half of the genera identified were common to more than one disease, suggesting a generalized microbial response to disease states rather than unique disease-specific signatures.
Diagnostic and Therapeutic Implications: The study identified distinct categories of dysbiosis (microbial imbalance) that could guide the development of microbiome-based diagnostics and therapeutics. For example, enriching for depleted beneficial microbes could be a strategy for diseases characterized by such depletions.
What are the greatest implications of this meta-analysis?
Improved Disease Understanding: By providing a clearer picture of the microbiome’s role in various diseases, the study helps refine our understanding of disease mechanisms and potential microbial contributions to disease processes.
Guidance for Future Research: The findings suggest that future microbiome research in disease contexts should consider the non-specificity of many microbial changes. This realization could influence how researchers design studies and interpret results, potentially focusing on truly disease-specific microbial signatures.
Clinical Applications: The identification of consistent microbial patterns and signatures across diseases opens pathways to developing novel diagnostics and therapies, such as probiotics or fecal microbiota transplants, targeted at restoring healthy microbial communities or addressing specific dysbioses.
Data Sharing and Standardization: The study underscores the value of making raw data and metadata from microbiome studies publicly available and highlights the benefits of using standardized methods for data processing and analysis to compare and integrate results across studies.
Overall, this meta-analysis clarifies the microbiome’s role in disease and sets a framework for future research and clinical applications by demonstrating the importance of understanding both disease-specific and non-specific microbial responses.
Microbiome of the lower genital tract in Chinese women with endometriosis by 16s-rRNA sequencing technique: a pilot study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This case-control study investigates the relationship between genital tract microbiota and endometriosis using 16s-rRNA sequencing. Findings show Atopobium prevalence in endometriosis with adenomyosis cases, highlighting microbiota's distinct functions.
What was studied?
The study investigated the relationship between the genital tract microbiota and endometriosis, particularly focusing on how microbiota diversity and specific bacteria like Atopobium might be associated with the disease.
Who was studied?
68 participants, from whom 134 samples were collected from the cervical canal, posterior fornix, and uterine cavity for 16s-rRNA sequencing, were included in the study.
What were the most important findings?
Key findings included no significant differences in alpha diversity between the cervical canal and posterior fornix. However, the microbiota profile of patients with adenomyosis and endometriosis differed markedly from the control group, with Atopobium showing significant prevalence in these patients. While no specific biomarkers were identified, PICRUSt analysis revealed several characteristic microbiota functions.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study suggests a potentially significant role of microbiota, particularly Atopobium, in the pathogenesis of endometriosis combined with adenomyosis. This finding could lead to new insights into the microbiota-immune-endometriosis system interaction, offering new avenues for understanding and possibly treating endometriosis and adenomyosis. Further research is needed to verify the functions of the microbiota identified and their direct association with the diseases.
Microbiome Profile of Deep Endometriosis Patients: Comparison of Vaginal Fluid, Endometrium and Lesion
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This case study found that a distinct bacterial composition was observed in deep endometriotic lesions, characterized by a reduced prevalence of Lactobacillus and an increased abundance of Alishewanella, Enterococcus, and Pseudomonas.
What was studied?
The study focused on identifying and comparing the bacterial patterns present in the vaginal fluid, eutopic endometrium, and endometriotic lesions of patients with endometriosis to those found in the vaginal fluid and eutopic endometrium of control patients without the disease. High-throughput DNA sequencing of the 16S rRNA marker gene was utilized to analyze the microbiome profile in these different biological samples from both groups.
Who was studied?
Twenty-one patients participated in this study, divided into two groups: eleven in the control group and ten in the endometriotic group. The control group consisted of women who underwent laparoscopic surgery for benign gynecological diseases or elective tubal ligation, where the absence of endometriosis was confirmed during peritoneal cavity inspection. The endometriotic group included only women with deep endometriosis, confirmed by laparoscopic surgery and histopathology analysis.
What were the most important findings?
The study found that microbiome sequencing of vaginal fluid, eutopic endometrium, and endometriotic lesions typically showed similar profiles, dominated by Lactobacillus, Gardnerella, Streptococcus, and Prevotella. Despite no significant overall differences in microbiome diversity between control and endometriotic patients, deep endometriotic lesions exhibited a distinct bacterial composition with less Lactobacillus and a higher abundance of Alishewanella, Enterococcus, and Pseudomonas.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study highlights several implications for endometriosis management: It provides insights into the pathogenesis by showing distinct bacterial compositions in deep lesions, suggesting microbial involvement in lesion development. This leads to the potential for non-invasive diagnostics by identifying specific microbial patterns, opening avenues for biomarker-based detection. Therapeutically, interventions like antibiotics or probiotics could be new treatment strategies if certain bacteria contribute to pathogenesis. The findings emphasize the need for more research to establish causal links between microbiome composition and endometriosis, understand the bacterial influence on the disease, and explore microbiome-based treatments.
Microbiota composition and distribution along the female reproductive tract of women with endometriosis
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
•
Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This cross-sectional observational study compared microbiota in various reproductive tract locations finding significant microbiota changes in endometriosis patients, especially a decrease in Lactobacillus and increase in specific bacteria in the cervical area.
What was studied?
The study investigated the microbiota distribution across the entire female reproductive tract of endometriosis (EMS) patients and non-EMS women, aiming to identify EMS-specific bacterial species and examine the relationship between flora and disease development.
Who was studied?
Fifty women undergoing laparoscopic surgery for benign gynecological diseases or pelvic endometriosis at Peking University Shenzhen Hospital were studied. They were divided into two groups: 36 with pelvic endometriosis (stages I-IV) and 14 controls without endometriosis symptoms.
What were the most important findings?
Significant differences in the microbiota distribution were observed, especially a decrease in Lactobacillus in the upper reproductive tract of EMS patients. Specific Operational Taxonomic Units (OTUs), particularly Sphingobium sp. and Pseudomonas viridiflava, were identified as significantly enriched in the endometrium and peritoneal fluid of EMS patients, suggesting their potential role in EMS pathogenesis.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study offers a new perspective on the pathogenesis of endometriosis, emphasizing the role of specific bacteria in its development. Identifying microbiota changes associated with EMS could lead to novel diagnostic markers and therapeutic targets, enhancing our understanding of the disease and potentially leading to more effective management strategies for endometriosis and other female reproductive tract diseases.
Molecular detection of microbial colonization in cervical mucus of women with and without endometriosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This cross-sectional observational study investigates cervical mucus in women with and without endometriosis, finding similar microbial distributions overall. However, bacteria such as Corynebacterium, Enterobacteriaceae, Flavobacterium, Pseudomonas, and Streptococcus were more common in women with endometriosis, with Enterobacteriaceae and Streptococcus showing significant associations
What was studied?
The study investigated the microbiota in the cervical mucus of women with and without endometriosis using next-generation sequencing (NGS) technologies. It aimed to clarify whether cervical mucus in women with endometriosis is contaminated with bacteria, which could potentially transmigrate into the intrauterine cavity, influencing the pathogenesis of endometriosis. The research explored the bacterial population’s diversity, its correlation with the disease, and how these findings align with previous studies on intrauterine microbial colonization and its role in endometriosis through LPS/TLR4 engagement of the innate immune system.
Who was studied?
The study’s participants consisted of 30 women diagnosed with endometriosis (confirmed by laparoscopy and classified according to the revised American Society for Reproductive Medicine scoring system for stages III-IV) and 39 women without the condition (control group), all of reproductive age (20-44 years). The control group included women with fibroids or benign ovarian tumors other than endometriosis. All subjects had a normal-appearing cervix, were negative for vaginal culturing tests, and had not received endocrine therapy or antibiotics for at least six months before sample collection.
What were the most important findings?
The study highlights several findings about the cervical mucus microbiota in women with and without endometriosis. It found a diverse array of microbiota in both groups, with variations not tied to menstrual cycle phases. The endometriosis group exhibited significantly higher alpha diversity, indicating a more diverse bacterial community. Specific bacteria such as Enterobacteriaceae, Corynebacterium, Pseudomonas, Flavobacterium, and Streptococcus were more prevalent in the endometriosis group, with Enterobacteriaceae and Streptococcus showing significantly higher prevalence.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings suggest that the cervical mucus of women with endometriosis harbors a distinct and more diverse bacterial population than women without the condition. The significant presence of specific bacteria, particularly Enterobacteriaceae and Streptococcus, in women with endometriosis may play a role in the disease’s pathogenesis through mechanisms involving bacterial contamination, immune system engagement, and inflammatory responses. These insights open new avenues for understanding endometriosis’s pathophysiology, potentially leading to novel diagnostic and therapeutic strategies. Further, the study implies a possible link between cervical mucus microbiota and adverse pregnancy outcomes, highlighting the need for additional research to explore the mechanistic connections between microbial colonization and endometriosis and its implications for fertility and pregnancy.
Reproductive Microbiomes: Using the Microbiome as a Novel Diagnostic Tool for Endometriosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This cross-sectional observational study examines how endometriosis affects the bacterial communities of the uterus and cervix, considering the condition's role in inflammation, pain management, and infertility in women.
What was studied?
The study aimed to investigate how endometriosis affects the uterine and cervical bacterial communities. Utilizing next-generation amplicon sequencing of the bacterial 16S rRNA gene, the research sought to identify alterations in these microbiomes associated with endometriosis and to determine if specific bacterial taxa within the cervix could help diagnose active endometriosis, potentially avoiding the need for invasive diagnostic procedures like laparoscopic surgery.
Who was studied?
Nineteen pre-menopausal women undergoing laparoscopic surgery for pelvic pain with suspicion or known endometriosis constituted the experimental group (n=10, with endometriosis stages I-IV), while women undergoing surgery for benign uterine or ovarian conditions served as controls (n=9). The control group was examined during surgery to confirm the absence of endometriotic lesions. The staging of endometriosis for patients in the experimental group was performed using the revised American Society for Reproductive Medicine (rASRM) classification scale.
Key findings of the study include significant differences in bacterial communities between uterine and cervical samples, both in species diversity and abundance, with the uterus displaying a diverse profile of Bacteroidetes and Firmicutes, and the cervix dominated by Lactobacillus. No significant differences in bacterial communities were noted across different endometriosis stages on the day of surgery. However, a distinct cervical bacterial community in a stage III endometriosis patient suggests a link between disease severity and microbiome alterations. Additionally, notable fluctuations in the cervical microbiome were observed over time in this patient, indicating dynamic microbiome changes associated with disease progression and treatment.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings underscore the potential of bacterial community profiling as a diagnostic tool for endometriosis, offering a non-invasive method to identify the disease in asymptomatic, infertile women. This approach could facilitate earlier diagnosis and treatment, potentially improving fertility outcomes and reducing the need for invasive diagnostic surgeries. The study also highlights the dynamic nature of the uterine and cervical microbiomes in relation to endometriosis, suggesting that microbiome alterations could be linked to disease severity and progression. Understanding these microbial community changes opens new avenues for researching endometriosis pathogenesis and developing novel therapeutic strategies that target microbiome modulation. Moreover, the fluctuations observed in the microbiome over time, especially in patients with advanced disease, may offer insights into predicting disease progression and treatment outcomes, including fertility potential post-treatment.
Role of Cholestyramine in Refractory Hyperthyroidism: A Case Report and Literature Review
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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A 52-year-old woman with refractory iodine-induced hyperthyroidism showed significant improvement with cholestyramine, reducing FT4 by 30% in 5 days. Despite conventional treatments failing, cholestyramine proved effective, leading to euthyroidism. This highlights cholestyramine's potential as an adjunct therapy.
What was studied?
The study investigated the role of cholestyramine as an additional treatment for refractory iodine-induced hyperthyroidism in a patient who did not respond to conventional therapies.
Who was studied?
A 52-year-old female patient with a history of goiter who developed iodine-induced hyperthyroidism following a CT scan with contrast. The patient had obstructive symptoms and was unresponsive to standard treatments, including dexamethasone, carbimazole, and propranolol.
What were the most important findings?
After adding cholestyramine, the patient’s FT4 levels decreased by 30% within 5 days and normalized by 12 days.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
Cholestyramine can be an effective adjunct therapy for managing refractory iodine-induced hyperthyroidism, suggesting a potential new treatment avenue for similar cases, such as Grave's Disease (GD). This case highlights the need for alternative treatments when conventional therapies fail and emphasizes the utility of cholestyramine in rapid thyroid hormone reduction.
Staphylococcus aureus: A Review of the Pathogenesis and Virulence Mechanisms
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review synthesizes key mechanisms of Staphylococcus aureus virulence, including colonization strategies, immune evasion, metabolic adaptability, and antimicrobial resistance. It highlights major microbial associations, such as siderophore-mediated modulation of the nasal microbiome and PVL-driven pathogenesis, offering translational insights for microbiome-targeted diagnostics, decolonization, and anti-virulence therapies.
What was reviewed?
This review critically examined the pathogenesis and virulence mechanisms of Staphylococcus aureus, a major human pathogen capable of causing a spectrum of diseases ranging from mild skin infections to life-threatening systemic conditions. The paper provided a comprehensive synthesis of current knowledge on S. aureus colonization dynamics, molecular virulence factors, antibiotic resistance mechanisms (particularly MRSA and VRSA), and its interplay with host immunity and the microbiome. The authors incorporated data from multiple global populations, highlighting strain variability, clinical epidemiology, and the urgent public health implications of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) associated with this pathogen.
Who was reviewed?
The review focused on previously published studies indexed in PubMed, Scopus, and Web of Science, covering research on S. aureus colonization (e.g., nasal, skin, throat, gastrointestinal, and urogenital sites), molecular genetics of virulence factors, microbial biofilm formation, antimicrobial resistance evolution, and clinical and epidemiological trends across various geographical and healthcare settings. Specific emphasis was placed on high-risk populations such as immunocompromised patients, healthcare workers, and those in community settings experiencing elevated MRSA or VRSA prevalence.
Most Important Findings
The review identified several mechanisms central to S. aureus virulence and persistence, including nasal and throat colonization by S. aureus mediated by adhesins such as ClfB and SasG, with distinct roles in tissue binding and immune evasion. S. aureus modulates microbial community dynamics in the nasal niche by secreting siderophores like staphyloferrin A/B, which shape colonization patterns by supporting or inhibiting co-resident taxa such as Corynebacterium accolens and Staphylococcus lugdunensis.
The review elaborated on S. aureus's complex arsenal of virulence factors, including surface-bound adhesins (MSCRAMMs), secreted cytotoxins (PVL, TSST-1, α-hemolysin), and immune modulators that disrupt host barriers and promote systemic infection. Biofilm formation and metabolic flexibility (iron scavenging via Isd and siderophores, amino acid metabolism via ACME) enhance survival under antimicrobial pressure. Notably, Panton–Valentine leukocidin (PVL) was extensively analyzed for its leukocyte-targeting mechanism and role in necrotizing infections, particularly in PVL+ CA-MRSA clones such as ST80 and USA300.
From a microbiome perspective, the review illuminated the dual role of S. aureus as both a commensal and pathobiont, capable of modulating its ecological niche through siderophore secretion and immune evasion strategies (e.g., staphylokinase-mediated AMP degradation, surface charge alteration by MprF).
Greatest Implications of This Review
The review underscores the urgent need for more targeted, multi-pronged interventions addressing S. aureus colonization and infection. These include microbiome-sensitive decolonization strategies that go beyond nasal interventions (e.g., oropharyngeal decolonization), advanced anti-virulence therapies (e.g., CRISPR-based PVL gene disruption, monoclonal antibodies targeting ClfB or Protein A), and vaccines that leverage Th17-mediated immunity. The failure of universal vaccines is attributed to antigenic redundancy and immune evasion, suggesting that multi-epitope vaccine strategies and host–microbe interface modulation (e.g., using probiotics or QS inhibitors) may be more effective. From a microbiome standpoint, interventions that modulate iron acquisition pathways, biofilm metabolism, or colonization resistance offer promising avenues for translational application in high-risk clinical cohorts.
The insights presented also reinforce the importance of using site-specific screening methods (e.g., throat and perineal swabs) for MRSA detection, given the site-specific persistence and differential resistance phenotypes observed. Global surveillance, precision antimicrobial stewardship, and leveraging omics-driven diagnostics are vital to reduce the burden of MDR S. aureus.
The impact of photobiomodulation of major salivary glands on caries risk
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study evaluated the effects of photobiomodulation on salivary glands in high caries-risk patients, finding that light therapies significantly reduced cariogenic bacteria and improved salivary parameters, suggesting a promising non-invasive approach to dental caries prevention.
What was studied?
The study explored the impact of photobiomodulation therapy using different types of light on the major salivary glands and its subsequent effects on caries risk factors in individuals with high risk for dental caries. The therapy modalities tested included polarized polychromatic light, continuous LED light, and pulsed LED light, each aiming to modify salivary parameters known to influence caries development, such as bacterial counts of Streptococcus mutans and Lactobacillus, salivary flow, and buffering capacity.
Who was studied?
The subjects of this study were thirty-six patients identified as having a high risk for dental caries. These individuals were randomly assigned to one of four groups, with three groups receiving distinct light treatments and one group serving as a control that was exposed to non-therapeutic visible light. The study’s interventions were applied extra-orally and intra-orally over multiple sessions spanning a four-week period.
What were the most important findings?
The study’s findings revealed significant improvements in caries risk factors for the groups treated with light therapies. Notably, there was a reduction in the bacterial counts of Streptococcus mutans and Lactobacillus, and enhancements in both stimulated and unstimulated salivary flow and buffering capacity in the groups exposed to light therapy, with statistically significant changes observed. Conversely, no significant changes were observed in the control group.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The greatest implications of this study are its contributions to the field of non-invasive dental treatments and the potential for reducing caries risk through such innovative approaches. By demonstrating that photobiomodulation can effectively decrease the levels of cariogenic bacteria and enhance salivary function, the study supports the broader application of light therapy in preventive dental care, particularly for patients at high risk of caries. This could lead to more targeted, conservative, and effective management strategies for dental caries, aligning with broader preventive healthcare goals.
The influence of nickel on intestinal microbiota disturbances
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Nickel
Nickel
Bacteria regulate transition metal levels through complex mechanisms to ensure survival and adaptability, influencing both their physiology and the development of antimicrobial strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Excess nickel disrupts gut microbiota, promoting dysbiosis and contributing to conditions like obesity and systemic nickel allergy syndrome (SNAS). Probiotics and nickel-restricted diets show promise in mitigating these effects, underscoring the need for further research and clinical intervention.
What was reviewed?
The paper reviewed the influence of nickel on intestinal microbiota disturbances, drawing on 59 scientific publications from the past 20 years. The analysis focused on nickel’s dual role as an essential element for microbial enzymatic reactions and a disruptor of gut microbiota, especially under conditions of excessive exposure or systemic nickel allergy syndrome (SNAS).
Who was reviewed?
The review encompassed research involving humans, animals, and microbial models. Specific attention was given to populations exposed to high levels of nickel, individuals with SNAS, and animal studies demonstrating changes in microbial communities under nickel exposure.
What were the most important findings?
Nickel acts as a cofactor for metalloenzymes like urease, hydrogenase, and [NiFe]-hydrogenase, essential for microbial survival. However, excess nickel promotes dysbiosis, characterized by reductions in beneficial taxa and increases in nickel-resistant bacteria. In humans with SNAS, the microbiota showed decreased levels of beneficial genera such as Bifidobacterium and Lactobacillus, known for their probiotic effects and urease activity, and increases in nickel-tolerant taxa, including Clostridiaceae and Bacillaceae. Similarly, animal studies indicated reduced Verrucomicrobia and Bacteroidetes while promoting Escherichia coli and Enterococcus.
Nickel exposure also leads to an increased abundance of Bacteroides fragilis, Bacteroidales S24-7, and Interstinimonas, with a concurrent decline in Firmicutes, disrupting the Firmicutes-to-Bacteroidetes ratio, a critical marker of gut health. This imbalance contributed to systemic inflammation and altered immune responses. Moreover, nickel-reliant pathogens, such as Helicobacter pylori, which require Ni2+-dependent enzymes like urease for colonization, further highlighted nickel’s role in microbial pathogenicity. Probiotic strains such as Lactobacillus fermentum demonstrated detoxifying effects by metabolizing nickel, suggesting their therapeutic potential.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The findings reveal that nickel exposure significantly alters gut microbial ecology, driving dysbiosis and systemic inflammation in susceptible populations. The rise of nickel-tolerant taxa, coupled with the decline of protective bacteria, underscores nickel’s role as a disruptor of gut homeostasis, contributing to conditions like obesity and SNAS. Probiotic supplementation, particularly strains capable of nickel detoxification, and dietary restrictions like a low-nickel diet, have shown promise in mitigating these effects. This review highlights the urgent need for dietary nickel regulations and further clinical studies on therapeutic interventions targeting nickel-induced microbial dysbiosis.
The Revaluation of Plant-Derived Terpenes to Fight Antibiotic-Resistant Infections
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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The study investigated the antimicrobial effects of plant-derived terpenes against antibiotic-resistant pathogens. Key findings revealed that terpenes disrupt microbial membranes, inhibit biofilm formation, and block efflux pumps. These properties suggest terpenes as potential alternatives to traditional antibiotics, offering new strategies to combat the increasing challenge of antibiotic resistance.
What was studied?
The study focused on terpenes derived from plants as potential antimicrobial agents, particularly their effectiveness against antibiotic-resistant infections. This included an exploration of the diverse mechanisms by which terpenes combat microbial resistance, their bioavailability, and the synergistic effects when combined with other antimicrobials.
Who was studied?
The research mainly involved microbial organisms that are known to exhibit resistance to conventional antibiotics. This included a variety of pathogens such as Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria, with specific attention to multi-drug resistant strains.
What were the most important findings?
The study found that plant-derived terpenes have significant antimicrobial activity against resistant strains. It highlighted the mechanisms of action of terpenes, such as disruption of microbial membranes, inhibition of biofilm formation, and efflux pump inhibition. These findings suggest terpenes’ potential as effective agents in combating antibiotic-resistant infections.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The implications are substantial in the context of global health challenges posed by antibiotic resistance. The findings suggest that terpenes could be developed into new antimicrobial agents that offer a viable alternative to traditional antibiotics. This could lead to the development of novel therapeutic strategies and formulations, potentially reducing the prevalence of resistant infections and the healthcare burdens associated with them.
The Vaginal Microbiome as a Tool to Predict rASRM Stage of Disease in Endometriosis: a Pilot Study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This pilot study analyzed gut and vaginal microbiomes in 59 women (35 with endometriosis, 24 controls) using 16S rRNA sequencing and machine learning to explore their diagnostic potential for endometriosis. Findings indicate microbiome variations with the menstrual cycle and disease severity, suggesting that vaginal microbiome profiles could predict endometriosis stages, offering a novel, less-invasive diagnostic method.
What was studied?
The study focused on characterizing the gut and vaginal microbiome profiles of women with endometriosis compared to controls without the disease, exploring the potential of these profiles as less-invasive diagnostic tools for assessing the severity of endometriosis.
Who was studied?
Fifty-nine women participated in the study, including 35 with endometriosis and 24 control subjects. Rectal and vaginal samples were collected from all participants at two different periods of their menstrual cycle.
What were the most important findings?
Significant findings included variations in the distribution of vaginal community state types (CSTs) across different phases of the menstrual cycle and differences in gut and vaginal microbiome profiles between patients with varying stages of endometriosis as classified by the revised American Society for Reproductive Medicine (rASRM) stages. Machine-learning models could predict the severity of endometriosis (stages 1-2 vs. 3-4) based on these microbiome profiles, with Anaerococcus genus showing the highest predictive value.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study suggests that analysis of the vaginal microbiome could serve as a novel, less-invasive method to diagnose and predict the stage of endometriosis. This approach could potentially lead to earlier and more accurate diagnoses of endometriosis, improving treatment planning and outcomes for affected women.
Urinary lead concentration and composition of the adult gut microbiota in a cross-sectional population-based sample
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study explores the link between urinary lead concentration and adult gut microbiota composition. Conducted on 696 participants, it reveals associations between lead levels and increased microbial diversity and richness. Specific bacterial groups, like Proteobacteria, correlate with elevated lead.
What was studied?
The study examined the association between urinary lead concentrations and changes in the gut microbiota composition in a population-based sample of adults. The research explored how varying levels of lead exposure could impact microbial diversity, richness, and specific bacterial taxa within the gut.
Who was studied?
The study population comprised adults from Wisconsin, USA, who participated in the Survey of the Health of Wisconsin (SHOW) and its ancillary microbiome study. Participants were mainly over 18 years of age, with a diverse distribution in terms of age, gender, income, and education levels.
What were the most important findings?
Key findings from the study revealed that urinary lead concentrations were associated with significant alterations in the gut microbiota. Notably, there was an increase in microbial α-diversity and richness. Furthermore, higher urinary lead levels were correlated with changes in microbial β-diversity, and these changes were linked to the presence of specific bacterial taxa such as Proteobacteria, including members of the Burkholderiales. Intriguingly, these alterations in the microbiota were observed even in adults who had relatively low levels of lead exposure compared to national averages. This suggests that even minimal lead exposure can have noticeable impacts on gut microbiota composition, underscoring the sensitivity of human microbiota to environmental contaminants.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The implications of this study suggest a significant environmental health concern where even low levels of lead exposure can influence gut microbiota composition, potentially affecting overall human health. The findings underscore the need for further research to understand the long-term health outcomes associated with microbiota changes due to environmental contaminants like lead. Additionally, this study contributes to the broader understanding of how environmental factors can impact microbial communities in the human body, which is crucial for developing strategies to mitigate such effects. These insights highlight the complex interactions between environmental pollutants and human health, emphasizing the importance of monitoring and regulating environmental lead exposures.
Microsporum canis Siderophores Identified as Ferrichrome and Ferricrocin
February 12, 2026
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Microbial Metallomics
Microbial Metallomics
Microbial Metallomics is the study of how microorganisms acquire, use, regulate, and transform metals in any biological or environmental context.
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Microsporum canis (M. canis)
Microsporum canis (M. canis)
OverviewMicrosporum canis (M. canis) is a zoophilic dermatophyte common in cats and dogs, responsible for 90% of feline dermatophytoses worldwide.[1][2] It has significant zoonotic potential, transmitting to humans through fomites or direct animal contact, causing severe superficial mycosis. M. canis is considered anthropo-zoophilic and can infect pediatric or immunocompromised patients, causing severe inflammatory responses such […]
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This study characterized the siderophores produced by Microsporum and Trichophyton species, revealing that M. canis secretes ferrichrome and ferricrocin under iron-limited conditions, indicating siderophore pathways as exploitable therapeutic targets.
What was studied?
This study investigated the production and identity of siderophores by six dermatophytic fungal species: Microsporum gypseum, M. canis, M. audouinii, Trichophyton rubrum, T. mentagrophytes, and T. tonsurans. Given the critical role of iron acquisition in microbial virulence, especially in iron-limited host environments where iron is tightly sequestered by transferrin and lactoferrin, the researchers aimed to characterize the types of siderophores secreted under iron-restricted conditions. Identification was performed using thin-layer chromatography (TLC), high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC), and mass spectrometry.
Who was studied?
Clinical isolates of the six dermatophytic fungi were collected from hospitals and maintained under standardized conditions. Trichophyton species were cultivated for 22 days and Microsporum species for 14 days in iron-limited synthetic media. The fungal cultures were then subjected to extraction, purification, and chemical characterization of their secreted siderophores.
Most important findings
All six dermatophyte species examined in the study were found to produce hydroxamate-type siderophores under iron-deficient conditions. Specifically, M. gypseum, M. canis, M. audouinii, and T. rubrum secreted two siderophores—ferrichrome C and ferricrocin—while T. mentagrophytes and T. tonsurans produced only ferrichrome. These siderophores were identified through their characteristic retention times using high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC), distinct Rf values on thin-layer chromatography (TLC), and confirmed molecular weights by mass spectrometry (with m/z values of 755 for ferrichrome C, 771 for ferricrocin, and 741 for ferrichrome).
Notably, T. rubrum exhibited a siderophore profile more closely aligned with Microsporum species than with other Trichophyton species, suggesting potential taxonomic or functional overlaps despite genus-level differences. These findings not only differentiate species based on siderophore output but also provide biochemical markers that could aid in fungal taxonomy or therapeutic targeting.
Fungus
Ferrichrome
Ferricrocin
Ferrichrome C
M. gypseum
+
+
–
M. canis
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+
–
M. audouinii
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+
–
T. rubrum
+
+
–
T. mentagrophytes
–
–
+
T. tonsurans
–
–
+
Key implications
Iron sequestration is a cornerstone of host immune defense, and fungal survival depends heavily on siderophore production to circumvent this. By defining the siderophore profiles of pathogenic dermatophytes, this study highlights potential molecular targets for antifungal development. Ferrichrome-type siderophores represent a vulnerability; disrupting their synthesis or uptake may impair the fungi’s ability to persist on keratinized tissues. Importantly, Microsporum canis depends on both ferricrocin and ferrichrome C siderophores, both of which could serve as diagnostic biomarkers or therapeutic targets. These results also suggest that antifungal strategies targeting siderophore-mediated iron uptake may have genus- or species-specific efficacy.
Lactoferrin and Derived Peptides: Antifungal Mechanisms, Azole Synergy, and Links to Microbial Metallomics
February 12, 2026
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Microbial Metallomics
Microbial Metallomics
Microbial Metallomics is the study of how microorganisms acquire, use, regulate, and transform metals in any biological or environmental context.
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Lactoferrin
Lactoferrin
Lactoferrin (LF) is a naturally occurring iron-binding glycoprotein classified as a postbiotic with immunomodulatory, antimicrobial, and prebiotic-like properties.
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Lactoferrin and its peptides exhibit broad antifungal activity through membrane disruption, immunomodulation, and iron sequestration, with documented synergy with azoles. Lactoferricin B is potent against dermatophytes, including Microsporum canis, and exemplifies how antimicrobial peptides can pair metallomic deprivation with rapid candidacidal effects.
What was reviewed?
This mini-review synthesizes evidence on the antifungal activity of lactoferrin and its derived peptides, detailing spectrum of activity, mechanisms, and drug synergy across yeasts and molds. It covers intact lactoferrin, lactoferricin, lactoferrampin, and Lf(1–11), and summarizes structure–function determinants relevant to fungal killing and adjuvancy.
Who was reviewed?
The paper surveys in vitro and mechanistic studies across clinically important fungi, including multiple Candida spp., Cryptococcus spp., Aspergillus fumigatus, dermatophytes such as Trichophyton spp. and Microsporum canis, plant-pathogenic molds, and model yeasts, incorporating data generated with human, bovine, porcine, and recombinant lactoferrin or peptides thereof.
Most important findings and microbiome-relevant interpretation
Lactoferrin is a multifunctional iron-binding glycoprotein with broad antifungal activity that operates through membrane disruption, immunomodulation, and metal sequestration. Evidence shows that apo-lactoferrin restricts fungal growth by chelating Fe³⁺, a cornerstone of nutritional immunity, while many candidacidal effects are iron-independent and result from direct perturbation of fungal membranes, ionic leakage, mitochondrial dysfunction, and apoptosis-like death. The review documents synergy with azoles such as fluconazole, itraconazole, clotrimazole, and ketoconazole across wild-type and resistant Candida strains, with additional interactions reported for amphotericin B and nystatin in selected species. The peptide derivatives exhibit greater potency than the intact protein. Lactoferricin B is rapidly internalized, collapses proton gradients, forms pores, and shows wide activity, including against dermatophytes; importantly for Microsporum canis, Table 1 reports a minimum inhibitory concentration of 40 μg/ml for lactoferricin B. Lactoferrampin and Lf(1–11) also permeabilize membranes and display synergistic killing with fluconazole under specific dosing sequences.
These mechanisms connect directly to microbial metallomics. Lactoferrin and its domains bind Fe³⁺ with high affinity and can also bind Cu²⁺, Zn²⁺, and Mn²⁺, situating these molecules at the interface of metal trafficking, fungal metal homeostasis, and host defense. By altering extracellular iron availability and engaging fungal membranes, lactoferrin-based interventions perturb metal-dependent respiratory and redox processes in pathogens, while derived peptides provide metal-agnostic membrane disruption that complements metallomic deprivation. This dual leverage on metal limitation and membrane damage supports their use as microbiome-targeted antifungals that both reduce pathogen fitness and lessen the likelihood of resistance emergence.
Greatest implications of the review
For microbiome-signature frameworks, lactoferrin and its peptides offer a mechanistically coherent class of interventions that align with metal-centric host–pathogen competition and immunologic containment. Clinically, they are promising adjuvants to azoles for azole-refractory candidiasis and plausible candidates for dermatophyte management, including M. canis, where peptide potency and synergy may reduce required azole exposures. The structure–activity insights summarized here further indicate that rational sequence optimization can tune charge, hydrophobicity, and helicity to maximize antifungal performance while preserving metallomic mechanisms related to iron sequestration. Translational priorities include standardized potency assays across species, peptide pharmacokinetics and safety, and in vivo confirmation of metallomic pathway engagement during therapy.
Citation
Fernandes KE, Carter DA. The Antifungal Activity of Lactoferrin and Its Derived Peptides: Mechanisms of Action and Synergy with Drugs against Fungal Pathogens. Front Microbiol. 2017;8:2. https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2017.00002
High Prevalence of Nickel Allergy in an Overweight Female Population: A Microbial Metallomics Commentary
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Microbial Metallomics
Microbial Metallomics
Microbial Metallomics is the study of how microorganisms acquire, use, regulate, and transform metals in any biological or environmental context.
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Low‑Nickel Diet (LNiD)
Low‑Nickel Diet (LNiD)
A low-nickel diet (LNiD) is a therapeutic dietary intervention that eliminates high-nickel foods, primarily plant-based sources such as legumes, nuts, whole grains, and cocoa, to reduce systemic nickel exposure. It is clinically validated for managing systemic nickel allergy syndrome (SNAS) and nickel-induced eczema. Its relevance is well-established in microbiome modulation, with studies demonstrating clinical benefits in conditions such as endometriosis, fibromyalgia, irritable bowel syndrome, and GERD.
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Overweight women show high rates of nickel allergy and benefit metabolically from a low-nickel diet. The study suggests a role for nickel-selective microbes and metallomic drivers of obesity and inflammation, particularly in perimenopausal women with metabolic syndrome.
What was studied?
This pilot observational analysis examined the high prevalence of nickel allergy in overweight adults and the potential impact of a low-nickel diet on body mass index (BMI) and waist circumference. The focus keyphrase nickel allergy in overweight females appears directly in this section, as the study centers on metabolic and inflammatory profiles in individuals with elevated BMI who exhibit delayed hypersensitivity to nickel. Drawing from patch-test results, metabolic data, and dietary intervention outcomes, the investigators evaluated whether nickel-sensitive overweight subjects—especially women—display a distinctive clinical pattern. The study connects systemic nickel exposure not only to dermatologic and gastrointestinal symptoms but also to metabolic derangements and potential microbiome-related mechanisms, including the role of nickel-dependent bacteria such as Helicobacter pylori (page 6), which may promote inflammation and alter gut energy extraction.
Who was studied?
Eighty-seven overweight adults (BMI >26 kg/m²) were consecutively enrolled at an Italian Red Cross preventive health program. The population was predominantly female (72 of 87; 82.8%), enabling more detailed analysis in women. Laboratory, anthropometric, and metabolic assessments were collected for all participants, including liver enzymes, glucose, insulin, lipid profile, and HOMA-IR (page 4). Patch testing for nickel sulfate identified 45 nickel-allergic individuals, with the overwhelming majority being women (43 of 45). Among nickel-allergic participants, 43 women and 2 men initiated a low-nickel diet. Twenty-four women completed the 24-week follow-up, permitting analysis of longitudinal anthropometric outcomes.
Most important findings
In this cohort, nickel allergy appeared substantially more common in overweight women than in the general population, and higher still when metabolic syndrome and hepatic steatosis were present. Individuals adhering to a low-nickel diet demonstrated clinically relevant reductions in BMI, waist circumference, and body fat. Mechanistically, the study highlights intersecting inflammatory and microbiome pathways: IL-17–driven immune activity, menopausal immune shifts, and nickel-dependent bacteria such as H. pylori, which may collectively intensify metabolic dysfunction. The findings suggest that excess dietary nickel may amplify systemic inflammation and alter gut microbial composition, thereby contributing to obesity-associated phenotypes.
Domain
Condensed Insight
Nickel allergy prevalence
Overweight women showed a 59.7% nickel allergy rate versus 12.5% in the general female population. Prevalence increased to 61.1% in those with metabolic syndrome and liver steatosis.
Anthropometric response to low-nickel diet
After 24 weeks, nickel-allergic overweight women experienced a mean BMI reduction of 4.2 ± 0.5 kg/m² and a waist decrease of 11.7 ± 0.6 cm, with parallel declines in body fat percentage.
Inflammatory mechanisms
Obesity and nickel allergy both upregulate IL-17; menopausal estrogen decline further enhances Th17 activity, potentially intensifying systemic inflammation in nickel-sensitive women.
Microbiome-related effects
Nickel supports growth of specific bacteria, including H. pylori. High dietary nickel may favor nickel-dependent gut microbes, promoting inflammation and metabolic imbalance; low-nickel diets may aid eradication.
Key implications
This study suggests that nickel allergy may be substantially more common in overweight females than in the general population, and that reducing dietary nickel could meaningfully improve anthropometric outcomes in nickel-sensitive individuals. The combination of inflammatory pathways, estrogen-related shifts in IL-17 biology, and nickel-dependent microbial ecology positions nickel exposure as a possible modifiable factor in obesity and metabolic dysfunction. Although preliminary and limited by sample size and lack of control group, these findings imply that clinicians addressing unexplained weight gain, metabolic syndrome, gastrointestinal symptoms, or systemic inflammation—especially in perimenopausal women—may consider evaluating nickel sensitivity and dietary nickel intake.
HapX in Arthroderma benhamiae: Iron Regulation Without Virulence Loss
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Microbial Metallomics
Microbial Metallomics
Microbial Metallomics is the study of how microorganisms acquire, use, regulate, and transform metals in any biological or environmental context.
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HapX regulates iron metabolism in A. benhamiae by controlling siderophore production and repressing iron-dependent genes, yet is dispensable for keratin-based virulence, suggesting compensatory iron acquisition strategies.
What was studied?
This study investigated the role of the transcription factor HapX in the regulation of iron homeostasis in the pathogenic dermatophyte Arthroderma benhamiae, with particular attention to whether HapX is essential for virulence. HapX is a known regulator of fungal iron metabolism in other ascomycetes, acting through its dual role in iron acquisition during starvation and iron detoxification during excess. The authors constructed ΔhapX mutants and reconstituted strains to analyze growth phenotypes under varying iron conditions, siderophore production, and gene expression patterns of iron-regulatory pathways. Additionally, they tested virulence potential on keratinized substrates, including human hair and nails.
Who was studied?
The experiments were performed using a wild-type A. benhamiae strain (LAU2354-2), two ΔhapX deletion mutants, and their respective gene-reconstituted strains (hapX^C). Growth, siderophore production, and gene expression were evaluated under iron-replete and iron-starved conditions, including exposure to deferoxamine (a xenosiderophore). Virulence was assessed via in vitro growth assays on human keratin substrates.
Most important findings
HapX is essential for iron homeostasis in Arthroderma benhamiae, governing adaptation to both iron limitation and excess. Deletion of the hapX gene (ΔhapX) resulted in impaired fungal growth, reduced conidiation, and decreased biomass under iron-starved conditions or in the presence of the iron chelator deferoxamine. The mutants also exhibited a distinct reddish hyphal pigmentation, likely due to accumulation of heme precursors. Molecular analyses revealed downregulation of siderophore biosynthetic genes sidA and sidC, along with reduced secretion of the extracellular siderophore ferrichrome C, though intracellular ferricrocin levels remained unaffected. Additionally, HapX-deficient strains failed to repress iron-consuming genes (cccA, hemA, cycA, lysF) during iron deprivation, underscoring its role in balancing iron usage. The ΔhapX strains were also hypersensitive to iron overload, showing growth inhibition at ≥5 mM FeSO₄, implicating HapX in iron detoxification pathways. Despite these metabolic disruptions, virulence remained intact on keratin-rich substrates like hair and nails, suggesting that keratin may supply bioavailable iron or that alternative acquisition systems, such as reductive iron assimilation, can compensate for the loss of HapX-regulated siderophore function.
Functional Role
ΔhapX Phenotype
Iron Starvation Response
↓ sidA, sidC transcription; ↓ ferrichrome C
Iron Detoxification
↑ sensitivity to FeSO₄; ↓ cccA induction
Gene Regulation
↑ hemA, lysF, cycA, sreA in iron-starved state
Virulence on Keratin
No impairment in hair/nail substrate infection
Key implications
While HapX is central to iron regulation in A. benhamiae, it is not required for keratin substrate colonization, suggesting that dermatophyte virulence mechanisms are adapted to relatively iron-rich or accessible environments like skin, nails, and hair. This divergence from pathogens such as Aspergillus fumigatus or Candida albicans, where HapX is critical for virulence, highlights the need for pathogen-specific strategies when targeting iron acquisition therapeutically. Furthermore, the redundancy of HapX in virulence points toward alternative iron uptake systems such as reductive iron assimilation or low-affinity transporters in dermatophytes. These compensatory pathways represent potential antifungal targets.
The Microbiome in Precision Medicine: The Way Forward
February 12, 2026
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Microbiome Signatures
Microbiome Signatures
Microbiome signatures are reproducible ecological and functional patterns—encompassing traits, interactions, and metabolic functions—that reflect microbial adaptation to specific host or environmental states. Beyond taxonomy, they capture conserved features like metal metabolism or immune modulation, enabling systems-level diagnosis and intervention in health and disease.
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Microbiome-Targeted Interventions (MBTIs)
Microbiome-Targeted Interventions (MBTIs)
Microbiome Targeted Interventions (MBTIs) are cutting-edge treatments that utilize information from Microbiome Signatures to modulate the microbiome, revolutionizing medicine with unparalleled precision and impact.
•
The editorial emphasizes how dynamic host–microbiome interactions, combined with genomics and other 'omics' datasets, can inform personalized diagnostics and microbiome-targeted interventions. Despite challenges like microbiome variability and establishing causality, the editorial underscores the microbiome's critical role in shaping the future of individualized medicine.
Overview
Joseph F. Petrosino’s editorial highlights the microbiome's pivotal role in precision medicine, emphasizing its potential to advance personalized diagnostics and therapeutic strategies. The integration of microbiome signatures with other ‘omics’ data, such as genomics and metabolomics, offers a comprehensive understanding of disease mechanisms and tailored treatments. Petrosino draws parallels between microbiome signature research and genomics, with both fields leveraging next-generation sequencing technologies to uncover associations that can be exploited for clinical interventions.
Precision Microbiome Interventions
A notable advancement discussed is the precision editing of the microbiome to treat inflammatory diseases. For instance, Zhu et al. demonstrated how targeting molybdenum-cofactor-dependent pathways with tungstate suppressed Enterobacteriaceae overgrowth in colitis models, restoring microbial diversity and reducing inflammation.[1] This targeted approach exemplifies the potential of microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) to effectively manage dysbiosis without disrupting beneficial microbial communities.
Future Directions
Petrosino advocates for the routine integration of microbiome data with clinical and multi-omics datasets to enhance diagnostic precision, treatment customization, and early disease detection. He envisions a future where microbiome profiling becomes standard practice in clinical trials and patient care, facilitating the stratification of patients for personalized interventions. Furthermore, the editorial calls for banking samples from large cohort studies to enable future integrative analyses, maximizing the clinical potential of microbiome research.
Conclusion
In conclusion, Petrosino establishes the microbiome as a cornerstone of precision medicine, emphasizing the need for continued innovation and translational efforts to unlock its full potential in clinical practice.
Targeted Therapies and Microbiome Insights in Graves’ Disease: A Clinical Review
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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Graves’ Disease (GD)
Graves’ Disease (GD)
OverviewGraves’ Disease (GD) affects approximately 0.5% of the population, predominantly women. First-line treatment options—antithyroid medications, radioactive iodine, and surgery— often result in significant side effects, incomplete remissions, and frequent relapses. Further, current first-line treatment options focus on symptoms management, and reflect an inadequate understanding of the etiology of the condition. However, recent research reveals a […]
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Microbiome-Targeted Interventions (MBTIs)
Microbiome-Targeted Interventions (MBTIs)
Microbiome Targeted Interventions (MBTIs) are cutting-edge treatments that utilize information from Microbiome Signatures to modulate the microbiome, revolutionizing medicine with unparalleled precision and impact.
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This review maps the immune‑microbial mechanisms driving Graves’ disease and evaluates next‑generation biologics, small molecules and tolerance‑inducing peptides that may replace conventional ablation therapies.
What was reviewed?
This narrative review collates pre‑clinical and clinical data on Graves’ disease (GD) pathogenesis and evaluates emerging “precision” therapeutics that intervene at discrete immune‑molecular checkpoints—CD20, CD40/CD40L, BAFF, neonatal Fc‑receptor, HLA‑DRβ1‑Arg74—or directly antagonise the thyrotropin receptor (TSHR) via monoclonal antibodies, small‑molecule inverse agonists or CAR‑T strategies. It also summarises complementary insights from genetics, epigenetics and the gut microbiome that refine present pathogenic models and inform candidate drug targets.
Who was reviewed?
The authors executed a PubMed search (no end‑date; English language only) for mechanistic and interventional studies, excluding case reports, letters and abstracts. Included material spans animal models, phase I–II trials, population genetics and multi‑centre microbiome consortia (e.g., INDIGO). Clinical data predominantly involve adult GD patients (with or without orbitopathy), whereas immunobiology derives from both human biospecimens and murine thyroiditis/GD models. Overall, the synthesis integrates evidence from several hundred individuals across Europe and Asia plus complementary in‑vivo platforms.
Most important findings
Immune escape hinges on TSHR‑stimulating antibodies driven by aberrant T‑ and B‑cell costimulation (CD40/CD40L) and BAFF‑mediated survival of autoreactive B cells. Genome‑wide and epigenetic studies highlight HLA‑DR, CTLA‑4, PTPN22 and FOXP3 variants, while single‑cell RNA‑seq reveals expanded memory B‑cell and CD16⁺ NK‑cell compartments. Importantly for microbiome signature databases, GD exhibits a reproducible dysbiosis: reduced α‑diversity and phylum‑level shifts summarised below.
Therapeutically, anti‑CD20 (rituximab) and anti‑CD40 (iscalimab) achieve biochemical remission in 40‑50 % of early GD, especially when baseline TRAb < 20 IU/L. FcRn blockade (batoclimab) rapidly de‑tiers TRAbs; TSHR‑blocking mAb K1‑70 and small molecules (ANTAG‑3, VA‑K‑14, S37) normalise thyroid hormones in murine models. Peptide apitope ATX‑GD‑59 restores tolerance in 50 % of mild GD, and TSHR‑CAR‑T selectively deletes TRAb‑producing B cells in vivo.
Key implications
Targeted immunomodulators promise durable euthyroidism without ablation or life‑long levothyroxine, and microbiome data suggest adjunctive avenues such as microbial metabolite supplementation or dysbiosis‑directed probiotics. Integration of host genetics, microbiota and antigen‑specific therapy could enable precision stratification, minimising exposure to broad immunosuppression and its respective risks.
Microbiome-targeted-interventions (MBTI) and the immune system: translating gut ecology into clinical practice
February 12, 2026
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Microbiome-Targeted Interventions (MBTIs)
Microbiome-Targeted Interventions (MBTIs)
Microbiome Targeted Interventions (MBTIs) are cutting-edge treatments that utilize information from Microbiome Signatures to modulate the microbiome, revolutionizing medicine with unparalleled precision and impact.
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This review integrates ecological and immunological data on microbiome-based-interventions, linking specific taxa, diets, and microbial metabolites to gut community shifts, barrier function, and adaptive immunity, and outlining translational opportunities and risks for clinically targeted microbiome modulation.
What was reviewed?
This review synthesizes evidence on microbiome-targeted-interventions (MBTIs) that modulate gut ecology and immune function from the perinatal period through adulthood, integrating mechanistic data from animal models, human trials, and in vitro systems. The authors summarize how various strategies, including diet, fermented foods, prebiotics, probiotics, fecal microbiota transplants (FMT),phage therapy, and microbial metabolites (postbiotics), reshape gut community structure, metabolic output, and host immune responses. The introductory sections emphasise the ecological complexity of the gut microbiome, strain-level heterogeneity, biogeography along the gastrointestinal tract, and the particular vulnerability and plasticity of the perinatal microbiome, providing the ecological context required to interpret intervention outcomes.
Who was reviewed?
The review draws on a broad corpus of preclinical and clinical literature that spans healthy term and preterm infants, pregnant women, adults with chronic inflammatory or metabolic diseases, patients with recurrent Clostridioides difficile infection, ulcerative colitis, Crohn’s disease, obesity, non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, epilepsy, end stage renal disease, multiple sclerosis, and solid-organ cancers receiving immune checkpoint inhibitors. Human data include small, deeply phenotyped dietary and probiotic trials, larger epidemiologic cohorts linking diet and fiber intake to incident inflammatory bowel disease, and early phase trials of fecal microbiota transplantation in infection, inflammatory bowel disease, and cancer immunotherapy. These are complemented by mechanistic mouse models and cell culture systems that dissect immune pathways, such as short-chain fatty acid (SCFA)-mediated T regulatory cell induction, bile acid receptor signalling, and epithelial barrier modulation.
Most important findings
A central conclusion is that targeted manipulation of gut ecology can reproducibly shift both microbiome composition and immune tone, but effects are highly context and host-dependent. Table 1 of the article (pages 4–5) organizes microbiome-based interventions by rationale, including infection prevention and treatment, chronic disease modification, early-life immune programming, improved nutrition, vaccine enhancement, and modulation of drug efficacy. Early life homeostasis is linked to Bifidobacterium longum subsp. infantis and Bifidobacterium breve, which metabolise human milk oligosaccharides into indole-3-lactic acid and other aromatic lactic acids that signal via the aryl hydrocarbon receptor and promote tolerogenic T cell and monocyte profiles. Akkermansia muciniphila is repeatedly associated with improved metabolic status, tighter epithelial barrier function, and enhanced response to PD-1 based checkpoint blockade; the outer membrane protein Amuc_1100 and pasteurised cells can be considered candidate postbiotic effectors. In fiber and prebiotic interventions, resistant starch robustly enriches Ruminococcus bromii and Eubacterium rectale, while complex arabinoxylans drive Bifidobacterium longum, Prevotella copri, and other saccharolytic taxa, shifting SCFA production toward butyrate or propionate in a structure-specific manner.
Western-style diets and high-fat feeding favour pathobionts such as Bilophila wadsworthia and Crohn’s disease-associated adherent invasive Escherichia coli, while Mediterranean pattern diets enrich Akkermansia and SCFA producers and reduce Fusobacterium. Figure 1 on page 6 schematically depicts how each intervention class primarily introduces new species, depletes selected taxa, or selectively enhances the growth of resident strains, with inevitable secondary network effects. Phage therapy and bacteriophage-rich fecal filtrate transplantation illustrate species depletion approaches that can reduce C. difficile or adherent invasive E. coli, yet still propagate indirect shifts in non-target taxa. Postbiotic strategies, including butyrate, propionate, and specific secondary bile acids such as ursodeoxycholic acid, modulate Treg expansion, Th17 differentiation, macrophage antimicrobial programmes, epithelial tight junction expression, and mucus secretion, as visualised in the mechanistic summary diagram on page 11 (Figure 2).
Key implications
The review underscores that microbiome-based interventions should be conceptualised as ecosystem engineering rather than simple single target therapies, with strain level resolution and host context critical for predicting outcomes. For clinicians, Bifidobacterium dominated, HMO driven infant microbiomes, Mediterranean pattern, fiber rich diets, and carefully selected probiotics or next generation probiotics such as A. muciniphila and Faecalibacterium prausnitzii represent promising tools to restore beneficial Major Microbial Associations in immune mediated and metabolic diseases. However, examples of high dose soluble fiber exacerbating colitis or promoting cholestatic liver cancer in mice highlight that interventions can be harmful when applied without ecological and disease specific nuance. For microbiome signatures databases, this paper provides mechanistically anchored associations between specific taxa (for example Bifidobacterium infantis, Ruminococcus bromii, Akkermansia muciniphila, Bilophila wadsworthia, Bacteroides fragilis complex, and Enterococcus hirae), distinct dietary or therapeutic exposures, and defined immune phenotypes such as Treg expansion, Th17 suppression, checkpoint inhibitor responsiveness, or epithelial barrier reinforcement. The authors conclude that future clinical translation will depend on integrating ecological design principles, precise chemical characterisation of substrates and postbiotics, and prospective trials that link defined microbial shifts with hard clinical endpoints, moving from associative signatures toward rational, condition specific microbiome based therapies.
Citation
Hitch TCA, Hall LJ, Walsh SK, Leventhal GE, Slack E, de Wouters T, Walter J, Clavel T. Microbiome-based interventions to modulate gut ecology and the immune system. Mucosal Immunology. 2022;15(6):1095-1113. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41385-022-00564-1
The Microbiome in Precision Medicine: The Way Forward
February 12, 2026
/
Microbiome Signatures
Microbiome Signatures
Microbiome signatures are reproducible ecological and functional patterns—encompassing traits, interactions, and metabolic functions—that reflect microbial adaptation to specific host or environmental states. Beyond taxonomy, they capture conserved features like metal metabolism or immune modulation, enabling systems-level diagnosis and intervention in health and disease.
•
Microbiome-Targeted Interventions (MBTIs)
Microbiome-Targeted Interventions (MBTIs)
Microbiome Targeted Interventions (MBTIs) are cutting-edge treatments that utilize information from Microbiome Signatures to modulate the microbiome, revolutionizing medicine with unparalleled precision and impact.
•
The editorial emphasizes how dynamic host–microbiome interactions, combined with genomics and other 'omics' datasets, can inform personalized diagnostics and microbiome-targeted interventions. Despite challenges like microbiome variability and establishing causality, the editorial underscores the microbiome's critical role in shaping the future of individualized medicine.
Overview
Joseph F. Petrosino’s editorial highlights the microbiome's pivotal role in precision medicine, emphasizing its potential to advance personalized diagnostics and therapeutic strategies. The integration of microbiome signatures with other ‘omics’ data, such as genomics and metabolomics, offers a comprehensive understanding of disease mechanisms and tailored treatments. Petrosino draws parallels between microbiome signature research and genomics, with both fields leveraging next-generation sequencing technologies to uncover associations that can be exploited for clinical interventions.
Precision Microbiome Interventions
A notable advancement discussed is the precision editing of the microbiome to treat inflammatory diseases. For instance, Zhu et al. demonstrated how targeting molybdenum-cofactor-dependent pathways with tungstate suppressed Enterobacteriaceae overgrowth in colitis models, restoring microbial diversity and reducing inflammation.[1] This targeted approach exemplifies the potential of microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) to effectively manage dysbiosis without disrupting beneficial microbial communities.
Future Directions
Petrosino advocates for the routine integration of microbiome data with clinical and multi-omics datasets to enhance diagnostic precision, treatment customization, and early disease detection. He envisions a future where microbiome profiling becomes standard practice in clinical trials and patient care, facilitating the stratification of patients for personalized interventions. Furthermore, the editorial calls for banking samples from large cohort studies to enable future integrative analyses, maximizing the clinical potential of microbiome research.
Conclusion
In conclusion, Petrosino establishes the microbiome as a cornerstone of precision medicine, emphasizing the need for continued innovation and translational efforts to unlock its full potential in clinical practice.
M. canis Antifungal Resistance: Enzymatic Correlates and Drug Efficacy
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Microsporum canis (M. canis)
Microsporum canis (M. canis)
OverviewMicrosporum canis (M. canis) is a zoophilic dermatophyte common in cats and dogs, responsible for 90% of feline dermatophytoses worldwide.[1][2] It has significant zoonotic potential, transmitting to humans through fomites or direct animal contact, causing severe superficial mycosis. M. canis is considered anthropo-zoophilic and can infect pediatric or immunocompromised patients, causing severe inflammatory responses such […]
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This study identified catalase and hemolysin as key virulence factors linked to antifungal resistance in Microsporum canis strains from symptomatic hosts. Voriconazole, terbinafine, and posaconazole were most effective.
What was studied?
This study investigated the virulence enzyme profiles and antifungal susceptibility of 100 M. canis strains isolated from humans with tinea corporis and animals either with or without skin lesions. With concerns around Microsporum canis antifungal resistance, the study aimed to determine whether specific virulence factors (phospholipase [Pz], lipase [Lz], hemolysin [Hz], catalase [Ca], and thermotolerance [GI]) correlate with antifungal susceptibility and the clinical presentation of infection. Seven antifungal agents were tested using a modified CLSI broth microdilution method: itraconazole, ketoconazole, voriconazole, posaconazole, terbinafine, fluconazole, and griseofulvin. The overarching goal was to assess potential links between virulence, antifungal resistance, and the presence or absence of lesions in different hosts. Understanding Microsporum canis antifungal resistance helps in developing more effective treatment strategies. The research on M. canis antifungal resistance is increasingly vital given the rising resistance patterns identified.
Who was studied?
The analysis included 100 M. canis strains: 10 from humans diagnosed with tinea corporis, 64 from animals with visible skin lesions, and 26 from asymptomatic animals. These strains were confirmed via morphological and molecular identification, including ITS sequencing. Strains were phenotypically grouped by host origin and the presence of skin lesions to identify correlations between enzymatic activity, antifungal susceptibility, and lesion development. These observations provide insights into Microsporum canis antifungal resistance.
Most important findings
Among the virulence factors examined, several displayed statistically significant variation between host groups. Lipase (Lz) activity was markedly higher in M. canis strains isolated from animals without lesions, suggesting a possible protective function or a role in early colonization. In contrast, catalase (Ca) activity was elevated in strains from both animals and humans with skin lesions, indicating its potential involvement in oxidative stress defense and pathogenicity. Hemolysin (Hz) activity was also higher in symptomatic hosts and significantly correlated with reduced susceptibility to azole antifungals such as fluconazole and voriconazole, implicating Hz as a contributor to Microsporum canis antifungal resistance.
Additionally, thermotolerance (GI%) was lower in lesion-associated strains, suggesting impaired growth at elevated temperatures, though this trait did not directly correlate with antifungal resistance. Among the antifungals tested, voriconazole, terbinafine, and posaconazole demonstrated the highest efficacy across all isolates, while fluconazole and itraconazole showed comparatively higher MICs in symptomatic strains, raising concerns regarding their long-term therapeutic utility and highlighting issues associated with M. canis antifungal resistance.
Virulence Factor
Observation in Lesion-Associated Strains
Catalase (Ca)
Elevated activity
Lipase (Lz)
Lower activity
Hemolysin (Hz)
Higher activity correlated with azole resistance, contributing to Microsporum canis antifungal resistance.
Thermotolerance
Lower in lesion-associated strains
The positive correlation between high MICs for azoles and increased Ca/Hz activity in lesion-associated strains suggests that enzymatic virulence may contribute to antifungal resistance or vice versa. Continued study on M. canis antifungal resistance can provide deeper insights into these complex interactions.
Key implications
The findings highlight a potential dual role for virulence enzymes—both in facilitating tissue invasion and correlating with antifungal resistance profiles, particularly among azoles. Elevated catalase and hemolysin activities in strains from symptomatic hosts indicate a mechanistic link between oxidative stress evasion and diminished antifungal efficacy. These insights suggest that catalase and hemolysin could serve as biomarkers for aggressive M. canis infections and potentially guide treatment decisions. Moreover, identifying voriconazole, terbinafine, and posaconazole as the most active antifungals against M. canis reinforces their clinical utility, especially in resistant or recurrent cases. These data support the need for enzyme-targeted antifungal strategies and call for surveillance of antifungal resistance patterns in zoonotic dermatophytoses, especially concerning Microsporum canis antifungal resistance.
Ciclopirox Antifungal and Anti-Inflammatory Review: Dermatology to Oncology
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
•
Staphylococcus aureus (S. Aureus)
Staphylococcus aureus (S. Aureus)
Staphylococcus aureus is a versatile skin and mucosal commensal that can transition into a highly virulent pathobiont. Known for its immune-evasive strategies, toxin production, and antibiotic resistance, it plays a significant role in chronic infections and microbiome imbalance.
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Microsporum canis (M. canis)
Microsporum canis (M. canis)
OverviewMicrosporum canis (M. canis) is a zoophilic dermatophyte common in cats and dogs, responsible for 90% of feline dermatophytoses worldwide.[1][2] It has significant zoonotic potential, transmitting to humans through fomites or direct animal contact, causing severe superficial mycosis. M. canis is considered anthropo-zoophilic and can infect pediatric or immunocompromised patients, causing severe inflammatory responses such […]
•
Ciclopirox and its salt form exhibit broad-spectrum antifungal, antibacterial, and anti-inflammatory activity via iron chelation and enzyme inhibition. With low resistance potential, they outperform many azoles and show promise in oncology, virology, and neuroinflammation, making them valuable tools in dermatology and beyond.
What was reviewed?
This review explores the therapeutic potential of ciclopirox (CPX) and its ethanolamine salt ciclopirox olamine (CPO)—two hydroxypyridone antifungal agents with broad-spectrum antimicrobial, anti-inflammatory, and iron-chelating properties. The paper examines their established role in dermatology and investigates their emerging uses in oncology, virology, immunology, and neurology. The authors describe CPX/CPO's unique mechanisms, structure–activity relationships, pharmacokinetics, and efficacy in diverse formulations including creams, shampoos, lacquers, and gels.
Who was reviewed?
The review draws on findings from in vitro studies, in vivo animal models, clinical trials, pharmacokinetic research, and microbial gene expression studies. It synthesizes data from both dermatological and non-dermatological disciplines, including microbiology, oncology, and virology, to contextualize CPX/CPO’s multifaceted utility.
Most important findings
Ciclopirox and its salt form, ciclopirox olamine, exhibit a unique mechanism of action that distinguishes them from conventional antifungals such as azoles and polyenes. Their primary mode involves intracellular iron chelation, targeting iron-dependent enzymes like ribonucleotide reductase and deoxyhypusine hydroxylase, thereby impairing fungal viability. Additionally, they disrupt mitochondrial function, energy metabolism, and membrane integrity, while also interfering with DNA repair, mitotic processes, and amino acid uptake.
Ciclopirox compounds exert potent anti-inflammatory effects by suppressing prostaglandins, leukotrienes, and pro-inflammatory cytokines including IL-1β, IL-6, and TNF-α. They are active against a wide spectrum of dermatophytes, Candida spp., Malassezia spp., Microsporum canis, and antibiotic-resistant bacteria, and demonstrate synergism with antifungal agents and mitochondrial electron transport chain (ETC) inhibitors. Notably, the review underscores microbiome-relevant implications, particularly in seborrheic dermatitis, where Malassezia dominance is accompanied by elevated levels of Staphylococcus aureus and S. epidermidis, along with reduced Cutibacterium, indicative of a dysbiotic profile. Ciclopirox effectively reduces these pathobionts while preserving beneficial taxa, highlighting its potential as a microbiome-friendly antifungal therapy.
Key implications
The review positions CPX/CPO as an underutilized multi-target agent with broad therapeutic value. In dermatology, they outperform many topical antifungals and reduce relapse in seborrheic dermatitis. Their low resistance potential and anti-inflammatory activity make them preferable to corticosteroid combinations. Outside dermatology, they show promise in cancer, HBV, HIV, SARS-CoV-2, polycystic kidney disease, type I diabetes, and stroke. Their iron-chelating mechanism offers a powerful avenue for targeting microbial virulence and host-pathogen interactions, which aligns with emerging interest in microbial metallomics and host–microbiome–metal ion dynamics.
Microsporum canis Siderophores Identified as Ferrichrome and Ferricrocin
February 12, 2026
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Microbial Metallomics
Microbial Metallomics
Microbial Metallomics is the study of how microorganisms acquire, use, regulate, and transform metals in any biological or environmental context.
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Microsporum canis (M. canis)
Microsporum canis (M. canis)
OverviewMicrosporum canis (M. canis) is a zoophilic dermatophyte common in cats and dogs, responsible for 90% of feline dermatophytoses worldwide.[1][2] It has significant zoonotic potential, transmitting to humans through fomites or direct animal contact, causing severe superficial mycosis. M. canis is considered anthropo-zoophilic and can infect pediatric or immunocompromised patients, causing severe inflammatory responses such […]
•
This study characterized the siderophores produced by Microsporum and Trichophyton species, revealing that M. canis secretes ferrichrome and ferricrocin under iron-limited conditions, indicating siderophore pathways as exploitable therapeutic targets.
What was studied?
This study investigated the production and identity of siderophores by six dermatophytic fungal species: Microsporum gypseum, M. canis, M. audouinii, Trichophyton rubrum, T. mentagrophytes, and T. tonsurans. Given the critical role of iron acquisition in microbial virulence, especially in iron-limited host environments where iron is tightly sequestered by transferrin and lactoferrin, the researchers aimed to characterize the types of siderophores secreted under iron-restricted conditions. Identification was performed using thin-layer chromatography (TLC), high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC), and mass spectrometry.
Who was studied?
Clinical isolates of the six dermatophytic fungi were collected from hospitals and maintained under standardized conditions. Trichophyton species were cultivated for 22 days and Microsporum species for 14 days in iron-limited synthetic media. The fungal cultures were then subjected to extraction, purification, and chemical characterization of their secreted siderophores.
Most important findings
All six dermatophyte species examined in the study were found to produce hydroxamate-type siderophores under iron-deficient conditions. Specifically, M. gypseum, M. canis, M. audouinii, and T. rubrum secreted two siderophores—ferrichrome C and ferricrocin—while T. mentagrophytes and T. tonsurans produced only ferrichrome. These siderophores were identified through their characteristic retention times using high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC), distinct Rf values on thin-layer chromatography (TLC), and confirmed molecular weights by mass spectrometry (with m/z values of 755 for ferrichrome C, 771 for ferricrocin, and 741 for ferrichrome).
Notably, T. rubrum exhibited a siderophore profile more closely aligned with Microsporum species than with other Trichophyton species, suggesting potential taxonomic or functional overlaps despite genus-level differences. These findings not only differentiate species based on siderophore output but also provide biochemical markers that could aid in fungal taxonomy or therapeutic targeting.
Fungus
Ferrichrome
Ferricrocin
Ferrichrome C
M. gypseum
+
+
–
M. canis
+
+
–
M. audouinii
+
+
–
T. rubrum
+
+
–
T. mentagrophytes
–
–
+
T. tonsurans
–
–
+
Key implications
Iron sequestration is a cornerstone of host immune defense, and fungal survival depends heavily on siderophore production to circumvent this. By defining the siderophore profiles of pathogenic dermatophytes, this study highlights potential molecular targets for antifungal development. Ferrichrome-type siderophores represent a vulnerability; disrupting their synthesis or uptake may impair the fungi’s ability to persist on keratinized tissues. Importantly, Microsporum canis depends on both ferricrocin and ferrichrome C siderophores, both of which could serve as diagnostic biomarkers or therapeutic targets. These results also suggest that antifungal strategies targeting siderophore-mediated iron uptake may have genus- or species-specific efficacy.
Zinc and Microsporum canis: Targeting ZafA to Disrupt Fungal Virulence
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
•
Microsporum canis (M. canis)
Microsporum canis (M. canis)
OverviewMicrosporum canis (M. canis) is a zoophilic dermatophyte common in cats and dogs, responsible for 90% of feline dermatophytoses worldwide.[1][2] It has significant zoonotic potential, transmitting to humans through fomites or direct animal contact, causing severe superficial mycosis. M. canis is considered anthropo-zoophilic and can infect pediatric or immunocompromised patients, causing severe inflammatory responses such […]
•
Zinc deficiency significantly impairs Microsporum canis growth and virulence. The ZafA gene regulates zinc uptake and pathogenesis, and its deletion disrupts zinc transporters, conidiation, and host infection, suggesting it as a novel antifungal drug target.
What was studied?
This study investigated the molecular and phenotypic impact of zinc deficiency on Microsporum canis, a dermatophyte responsible for zoonotic skin infections in humans and animals. Using RNA-Seq, researchers assessed transcriptomic changes in M. canis grown under zinc-restricted conditions and identified differentially expressed genes (DEGs). Particular focus was placed on the ZafA gene—a zinc-responsive transcription factor homologous to Zap1 in Saccharomyces cerevisiae—which was significantly upregulated under zinc-deficient conditions. Functional validation included construction of a ZafA knockout strain (ZafA-hph) via Agrobacterium tumefaciens-mediated transformation (ATMT), which allowed assessment of zinc absorption, growth, conidiation, pathogenicity, and gene expression regulation. This research delves deep into the impacts of zinc on Microsporum canis and sheds light on critical fungal dynamics.
Who was studied?
The study was conducted on Microsporum canis strain CBS 113480 in vitro and in vivo. Fungal strains were cultured under varying zinc conditions (0–1000 nM Zn²⁺), and both wild-type and ZafA-deficient strains were compared for phenotypic and transcriptional differences. In vivo pathogenicity was assessed using New Zealand rabbits, which were infected with wild-type or ZafA-hph strains for histopathological evaluation. This sheds light on how zinc and Microsporum canis interact to affect growth and pathogenic behaviors.
Most important findings
Zinc deficiency significantly impaired M. canis growth, reduced conidiation, and altered global gene expression. Key findings included:
Finding
Description
ZafA gene role
ZafA was highly upregulated in zinc-deficient cultures and is required for zinc uptake, conidiation, and virulence.
Rabbits infected with ZafA-hph showed minimal skin lesions compared to wild-type-infected animals.
Zinc transporter regulation
ZupT (MCYG_04486) and ZTR (MCYG_02504) were significantly downregulated in ZafA-deficient strains.
Major transcriptional shifts
764 upregulated and 585 downregulated genes (Zn200 vs Norm); GO and KEGG analysis linked DEGs to zinc ion binding, oxidative stress response, and growth/metabolism pathways.
These results confirm ZafA as a key regulator of zinc homeostasis, fungal physiology, and pathogenesis. The findings highlight the complex relationship between zinc and Microsporum canis, illustrating significant impacts on zinc uptake and genetic expression.
Key implications
This study demonstrates that zinc availability is critical for the growth and pathogenicity of M. canis, and that ZafA functions as a master transcriptional regulator of zinc uptake and associated pathways. The ZafA gene represents a promising antifungal drug target, as its disruption severely compromises fungal growth and virulence without affecting human homologs. By targeting ZafA or its downstream zinc transporters, novel antifungal therapies could be developed. Additionally, the work introduces a viable genetic manipulation technique (ATMT) for M. canis, facilitating further functional genomics research in dermatophytes. These insights are especially valuable for microbiome-targeted antifungal strategies, where disrupting fungal micronutrient acquisition can modulate microbial balance in skin and hair-associated niches. In summary, zinc and Microsporum canis interactions offer pathways for innovative antifungal therapies.
Dermatophyte Virulence and Host Immunity: Key Mechanisms and Clinical Implications
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
•
Microsporum canis (M. canis)
Microsporum canis (M. canis)
OverviewMicrosporum canis (M. canis) is a zoophilic dermatophyte common in cats and dogs, responsible for 90% of feline dermatophytoses worldwide.[1][2] It has significant zoonotic potential, transmitting to humans through fomites or direct animal contact, causing severe superficial mycosis. M. canis is considered anthropo-zoophilic and can infect pediatric or immunocompromised patients, causing severe inflammatory responses such […]
•
This review outlines the pathogenic strategies of dermatophytes and host antifungal responses, with a focus on keratinolytic enzymes, PRRs, Th17 immunity, and CARD9-related immune dysfunction, offering insight into novel diagnostic and therapeutic strategies.
What was reviewed?
This review article provides a comprehensive synthesis of the current understanding of dermatophyte pathogenicity and host immune responses. It covers fungal virulence factors, including keratinolytic enzymes and pH-responsive regulatory proteins, and explores innate and adaptive host defenses. The authors specifically highlight recent findings in the molecular mechanisms of fungal invasion, immune evasion, and drug resistance, as well as the interplay between fungal pathogens and host pattern recognition receptors (PRRs). Key emphasis is placed on the pathophysiology of chronic and deep dermatophytosis, particularly in the context of CARD9 mutations and impaired Th17 responses.
Who was reviewed?
The review aggregates data from a broad range of studies involving both in vitro and in vivo models, as well as clinical case reports and genetic analyses from patients with dermatophytosis. Notably, the authors reference case series involving CARD9-deficient individuals from North Africa and Asia, murine models of Trichophyton and Microsporum infections, and human keratinocyte co-culture systems. These sources allow the authors to connect clinical phenotypes with immunological and molecular insights.
Most important findings
Dermatophyte virulence is driven by enzymatic degradation of keratin via proteases (e.g., Sub3, Mep3, DppIV) and sulfite production (via cysteine dioxygenase and Ssu1), which enables nutrient acquisition from host tissue. Dermatophytes adapt to changing skin pH via the PacC/Pal signaling pathway, enhancing protease expression. The review also underscores the emergence of antifungal resistance, particularly in T. indotineae, mediated by mutations in the SQLE gene and upregulation of ABC transporters and CYP51B.
Host immunity is initiated by PRRs such as Dectin-1, TLR2/4, and NLRP3, which activate signaling cascades involving CARD9 and MALT1, promoting cytokine release (e.g., IL-17, IL-1β, TNF-α). IL-17-mediated (Th17) responses are central in fungal clearance, regulating antimicrobial peptide production (cathelicidin, β-defensins, S100 proteins), neutrophil recruitment, and keratinocyte proliferation. CARD9 deficiency impairs these pathways, particularly Th17 differentiation, predisposing individuals to chronic or deep fungal infections. These deficiencies are geographically clustered and genetically characterized by mutations like p.Q289X and p.R101C.
Key implications
The article delineates how dermatophyte infections persist and become chronic through complex pathogen-host interactions, revealing potential therapeutic targets. Protease inhibitors, ureases and pH modulation strategies, and immunomodulatory interventions aimed at enhancing Th17 responses could be leveraged as adjunctive treatments. Importantly, identifying CARD9 mutations in patients with refractory or deep dermatophytosis offers a genetic diagnostic tool and may guide immunotherapy decisions, such as IL-17 supplementation or JAK inhibition in cases of STAT1 gain-of-function. These insights bridge mycology, immunology, and clinical dermatology, particularly useful for managing treatment-resistant or recurrent cases.
Cold Atmospheric Plasma for Dermatophytes: In Vitro Efficacy Against T. rubrum and M. canis
February 12, 2026
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Microsporum canis (M. canis)
Microsporum canis (M. canis)
OverviewMicrosporum canis (M. canis) is a zoophilic dermatophyte common in cats and dogs, responsible for 90% of feline dermatophytoses worldwide.[1][2] It has significant zoonotic potential, transmitting to humans through fomites or direct animal contact, causing severe superficial mycosis. M. canis is considered anthropo-zoophilic and can infect pediatric or immunocompromised patients, causing severe inflammatory responses such […]
•
Cold atmospheric plasma significantly inhibited T. rubrum and M. canis growth in vitro, matching the efficacy of ciclopirox olamine. Daily 10-minute CAP treatments proved most effective, acting through ROS/RNS mechanisms, offering a promising contact-free alternative to systemic or topical antifungals.
What was studied?
This in vitro study investigated the antifungal efficacy of cold atmospheric plasma (CAP), generated via surface microdischarge (SMD) technology using ambient air, against two clinically significant dermatophytes: Trichophyton rubrum and Microsporum canis. CAP emits a mixture of reactive oxygen and nitrogen species (ROS/RNS), UV photons (280–420 nm), and charged particles capable of inducing cellular damage in microorganisms. The researchers compared the antifungal activity of CAP treatments of varying durations (5, 8, 10 minutes) and frequencies (single vs. daily treatments) against standard antifungal interventions: ciclopirox olamine and UVC irradiation (0.120 J/cm²). Growth inhibition of fungal colonies was monitored for up to nine days post-treatment.
Who was studied?
Fungal strains of T. rubrum and M. canis were isolated from untreated patients with tinea pedis and tinea capitis, respectively, at the Department of Dermatology, University Hospital Regensburg. Cultures were prepared using Sabouraud–glucose agar, and CAP treatments were applied using the FlatPlaSter device. All treatments were performed in quadruple across at least five independent experiments to ensure statistical reliability when using cold atmospheric plasma for dermatophytes
Most important findings
Daily 10-minute CAP treatments produced fungal growth inhibition comparable to that of ciclopirox olamine, with both T. rubrum and M. canis colony sizes remaining virtually unchanged over nine days. By contrast, one-time CAP treatments and shorter daily exposures (5 or 8 minutes) produced only partial inhibition. UVC treatment showed only transient suppression of growth, and pre-treatment of agar alone with CAP had no antifungal effect, confirming direct mycelial interaction is required.
Summary of key results (Day 9 colony sizes in mm):
Treatment
T. rubrum (Day 9)
M. canis (Day 9)
Untreated Control
25.6 ± 2.7
32.6 ± 1.5
Daily CAP, 10 min
4.3 ± 0.7
5.2 ± 0.6
Ciclopirox Olamine
4.7 ± 0.4
5.9 ± 0.9
Daily CAP, 8 min
15.5 ± 1.6
13.8 ± 10.7
Daily CAP, 5 min
15.8 ± 3.2
13.4 ± 7.6
UVC, one-time
~temporary inhibition only
~temporary inhibition only
The antifungal mechanism is attributed primarily to ROS/RNS interaction with fungal membranes and DNA, rather than UV or heat, as the emitted UV was negligible (25 nW/cm²) and thermal rise remained below 4°C
Key implications
CAP demonstrates strong fungistatic activity and holds promise as a contact-free alternative for treating dermatophytoses, especially where systemic antifungal use is contraindicated due to toxicity, liver involvement, or treatment failure. While complete mycelial eradication was not achieved (as expected in a high-biomass in vitro setup), the suppression was sufficient to suggest clinical potential. Importantly, CAP’s antimicrobial action does not stem from residual effects on growth medium, indicating direct ROS/RNS-mediated cytotoxicity. This positions CAP as a novel adjunct or alternative in antifungal therapy, especially for superficial infections like tinea capitis or tinea pedis. Further animal and clinical studies are warranted to translate these findings into therapeutic protocols.
Metalloprotease Gene Family in Microsporum canis Identified as Potential Virulence Factors
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
•
Microsporum canis (M. canis)
Microsporum canis (M. canis)
OverviewMicrosporum canis (M. canis) is a zoophilic dermatophyte common in cats and dogs, responsible for 90% of feline dermatophytoses worldwide.[1][2] It has significant zoonotic potential, transmitting to humans through fomites or direct animal contact, causing severe superficial mycosis. M. canis is considered anthropo-zoophilic and can infect pediatric or immunocompromised patients, causing severe inflammatory responses such […]
•
This study identified a metalloprotease gene family in Microsporum canis and confirmed in vivo expression of MEP2 and MEP3 during infection. MEP3, a keratinolytic enzyme, was expressed recombinantly and may contribute to fungal virulence, supporting its use in vaccine development.
What was studied?
This study characterized a family of secreted metalloprotease genes in Microsporum canis, a zoophilic dermatophyte responsible for dermatophytosis in cats, dogs, and humans. The authors identified three homologous genes—MEP1, MEP2, and MEP3—encoding zinc-dependent metalloproteases containing the canonical HEXXH motif. These genes were isolated using a genomic probe derived from the Aspergillus fumigatus MEP gene. Among these, MEP3 was confirmed to encode the previously described 43.5-kDa keratinolytic metalloprotease and was successfully expressed in Pichia pastoris as a recombinant enzyme. To assess potential involvement in pathogenesis, the in vivo expression of MEP1–3 during infection was evaluated using RT-nested PCR on RNA extracted from infected guinea pig hair samples.
Who was studied?
The experimental infection model involved two 3-month-old female guinea pigs (Hartley strain) infected with M. canis strain IHEM 15221. Hair samples were harvested from infected and control animals at 14 and 21 days post-infection for molecular analysis of MEP gene expression. Additionally, P. pastoris was employed as a heterologous expression system to produce recombinant MEP3 for biochemical characterization.
Most important findings
The study provided the first genomic and functional characterization of a metalloprotease gene family in Microsporum canis, implicating these enzymes in fungal virulence. All three identified MEP genes—MEP1, MEP2, and MEP3—encode zinc-dependent metalloproteases belonging to the M36 (fungalysin) family. Among them, MEP3 demonstrated broad proteolytic activity, including keratinolytic, elastinolytic, and collagenolytic functions, distinguishing it from its Aspergillus homologs, which cleave only collagen. In vivo expression analysis via RT-nested PCR confirmed that MEP2 and MEP3, but not MEP1, are transcribed in infected hair samples during the phase of lesion development. MEP3 was further expressed in Pichia pastoris as a recombinant enzyme, yielding approximately 40 µg/mL and retaining native proteolytic activity. N-terminal sequencing of the recombinant protein matched the native MEP3, validating accurate folding and post-translational processing in the heterologous system.
Metalloprotease
In Vivo Expression
Proteolytic Activities
Gene Product Verified
MEP1
Not detected
Unknown
Not purified
MEP2
Detected
Unknown
Not purified
MEP3
Detected
Collagen, keratin, elastin
Recombinant confirmed
Key implications
This work demonstrates that M. canis expresses multiple metalloproteases during infection, with MEP3 likely contributing to keratin degradation and host tissue invasion. Given the evidence for its in vivo expression and enzymatic activity, MEP3 emerges as a strong candidate virulence factor and a potential immunogen for vaccine development. The absence of MEP1 expression in vivo suggests a temporally or spatially restricted role or low expression levels. The identification of this gene family lays the groundwork for functional genetic studies, including gene knockouts to verify roles in pathogenicity, and may facilitate the development of diagnostic or therapeutic tools targeting metalloproteases in zoonotic dermatophytosis.
Virulence Factors of Microsporum canis: Enzymes, Genes, and Clinical Implication
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
•
Microsporum canis (M. canis)
Microsporum canis (M. canis)
OverviewMicrosporum canis (M. canis) is a zoophilic dermatophyte common in cats and dogs, responsible for 90% of feline dermatophytoses worldwide.[1][2] It has significant zoonotic potential, transmitting to humans through fomites or direct animal contact, causing severe superficial mycosis. M. canis is considered anthropo-zoophilic and can infect pediatric or immunocompromised patients, causing severe inflammatory responses such […]
•
This review details the enzymatic and genetic virulence arsenal of Microsporum canis, highlighting understudied factors like biofilms and dipeptidylpeptidases. Greater insight into these mechanisms could improve treatment and prevention strategies.
What was reviewed?
This systematic review examined the phenotypic virulence factors of Microsporum canis, a dermatophyte responsible for superficial fungal infections in humans and animals. The authors compiled and synthesized data from 46 original research articles published between 1988 and 2023, focusing on enzymatic and non-enzymatic factors that contribute to fungal adhesion, invasion, immune evasion, and survival within keratinized tissues. Key attention was given to extracellular and intracellular virulence mechanisms, associated gene expression, and implications for infection control and antifungal resistance.
Who was reviewed?
The review drew upon experimental and clinical studies investigating M. canis strains isolated from both symptomatic and asymptomatic animals (especially cats and dogs) and human hosts, including pediatric and immunocompromised individuals. The reviewed studies encompassed diverse methodological approaches—ranging from enzymatic profiling and gene expression analyses to in vivo and in vitro infection models using tissues from humans, cats, and guinea pigs.
Most important findings
The review identified a broad range of virulence factors grouped into extracellular and intracellular categories. Among the extracellular factors, three key protease classes—keratinases, metalloproteases (fungalisins), and subtilisins—were most frequently characterized. These enzymes enable M. canis to degrade host keratin, collagen, and elastin, facilitating nutrient acquisition and tissue colonization. Subtilisin Sub3 was notably linked to fungal adhesion and chronic infection persistence. Other extracellular factors included dipeptidylpeptidases (DppIV, DppV), aminopeptidases (Lap1, Lap2), aspartyl proteases, catalases, hemolysins, ureases, and serine hydrolases, each contributing variably to tissue invasion, immune modulation, and environmental stress resistance. Biofilm formation and thermotolerance were also identified as phenotypes enhancing antifungal resistance and deeper tissue penetration.
The review also highlighted a set of intracellular virulence genes, including:
Collagen and elastin degradation, nutrient acquisition
LAP1/LAP2
Aminopeptidases
Conversion of long-chain peptides to amino acids
SSU1
Sulfite efflux pump
Detoxification of sulfur metabolites
PacC
pH-responsive TF
Regulation of proteolytic gene expression
Key implications
The review underscores the complexity and adaptability of M. canis as a pathogen, facilitated by its diverse enzymatic arsenal and environmentally responsive gene expression. While keratinases, subtilisins, and metalloproteases are well-characterized, less attention has been given to dipeptidylpeptidases, biofilm formation, thermotolerance, and sulfite detoxification—all of which may be crucial for chronicity, deep invasion, and treatment resistance. The authors emphasize the need to expand research beyond the canonical virulence enzymes to uncover novel targets for antifungal therapy. This has clinical relevance not only for treating dermatophytosis but also for addressing M. canis as an emerging threat in immunocompromised populations.
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
•
Microsporum canis (M. canis)
Microsporum canis (M. canis)
OverviewMicrosporum canis (M. canis) is a zoophilic dermatophyte common in cats and dogs, responsible for 90% of feline dermatophytoses worldwide.[1][2] It has significant zoonotic potential, transmitting to humans through fomites or direct animal contact, causing severe superficial mycosis. M. canis is considered anthropo-zoophilic and can infect pediatric or immunocompromised patients, causing severe inflammatory responses such […]
•
Genome sequencing of feline and canine Microsporum canis reveals close genetic identity to an invasive human strain and dissects secreted CAZymes that drive keratin degradation and potential zoonosis.
What was studied?
Microsporum canis whole genome sequencing was undertaken to generate and analyse draft genomes (~22.8 Mb, ~7 000 CDS each) from one feline and one canine dermatophyte strain collected in northern India. The research focused on Microsporum canis whole genome sequencing to achieve these insights. Using Illumina short-read data the authors assembled 300 + contigs per strain and annotated coding sequences, carbohydrate-active enzymes (CAZymes) and mitochondrial genomes. Comparative genomics against four previously published human M. canis genomes and two related species (M. audouinii, M. ferrugineum) included average-nucleotide-identity (ANI), Mash distance and core-SNP phylogeny to explore host-adaptation and potential zoonotic links.
Who was studied?
The investigation focused on two symptomatic companion animals: a 4-month-old Persian cat (strain B12-36A) and a 3-month-old mixed-breed dog (strain B12-45A) presenting with ringworm lesions in Uttar Pradesh, India. Comparative reference material comprised four Chinese human isolates representing disseminated infection, subcutaneous lesions and tinea capitis, plus archived human isolates of M. audouinii and M. ferrugineum; no healthy controls were included. Thus, to uncover the genetic makeup, Microsporum canis whole genome sequencing was pivotal in analyzing these strains.
Most important findings
Whole-genome comparison placed all six M. canis strains in one species cluster (ANI > 99 %). Strikingly, the two Indian animal strains showed >99.9 % ANI and ≤1 287 pairwise SNPs to a Chinese human isolate recovered from disseminated dermatophytosis, while being increasingly distant from isolates causing subcutaneous disease and tinea capitis. This core group was clearly separated from M. audouinii and M. ferrugineum (ANI < 97.2 %), underscoring host-specialised diversification within the complex, much elucidated by Microsporum canis whole genome sequencing efforts.
Functionally, 158 CAZyme-encoding genes were predicted, 58 of which carry signal peptides suggesting secretion into keratinised niches. Key families included multiple GH18 chitinases, GH3/GH5 β-glucosidases, AA1/AA7 laccases/oxidoreductases and GT32/GT72 hexosyltransferases, enzymes implicated in keratin degradation, melanisation, immune evasion and nutrient acquisition. Hot-spot analysis identified 159 genes with non-synonymous mutations shared by ≥4 strains, providing candidate virulence markers; the animal strains displayed fewer unique mutations than human subcutaneous strains, hinting at a conserved zoonotic genotype.
Key implications
For clinicians, these genomic insights highlight that pet-derived M. canis lineages can be almost indistinguishable from strains producing severe, invasive infections in humans, supporting direct zoonotic transmission. Importantly, Microsporum canis whole genome sequencing has unveiled these genetic similarities. The extensive repertoire of secreted CAZymes links fungal metabolism to tissue invasion and may furnish microbiome-signature databases with fungal enzyme markers relevant to skin-microbiome dysbiosis. Recognising such signatures could aid early diagnosis and tailored antifungal strategies, especially as ABC-transporter over-expression and terbinafine resistance emerge within M. canis populations. Routine sequencing of veterinary and human isolates, combined with transcriptomic profiling of CAZyme genes, is therefore warranted to track virulent clades and to develop enzyme-targeted therapeutics.
Citation
Nair SS, Thomas P, Abdel-Glil MY, Prajapati SK, Va A, Reddi L, Kumar B, Saikumar G, Dandapat P, Rudramurthy SM, & Abhishek. Whole genome sequence analysis of Microsporum canis: A study based on animal strains isolated from India. The Microbe, 7, 100329. (2025). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.microb.2025.100329
Microsporum canis Antifungal Susceptibility and Therapy: A Review
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
•
Microsporum canis (M. canis)
Microsporum canis (M. canis)
OverviewMicrosporum canis (M. canis) is a zoophilic dermatophyte common in cats and dogs, responsible for 90% of feline dermatophytoses worldwide.[1][2] It has significant zoonotic potential, transmitting to humans through fomites or direct animal contact, causing severe superficial mycosis. M. canis is considered anthropo-zoophilic and can infect pediatric or immunocompromised patients, causing severe inflammatory responses such […]
•
This review evaluates antifungal susceptibility and therapeutic options for Microsporum canis, highlighting methodological variability in testing and identifying terbinafine and itraconazole as the most reliable agents.
What was reviewed?
This review article assessed the antifungal therapy options and susceptibility profiles of Microsporum canis (M. canis), a zoophilic dermatophyte responsible for dermatophytosis in animals and humans. The paper provided an in-depth analysis of conventional antifungal treatments and in vitro susceptibility data obtained using broth microdilution (CLSI-based), E-test, and disk diffusion methods. It emphasized the lack of standardized susceptibility testing protocols for M. canis and the implications this variability has on clinical decision-making and the interpretation of minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs).
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesized findings from studies involving both human and animal M. canisinfections. It compiled clinical trial data from domestic cats, in vivo veterinary studies, and in vitro susceptibility studies of fungal isolates collected globally. The included literature encompassed dermatophyte strains tested under variable laboratory conditions, particularly those from cases of recalcitrant or treatment-resistant dermatophytosis.
Most important findings
M. canis exhibits substantial variability in antifungal susceptibility depending on the methodology employed for testing, which significantly influences therapeutic outcomes and drug efficacy interpretation. Terbinafine (TER) and itraconazole (ITZ) consistently demonstrated superior in vivo and in vitro efficacy when compared to fluconazole (FLZ) and griseofulvin (GRI), with TER and ITZ associated with faster healing times and lower minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs). However, treatment failures have been reported in 25–40% of patients, frequently attributed to factors such as variability in MIC results, suboptimal drug penetration into infected tissues, poor patient compliance, and the emergence of antifungal resistance.
Notably, methodological disparities across susceptibility assays—including broth microdilution, E-test, and disk diffusion—have been shown to introduce significant variability. Key parameters such as inoculum size (ranging from 10³ to 10⁶ CFU/mL), culture medium (e.g., PDA versus RPMI), incubation temperature and duration, and endpoint criteria (e.g., MIC-50, MIC-80, or MIC-0) critically affect the resulting MIC values, thereby complicating cross-study comparisons and hindering the development of standardized clinical breakpoints.
Antifungal Agent
In Vitro Activity Consistency
Notable Findings
Terbinafine (TER)
High
Most effective in in vivo feline models and showed high inhibition zones (DD method). A TER-resistant strain has been reported.
Itraconazole (ITZ)
High
Quick healing and low MICs across methods; preferred over GRI.
Fluconazole (FLZ)
Low
Consistently poor activity, with high MICs and poor zone inhibition across all methods.
Griseofulvin (GRI)
Moderate to Low
Inferior to ITZ and TER in both speed and consistency; associated with therapeutic failure.
Voriconazole (VOR)
Limited Data
Promising based on DD zone inhibition but underexplored.
Key implications
The absence of a standardized, validated antifungal susceptibility method for M. canis undermines accurate resistance profiling and therapy optimization. The variability in MICs depending on technical parameters highlights the urgent need for harmonized protocols, particularly for dermatophyte infections. Moreover, the low efficacy of FLZ and emerging resistance to TER suggest a potential therapeutic shift toward ITZ as a first-line systemic antifungal. Given the zoonotic potential of M. canis and increasing recalcitrance, routine susceptibility testing using standardized CLSI protocols should be adopted in both clinical and veterinary settings to ensure appropriate antifungal stewardship and reduce transmission risks.
Genetic Clustering and Virulence Insights in Microsporum canis: Clinical Isolates from US Cats
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
•
Microsporum canis (M. canis)
Microsporum canis (M. canis)
OverviewMicrosporum canis (M. canis) is a zoophilic dermatophyte common in cats and dogs, responsible for 90% of feline dermatophytoses worldwide.[1][2] It has significant zoonotic potential, transmitting to humans through fomites or direct animal contact, causing severe superficial mycosis. M. canis is considered anthropo-zoophilic and can infect pediatric or immunocompromised patients, causing severe inflammatory responses such […]
•
This US-based study reveals that M. canis genotype correlates with disease severity in cats, identifies three genetic clusters, and confirms the dominance of the MAT1-1 mating type. Conserved virulence genes (SSU1, SUB3) offer potential diagnostic utility.
What was studied?
This study investigated the genetic diversity of Microsporum canis, a dermatophytic fungus that commonly infects cats and is transmissible to humans. Researchers collected 191 fungal isolates from domestic cats across seven US clinics to analyze genotypic variation using eight microsatellite loci, internal transcribed spacer (ITS) sequences, and the mating type (MAT) locus. In addition, the study explored genetic variation in two putative virulence genes: SSU1 and SUB3, which are associated with keratin digestion and adherence.
Who was studied?
A total of 258 hair samples were collected from domestic cats suspected of dermatophytosis, with 191 confirmedM. canis isolates included in the study. The cohort predominantly consisted of kittens (96.8%) from shelter populations (97.4%), most of which were stray, intact domestic shorthairs presenting with alopecic lesions on the head and limbs. Clinical severity was classified based on lesion count, size, and distribution, and was used to correlate with genetic findings.
Most important findings
The study identified substantial genetic variation across the M. canis isolates, observing 122 unique multilocus genotypes from 180 successfully genotyped samples. Notably, three distinct genetic clusters were detected using STRUCTURE and principal component analysis. Clinic location and disease severity were statistically significant predictors of microsatellite variation (p=0.001 and p=0.004, respectively). All isolates were identified as MAT1-1 mating type, supporting prior hypotheses that M. canis populations in the US have largely transitioned to asexual reproduction. No sequence polymorphisms were detected in SSU1 and SUB3, suggesting these genes are highly conserved, likely due to essential roles in virulence.
Key implications
This is the first large-scale genotypic analysis of M. canis in the US and provides foundational evidence that fungal genotype is associated with clinical disease severity. The discovery that all isolates were MAT1-1 indicates a shift toward asexual propagation, which may reduce genetic recombination but stabilize virulent traits within a host population. Identifying conserved virulence genes like SSU1 and SUB3 across diverse isolates supports their potential utility as diagnostic or therapeutic targets. Importantly, the correlation between genotype and clinical presentation, though not definitively causal, suggests that genotyping could eventually inform clinical management strategies, including prognosis and treatment intensity. This work supports the value of expanding to whole-genome sequencing for more granular pathogenicity markers and epidemiological tracking.
Bee Venom as a Novel Antifungal Agent Against Microsporum canis
February 12, 2026
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Microsporum canis (M. canis)
Microsporum canis (M. canis)
OverviewMicrosporum canis (M. canis) is a zoophilic dermatophyte common in cats and dogs, responsible for 90% of feline dermatophytoses worldwide.[1][2] It has significant zoonotic potential, transmitting to humans through fomites or direct animal contact, causing severe superficial mycosis. M. canis is considered anthropo-zoophilic and can infect pediatric or immunocompromised patients, causing severe inflammatory responses such […]
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Bee venom showed partial antifungal activity against resistant M. canis isolates, supporting its evaluation as a potential topical therapeutic. While not as potent as terbinafine, BV outperformed fluconazole and amphotericin B in susceptible isolates, highlighting its promise amid rising antifungal resistance.
What was studied?
This original research study evaluated the antifungal efficacy of bee venom (BV) against Microsporum canis (M. canis), a dermatophyte responsible for the majority of feline dermatophytoses and a zoonotic agent affecting humans. Due to rising antifungal resistance, especially against fluconazole and amphotericin B, and the side effects associated with drugs like terbinafine, the researchers explored BV as a natural antimicrobial alternative. The study employed a modified macrodilution method (based on EUCAST protocols) to assess the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) and minimum fungicidal concentration (MFC) of BV compared to standard antifungal agents.
Who was studied?
Seventeen clinical samples were collected from domestic cats with suspected dermatophytosis, yielding six isolates of M. canis (Mc1–Mc6). These isolates were cultured, identified via macroscopic and microscopic criteria, and subjected to antifungal susceptibility testing. The study focused on testing both pharmaceutical antifungals (fluconazole, itraconazole, amphotericin B, and terbinafine) and bee venom on these isolates under controlled laboratory conditions.
Most important findings
All M. canis isolates were resistant to fluconazole and amphotericin B. Only one isolate (Mc2) was susceptible to itraconazole (MIC and MFC of 8 µg/mL). Terbinafine demonstrated potent activity against all isolates (MIC and MFC = 0.1 µg/mL). Bee venom exhibited partial antifungal activity, with MIC/MFC values of 320 µg/mL for Mc2 and 640 µg/mL for Mc6, while other isolates were resistant. The antifungal potency of BV was lower than that of terbinafine but superior to fluconazole and amphotericin B for the few susceptible isolates.
Agent
Sensitive Isolates
MIC (µg/mL)
MFC (µg/mL)
Terbinafine
All (Mc1–Mc6)
0.1
0.1
Fluconazole
None
-
-
Amphotericin B
None
-
-
Itraconazole
Mc2 only
8
8
Bee venom
Mc2, Mc6
320, 640
320, 640
Key implications
The study underscores the growing resistance of M. canis to conventional antifungals, particularly fluconazole and amphotericin B. While terbinafine remains effective, the emergence of resistance elsewhere justifies exploring novel agents. BV demonstrated modest antifungal activity, supporting its future potential as a topical therapeutic, especially in cases where conventional therapies fail or are contraindicated. However, in vivo validation is necessary before clinical implementation. Moreover, while BV has promising antimicrobial and anti-inflammatory properties, its toxicity, optimal dosing, and delivery routes remain critical challenges to address before therapeutic translation.
Synergistic Nanoparticle–Essential Oil Combinations Show Promising Antifungal Activity
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
•
Microsporum canis (M. canis)
Microsporum canis (M. canis)
OverviewMicrosporum canis (M. canis) is a zoophilic dermatophyte common in cats and dogs, responsible for 90% of feline dermatophytoses worldwide.[1][2] It has significant zoonotic potential, transmitting to humans through fomites or direct animal contact, causing severe superficial mycosis. M. canis is considered anthropo-zoophilic and can infect pediatric or immunocompromised patients, causing severe inflammatory responses such […]
•
Ag₀.₉₉Fe₁.₀₁O₃ nanoparticles, especially when combined with cinnamon, clove, or lemongrass essential oils, exhibited strong synergistic antifungal effects against multiple dermatophytes, offering a promising strategy against antifungal resistance.
What was studied?
This study evaluated the antidermatophytic activity of eight novel metallic nanoparticle (NP) compounds, both as individual agents and in synergistic combinations with essential oils (EOs), against five dermatophyte species. The nanoparticles—Ag₀.₄₉Cr₂.₅₁O₄, Ag₀.₉₉Fe₁.₀₁O₃, CoLa₀.₀₁₉Fe₁.₉₈₁O₄, Co₀.₉₉Fe₁.₉₉O₄, Ag₀.₉₉Cr₁.₀₁O₂, Ca₀.₉₉Fe₁.₉₉O₄, CoBi₀.₀₁₉Fe₁.₉₈₁O₄, and Cu₀.₉₉Fe₁.₉₉O₄—were synthesized via flash auto-combustion. The antifungal efficacy was further assessed by combining the four active nanoparticle compounds with five essential oils (cinnamon, clove, lemongrass, tea tree, and thyme), aiming to identify synergistic interactions capable of overcoming rising antifungal resistance in dermatophytes.
Who was studied?
The dermatophytic species evaluated in vitro included Microsporum canis, Trichophyton tonsurans, T. violaceum, T. verrucosum, and Epidermophyton floccosum, all of which were sourced from the Dermatology Department at Cairo University. Morphological and microscopic identification methods confirmed the species. The study utilized standard antifungal susceptibility assays (Kirby-Bauer disc diffusion, MIC determination via broth microdilution, and FICI analysis) to assess inhibitory efficacy.
Most important findings
Among the eight synthesized NP compounds, only four—Ag₀.₄₉Cr₂.₅₁O₄, Ag₀.₉₉Fe₁.₀₁O₃, CoLa₀.₀₁₉Fe₁.₉₈₁O₄, and Co₀.₉₉Fe₁.₉₉O₄—exhibited measurable antidermatophytic activity. Ag₀.₉₉Fe₁.₀₁O₃ demonstrated the strongest activity, particularly against M. canis, showing a 19 mm inhibition zone and a 211% relative activity compared to terbinafine. The combination of Ag₀.₉₉Fe₁.₀₁O₃ with cinnamon yielded the most potent synergy, resulting in a 47 mm inhibition zone and a fractional inhibitory concentration index (FICI) ≤ 0.5 across all species tested. The lowest MIC values were observed for Ag₀.₉₉Fe₁.₀₁O₃ with cinnamon (6.25 µg/mL / 2 µL/mL), confirming strong synergy. Several other combinations involving Ag₀.₉₉Fe₁.₀₁O₃ (with clove and lemongrass) also showed synergistic effects. In contrast, combinations with thyme and tea tree oils often showed antagonistic or indifferent effects.
Synergistic combinations with FICI ≤ 0.5 (synergistic effect):
Combination
M. canis
T. tonsurans
T. violaceum
T. verrucosum
E. floccosum
Ag₀.₉₉Fe₁.₀₁O₃ + Cinnamon
0.375
0.5
0.375
0.3125
0.375
Ag₀.₉₉Fe₁.₀₁O₃ + Clove
0.25
0.375
0.375
0.5
0.5
Ag₀.₉₉Fe₁.₀₁O₃ + Lemongrass
0.375
0.5
0.5
0.375
0.375
Combinations involving other NPs and EOs largely yielded indifferent or antagonistic interactions.
Key implications
The study provides compelling evidence for the synergistic antifungal potential of metallic nanoparticles, particularly Ag₀.₉₉Fe₁.₀₁O₃, when combined with specific essential oils such as cinnamon, clove, and lemongrass. These combinations not only surpassed the antifungal efficacy of standard treatments like terbinafine but also demonstrated lower minimum inhibitory concentrations and favorable FICI values. This indicates a promising alternative strategy to combat the rising issue of antifungal resistance in dermatophytes, especially M. canis, which is increasingly resistant to first-line antifungals. However, the study emphasizes the need for further toxicological and mechanistic investigations before clinical translation.
Berberine and Palmatine Show Superior Antifungal Activity Against Microsporum canis
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
•
Microsporum canis (M. canis)
Microsporum canis (M. canis)
OverviewMicrosporum canis (M. canis) is a zoophilic dermatophyte common in cats and dogs, responsible for 90% of feline dermatophytoses worldwide.[1][2] It has significant zoonotic potential, transmitting to humans through fomites or direct animal contact, causing severe superficial mycosis. M. canis is considered anthropo-zoophilic and can infect pediatric or immunocompromised patients, causing severe inflammatory responses such […]
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This study found that berberine and palmatine hydrochloride synergistically inhibit M. canis by disrupting cell structure and modulating virulence-related genes. The combination outperformed clotrimazole in vivo, showing strong potential for treating dermatophytosis.
What was studied?
This study investigated the antifungal efficacy and underlying mechanism of berberine hydrochloride and palmatine hydrochloride—two alkaloids derived from Phellodendron amurense—against Microsporum canis, a dermatophyte responsible for zoonotic skin infections. The researchers performed both in vitro and in vivo experiments to assess antifungal activity, determine minimal inhibitory concentrations (MICs), and evaluate morphological changes using transmission electron microscopy (TEM). Gene expression analysis of eight M. canis-related genes (including PGAL4, FSH1, NADH1, PQ-LRP, NDR, SC, and ZTZ) was conducted via real-time PCR. An in vivo rabbit dermatitis model was used to evaluate clinical efficacy, histological fungal burden, and NADH enzyme activity.
Who was studied?
The study involved M. canis strains isolated from rabbits and a total of 50 male New Zealand rabbits, each aged 31 days and weighing 400–450 grams. The rabbits were divided into five treatment groups receiving topical applications of berberine, palmatine, their combination, clotrimazole, or DMSO as control.
Most important findings
The combination of berberine and palmatine (B-P) exhibited superior antifungal effects compared to individual compounds or clotrimazole. Notably, palmatine acted earlier in gene upregulation, while berberine sustained antifungal activity longer, indicating a synergistic mechanism. Clotrimazole, while potent in MIC assays, performed less effectively in vivo, likely due to cyclophosphamide-induced immunosuppression interfering with its bioactivity. Key findings include:
B-P group had lower lesion scores than single agents or clotrimazole at days 9–17 (pages 7 & 13)
Histology
PAS staining showed fewer fungal elements in B-P treated skin compared to all other groups (page 13)
Key implications
This study highlights a promising plant-derived therapeutic strategy for treating dermatophytosis caused by M. canis. The berberine-palmatine combination not only disrupted fungal cell membranes but also modulated the expression of genes associated with virulence and metabolism, suggesting a dual mechanism of action. From a microbiome perspective, this study underscores the value of targeting microbial metabolic and transport pathways (e.g., NADH1, ZTZ) and supports the clinical utility of natural antifungals as adjuncts or alternatives to synthetic agents like azoles. Given the rising resistance to conventional antifungals and the zoonotic risk posed by M. canis, this research offers a translational path for developing novel, microbiome-compatible antifungal therapies in both veterinary and human medicine.
Antifungal Activity of Compound 2d Against Dermatophytes via Ergosterol Pathway Disruption
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
•
Microsporum canis (M. canis)
Microsporum canis (M. canis)
OverviewMicrosporum canis (M. canis) is a zoophilic dermatophyte common in cats and dogs, responsible for 90% of feline dermatophytoses worldwide.[1][2] It has significant zoonotic potential, transmitting to humans through fomites or direct animal contact, causing severe superficial mycosis. M. canis is considered anthropo-zoophilic and can infect pediatric or immunocompromised patients, causing severe inflammatory responses such […]
•
This study identified compound 2d as a potent antifungal agent against dermatophytes, demonstrating efficacy via ergosterol pathway suppression, cell wall disruption, and oxidative stress induction. It was non-toxic to mammalian cells, making it a strong candidate for further antifungal drug development.
What was studied?
This study evaluated the antifungal properties of potassium salts of N-acylhydrazinecarbodithioates (1a–e) and their aminotriazole-thione derivatives (2a–e) against keratinolytic fungi, including several dermatophytes. Given the rising resistance and toxicity concerns associated with conventional antifungals like terbinafine and azoles, the authors aimed to identify novel, less toxic alternatives with effective antidermatophytic activity. The compound 2d (5-amino-4-(naphthalene-1-yl)-2,4-dihydro-3H-1,2,4-triazole-3-thione) emerged as the most promising, showing activity against all tested fungal strains. Functional analyses using SEM, TEM, and RNA-seq were employed to explore its mechanism of action, including its impact on fungal morphology, transcriptomic profiles, and potential targets like ergosterol biosynthesis.
Who was studied?
The study used a panel of 14 keratinolytic fungal strains, including clinical and reference isolates of Trichophyton rubrum, T. interdigitale, T. tonsurans, T. granulosum, Microsporum canis, and Chrysosporium keratinophilum. Cytotoxicity was assessed using murine fibroblast (L929) and human epithelial (HeLa) cell lines, while transcriptomic effects were analyzed in T. rubrum CBS 120358. Control comparisons included antifungal agents amphotericin B and ketoconazole.
Most important findings
Compound 2d demonstrated broad-spectrum antifungal activity, with MIC values ranging from 32–128 mg/L against all tested strains. SEM and TEM showed that 2d inhibits mycelial growth and causes ultrastructural disruption in T. rubrum. RNA-seq analysis revealed 3,461 differentially expressed genes after 24 hours of 2d exposure, with downregulation of key genes in the ergosterol biosynthesis pathway (ERG3, ERG4, ERG6, ERG11, ERG25, ERG28), suggesting interference with membrane integrity. Additionally, oxidative stress-related genes (e.g., glutathione S-transferases, superoxide dismutases) were upregulated, indicating that 2d may induce ROS-mediated stress. Transmembrane transporter and cell wall-associated genes, including those encoding ABC and MFS efflux pumps and GPI-anchored proteins, were differentially regulated, suggesting disrupted detoxification and adherence processes.
Key implications
The findings position compound 2d as a promising antidermatophytic candidate with dual antifungal and low cytotoxicity profiles. Unlike traditional azoles, which often provoke compensatory ERG gene upregulation, 2d represses key ergosterol pathway genes, suggesting a distinct mechanism of action. Its ability to downregulate hydrophobin and GPI-anchor protein genes may enhance immune visibility of dermatophytes and impair host adherence. These properties, along with minimal mammalian toxicity and lack of broad-spectrum antibacterial activity, make 2d an ideal candidate for topical antifungal development. The study also illustrates how integrative RNA-seq analysis can elucidate the multifactorial responses of fungi to novel agents, aiding the identification of molecular targets for drug design.
A comparative study of the gut microbiota in immune-mediated inflammatory diseases-does a common dysbiosis exist?
February 12, 2026
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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Multiple Sclerosis (MS)
Multiple Sclerosis (MS)
OverviewIn the past decade, research has shown that the enormous community of microbes that live in the gut, known as the gut microbiota, are closely linked to human health and disease. This relationship is primarily due to the gut microbiota’s impact on systemic immune responses. There is growing evidence that these impacts on immune function are […]
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This study reveals that gut microbiota dysbiosis in immune-mediated inflammatory diseases includes shared enrichment of pro-inflammatory taxa like Streptococcus and Eggerthella, alongside depletion of beneficial genera such as Roseburia. These patterns support a common microbial signature across IMIDs and highlight potential targets for diagnosis and therapeutic intervention.
What was studied?
This study examined whether a common gut microbiota dysbiosis exists across multiple immune-mediated inflammatory diseases (IMIDs), specifically Crohn’s disease (CD), ulcerative colitis (UC), multiple sclerosis (MS), and rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Researchers employed 16S rRNA gene sequencing of stool samples and machine learning techniques to identify both disease-specific and shared microbial signatures. This pilot investigation also explored the potential of taxonomic features to classify disease states using random forest classifiers.
Who was studied?
The study included 99 participants: 20 with CD, 19 with UC, 19 with MS, 21 with RA, and 23 healthy controls (HC). Patients were recruited from clinical centers in Winnipeg, Canada, and met disease-specific diagnostic criteria. Inclusion criteria mandated age above 18 and no antibiotic use in the preceding 8 weeks. Biological replicates were collected approximately two months apart to assess microbial stability over time.
What were the most important findings?
The study identified a shared gut microbiota dysbiosis signature across IMIDs, marked by reduced diversity and distinct taxonomic shifts compared to healthy controls. Alpha diversity was significantly lower in IMID groups, especially in CD. Key genera enriched across all disease groups included Actinomyces, Eggerthella, Clostridium III, Faecalicoccus, and Streptococcus—potential Major Microbial Associations (MMAs) due to their pro-inflammatory profiles and consistent presence in IMID cohorts. In contrast, Gemmiger, Lachnospira, and Roseburia were significantly depleted in IMIDs and are known to produce anti-inflammatory metabolites like butyrate. Machine learning classifiers distinguished disease from HC with high accuracy (AUC up to 0.95 for CD), confirming the reliability of these microbial features as diagnostic indicators. Disease-specific signatures were also detected: Bifidobacterium was elevated in UC, Intestinibacter in CD, and unclassified Erysipelotrichaceae in MS.
Actinomyces, Eggerthella, Clostridium III, Faecalicoccus, Streptococcus
Shared Microbial Decreases
Gemmiger, Lachnospira, Roseburia
Disease-Specific Associations
Intestinibacter (CD), Bifidobacterium (UC), Erysipelotrichaceae (MS), Roseburia (↓ in RA)
Microbiome Metrics
Alpha diversity lowest in CD, highest in healthy controls; compositional shifts significant
Clinical Implications
Supports development of microbiome-targeted diagnostics and interventions
Diagnostic Performance
AUCs: CD vs HC = 0.95; classification robust for all IMIDs using Gram-positive taxa
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study provides compelling evidence for a partially conserved gut microbiota dysbiosis pattern in IMIDs, despite their diverse clinical presentations. The findings suggest that microbial taxa such as Streptococcus and Eggerthella may contribute to shared pathogenic mechanisms via modulation of host immunity, while depletion of butyrate-producing genera like Roseburia may reflect a breakdown in mucosal tolerance. These MMAs highlight targets for microbiome-modulating interventions and support their integration into risk stratification and personalized treatment strategies. Furthermore, the study underscores the diagnostic potential of microbiota-based machine learning tools, offering a route to non-invasive, microbiome-informed screening across inflammatory conditions.
Ni(II) Cd(II) mixed ligand complexes as dual antimicrobial and anti inflammatory agents
February 12, 2026
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Dimethylglyoxime (DMG)
Dimethylglyoxime (DMG)
Dimethylglyoxime represents a novel therapeutic paradigm that exploits a fundamental metabolic difference between pathogenic bacteria and their mammalian hosts. By selectively depleting bacterial access to nickel, a cofactor essential for multiple pathogenic enzymes but unnecessary for human physiology, DMG offers a theoretically host-sparing antimicrobial approach.
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Nickel
Nickel
Bacteria regulate transition metal levels through complex mechanisms to ensure survival and adaptability, influencing both their physiology and the development of antimicrobial strategies.
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Cadmium (Cd)
Cadmium (Cd)
Cadmium (Cd) is a highly toxic heavy metal commonly found in industrial, agricultural, and environmental settings. Exposure to cadmium can occur through contaminated water, food, soil, and air, and it has been linked to a variety of health issues, including kidney damage, osteoporosis, and cancer. In agriculture, cadmium is often present in phosphate fertilizers and can accumulate in plants, entering the food chain. Its toxicity to living organisms makes cadmium a subject of regulatory concern worldwide, particularly in industrial waste disposal and environmental monitoring.
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Ni(II) Cd(II) mixed ligand complexes showed broad in vitro antimicrobial activity against key bacterial and fungal pathogens and moderate anti-inflammatory effects via albumin denaturation inhibition, supporting metal chelation as a tunable strategy for targeting dysbiosis associated pathobionts while highlighting significant toxicity related translational constraints.
What was studied?
Ni(II) Cd(II) mixed ligand complexes were synthesized and characterized to evaluate their in vitro antimicrobial and anti-inflammatory activities. The authors prepared mixed ligand complexes of Ni(II) and Cd(II) using 2,4-dinitrophenylhydrazine (DNPH) and dimethylglyoxime (DMG) in a 1:1:1 metal to ligand ratio, then performed comprehensive physicochemical characterization and biological testing. Elemental CHNO analysis, molar conductance, UV–visible spectroscopy, FTIR, powder X ray diffraction, thermal analysis, magnetic measurements, and SEM imaging were used to confirm complex formation, non-electrolytic behavior, octahedral geometry, nanocrystalline structure, and thermal stability. The central aim was to determine whether these Ni(II) Cd(II) mixed ligand complexes, which incorporate nitrogen and oxygen donor atoms and the classic nickel chelator DMG, exhibit meaningful antibacterial, antifungal, and anti-inflammatory effects that could justify further exploration as bioactive coordination compounds.
Who was studied?
No human or animal subjects were included. Instead, the study employed reference microbial strains and an in vitro protein denaturation system as experimental models. Antimicrobial activity was assessed against Gram positive bacteria Bacillus subtilis and Staphylococcus aureus, Gram negative bacteria Escherichia coli and Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and the fungal species Aspergillus niger and Candida albicans, all obtained from MTCC culture collections. These taxa include clinically relevant pathobionts commonly implicated in soft tissue, device-associated, and mucosal infections that intersect with microbiome research. Anti-inflammatory activity was modeled using egg albumin (bovine serum albumin analogue) denaturation in phosphate-buffered saline, with diclofenac sodium as the reference nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug. Thus, the biological data reflect direct effects on key bacterial and fungal taxa plus a generic protein denaturation model rather than host tissue or in vivo outcomes.
Most important findings
Structurally, both Ni(II) and Cd(II) complexes behaved as non-electrolytes in DMF with low molar conductance, showed IR shifts consistent with coordination through DNPH and DMG donor atoms, and exhibited electronic spectra and magnetic moments consistent with octahedral geometry. PXRD patterns demonstrated crystalline materials with nanoscale crystallite sizes of approximately 56.7 nm for Ni(II) and 69.3 nm for Cd(II), and thermogravimetric analyses showed multistep decomposition, confirming reasonable thermal stability suitable for further formulation work.
Biologically, both complexes demonstrated measurable antimicrobial activity that increased with concentration. At 30 and 60 μg/ml, the Ni(II) complex showed particularly good activity against B. subtilis and E. coli, with inhibition zones of 15 and 17 mm for B. subtilis and 11 and 19 mm for E. coli, relative to chloramphenicol standards. In contrast, the Cd(II) complex was more potent against P. aeruginosa and especially C. albicans at 60 μg/ml, where inhibition of C. albicans reached 18 mm compared with very weak action of the Ni(II) complex against this yeast. Activity against A. niger was modest for both complexes. This pattern indicates that complexation to DNPH and DMG alters metal bioavailability and broadens activity across a clinically relevant spectrum that spans Gram positive and Gram negative bacteria and opportunistic fungi.
From a microbiome signatures perspective, the inclusion of E. coli, P. aeruginosa, S. aureus, B. subtilis, and C. albicans is notable, since these taxa frequently emerge as major microbial associations in dysbiotic mucosal and device related infections and are of interest when designing microbiome targeted interventions or co therapies. The differential sensitivity of C. albicans to the Cd(II) complex in particular suggests that mixed ligand metal chelates could in principle be tuned to selectively suppress fungal pathobionts such as Candida while exerting varying pressure on bacterial community members.
For anti-inflammatory effects, both Ni(II) and Cd(II) complexes inhibited egg albumin denaturation in a concentration dependent fashion. At 500 μg/ml, the Ni(II) complex achieved 84.56 percent inhibition, the Cd(II) complex 79.55 percent, and diclofenac sodium 96.05 percent. Calculated IC50 values were 230.75 μg/ml for diclofenac, 257.31 μg/ml for the Ni(II) complex, and 270.83 μg/ml for the Cd(II) complex, indicating that while less potent than the reference NSAID, the complexes display meaningful anti-denaturation activity. The authors attribute the bioactivity partly to chelation effects, where coordination reduces metal ion polarity and increases lipophilicity, facilitating penetration into microbial cells and interaction with protein targets.
Key implications
For clinicians and microbiome researchers, these findings position Ni(II) Cd(II) mixed ligand complexes as proof of concept scaffolds rather than ready translational candidates. The complexes show that combining DNPH and the classical nickel chelator dimethylglyoxime around a transition metal center can yield thermally stable, nanocrystalline coordination compounds with broad antimicrobial spectra against several clinically relevant taxa, including E. coli, P. aeruginosa, S. aureus, B. subtilis, and C. albicans, while also delivering moderate anti-inflammatory effects via inhibition of protein denaturation.
However, systemic use of Ni and particularly Cd raises substantial toxicity and metallotoxicity concerns, limiting realistic applications to highly localized or surface bound contexts such as coatings, dressings, or device surfaces. From a microbiome signatures standpoint, the work supports the broader concept that metal coordination chemistry and chelation can be leveraged to modulate pathobionts that are strongly represented in dysbiotic states, potentially informing the design of safer metal based or metal chelator based agents that target C. albicans and other MMAs without introducing toxic metals into the host environment. Future work should focus on metal substitution to less toxic centers, evaluation in biofilm models that better replicate microbiome architecture, and an explicit assessment of collateral effects on beneficial commensals before any clinical application is considered.
Nickel chelator dimethylglyoxime inhibits amyloid beta aggregation in vitro and targets nickel-driven Alzheimer’s mechanisms
February 12, 2026
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Alzheimer’s Dementia
Alzheimer’s Dementia
OverviewAlzheimer’s disease (AD) is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder characterized by amyloid-beta (Aβ) plaques, neurofibrillary tangles, neuroinflammation, and metabolic dysfunction, ultimately leading to cognitive decline and dementia. Emerging research highlights the microbiota-gut-brain axis as a crucial factor in AD pathogenesis, with gut dysbiosis contributing to neuroinflammation, immune dysregulation, and blood-brain barrier permeability. Microbial metabolites, such as […]
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Dimethylglyoxime (DMG)
Dimethylglyoxime (DMG)
Dimethylglyoxime represents a novel therapeutic paradigm that exploits a fundamental metabolic difference between pathogenic bacteria and their mammalian hosts. By selectively depleting bacterial access to nickel, a cofactor essential for multiple pathogenic enzymes but unnecessary for human physiology, DMG offers a theoretically host-sparing antimicrobial approach.
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Nickel
Nickel
Bacteria regulate transition metal levels through complex mechanisms to ensure survival and adaptability, influencing both their physiology and the development of antimicrobial strategies.
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This study shows that nickel strongly enhances Aβ40 aggregation, while the nickel chelator dimethylglyoxime inhibits amyloid beta aggregation by sequestering nickel in vitro. It also links nickel to both metal-driven and infection-related Alzheimer’s mechanisms, positioning nickel chelation at the intersection of these pathogenic pathways.
What was studied?
In this experimental study, the authors investigated how the nickel chelator dimethylglyoxime inhibits amyloid beta aggregation, focusing specifically on the recombinant human Aβ40 peptide and its interaction with transition metals, particularly nickel. Using inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS), thioflavin T (ThT) aggregation assays, isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC), and high-resolution mass spectrometry, they quantified the metal content of a commercial recombinant Aβ40 preparation, characterized the impact of Cu²⁺, Zn²⁺, and Ni²⁺ on in vitro aggregation kinetics, and tested whether the nickel chelator dimethylglyoxime (DMG) inhibits amyloid beta aggregation under different metal and pH conditions. They further evaluated whether dimethylglyoxime forms stable complexes with various metals and explored the capacity of orally administered dimethylglyoxime to reach the brain in a murine model, situating these findings within the broader “metal hypothesis” and “infection hypothesis” of Alzheimer’s disease.
Who was studied?
This is an in vitro biochemical and biophysical study using commercially available recombinant human Aβ40 peptide expressed in Escherichia coli, not a clinical or animal efficacy trial. The peptide preparation was analyzed for multi-element metal content and then subjected to aggregation and binding assays in buffered solutions. For the pharmacokinetic aspect, C57BL mice received repeated oral doses of dimethylglyoxime, after which brain tissue was harvested to detect dimethylglyoxime or dimethylglyoxime–metal complexes by FTICR-MS and NMR, although this arm was limited to detection rather than evaluation of behavioral or neuropathological outcomes. No human subjects or clinical Alzheimer’s disease populations were included; the work is best interpreted as mechanistic preclinical data that inform future translational strategies for metal-targeted interventions in Alzheimer’s disease.
Most important findings
ICP-MS of the recombinant Aβ40 peptide revealed substantial metal contamination intrinsic to the preparation, with selenium and nickel being most abundant and appreciable levels of aluminum, copper, manganese, zinc, barium, and strontium also detected, whereas iron was below detection limits. The table on page 3 (Table 1) quantifies a metal: peptide ratio of approximately 0.073 mol Ni per mol Aβ40, indicating that the peptide is already nickel-bound before any experimental supplementation. Functionally, ThT aggregation assays showed that exogenous Ni²⁺ significantly accelerated Aβ40 aggregation in a concentration-dependent manner, with a 2.5-fold increase in aggregation rate at 10 µM Ni²⁺ and 5.7-fold at 100 µM compared with metal-free control, while Zn²⁺ produced even larger enhancements and Cu²⁺ had minimal effect at neutral pH. pH modulation demonstrated that Ni-induced aggregation was facilitated under mildly acidic conditions (pH 6.5) and abolished at alkaline pH 8.5, reinforcing pH-sensitive nickel–peptide interactions. ITC confirmed direct nickel binding to Aβ40 with an apparent Kd of ~4.2 µM and a stoichiometry of ~0.7 Ni per peptide, and thermodynamic parameters (ΔH −5 kJ/mol, positive ΔS) consistent with an exothermic, spontaneous binding reaction.
Dimethylglyoxime robustly inhibited Aβ40 aggregation when added to metal-containing peptide preparations. In the absence of added metal, 100 µM dimethylglyoxime reduced aggregation by 40–85 %, and 500–1000 µM essentially abolished ThT signal, implying that chelation of intrinsic metals within the recombinant peptide (notably Ni²⁺) is sufficient to block β-sheet–rich fibril formation. In the presence of 100 µM Ni²⁺, dimethylglyoxime produced complete inhibition of aggregation at higher chelator concentrations, whereas inhibition in the presence of Cu²⁺ was partial and Zn²⁺-driven aggregation remained only partially suppressible even at 1 mM dimethylglyoxime, mirroring its weaker coordination with zinc. FTICR-MS confirmed stable [DMG]₂–Ni and [DMG]₂–Cu complexes and an absence of similar complexes with Fe, Zn, or Se, explaining the metal-selective chelation pattern. The schematic model on page 8 (Figure 4) integrates these findings into a dual mechanism in which nickel contributes to Alzheimer’s disease both by directly enhancing Aβ aggregation and by supporting nickel-dependent bacterial enzymes in pathogens implicated in Alzheimer’s pathology; dimethylglyoxime occupies an intersection point by depleting nickel for both Aβ and microbial systems. Attempts to detect dimethylglyoxime or its complexes in mouse brain after repeated oral dosing were unsuccessful, suggesting poor blood-brain barrier penetration or rapid metabolism under the tested conditions.
Key implications
The study provides strong mechanistic support for considering nickel as an under-recognized contributor to Aβ40 aggregation and, by extension, to the metal-driven component of Alzheimer’s disease pathogenesis. For clinicians and translational researchers, the data highlight that not all metal chelation strategies are equivalent: a nickel-selective agent such as dimethylglyoxime can inhibit amyloid aggregation driven by nickel while sparing essential metal pools for zinc and iron, at least at the level of direct coordination chemistry.
From a microbiome and microbial metallomics perspective, the work is particularly relevant because many candidate Alzheimer’s-associated pathogens, including Helicobacter pylori, Escherichia coli, and Salmonella Typhimurium, rely on nickel-dependent enzymes such as urease and NiFe hydrogenases; systemic nickel chelation might therefore modulate both host amyloidogenic processes and the viability or virulence of nickel-requiring pathobionts that could participate in brain infection or peripheral immune priming. In the microbiome signatures framework, these nickel-dependent taxa could be considered major microbial associations in an Alzheimer’s disease metallomic-microbiomic axis. However, the inability to demonstrate brain penetration of orally administered dimethylglyoxime underscores a key translational barrier: any clinical strategy based on nickel chelation will require optimization of pharmacokinetics, delivery route, and tissue targeting to influence central nervous system amyloid dynamics. Overall, the findings justify further preclinical work combining nickel chelation, microbiome-targeted interventions, and in vivo Alzheimer's models.
Adverse Events Due to Suspected Nickel Hypersensitivity in Patients with Essure Micro-Inserts
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Nickel
Nickel
Bacteria regulate transition metal levels through complex mechanisms to ensure survival and adaptability, influencing both their physiology and the development of antimicrobial strategies.
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The study reviewed adverse events linked to nickel hypersensitivity in Essure implants, noting rare reactions and the role of the menstrual cycle in modulating hypersensitivity.
What was studied?
This study aimed to review adverse events associated with suspected nickel hypersensitivity in patients implanted with Essure micro-inserts, a device used for hysteroscopic sterilization. The researchers specifically sought to determine the correlation between reported symptoms and positive results of nickel patch testing, providing insights into the relevance of nickel sensitivity in clinical outcomes. The role of the menstrual cycle in modulating nickel hypersensitivity was also examined to better understand potential confounding factors.
Who was studied?
The study utilized data from adverse event reports collected between 2001 and July 2010, including 63 patients with suspected nickel hypersensitivity. These data were drawn from the MAUDE database, direct manufacturer reports, and published clinical trials involving 650 patients. Patch testing, performed at the discretion of treating physicians, was reported for 20 patients, with 13 testing positive and 7 testing negative.
What were the most important findings?
The study found that the incidence of adverse events potentially related to nickel hypersensitivity in Essure users was exceptionally low, at 0.01%. Among the 13 patients with positive nickel patch tests, symptom resolution occurred in only 4 cases after device removal, with symptoms such as rash, itching, and asthma attributed to nickel allergy. However, two cases demonstrated unresolved symptoms, and the remaining showed no definitive link to nickel hypersensitivity. For the 7 patients with negative patch tests, none of their symptoms were deemed related to the implants. Notably, nickel ion release from Essure devices was minimal, with leaching rates 2,143 times lower than daily dietary nickel intake.
The findings highlight inconsistencies between patch test results and clinical symptoms, questioning the predictive reliability of these tests for implant-related nickel hypersensitivity. The report underscores that nickel-sensitive individuals did not universally experience symptoms, and adverse reactions were rare compared to the prevalence of nickel allergy in the general population.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings suggest that nickel hypersensitivity, as determined by patch testing, is not a clinically significant contraindication for Essure device placement. Despite the presence of nickel in these implants, adverse reactions were rare, and many suspected symptoms lacked a clear link to nickel sensitivity. The study emphasizes the importance of careful evaluation before attributing symptoms to nickel hypersensitivity and suggests that device removal should be reserved for confirmed cases. The data also support the continued use of nickel-containing implants with appropriate monitoring, providing reassurance to clinicians and patients about their safety.
Nickel Allergy is Found in a Majority of Women with Chronic Fatigue Syndrome and Muscle Pain—and may be Triggered by Cigarette Smoke and Dietary Nickel Intake
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Nickel
Nickel
Bacteria regulate transition metal levels through complex mechanisms to ensure survival and adaptability, influencing both their physiology and the development of antimicrobial strategies.
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Nickel allergy, smoking, and dietary nickel intake may worsen chronic fatigue and muscle pain. Managing exposure can improve symptoms.
What was studied?
This study investigated the relationship between nickel allergy, cigarette smoking, and dietary nickel intake in women diagnosed with chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) and muscle pain. The primary aim was to evaluate the prevalence of nickel allergy in this population and explore how smoking and dietary nickel may trigger or exacerbate symptoms.
Who was studied?
The study involved 204 women aged 21 to 73 years with chronic fatigue and muscle pain, meeting the criteria for fibromyalgia and chronic fatigue syndrome but with no signs of autoimmune disorders. The participants underwent immune stimulation therapy using a Staphylococcus vaccine for six months, and their nickel allergy history, smoking habits, and treatment responses were analyzed.
What were the most important findings?
The study found that 52% of the women had a history suggestive of nickel allergy, and 28% were habitual smokers. Nickel allergy and smoking significantly influenced treatment outcomes, with non-allergic, non-smoking participants showing the highest treatment success rates (39%), compared to only 6% in allergic smokers. Additionally, two case reports highlighted the impact of dietary and smoking changes: one participant improved after quitting smoking and reducing dietary nickel intake, while another experienced sustained symptom relief by following a low-nickel diet. Notably, nickel hypersensitivity was associated with increased fatigue and muscle pain symptoms triggered by dietary nickel or cigarette smoke, both of which contain trace amounts of the metal. The findings indicate that systemic nickel allergy, potentially exacerbated by smoking or high dietary nickel, may contribute to chronic fatigue and muscle pain.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This research emphasizes the importance of recognizing nickel allergy as a potential factor in chronic fatigue syndrome and muscle pain. The interplay between nickel hypersensitivity, dietary nickel intake, and smoking could have significant clinical implications. Managing nickel exposure through dietary adjustments such as a low-nickel diet and smoking cessation may serve as a non-invasive strategy to alleviate symptoms in affected patients. Furthermore, the study underscores the need for broader awareness and diagnostic consideration of systemic nickel allergy in chronic fatigue-related conditions, particularly in women.
The influence of nickel on intestinal microbiota disturbances
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Nickel
Nickel
Bacteria regulate transition metal levels through complex mechanisms to ensure survival and adaptability, influencing both their physiology and the development of antimicrobial strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Excess nickel disrupts gut microbiota, promoting dysbiosis and contributing to conditions like obesity and systemic nickel allergy syndrome (SNAS). Probiotics and nickel-restricted diets show promise in mitigating these effects, underscoring the need for further research and clinical intervention.
What was reviewed?
The paper reviewed the influence of nickel on intestinal microbiota disturbances, drawing on 59 scientific publications from the past 20 years. The analysis focused on nickel’s dual role as an essential element for microbial enzymatic reactions and a disruptor of gut microbiota, especially under conditions of excessive exposure or systemic nickel allergy syndrome (SNAS).
Who was reviewed?
The review encompassed research involving humans, animals, and microbial models. Specific attention was given to populations exposed to high levels of nickel, individuals with SNAS, and animal studies demonstrating changes in microbial communities under nickel exposure.
What were the most important findings?
Nickel acts as a cofactor for metalloenzymes like urease, hydrogenase, and [NiFe]-hydrogenase, essential for microbial survival. However, excess nickel promotes dysbiosis, characterized by reductions in beneficial taxa and increases in nickel-resistant bacteria. In humans with SNAS, the microbiota showed decreased levels of beneficial genera such as Bifidobacterium and Lactobacillus, known for their probiotic effects and urease activity, and increases in nickel-tolerant taxa, including Clostridiaceae and Bacillaceae. Similarly, animal studies indicated reduced Verrucomicrobia and Bacteroidetes while promoting Escherichia coli and Enterococcus.
Nickel exposure also leads to an increased abundance of Bacteroides fragilis, Bacteroidales S24-7, and Interstinimonas, with a concurrent decline in Firmicutes, disrupting the Firmicutes-to-Bacteroidetes ratio, a critical marker of gut health. This imbalance contributed to systemic inflammation and altered immune responses. Moreover, nickel-reliant pathogens, such as Helicobacter pylori, which require Ni2+-dependent enzymes like urease for colonization, further highlighted nickel’s role in microbial pathogenicity. Probiotic strains such as Lactobacillus fermentum demonstrated detoxifying effects by metabolizing nickel, suggesting their therapeutic potential.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The findings reveal that nickel exposure significantly alters gut microbial ecology, driving dysbiosis and systemic inflammation in susceptible populations. The rise of nickel-tolerant taxa, coupled with the decline of protective bacteria, underscores nickel’s role as a disruptor of gut homeostasis, contributing to conditions like obesity and SNAS. Probiotic supplementation, particularly strains capable of nickel detoxification, and dietary restrictions like a low-nickel diet, have shown promise in mitigating these effects. This review highlights the urgent need for dietary nickel regulations and further clinical studies on therapeutic interventions targeting nickel-induced microbial dysbiosis.
Commensal iron acquisition and nutritional immunity during Salmonella infection
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Iron (Fe)
Iron (Fe)
OverviewIron is a pivotal nutrient at the host–pathogen interface. Virtually all microbes (with rare exceptions like Borrelia) require iron for processes from DNA synthesis to respiration. [1] In human hosts, free iron is vanishingly scarce due to “nutritional immunity,” wherein iron is locked up in hemoproteins or tightly bound by transport proteins.[2] This metal tug-of-war […]
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Nutritional Immunity
Nutritional Immunity
Nutritional immunity restricts metal access to pathogens, leveraging sequestration, transport, and toxicity to control infections and immunity.
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XusB in Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron binds enterobactin in OMVs, sustains commensal fitness, and creates a lipocalin 2 resistant iron pool that Salmonella can recapture, redefining commensal-iron-acquisition-and-nutritional-immunity during colitis.
What was studied?
This study interrogates commensal iron acquisition and nutritional immunity during Salmonella infection, focusing on how the gut commensal Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron captures xenosiderophores to sustain fitness and inadvertently modulates host defenses against pathogens. The authors identify XusB, a secreted, surface-anchored lipoprotein that binds ferric enterobactin with high affinity and is enriched in outer membrane vesicles. They combine structural biology, biochemistry, bacterial genetics, and murine infection models to show that XusB-bound enterobactin resists sequestration by host lipocalin 2, can be re-acquired by Salmonella via FepA or IroN, and thereby alters the effective pool of iron chelators available under inflammatory iron restriction. The graphical abstract on page 2 schematically depicts enterobactin crossfeeding, OMV packaging of XusB, and reduced lipocalin 2 access, framing commensal iron acquisition as a third axis in nutritional immunity beyond host and pathogen.
Who was studied?
Experiments used B. thetaiotaomicron VPI-5482 and isogenic mutants lacking xusB or harboring an enterobactin-binding deficient XusB, along with Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium strains, including wild type, entB deficient, ΔfepA iroN double mutant, and ΔiroB lacking salmochelin synthesis. Escherichia coli BW25113 mutants from the Keio collection informed receptor requirements for XusB-bound siderophore uptake. In vivo work involved antibiotic-pretreated conventional C57BL/6 mice for competitive infection and colonization studies, and gnotobiotic Swiss Webster mice to measure XusB in luminal OMV fractions without confounding microbes. Figures 4 and 7 detail competitive indices for Salmonella in mice colonized with B. thetaiotaomicron variants or administered OMVs, while supplementary analyses confirm comparable inflammation readouts across conditions.
Most important findings
XusB is a surface-exposed, OMV-enriched lipoprotein required for B. thetaiotaomicron utilization of catecholate xenosiderophores. Structural work shows XusB forms a seven-bladed beta propeller with a positively charged central calyx that accommodates Fe-enterobactin; docking and mutagenesis identify key contact residues, and binding affinity is in the low-nanomolar range near 148 nM. In vitro, OMV-associated or recombinant XusB preloaded with Fe-enterobactin fuels growth of B. thetaiotaomicron under iron chelation, elevates cellular iron by ICP-MS, and supports growth of Salmonella entB mutants and E. coli via TonB-dependent enterobactin receptors FepA and IroN. In species with distinct XusB homologs, XusB-bound siderophores can be “selfish,” restricting access to closely related Bacteroides while remaining accessible to Enterobacteriaceae.
Crucially, XusB changes the competitive landscape in the presence of host lipocalin 2. When lipocalin 2 is added with an iron chelator, XusB increases the competitive index of wild-type Salmonella over the ΔfepA iroN mutant, indicating that XusB-bound enterobactin constitutes an exploitable pool despite host sequestration of free enterobactin. In mice, XusB confers a resilience advantage to B. thetaiotaomicron during Salmonella colitis and increases Salmonella fitness when animals are colonized with XusB-positive B. thetaiotaomicron or given XusB-bearing OMVs. Page 34 visualizes the XusB architecture and calyx electrostatics, pages 39 to 41 depict in vitro and in vivo competition assays that demonstrate altered siderophore accessibility and pathogen advantage.
Key implications
For microbiome signatures, B. thetaiotaomicron emerges as a context-dependent facilitator of pathogen iron access under inflammation, linking a commensal siderophore-binding system to Salmonella expansion. B. thetaiotaomicron with XusB-mediated xenosiderophore capture and Salmonella Typhimurium with enterobactin or salmochelin utilization. Clinically, strategies that modulate iron availability or deploy siderophore-binding therapeutics must account for commensal OMV cargo that can buffer host sequestration and inadvertently aid pathogens. Targeting XusB-like systems may represent a translational lever to restore nutritional immunity without broadly disrupting commensals.
Nutritional Immunity and Metallomic Signatures: Metal Competition at the Host–Pathogen Interface
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Nutritional Immunity
Nutritional Immunity
Nutritional immunity restricts metal access to pathogens, leveraging sequestration, transport, and toxicity to control infections and immunity.
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This review details how nutritional immunity shapes host–pathogen interactions through metal sequestration and intoxication, highlights key microbial metal acquisition systems, and discusses their implications for microbiome signatures and the development of novel antimicrobial therapies.
What was reviewed?
This comprehensive review by Murdoch and Skaar provides a detailed synthesis of current knowledge on nutritional immunity and metallomic signatures—the dynamic competition for trace metals at the host–pathogen interface. The review explores how vertebrate hosts restrict metal availability to limit bacterial proliferation, while pathogens have evolved diverse acquisition and detoxification strategies to overcome these host defenses. The authors examine the molecular mechanisms underlying metal sequestration and trafficking by both host and pathogens, the tissue- and cell-specific roles of individual metals in infection, and the emerging concept that both metal starvation and intoxication are critical aspects of host defense. Particular attention is given to the molecular machinery involved in metal homeostasis, including siderophores, metallochaperones, metal transporters, and regulatory proteins. The review also highlights recent therapeutic advances that exploit bacterial metal acquisition pathways, such as siderophore–antibiotic conjugates, and discusses the translational potential of nutritional immunity research.
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesizes data from a broad range of studies encompassing both vertebrate hosts (primarily mammals, including humans and animal models) and bacterial pathogens (notably Gram-positive and Gram-negative species such as Staphylococcus aureus, Escherichia coli, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Acinetobacter baumannii, Mycobacterium tuberculosis, and Neisseria spp.). It also draws on microbiome-focused research, considering commensal and opportunistic bacteria within the gut. It addresses the impact of dietary metal availability and host genetic factors on infection risk and microbiome composition. The review encompasses both in vitro and in vivo studies, as well as translational research on therapeutic interventions targeting metal homeostasis.
Most important findings
This review highlights the pivotal role of trace metal regulation at the host–microbe interface, emphasizing how host-imposed metal sequestration, termed nutritional immunity, restricts microbial access to essential elements like iron, zinc, nickel, and manganese. In response, pathogens evolve countermeasures including siderophore production, high-affinity metal transporters, and metallochaperones to overcome these barriers. The host may also weaponize metals such as copper and zinc to exert antimicrobial pressure.
These dynamic interactions significantly influence the composition of the gut microbiome and infection susceptibility, modulated by dietary metal intake and host genetic polymorphisms. Importantly, the review outlines therapeutic innovations targeting bacterial metal acquisition systems, including siderophore-antibiotic conjugates and host-metal modulating strategies. Finally, the concept of microbial metallomics—taxon-specific metal acquisition and detoxification pathways—emerges as a powerful tool for diagnostics and precision antimicrobial targeting. The review underscores several crucial findings relevant to microbiome signatures, metallomic signatures, microbial metallomics, and clinical translation:
Key Concept
Description
Host Metal Sequestration
Vertebrate hosts utilize proteins like transferrin, lactoferrin, calprotectin, S100 proteins, metallothioneins, and haptoglobin to restrict microbial access to metals in tissues, blood, and mucosa—a process termed nutritional immunity.
Bacterial Adaptation
Pathogens counteract metal sequestration by upregulating siderophores (e.g., staphyloferrin, yersiniabactin), transporters (ZnuABC, FeoB), and metallochaperones (ZigA, YeiR); some exploit host proteins for metal “piracy.”
Metal Intoxication
Host phagocytes may deliver toxic levels of metals (e.g., Cu, Zn) into pathogen-containing compartments to promote oxidative damage and microbial death.
Microbiome and Diet
Variations in dietary metals and host genetics affecting metal metabolism alter microbiome structure and pathogen susceptibility; excess Fe/Zn and nickel (Ni) may favor pathogen overgrowth, while deficiencies impair immune defense.
Therapeutic Advances
Novel antimicrobials like cefiderocol hijack bacterial metal uptake systems; strategies targeting metal acquisition pathways or host metal-binding proteins hold promise for future infection control.
Metallomic Signatures
Pathogen-specific metal-handling systems (e.g., S. aureus Isd system, Yersinia yersiniabactin, Acinetobacter ZnuD) may serve as diagnostic biomarkers or antimicrobial targets within a precision medicine framework.
Key implications
For clinical practice, this review highlights the importance of considering metallomic signatures and metal homeostasis as determinants of infection risk, pathogen virulence, and microbiome stability. Metal acquisition and detoxification systems represent promising targets for next-generation antimicrobials, vaccines, and other microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs). Additionally, dietary supplementation or restriction of trace metals should be approached cautiously, as it can influence both beneficial microbiota and pathogen expansion. Recognizing microbial metal-handling signatures may aid in predicting infection risk, guiding therapeutic choices, or developing microbiome or metallome-based diagnostics. The integration of nutritional immunity concepts into clinical microbiology will be critical for advancing precision medicine approaches in infectious disease and microbiome management.
Correlation of calprotectin serum levels with degrees of endometriosis: A cross-sectional study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Nutritional Immunity
Nutritional Immunity
Nutritional immunity restricts metal access to pathogens, leveraging sequestration, transport, and toxicity to control infections and immunity.
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This study found no significant correlation between serum calprotectin levels and the severity of endometriosis. Despite its known role as an inflammatory biomarker, calprotectin did not differentiate between stages of disease, suggesting limited utility in clinical staging and reinforcing the need for localized biomarker assessment.
What was studied?
This cross-sectional study aimed to evaluate the correlation between serum calprotectin levels and the severity of endometriosis. The primary objective was to determine whether calprotectin could serve as a non-invasive biomarker to distinguish the different stages of endometriosis severity based on the revised American Society for Reproductive Medicine (ASRM) classification.
Who was studied?
A total of 46 women diagnosed with endometriosis undergoing laparoscopic or laparotomy procedures at three tertiary hospitals in Jakarta, Indonesia, between July 2017 and April 2018 were enrolled. Blood samples were collected one day prior to surgery, and serum calprotectin was measured using the Phical® ELISA method. Diagnosis and classification of endometriosis were confirmed via histopathological examination following surgery. Exclusion criteria included comorbidities such as diabetes, hypertension, infections, liver disease, or recent corticosteroid/immunosuppressant therapy.
Most important findings:
The distribution of endometriosis stages among participants was as follows: minimal (15.2%), mild (39.1%), moderate (34.8%), and severe (10.9%). Median serum calprotectin levels showed modest variation across groups, with the highest levels in the minimal group (138.98 ng/mL) and the lowest in the mild group (121.49 ng/mL). However, Spearman’s correlation analysis revealed no statistically significant correlation between serum calprotectin levels and the degree of endometriosis (r = –0.16; p = 0.278).
Interestingly, age and BMI showed a moderate positive correlation with endometriosis severity (r = 0.37 and 0.36, respectively; both p < 0.05), which could imply that these host factors are more predictive of disease progression than calprotectin levels.
Despite calprotectin’s recognized value as a biomarker in other chronic inflammatory conditions such as rheumatoid arthritis, obesity, and Crohn’s disease—where it reflects systemic inflammation and correlates with CRP and disease activity—the results of this study do not support its utility in endometriosis staging. The authors acknowledge that calprotectin's utility may be more pronounced in localized samples such as feces or peritoneal fluid rather than systemic circulation, where inflammation may not be as detectably elevated in endometriosis.
Implications:
This study provides evidence against the clinical utility of serum calprotectin as a non-invasive biomarker for grading endometriosis severity. While calprotectin is a well-established marker of inflammation in other systemic and localized inflammatory diseases, its lack of correlation with endometriosis stages underscores the complexity of the disease's inflammatory profile. The findings suggest that systemic markers may not adequately reflect the localized inflammatory microenvironment of endometriotic lesions. The authors recommend further research exploring calprotectin in peritoneal fluid or fecal samples, which may better capture localized inflammatory processes relevant to endometriosis pathogenesis.
Acetylcholinesterase inhibition: does it explain the toxicity of organophosphorus compounds?
February 12, 2026
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Organophosphates
Organophosphates
Organophosphates are cholinesterase-inhibiting chemicals widely used as pesticides. Beyond neurotoxicity, evidence links chronic exposure to gut microbiome changes, barrier disruption, and metabolic effects. Microbiome medicine integrates exposure biomarkers and microbiome signatures to support personalized risk assessment.
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This mechanistic toxicology study shows that AChE inhibition explains most acute lethality from highly toxic organophosphorus agents. Steep dose–response slopes across species and strong correlations between enzyme inhibition/reactivation kinetics and survival support AChE inhibition as the dominant mechanism.
What was studied?
This study evaluated whether the inhibition of acetylcholinesterase (AChE) by organophosphorus (OP) compounds is sufficiently explained by a single dominant mechanism, AChE inhibition, by mathematically modeling the relationships between in vivo lethality and in vitro enzyme kinetics across multiple OP compounds. The authors compared mortality dose–response curves (LD50 and probit slope) for several highly toxic OP agents (including VX, soman, sarin, cyclosarin, tabun, paraoxon, and DFP) and tested whether steep, consistent dose–response slopes support a single specific toxic mechanism. They then used regression models to quantify how much of the variation in OP acute toxicity is explained by the in vitro bimolecular rate constants for AChE inhibition (kAChE). Finally, they examined antidotal pharmacology by assessing how well oxime-mediated AChE reactivation predicts protection in vivo, using protective ratios from pralidoxime (2-PAM) and obidoxime (OBID) plus atropine treatment. Notably, this paper does not investigate the microbiome, microbial metabolites, or host–microbiome interactions; therefore, it contributes no microbiome signatures for a microbiome database and instead serves as a mechanistic toxicology reference.
Who was studied?
The experiments primarily used healthy laboratory mammals: male Sprague–Dawley rats, Hartley guinea pigs, New Zealand rabbits, and CD-1 mice housed under controlled conditions and monitored for 24-hour mortality after subcutaneous OP exposure. Guinea pigs were the main species for detailed comparisons across multiple OP compounds (for LD50/probit slopes) and for antidote efficacy testing (oxime + atropine administered intramuscularly 1 minute post-exposure). Cross-species generalizability of dose–response behavior was explored using soman lethality curves generated in mice, rats, rabbits, and guinea pigs, and additionally compared with published primate data (marmosets and rhesus monkeys). This design enabled the authors to test whether a consistent dose–response shape is conserved across mammalian species, despite differences in toxicity potency (LD50).
Most important findings
Across multiple highly toxic OP compounds in guinea pigs, mortality dose–response curves were uniformly steep (probit slopes >9.6) despite large potency differences (LD50 varied ~439-fold), supporting a single dominant mechanism rather than multiple threshold mechanisms. When soman was tested across species (including primates from prior literature), dose–response slopes remained similarly steep even though LD50 varied ~15-fold, reinforcing the interpretation that highly toxic OP agents act through a common, specific pathway. Quantitatively, in rats, the in vitro AChE inhibition rate constant (kAChE) explained 93% of the 3,280-fold variation in OP LD50 values, indicating that AChE inhibition kinetics are a near-complete predictor of acute lethality. Complementing this, oxime efficacy in guinea pigs expressed as protective ratio (PR) was strongly predicted by in vitro oxime reactivation kinetics (kR), with 91% of the 23-fold variation in protection explained by reactivation capacity. From a microbiome perspective, there were no microbial taxa, pathways, or community patterns measured; however, the work provides a rigorous template for linking mechanistic biochemical rates to clinically meaningful outcomes, which is analogous to how microbiome functional readouts could be validated against clinical endpoints.
Key relationship or endpoint
Main result (from paper)
Dose–response shape across OPs (guinea pigs)
kAChE explained 93% of the 3,280-fold LD50 variation in rats
Cross-species soman response
Similar steep slopes across rodents, rabbits, and primates
Toxicity explained by AChE inhibition
kAChE explained 93% of 3,280-fold LD50 variation in rats
Oxime protection explained by reactivation
kR (dose-normalized) explained 91% of 23-fold PR variation
Key implications
Clinically, these findings strengthen the argument that AChE inhibition is the primary driver of acute lethal toxicity for highly toxic OP agents, with alternative non-cholinesterase mechanisms likely contributing <10% of overall variability in lethality. This has practical implications for both risk assessment and treatment strategy: predicting toxicity should prioritize AChE inhibition kinetics, and therapeutic effectiveness should emphasize rapid muscarinic blockade (atropine) plus reactivation of inhibited AChE (appropriate oxime selection and dosing). For translational science more broadly including microbiome research, this paper is a reminder that clinical utility depends on quantifying how much outcome variance is explained by a proposed mechanism; microbiome signatures intended for clinical deployment should be similarly benchmarked against hard endpoints and assessed for how much predictive variance they truly capture.
Di-alkyl phosphate biomonitoring data: assessing cumulative exposure to organophosphate pesticides
February 12, 2026
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Organophosphates
Organophosphates
Organophosphates are cholinesterase-inhibiting chemicals widely used as pesticides. Beyond neurotoxicity, evidence links chronic exposure to gut microbiome changes, barrier disruption, and metabolic effects. Microbiome medicine integrates exposure biomarkers and microbiome signatures to support personalized risk assessment.
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This paper uses NHANES urinary dialkyl phosphate metabolites to estimate cumulative organophosphate exposure and compares results with EPA models, finding major model conservatism and key limitations of non-specific metabolites. Clinically, DAPs are best treated as screening biomarkers and exposure confounders in microbiome studies.
What was studied?
This paper evaluated microbiome signatures database relevance indirectly by analyzing U.S. biomonitoring data for urinary di-alkyl phosphate (DAP) metabolites—non-specific breakdown products shared by many organophosphate (OP) pesticides—to estimate cumulative OP exposure and compare those biomonitoring-derived exposure estimates with U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) modeled “aggregate” and “cumulative” exposure assessments developed under the Food Quality Protection Act (FQPA). Using the CDC’s first National Report on Human Exposure to Environmental Chemicals (based on NHANES 1999 urine samples), the authors calculated absorbed OP dose equivalents from six urinary alkyl phosphate metabolites (DMP, DMTP, DMDTP, DEP, DETP, DEDTP) and contrasted these with exposure estimates from OP Registration Eligibility Decision (RED) documents and EPA’s preliminary OP cumulative risk assessment. The central scientific question was whether model-based regulatory exposure estimates align with population biomonitoring “ground truth,” and what methodological caveats limit interpretation of DAP metabolites as quantitative indicators of OP pesticide exposure.
Who was studied?
No new clinical cohort was recruited. The human data came from the CDC’s NHANES 1999 biomonitoring subsample: 703 individuals aged 6–59 years, with urine analyzed by GC-MS/MS using isotope-dilution methods. The paper primarily presents adult dose reconstructions (assuming 1.2 L urine/day and 70 kg body weight) because the March 2001 CDC report provided only summary statistics that limited stratification by age/sex and did not permit individualized exposure reconstruction. The authors also discuss how interpretation differs for children due to creatinine excretion variability and different physiology, emphasizing that future comparisons should explicitly contrast adult and pediatric biomonitoring patterns.
Most important findings
Across the U.S. population sample, >90% had one or more DAP metabolites detected at low limits of quantification, implying ubiquitous exposure to OPs and/or environmental DAP sources. Using geometric means, the authors estimated a total cumulative OP-equivalent dose of ~0.30 µg/kg/day, with a 90th percentile of ~1.68 µg/kg/day when summing across the six metabolites, while stressing that summing geometric means likely overestimates any individual’s true combined exposure because it assumes all metabolites are simultaneously at their mean. Importantly, EPA RED-based aggregate exposure estimates for several individual OP pesticides often exceeded EPA’s own preliminary cumulative dietary estimates and, in some comparisons, even exceeded the biomonitoring-derived cumulative estimate for the entire OP class—highlighting substantial conservatism (overestimation) in screening models, particularly drinking-water modeling. The paper also argues that DAP metabolites are non-specific and non-toxic (non–cholinesterase–inhibiting) and may reflect pre-hydrolyzed OP degradates already present in food/water or non-pesticide sources, potentially inflating inferred pesticide exposure signals. In microbiome terms, the study contains no microbial taxa data, but it is clinically relevant because OP exposure can be a confounder in microbiome studies; urinary DAPs may serve as exposure markers when interpreting pesticide–microbiome associations.
Key exposure marker
Practical interpretation for clinicians
DMP/DEP (non-sulfur DAPs)
May reflect multiple OPs and/or dietary degradates; not pesticide-specific
DMTP/DETP (thiophosphates)
More consistent with parent OP exposure patterns for many OPs
Summed geometric mean dose
Useful as an upper-bound screen, not an individual “true” cumulative dose
For clinical and translational research—including microbiome-focused work—urinary DAP metabolites can provide a population-level upper-bound estimate of cumulative OP exposure and a valuable benchmark for “ground-truthing” exposure models, but they should not be interpreted as precise, pesticide-specific absorbed doses. The paper’s core caution is that non-specific metabolites can be substantially confounded by environmental degradates and non-pesticide sources, making dose reconstruction and risk inference uncertain; clinicians should therefore treat urinary DAPs as screening biomarkers and avoid over-assigning causality to specific OP pesticides without corroborating specific metabolites or contextual exposure data.
Ambient long-term exposure to organophosphorus pesticides and the human gut microbiome: an observational study
February 12, 2026
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Organophosphates
Organophosphates
Organophosphates are cholinesterase-inhibiting chemicals widely used as pesticides. Beyond neurotoxicity, evidence links chronic exposure to gut microbiome changes, barrier disruption, and metabolic effects. Microbiome medicine integrates exposure biomarkers and microbiome signatures to support personalized risk assessment.
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Ambient long-term organophosphorus pesticide exposure gut microbiome signatures were associated with specific genus-level shifts and predicted functional changes (cell-wall/respiration pathways, reduced B1/B6 synthesis), despite no differences in overall microbiome diversity, in an older California cohort enriched for Parkinson’s disease.
What was studied?
This observational study examined ambient long-term organophosphorus pesticide exposure gut microbiome signatures in humans living in California’s heavily agricultural Central Valley, asking whether chronic residential exposure to organophosphorus (OP) pesticides is linked to measurable shifts in gut microbial composition and microbial metabolic potential. Participants provided fecal samples for 16S rRNA sequencing, and investigators inferred functional capacity using PICRUSt2 to generate predicted enzyme and MetaCyc pathway profiles. OP exposure was estimated using a geographic information systems approach that linked California Pesticide Use Reports to each participant’s residential history, calculating average OP application within a 500-meter buffer over the 10 years before stool collection (with additional 0–5 and 6–10 year sensitivity windows). The primary outcomes were alpha diversity (Shannon index), beta diversity (Bray–Curtis dissimilarity), differential abundance of taxa (family/genus), and differential predicted pathway abundance, with multivariable adjustment for age, sex, race, Parkinson’s disease (PD) status, pesticide co-exposures, and sequencing platform.
Who was studied?
A total of 190 adults were recruited from the Parkinson’s, Environment and Gene (PEG) study in Kern, Tulare, and Fresno counties. The cohort was older (mean age ~72 years) and included both PD cases (61%) and community/household controls (39%). Participants were predominantly White (74%) and slightly more often male (53%). Individuals with major gastrointestinal disease, immunocompromised states, or recent/ongoing antibiotic use were excluded to reduce non-exposure-related microbiome disruption. Using the study’s exposure definition, 36 participants (19%) were classified as “high OP exposure” (exposed to >1 OP chemical above the non-PD median), while 154 (81%) were low/no exposure. This design offers strong exposure characterization for ambient agricultural drift but limits generalizability to younger, healthier populations.
Most important findings
At the ecosystem level, OP exposure was not associated with bacterial alpha diversity or overall community structure (beta diversity). However, functional potential shifted: predicted metagenomes were less even/sparser in highly exposed participants (p=0.04), suggesting altered microbial gene-expression potential despite stable diversity metrics. Differential abundance analyses identified changes in two families and 22 genera, with many signals within Lachnospiraceae and Ruminococcaceae (Clostridia), including increases in Sellimonas, Blautia, Coprococcus_1, and multiple Ruminococcaceae UCG taxa, and decreases in Dialister, Anaerotruncus, Turicibacter, Parasutterella, and Cloacibacillus. Predicted pathways (34 total) suggested increased activity in cell-wall biogenesis and carbohydrate utilization (e.g., teichoic acid biosynthesis, peptidoglycan maturation, fucose degradation) and increased methanogenesis from acetate, while vitamin/cofactor pathways decreased, notably thiamin diphosphate (B1) and pyridoxal-5′-phosphate (B6) biosynthesis/salvage. These functional shifts point toward a microbiome adapting to chronic toxicant stress with changes in energy metabolism and structural reinforcement.
↑ Teichoic acid, peptidoglycan; ↑ methanogenesis from acetate
Vitamin/cofactor functions
↓ Thiamin (B1) and pyridoxal-5′-phosphate (B6) pathways
Key implications
For clinicians and microbiome signature databases, the main takeaway is that chronic ambient OP exposure may produce a “functional dysbiosis” phenotype—subtle taxonomic rearrangements (especially among SCFA-associated Clostridia lineages) coupled with predicted pathway changes affecting microbial respiration, cell-envelope biosynthesis, and vitamin metabolism—without collapsing overall diversity. This pattern aligns with a plausible long-term toxicant-adaptation signal rather than acute disruption. Clinically, it supports integrating environmental exposure history (especially agricultural proximity) when interpreting microbiome profiles in older adults and neurodegenerative populations, while underscoring that these findings are associative, predicted (not measured metagenomics/metabolomics), and derived from an older cohort with substantial PD prevalence.
Mechanisms of organophosphate toxicity and the role of acetylcholinesterase inhibition
February 12, 2026
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Organophosphates
Organophosphates
Organophosphates are cholinesterase-inhibiting chemicals widely used as pesticides. Beyond neurotoxicity, evidence links chronic exposure to gut microbiome changes, barrier disruption, and metabolic effects. Microbiome medicine integrates exposure biomarkers and microbiome signatures to support personalized risk assessment.
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This review explains how AChE inhibition triggers respiratory failure and SE after organophosphate exposure, and how SE drives excitotoxic, oxidative, and inflammatory brain injury. Chronic low-dose effects may occur without SE. No microbiome signatures or microbial biomarkers are reported.
What was reviewed?
This narrative review synthesizes current evidence on organophosphate-toxicity mechanisms, focusing on how organophosphorus compounds (agricultural pesticides, industrial agents, and nerve agents) cause acute lethality and longer-term neurologic injury. The authors center the discussion on acetylcholinesterase (AChE) inhibition as the shared initiating event, then trace downstream pathways leading to respiratory depression, seizures, and status epilepticus (SE), and finally outline SE-driven neurodegeneration through excitotoxic calcium overload, oxidative stress, and neuroinflammation. The review also summarizes emerging mechanisms from low-dose, chronic exposure that may occur without SE and may not strictly depend on AChE inhibition, including persistent calcium dyshomeostasis and inflammatory signaling in neural and glial cells.
Who was reviewed?
Rather than a single patient cohort, the review integrates data from multiple experimental systems and exposure scenarios. These include mammalian animal models of acute nerve agent intoxication (notably soman and sarin), with a mechanistic emphasis on limbic circuitry (especially the basolateral amygdala) as a seizure trigger zone, as well as brain-slice electrophysiology studies that demonstrate region-specific epileptiform activity. It also draws on occupational and environmental exposure studies in humans (e.g., pesticide workers) to discuss chronic, low-dose neurobehavioral outcomes and biomarker relationships (such as blood cholinesterase activity), plus in vitro work in human astrocytes to illustrate inflammatory effects that are unlikely to be purely cholinergic. Importantly for clinicians building microbiome signature databases, the review does not evaluate gut, oral, or other microbiome profiles, and it does not report microbial taxa, microbial metabolites, or host–microbiome associations as exposures, mediators, or biomarkers.
Most important findings
Acute organophosphate poisoning begins with AChE phosphorylation, producing a surge of acetylcholine that hyperstimulates muscarinic and nicotinic receptors. The most immediate life threats are centrally mediated respiratory depression (with muscarinic signaling in brainstem respiratory networks implicated) and peripheral “cholinergic crisis” effects such as bronchorrhea/bronchoconstriction and neuromuscular weakness. In the brain, excess cholinergic drive rapidly precipitates seizures and SE, with strong evidence that the basolateral amygdala is a key initiation site; animals exposed to soman that fail to develop SE show little to no neurodegeneration despite AChE inhibition elsewhere, supporting SE as the main driver of lasting neuropathology. Early SE appears heavily muscarinic (notably M1 receptor–linked facilitation of glutamatergic excitation), but once established, SE becomes increasingly sustained by glutamate-mediated hyperexcitation. Neurotoxicity then follows classic excitotoxic cascades: calcium influx through AMPA/kainate/NMDA receptors, mitochondrial dysfunction, reactive oxygen species generation, blood–brain barrier disruption, and a self-amplifying neuroinflammatory response involving astrocytes and microglia. For chronic low-dose exposure, the review highlights persistent neuronal calcium elevations, oxidative stress, and inflammation that can occur without SE and may show inconsistent correlations with blood cholinesterase suppression. Microbiome-related findings are absent; no microbial biomarkers are proposed.
Microbiome signature element
Evidence in this paper
Taxa associated with exposure or outcomes
Not reported
Metagenomic/16S profiling
Not performed
Microbial metabolites as mediators/biomarkers
Not discussed
Host–microbiome mechanistic pathways
Not evaluated
Key implications
Clinically, the review argues that survival and neuroprotection in acute organophosphate intoxication hinge on rapid seizure control, not only reversal of cholinergic symptoms. Benzodiazepines are most effective early, while delayed presentations may require anti-glutamatergic strategies to stop SE and prevent downstream excitotoxic and inflammatory injury; adjunct anti-inflammatory approaches may be necessary when SE-driven cascades are already active. For chronic exposures, clinicians should recognize that neurocognitive and mood sequelae may reflect calcium and inflammatory dysregulation even when cholinesterase measures are near-normal. From a microbiome-signature perspective, this paper contributes to mechanistic toxicology but provides no microbial associations; any microbiome database entry should explicitly mark “no microbiome data” to avoid false linkage.
Dietary Intake and Ovarian Cancer Risk: A Systematic Review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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This review examines the relationship between diet and ovarian cancer risk, finding that animal fats and dairy are linked to higher risk, while vegetables and bioactive compounds may offer protective benefits, although results are inconsistent across studies.
What was studied?
This systematic review investigates the association between dietary intake and ovarian cancer risk. The authors reviewed prospective cohort studies that assessed the impact of various dietary factors, including fats (animal and dairy), vegetables, fruits, micronutrients, and bioactive compounds like isoflavones and flavonoids, on ovarian cancer incidence. The review sought to provide a clearer understanding of how specific foods and dietary patterns might contribute to ovarian cancer risk, a key issue given the lack of conclusive evidence on the subject.
Who was studied?
The review incorporated data from 24 prospective cohort studies, including large cohorts like the Nurses' Health Study, the Women’s Health Initiative, and EPIC. These studies included thousands of women across various geographic regions, all of whom were followed over several years to track the relationship between their dietary habits and ovarian cancer risk. The review primarily focused on studies with over 200 ovarian cancer cases to ensure robust statistical power and to minimize the bias introduced by recall error in case-control studies.
Most important findings
The review identified several key associations, though the results were often inconsistent across studies. Increased intake of animal fats, dairy fats, and nitrates (primarily from processed meats) was generally linked to a higher risk of ovarian cancer. For example, a 30% higher risk was associated with animal fat consumption, while dairy fat showed a modest 1.53 relative risk in some cohorts. Conversely, diets rich in vegetables, particularly allium vegetables (e.g., garlic and onions), seemed to offer a protective effect, although these findings were not statistically significant in all studies. Isoflavones and flavonoids were found to be associated with a reduced risk of ovarian cancer in two studies, and tea consumption was linked to a lower risk in some cohorts.
Key implications
The findings highlight the complexity of dietary influences on ovarian cancer risk, with some foods showing promising protective effects while others contribute to increased risk. This review suggests that diets high in animal-based fats and nitrates from processed meats could be risk factors for ovarian cancer. On the other hand, incorporating more plant-based foods, especially vegetables like garlic and onions, and bioactive compounds like isoflavones, may reduce the risk. The inconsistent results call for further research with more rigorous dietary assessments, larger sample sizes, and studies considering specific ovarian cancer subtypes to provide more actionable insights for cancer prevention strategies. These findings could inform public health recommendations and help clinicians in advising patients on lifestyle modifications to reduce cancer risk.
Reducing Ovarian Cancer Mortality Through Early Detection: Approaches using Circulating Biomarkers
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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This review discusses liquid biopsy techniques for early ovarian cancer detection, focusing on circulating tumor cells, cell-free DNA, and extracellular vesicles. It highlights their potential to improve sensitivity, specificity, and prognosis prediction, providing a promising avenue for non-invasive cancer screening.
What was reviewed?
This review examined the current approaches for improving early detection of ovarian cancer, specifically focusing on the use of circulating biomarkers in liquid biopsies. It analyzed various molecular biomarkers, including circulating tumor cells (CTCs), cell-free DNA (cfDNA), and extracellular vesicles (EVs), and their potential roles in early-stage detection, monitoring recurrence, and predicting treatment responses.
Who was reviewed?
This review focused on the current advancements and methodologies related to the detection of ovarian cancer using liquid-based biomarkers. It did not evaluate specific individuals or patient groups but instead examined various biomarker types such as circulating tumor cells (CTCs), cell-free DNA (cfDNA), and extracellular vesicles (EVs) as potential tools for early diagnosis and monitoring of ovarian cancer. The review assessed numerous studies and research findings on these biomarkers and their clinical application, exploring how these molecular tools could improve ovarian cancer detection, prognosis, and treatment response.
What were the most important findings?
The review highlights the limitations of current ovarian cancer detection methods, such as CA125 and transvaginal ultrasonography, which have not significantly improved mortality rates. The main findings suggest that liquid-based biomarkers, particularly CTCs, cfDNA, and EVs, show promising potential for early detection. The use of CTCs, though not yet effective for early detection in ovarian cancer, is associated with prognosis and survival in advanced cases. More promising, however, are the advancements in the analysis of cfDNA and EVs, including their use for detecting mutations, methylation patterns, and tumor-associated markers like EpCAM and CD24, which could aid in distinguishing ovarian cancer from benign conditions. These biomarkers also hold the potential for identifying the tumor's genetic landscape, which could significantly improve early diagnosis and targeted therapy.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The findings underscore the need for more effective, non-invasive diagnostic tools for ovarian cancer. Liquid biopsy technologies that analyze CTCs, cfDNA, and EVs offer a less invasive alternative to traditional tissue biopsies, with the potential for earlier detection and continuous monitoring of treatment efficacy and recurrence. The review suggests that these technologies could be integrated into clinical practice for improving ovarian cancer screening, particularly through enhanced sensitivity and specificity in identifying early-stage disease. The review also calls for further clinical validation to demonstrate these biomarkers' diagnostic and prognostic value, as well as the need for new techniques to improve detection sensitivity for rare biomarkers.
The microbiome and ovarian cancer: insights, implications, and therapeutic opportunities
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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This review explores how the microbiome influences ovarian cancer development, progression, and treatment response. It emphasizes microbial dysbiosis as a factor in carcinogenesis and offers insights into therapeutic opportunities like probiotics and fecal microbiota transplantation to improve treatment outcomes.
What was studied?
This review explores the role of the microbiome in ovarian cancer, with a focus on how microbial communities in the female reproductive and gastrointestinal tracts contribute to carcinogenesis and affect treatment responses. The paper investigates the mechanisms through which the microbiome influences ovarian cancer development, including immune modulation, DNA repair, inflammatory pathways, and estrogen metabolism. The authors also discuss how dysbiosis, an imbalance in microbial populations, can impact chemotherapy efficacy and contribute to cancer progression. Potential strategies to modulate the microbiome to improve treatment outcomes, such as diet, probiotics, and fecal microbiota transplantation, are also considered.
Who was studied?
The review incorporates data from both pre-clinical animal models and human studies involving ovarian cancer patients. It includes observational studies that track microbiome composition in ovarian cancer patients, particularly those with different stages and histological subtypes of cancer. The review also explores microbiome alterations in patients undergoing chemotherapy and other cancer treatments. Studies on animal models, particularly in mice, are used to illustrate how microbiome modulation impacts cancer progression and therapeutic efficacy.
Most important findings
The review identifies a clear link between microbial dysbiosis and ovarian cancer progression. One significant finding is that specific microbial populations in the female reproductive tract, such as the absence of Lactobacillus species, are associated with a higher risk of ovarian cancer. In contrast, the presence of certain bacteria like Akkermansia muciniphila and Bifidobacterium is linked to anti-tumor activity and improved treatment outcomes. The study highlights that microbial signatures in the gut microbiome, such as changes in Firmicutes and Bacteroidetes, may also influence ovarian cancer development. Additionally, the review suggests that the microbiome’s impact on cancer treatment can lead to changes in treatment efficacy and toxicity. Antibiotic use, which disrupts the gut microbiome, can reduce chemotherapy effectiveness, while supplementation with probiotics may help restore microbial balance and improve treatment outcomes.
Key implications
Understanding the microbiome’s role in ovarian cancer offers new avenues for improving diagnosis, prevention, and treatment strategies. The potential for microbiome-based biomarkers in early detection is highlighted, particularly in distinguishing between benign and malignant ovarian masses. Furthermore, therapeutic strategies that modulate the microbiome, such as probiotics, dietary changes, and fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT), could be explored to enhance the efficacy of chemotherapy and immunotherapy in ovarian cancer patients. Given the complexity of the microbiome and its influence on various cancer pathways, further research is necessary to identify specific microbial targets that could lead to personalized cancer therapies.
The Gut Microbiome in Aging and Ovarian Cancer
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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This review examines how the aging gut microbiome affects ovarian cancer progression. It highlights microbial dysbiosis as a common feature in both aging and cancer, with implications for novel therapeutic strategies like probiotics and fecal microbiota transplantation to improve treatment outcomes.
What was studied?
This review explores the relationship between the gut microbiome, aging, and ovarian cancer. It highlights the impact of aging on the gut microbiota and its potential role in the progression of ovarian cancer. The review examines how microbial dysbiosis, particularly in phyla such as Firmicutes, Bacteroidetes, and Proteobacteria, is associated with both aging and ovarian cancer. It also delves into the interplay between the gut microbiome and ovarian cancer treatments, such as chemotherapy, and their effects on treatment outcomes.
Who was studied?
The review includes data from studies involving ovarian cancer patients, both in pre- and post-treatment stages, as well as healthy control subjects. Additionally, it references animal models, specifically mice, to understand the mechanistic relationship between the gut microbiome and ovarian cancer progression. It also explores the influence of aging by comparing microbial data from individuals across various age groups, highlighting the changes in the gut microbiome that accompany aging and how these changes might influence cancer risk and prognosis.
Most important findings
Key findings from the review indicate that both aging and ovarian cancer lead to shifts in the gut microbiome, particularly in the levels of certain microbial taxa. As individuals age, the abundance of beneficial bacteria, such as Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium, tends to decrease, while proinflammatory bacteria from the Proteobacteria phylum, like Escherichia species, increase. These same microbial shifts are observed in ovarian cancer patients, suggesting a link between gut dysbiosis and cancer progression. Additionally, Ruminococcaceae, a family of bacteria important for short-chain fatty acid production, tends to decrease in both aging and ovarian cancer, which may contribute to chronic inflammation and cancer development. Interestingly, the review notes that aging and ovarian cancer share common microbial alterations, but the effects of age on the microbiome appear to have a more significant impact on ovarian cancer outcomes, especially regarding immune modulation and inflammation.
Key implications
The review suggests that understanding the relationship between the gut microbiome, aging, and ovarian cancer could lead to novel therapeutic approaches. Modulating the gut microbiome through interventions such as probiotics or fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) could potentially improve cancer treatment outcomes, particularly in elderly ovarian cancer patients. Moreover, early identification of microbiome signatures in aging populations may help in predicting ovarian cancer risk and tailoring personalized therapies. However, the review also highlights the need for further research to establish causal links between microbial dysbiosis and cancer progression and to refine therapeutic strategies based on microbiome modulation.
Correlation of Heavy Metal Content in the Blood of Patients with Ovarian Cancer by Place of Residence
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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This study explores how the concentration of heavy metals, particularly zinc and copper, in the blood of ovarian cancer patients correlates with their recurrence-free survival. It highlights the potential of these metals as biomarkers for prognosis and suggests environmental factors play a role in cancer outcomes.
What was studied?
This study investigates the correlation between heavy metal content in the blood of patients with ovarian cancer and their place of residence. It specifically looks at the relationship between the levels of chromium, lead, cadmium, copper, and zinc in the blood and how these correlate with the recurrence-free survival rates of ovarian cancer patients. The research also explores how variations in heavy metal exposure, based on geographic location, might influence ovarian cancer prognosis and suggests the importance of considering these environmental factors in cancer treatment.
Who was studied?
The study analyzed 127 patients diagnosed with ovarian cancer at various stages (I-IV). The patients were divided based on their place of residence within the Ivano-Frankivsk region of Ukraine, which included districts like Ivano-Frankivsk, Kalush, Kolomyia, and Nadvirna. The study assessed blood samples to determine the concentration of various heavy metals and followed up on the recurrence-free survival of the patients over time, relating these findings to their geographic location and metal content in the blood.
Most important findings
The study found that there was a significant correlation between the zinc content in the blood of ovarian cancer patients and their place of residence. Patients living in Ivano-Frankivsk and Kalush districts, where zinc levels were higher, showed longer durations of recurrence-free survival. The highest levels of zinc and copper were associated with a more favorable prognosis, indicating a protective effect. However, no significant correlation was found between the content of chromium, lead, or cadmium in the blood and recurrence-free survival. This suggests that zinc and copper could serve as potential markers for ovarian cancer prognosis, while the role of other heavy metals requires further investigation.
Key implications
The findings suggest that monitoring the levels of certain heavy metals, particularly zinc and copper, in ovarian cancer patients could help in predicting their prognosis and tailoring individualized supportive therapies. The study also highlights the importance of considering environmental factors, such as geographic location and heavy metal exposure, in cancer treatment. While further research is necessary to confirm the role of zinc and copper, these findings offer new insights into how environmental factors may influence cancer progression and outcomes. This study advocates for a more personalized approach to ovarian cancer treatment, incorporating the impact of heavy metals and environmental exposure.
Cellular and molecular processes in ovarian cancer metastasis. A Review in the Theme: Cell and Molecular Processes in Cancer Metastasis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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This review explores the molecular mechanisms of ovarian cancer metastasis, focusing on the role of stromal cells and the metastatic routes—passive dissemination and hematogenous spread—while discussing therapeutic implications for targeting both cancer cells and the tumor microenvironment.
What was reviewed?
This review examined the cellular and molecular mechanisms involved in the metastasis of ovarian cancer. The article focused on the role of various cellular interactions, particularly those between ovarian cancer cells and the tumor microenvironment, which includes stromal cells, endothelial cells, cancer-associated macrophages, and cancer-associated adipocytes (CAAs). It also discussed the two major routes of ovarian cancer metastasis: passive dissemination and hematogenous metastasis, shedding light on the biological pathways and cellular behaviors that facilitate these processes.
Who was reviewed?
This review focused on the cellular and molecular processes involved in ovarian cancer metastasis. It specifically examined the interactions between ovarian cancer cells and various stromal components within the tumor microenvironment, including cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs), endothelial cells, macrophages, and adipocytes. The review did not study individual patients or groups of people but instead analyzed the broader mechanisms that underlie metastasis in ovarian cancer as reported in multiple research findings.
What were the most important findings?
The review highlighted key findings related to ovarian cancer metastasis. It emphasized the role of stromal cells, including cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs), endothelial cells, and macrophages, in facilitating tumor spread. These cells interact with cancer cells, contributing to tumor growth, angiogenesis, and immune modulation. The authors also discussed the two mechanisms of metastasis: passive dissemination through peritoneal fluid and hematogenous spread via circulating tumor cells. The omentum was identified as a primary site for ovarian cancer metastasis due to its unique stromal environment, which favors the colonization of cancer cells. Additionally, the review highlighted the importance of angiogenesis in metastasis, particularly through the vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) pathway, which is upregulated in ovarian cancer cells. The role of adipocytes in the tumor microenvironment, especially in providing lipids for cancer cell growth, was also discussed, with metformin being identified as a potential therapeutic agent to target adipocyte-cancer cell interactions.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The findings of this review have significant clinical implications, especially in developing therapeutic strategies for ovarian cancer. The detailed understanding of stromal cell involvement in cancer metastasis underscores the need for therapies targeting both cancer cells and their supportive microenvironment. Current treatments mainly focus on cancer cells, but the review suggests that targeting stromal components could enhance treatment effectiveness. Moreover, identifying stromal-specific metastasis-promoting factors and the signaling pathways involved, such as those triggered by VEGF and FGFs, offers new avenues for therapeutic intervention. The review also calls for further research on stromal reprogramming as a potential therapeutic strategy, advocating for more targeted approaches rather than broad stromal depletion, which may unintentionally promote metastasis. Overall, the review provides a roadmap for future research focused on improving survival rates in ovarian cancer patients by targeting metastasis through stromal cell interactions.
The Role of Lead and Cadmium in Gynecological Malignancies
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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Breast Cancer
Breast Cancer
Traditionally linked to genetic predispositions and environmental exposures, emerging evidence highlights the microbiome as a critical and underappreciated factor influencing breast cancer progression, immune response, and treatment outcomes.
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This study explores the role of lead and cadmium in gynecological malignancies, focusing on their ability to mimic estrogen and induce oxidative stress, contributing to cancer development. It highlights their potential as biomarkers for early detection and treatment.
What was studied?
The paper investigates the impact of two toxic heavy metals, lead (Pb) and cadmium (Cd), on the development of gynecological cancers such as ovarian, endometrial, and cervical cancers. The authors explore how these metals contribute to cancer development, particularly through mechanisms like oxidative stress, DNA damage, and their ability to mimic estrogen. This review highlights the potential of Pb and Cd as biomarkers for cancer risk and progression, emphasizing their roles in the oncogenesis of gynecological malignancies.
Who was studied?
The study centers around women exposed to Pb and Cd, particularly those with gynecological cancers. It examines clinical and experimental research linking elevated metal levels to cancer occurrence, focusing on ovarian, cervical, and endometrial cancers. The research delves into the biological changes these metals cause, including hormonal disruption, oxidative stress, and DNA damage, all of which are associated with cancer development.
Most important findings
The study identifies the carcinogenic properties of Pb and Cd, showing that both metals function as metalloestrogens, activating estrogen receptors and mimicking estrogen’s effects. This mechanism contributes to hormone-dependent cancers like ovarian, endometrial, and cervical cancers. Elevated levels of Pb and Cd were found in neoplastic tissues of these cancers, establishing a clear connection between their presence and increased cancer risk. These metals were also found to disrupt oxidative stress regulation, leading to cellular damage. Pb has been linked to increased cancer risks, particularly breast cancer, while Cd similarly affects estrogen receptors, promoting hormone-related cancers. The study also points to the possibility of using Pb and Cd as biomarkers for early detection and progression monitoring of gynecological cancers.
Key implications
This research underscores the importance of reducing environmental and occupational exposure to Pb and Cd, which are modifiable risk factors for gynecological cancers. Identifying these metals as potential biomarkers provides a valuable tool for early detection and diagnosis, offering a new avenue for cancer risk assessment. Reducing exposure to these metals is essential to mitigate cancer risk, and further studies are needed to understand their full role in cancer development.
Endometriosis and Ovarian Cancer: An Integrative Review (Endometriosis and Ovarian Cancer)
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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This review explores the link between endometriosis and ovarian cancer, focusing on genetic mutations like ARID1A, oxidative stress, and estrogen receptor loss, which contribute to the development of malignancy, particularly in the endometrioid and clear-cell subtypes.
What was studied?
This review focuses on the relationship between endometriosis and ovarian cancer, specifically examining how endometriosis, particularly ovarian endometriomas, can lead to malignancy. The review synthesizes data from various studies published over the past five years that explore this association, highlighting genetic, molecular, and inflammatory mechanisms that could contribute to ovarian cancer development. Endometriosis is increasingly recognized not as a benign condition but as one that, under certain circumstances, could evolve into cancer, with epithelial ovarian cancers (EOC) of the endometrioid and clear-cell subtypes being the most common among women with endometriosis.
Who was studied?
The review analyzed studies on women diagnosed with endometriosis and ovarian cancer, particularly those with epithelial ovarian carcinoma (EOC) associated with endometriosis. Studies were included from various clinical trial cohorts, case-control studies, and cross-sectional research. These studies focused on patients with tissue-proven endometriosis, those with endometriosis-associated ovarian cancer (EAOC), and control groups without endometriosis. The review also considered histological subtypes such as endometrioid carcinoma (EC) and clear-cell carcinoma (CCC), which are the most commonly observed malignancies in endometriosis-associated ovarian cancer.
Most important findings
The review found that women with endometriosis are at an increased risk for developing ovarian cancer, particularly of the endometrioid and clear-cell subtypes. Key genetic alterations were identified, including mutations in the ARID1A gene, which leads to the loss of the BAF250a protein and is a frequent event in both ovarian clear-cell carcinoma (OCCC) and endometrioid carcinoma (EAEC). The study also highlighted the role of oxidative stress in malignant transformation, driven by the iron in the fluid of endometriotic cysts, which promotes genetic mutations. Loss of estrogen receptors in some cases of endometriosis-associated carcinoma was observed, possibly contributing to the neoplastic transformation of endometriotic lesions. Additionally, the review pointed to the importance of understanding the distinct histologic features of endometriosis-associated cancers compared to non-endometriosis ovarian cancers, with earlier diagnosis and better prognosis often seen in cases associated with endometriosis.
Key implications
The findings suggest that women with endometriosis, especially those with ovarian endometriomas, are at an increased risk for developing ovarian cancer, specifically the endometrioid and clear-cell subtypes. These insights emphasize the need for closer monitoring of women with endometriosis, particularly in younger women, who are more likely to develop these types of ovarian cancer. The review also underscores the importance of genetic testing, such as identifying mutations in ARID1A and other key genes like PIK3CA and β-catenin, which may help in early detection and provide targets for more personalized treatment strategies. The findings highlight the role of inflammation and oxidative stress in the progression of ovarian cancer in these patients, suggesting potential therapeutic avenues such as antioxidants or inhibitors targeting these pathways. Furthermore, the study calls for more research into the molecular underpinnings of this link to improve early detection, prognosis, and treatment strategies for women at risk.
Probiotics as Anti-Tumor Agents: Insights from Female Tumor Cell Culture Studies
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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Breast Cancer
Breast Cancer
Traditionally linked to genetic predispositions and environmental exposures, emerging evidence highlights the microbiome as a critical and underappreciated factor influencing breast cancer progression, immune response, and treatment outcomes.
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Probiotics were shown to significantly reduce cancer cell proliferation, promote apoptosis, and inhibit migration in breast and ovarian cancer cells, suggesting their potential as adjunctive cancer therapies.
What was studied?
This study explores the effects of probiotics as potential anti-tumor agents in two female cancer cell lines: MDA-MB-231 (triple-negative breast cancer) and OVCAR-3 (ovarian adenocarcinoma). Researchers tested several probiotic strains, including Streptococcus thermophilus, Lactobacillus delbrueckii, and Bifidobacterium lactis, assessing their impact on cancer cell proliferation, migration, and protein expression related to the cell cycle and apoptosis.
Who was studied?
The study focused on two human cancer cell lines: MDA-MB-231, representing triple-negative breast cancer, and OVCAR-3, an ovarian adenocarcinoma cell line. These cell lines were chosen due to their relevance in aggressive forms of cancer, which are often characterized by high proliferation rates and metastatic potential. Probiotic strains were applied in vitro to test their anti-tumor effects.
Most important findings
The study demonstrated that probiotic lysates significantly reduced the proliferation of both cancer cell lines. Specifically, the Lactobacillus strains (E and F) showed the most promising anti-proliferative effects, with a reduction of up to 70% in cell proliferation. Western blot analysis revealed key molecular changes: an increase in phosphorylated p53 (a tumor suppressor protein) in the OVCAR-3 cells, suggesting a potential induction of apoptosis. Additionally, there was a notable decrease in proteins associated with cancer cell survival and migration, including cyclin D1 (critical for cell cycle progression), p-ERK1 (involved in survival signaling), and RhoA (linked to cell migration). The probiotic treatment reduced cell migration, particularly in the OVCAR-3 cells, without affecting non-cancerous cells, highlighting a degree of specificity for tumor cells.
Probiotic Strain
Actions
Streptococcus thermophilus
Antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, anti-mutagenic
Lactobacillus delbrueckii
Inhibits colitis-associated cancer development
Bifidobacterium lactis
Supports intestinal barrier function, anti-cancer
Lactobacillus acidophilus
Anticarcinogenic, immune stimulation
Lactobacillus rhamnosus
Anti-colon cancer, modulates gut microbiota
Lactobacillus casei
Immune system stimulation, anticarcinogenic
Key implications
The findings suggest that certain probiotic strains may offer new adjunctive therapies for cancer treatment, specifically in breast and ovarian cancers. Their ability to reduce tumor cell proliferation, promote cell death, and inhibit migration could complement existing treatments, potentially improving patient outcomes. However, further studies are needed, especially in vivo, to explore the full potential and safety of probiotics as cancer therapies. The specificity of probiotics for tumor cells without harming healthy cells is a critical factor for their future clinical use.
Revolutionizing ovarian cancer therapy by drug repositioning for accelerated and cost-effective treatments
February 12, 2026
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Drug Repurposing
Drug Repurposing
Drug repurposing involves identifying new therapeutic uses for existing drugs, offering a cost-effective and time-efficient pathway to enhance treatment options and address unmet medical needs.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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The review explores drug repositioning for ovarian cancer, highlighting statins, ivermectin, and ormeloxifene as promising treatments. These repurposed drugs offer potential for accelerated and cost-effective therapies.
What was studied?
The study explores drug repositioning as a transformative strategy for ovarian cancer (OC) treatment, highlighting the potential of repurposing existing drugs for more effective, accelerated, and cost-efficient therapies. The review focuses on in vitro experiments with various cancer cell lines and preclinical in vivo models to evaluate the efficacy of repurposed drugs, including antiparasitics, antibiotics, and antiretrovirals, as well as their synergistic potential when combined with conventional cancer therapies like chemotherapy.
Who was studied?
The research reviewed a broad spectrum of studies involving ovarian cancer cell lines (such as SKOV-3, A2780, OVCAR-3) and preclinical murine models. These studies aim to evaluate the effects of repurposed drugs on ovarian cancer cell viability, migration, and tumorigenesis. The review also examined clinical trials involving patients with recurrent or resistant ovarian cancer, particularly focusing on those who were resistant to platinum-based therapies.
Most important findings
The study highlighted several key findings related to the efficacy of repurposed drugs for ovarian cancer treatment. For example, statins like atorvastatin, commonly used for lowering cholesterol, showed promise in inhibiting ovarian cancer cell proliferation and inducing apoptosis through pathways such as Akt/mTOR and MAPK activation. Ormeloxifene, a contraceptive drug, was found to suppress proliferation and promote apoptosis in chemoresistant ovarian cancer cells. Monensin, an antibiotic, showed effectiveness in inhibiting tumor growth and migration by modulating the MEK-ERK signaling pathway. Ivermectin, an antiparasitic, induced cell cycle arrest and apoptosis in ovarian cancer cells, particularly when combined with paclitaxel.
Key implications
The study underscores the potential of drug repositioning to accelerate the availability of new cancer treatments. By leveraging the existing safety profiles of these drugs, researchers can bypass much of the long and expensive drug development process. The ability to repurpose drugs like statins, ivermectin, and monensin could provide cost-effective solutions, particularly in resource-limited settings. Additionally, the synergy between repurposed drugs and existing treatments opens the door for more personalized and combinatory therapeutic strategies, which may improve treatment efficacy and overcome common challenges like drug resistance in ovarian cancer patients.
New hopes and promises in the treatment of ovarian cancer focusing on targeted treatment—A narrative review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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This review explores the role of targeted therapies in ovarian cancer treatment, focusing on the potential of angiogenesis inhibitors, PARP inhibitors, and folate receptor alpha inhibitors. While promising, further clinical trials and personalized approaches are necessary to enhance survival and treatment outcomes.
What was studied?
This narrative review examines the advancements in targeted therapies for ovarian cancer. It focuses on recent developments in the treatment landscape, particularly on therapies such as angiogenesis inhibitors, PARP inhibitors, immune checkpoint inhibitors, and folate receptor alpha inhibitors. The review highlights the potential of these therapies in extending progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS) in ovarian cancer patients. It also emphasizes the importance of identifying biomarkers that could guide treatment decisions and help in personalizing therapies for patients, as well as the challenges that still need to be addressed for these therapies to be fully effective in clinical practice.
Who was studied?
The studies reviewed in this article involve ovarian cancer patients, including those with platinum-sensitive and platinum-resistant ovarian cancer. These patients often have varying genetic backgrounds, with a focus on those carrying BRCA1/BRCA2 mutations and those expressing folate receptor alpha (FRα). Clinical trials from multiple phases and different study designs were included to assess the effectiveness of therapies like bevacizumab, olaparib, and mirvetuximab soravtansine. Both early and advanced-stage patients were studied, and the review draws on findings from various regions and healthcare settings.
Most important findings
The review highlights the positive effects of targeted therapies such as bevacizumab, which is an anti-VEGF therapy. It has demonstrated an improvement in progression-free survival when combined with chemotherapy for advanced ovarian cancer, although its impact on overall survival remains limited. The PARP inhibitor olaparib has been particularly effective for patients with BRCA mutations, improving both overall and progression-free survival, especially in recurrent platinum-sensitive ovarian cancer. Mirvetuximab soravtansine, which targets folate receptor alpha, has shown promising results in platinum-resistant ovarian cancer patients who have high FRα expression. Despite the promise of immune checkpoint inhibitors, they have not yet demonstrated significant efficacy in ovarian cancer, with ongoing research needed to assess their potential. The review suggests that combining different targeted therapies might yield better results, although side effects and toxicity remain a challenge.
Key implications
The review suggests that while targeted therapies have provided new hope in ovarian cancer treatment, they are not curative and often only delay the recurrence of the disease. The key to improving treatment outcomes lies in better patient selection through genetic and molecular profiling, ensuring that patients receive the therapies most likely to be effective for their specific cancer subtype. Further clinical trials are needed, particularly for those with platinum-resistant ovarian cancer, as current treatment options are limited. Moreover, ongoing research into combining targeted therapies and identifying novel biomarkers will be essential to advancing treatment strategies and improving survival rates for ovarian cancer patients.
The application of metabolomics in ovarian cancer management: A systematic review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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This systematic review highlights the role of metabolomics in ovarian cancer management, identifying key metabolic alterations in lipids and amino acids that could improve diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment strategies. Further validation is needed for clinical application.
What was studied?
This systematic review focused on the application of metabolomics in ovarian cancer management, exploring how metabolomic analysis can be used for diagnosing, prognosing, and monitoring the treatment and recurrence of ovarian cancer. The review compiled and evaluated findings from 32 global studies that applied metabolomics to biofluids and tumor tissues in ovarian cancer patients. The review also assessed 18 targeted metabolomics studies for further validation. It aimed to highlight metabolite profiles and metabolic pathways that could potentially be used as clinical biomarkers for ovarian cancer detection and management.
Who was studied?
The review analyzed studies involving ovarian cancer patients, including those with both primary and recurrent cancers. The included studies had participants from diverse regions such as China, the USA, the UK, and Poland, totaling 3,634 participants. Of these, 1,724 had ovarian cancer, and 1,910 served as controls or had benign ovarian conditions. The studies employed various metabolomic techniques, including liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), to analyze biofluids like serum and urine, as well as tumor tissues from ovarian cancer patients.
Most important findings
The review found significant alterations in metabolites linked to ovarian cancer, especially phospholipids and amino acids. The most commonly reported findings were a down-regulation of lysophosphatidylcholine (LPC) and phosphatidylcholine (PC), and up-regulation of lysophosphatidylethanolamine (LPE) and ceramides. Amino acids such as histidine, citrulline, alanine, and methionine were also found to be down-regulated in ovarian cancer tissues. In addition, the combination of multiple metabolites in diagnostic panels showed improved sensitivity and specificity for diagnosing ovarian cancer, with lipid metabolism being a key area of focus. Dysregulated pathways, such as glutamine metabolism, were also linked to the aggressive nature of ovarian cancer, offering insight into prognosis and recurrence.
Key implications
The findings suggest that metabolomics has significant potential as a diagnostic and prognostic tool for ovarian cancer. The identification of specific metabolic signatures, particularly in phospholipid and amino acid metabolism, can aid in the early detection of ovarian cancer, which is typically diagnosed at an advanced stage. Furthermore, combining multiple metabolites into diagnostic panels could increase diagnostic accuracy, making it a promising approach for clinical use. However, further research is needed to validate these findings in larger and more diverse populations, as well as to integrate metabolomics with existing clinical biomarkers for better patient management.
Recycling the Purpose of Old Drugs to Treat Ovarian Cancer
February 12, 2026
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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Drug Repurposing
Drug Repurposing
Drug repurposing involves identifying new therapeutic uses for existing drugs, offering a cost-effective and time-efficient pathway to enhance treatment options and address unmet medical needs.
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The review explores the potential of repurposing non-oncological drugs for ovarian cancer treatment, highlighting their ability to improve chemotherapy effectiveness and reduce treatment costs, with promising findings from preclinical studies and clinical trials.
What was studied?
This review article investigates the potential for repurposing existing, non-oncological drugs to treat ovarian cancer. It explores the use of drugs like statins, metformin, bisphosphonates, ivermectin, itraconazole, and ritonavir, which are traditionally prescribed for conditions such as high cholesterol, diabetes, osteoporosis, and parasitic infections. The article emphasizes the advantages of this approach, noting that these drugs have well-established safety profiles and could offer quicker, more affordable treatment options for ovarian cancer patients. By combining these repurposed drugs with conventional chemotherapy, researchers hope to improve patient outcomes while reducing the cost and side effects associated with newer, more expensive cancer treatments.
Who was studied?
The review focuses on ovarian cancer, particularly the high-grade serous carcinoma (HGSC) subtype, the most common and aggressive form of the disease. It evaluates several preclinical studies using ovarian cancer cell lines and animal models, which provide insights into the potential of repurposed drugs to improve therapeutic outcomes. These studies include both in vitro testing, which assesses drug effects on cultured cancer cells, and in vivo testing, using animal models to understand how the drugs work in a living organism. In addition, the review incorporates references to ongoing clinical trials, demonstrating the growing interest in using these repurposed drugs in human cancer treatment.
Most important findings
Several important findings emerged from the review, with particular emphasis on how repurposed drugs can target ovarian cancer cells and potentially overcome common challenges like chemoresistance. Statins, for instance, showed promise in reducing ovarian cancer cell proliferation and migration, as well as enhancing the effectiveness of traditional chemotherapy agents like doxorubicin. Metformin, widely used in the treatment of type 2 diabetes, demonstrated potential to reduce cancer cell growth by regulating cellular metabolism and influencing molecular pathways involved in cancer progression. Other promising drugs, such as ivermectin, an anti-parasitic, and itraconazole, an antifungal, have shown significant effects on ovarian cancer cell growth, metastasis, and resistance to chemotherapy. Ritonavir, an antiviral, and bisphosphonates, typically used for treating osteoporosis, also exhibited anticancer properties when used alone or in combination with chemotherapy.
Key implications
The primary implication of this study is the potential for drug repurposing to provide more affordable and accessible treatment options for ovarian cancer, especially in resource-limited settings. By repurposing drugs that are already approved for other conditions, the process of bringing them to clinical use for cancer treatment can be expedited, avoiding the lengthy and expensive drug development process. The combination of these drugs with conventional therapies could be a powerful strategy to overcome the significant challenge of chemoresistance, a common issue in ovarian cancer treatment. Additionally, the use of personalized testing approaches, such as ex vivo models derived from patient samples, could provide tailored treatment strategies, enhancing the likelihood of successful outcomes for individual patients.
Paradigm Shift: A Comprehensive Review of Ovarian Cancer Management in an Era of Advancements.
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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This review maps advances in ovarian cancer management, from surgery and chemotherapy to targeted and emerging therapies, and highlights a need to integrate microbiome insights.
What was reviewed?
The focus keyphrase “Ovarian Cancer Management” guides this comprehensive narrative review of current strategies in preventing, diagnosing, and treating ovarian cancer. The article synthesizes advancements in surgical approaches, chemotherapy regimens, targeted therapies (including PARP inhibitors and anti-angiogenics), and emerging modalities such as immunotherapy, gene therapy, and drug repurposing.
Who was reviewed?
This review draws on peer-reviewed studies published between 2013 and 2023, identified via PubMed searches using terms like “ovarian cancer”, “ovarian tumour”, “ovarian carcinoma”, “advances”, “updates”, “overview”, “screening”, “prevention”, “diagnosis”, “prognosis”, “therapy” and “treatment” that appeared anywhere in the article. It includes evidence from clinical trials, molecular profiling projects (e.g., TCGA), and guideline recommendations from bodies such as NCCN and ESMO.
Most important findings
The review highlights that combining cytoreductive surgery with platinum-taxane chemotherapy remains standard frontline care, yet yields only marginal improvements in progression-free survival due to chemoresistance. Targeted agents—bevacizumab for VEGF inhibition and PARP inhibitors (olaparib, niraparib, rucaparib)—have improved outcomes, particularly in BRCA-mutant and homologous recombination-deficient tumors. Emerging treatments such as HIPEC, immunotherapies (e.g., anti-PD-1/PD-L1), gene therapy vectors, and small-molecule kinase inhibitors show promise in trials. Notably, the review does not address microbiome signatures or microbial associations, indicating a gap for future integration of microbiome research in OC management.
Key implications
This narrative underscores the paradigm shift toward personalized care in ovarian cancer management, driven by molecular profiling and targeted therapy development. It emphasizes the urgency of overcoming chemoresistance and tumor heterogeneity. The absence of microbiome data signals an opportunity for trials integrating microbial biomarkers to refine early detection, prognostication, and therapeutic stratification.
Endometriosis-Associated Ovarian Cancer: From Molecular Pathologies to Clinical Relevance
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This review explores the molecular pathogenesis of endometriosis-associated ovarian cancer, highlighting key genetic mutations, hormonal imbalances, and microRNA dysregulation that contribute to the disease. It discusses the potential for personalized treatment strategies based on molecular signatures to improve outcomes in affected patients.
What was studied?
This review examines the molecular pathogenesis of endometriosis-associated ovarian cancer (EAOC), focusing on the genetic, epigenetic, and microenvironmental factors that contribute to the transformation of benign endometriotic lesions into malignancies. The study explores how endometriosis, a chronic condition where endometrial-like tissue grows outside the uterus, increases the risk of developing certain types of ovarian cancer, particularly endometrioid and clear-cell carcinoma. The article discusses the roles of various genetic mutations, including those in genes like p53, K-ras, ARID1A, PIK3CA, and PPP2R1A, as well as the influence of hormonal imbalances, oxidative stress, and inflammation in driving the progression of EAOC.
Who was studied?
The review focuses on molecular and clinical studies involving patients with endometriosis, specifically those at an increased risk for developing ovarian cancer. It explores the genetic and molecular profiles of ovarian endometriotic lesions and compares them with those of normal ovarian tissues and ovarian cancer. The article also highlights the tumor microenvironment, including factors like estrogen signaling, oxidative stress, and microRNA dysregulation, that may contribute to cancer progression in women with endometriosis. The study integrates findings from various patient cohorts and experimental models, emphasizing the need for personalized treatment strategies based on molecular signatures.
Most important findings
The study identifies several key molecular factors involved in the malignant transformation of endometriosis to ovarian cancer. Genetic mutations, such as in the p53 and K-ras genes, along with microsatellite instability, play a critical role in the initiation and progression of tumors. ARID1A mutations, which affect chromatin remodeling, are frequent in clear-cell and endometrioid ovarian carcinomas, leading to genomic instability and increased tumor aggressiveness. Additionally, mutations in the PIK3CA gene, which is involved in the PI3K/AKT/mTOR signaling pathway, were found to be early events in the development of EAOC, particularly in clear-cell carcinoma. The loss of ARID1A expression often coexists with these mutations, further complicating tumor progression. The review also highlights the role of estrogen in promoting endometriotic cell proliferation through signaling pathways, contributing to carcinogenesis. MicroRNAs, including miR-200 and let-7, are involved in regulating epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition and oncogenicity, making them potential biomarkers for EAOC. Moreover, the tumor microenvironment, shaped by oxidative stress and inflammation, further accelerates the carcinogenic process.
Key implications
The molecular insights provided by this review suggest that targeting specific genetic and molecular pathways could be an effective approach to treating EAOC. For example, inhibiting the PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway, which is altered in many EAOC cases, or targeting microRNAs involved in tumor progression, could offer new therapeutic avenues. The review also emphasizes the importance of early detection, especially for patients with endometriosis who are at higher risk for developing ovarian cancer. Understanding the complex interplay between genetic mutations, hormonal factors, and the tumor microenvironment is crucial for developing more effective, personalized treatments for EAOC. Given the poor prognosis associated with clear-cell ovarian carcinoma, which is often diagnosed at advanced stages, the identification of specific molecular signatures could help tailor early interventions to improve patient outcomes.
Ovarian Cancer—Epidemiology, Classification, Pathogenesis, Treatment, and Estrogen Receptors’ Molecular Backgrounds
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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This review covers the epidemiology, genetics, and molecular mechanisms of ovarian cancer, focusing on the role of estrogen receptors and genetic mutations such as BRCA1/2. It emphasizes the importance of genetic testing and the potential of targeted therapies, including PARP inhibitors, for improving patient outcomes.
What was reviewed?
This review explores the epidemiology, classification, pathogenesis, treatment, and molecular background of estrogen receptors in ovarian cancer. It provides a comprehensive analysis of the various factors that contribute to the development and progression of ovarian cancer, with a specific focus on genetic factors such as mutations in BRCA1 and BRCA2, and the role of estrogen receptors in tumor growth and hormone-dependent carcinogenesis.
Who was reviewed?
The review does not focus on individual studies or specific patient populations but instead compiles data from a wide range of epidemiological and clinical research. It synthesizes information on ovarian cancer risk factors, the molecular biology of the disease, and therapeutic interventions from various scientific and clinical sources, offering insights into treatment approaches and ongoing research.
Most important findings
A key finding of the review is the growing understanding of the genetic and molecular underpinnings of ovarian cancer. Mutations in the BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes significantly increase the risk of developing ovarian cancer, with BRCA1 mutation carriers facing a 44% risk, while BRCA2 mutation carriers have a 17% risk. The review highlights the role of estrogen in ovarian cancer, noting that 60% of cases exhibit significantly elevated levels of estrogen receptor alpha (ERα). The review emphasizes the impact of estrogen receptors on ovarian cancer progression, with the imbalance between ERα and estrogen receptor beta (ERβ) playing a crucial role in carcinogenesis. Additionally, polymorphisms in the ESR1 gene, which encodes ERα, may affect estrogen receptor activity and influence both the development of ovarian cancer and the response to hormone therapies.
Key implications
The review’s findings have substantial clinical implications, particularly in the areas of genetic testing, early detection, and treatment strategies for ovarian cancer. The identification of BRCA1/2 mutations can guide personalized treatment with PARP inhibitors, which have proven effective for hereditary ovarian cancers. The understanding of estrogen receptor signaling, especially the role of ERα and ERβ, opens avenues for targeted therapies that could modulate estrogen activity to slow down cancer progression. Furthermore, the exploration of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the ESR1 gene provides new opportunities for predicting treatment outcomes and tailoring therapies based on individual genetic profiles. Despite advancements, the review stresses that there is still no effective screening method for early-stage ovarian cancer, highlighting the need for continued research into biomarkers and non-invasive detection methods.
Ovarian cancer in the world: Epidemiology and risk factors
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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This review analyzes the global epidemiology and risk factors of ovarian cancer, emphasizing the role of genetic predispositions, reproductive factors, and lifestyle choices. It highlights the disparities in incidence and mortality rates across regions and calls for better prevention and early detection strategies.
What was reviewed?
This review article examines the global epidemiology of ovarian cancer, focusing on its incidence, mortality rates, and risk factors. It highlights the geographical disparities in ovarian cancer rates, with a particular focus on variations across different human development index (HDI) countries. Additionally, the article emphasizes the diverse range of risk factors, such as genetic predispositions, reproductive health factors, hormonal influences, and lifestyle factors, and their implications for ovarian cancer incidence.
Who was reviewed?
The review utilizes findings from a broad collection of studies on ovarian cancer published between 1925 and 2018. It includes data from observational studies on various aspects of ovarian cancer epidemiology, including incidence and mortality across different geographic regions and populations. The authors reviewed information on demographic, reproductive, genetic, hormonal, and lifestyle-related risk factors and their influence on the occurrence of ovarian cancer. No specific individuals were studied; rather, the article provides an overview of global trends and the factors contributing to ovarian cancer risk.
Most important findings
The review identifies several critical findings related to ovarian cancer’s global epidemiology. First, it highlights ovarian cancer as the seventh most common cancer among women, with significant variations in incidence and mortality rates across different regions. High-income countries tend to have higher incidence rates, although their mortality rates have been declining in recent years due to better access to treatment. In contrast, lower-income countries face higher mortality rates, attributed to limited healthcare access and late-stage diagnoses.
Genetic factors, particularly mutations in the BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes, play a significant role in increasing ovarian cancer risk, with familial history also contributing to susceptibility. Reproductive factors, including age at first menstruation, pregnancy, and lactation, were found to influence ovarian cancer risk, with early pregnancies and breastfeeding reducing the risk. Hormonal contraceptive use was also associated with a reduced risk of ovarian cancer. Additionally, lifestyle factors such as obesity, diet, and physical activity significantly impact ovarian cancer risk, with obesity being linked to higher cancer mortality rates. The article also discusses the role of pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) and endometriosis in increasing the likelihood of ovarian cancer, especially among women with chronic inflammation.
Key implications
The review’s findings suggest several implications for public health, especially in the context of prevention, early detection, and treatment strategies for ovarian cancer. Understanding the geographic disparities in incidence and mortality rates calls for targeted health interventions and increased access to diagnostic and treatment services, particularly in low-income countries. The recognition of genetic and reproductive factors as key determinants in ovarian cancer risk underscores the importance of genetic counseling and early screening for high-risk populations, particularly those with a family history of ovarian or breast cancer. Furthermore, the identification of lifestyle factors as modifiable risks opens opportunities for prevention strategies, including promoting healthy diets, regular physical activity, and weight management. The review also stresses the need for ongoing research to better understand the roles of chronic inflammation and reproductive health conditions like PID and endometriosis in ovarian cancer development.
Urinary heavy metals and overall survival of advanced high-grade serous ovarian cancer: A nested case-control study in China
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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The study examines the association between urinary concentrations of heavy metals (arsenic, cadmium, mercury, lead) and survival in patients with advanced high-grade serous ovarian cancer. High levels of these metals correlate with worse outcomes, particularly lead, which significantly contributes to survival prognosis.
What was studied?
The study investigated the relationship between urinary concentrations of five heavy metals, arsenic (As), cadmium (Cd), chromium (Cr), mercury (Hg), and lead (Pb), and overall survival (OS) in patients with advanced high-grade serous ovarian cancer (HGSOC). Using a nested case-control design within the Ovarian Cancer Follow-Up Study (OOPS), the researchers aim to identify whether high levels of these metals in urine could serve as biomarkers for cancer prognosis and survival outcomes in women with HGSOC.
Who was studied?
The study focused on 318 women diagnosed with advanced high-grade serous ovarian cancer, with a 1:1 matched case-control design. The patients were recruited from Shengjing Hospital of China Medical University, Shenyang, China, and were matched for age at diagnosis, sample date, and body mass index. The cases were those who had passed away from the disease, and the controls were those who survived. The study excluded patients who had early-stage or non-serous ovarian cancer and those undergoing chemotherapy at the time of diagnosis, ensuring the cohort was limited to never-smokers to avoid confounding factors like smoking, which could affect metal accumulation.
Most important findings
The study found significant associations between higher urinary concentrations of arsenic, cadmium, mercury, and lead and worse overall survival for patients with advanced high-grade serous ovarian cancer. Specifically, individuals in the highest tertile for arsenic, cadmium, mercury, and lead concentrations had higher odds ratios for poor survival compared to those in the lowest tertile. The odds ratios (ORs) for arsenic, cadmium, mercury, and lead were 1.99, 2.56, 2.24, and 3.80, respectively, indicating a strong relationship between elevated metal levels and reduced survival. Additionally, a joint effect analysis revealed that mixtures of these heavy metals further exacerbated the association with poor survival outcomes, with lead contributing the most to this negative impact.
Key implications
This study suggests that urinary heavy metal concentrations, particularly of lead, cadmium, mercury, and arsenic, are associated with worse survival outcomes in advanced high-grade serous ovarian cancer. These findings support the notion that environmental exposures to these toxic metals might play a critical role in the prognosis of HGSOC. Given the persistent nature of these metals in the environment and their accumulation in the human body, they could serve as potential biomarkers for assessing cancer prognosis. The study calls for further research to validate these findings and explore mechanisms underlying the relationship between heavy metals and ovarian cancer survival, including their potential interaction with other environmental and genetic factors.
Nutritional interventions during treatment for ovarian cancer: A narrative review and recommendations for future research
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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This review discusses the role of nutritional interventions in improving the nutritional status and clinical outcomes of women with ovarian cancer during treatment. It highlights the importance of personalized nutrition care and the need for more research to establish effective intervention strategies.
What was studied?
This narrative review explores the impact of nutritional interventions during ovarian cancer treatment, focusing on their effects on nutritional status, muscle mass, and clinical outcomes. The study evaluates various types of interventions, including individual nutrition counseling, oral nutritional supplements, perioperative immunonutrition, and exercise interventions. The review highlights the importance of addressing malnutrition and muscle loss, which are prevalent in ovarian cancer patients, particularly due to the hypermetabolic state caused by the cancer itself and its treatments. It also investigates the role of personalized nutrition care to mitigate treatment-related side effects and improve patient survival and quality of life.
Who was studied?
The review compiles evidence from multiple studies on women diagnosed with ovarian cancer, primarily in advanced stages (III and IV). These studies include various treatment regimens such as surgery, chemotherapy, and sometimes radiotherapy. The patients in the reviewed studies had varying nutritional statuses, many presenting with malnutrition or muscle loss at the time of diagnosis. The sample sizes varied across studies, ranging from small cohorts in pilot studies to larger retrospective and prospective cohort studies. The majority of the women studied had ovarian cancer at stages where malnutrition and muscle loss were already prevalent due to the disease and its treatment.
Most important findings
One of the key findings from the review is the widespread prevalence of malnutrition and muscle loss in women with ovarian cancer. Around 70% of these patients experience malnutrition at diagnosis, and approximately 40% suffer from muscle loss, which negatively impacts treatment outcomes. The review highlights several interventions that have shown promise, particularly individualized nutrition counseling and oral nutritional supplements, which have been associated with improvements in nutritional status and survival outcomes. The review also found that perioperative immunonutrition could reduce complications and length of hospital stays, though the results were inconsistent across studies. Nutrition and exercise interventions, such as multimodal prehabilitation programs, demonstrated improvements in dietary intake, muscle mass preservation, and overall quality of life during chemotherapy treatment. Notably, a retrospective study showed that improved nutritional status was linked to significantly better survival outcomes.
Key implications
The findings suggest that early and individualized nutritional interventions are critical for women with ovarian cancer, particularly during treatment. These interventions can prevent further nutritional decline, support muscle mass preservation, and improve clinical outcomes, such as reducing chemotherapy toxicities and improving overall survival. However, the review emphasizes that while the evidence is promising, there is a critical need for larger, more robust prospective studies to confirm these benefits and develop comprehensive clinical guidelines. The importance of integrating nutrition care into routine cancer treatment is clear, but future research should focus on the long-term impact of nutritional interventions, particularly after treatment ends, to prevent ongoing declines in nutritional status and muscle mass.
Metformin use and survival in people with ovarian cancer: A population-based cohort study from British Columbia, Canada
February 12, 2026
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Drug Repurposing
Drug Repurposing
Drug repurposing involves identifying new therapeutic uses for existing drugs, offering a cost-effective and time-efficient pathway to enhance treatment options and address unmet medical needs.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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This study examines the association between metformin use and survival outcomes in ovarian cancer patients. A significant survival benefit was found in diabetic patients, suggesting metformin may improve ovarian cancer prognosis, although further research is needed for non-diabetic patients.
What was studied?
This study investigates the relationship between metformin use and survival outcomes in patients diagnosed with ovarian cancer. It specifically explores how metformin, a common treatment for type 2 diabetes, impacts the prognosis of ovarian cancer patients. The study focuses on a large cohort of patients diagnosed between 1997 and 2018 in British Columbia, Canada, using time-dependent analysis methods to avoid immortal time bias. The aim is to determine whether metformin use improves survival rates for ovarian cancer patients, particularly in those with diabetes.
Who was studied?
The cohort consisted of 4,951 individuals diagnosed with ovarian cancer in British Columbia, Canada, between 1997 and 2018. Out of these, 711 patients had a history of diabetes, and 236 of them used metformin during the 12 months before diagnosis. The study also included non-diabetic patients, but a separate focus was placed on the diabetic subgroup to better assess the relationship between metformin use and ovarian cancer survival. The patients in the study were followed up until 2020, providing a long-term view of survival outcomes.
Most important findings
The study found that metformin use was associated with a 17% reduction in ovarian cancer-specific mortality across the full cohort, though this result was not statistically significant. However, a significant survival benefit was observed in the subgroup of diabetic patients, where metformin use was linked to a 29% reduction in ovarian cancer-specific mortality. The findings suggest that metformin's effects may be more pronounced in diabetic patients, possibly due to the interaction between diabetes and cancer survival. Importantly, the study accounted for immortal time bias, which has affected previous studies. No statistically significant impact was found with cumulative duration of metformin use or by the type of metformin use (pre-diagnosis, continuing, or new use post-diagnosis), although trends indicated improved survival with continued use of metformin from pre-diagnosis.
Key implications
The findings from this study suggest that metformin could offer a survival benefit for ovarian cancer patients, particularly those with diabetes. The results call for further research, especially focusing on non-diabetic patients, to fully understand the role of metformin in ovarian cancer treatment. While the statistical significance in the full cohort was not achieved, the protective effects observed in the diabetic subgroup warrant further investigation, possibly through randomized controlled trials to mitigate potential confounding factors. Given the widespread use of metformin for diabetes management, its potential application in cancer therapy could provide a low-cost, easily accessible treatment option for ovarian cancer patients.
Extended sub-chronic exposure to heavy metal mixture induced multidrug resistance against chemotherapy agents in ovarian cancer cells
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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This study investigates how sub-chronic exposure to lead, cadmium, and cobalt induces multidrug resistance in ovarian cancer cells, highlighting the role of drug efflux transporters and reduced apoptosis in treatment resistance. These findings underscore the importance of environmental metal exposure in cancer therapy effectiveness.
What was studied?
The research investigates how chronic exposure to a mixture of lead (Pb), cadmium (Cd), and cobalt (Co) at low, non-lethal doses can induce multidrug resistance (MDR) in the NIH-Ovcar3 human ovarian cancer cell line. The study focuses on whether prolonged exposure to these heavy metals results in resistance to chemotherapy drugs like cisplatin (CP), 5-fluorouracil (5-FU), and doxorubicin (DX), and explores the molecular mechanisms behind this resistance. The research aims to uncover whether the heavy metals could influence drug efflux pumps and apoptosis pathways, making chemotherapy less effective.
Who was studied?
The study utilized the NIH-Ovcar3 human ovarian cancer cell line, which is commonly used for research into chemotherapy resistance. The cells were exposed to a mixture of Pb, Cd, and Co at concentrations that were below known harmful levels, simulating the chronic exposure seen in real-world environments. The research observed the development of multidrug resistance over several generations (20 passages) to investigate how these cells adapted to low-dose heavy metal exposure. This was followed by treatment with chemotherapy agents to examine how the exposure affected the cells' responses to these drugs.
Most important findings
The study showed that prolonged exposure to low doses of Pb, Cd, and Co resulted in significant chemotherapy resistance in the ovarian cancer cells. These resistant cells exhibited cross-resistance to three chemotherapy agents: cisplatin, 5-fluorouracil, and doxorubicin. The most pronounced resistance was observed against cisplatin and doxorubicin, where resistant cells had over 2.1 and 2.87 times higher IC50 values compared to controls. Furthermore, the study highlighted the role of ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters, particularly P-glycoprotein (ABCB1), Breast Cancer Resistance Protein (ABCG2), and Multidrug Resistance-associated Protein 1 (ABCC1), in this resistance mechanism. These transporters were significantly overexpressed in the resistant cell population, supporting the hypothesis that heavy metal exposure upregulates cellular detoxification pathways. Additionally, the resistant cells exhibited lower apoptotic activity and increased motility, suggesting that the exposure may also contribute to a more invasive and metastatic phenotype.
Key implications
The findings of this study suggest that even low levels of heavy metal exposure, which are often deemed safe, could contribute to the development of multidrug resistance in ovarian cancer cells. This has critical implications for clinical practice, especially in environments with high environmental contamination. The study emphasizes the need for monitoring heavy metal exposure in patients with ovarian cancer, particularly in those undergoing chemotherapy, as it could influence the efficacy of treatment. Understanding the molecular mechanisms, including the involvement of ABC transporters and reduced apoptosis, offers potential targets for overcoming resistance and improving therapeutic strategies. This research also calls for further exploration of how environmental exposures to heavy metals might affect cancer progression and drug resistance over time.
Ovarian Cancer and the Microbiome: Connecting the Dots for Early Diagnosis and Therapeutic Innovations—A Review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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This review explores the role of the microbiome in ovarian cancer, emphasizing its potential for early diagnosis and treatment. The use of microbiome-based biomarkers and therapies like fecal and vaginal microbiome transplantation offers promising new avenues for cancer care.
What was reviewed?
This review explores the relationship between the microbiome and ovarian cancer, specifically how the gut and cervicovaginal microbiota influence the development, progression, and treatment of the disease. The review also delves into the potential of microbiome-based biomarkers for early diagnosis and therapeutic strategies, including microbiome transplantation approaches like fecal and vaginal microbiome transplantation (FMT and VMT).
Who was studied?
The review synthesizes findings from various studies involving patients with ovarian cancer, healthy controls, and animal models. It discusses the microbiome alterations observed in the gut and cervicovaginal regions and their association with ovarian cancer. The studies reviewed provide insights into how microbiome dysbiosis contributes to cancer progression, with a particular focus on microbial signatures in different stages of the disease.
Most important findings
The review highlights the significant role of microbiome dysbiosis in ovarian cancer pathogenesis. Alterations in the gut microbiome, particularly an increase in Bacteroides, Prevotella, and Proteobacteria, are associated with increased cancer risk. In the cervicovaginal microbiome, a decrease in Lactobacillus species is linked to cancer progression. The review also underscores the impact of inflammatory cytokines, such as IL-6, which are influenced by the microbiome and contribute to tumor growth. Additionally, infections like Chlamydia, which are associated with pelvic inflammatory disease (PID), can increase the risk of ovarian cancer by triggering inflammation. The review further suggests that microbial signatures, such as changes in Lactobacillus and Acinetobacter populations, could be used as biomarkers for early detection and prognosis of ovarian cancer.
Key implications
The findings in this review suggest that the microbiome could be a valuable diagnostic tool and therapeutic target in ovarian cancer. The identification of microbial signatures linked to ovarian cancer offers the potential for non-invasive biomarkers that could improve early detection and prognosis. Moreover, the manipulation of the microbiome through therapies like FMT and VMT holds promise for enhancing the effectiveness of existing treatments and overcoming chemotherapy resistance. However, the review stresses the need for more research to validate these findings and determine how best to apply microbiome-based therapies in clinical settings. Understanding the complex interactions between the microbiome and ovarian cancer could lead to personalized treatment approaches based on an individual's microbiome profile, offering new hope for more effective cancer therapies.
Ovarian cancer: Diagnosis and treatment strategies (Review)
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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This review discusses ovarian cancer diagnosis, molecular characteristics, and treatment strategies, emphasizing the role of targeted therapies like PARP inhibitors and immunotherapy, with a focus on personalized treatment approaches based on genetic and molecular tumor profiles.
What was reviewed?
This review article focuses on the current advancements in the diagnosis and treatment strategies for ovarian cancer. The review discusses the challenges associated with early detection, which is often complicated due to the subtle symptoms and lack of reliable screening techniques. It explores diagnostic approaches, including serum biomarkers like CA125, HE4, and other molecular markers. The review also covers the promising roles of targeted therapies, such as PARP inhibitors and anti-angiogenesis therapies, in treating ovarian cancer, as well as the evolving potential of immunotherapy. It highlights the need for personalized treatments based on genetic profiles and tumor characteristics, noting the significant progress in molecular-based strategies for ovarian cancer treatment.
Who was reviewed?
This review synthesizes a broad range of studies and clinical research findings on ovarian cancer from various researchers and clinical trials. The studies reviewed focus on ovarian cancer's molecular genetics, diagnosis, treatment strategies, and therapeutic advancements. The authors discuss the characteristics of different ovarian cancer subtypes, diagnostic markers, and the current and future therapeutic options. Additionally, it evaluates various biomarker studies and therapeutic trials to present a comprehensive understanding of the disease's clinical management.
Most important findings
The review highlighted several key points. Firstly, ovarian cancer is often diagnosed at an advanced stage due to the lack of effective early screening methods. CA125 remains the most commonly used biomarker, though its sensitivity is limited, especially in early-stage cases. The combination of CA125 and HE4 shows promise in improving diagnostic accuracy. Moreover, new liquid biopsy techniques, such as the analysis of circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA), provide a non-invasive alternative to traditional methods. In treatment, targeted therapies like PARP inhibitors (e.g., olaparib, rucaparib, niraparib) have proven beneficial, especially for BRCA-mutated ovarian cancers. The review also points out the significance of anti-angiogenesis therapies, such as bevacizumab, and the increasing importance of immunotherapy, particularly immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) and adoptive cell therapies, as potential future strategies. Finally, the review underscores the need for personalized medicine tailored to the genetic and molecular profiles of individual tumors.
Key implications
The review’s findings have substantial clinical implications. The need for more effective early detection methods is clear, and advancements in liquid biopsy and combined biomarker assays could significantly improve diagnosis. For treatment, the ongoing development and application of targeted therapies, such as PARP inhibitors, hold promise for enhancing progression-free survival, especially in genetically predisposed populations. However, challenges remain in overcoming treatment resistance and improving patient outcomes, particularly in recurrent cases. The potential integration of immunotherapy with targeted therapies is an exciting frontier, offering hope for more durable and personalized treatment regimens. Despite the promise of these therapies, further research is needed to optimize combination strategies, address side effects, and develop cost-effective treatments that can be widely accessible. Personalized treatment approaches based on genetic profiles may revolutionize ovarian cancer care by offering tailored therapies that are more effective and less toxic.
Potential Role of Vaginal Microbiota in Ovarian Cancer Carcinogenesis, Progression and Treatment
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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This review highlights the role of vaginal microbiota in ovarian cancer carcinogenesis, progression, and treatment. It discusses microbial dysbiosis and potential therapeutic interventions like probiotics and vaginal microbiota transplantation, offering promising avenues for improving cancer treatment.
What was studied?
This review examines the role of the vaginal microbiota in ovarian cancer carcinogenesis, progression, and treatment. The paper highlights how changes in the vaginal microbiome, particularly dysbiosis, may influence ovarian cancer. It explores the connections between vaginal microbial composition and ovarian cancer risk, shedding light on potential mechanisms through microbial metabolites, inflammatory responses, and immune modulation. The review also suggests that therapeutic interventions targeting the vaginal microbiota, such as probiotics and vaginal microbiota transplantation (VMT), could be a promising approach in ovarian cancer treatment.
Who was studied?
The review references various studies involving ovarian cancer patients and healthy individuals, primarily focusing on human subjects. Research on animal models is also included to examine the impact of altered vaginal microbiota on cancer progression. Studies exploring the vaginal microbiome composition in cancer patients, particularly those with a high risk of ovarian cancer, have been considered to understand how microbial shifts may contribute to disease development. The article also addresses the potential therapeutic effects of modulating vaginal microbiota in cancer treatment.
Most important findings
The review highlights several key findings, including the association between vaginal microbial dysbiosis and ovarian cancer. Specific microbial changes, such as a shift away from Lactobacillus dominance and the increased presence of anaerobic bacteria like Atopobium and Prevotella, are linked to cancer progression. Additionally, pathogens such as Chlamydia trachomatis have been found to increase ovarian cancer risk by facilitating DNA damage and inflammation, which may lead to tumor initiation. Furthermore, the review discusses how certain vaginal bacteria, including Lactobacillus strains, might have protective effects by reducing inflammation and promoting cancer cell apoptosis. It also notes that altering the vaginal microbiota through antibiotics or probiotics may influence the development and progression of ovarian cancer.
Key implications
The review suggests that understanding the vaginal microbiota's role in ovarian cancer could lead to novel therapeutic strategies. Modifying the vaginal microbiome using probiotics or vaginal microbiota transplantation (VMT) may not only prevent cancer progression but also enhance treatment efficacy. Given the strong correlation between microbial imbalances and cancer risk, this approach could offer new possibilities for both prevention and treatment. However, further research is needed to better understand the specific microbial signatures associated with ovarian cancer and to refine these interventions for clinical use. The potential for integrating microbiome modulation into ovarian cancer treatment could significantly improve outcomes, particularly for patients with recurrence or chemotherapy resistance.
The role of the microbiome in ovarian cancer: mechanistic insights into oncobiosis and to bacterial metabolite signaling
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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This review explores the role of the microbiome in ovarian cancer, focusing on microbial dysbiosis and bacterial metabolites that influence inflammation and carcinogenesis. It highlights the potential of microbiome-based therapies, such as probiotics and antibiotics, to improve treatment outcomes and provide new diagnostic tools.
What was studied?
This review focuses on the role of the microbiome in ovarian cancer, specifically its influence on inflammation, immune modulation, and carcinogenesis. The study highlights the concept of "oncobiosis," a term used to describe microbial dysbiosis associated with cancer. It explores how specific bacterial communities in ovarian cancer tissue, the genital tract, peritoneum, and even serum, contribute to cancer progression. The paper also investigates bacterial metabolites, such as lipopolysaccharides (LPS), lysophospholipids, and tryptophan derivatives, and their roles in promoting inflammation and tumor development. Additionally, the interaction between the microbiome and ovarian cancer therapies, like chemotherapy, is examined, suggesting that microbiome manipulation may influence therapeutic outcomes.
Who was studied?
The review includes research on ovarian cancer patients, with data from various microbiome compartments such as the vaginal, cervicovaginal, peritoneal, and gastrointestinal tracts. Studies involving both human samples and animal models were referenced to explore microbial composition in ovarian cancer patients compared to healthy controls. It also considers the impact of infections such as Chlamydia trachomatis and Neisseria gonorrhoeae, which are linked to increased ovarian cancer risk. Furthermore, the paper discusses the use of antibiotics and probiotics in modulating the microbiome to potentially influence ovarian cancer progression and treatment responses.
Most important findings
The review identifies significant microbial shifts associated with ovarian cancer. In ovarian cancer tissues, there is an increase in Gram-negative bacteria, such as Proteobacteria and Fusobacteria, which are known for their inflammatory properties. Dysbiosis is also evident in other compartments, such as the vaginal and peritoneal microbiomes, where reduced diversity and an increase in pathogenic bacteria were observed. The review further highlights the involvement of microbial metabolites in carcinogenesis, including lipopolysaccharides (LPS), which trigger inflammatory pathways through TLR4 receptors, and lysophospholipids, which promote cancer cell migration and invasion. Tryptophan metabolites, particularly indole derivatives, are also implicated in ovarian cancer progression. The paper suggests that microbial metabolites may influence chemotherapy effectiveness, with some bacterial species enhancing drug resistance while others may reduce tumor proliferation.
Key implications
This review underscores the potential of microbiome-based interventions in ovarian cancer management. It suggests that modulating the microbiome, through antibiotics, probiotics, or diet, could influence inflammation and immune responses, thereby improving treatment outcomes. Given the microbiome’s role in promoting carcinogenesis, targeting specific bacterial populations or their metabolites may provide novel therapeutic avenues. Additionally, understanding microbiome signatures could assist in early diagnosis, monitoring disease progression, and predicting treatment responses. However, the review emphasizes that more research is needed to fully understand the complex interactions between the microbiome and ovarian cancer, and to refine microbiome-based treatments for clinical use.
Causal association between 637 human metabolites and ovarian cancer: A mendelian randomization study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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Mendelian randomization identified causal links between 9 metabolites and ovarian cancer risk. Some metabolites promote, others protect against OC. These findings suggest potential biomarkers for diagnosis and treatment but require clinical validation.
What was studied?
This study employed Mendelian randomization (MR) to assess causal associations between 637 human metabolites and ovarian cancer (OC). Researchers used data from the GWAS database to identify genetic variants associated with metabolites, applying this to a large ovarian cancer GWAS dataset. The goal was to determine the causal relationships between specific metabolites and the risk of developing OC, thereby revealing potential biomarkers for early diagnosis and treatment.
Who was studied?
The study utilized genetic data from European populations, focusing on GWAS datasets for both human metabolites and ovarian cancer. The metabolites were selected based on genetic loci associated with 637 metabolites, as identified in earlier genome-wide studies. The ovarian cancer dataset (encoded as ieu-b-4963) included over 199,000 samples, with outcomes specific to ovarian cancer subtypes, analyzed through MR techniques.
Most important findings
The MR analysis identified 31 metabolites with a significant causal relationship to OC. Among these, 9 metabolites passed additional tests for heterogeneity, pleiotropy, and causal direction. Notably, androsterone sulfate, propionylcarnitine, 5alpha-androstan-3beta-17beta-diol disulfate, and medium very-low-density lipoprotein (VLDL) were found to have a positive causal effect, promoting the development of OC. In contrast, metabolites like X-12,093, octanoylcarnitine, N2,N2-dimethylguanosine, and cis-4-decenoyl carnitine showed a negative association, suggesting protective effects against OC.
Key implications
These findings suggest that specific metabolites, especially lipids like VLDL and acylcarnitines, may play a crucial role in ovarian cancer development. Such metabolites could serve as potential biomarkers for early detection or therapeutic targets. While the study provides promising insights, it emphasizes the need for further clinical validation, particularly due to limitations like ethnic homogeneity in the dataset and the low statistical power associated with some metabolites.
Exploring the causal role of multiple metabolites on ovarian cancer: a two sample Mendelian randomization study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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A two-sample MR of 486 metabolites reports suggestive causal links across OC and histotypes, maps caffeine/arginine/TCA and alpha-linolenic pathways, and surfaces microbially influenced xenobiotics as potential biomarkers; findings require replication before translation.
What was studied?
This study used metabolites and ovarian cancer Mendelian randomization to test causal links between 486 serum metabolites and overall epithelial ovarian cancer (OC) and four histotypes. The authors performed a two-sample Mendelian randomization (MR) using inverse-variance weighted (primary), MR-Egger, and weighted median estimators, with sensitivity tests for heterogeneity, horizontal pleiotropy, and leave-one-out stability. They also ran reverse MR and pathway enrichment. The goal was to identify metabolites and pathways that may contribute to OC etiology and inform biomarker discovery and prevention.
Who was studied?
Genetic instruments for 486 circulating metabolites came from a metabolomics GWAS of 7,824 individuals of European ancestry; 309 were known metabolites categorized across eight KEGG classes. Outcomes were from OCAC GWAS summary data: 25,509 OC cases and 40,941 controls of European ancestry, with subtype datasets for serous (14,049 cases), endometrioid (2,810), clear cell (1,366), and mucinous (2,566).
Most important findings
The analysis yielded 112 suggestive metabolite–phenotype associations; stringent consistency across ≥3 MR methods reduced these to 18 associations spanning 14 known metabolites, with eight risk-linked and six protective signals. Notably for overall OC, asparagine associated with a lower risk (OR 0.65), while 4-acetamidobutanoate, alpha-hydroxyisovalerate, 3-(3-hydroxyphenyl)propionate, and X-13183 stearamide are associated with a higher risk. For subtypes, betaine is associated with reduced clear cell risk, whereas estrone-3-sulfate is associated with increased clear cell risk. For endometrioid OC, higher risk signals included 3-(3-hydroxyphenyl)propionate, 1,5-anhydroglucitol, 1-linoleoyl-GPE, and the fibrinogen-derived peptide ADpSGEGDFXAEGGGVR; protective signals for endometrioid included arachidonate (20:4n6) and stearidonate (18:4n3). For serous OC, DSGEGDFXAEGGGVR and salicylurate (2-hydroxyhippurate) are associated with a lower risk. Pathway analysis linked mucinous OC to caffeine metabolism, arginine biosynthesis, and the TCA cycle, and linked endometrioid OC to caffeine and alpha-linolenic acid metabolism. After FDR correction, associations remained suggestive rather than confirmatory, but heterogeneity and pleiotropy checks were negative and leave-one-out analyses were stable; reverse MR did not support reverse causation. From a microbiome perspective, several signals involve xenobiotics and aromatic metabolites that are microbially influenced in humans, suggesting plausible gut–tumor metabolic axes, although the study did not profile microbiota directly.
Key implications
For clinicians, these findings highlight metabolic pathways that may intersect with host–microbe chemistry in OC. The caffeine, arginine, and TCA axes in mucinous disease, and alpha-linolenic acid metabolism in endometrioid disease, point to diet- and microbiome-modifiable routes worth validation. Metabolites with suggestive risk signals and protective signals could seed candidate biomarker panels for risk stratification or recurrence surveillance. Yet none survived FDR correction, and all data were European; apply caution and seek replication in diverse cohorts with integrated microbiome and metabolomics profiling before clinical use.
The effects of dietary fat on gut microbial composition and function in a mouse model of ovarian cancer
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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This study investigates the effects of ketogenic and high-fat diets on gut microbial composition and ovarian cancer progression in mice. It shows that high-fat diets increase tumor growth and disrupt microbial diversity, highlighting the potential role of diet in cancer therapy and prevention.
What was studied?
This study aimed to investigate the impact of dietary fat on gut microbial composition and function in a mouse model of ovarian cancer. Specifically, it explored the effects of ketogenic (KD) and high-fat/low-carbohydrate (HF/LC) diets on the gut microbiome and tumor progression in a syngeneic mouse model of high-grade serous ovarian cancer (EOC). The study also compared these high-fat diets to a low-fat/high-carbohydrate (LF/HC) diet. Tumor growth was monitored, and microbial composition was analyzed using 16S rRNA sequencing and shotgun metagenomics.
Who was studied?
The study involved 30 female C57BL/6 J mice, a widely used strain in cancer research. The mice were injected with KPCA EOC cells, a syngeneic ovarian cancer cell line that mimics high-grade serous ovarian cancer, and were subsequently randomized into three diet groups: ketogenic diet (KD), high-fat/low-carbohydrate diet (HF/LC), and low-fat/high-carbohydrate diet (LF/HC). The gut microbial composition and tumor progression were monitored over a period of 27 days. Fecal samples were collected for microbial analysis at the time of euthanasia.
Most important findings
The study found that both KD and HF/LC diets significantly accelerated tumor growth compared to the LF/HC diet. Mice on the KD and HF/LC diets showed marked reductions in gut microbial diversity, while those on the LF/HC diet exhibited higher microbial diversity. The taxonomic analysis revealed distinct microbial alterations among diet groups. Notably, HF/LC-fed mice had an increased abundance of Bacteroides thetaiotamicron, Enterococcus faecalis, and Lachnospiraceae bacterium, while LF/HC-fed mice had an overrepresentation of Dubosiella newyorkensis. KD-fed mice showed a higher abundance of Akkermansia species. Functional pathway analysis indicated that polyamine biosynthesis and fatty acid oxidation pathways were enriched in the HF/LC group, suggesting a link between these metabolic pathways and accelerated tumor growth.
The results highlight the complex relationship between dietary fat, the gut microbiome, and ovarian cancer progression. The study shows that high-fat diets, particularly ketogenic and HF/LC diets, not only accelerate tumor growth but also disrupt microbial diversity in the gut. The findings underscore the importance of considering both the quantity and quality of dietary fat when evaluating its effects on cancer biology. Additionally, the alterations in gut microbial composition linked to these diets suggest that dietary interventions could potentially be used as part of cancer prevention or therapeutic strategies. However, further research is needed to determine the exact mechanisms through which the microbiome influences cancer progression and how dietary modifications can be used to modulate these effects.
Repurposing approved non-oncology drugs for cancer therapy: a comprehensive review of mechanisms, efficacy, and clinical prospects
February 12, 2026
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Drug Repurposing
Drug Repurposing
Drug repurposing involves identifying new therapeutic uses for existing drugs, offering a cost-effective and time-efficient pathway to enhance treatment options and address unmet medical needs.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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This review explores the potential of repurposing non-oncological drugs for cancer therapy, highlighting their efficacy in preclinical studies and their mechanisms of action. It emphasizes the benefits of using established drugs to overcome cancer treatment challenges, particularly in overcoming drug resistance and reducing costs.
What was studied?
This comprehensive review addresses the growing interest in repurposing approved non-oncological drugs for cancer therapy. The study examines various classes of drugs, including antimalarials, antibiotics, antivirals, antifungals, and anti-inflammatory agents, that have demonstrated significant antiproliferative, pro-apoptotic, immunomodulatory, and antimetastatic properties. The article provides an in-depth analysis of the mechanisms, efficacy, and clinical prospects of these drugs when used in cancer treatment. It highlights the potential of these repurposed drugs to overcome challenges such as the high cost and lengthy development process associated with new anti-cancer therapies.
Who was studied?
The review primarily discusses preclinical studies and in vitro experiments using cancer cell lines, along with some clinical trials that focus on repurposed drugs. The studies investigate the effects of these drugs on various types of cancers, including breast, prostate, colorectal, ovarian, and lung cancer. The cancer cell lines tested include those from different cancer subtypes, allowing for a broad understanding of how these drugs could be applied to treat multiple forms of cancer. The article also references case studies involving patients treated with repurposed drugs, providing insights into their clinical relevance and potential for broader use in cancer therapy.
Most important findings
The review identifies several repurposed drugs with promising anti-cancer effects. For example, statins, commonly used for cholesterol management, have shown effectiveness in inhibiting tumor growth and enhancing chemotherapy in various cancers. Ivermectin, an antiparasitic drug, has demonstrated anti-tumor effects by reducing cancer cell proliferation and promoting apoptosis. Chloroquine, initially used for malaria, has been highlighted for its ability to suppress autophagy and reduce tumor progression in combination with other chemotherapy agents. Other drugs such as flubendazole, mebendazole, and ritonavir also showed significant anticancer potential, acting through different mechanisms like apoptosis induction, cell cycle arrest, and inhibition of metastasis. These drugs were found to target key cancer-related pathways, including Wnt/β-catenin, AKT/mTOR, and NF-kB signaling, which are crucial for cancer cell survival and progression.
Key implications
The primary implication of this research is that drug repurposing provides an efficient and cost-effective approach to cancer treatment. By utilizing drugs that are already FDA-approved for other diseases, the time and cost associated with developing new cancer therapies can be significantly reduced. Furthermore, the repurposing of drugs with established safety profiles can expedite their transition into clinical practice, offering new therapeutic options for cancer patients, especially in low-resource settings. The findings suggest that combining repurposed drugs with conventional chemotherapy may help overcome drug resistance, a common challenge in cancer treatment. The review emphasizes the need for further clinical trials to validate these preclinical findings and optimize the use of these drugs in cancer therapy.
Profiling of metabolic dysregulation in ovarian cancer tissues and biofluids
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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This study profiles metabolic dysregulation in ovarian cancer, identifying key metabolites and pathways altered in OC tissues and biofluids. N1,N12-diacetylspermine emerges as a potential biomarker.
What was studied?
This study aimed to investigate the metabolomic dysregulation in ovarian cancer (OC) tissues and biofluids. Using targeted metabolomics, the research analyzed tissue samples from ovarian tumors and paired normal tissues as well as biofluid samples including plasma, urine, and saliva. The focus was to identify metabolite profiles that could distinguish OC from benign gynecological diseases and explore metabolic pathways altered in OC. The study employed advanced mass spectrometry techniques, including capillary electrophoresis-mass spectrometry (CE-TOFMS) and liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-QQQMS), to quantify metabolites involved in glycolysis, the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle, and polyamine metabolism, among others.
Who was studied?
The study involved 37 patients diagnosed with ovarian cancer (OC) and 30 patients with benign gynecological diseases, who served as controls. Participants were aged between 33 and 86 years, with no significant differences in body mass index (BMI) between the groups. The ovarian cancer patients had different histological subtypes of OC, including high-grade serous carcinoma, endometrioid carcinoma, and clear cell carcinoma, among others. The control group included individuals with conditions such as benign ovarian tumors, uterine myomas, and polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS).
Most important findings
The study identified significant metabolic differences between ovarian tumor (OT) and normal tissue (NT) samples. Notably, 96 metabolites showed significant differences, with many metabolites being elevated in OT samples, including N1,N12-diacetylspermine, UDP-N-acetylglucosamine, and adenosine monophosphate (AMP). These differences were also reflected in biofluids like plasma, urine, and saliva, with 12 metabolites consistently showing significant changes in both tissues and biofluids. Specifically, N1,N12-diacetylspermine was found to be consistently elevated across all samples, indicating its potential as a biomarker for OC. The study also highlighted metabolic pathway changes in glucose and amino acid metabolism, including pyruvate metabolism, glycolysis, and the TCA cycle, suggesting that metabolic reprogramming, characteristic of cancer cells, is evident in OC tissues.
Key implications
The findings of this study emphasize the importance of metabolic dysregulation in ovarian cancer. The consistent elevation of N1,N12-diacetylspermine across various biofluids and tissues could serve as a potential non-invasive biomarker for early detection. The identification of altered metabolic pathways, such as glycolysis and polyamine metabolism, offers insights into OC pathogenesis and suggests possible therapeutic targets. Given the challenges in early diagnosis of OC, the metabolomic profiling presented here could be pivotal for improving diagnostic strategies and treatment approaches. Further clinical validation and larger cohort studies are necessary to confirm these findings and assess their applicability in clinical settings.
Diet and ovarian cancer risk: A case–control study in China
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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This case-control study highlights the significant role of diet in ovarian cancer risk, with high vegetable and fruit intake reducing risk, while animal fats and salted vegetables increase it. Fried and smoked foods also contribute to a higher risk.
What was studied?
This case-control study investigated the relationship between dietary factors and the risk of ovarian cancer among women in Zhejiang, China. The research focused on food intake, including vegetables, fruits, animal fats, and preserved foods, and their potential impact on the development of epithelial ovarian cancer. The study aimed to identify protective or risk-related dietary habits through an in-depth analysis of food consumption and its association with cancer incidence.
Who was studied?
The study involved 254 patients diagnosed with histologically confirmed epithelial ovarian cancer and 652 control participants. The cases involved women under 75 years old who had lived in Zhejiang Province for at least 10 years. Controls were matched by age and geographical area and consisted of hospital visitors, outpatients, and women recruited from the community. The study sample was designed to ensure diverse representation, with controls free of neoplasms and not under long-term dietary modifications.
Most important findings
The study revealed significant associations between dietary habits and ovarian cancer risk. High intakes of vegetables and fruits were linked to a decreased risk of ovarian cancer, with the upper quartile of vegetable intake showing a 76% lower risk compared to the lower quartile. In contrast, diets rich in animal fat and salted vegetables increased the risk of ovarian cancer, with the highest quartiles for animal fat intake associated with a 4.6-fold increased risk. The study also found that the consumption of fried, cured, and smoked foods significantly increased cancer risk, with the highest intake of smoked food showing a dramatic 9.6-fold increase in risk.
Food Group
Risk Association
Vegetables
Decreased risk (OR = 0.24)
Fruits
Decreased risk (OR = 0.36)
Animal Fat
Increased risk (OR = 4.6)
Salted Vegetables
Increased risk (OR = 3.4)
Fried Foods
Increased risk (OR = 2.50)
Smoked Foods
Increased risk (OR = 9.60)
Key implications
This study highlights the potential impact of dietary patterns on ovarian cancer risk and emphasizes the importance of modifying dietary habits to reduce cancer risk. The findings suggest that increasing the intake of fruits and vegetables while reducing the consumption of animal fats, salted vegetables, and fried or smoked foods may lower the risk of ovarian cancer. These insights can inform public health strategies and recommendations for cancer prevention, particularly in regions where dietary habits significantly contribute to cancer incidence. The clear associations between diet and ovarian cancer suggest that further research into dietary interventions, combined with lifestyle changes, could be beneficial in cancer prevention programs.
A prebiotic dietary pilot intervention restores faecal metabolites and may be neuroprotective in Parkinson’s Disease
February 12, 2026
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Parkinson’s Disease
Parkinson’s Disease
Parkinson’s disease is increasingly recognized as a systemic disorder involving coordinated disturbances across the gut–brain axis, rather than a condition confined to dopaminergic neurodegeneration alone. Converging evidence implicates gut dysbiosis, altered microbial metabolites, impaired intestinal barrier integrity, and metal dyshomeostasis as upstream drivers of neuroinflammation and alpha-synuclein pathology. These interconnected microbiome, metabolomic, and metallomic signals provide a mechanistic framework for understanding disease initiation, progression, and therapeutic targeting beyond the central nervous system.
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Short-chain Fatty Acids (SCFAs)
Short-chain Fatty Acids (SCFAs)
Short-chain fatty acids are microbially derived metabolites that regulate epithelial integrity, immune signaling, and microbial ecology. Their production patterns and mechanistic roles provide essential functional markers within microbiome signatures and support the interpretation of MBTIs, MMAs, and systems-level microbial shifts across clinical conditions.
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A 4-week prebiotic diet in PD patients increased faecal SCFAs, improved gut-brain metabolite profiles, and alleviated gastrointestinal symptoms, but core dysbiosis persisted. Results support microbiota-directed dietary interventions as a promising adjunct for Parkinson's management.
What was studied?
This study, titled "A prebiotic dietary pilot intervention restores faecal metabolites and may be neuroprotective in Parkinson’s Disease," aimed to evaluate whether a short-term, fiber-rich prebiotic diet could modulate the gut microbiome and its metabolites in patients with Parkinson’s Disease (PD), with a particular emphasis on short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) and microbial metabolic signatures of potential neuroprotective relevance. The intervention consisted of a 4-week diet high in dietary fiber and daily intake of the prebiotic Lactulose. Researchers conducted comprehensive profiling, including gut metagenomics, faecal and urinary metabolomics, and clinical assessments (motor and gastrointestinal symptoms), to determine the effects of this dietary intervention on microbial composition, SCFA production, gut-brain-relevant metabolites, and clinical parameters.
Who was studied?
The study population consisted of 11 couples, each comprising a patient with idiopathic Parkinson’s Disease (mild to moderately advanced, Hoehn and Yahr stages 1–2) and their healthy spouse as a control (CO). Ten couples completed the intervention, resulting in 10 PD patients and 10 matched controls. All participants were aged ≤75 years, followed omnivorous diets, and were screened for exclusion criteria such as recent antibiotic use, gastrointestinal diseases, or veganism. The inclusion of spousal controls was designed to minimize dietary and environmental variability, given the pronounced "household effect" on microbiome composition. PD subjects started Lactulose for constipation management at the time of study entry, while controls received a prebiotic dose, ensuring matched intervention exposure.
Most important findings
The most significant findings centered on microbiome composition, metabolite profiles, and clinical outcomes. At baseline, PD patients displayed reduced faecal SCFA concentrations and characteristic gut bacterial dysbiosis, notably depletion of SCFA-producing taxa such as Blautia, Dorea, and Erysipelatoclostridium. Following the prebiotic intervention, both PD and control groups exhibited increased faecal SCFA levels, with a particularly notable rise in propionate among PD patients. This increase in SCFAs correlated inversely with disease severity and gastrointestinal symptom scores in PD, indicating possible clinical benefits.
Taxonomically, the diet induced a robust enrichment of multiple Bifidobacterium species in both groups, likely attributable to Lactulose, but failed to fully restore the PD-associated dysbiotic signature—key taxa remained depleted in PD after intervention. Importantly, urinary and faecal metabolomics demonstrated normalization of several PD-associated metabolite aberrations after the intervention, including reductions in potentially neurotoxic compounds (e.g., p-cresol sulfate, quinolinic acid) and increases in neuroprotective metabolites (e.g., myo-inositol, glutathione). Functional metagenomics revealed increased microbial genes related to fatty acid metabolism, glutathione synthesis, and other neuroprotective pathways in PD post-intervention. However, certain PD-specific microbial functional signatures, such as enhanced drug resistance and tryptophan degradation, persisted.
Key implications
This pilot study provides compelling evidence that a short-term, prebiotic-rich dietary intervention can beneficially modulate the gut microbiome and metabolite output in PD patients, particularly by enhancing SCFA production and shifting metabolic pathways toward neuroprotection. Importantly, these changes were accompanied by improvements in gastrointestinal symptoms and trends toward reduced motor severity. The marked enrichment of Bifidobacteria underscores the need to consider Lactulose use in microbiome studies of PD, as it may confound disease-specific microbial signatures. However, the persistence of core dysbiotic taxa in PD suggests that longer or more targeted interventions may be needed to fully normalize the gut ecosystem. For clinicians, these findings highlight the therapeutic promise of microbiota-directed dietary strategies in PD—especially for patients with fiber-deficient diets—but also the necessity for personalized, strain-specific approaches and careful consideration of potential interactions with standard PD treatments. Larger, longer-term, and placebo-controlled studies are required to validate these results and optimize intervention protocols.
Citation
Bedarf JR, Romano S, Heinzmann SS, Duncan A, Traka MH, Ng D, Segovia-Lizano D, Simon MC, Narbad A, Wüllner U, Hildebrand F. A prebiotic dietary pilot intervention restores faecal metabolites and may be neuroprotective in Parkinson’s Disease. npj Parkinson’s Disease. 2025;11:66. doi:10.1038/s41531-025-00885-5
Minocycline in Parkinson’s Disease: Preclinical Promise, Clinical Uncertainty
February 12, 2026
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Parkinson’s Disease
Parkinson’s Disease
Parkinson’s disease is increasingly recognized as a systemic disorder involving coordinated disturbances across the gut–brain axis, rather than a condition confined to dopaminergic neurodegeneration alone. Converging evidence implicates gut dysbiosis, altered microbial metabolites, impaired intestinal barrier integrity, and metal dyshomeostasis as upstream drivers of neuroinflammation and alpha-synuclein pathology. These interconnected microbiome, metabolomic, and metallomic signals provide a mechanistic framework for understanding disease initiation, progression, and therapeutic targeting beyond the central nervous system.
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This review evaluates minocycline’s neuroprotective and procognitive potential in Parkinson’s disease, integrating findings from animal models and clinical trials. While preclinical evidence is robust, human studies remain inconclusive, underscoring the translational challenges of anti-inflammatory therapies in PD.
What was reviewed?
This review article examined the therapeutic potential of minocycline, a second-generation tetracycline antibiotic, as a neuroprotective agent in Parkinson’s disease (PD). The authors synthesized data from 92 selected sources, including preclinical studies, clinical trials, and review articles, to assess the capacity of minocycline to modify disease progression through its anti-inflammatory, anti-apoptotic, and antioxidant actions. The article also evaluated mechanistic pathways, experimental models (including MPTP- and 6-OHDA-induced PD), and the effects of minocycline on cognitive dysfunction, a prominent non-motor symptom in PD.
Who was reviewed?
The review included a range of in vivo and in vitro studies using animal models (rodents, zebrafish, monkeys) and limited human clinical trials. Key studies involved dopaminergic neuron degeneration induced by neurotoxins (e.g., MPTP, 6-OHDA), transgenic mouse models, and patients in clinical trials such as the NINDS NET-PD FS-1 and FS-2. These were used to explore minocycline’s actions on microglial activation, inflammatory cytokines, caspase-mediated apoptosis, and oxidative stress pathways. Additionally, the MADE (Minocycline in Alzheimer's Disease Efficacy) trial was cited for relevance to procognitive effects.
Most important findings
Minocycline demonstrated consistent neuroprotective effects in preclinical models of PD by inhibiting microglial activation, suppressing inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS), caspase-1 and caspase-3, and reducing mitochondrial dysfunction and oxidative stress. Mechanistically, its effects are mediated via inhibition of p38 MAPK, stabilization of mitochondrial membranes, increased Bcl-2 expression, and attenuation of cytochrome c release. The article also noted potential procognitive effects, particularly in models involving LPS-induced inflammation, where minocycline improved memory and reduced microglial-derived neurotoxicity. However, contradictory results were also highlighted: in some MPTP models, minocycline exacerbated neurotoxicity, possibly due to interference with dopamine reuptake or vesicular transport.
Critically, human clinical trials failed to validate minocycline’s neuroprotective efficacy in PD. Both the NET-PD FS-1 and FS-2 trials reported no significant difference in disease progression, symptom relief, or cognitive outcomes between treatment and placebo groups.
Summary Table of Key Mechanistic and Experimental Findings
Effect/Outcome
Evidence Source
↓ Microglial activation, ↓ IL-1β, TNF-α
MPTP, 6-OHDA, LPS models.
↓ Caspase-1, Caspase-3, cytochrome c release
MPTP, 6-OHDA, LPS models.
↑ Bcl-2 expression, mitochondrial stabilization
In vitro neuronal cultures, ischemia models.
↓ Dopaminergic neuron loss
MPTP, rotenone, paraquat models.
↓ Alpha-synuclein expression
Gerbil and rodent PD models.
Contradictory: ↑ MPTP toxicity in some studies
Yang et al., Diguet et al. (2003–2004)
No significant benefit in clinical trials
NET-PD FS-1 and FS-2 (2006–2008)
Key implications
The findings underscore the translational gap between promising preclinical results and negative or inconclusive outcomes in clinical trials for neuroprotective agents in PD. Despite minocycline’s broad-spectrum actions on neuroinflammation, apoptosis, and oxidative stress—key pathomechanisms of PD—its failure to show efficacy in large human trials raises questions about the validity of animal models or possible confounders such as dosing, timing, and patient heterogeneity. Nonetheless, the compound’s well-tolerated safety profile and affordability support further investigation, especially in combinatory strategies or earlier disease stages. Importantly, the article emphasizes the importance of considering inflammation-modulating interventions for non-motor symptoms, such as cognitive decline, which remains an unmet clinical need in PD management.
Metallomic signatures of brain tissues distinguishes between cases of dementia with Lewy bodies, Alzheimer’s disease, and Parkinson’s disease dementia
February 12, 2026
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Parkinson’s Disease
Parkinson’s Disease
Parkinson’s disease is increasingly recognized as a systemic disorder involving coordinated disturbances across the gut–brain axis, rather than a condition confined to dopaminergic neurodegeneration alone. Converging evidence implicates gut dysbiosis, altered microbial metabolites, impaired intestinal barrier integrity, and metal dyshomeostasis as upstream drivers of neuroinflammation and alpha-synuclein pathology. These interconnected microbiome, metabolomic, and metallomic signals provide a mechanistic framework for understanding disease initiation, progression, and therapeutic targeting beyond the central nervous system.
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Alzheimer’s Dementia
Alzheimer’s Dementia
OverviewAlzheimer’s disease (AD) is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder characterized by amyloid-beta (Aβ) plaques, neurofibrillary tangles, neuroinflammation, and metabolic dysfunction, ultimately leading to cognitive decline and dementia. Emerging research highlights the microbiota-gut-brain axis as a crucial factor in AD pathogenesis, with gut dysbiosis contributing to neuroinflammation, immune dysregulation, and blood-brain barrier permeability. Microbial metabolites, such as […]
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Metallomic Signatures
Metallomic Signatures
A metallomic signature is the condition-specific profile of trace metals and metal-binding molecules that reflects disrupted metal homeostasis.
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Dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) brains show widespread copper depletion and region-specific sodium, manganese, iron, and selenium alterations. While copper loss is common to AD and PDD, DLB presents a distinct metallomic fingerprint, enabling disease differentiation via PCA. Metallomic profiling may aid in diagnosing overlapping dementias and reveals unique pathophysiological signatures.
What was studied?
This original research study investigated whether the metallomic signature of dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) differs from Alzheimer’s disease (AD) and Parkinson’s disease dementia (PDD). The study sought to determine if post-mortem changes in elemental concentrations—particularly in essential metals—could help differentiate these often-overlapping neurodegenerative conditions. Using Inductively Coupled Plasma–Mass Spectrometry (ICP-MS), the authors quantified concentrations of nine elements (Na, Mg, K, Ca, Mn, Fe, Cu, Zn, and Se) across 10 brain regions from DLB patients and age-/sex-matched controls. These findings were directly compared to previously published metallomic profiles for AD and PDD, produced using identical methodologies. Multivariate analyses (PCA and PLS-DA) were employed to assess the potential for disease discrimination based on metal signatures.
Who was studied?
The study analyzed post-mortem brain tissue from 23 DLB patients and 20 controls, collected across ten distinct brain regions. Comparative analyses included prior datasets from similarly matched AD and PDD patient cohorts.
What were the most important findings?
In this study, region-specific metallomic signatures profiling revealed distinct trace element alterations in Dementia with Lewy Bodies (DLB). Copper (Cu) levels were consistently decreased in five of ten DLB brain regions, including the cingulate gyrus (CG), middle temporal gyrus (MTG), primary visual cortex (PVC), substantia nigra (SN), and putamen (PUT), suggesting a widespread Cu deficiency. Sodium (Na) was elevated in four regions—medulla (MED), cerebellum (CB), MTG, and CG—while more localized changes were observed for other metals. Iron (Fe) levels were increased in the motor cortex (MCX) and CG, whereas manganese (Mn) was decreased in both the PVC and MED. Calcium (Ca) was specifically reduced in the hippocampus, and selenium (Se) was also decreased in the PVC.
No significant differences in magnesium, potassium, or zinc levels were observed between DLB and control brains. Multivariate analyses, including Principal Component Analysis (PCA) and Partial Least Squares-Discriminant Analysis (PLS-DA), demonstrated that DLB could be distinctly separated from Alzheimer’s disease (AD) and Parkinson’s disease dementia (PDD) based on metallomic signatures. Specifically, CG, MTG, and PVC profiles enabled discrimination between DLB and AD, while the PVC alone differentiated DLB from PDD. Notably, copper depletion emerged as the only common alteration across DLB, AD, and PDD, underscoring its potential central role in the pathogenesis of neurodegenerative diseases. The authors propose that these metallomic signatures in dementia may reflect disease-specific mechanisms, including variations in oxidative stress, protein aggregation, and mitochondrial dysfunction.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study provides compelling evidence that distinct metallomic signatures exist across DLB, AD, and PDD, despite shared pathology such as copper depletion. It strengthens the emerging concept that trace metal dysregulation is disease-specific, rather than a general byproduct of neurodegeneration. The findings support the idea that metallomic signatures profiling—potentially via cerebrospinal fluid or advanced imaging in living patients—could improve differential diagnosis of dementia with overlapping clinical features. Furthermore, the study reinforces the hypothesis that metal dyshomeostasis, particularly copper depletion, may be a contributing pathogenic mechanism, impairing antioxidant defenses and mitochondrial function. These findings could inform new diagnostic tools and therapeutic targets.
Citation
Scholefield M, Church SJ, Xu J, Cooper GJS. Metallomic analysis of brain tissues distinguishes between cases of dementia with Lewy bodies, Alzheimer's disease, and Parkinson's disease dementia. Front Neurosci. 2024 Jun 26;18:1412356. doi: 10.3389/fnins.2024.1412356.
Differences in the gut microbiome across typical ageing and in Parkinson’s disease
February 12, 2026
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Parkinson’s Disease
Parkinson’s Disease
Parkinson’s disease is increasingly recognized as a systemic disorder involving coordinated disturbances across the gut–brain axis, rather than a condition confined to dopaminergic neurodegeneration alone. Converging evidence implicates gut dysbiosis, altered microbial metabolites, impaired intestinal barrier integrity, and metal dyshomeostasis as upstream drivers of neuroinflammation and alpha-synuclein pathology. These interconnected microbiome, metabolomic, and metallomic signals provide a mechanistic framework for understanding disease initiation, progression, and therapeutic targeting beyond the central nervous system.
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Cross-sectional metagenomic profiling shows that the gut microbiome in Parkinson's disease differs from age-matched controls via selective loss of butyrate-producing taxa, especially Butyricimonas synergistica, with links to non-motor symptoms, ageing-related Bifidobacterium decline, and sleep-associated Roseburia in older adults.
What was studied?
The study investigated the gut microbiome in Parkinson's disease in the context of normal ageing, asking whether PD-related microbial changes are distinct from, or simply exaggerations of, age-related shifts. Using shotgun metagenomic sequencing with compositional data analysis, the authors compared bacterial diversity, taxonomic profiles, and predicted metabolic pathways across groups. They focused on short-chain fatty acid (SCFA)–producing taxa and butyrate-related functions, given their roles in epithelial integrity, anti-inflammatory signalling, and potential influence on α-synuclein pathology along the microbiota–gut–brain axis. They also modelled associations between microbial features and PD motor/non-motor symptoms, as well as lifestyle factors (dietary fibre, physical activity, sleep efficiency).
Who was studied?
This cross-sectional observational study included 73 community-dwelling adults in Australia: 22 healthy young adults (18–35 years; HY), 33 healthy older adults (50–80 years; HO), and 18 individuals with clinically diagnosed PD aged 50–80 years. Groups were broadly similar in sex and education. By design, HY participants were younger, more physically active, and had lower BMI than older groups. All participants provided stool samples for metagenomic profiling and completed assessments of PD symptomatology (in the PD group), diet (including fibre), physical activity, and sleep (including sleep efficiency), enabling correlation of microbiome data with clinical and behavioural measures.
Most important findings
Finding
Details
Alpha and beta diversity patterns
Within-sample diversity (alpha diversity) did not differ between Parkinson’s disease (PD) and healthy older (HO) adults, indicating that PD is not simply a “low diversity” state. However, between-sample community structure (beta diversity) differed between PD and HO, pointing to compositional rearrangement rather than global loss of taxa.
Reduced Butyricimonas synergistica in PD
A key PD-linked signal was reduced abundance of the butyrate-producing species Butyricimonas synergistica, with lower levels associated with worse non-motor symptoms in PD, supporting a connection between butyrate deficiency, gut barrier dysfunction, and systemic/neuroinflammation.
Ageing-related change in Bifidobacterium bifidum
In terms of typical ageing, Bifidobacterium bifidum was more abundant in healthy young (HY) adults compared with healthy older (HO) adults, whereas HO and PD did not differ, suggesting some “PD-like” microbial shifts might actually reflect age-related decline in beneficial taxa.
Butyrate pathways vs other metabolic pathways
Predicted butyrate-production pathways were not significantly different among HY, HO, and PD groups, while other metabolic pathways differed among the three groups, hinting at functional redundancy or compensatory changes among butyrate producers.
Lifestyle–microbiome associations
Lifestyle–microbiome links emerged: higher sleep efficiency in older adults correlated positively with Roseburia inulinivorans, another short-chain fatty acid (SCFA)–producing species, aligning with emerging evidence for bidirectional sleep–microbiome interactions. Reported associations with fibre intake and physical activity suggest that behaviour and microbiota sit on the same axis as PD risk and progression, though effect sizes in this study appear modest and exploratory.
Key implications
For clinicians, the message is that PD involves selective shifts in butyrate-producing taxa, not just global microbial loss. The association between lower Butyricimonas synergistica and worse non-motor symptoms positions butyrate-related signatures as candidates for future biomarkers and therapeutic targeting. At the same time, age-related loss of B. bifidum and the sleep–Roseburia link emphasise that any microbiome-based PD intervention must be interpreted against an ageing backdrop and integrated with lifestyle modification (dietary fibre, sleep, activity). Functionally focused microbiome metrics (e.g., SCFA capacity, barrier-supporting taxa) may ultimately be more clinically useful than taxonomic lists alone when designing microbiome-informed strategies for PD management or prevention.
Gut microbiome is not associated with mild cognitive impairment in Parkinson’s disease
February 12, 2026
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Parkinson’s Disease
Parkinson’s Disease
Parkinson’s disease is increasingly recognized as a systemic disorder involving coordinated disturbances across the gut–brain axis, rather than a condition confined to dopaminergic neurodegeneration alone. Converging evidence implicates gut dysbiosis, altered microbial metabolites, impaired intestinal barrier integrity, and metal dyshomeostasis as upstream drivers of neuroinflammation and alpha-synuclein pathology. These interconnected microbiome, metabolomic, and metallomic signals provide a mechanistic framework for understanding disease initiation, progression, and therapeutic targeting beyond the central nervous system.
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This study found no reproducible gut microbiome signature distinguishing mild cognitive impairment in Parkinson’s disease, despite marked differences between PD and controls. The findings suggest gut microbial features are not useful for identifying cognitive decline in PD at present.
What was studied?
This study investigated whether the gut microbiome harbors a distinct microbial signature associated with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) in individuals with Parkinson’s disease (PD). Prior research has established significant differences in the gut microbiome between PD patients and healthy controls, but the question of whether specific gut microbiome changes are linked to cognitive decline within PD remained unresolved. Using fecal samples and 16S rRNA gene sequencing, the authors compared gut microbial diversity and composition across three groups: PD patients with MCI (PD-MCI), PD patients without cognitive impairment (PD-NC), and cognitively normal control subjects. The primary goal was to determine if MCI in PD is associated with unique microbiome alterations, beyond those observed in PD itself.
Who was studied?
The study analyzed data from 208 individuals after stringent exclusion criteria. The cohort comprised 58 people with PD-MCI, 60 with PD-NC, and 90 cognitively unimpaired controls, all drawn from the Luxembourg Parkinson’s Study (NCER-PD). Controls were age-matched and excluded if genetically related to PD subjects. Participants met the UK Parkinson’s Disease Society Brain Bank criteria for PD, and cognitive status was determined using Movement Disorder Society (MDS) taskforce criteria and the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA). Exclusions included subjects under 65 years (to address age imbalance), those with insufficient sequencing data, recent immunosuppressant or corticosteroid use, and incomplete clinical information. Clinical variables such as disease duration, constipation, medication use, and body mass index were recorded and adjusted for in the analysis.
Most important findings
The study found robust differences in gut microbial composition between PD patients (both PD-MCI and PD-NC) and controls, consistent with prior literature. PD groups had lower microbial diversity and distinct beta diversity compared to controls, with notable decreases in families such as Lachnospiraceae, Clostridiaceae, and Butyricicoccaceae, and increases in Enterobacteriaceae, Hungatella, and Methanobrevibacter. However, critically, no significant differences in overall microbiome diversity or community structure were observed between PD-MCI and PD-NC. In taxon-level analyses, only one out of three statistical tools (DESeq2) detected several taxa differing between PD-MCI and PD-NC, but these findings were not corroborated by the other methods and did not overlap with results from the only previous study on this topic. Among the few detected, Streptococcus was increased and Akkermansia muciniphila decreased in PD-MCI, but these were isolated results lacking replication. Thus, the data do not support the existence of a reproducible gut microbiome signature specific to MCI in PD.
Key implications
For clinicians and researchers, these findings indicate that while gut microbiome alterations are a hallmark of PD, there is currently no consistent or clinically actionable microbial signature distinguishing PD with MCI from cognitively intact PD. This suggests that gut microbiome-based biomarkers are unlikely to aid in the identification or risk stratification of MCI within PD populations at present. The absence of reproducible taxonomic differences, even in a larger and geographically distinct cohort, underscores the need for further research—potentially involving larger, multi-omic, or longitudinal designs—to clarify whether subtle or dynamic microbiome changes contribute to cognitive decline in PD. For clinical practice, gut microbiome profiles should not yet be used to inform the assessment of cognitive impairment in PD.
Meta-analysis of shotgun sequencing of gut microbiota in Parkinson’s disease
February 12, 2026
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Parkinson’s Disease
Parkinson’s Disease
Parkinson’s disease is increasingly recognized as a systemic disorder involving coordinated disturbances across the gut–brain axis, rather than a condition confined to dopaminergic neurodegeneration alone. Converging evidence implicates gut dysbiosis, altered microbial metabolites, impaired intestinal barrier integrity, and metal dyshomeostasis as upstream drivers of neuroinflammation and alpha-synuclein pathology. These interconnected microbiome, metabolomic, and metallomic signals provide a mechanistic framework for understanding disease initiation, progression, and therapeutic targeting beyond the central nervous system.
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This meta-analysis of shotgun gut microbiome datasets in Parkinson’s disease identified cross-country microbial and functional signatures, including reduced riboflavin and biotin biosynthesis, depleted SCFA and polyamine levels, and species-level taxonomic shifts—highlighting microbiome-driven metabolic deficits as potential contributors to PD pathogenesis.
What was studied?
This meta-analysis investigated gut microbiome alterations in Parkinson’s disease (PD) using shotgun metagenomic sequencing. The primary aim was to identify microbial signatures and metabolic pathway changes consistent across geographically and ethnically diverse populations. The authors combined their own Japanese cohort (94 PD patients, 73 controls) with five previously published shotgun metagenomic datasets from the USA, Germany, China (two cohorts), and Taiwan. They examined global and species-level microbial diversity, taxonomic profiles, functional pathways (particularly those involved in vitamin and polyamine biosynthesis), and fecal metabolite profiles—including short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) and polyamines. By correlating metagenomic data with metabolomic measurements, the study explored potential mechanistic links between microbial changes and PD pathogenesis, focusing on the roles of riboflavin (vitamin B2), biotin (vitamin B7), SCFAs, and polyamines. The comprehensive analysis sought to discern both globally shared and region-specific microbiome alterations relevant to PD and to inform the development of robust microbiome signatures for clinical and research applications.
Who was studied?
The study encompassed a total of 813 PD patients and 558 controls. The Japanese cohort consisted of PD patients diagnosed according to Movement Disorder Society criteria and their healthy, cohabiting spouses (serving as controls), recruited between 2015 and 2018. Exclusion criteria included chronic illnesses and recent antibiotic use to minimize confounding effects. The meta-analysis incorporated five additional cohorts from the USA, Germany, China (Shanghai and Xiangyang), and Taiwan, with similar inclusion criteria and available demographic data. All datasets used shotgun metagenomic sequencing and, where available, included metadata such as age, sex, BMI, constipation status, and medication use. The analysis adjusted for demographic and clinical confounders where feasible, ensuring the observed microbiome alterations were robust across different populations and backgrounds.
Most important findings
The meta-analysis revealed several microbiome features consistently altered in PD across countries. Notably, alpha diversity (Shannon index) at the species level was increased in PD, a finding that contrasts with many other diseases where decreased diversity is typical. Taxonomically, the mucin-degrading species Akkermansia muciniphila was significantly increased, while SCFA-producing species Roseburia intestinalis and Faecalibacterium prausnitzii were decreased in PD. Functionally, metagenomic pathway analyses showed marked reductions in genes involved in riboflavin and biotin biosynthesis in PD, after adjusting for confounding factors. Five of six carbohydrate-active enzyme (CAZyme) categories were also significantly decreased, indicating impaired bacterial carbohydrate metabolism.
Metabolomic analyses of fecal samples from the Japanese cohort demonstrated significantly lower levels of SCFAs (acetate, propionate, butyrate) and polyamines (putrescine, spermidine, spermine) in PD patients. There was a positive correlation between the abundance of metagenomic genes for riboflavin and biotin biosynthesis and fecal levels of SCFAs and polyamines, suggesting interconnected microbial metabolic deficits. Importantly, the bacterial taxa responsible for these deficits varied by country: in Japan, the USA, and Germany, Faecalibacterium prausnitzii was the main contributor to reduced riboflavin biosynthesis, whereas in Chinese and Taiwanese cohorts, Phocaeicola vulgatus played this role. Similar geographic differences were seen for biotin biosynthesis, implicating distinct taxa such as Blautia obeum and Phocaeicola vulgatus.
Key implications
This study highlights a reproducible microbiome signature in PD characterized by increased alpha diversity, enrichment of Akkermansia muciniphila, and depletion of SCFA-producing species and functional pathways for riboflavin and biotin biosynthesis. The concomitant reduction in fecal SCFAs and polyamines suggests a mechanistic link to impaired intestinal barrier function, increased neuroinflammation, and possibly the propagation of alpha-synuclein pathology—a key feature of PD. The observation that different taxa drive similar functional deficits in different regions underscores the necessity of focusing on microbial functions (rather than taxa alone) for biomarker development and intervention strategies. Clinically, supplementation with riboflavin, biotin, or interventions to restore SCFA/polyamine production may be therapeutically beneficial in PD, particularly in patients with evidence of gut dysbiosis. These findings support the inclusion of microbial metabolic pathway alterations as core elements in microbiome signature databases for PD, reinforcing the potential for precision microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs).
Microbial Metallomics Theory of Parkinson’s Disease: A Unified Framework
February 12, 2026
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Parkinson’s Disease
Parkinson’s Disease
Parkinson’s disease is increasingly recognized as a systemic disorder involving coordinated disturbances across the gut–brain axis, rather than a condition confined to dopaminergic neurodegeneration alone. Converging evidence implicates gut dysbiosis, altered microbial metabolites, impaired intestinal barrier integrity, and metal dyshomeostasis as upstream drivers of neuroinflammation and alpha-synuclein pathology. These interconnected microbiome, metabolomic, and metallomic signals provide a mechanistic framework for understanding disease initiation, progression, and therapeutic targeting beyond the central nervous system.
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This review unifies Parkinson’s disease mechanisms under a single framework of heavy metal-induced ferroptosis, microbial virulence, and α-synuclein aggregation, emphasizing the central role of metal-driven dysbiosis and gut-brain axis propagation.
What was reviewed?
This review proposes the Microbial Metallomics Theory of Parkinson’s Disease, a unified explanatory framework that links environmental metal exposure, gut microbiome dysbiosis, ferroptosis, and α-synuclein aggregation. Instead of treating gut dysbiosis, neuroinflammation, and protein misfolding as disconnected phenomena, the paper frames them as downstream consequences of a shared initiating event: heavy metal dyshomeostasis. Environmental toxins, such as paraquat and transition metals like iron, copper, and manganese, initiate NCOA4-mediated ferritinophagy, leading to intracellular iron release and ferroptosis in dopaminergic neurons. Simultaneously, transferrin depletion in the substantia nigra disables iron export, reinforcing this neurodegenerative process. These metallomic disruptions propagate systemic effects that shape the gut microbiome, selecting for metal-tolerant, pro-inflammatory pathobionts with virulence mechanisms dependent on nickel and zinc.
Who was reviewed?
This review integrates data from in vivo and in vitro studies, systematic reviews, and human case–control studies involving Parkinson’s disease (PD) patients and relevant microbial taxa. Particularly emphasized are studies documenting microbial shifts in the gut microbiota of PD patients—such as enrichment of Desulfovibrionaceae, Enterobacteriaceae, and Proteobacteria—as well as evidence from animal models exposed to heavy metals like lead, arsenic, and manganese. Key microbial mechanisms are extrapolated from microbiological and metallomic studies examining the role of nickel- and zinc-dependent enzymes in virulence and immune evasion.
Most important findings
The microbial metallomics model of Parkinson’s disease (PD) outlines a cascading pathophysiological sequence initiated by environmental metal exposure. This model proposes that dysregulated metal homeostasis—particularly iron, nickel, and manganese—triggers ferroptosis, shapes a dysbiotic gut environment, and facilitates α-synuclein pathology. These interconnected mechanisms offer a mechanistic narrative linking toxicant exposure to the onset and progression of neurodegeneration in PD.
Mechanistic Domain
Description of Events and Relevance to PD
Ferritinophagy and Iron Overload
Environmental toxins such as paraquat activate NCOA4-mediated ferritinophagy, releasing intracellular iron in dopaminergic neurons. This promotes ferroptosis via iron-induced lipid peroxidation.
Transferrin Deficiency
Transferrin levels are markedly decreased in the substantia nigra of PD brains, disrupting iron export and causing regional iron accumulation that exacerbates oxidative stress.
Mismetallation and Protein Aggregation
Metals including Mn, Cu, and Pb displace native cofactors in enzymes, destabilizing proteins like α-synuclein and SOD1. This promotes pathological misfolding and fibrillar aggregation.
Microbial Selection via Metal Pressure
Chronic metal exposure favors Gram-negative, metal-tolerant bacteria such as Desulfovibrio, E. coli, and Burkholderiales, altering gut ecology in PD patients.
Nickel-Dependent Microbial Virulence
Surviving pathobionts utilize nickel-dependent virulence enzymes such as urease, [NiFe]-hydrogenases, Ni-SOD, and Ni-glyoxalase I to resist immunity and intensify inflammation.
Zinc Metalloprotease Activity
Zinc-dependent proteases (e.g., fragilysin from Bacteroides fragilis) degrade host tight junctions and cleave transferrin/lactoferrin, releasing iron and disrupting epithelial barriers.
Desulfovibrio and α-Synuclein Seeding
Desulfovibrio produces magnetite and H₂S, increasing intracellular iron and oxidative stress in enteric neurons, which promotes α-synuclein misfolding and aggregation.
Gut-Brain Axis Propagation
Misfolded α-synuclein travels via the vagus nerve from the enteric nervous system to the brain. Systemic inflammation and exosome-mediated transport further accelerate CNS involvement.
Key implications
The Microbial Metallomics Theory of Parkinson’s Disease reframes PD as a metal-initiated, microbiome-mediated neurodegenerative condition. This has profound clinical implications. If validated, it positions environmental metal detoxification and microbial modulation as upstream therapeutic targets rather than focusing solely on symptomatic management of neurodegeneration. Intervention strategies may include dietary reduction of metal exposure, use of metal chelators (e.g., lactoferrin, transferrin supplementation), microbiome-targeted therapies to suppress metal-tolerant pathobionts, and inhibition of microbial virulence systems (e.g., urease or metalloprotease inhibitors). The theory also emphasizes the importance of early detection via gut microbiome and metallomic profiling before CNS symptoms manifest. Finally, the theory offers a mechanistic scaffold for future clinical trials, which can use microbial and metallomic biomarkers as endpoints for evaluating therapeutic efficacy.
Evidence for the Use of Complementary and Alternative Medicine for Pelvic Inflammatory Disease: A Literature Review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) is a complex interplay between pathogens, immune responses, and microbial communities. As research continues to uncover the microbiome's role in reproductive health, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as probiotics, prebiotics, and transplants are redefining how we prevent and treat PID. This page dives deep into these innovations, offering a glimpse into the future of personalized, biologically informed women’s healthcare.
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This review investigates the potential of Complementary and Alternative Medicine (CAM) in managing Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Therapies like Chinese Herbal Medicine and acupuncture show promise in improving symptoms and reducing inflammation, making them valuable adjuncts to conventional treatments.
What was studied?
This review focused on evaluating the role of Complementary and Alternative Medicine (CAM) in the treatment of Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). It aimed to assess the effectiveness, safety, and mechanisms behind various CAM therapies, such as Chinese Herbal Medicine (CHM), acupuncture, moxibustion, and other non-pharmaceutical interventions like pelvic exercises, hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT), and microwave physiotherapy. The study explored how these therapies could serve as adjunct treatments for PID, particularly in cases where conventional antibiotic treatments show limited success.
Who was studied?
The review synthesized evidence from multiple studies involving women diagnosed with PID, especially those suffering from chronic pelvic inflammatory disease (CPID), a condition with serious long-term implications such as infertility and chronic pelvic pain. These studies included patients who underwent CAM therapies either alone or in combination with conventional treatments. By evaluating the outcomes of these patients, the review aimed to determine whether CAM therapies could provide significant benefits in PID management.
What were the most important findings?
The review found that CAM therapies, particularly Chinese Herbal Medicine (CHM), acupuncture, and moxibustion, have shown promising results in managing PID symptoms, including inflammation and pelvic pain. CHM, such as Xaiyan decoction, was particularly effective in improving clinical outcomes in chronic PID patients, where conventional treatments often fail. Acupuncture and moxibustion were noted for their ability to reduce inflammation and improve blood circulation, which contributed to better symptom management in PID patients. Moreover, combining CAM therapies with traditional antibiotics appeared to offer enhanced therapeutic outcomes, reduced recurrence rates, and a decrease in the long-term use of antibiotics. These findings suggest that CAM therapies may have a role in supporting the treatment of PID, especially when used alongside conventional medical treatments.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study suggests that integrating CAM therapies into PID treatment plans could potentially improve patient outcomes, particularly in managing inflammation and alleviating symptoms like chronic pelvic pain. By reducing the need for prolonged antibiotic use, CAM offers a potential strategy to mitigate antibiotic resistance, which is a growing concern in PID treatment. However, the study also highlights the need for further high-quality, large-scale clinical trials to substantiate the effectiveness and safety of these treatments. With additional research, CAM could become a standard part of PID treatment protocols, offering a holistic approach to managing this complex condition.
Pelvic inflammatory disease: a family practice perspective
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) is a complex interplay between pathogens, immune responses, and microbial communities. As research continues to uncover the microbiome's role in reproductive health, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as probiotics, prebiotics, and transplants are redefining how we prevent and treat PID. This page dives deep into these innovations, offering a glimpse into the future of personalized, biologically informed women’s healthcare.
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Family practice perspectives highlight challenges diagnosing PID, advocating enhanced clinical suspicion, multi-antibiotic treatment adherence, and regular screening for asymptomatic infections to minimize severe reproductive complications such as infertility and ectopic pregnancies.
What was reviewed?
The paper reviewed key aspects of pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) management from the perspective of family practice physicians. The author assessed diagnostic accuracy, clinical presentations, and effective management strategies, focusing on risk factors, clinical criteria, diagnostic investigations, antimicrobial therapy, and prevention of PID, including asymptomatic forms linked to severe reproductive complications.
Who was reviewed?
This review examined family physicians' diagnostic and treatment practices for PID, evaluating the challenges encountered in the primary care setting. It synthesized available clinical data, expert guidelines, and recommendations to enhance diagnostic accuracy and improve treatment outcomes among women managed in outpatient family practice environments.
What were the most important findings?
This review highlighted several important insights into PID management. PID, primarily an infection of the upper genital tract involving pathogens such as Chlamydia trachomatis, Neisseria gonorrhoeae, anaerobic bacteria like Bacteroides, and aerobic bacteria such as Escherichia coli, poses diagnostic challenges due to its variable symptoms, ranging from mild discomfort to severe illness. A notable finding was the low diagnostic accuracy by clinical assessment alone, underscoring the necessity of adjunct diagnostic methods. Inflammatory markers such as erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) and C-reactive protein (CRP) significantly improved diagnostic certainty when positive. However, even with these markers, clinical diagnosis alone remains insufficient; thus, laparoscopy or endometrial biopsy is recommended for uncertain cases to enhance diagnostic precision.
The review underscored that many family physicians inadequately adhere to antibiotic treatment guidelines, often prescribing single antibiotics despite recommendations advocating combination therapy. Recommended antibiotic regimens consistently include doxycycline or tetracycline combined with other antibiotics like cefoxitin, ampicillin, or ceftriaxone to adequately cover common pathogens. Compliance with antibiotic regimens remains critical, especially among adolescents who may require hospitalization to ensure effective treatment completion. The review stressed that asymptomatic PID, often caused by Chlamydia trachomatis, is an important precursor to infertility and ectopic pregnancy. Therefore, the review strongly advocated screening and early treatment of sexually transmitted infections (STIs), particularly chlamydial infections, as an essential preventative measure.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The greatest implications involve the need for heightened clinical suspicion, better adherence to recommended multi-antibiotic treatments, improved diagnostic practices using biomarkers and laparoscopic confirmation when uncertainty exists, and proactive screening for asymptomatic infections. Emphasis on compliance and partner treatment to prevent recurrent infections also holds significant practical implications. Adopting these approaches in family practice will significantly reduce complications such as infertility, ectopic pregnancy, and chronic pelvic pain, thereby improving women's overall reproductive health outcomes.
Microbiology profile in women with pelvic inflammatory disease in relation to IUD use
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) is a complex interplay between pathogens, immune responses, and microbial communities. As research continues to uncover the microbiome's role in reproductive health, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as probiotics, prebiotics, and transplants are redefining how we prevent and treat PID. This page dives deep into these innovations, offering a glimpse into the future of personalized, biologically informed women’s healthcare.
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This study identifies microbial differences in women with PID based on IUD use, highlighting a higher presence of anaerobic bacteria in IUD users and an increased risk of PID complications. These findings emphasize the need for careful monitoring of IUD users and further research into the microbiome’s role in PID development.
What was studied?
This study focused on the microbial profile of women with pelvic inflammatory disease (PID), in relation to intrauterine device (IUD) use. The researchers conducted a case-control study involving 51 women diagnosed with acute PID and 50 healthy women as controls. Endocervical specimens were collected from both groups and analyzed for microbial content to determine whether IUD use influences the microbial environment in the female genital tract and increases the risk of PID. The study aimed to compare the microbial characteristics of PID in IUD users versus non-users, with a focus on anaerobic and aerobic bacteria.
Who was studied?
The study involved two groups of women: 51 women diagnosed with acute PID, and 50 healthy women who served as controls. The women in the PID group had been admitted to the hospital with confirmed PID, while the control group was made up of healthy women attending outpatient gynecological checkups. The study further divided both groups into subgroups based on whether they used an IUD. Women with a history of IUD use were compared to those without IUDs to analyze any differences in microbial profiles and the risk of PID development.
What were the most important findings?
The study found significant differences in the microbial profiles of women with PID who used IUDs compared to those who did not. Specifically, IUD users with PID had significantly higher levels of Fusobacteria and Peptostreptococcus compared to non-IUD users with PID. These anaerobic bacteria were found more frequently in IUD users and were associated with both the development and complications of PID. Additionally, the presence of combinations of several anaerobic or aerobic microbes in the endocervix was linked to a higher risk of PID, especially among IUD users. The study also found that long-term use of IUDs appeared to increase the risk of complicated PID, as evidenced by the increased presence of multiple microbial species. There were no significant differences in the frequency of Neisseria gonorrhoeae or Chlamydia trachomatis infections between the two groups, suggesting that the microbiological etiology of PID in IUD users might involve different pathogens, particularly anaerobes.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The implications of this study are significant for understanding the role of IUDs in the development and complications of PID. The findings suggest that IUD use may promote an environment conducive to the growth of anaerobic bacteria, which can lead to an increased risk of PID and its complications, particularly in women with multiple microbial infections. Clinicians should be aware of the potential risks associated with IUDs, particularly in women with a history of PID or those at higher risk of infection. This study underscores the importance of monitoring microbial profiles in IUD users and suggests that long-term use may require closer surveillance and possibly different treatment protocols for PID. The study also emphasizes the need for further research into the interactions between IUDs and the vaginal microbiome to better understand the mechanisms through which IUDs may contribute to PID.
Epidermiological markers in pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) among the women of reproductive age group
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) is a complex interplay between pathogens, immune responses, and microbial communities. As research continues to uncover the microbiome's role in reproductive health, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as probiotics, prebiotics, and transplants are redefining how we prevent and treat PID. This page dives deep into these innovations, offering a glimpse into the future of personalized, biologically informed women’s healthcare.
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This study identifies key socio-demographic factors associated with PID in women of reproductive age, highlighting the need for better education, healthcare access, and early intervention. It underscores the importance of targeting high-risk groups, including young, uneducated, and economically disadvantaged women, for improved reproductive health outcomes.
What was studied?
This study examined the epidemiological markers associated with pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) in women of reproductive age in the Akola-Washim city area, Maharashtra, India. The researchers analyzed data collected from 611 women diagnosed with PID over a three-year period (2009-2012). The primary goal was to explore the socio-demographic, reproductive, and lifestyle factors that may contribute to the prevalence of PID. The study utilized medical records and personal interviews to collect comprehensive data, which was then processed statistically to identify significant associations with PID risk. By examining variables like age, marital status, education, economic status, occupation, and reproductive history, the study aimed to identify patterns that could inform better public health strategies for preventing and managing PID.
Who was studied?
The study involved 611 women diagnosed with PID who were recruited from both government and private hospitals in the Akola-Washim area. The women were of reproductive age and were diagnosed with PID either based on clinical symptoms or through laboratory confirmation. The demographic information, including age, marital status, education, occupation, and economic status, was collected through hospital records and personal interviews. The sample population predominantly included women from rural areas and from various socio-economic backgrounds, with a focus on women from the Below Poverty Line (BPL) sector. This study sought to determine how various socio-demographic and health-related factors influenced the incidence of PID in this specific region.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed that several socio-demographic and health-related factors are significantly associated with PID risk. Women aged 20-25 years had the highest incidence of PID, followed by teenagers. Most of the women diagnosed with PID were married (86.08%), highlighting the link between sexual activity and infection. Additionally, uneducated women (80.03%) and those from lower economic backgrounds (62.02%) had a higher incidence of PID, suggesting that lack of knowledge about sexual health, hygiene, and reproductive care is a contributing factor. The study also identified a higher prevalence of PID among overweight women (48.28%) and those residing in rural areas (64.97%). Women with a history of ectopic pregnancies (60.39%) and habitual miscarriages (55.97%) were more likely to have PID. These findings underscore the role of education, economic status, and access to healthcare in the prevention of PID.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study has important public health implications, especially for developing strategies to reduce PID incidence and improve women’s reproductive health. The findings indicate that PID is more common in socio-economically disadvantaged groups, emphasizing the need for targeted education and healthcare interventions for young, uneducated, and economically disadvantaged women. Public health programs should focus on improving awareness about the risks of PID and the importance of early treatment, especially in rural areas. The study also highlights the importance of improving access to gynecological care and providing healthcare services that cater to the needs of working women, particularly in low-income settings. Future research should aim to confirm these findings through larger, more diverse studies and explore further preventive measures, particularly for high-risk groups.
Pelvic inflammatory disease and infertility
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) is a complex interplay between pathogens, immune responses, and microbial communities. As research continues to uncover the microbiome's role in reproductive health, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as probiotics, prebiotics, and transplants are redefining how we prevent and treat PID. This page dives deep into these innovations, offering a glimpse into the future of personalized, biologically informed women’s healthcare.
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This review details the polymicrobial pathogenesis of PID, its major microbial culprits—including both classical STIs and vaginal anaerobes—and underscores the high risk of infertility. Early diagnosis, broad-spectrum treatment, and awareness of microbiome shifts are key to reducing reproductive morbidity.
What was reviewed?
This narrative clinical review discusses the pathogenesis, clinical evaluation, and management of pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) with a dedicated focus on fertility-related long-term sequelae. The article synthesizes current knowledge regarding PID’s microbial etiologies, diagnostic approaches, complications such as tubal infertility, and both medical and surgical management strategies. Special attention is given to the role of the microbiome in PID development and progression, particularly regarding upper genital tract infection by various microorganisms and their contribution to reproductive morbidity.
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesizes data and recommendations relevant to women of reproductive age who are at risk for, or have a history of, PID. It draws on evidence from studies involving women with clinically and laparoscopically diagnosed PID, women undergoing infertility evaluation, and specific population groups with higher reported PID incidence, such as those in developing nations and Indigenous Australian communities. The microbiological data reviewed come from studies isolating pathogens from women with PID and related infertility.
Most important findings
PID is a polymicrobial infection of the upper female genital tract, initiated by pathogens that disrupt the cervicovaginal barrier. Chlamydia trachomatis and Neisseria gonorrhoeae are implicated in 33–50% of cases, but other significant contributors include Mycoplasma genitalium, bacterial vaginosis-associated anaerobes, as well as respiratory and enteric organisms. The progressive ascent of these microbes, facilitated by alterations in the cervicovaginal microenvironment and host factors (e.g., menses, loss of mucus plug), leads to upper tract inflammation and damage. Despite adequate antimicrobial therapy, long-term sequelae are common: infertility (18%), ectopic pregnancy (0.6–2%), and chronic pelvic pain (30%). Tubal infertility, largely attributable to microbial damage and subsequent fibrosis or adhesions, is responsible for 25–35% of female infertility cases, with PID as the primary cause in over half. Notably, risk escalates with recurrent PID episodes and severity of tubal damage. The review underscores that even subclinical PID can have major reproductive consequences, and that the diversity of implicated microbes should be considered in diagnosis and management.
Key implications
For clinicians, this review emphasizes the importance of early suspicion, diagnosis, and treatment of PID to mitigate long-term reproductive sequelae, particularly tubal infertility. The polymicrobial nature of PID, including both classical sexually transmitted pathogens and diverse anaerobic and facultative organisms, highlights the need for comprehensive microbial assessment and broad-spectrum empirical therapy. The findings suggest that a history of PID should prompt early fertility evaluation and counseling, and that public health efforts in STI prevention and early intervention could substantially reduce infertility rates. From a microbiome perspective, the article reinforces the critical role of cervicovaginal microbial communities and their disruption in PID pathogenesis, supporting the inclusion of these microbial signatures in reproductive health databases for risk stratification and targeted interventions.
Bacterial isolates associated with pelvic inflammatory disease among female patients attending some hospitals in abuja, Nigeria
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) is a complex interplay between pathogens, immune responses, and microbial communities. As research continues to uncover the microbiome's role in reproductive health, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as probiotics, prebiotics, and transplants are redefining how we prevent and treat PID. This page dives deep into these innovations, offering a glimpse into the future of personalized, biologically informed women’s healthcare.
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This study identifies key bacterial pathogens associated with pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) in Abuja, Nigeria, highlighting the effectiveness of Cefotaxime in treatment. The research also stresses the role of socio-demographic factors in PID prevalence and calls for targeted health interventions.
What was studied?
This study focused on the bacterial isolates associated with pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) in female patients attending hospitals in Abuja, Nigeria. Researchers collected endocervical swabs from 100 women diagnosed with PID and analyzed the bacterial pathogens present using cultural and biochemical tests. The study aimed to identify the specific microorganisms causing PID in the region, their resistance to antibiotics, and the factors contributing to the disease's occurrence. This research is particularly significant as PID is a prevalent but underreported health issue, and understanding the microbiological landscape can help guide treatment strategies.
Who was studied?
The study involved 100 women diagnosed with PID, attending various hospitals in Abuja, Nigeria. The participants were primarily women of reproductive age, with confirmed cases of PID based on clinical symptoms and laboratory findings. The study population also included women from various socio-demographic backgrounds, with a focus on understanding how factors like marital status, age, and sexual behavior influenced PID prevalence. These women were selected based on clinical criteria, such as a history of recurrent lower abdominal pain, cervical tenderness, and elevated white blood cell count, which are indicative of PID.
What were the most important findings?
The study identified several bacterial pathogens responsible for PID in the region, with Staphylococcus aureus being the most prevalent isolate (16%), followed by Escherichia coli (10%), Streptococcus faecalis (8%), and others such as Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Klebsiella pneumoniae, and Proteus species. 55% of the samples yielded no bacterial growth, suggesting that PID may also involve pathogens that are not detectable through conventional culturing methods. The study also highlighted that polygamous married women were the most affected group (90%), followed by singles (50%). Women in the 25-35 years age group had the highest incidence, while those aged 36-45 had the least. This age-related trend might be associated with sexual activity, as younger women are more likely to engage in high-risk behaviors. In terms of antibiotic resistance, Cefotaxime emerged as the most effective treatment for both Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria, indicating its potential use as a frontline treatment for PID.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings from this study highlight the importance of understanding the local microbial landscape when diagnosing and treating PID. The identification of Staphylococcus aureus and Escherichia coli as the dominant pathogens highlights the need for targeted antibiotic therapy. The study also emphasizes the need for healthcare providers to consider socio-demographic factors, such as marital status and age, when addressing PID risks in women. The high prevalence of PID among polygamous women calls for focused public health interventions, including education on safe sexual practices and the promotion of early diagnosis and treatment. Moreover, the high occurrence of PID in the reproductive age group (25-35 years) suggests that sexual health education, coupled with routine screening for STIs and PID, could help reduce the incidence of this disease.
Relationships between female infertility and female genital infections and pelvic inflammatory disease
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) is a complex interplay between pathogens, immune responses, and microbial communities. As research continues to uncover the microbiome's role in reproductive health, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as probiotics, prebiotics, and transplants are redefining how we prevent and treat PID. This page dives deep into these innovations, offering a glimpse into the future of personalized, biologically informed women’s healthcare.
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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A large-scale Taiwanese study found that upper and lower genital tract infections, but not comorbidities or bacterial vaginosis, independently increased infertility risk. PID and lower genital tract inflammation showed the strongest associations, emphasizing the critical role of reproductive tract infections in female infertility.
What was studied?
This population-based nested case-control study investigated the associations between female genital tract infections, selected comorbidities, and infertility using data from the Taiwan National Health Research Database (NHIRD) between 2000 and 2013. The study specifically evaluated whether infections such as pelvic inflammatory disease (PID), bacterial vaginosis (BV), and endometritis, as well as comorbid conditions like obesity, lipid metabolism disorders, and abortion history, were linked to an increased risk of diagnosed infertility. The research leveraged the large scope of the NHIRD, which includes nearly the entire Taiwanese population, to provide robust epidemiological insights. The analysis involved both univariate and multivariate conditional logistic regression to adjust for confounding variables and to isolate the independent associations of different infections and comorbidities with infertility risk in women, stratified by age groups (≤40 and >40 years).
Who was studied?
The study included 18,276 women newly diagnosed with infertility and 73,104 age-matched controls without infertility, all identified from the NHIRD. Controls were matched by age (within three years) and index year and were required to have a history of pregnancy but no prior diagnosis of infertility or use of ovulation stimulants or gonadotropins. Exclusion criteria covered prior hysterectomy, bilateral oophorectomy, cancer, prior chemotherapy or radiotherapy, polycystic ovary syndrome, ovarian failure, endometriosis, adenomyosis, amenorrhea, and Turner syndrome. The mean age of the cohort was 31 years, and the population was predominantly Han Chinese women residing in Taiwan. Patients were further stratified into two age groups (≤40 and >40 years) to assess potential age-related interactions with infertility risk factors.
Most important findings
The most significant finding was a robust association between upper and lower genital tract infections and increased risk of infertility, evident even after controlling for comorbidities and other confounders. Specifically, pelvic inflammatory disease involving the ovary, fallopian tube, pelvic cellular tissue, and peritoneum showed odds ratios (OR) of 4.82 and 6.03 for infertility. Cervical, vaginal, and vulvar inflammation had even higher associations, with ORs of 7.79 and 6.65. Clinicians found that BV and endometritis were associated with infertility in univariate analysis, but multivariate models did not confirm these associations, indicating that other factors or confounders may mediate their effect. Comorbidities such as obesity, lipid disorders, dysthyroidism, and abortion initially showed associations with infertility, but these did not persist after adjustment. Importantly, the study did not examine specific pathogens, but referenced the role of Chlamydia trachomatis, Neisseria gonorrhoeae, Mycoplasma genitalium, Ureaplasma urealyticum, and Trichomonas vaginalis as potential microbial contributors to tubal factor infertility.
Key implications
These findings reinforce the central role of female genital tract infections, particularly upper tract involvement and lower tract inflammation, in the pathogenesis of infertility. The lack of an independent association with bacterial vaginosis and endometritis after adjustment suggests that not all genital infections contribute equally to infertility risk and highlights the importance of distinguishing between associative and causal relationships. For clinicians, this underscores the need for vigilant screening, diagnosis, and management of PID and lower genital tract inflammation as part of infertility workups. The study’s population-based design adds weight to these recommendations, advocating for targeted prevention and early intervention strategies that could mitigate the risk of infertility associated with genital tract infections. These microbiome-related insights are particularly relevant for developing microbiome signatures and risk-stratification tools in reproductive medicine.
Association between dietary trace minerals and pelvic inflammatory disease: Data from the 2015–2018 National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) is a complex interplay between pathogens, immune responses, and microbial communities. As research continues to uncover the microbiome's role in reproductive health, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as probiotics, prebiotics, and transplants are redefining how we prevent and treat PID. This page dives deep into these innovations, offering a glimpse into the future of personalized, biologically informed women’s healthcare.
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Higher dietary copper intake significantly lowers the risk of pelvic inflammatory disease in U.S. women, highlighting copper’s role in inflammation and reproductive health.
What was studied?
This cross-sectional study examined the association between dietary intake of trace minerals and pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) among women in the United States. Using data from the 2015–2018 National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys (NHANES), the study aimed to determine whether levels of these trace minerals in the diet correlated with PID risk. Multivariate logistic regression and restricted cubic spline analyses were performed to evaluate the relationships while controlling for demographic, lifestyle, and health covariates.
Who was studied?
The study analyzed data from 2,694 women aged 20 to 59 years, representative of the U.S. female population, who had complete data on dietary trace mineral intake and self-reported PID status. Participants were selected after excluding those with missing or incomplete data on PID, dietary intake, or key covariates. The diverse cohort included various ethnic backgrounds and socioeconomic statuses, with detailed assessments of BMI, smoking status, diabetes, hypertension, and reproductive health factors to adjust for potential confounding influences.
What were the most important findings?
The study found a significant inverse relationship between dietary copper intake and PID risk. Women with higher copper intake showed a notably lower odds of having PID, even after adjusting for multiple confounders, including age, race, BMI, smoking, and chronic health conditions. The strongest protective effect was observed in women consuming more than 1.49 mg/day of copper, which correlated with roughly a 70% reduction in PID odds compared to those with the lowest intake. No significant associations were found between PID and the intake of iron, selenium, or zinc. Subgroup analyses revealed that the inverse association with copper intake was consistent across most subgroups, except for underweight women. Age and BMI influenced the strength and shape of this relationship, with older and overweight women showing stronger linear or nonlinear protective effects from increased copper intake. Biologically, copper's known role in inflammatory regulation and oxidative stress defense likely underpins its protective association. Given PID’s inflammatory and polymicrobial nature, adequate copper intake may contribute to maintaining immune and microbial homeostasis in the reproductive tract.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This research highlights dietary copper intake as a potentially modifiable factor in reducing PID risk among women. Clinicians should consider dietary evaluation and counseling on adequate copper intake as part of comprehensive PID prevention strategies. The findings emphasize the importance of nutritional factors in reproductive health and suggest further studies should investigate the mechanistic pathways linking copper to immune modulation and microbiome regulation in PID. Public health efforts promoting balanced copper intake may help lower PID incidence and improve long-term reproductive outcomes. However, as the study is cross-sectional, causal relationships cannot be confirmed, and prospective studies are needed to validate these results and establish dietary recommendations.
Association between dietary magnesium intake and pelvic inflammatory disease in US women: a cross-sectional study of NHANES
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) is a complex interplay between pathogens, immune responses, and microbial communities. As research continues to uncover the microbiome's role in reproductive health, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as probiotics, prebiotics, and transplants are redefining how we prevent and treat PID. This page dives deep into these innovations, offering a glimpse into the future of personalized, biologically informed women’s healthcare.
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Higher dietary magnesium intake significantly reduces pelvic inflammatory disease risk in U.S. women, especially older adults, highlighting magnesium’s role in inflammation and reproductive health.
What was studied?
This cross-sectional study investigated the association between dietary magnesium intake and the risk of pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) in U.S. women. Using data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) cycles 2015–2018, the researchers examined whether higher dietary magnesium intake correlates with a reduced likelihood of PID. They applied weighted multivariable logistic regression models and restricted cubic spline (RCS) analysis to assess the dose-response relationship, adjusting for various demographic, lifestyle, and health-related confounders.
Who was studied?
The study analyzed data from 3,034 women aged 20 to 59 years who participated in NHANES 2015–2018. These women provided dietary intake information through two 24-hour recalls and self-reported their history of PID based on treatment for pelvic infection. Participants with missing data on PID status, magnesium intake, or key covariates were excluded. The sample represented a nationally weighted demographic, including diverse racial, socioeconomic, and health profiles, allowing generalization to U.S. women of reproductive and early middle age.
What were the most important findings?
The study found a significant inverse association between dietary magnesium intake and the risk of PID. Women in the highest quartile of magnesium intake had a 60.5% lower risk of PID compared to those in the lowest quartile after adjusting for potential confounders. The trend analysis indicated a linear negative relationship, with each increase in magnesium quartile corresponding to reduced PID odds. Subgroup analyses revealed that this association was stronger in older women (41–59 years) and specific subpopulations such as nonsmokers and those with normal or overweight BMI. The authors discussed biological plausibility: magnesium plays a key role in modulating inflammation and oxidative stress, both critical in PID pathogenesis. Magnesium's immune-enhancing properties and its inverse correlation with inflammatory markers like C-reactive protein (CRP) suggest that higher magnesium intake may mitigate inflammatory damage in the reproductive tract, potentially influencing the microbiome and pathogen susceptibility indirectly.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings highlight dietary magnesium as a potentially modifiable risk factor for PID, emphasizing nutrition’s role in gynecological health. Clinicians should consider dietary assessments and magnesium supplementation, especially for women at higher PID risk, as a preventative strategy alongside traditional treatments. The age-dependent effects underscore the need to tailor dietary guidance accordingly. This research advocates for further longitudinal and intervention studies to confirm causality and explore magnesium’s mechanistic impact on inflammation and the vaginal microbiome. Public health policies promoting magnesium-rich diets could contribute to reducing PID incidence and its serious reproductive consequences.
Integrated Metabolomics and Network Pharmacology Study on the Mechanism of Kangfuxiaoyan Suppository for Treating Chronic Pelvic Inflammatory Disease
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) is a complex interplay between pathogens, immune responses, and microbial communities. As research continues to uncover the microbiome's role in reproductive health, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as probiotics, prebiotics, and transplants are redefining how we prevent and treat PID. This page dives deep into these innovations, offering a glimpse into the future of personalized, biologically informed women’s healthcare.
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Kangfuxiaoyan suppository effectively treats chronic pelvic inflammatory disease by regulating key inflammatory and metabolic pathways, significantly reducing inflammation. Integrated metabolomics and network pharmacology clarify its therapeutic mechanisms, highlighting specific active ingredients and metabolic biomarkers for potential clinical use.
What was studied?
This study examined the therapeutic mechanisms of Kangfuxiaoyan suppository (KFXYS), a traditional Chinese medicine, in treating chronic pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) through integrated metabolomics and network pharmacology. Researchers conducted experiments using a rat model of CPID to assess the effects of KFXYS treatment on inflammation. They characterized the chemical ingredients of KFXYS, identified components absorbed into the bloodstream using advanced UPLC-Q-TOF/MS techniques, analyzed their pharmacokinetics, and employed network pharmacology to predict potential therapeutic targets and pathways. Additionally, metabolomics was used to uncover differential metabolites significantly related to inflammatory markers, helping to clarify how KFXYS exerts its therapeutic effects.
Who was studied?
The research involved female Sprague Dawley rats experimentally induced with CPID by implanting infectious materials. The rats were divided into several groups: normal, sham-operated, untreated CPID model, and KFXYS-treated groups. Blood and serum samples from these rats provided data for identifying absorbed chemical components and analyzing changes in metabolic profiles following treatment. By comparing inflammatory indicators such as interleukin levels and metabolic alterations, the study sought to understand KFXYS's effects at both biochemical and molecular levels.
What were the most important findings?
The study discovered significant therapeutic effects of KFXYS on CPID through multiple interconnected metabolic and molecular pathways. Treatment with KFXYS substantially reduced inflammation indicators, notably interleukin-1 (IL-1) and interleukin-6 (IL-6). Several key metabolites showed significant correlations with inflammation, particularly Leukotriene A4, 5-Hydroxyindoleacetic acid, Ornithine, Arginine, and specific phosphatidylcholine compounds. These metabolites were involved in critical pathways such as arginine and proline metabolism and glutathione metabolism. Network pharmacology further identified specific targets, including Arginase-1 (ARG1), nitric oxide synthases (NOS2 and NOS3), monoamine oxidase A (MAOA), and glutathione-related enzymes (GSTM1, GSTP1, and GSR), that KFXYS regulated to reduce inflammation and oxidative stress. Components identified with good absorption and pharmacokinetics included matrine, sophocarpine, aloin, esculetin, and various flavonoid glucuronides, strongly suggesting these compounds contributed to the therapeutic effect.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The implications of this research are profound for clinicians interested in novel, integrative treatments for CPID. The study clearly demonstrates how KFXYS, a multi-component herbal preparation, effectively reduces pelvic inflammation by modulating key metabolic and inflammatory pathways. These findings suggest significant potential for KFXYS as an alternative or complementary therapy to conventional antibiotics, particularly in the face of antibiotic resistance and associated side effects. Clinically, this approach could guide personalized treatment strategies and encourage further exploration of herbal and natural products through metabolomics and network pharmacology methods. The study underscores the importance of targeting multiple inflammatory and metabolic pathways to achieve comprehensive therapeutic outcomes in chronic inflammatory diseases like CPID.
Lactobacilli–lactoferrin interplay in Chlamydia trachomatis infection
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Infertility
Infertility
Infertility is the inability to conceive after 12 months of regular, unprotected sex. It affects both men and women and can be due to various physical, hormonal, or genetic factors. Treatments include medication, surgery, assisted reproductive technologies, and lifestyle changes.
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Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) is a complex interplay between pathogens, immune responses, and microbial communities. As research continues to uncover the microbiome's role in reproductive health, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as probiotics, prebiotics, and transplants are redefining how we prevent and treat PID. This page dives deep into these innovations, offering a glimpse into the future of personalized, biologically informed women’s healthcare.
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The study found a potent inhibitory effect against Chlamydia trachomatis infection using Lactobacillus brevis combined with lactoferrin, notably reducing bacterial adhesion, invasion, and inflammation. This indicates significant therapeutic potential in preventing chronic complications from genital infections.
What was studied?
This research study examined the interaction of two specific Lactobacillus strains (Lactobacillus brevis and Lactobacillus crispatus) and lactoferrin in the context of a genital infection caused by Chlamydia trachomatis. The researchers aimed to understand how lactobacilli and lactoferrin, individually and in combination, impact the infection process of C. trachomatis in cervical epithelial cells, specifically evaluating their effects on bacterial adhesion, invasion, intracellular replication, and the inflammatory response induced by infection.
Who was studied?
The study used an in vitro cell culture model involving human cervical epithelial HeLa cells. These cells were infected with Chlamydia trachomatis and exposed to either Lactobacillus brevis, Lactobacillus crispatus, bovine lactoferrin, or combinations thereof. This experimental setup simulated the genital environment, allowing the investigators to measure interactions and inflammatory responses directly relevant to human female genital tract infections.
What were the most important findings?
The most significant outcome was that the combination of Lactobacillus brevis and bovine lactoferrin showed the strongest inhibitory effect against C. trachomatis infection, especially during the early phases of bacterial adhesion and invasion into host cells. This combination notably reduced the formation of infectious bacterial units (IFUs), indicating a substantial decrease in bacterial load. Individually, Lactobacillus brevis was more effective than Lactobacillus crispatus in preventing chlamydial adhesion, while bovine lactoferrin significantly hindered bacterial internalization. Lactobacilli displayed effective co-aggregation with C. trachomatis elementary bodies (EBs), reducing bacterial infectivity. The study also highlighted that this combined treatment dramatically reduced levels of inflammatory cytokines IL-6 and IL-8, thus suggesting a potent anti-inflammatory effect beneficial in preventing chronic inflammation and subsequent tissue damage associated with persistent chlamydial infections.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study carries important clinical implications. The synergy between Lactobacillus brevis and bovine lactoferrin points towards a promising non-antibiotic strategy to prevent and manage genital infections caused by Chlamydia trachomatis. Given the rising concern of antibiotic resistance and chronic inflammation linked to persistent chlamydial forms, employing probiotics combined with lactoferrin could offer a safer, more sustainable method to maintain genital tract health. Moreover, the significant anti-inflammatory impact indicates potential utility in reducing the chronic complications of C. trachomatis infections, such as pelvic inflammatory disease and infertility. Translating these findings into clinical interventions, including topical probiotics and lactoferrin formulations, could notably enhance the current therapeutic approaches for sexually transmitted infections and associated inflammatory conditions.
Perception prevalence of the relationship between PID and infertility amongst women of reproductive age: A Nigerian study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) is a complex interplay between pathogens, immune responses, and microbial communities. As research continues to uncover the microbiome's role in reproductive health, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as probiotics, prebiotics, and transplants are redefining how we prevent and treat PID. This page dives deep into these innovations, offering a glimpse into the future of personalized, biologically informed women’s healthcare.
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A Nigerian study found only 10% of reproductive-age women recognized the link between PID and infertility, despite high education levels. The findings emphasize the need for improved public health campaigns and highlight the microbial etiology—chiefly Chlamydia trachomatis—behind PID-related infertility.
What was studied?
This cross-sectional study investigated the perception prevalence of the relationship between pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) and infertility among women of reproductive age in Rivers State, Nigeria. The primary aim was to assess awareness and understanding of the established link between PID, an ascending genital tract infection often caused by sexually transmitted infections (STIs) like Chlamydia trachomatis, and infertility, which is recognized globally as a major public health concern. The study evaluated awareness levels regarding PID, infertility, and their interrelationship, with particular interest in how education and age might influence these perceptions. Data were collected from women attending an enlightenment campaign hosted by the Mother and Baby Care Global Foundation and analyzed using SPSS.
Who was studied?
The study population comprised 250 women of reproductive age (20–49 years) who participated in a local health campaign in Port Harcourt, Rivers State, Nigeria. The mean age was 24 ± 4 years, with 46% aged 20–29, 34% aged 30–39, and 20% aged 40–49. Educational attainment was high in this cohort, with 80% holding tertiary qualifications and the remaining 20% having secondary education. All participants provided informed consent, and those under 15 or over 49 years were excluded from the study.
Most important findings
Despite high educational status among participants, only 30% were aware of PID and 45% were aware of infertility. Notably, only 10% recognized the relationship between PID and infertility, a figure that is low given the well-documented association between these conditions. The highest perception prevalence of the PID-infertility link was observed in women aged 30–39 years (6%). Microbiologically, the study reinforces that Chlamydia trachomatis and Neisseria gonorrhoeae are the primary pathogens implicated in PID, with Chlamydia infection alone accounting for up to 45% of tubal infertility in referenced literature. Approximately 85% of PID cases globally are attributable to STIs. The low perception prevalence found here suggests a significant gap in patient awareness, which is critical given the preventable nature of many PID-related infertility cases.
Key implications
The findings highlight an urgent need for targeted public health education and community-based interventions to raise awareness about PID and its reproductive consequences. Despite high levels of formal education, knowledge gaps persist, underlining that educational campaigns must be tailored and recurrent. From a microbiome perspective, recognizing the microbial etiology of PID, especially the role of Chlamydia trachomatis, should inform both clinical practice and public health messaging to improve screening, early diagnosis, and treatment. Enhanced awareness could contribute to reducing infertility rates attributable to PID, particularly in similar populations and settings.
Bacterial vaginosis and its association with infertility, endometritis, and pelvic inflammatory disease
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) is a complex interplay between pathogens, immune responses, and microbial communities. As research continues to uncover the microbiome's role in reproductive health, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as probiotics, prebiotics, and transplants are redefining how we prevent and treat PID. This page dives deep into these innovations, offering a glimpse into the future of personalized, biologically informed women’s healthcare.
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This review details the links between bacterial vaginosis, endometritis, pelvic inflammatory disease, and infertility, highlighting the role of vaginal and endometrial microbiota disruptions and their impact on reproductive outcomes and management strategies.
What was reviewed?
This review article comprehensively examines the associations between bacterial vaginosis (BV), endometritis, pelvic inflammatory disease (PID), and infertility, with a particular focus on the underlying microbiome-related mechanisms. The paper synthesizes current evidence on how disruptions in the vaginal and endometrial microbiota, characterized predominantly by a loss of beneficial lactobacilli and an overgrowth of anaerobic bacteria, contribute to the pathogenesis of these gynecological conditions. The review covers diagnostic criteria, treatment options, recurrence issues, and the role of the vaginal and endometrial microbial signatures in affecting reproductive outcomes, both naturally and in assisted reproduction settings. It also explores potential mechanistic pathways linking these infections to infertility, including inflammation, immune responses, microbial toxin production, and increased susceptibility to sexually transmitted infections (STIs).
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesizes data from a broad range of studies involving women of reproductive age, particularly those diagnosed with BV, endometritis, or PID, as well as women experiencing infertility (including those undergoing fertility treatments such as in vitro fertilization [IVF]). It considers diverse populations, including women with tubal and non-tubal infertility, women with unexplained or idiopathic infertility, and those with recurrent implantation failure or miscarriage. The article also references clinical trials and meta-analyses, drawing on evidence from both symptomatic and asymptomatic women across multiple ethnic groups and geographic regions.
Most important findings
The review highlights that optimal vaginal health is typically characterized by a microbiota dominated by lactobacilli, which produce lactic acid and antimicrobial compounds, conferring protection against pathogenic bacteria. BV is marked by a depletion of these protective lactobacilli and an overgrowth of anaerobes such as Gardnerella vaginalis, Atopobium vaginae, Megasphaera spp., and others. This microbial imbalance is strongly associated with an increased risk of endometritis and PID, both of which are significant causes of infertility. Notably, more than 85% of PID cases are linked to BV-associated bacteria and/or STIs, but fewer than half involve classic pathogens like Neisseria gonorrhoeae or Chlamydia trachomatis, underscoring the importance of the broader vaginal microbiome.
BV increases the risk of acquiring STIs, which further amplify the risk of upper genital tract infections and infertility. Mechanistically, BV-related bacteria can induce genital tract inflammation, alter immune responses, produce enzymes that degrade cervical mucus, and facilitate pathogen ascension to the endometrium and fallopian tubes. Women with BV and non-lactobacillus-dominated endometrial microbiota have lower implantation and pregnancy rates, particularly in IVF settings. Chronic endometritis (CE) is highly prevalent among women with unexplained infertility and recurrent implantation failure, and cure of CE with antibiotics improves reproductive outcomes. Despite these associations, causality between BV and infertility is not fully established due to heterogeneity in diagnostic criteria, patient populations, and study designs.
Key implications
The review underscores the clinical importance of recognizing and treating BV, endometritis, and PID—especially in women with infertility or at risk of reproductive complications. Early diagnosis and appropriate antibiotic treatment for symptomatic BV and CE can improve fertility outcomes, particularly in IVF patients. The findings also call for a more nuanced understanding of the vaginal and endometrial microbiome, advocating for future research to refine the definitions of “normal” versus “abnormal” microbial states and to clarify the mechanisms linking microbial dysbiosis to infertility. Given the high recurrence rates and diagnostic challenges, integrating microbiome-based diagnostics and interventions (including probiotics) into preconceptional and fertility care may offer new avenues for improving women’s reproductive health.
A Metabolomics Study of the Volatile Oil from Prunella vulgaris L. On Pelvic Inflammatory Disease
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) is a complex interplay between pathogens, immune responses, and microbial communities. As research continues to uncover the microbiome's role in reproductive health, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as probiotics, prebiotics, and transplants are redefining how we prevent and treat PID. This page dives deep into these innovations, offering a glimpse into the future of personalized, biologically informed women’s healthcare.
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This study shows volatile oil from Prunella vulgaris effectively reduces pelvic inflammation by correcting metabolic disruptions in a rat PID model, highlighting key inflammatory metabolites as biomarkers and suggesting therapeutic potential for herbal treatments in PID management.
What was studied?
Using metabolomics analysis, this study explored the effects of volatile oil extracted from Prunella vulgaris L. (PVVO) on pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) in rats. The research involved establishing a PID rat model to evaluate how PVVO treatment influenced metabolic pathways associated with the condition. Using gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS), the study compared metabolomic profiles between PID rats and healthy controls, and between untreated PID rats and those treated with PVVO, aiming to identify key metabolites and pathways affected by the oil.
Who was studied?
The study used female rats to establish an animal model of PID. Researchers induced PID using a standard infectious model involving bacterial agents, ensuring consistent inflammation and pathology similar to human PID. The experimental group received treatment with PVVO, while the control groups included healthy rats and untreated PID-model rats. Serum samples from these animals provided the basis for metabolomic analysis, facilitating comparisons of metabolite differences due to disease and PVVO treatment.
What were the most important findings?
The study found that PVVO significantly alleviated pelvic inflammation in the PID rat model. GC-MS analysis identified substantial differences in metabolic profiles between PID-affected rats and healthy controls. Specifically, PID rats exhibited significant perturbations in metabolites related to inflammatory and immune response pathways, amino acid metabolism, and lipid metabolism. After PVVO treatment, several metabolites such as arachidonic acid, glutamic acid, and leucine were markedly regulated, returning closer to normal levels. The Random Forest (RF) algorithm analysis highlighted these metabolites as crucial biomarkers indicative of PVVO's therapeutic effects. Thus, PVVO appeared to regulate metabolic pathways disrupted by PID, especially those involved in inflammation control and immune modulation, indicating its potential therapeutic utility.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The implications of this research are significant, indicating the potential of volatile oil from Prunella vulgaris L. as a novel treatment for PID. By demonstrating PVVO's capacity to modulate inflammation-related metabolites and pathways, this study offers evidence supporting further exploration of herbal-based therapeutic strategies in clinical settings. The clear identification of key biomarkers associated with PVVO treatment highlights metabolomics as a powerful tool in discovering new treatment mechanisms and monitoring therapeutic efficacy. Clinicians could potentially leverage these biomarkers for improved diagnosis and personalized treatment strategies. Additionally, these findings suggest an important direction for future research, especially clinical trials, to confirm efficacy and safety in humans, potentially broadening therapeutic options for PID.
Research Progress on the Interaction between Intestinal Flora and MicroRNA in Pelvic Inflammatory Diseases
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) is a complex interplay between pathogens, immune responses, and microbial communities. As research continues to uncover the microbiome's role in reproductive health, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as probiotics, prebiotics, and transplants are redefining how we prevent and treat PID. This page dives deep into these innovations, offering a glimpse into the future of personalized, biologically informed women’s healthcare.
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This review highlights the crucial interactions between gut microbiota and microRNAs in pelvic inflammatory disease, revealing novel diagnostic markers and therapeutic targets.
What was reviewed?
This review article examined the current scientific progress on the interactions between the intestinal flora (gut microbiota) and microRNAs (miRNAs) in the pathogenesis and treatment of pelvic inflammatory disease (PID). It explores the reciprocal regulatory roles of gut microbiota and miRNAs, highlighting their contributions to immune-inflammatory processes, microbial balance, and disease progression in PID. The review also discusses emerging microbiome-targeted and miRNA-based therapeutic strategies.
Who was reviewed?
The authors synthesized evidence from a broad range of experimental, clinical, and animal studies focusing on women with PID and relevant model systems. These studies investigated changes in gut and reproductive tract microbiota, miRNA expression profiles linked to PID and related complications (e.g., endometritis, ectopic pregnancy), and how modulation of these factors affects inflammation and immune responses. The review also included findings on probiotics, prebiotics, fecal microbiota transplantation, and miRNA-based diagnostics and therapeutics.
What were the most important findings?
The review underscores that PID pathogenesis is closely associated with dysbiosis of the gut microbiota, which disrupts immune homeostasis and triggers chronic inflammation through pathways involving pro- and anti-inflammatory cytokines and immune cell dysregulation. miRNAs emerge as critical regulators, modulating inflammation by targeting signaling pathways like NF-κB, TLR4, and NLRP3 inflammasomes. Specific miRNAs are implicated in PID severity and progression by influencing immune cell function and microbial populations. Furthermore, miRNAs can directly alter the gut microbiome composition, while microbial metabolites influence host miRNA expression, establishing a bidirectional regulatory network. Interventions such as probiotics, prebiotics, dietary adjustments, and fecal microbiota transplantation show promise in restoring microbiome balance and modulating miRNA profiles to alleviate inflammation and improve PID outcomes. This integrated view highlights the microbiome-miRNA axis as a novel frontier for diagnostic markers and targeted therapies in PID.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review provides a compelling rationale for developing precision medicine approaches targeting both the microbiome and miRNAs to manage PID more effectively. Understanding the dynamic interplay between gut microbiota and miRNAs can facilitate the identification of novel biomarkers for early diagnosis and prognosis of PID. Additionally, microbiome and miRNA modulation could serve as adjunct or alternative therapies to conventional antibiotics, potentially reducing antibiotic resistance and improving long-term reproductive health. The review calls for further research into the mechanisms governing microbiome-miRNA interactions and clinical trials to validate microbiome-targeted and miRNA-based interventions. Ultimately, this could transform PID management by enabling personalized treatments that address the underlying immune-inflammatory dysregulation.
Risk of Endometrial Cancer in Women With Pelvic Inflammatory Disease
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) is a complex interplay between pathogens, immune responses, and microbial communities. As research continues to uncover the microbiome's role in reproductive health, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as probiotics, prebiotics, and transplants are redefining how we prevent and treat PID. This page dives deep into these innovations, offering a glimpse into the future of personalized, biologically informed women’s healthcare.
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Women with pelvic inflammatory disease have a higher risk of endometrial cancer, especially older and hypertensive women, highlighting the need for vigilant care.
What was studied?
This population-based retrospective cohort study investigated whether pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) increases the risk of endometrial cancer (EC). Utilizing Taiwan’s National Health Insurance Research Database (NHIRD), the research explored the long-term incidence of EC among women diagnosed with PID compared to matched controls without PID, while adjusting for key demographic and health factors.
Who was studied?
The study examined a large cohort of women diagnosed with PID and a control group without PID from a nationally representative Taiwanese population. Both groups were followed over several years to track new cases of endometrial cancer. The analysis accounted for variables such as age, socioeconomic status, urbanization level, occupation, and comorbidities like hypertension and diabetes.
What were the most important findings?
Women with a history of PID showed a notably higher risk of developing endometrial cancer than women without PID. This increased risk was particularly evident among older women and those with hypertension. Moreover, the interval between PID diagnosis and EC occurrence was shorter in the PID group, suggesting that chronic pelvic inflammation may accelerate endometrial carcinogenesis. The findings reinforce the role of persistent inflammation and immune dysregulation as drivers of cancer development in the reproductive tract.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study underscores the importance of recognizing PID as a significant risk factor for endometrial cancer, especially in women over 50 and those with comorbid conditions like hypertension. Clinicians should incorporate this knowledge into patient management, emphasizing timely diagnosis and aggressive treatment of PID to reduce long-term cancer risks. The data also point toward the potential benefit of inflammation-targeted therapies and regular surveillance in women with PID. Future research should explore mechanistic pathways and preventive strategies to mitigate this elevated cancer risk.
Gynecologists and pelvic inflammatory disease: do we actually know what to do?
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) is a complex interplay between pathogens, immune responses, and microbial communities. As research continues to uncover the microbiome's role in reproductive health, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as probiotics, prebiotics, and transplants are redefining how we prevent and treat PID. This page dives deep into these innovations, offering a glimpse into the future of personalized, biologically informed women’s healthcare.
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This study highlights significant gaps in gynecologists' knowledge regarding Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Misdiagnosis, inadequate treatment duration, and poor adherence to guidelines were noted. Enhanced training and culturally adapted guidelines are urgently recommended to address misconceptions and improve patient outcomes.
What was studied?
This observational cross-sectional study aimed to assess the knowledge, awareness, and clinical practice of Jordanian gynecologists concerning Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Researchers evaluated gynecologists’ understanding of PID diagnosis, treatment, and management through an online questionnaire involving 172 gynecologists practicing in Jordan. The study specifically examined gynecologists’ awareness of PID’s clinical presentation, diagnostic investigations, therapeutic strategies, and the perceived prevalence and implications of PID within the Jordanian cultural context.
Who was studied?
The participants were 172 gynecologists practicing in Jordan. The study included various demographics, with 57% female and 43% male respondents, ranging widely in age and educational backgrounds. Over half (55.8%) were under the age of 45, reflecting a younger medical cohort actively practicing in Jordan.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed several crucial insights regarding gynecologists' perceptions and clinical handling of PID. Although 68.6% recognized PID as a significant health issue in Jordan, there was notable confusion around its clinical presentation, diagnosis, and appropriate management. Major microbial associations identified by participants were anaerobic bacteria such as Escherichia coli and Streptococcus, followed by Chlamydia trachomatis, and rarely Neisseria gonorrhoeae. Surprisingly, despite these pathogens being critical in PID, clinicians rarely requested targeted tests for C. trachomatis and N. gonorrhoeae. Significant gaps emerged regarding adherence to international guidelines, with only 51% correctly identifying laparoscopy as a diagnostic tool, and fewer employing recommended treatment durations. While CDC guidelines suggest a minimum 14-day antibiotic regimen, many gynecologists treated for shorter periods. Gynecologists frequently identified IUCD insertion as a major PID risk factor, despite modern IUCDs having minimal association.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study underscores the urgent need for clearer, culturally adapted clinical guidelines and enhanced physician education on PID in Jordan and similar conservative societies. The findings highlight significant discrepancies between current clinical practice and established international standards, potentially leading to suboptimal patient outcomes and complications like infertility and chronic pelvic pain. Additionally, it draws attention to updating perceptions regarding IUCD risks, employing proper diagnostic tests (including C. trachomatis and N. gonorrhoeae testing), and adopting appropriate treatment protocols. The study strongly recommends targeted educational programs and continuous professional development efforts for gynecologists, emphasizing accurate diagnosis, informed therapeutic approaches, and heightened awareness of PID's diverse clinical presentations.
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease Trends Among Emergency Department Visits in North Carolina, 2008 to 2017
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) is a complex interplay between pathogens, immune responses, and microbial communities. As research continues to uncover the microbiome's role in reproductive health, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as probiotics, prebiotics, and transplants are redefining how we prevent and treat PID. This page dives deep into these innovations, offering a glimpse into the future of personalized, biologically informed women’s healthcare.
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This study identified a declining trend in emergency department diagnoses of PID among North Carolina women from 2008-2017. Persistent disparities emerged among young, low-income, and publicly insured women, underscoring the need for improved screening, reporting, and public health interventions to reduce PID's serious reproductive consequences.
What was studied?
This study examined trends in pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) diagnoses among women aged 15-44 years visiting emergency departments (EDs) in North Carolina (NC) from 2008 to 2017. Researchers utilized the North Carolina Disease Event Tracking and Epidemiology Collection Tool (NC DETECT), a real-time surveillance system gathering data from nearly all NC emergency departments. The primary goal was to identify trends and disparities in PID diagnoses based on demographic factors such as age, socioeconomic status, insurance coverage, and regional location.
Who was studied?
The study included women aged 15-44 who visited emergency departments in North Carolina between 2008 and 2017. The analysis specifically targeted PID diagnoses identified through ICD-9-CM and ICD-10-CM diagnostic codes within ED visit records. The study reviewed a total of 54,502 ED visits by 51,847 women diagnosed with PID during this period.
What were the most important findings?
The study found a significant decline in PID diagnoses from 1.0% (6,189 women) in 2008 to 0.58% (4,337 women) in 2016, with a slight increase to 0.61% (4,371 women) in 2017. The majority (95.5%) of women diagnosed with PID visited the ED only once annually. PID diagnoses were most prevalent among women aged 20-24 years, those covered by public insurance, and women living in the most impoverished neighborhoods. Regionally, the Coastal area of NC showed the highest PID rates.
The study emphasized that approximately 20% of PID cases are attributable to untreated Chlamydia trachomatis, while about one-third to half are caused by Neisseria gonorrhoeae. Additional pathogens such as Mycoplasma genitalium and other bacteria associated with bacterial vaginosis also contribute to PID. Notably, fewer than 2% of women diagnosed with PID in EDs had a concurrent or prior diagnosis of chlamydia or gonorrhea within the same year, indicating possible gaps in STI screening or reporting in emergency settings.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The major implications of this study highlight the limitations of current PID reporting and diagnostic practices. Despite PID being a reportable condition, significant underreporting exists, as indicated by the discrepancy between reported cases and ED diagnoses. The findings suggest a need for improved public health strategies to increase screening and treatment for underlying infections, particularly chlamydia and gonorrhea, to reduce PID incidence. Recognizing that the highest burden occurs among socioeconomically disadvantaged groups and younger women, targeted interventions to enhance STI screening and education in these populations could significantly mitigate PID’s long-term reproductive consequences, such as infertility and ectopic pregnancies
The challenge of pelvic inflammatory disease
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) is a complex interplay between pathogens, immune responses, and microbial communities. As research continues to uncover the microbiome's role in reproductive health, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as probiotics, prebiotics, and transplants are redefining how we prevent and treat PID. This page dives deep into these innovations, offering a glimpse into the future of personalized, biologically informed women’s healthcare.
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This review highlights PID’s diagnostic challenges, microbiological associations, and evidence-based treatment guidelines. It emphasizes routine screening for chlamydia to reduce disease incidence, focusing clinicians on adopting comprehensive strategies aligned with current CDC recommendations to effectively manage and prevent PID and its severe reproductive complications.
What was reviewed?
The paper reviewed the complexities involved in the diagnosis, management, and prevention of pelvic inflammatory disease (PID), emphasizing its multifactorial nature and clinical challenges. PID, characterized as an upper genital tract infection, can manifest as endometritis, salpingitis, oophoritis, tubo-ovarian abscess, and peritonitis. The review specifically discussed diagnostic criteria recommended by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), explored available diagnostic tools (e.g., imaging and laboratory methods), treatment strategies, and emphasized prevention, primarily through screening for chlamydial infections.
Who was reviewed?
The review specifically evaluated clinical guidelines, diagnostic criteria, treatment strategies, and prevention recommendations as proposed by authoritative bodies, notably the CDC. Additionally, it assessed evidence from multiple studies, including the Pelvic Inflammatory Disease Evaluation and Clinical Health (PEACH) study, which compared inpatient versus outpatient management outcomes.
What were the most important findings?
The review underscored significant challenges clinicians face in diagnosing PID, attributed to its varied clinical presentations, ranging from asymptomatic to severe illness. Crucially, PID is polymicrobial, commonly associated with pathogens such as Chlamydia trachomatis, Neisseria gonorrhoeae, and aerobic and anaerobic vaginal flora. Chlamydia and Gonorrhea remain predominant pathogens and diagnostic targets. Diagnostic recommendations highlighted the necessity of empirical treatment for women presenting with pelvic tenderness and risk factors for sexually transmitted infections (STIs). Key diagnostic criteria include uterine, adnexal, or cervical motion tenderness, supported by laboratory and imaging findings such as elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate, positive chlamydial or gonorrheal cultures, and suggestive imaging findings (e.g., thickened, fluid-filled tubes on ultrasound or MRI).
The review emphasized significant geographical variations in antibiotic resistance, notably fluoroquinolone-resistant N. gonorrhoeae, influencing therapeutic decisions. Recommended antibiotics must cover primary pathogens and anaerobes. The findings from the PEACH trial demonstrated that outpatient antibiotic therapy effectively prevented long-term complications like infertility and chronic pelvic pain in mild to moderate cases. The article further advocated routine screening for asymptomatic lower genital tract chlamydial infections as an effective strategy to reduce PID incidence and subsequent complications, such as infertility and ectopic pregnancy.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review highlights critical implications for clinical practice. First, it reinforces the need for maintaining a high clinical suspicion for PID to initiate prompt empirical treatment. Second, clinicians should integrate current CDC guidelines, especially concerning antibiotic choice in the context of antibiotic resistance patterns. Third, routine chlamydial screening for young, sexually active women as a preventative measure. Overall, the review provides clarity on evidence-based management strategies that clinicians can directly apply to enhance patient outcomes, minimize complications, and better handle the multifaceted clinical presentation of PID.
Characteristics of Vaginal Microbiome in Women with Pelvic Inflammatory Disease in Korea
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) is a complex interplay between pathogens, immune responses, and microbial communities. As research continues to uncover the microbiome's role in reproductive health, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as probiotics, prebiotics, and transplants are redefining how we prevent and treat PID. This page dives deep into these innovations, offering a glimpse into the future of personalized, biologically informed women’s healthcare.
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This study identifies key differences in the vaginal microbiome of women with PID, emphasizing a significant reduction in Lactobacillus and an increase in polymicrobial infections. The findings underscore the importance of microbiome management in diagnosing and treating PID.
What was studied?
This study focused on the vaginal microbiome of premenopausal women with pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) compared to healthy controls. The researchers analyzed vaginal fluid samples from 74 women using 16S rRNA gene-based amplicon sequencing. The study aimed to identify microbial differences between women with and without PID, specifically looking for patterns of microbial imbalance associated with PID. The findings were expected to contribute to understanding the microbial factors involved in PID and improve diagnosis and treatment strategies by focusing on the role of the vaginal microbiome.
Who was studied?
The study involved 74 premenopausal Korean women, aged 18-50 years, who were divided into two groups: 41 women diagnosed with PID and 33 healthy women serving as the control group. The PID patients were diagnosed based on the clinical criteria set by the CDC and presented with symptoms such as abnormal vaginal discharge, itching, and burning sensations. The control group consisted of women who did not show symptoms of PID or any underlying gynecological conditions. Vaginal samples were collected from both groups and analyzed to compare their microbial profiles.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed significant differences in the vaginal microbial profiles of women with PID compared to healthy controls. In the control group, Lactobacillus dominated the vaginal microbiota, accounting for 61.0% of the bacterial community. However, in PID patients, Lactobacillus was significantly reduced to 34.9%, and the diversity of the microbiome increased. The reduction in Lactobacillus was the most significant difference between the two groups. In contrast, other bacteria such as Gardnerella (13.9%), Enterococcus (13.1%), and Atopobium (6.0%) were significantly increased in the PID group. This shift toward a more polymicrobial infection, involving a range of pathogens, highlights the role of microbial imbalance in the development of PID. The concentration of lactate, a key organic acid produced by Lactobacillus, was significantly lower in the PID group, suggesting that the loss of Lactobacillus and its metabolic products may contribute to the pathogenic environment that facilitates PID.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings of this study have significant implications for understanding PID from a microbiome perspective. The reduction of Lactobacillus and the increased diversity of the microbiome in PID patients suggest that a healthy vaginal microbiota, especially Lactobacillus, is crucial for preventing PID and related complications. The results point to the potential for microbiome-based therapies, such as probiotics or lactobacillus supplementation, as part of a strategy to restore balance and prevent or treat PID. Additionally, the identification of specific pathogens associated with PID could lead to more targeted and effective diagnostic tools and treatments. Clinicians should consider the role of the vaginal microbiome when managing PID, especially in light of the increasing evidence linking dysbiosis to reproductive tract infections.
Microbiota and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) is a complex interplay between pathogens, immune responses, and microbial communities. As research continues to uncover the microbiome's role in reproductive health, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as probiotics, prebiotics, and transplants are redefining how we prevent and treat PID. This page dives deep into these innovations, offering a glimpse into the future of personalized, biologically informed women’s healthcare.
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This review highlights how vaginal microbiota imbalance, particularly bacterial vaginosis, significantly increases the risk of pelvic inflammatory disease. Advanced molecular methods have identified diverse microbes linked to PID, emphasizing the importance of microbiome health in preventing serious reproductive infections.
What was reviewed?
This review examined the complex relationship between pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) and the genital microbiota. It focused on recent advancements in molecular microbiological techniques and their implications for understanding the diverse bacterial communities in both healthy and diseased states of the female genital tract. It also explored how changes in these microbial communities (dysbiosis), specifically bacterial vaginosis, could significantly increase the risk of PID, sexually transmitted infections (STIs), HIV, and adverse reproductive outcomes.
Who was reviewed?
The review analyzed findings from several clinical and molecular microbiology studies involving women diagnosed with pelvic inflammatory disease or other genital infections. It included detailed analyses of microbial communities identified through culture-based methods and advanced molecular techniques, such as 16S rRNA sequencing, PCR-based identification, and cloning and sequencing methods. Patient groups ranged from asymptomatic healthy individuals to women with symptomatic PID, endometriosis, salpingitis, and tubo-ovarian abscesses (TOAs).
What were the most important findings?
The most important findings were that PID is typically polymicrobial, involving a diverse range of pathogens beyond traditional culprits like Chlamydia trachomatis and Neisseria gonorrhoeae. Advanced molecular techniques revealed that bacterial vaginosis-associated bacteria (BVAB), including Gardnerella vaginalis, Atopobium vaginae, and several anaerobic species (e.g., Prevotella, Sneathia, and BVAB 1, 2, and 3), significantly associate with PID development. This contrasts with earlier beliefs that focused primarily on classic sexually transmitted pathogens. The data strongly indicate that vaginal microbiota disturbances, especially reductions in protective Lactobacillus species, substantially increase the risk of ascending infections to the upper genital tract.
Clinicians are increasingly recognizing novel microbial phylotypes and traditionally overlooked anaerobes in PID, especially in severe cases like TOAs. Anaerobes such as Prevotella, Bacteroides, and Peptostreptococcus have frequently emerged as critical players. The identification of BV-associated microbes in salpingitis and abscesses reinforces the microbial continuum from vaginal dysbiosis to upper genital tract infections, providing substantial evidence that microbial dysbiosis directly predisposes women to PID.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review significantly impacts clinical practice by underscoring the importance of maintaining a healthy vaginal microbiota to prevent upper genital tract infections. Clinicians should recognize BV as a critical modifiable risk factor for PID and associated complications, including infertility and ectopic pregnancy. The findings emphasize the urgent need for improved screening and treatment strategies for BV to reduce PID incidence and associated reproductive health complications. Additionally, molecular identification of novel pathogens stresses the necessity of broad-spectrum antimicrobial regimens capable of targeting a diverse microbial landscape, especially anaerobes. Future research must continue exploring the therapeutic and preventive potential of maintaining a healthy vaginal microbiome.
Pelvic inflammatory disease and the risk of ovarian cancer: a meta-analysis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) is a complex interplay between pathogens, immune responses, and microbial communities. As research continues to uncover the microbiome's role in reproductive health, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as probiotics, prebiotics, and transplants are redefining how we prevent and treat PID. This page dives deep into these innovations, offering a glimpse into the future of personalized, biologically informed women’s healthcare.
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This meta-analysis reveals a significant association between pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) and an increased risk of ovarian cancer. The link is particularly strong among Asian women, with implications for early detection and prevention strategies, especially for borderline ovarian tumors.
What was studied?
This study conducted a meta-analysis to evaluate the association between pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) and the risk of ovarian cancer. The authors reviewed studies from various databases, including PubMed, Embase, and ISI Web of Science, focusing on cohort and case-control studies that examined the relationship between PID and ovarian cancer risk. They aimed to provide a more comprehensive understanding of this potential link by updating previous meta-analyses and addressing variations in the study results.
Who was studied?
The study included women diagnosed with PID, as identified through clinical records, hospital diagnoses, or self-reported data. The study population included those who were later diagnosed with ovarian cancer. The research incorporated data from various studies, with participants drawn from both Asian and Caucasian populations. Data from 13 eligible studies were included, which involved cohort studies (which used medical records) and case-control studies (which relied on self-reported history of PID).
What were the most important findings?
The meta-analysis found that PID is associated with an increased risk of ovarian cancer. The association was more pronounced among Asian women compared to Caucasian women. This suggests that PID may be a significant risk factor for ovarian cancer, particularly in populations with different racial and ethnic backgrounds. The study also observed a stronger association between PID and borderline ovarian tumors, but the link with invasive ovarian cancer was weaker. The risk estimate remained elevated in cohort studies, but the association was less significant in case-control studies. These results indicate that PID may increase the risk of ovarian cancer, especially for borderline tumors, but further research is needed to fully clarify this relationship.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings from this meta-analysis suggest that PID may contribute to ovarian cancer risk, particularly in women with a history of sexually transmitted infections that lead to PID. The study highlights the importance of early and effective treatment for PID to reduce long-term reproductive health risks, including ovarian cancer. Given the heightened risk in Asian women, healthcare providers may consider more frequent screening and preventive measures for this group. The study also points to the need for further large cohort studies with long-term follow-up and better diagnostic methods to clarify the causal relationship between PID and ovarian cancer. These findings could inform clinical practice guidelines and public health strategies aimed at reducing the incidence of ovarian cancer.
Association of pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) with ovarian cancer: a nationwide population-based retrospective cohort study from Taiwan
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) is a complex interplay between pathogens, immune responses, and microbial communities. As research continues to uncover the microbiome's role in reproductive health, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as probiotics, prebiotics, and transplants are redefining how we prevent and treat PID. This page dives deep into these innovations, offering a glimpse into the future of personalized, biologically informed women’s healthcare.
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This nationwide study from Taiwan demonstrates that women with a history of pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) are at a significantly higher risk of developing ovarian cancer. The study highlights the importance of monitoring and early screening for ovarian cancer in women with PID, particularly those aged 40 and above.
What was studied?
This study examined the association between pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) and the subsequent risk of ovarian cancer in women. Using data from Taiwan's National Health Insurance Research Database (NHIRD), the researchers conducted a population-based, retrospective cohort study. The study focused on women diagnosed with PID between 2000 and 2012 and compared their risk of developing ovarian cancer to that of women without PID. The study used Cox proportional hazards regression models to analyze the association, adjusting for potential confounders such as age, comorbidities, and income.
Who was studied?
The study included women aged 18 years and older who were diagnosed with PID, as indicated by the ICD-9-CM code for PID between 2000 and 2012. Each woman with PID was matched with two women without PID based on age and the date of entry into the NHIRD. The study followed both cohorts until they either developed ovarian cancer, withdrew from the National Health Insurance program, died, or the study period ended in December 2012.
What were the most important findings?
The study found a significant association between PID and an increased risk of developing ovarian cancer. Over an approximate 10-year follow-up period, women with a history of PID had a 1.49-fold higher risk of ovarian cancer compared to those without PID. The incidence rate of ovarian cancer in women with PID was 0.27 per 1,000 person-years, compared to 0.16 per 1,000 person-years in the control group (P < 0.001). The study also identified that women aged 40 years and older with PID were at a higher risk than younger women. The study highlighted several comorbidities associated with an increased risk of ovarian cancer in the PID cohort, including endometriosis, infertility, and a history of uterine or breast cancer. These comorbidities were more prevalent in the PID group than in controls. The findings suggested that PID is not only a risk factor for infertility but also for ovarian cancer, possibly due to chronic inflammation that may promote carcinogenesis.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study has significant clinical implications, particularly in identifying women at high risk for ovarian cancer. Given the observed association between PID and increased ovarian cancer risk, healthcare providers should carefully monitor women with a history of PID, especially those over 40 years of age. This could include earlier and more frequent screenings for ovarian cancer. The study suggests that PID may serve as a sentinel event for ovarian cancer, with chronic inflammation potentially contributing to cancer development. The findings underscore the need for targeted preventive measures and early detection strategies, especially in populations with known PID risk factors. Further research in different populations is necessary to confirm these results and refine prevention guidelines.
The Application of Complementary and Alternative Medicine in Polycystic Ovary Syndrome Infertility
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is a common endocrine disorder that affects women of reproductive age, characterized by irregular menstrual cycles, hyperandrogenism, and insulin resistance. It is often associated with metabolic dysfunctions and inflammation, leading to fertility issues and increased risk of type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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This review summarizes clinical and mechanistic evidence for complementary and alternative medicine in PCOS infertility, highlighting TCM, acupuncture, nutrient supplementation, and lifestyle interventions as effective, safe adjunct therapies with potential microbiome-mediated benefits.
What was reviewed?
This comprehensive review article examines the current clinical evidence and mechanistic insights for complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) approaches in the management of infertility associated with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS). The review synthesizes findings from clinical trials, animal studies, and mechanistic research to evaluate the safety, efficacy, and potential mechanisms of traditional Chinese medicine (TCM), acupuncture (including electroacupuncture, moxibustion, and related modalities), nutrient supplementation (vitamins and trace elements), and lifestyle interventions such as diet, exercise, Tai Chi, yoga, and Qigong. The review emphasizes both the clinical outcomes and the biological pathways involved, particularly those relevant to metabolic, endocrine, and inflammatory regulation.
Who was reviewed?
The article analyzes a broad spectrum of studies, including randomized controlled trials (RCTs), cohort studies, and preclinical animal research. The reviewed populations primarily consist of reproductive-age women diagnosed with PCOS and infertility, as well as animal models (mainly rats) induced with PCOS-like phenotypes for mechanistic studies. The included studies span diverse geographic regions, with a heavy emphasis on Chinese clinical practice and research, but also incorporate international evidence on CAM use in PCOS. Subpopulations considered include patients with insulin resistance, obesity, or poor ovarian response, and studies often include comparison groups receiving conventional Western medical therapy.
Most important findings
The review identifies strong evidence that CAM modalities, particularly TCM herbal formulas and acupuncture, can improve reproductive and metabolic outcomes in women with PCOS-related infertility. Key TCM monomers such as berberine, cryptotanshinone, and quercetin, as well as compound prescriptions like Liu Wei Di Huang, Gui Zhi Fu Ling, Shou Tai Pill, and Zi Shen Yu Tai Pill, demonstrate efficacy in clinical trials by improving insulin resistance (IR), regulating sex hormone levels, reducing inflammation, and promoting follicle development. Several studies report that these interventions also modulate the gut microbiome and metabolic pathways (e.g., PI3K/AKT/mTOR, IRS-1/PI3K/GLUT4), suggesting a microbiome-endocrine-immune axis relevant to PCOS pathophysiology.
Notably, some studies link improvements in insulin sensitivity and reduction in inflammatory markers to alterations in the intestinal flora, providing a basis for further microbiome signatures research. Nutrient supplementation (vitamins D, E, and trace elements) and lifestyle modifications (weight loss, exercise, Tai Chi, yoga) also offer measurable benefits in ovulation, metabolic parameters, and psychological well-being.
Key implications
For clinicians, this review supports the integration of CAM as adjuncts to conventional fertility treatments for PCOS, particularly in patients with metabolic disturbances, poor response to ovulation induction, or those seeking alternatives due to adverse reactions to standard therapies. The mechanistic evidence for microbiome involvement highlights new avenues for personalized medicine and database development of microbial signatures associated with improved reproductive outcomes. While the safety profile for most CAM interventions is favorable, the review calls for greater standardization, larger-scale RCTs, and rigorous monitoring of potential adverse effects. Overall, CAM offers a promising, multifaceted approach to improve fertility outcomes and quality of life in PCOS, meriting further clinical adoption and research.
Female Fertility and Environmental Pollution
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is a common endocrine disorder that affects women of reproductive age, characterized by irregular menstrual cycles, hyperandrogenism, and insulin resistance. It is often associated with metabolic dysfunctions and inflammation, leading to fertility issues and increased risk of type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease.
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Environmental pollution—including heavy metals, air pollutants, and endocrine disruptors—negatively impacts female fertility through hormonal disruption, oxidative stress, and epigenetic changes. The review emphasizes the clinical need for exposure assessment and mitigation strategies to protect reproductive health.
What was reviewed?
This comprehensive review examined the impact of various environmental pollutants, including heavy metals, air pollutants, and endocrine disruptors, on female fertility. The authors analyzed the mechanisms by which these contaminants disrupt ovarian function, hormonal regulation, and oocyte quality, ultimately leading to reduced fertility. Special attention was given to the fixed, non-renewable nature of the female oocyte pool, which increases vulnerability to environmental insults. The paper also explored how pollution-induced oxidative stress, endocrine disruption, and epigenetic changes can impair oogenesis, follicular development, and embryo viability. Additionally, the review discussed the influence of environmental factors on the placental barrier, fetal development, and the potential for transgenerational effects. The article highlighted emerging concerns such as climate change, thermal stress, and the interaction between pollution and the microbiome as contributors to declining reproductive health.
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesized evidence from human epidemiological studies, animal experiments, and in vitro research. Human data included women of reproductive age, pregnant women, and those undergoing assisted reproduction, as well as population-level studies from polluted regions. Key animal models were referenced to elucidate mechanistic insights not easily obtained in humans. The review also incorporated studies on fetal and placental tissues and, where relevant, included cross-species data to highlight conserved biological responses to pollutants.
Most important findings
The review identified several key mechanisms by which environmental pollutants impair female fertility. Heavy metals such as lead, cadmium, and mercury accumulate in the body and can cross the placental barrier, leading to epigenetic modifications, oxidative stress, and disruption of steroidogenesis. These metals act as endocrine disruptors, affecting the hormonal milieu required for oocyte maturation and ovulation. Air pollution was associated with decreased ovarian reserve, lower rates of fertilization, increased miscarriage, and adverse IVF outcomes. Endocrine disruptors like bisphenol A (BPA) and phthalates were shown to alter gene expression, induce oxidative stress, and interfere with estrogen and androgen receptors, with strong evidence of negative effects on folliculogenesis, embryo development, and increased risk of conditions such as polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS). The review also highlighted the compounding effects of multiple pollutants and the role of the microbiome in modulating susceptibility to environmental toxins—an area of emerging relevance for microbiome signatures databases.
Key implications
For clinicians, this review underscores the critical importance of environmental exposures as modifiable risk factors in the management of female infertility. The findings advocate for thorough patient histories that include environmental, occupational, and lifestyle exposures. There is a strong rationale for patient education on minimizing contact with pollutants, advocating for public health policies that reduce environmental contamination, and counseling regarding timing and mode of assisted reproduction, particularly in high-pollution contexts. The mechanistic links between pollutants and reproductive dysfunction also suggest avenues for biomarker development, including the use of AMH and specific microbial signatures to assess exposure and risk. The review calls for further research on pollutant-microbiome interactions and the cumulative effects of pollutant mixtures, as well as expanded epidemiological studies to inform guidelines and interventions.
Altered Follicular Fluid Metabolic Pattern Correlates with Female Infertility and Outcome Measures of In Vitro Fertilization
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is a common endocrine disorder that affects women of reproductive age, characterized by irregular menstrual cycles, hyperandrogenism, and insulin resistance. It is often associated with metabolic dysfunctions and inflammation, leading to fertility issues and increased risk of type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This study identified 27 follicular fluid metabolites differentiating infertile from fertile women, developed a predictive Biomarker Score, and demonstrated strong correlations with IVF outcomes, providing a basis for personalized infertility management.
What was studied?
This original research investigated the metabolic profile of follicular fluid (FF) in women undergoing in vitro fertilization (IVF) to determine whether specific biochemical alterations correlate with female infertility and IVF outcomes. Using a targeted metabolomics approach, the study quantified 55 low molecular weight compounds, encompassing energy metabolites, purines, pyrimidines, antioxidants, oxidative/nitrosative stress markers, and amino acids, in FF samples. The research aimed to identify distinct metabolic signatures in infertile women compared to controls (fertile women whose partner’s infertility was the only impediment to conception), and to evaluate the relationship between these metabolic patterns and clinical IVF outcome measures, including oocyte development, embryo quality, and pregnancy rates. A cumulative Biomarker Score, based on deviations in 27 key FF metabolites, was developed to distinguish between fertile and infertile women and to predict IVF success.
Who was studied?
The study cohort consisted of 180 women attending a fertility clinic in Rome, Italy, from 2018 to 2020. The control group (n=35) was composed of women whose infertility was exclusively due to a male factor, ensuring their reproductive competence. The infertile group (n=145) included women diagnosed with endometriosis (n=19), polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS; n=14), age-related reduced ovarian reserve (AR-ROR; n=58), reduced ovarian reserve (ROR; n=29), unexplained infertility (UI; n=14), and genetic infertility (GI; n=11). All participants underwent standardized ovarian stimulation and IVF/ICSI protocols, with FF collected during oocyte retrieval. The study excluded women with mechanical reproductive barriers, cancer history, or premature ovarian failure, and controlled for confounding lifestyle and nutritional factors.
Most important findings
The metabolomic analysis revealed that 27 of 55 measured metabolites significantly differed between infertile and control groups. Infertile women generally exhibited lower FF glucose, higher lactate, elevated purine and pyrimidine catabolites (hypoxanthine, xanthine, uracil, pseudouridine), decreased antioxidants (ascorbic acid, glutathione, vitamin A, vitamin E, coenzyme Q10, carotenoids), increased oxidative/nitrosative stress markers (malondialdehyde, 8-hydroxy-2′-deoxyguanosine, nitrite, nitrate), and reduced levels of several amino acids (notably serine, threonine, arginine, valine, methionine, tryptophan, isoleucine, leucine). These metabolic anomalies were largely consistent across different infertility diagnoses, though some subgroup-specific patterns emerged (e.g., PCOS and GI showed normal FF glucose). The composite Biomarker Score robustly discriminated between control and infertile groups, with scores correlating inversely with key IVF outcomes—number and quality of oocytes/blastocysts, clinical pregnancy, and healthy live birth rates. The Biomarker Score showed high specificity and sensitivity in predicting fertility status and IVF success.
Key implications
This study underscores the central role of FF metabolic composition in female fertility and IVF outcomes. The identification of a 27-metabolite signature and its integration into a Biomarker Score offers a powerful, noninvasive tool for distinguishing fertile from infertile patients and predicting assisted reproduction success. The findings suggest that metabolic profiling of FF could inform personalized interventions to optimize the follicular environment, enhance oocyte quality, and improve IVF success rates. Furthermore, these metabolomic biomarkers could be incorporated into microbiome-multimetabolite databases, facilitating personalized reproductive medicine and potentially guiding future research into the interplay between follicular metabolites, the ovarian microenvironment, and the local microbiome.
Metabolic risk factors and fertility disorders: A narrative review of the female perspective
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is a common endocrine disorder that affects women of reproductive age, characterized by irregular menstrual cycles, hyperandrogenism, and insulin resistance. It is often associated with metabolic dysfunctions and inflammation, leading to fertility issues and increased risk of type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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This review explores how metabolic risk factors—obesity, the female athlete triad, and oxidative stress—contribute to female infertility, highlighting associations with PCOS, endometriosis, and idiopathic infertility, and calling for improved metabolic assessment and molecular diagnostics in clinical practice.
What was reviewed?
This narrative review comprehensively examined the associations between metabolic risk factors and female fertility disorders, focusing on obesity, the female athlete triad (low energy intake, menstrual dysfunction, decreased bone density), and oxidative stress as potential contributors to infertility. The authors aimed to clarify how these metabolic conditions, alongside major infertility-related disorders such as polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) and endometriosis, impact women's reproductive health. The review synthesized evidence from 50 selected studies published between 2006 and 2020, integrating pathophysiological, genetic, lifestyle, and epidemiological perspectives. It also highlighted the prevalence, mechanisms, and clinical consequences of metabolic risks with female infertility and discussed gaps in current knowledge, especially regarding idiopathic infertility and the need for robust molecular markers.
Who was reviewed?
The review focused on studies involving women of reproductive age experiencing infertility. It included populations affected by PCOS, endometriosis, obesity, and those displaying characteristics of the female athlete triad. The selected studies varied in design but excluded animal research and clinical trials of pharmaceutical treatments. The review encompassed diverse geographic regions and considered women with both known and idiopathic infertility, as well as those undergoing assisted reproductive technology (ART). The aim was to gather data relevant to women at risk for or experiencing infertility due to metabolic and lifestyle factors.
Most important findings
The review established a clear and direct association between obesity and increased risk of female infertility, with obese women exhibiting up to a three-fold higher risk compared to those with normal body mass index (BMI). Obesity was linked to anovulation, reduced ART success rates, and increased miscarriage risk. Mechanistically, excess body fat disrupts ovarian steroidogenesis, induces hyperandrogenism, and promotes chronic low-grade inflammation, all of which impair reproductive function. PCOS was highlighted as a central metabolic-endocrine disorder, often comorbid with obesity, insulin resistance, and increased cardiovascular risk. Endometriosis risk showed a more complex relationship with BMI, with evidence suggesting both inverse and direct associations, possibly due to genetic and hormonal influences. The female athlete triad, though less well-studied in this context, was associated with hypothalamic suppression, menstrual dysfunction, and reduced fertility, primarily through chronic energy deficiency and altered estrogen signaling. Oxidative stress, driven by lifestyle factors (e.g., smoking, alcohol, drug use), was identified as a pervasive mediator, damaging DNA and germ cells, increasing risks for PCOS and endometriosis, and contributing to idiopathic infertility. The review emphasized a lack of large-scale population studies and molecular biomarker research linking metabolic status and infertility.
Key implications
For clinicians, the review underscores the necessity of assessing metabolic risk factors, especially obesity and undernutrition, when addressing female infertility. Interventions targeting weight management, healthy nutrition, and lifestyle modification may improve hormonal balance and reproductive outcomes, particularly in women with PCOS. The review also calls for interdisciplinary collaboration to integrate molecular, metabolic, and psychosocial approaches to infertility. Given the anticipated rise in obesity prevalence among women, proactive metabolic assessment and the development of diagnostic molecular signatures are critical for improving ART outcomes and reducing unexplained infertility. Further, the establishment of consensus definitions and large-scale biobank studies will be pivotal for advancing personalized infertility care.
Evaluation of the relationship between polycystic ovary syndrome and intestinal inflammation as measured by fecal calprotectin levels
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is a common endocrine disorder that affects women of reproductive age, characterized by irregular menstrual cycles, hyperandrogenism, and insulin resistance. It is often associated with metabolic dysfunctions and inflammation, leading to fertility issues and increased risk of type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease.
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PCOS is linked with higher gut inflammation, as shown by elevated fecal calprotectin. This may help guide diagnosis and treatment.
What was studied?
The authors investigated whether intestinal inflammation plays a role in polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) by analyzing fecal calprotectin levels, a noninvasive biomarker that reflects neutrophil-driven gut inflammation. Given the increasing evidence that inflammation and gut dysbiosis contribute to PCOS, the researchers aimed to determine if elevated calprotectin could serve as an additional indicator of disease presence or severity.
Who was studied?
The study included 54 adult women: 27 with PCOS and 27 healthy controls. All participants were of reproductive age and had a body mass index within the normal range. The authors excluded individuals with gastrointestinal disorders, systemic illness, or recent antibiotic use to isolate the relationship between PCOS and gut inflammation.
What were the most important findings?
Women with PCOS had significantly higher fecal calprotectin levels compared to healthy controls, suggesting greater intestinal inflammation. Interestingly, systemic inflammation, measured by standard markers like hs-CRP, was similar across groups, indicating that the inflammation in PCOS may be localized to the gut. Although calprotectin wasn’t an independent predictor of PCOS in statistical models, it showed excellent specificity. This means it could help differentiate between PCOS and non-PCOS individuals in clinical settings. The findings support that microbial shifts and increased intestinal permeability—hallmarks of gut dysbiosis—may underlie some aspects of PCOS. Elevated calprotectin levels point toward neutrophil activity in the intestinal lining, often triggered by changes in gut microbiota.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study underscores the potential role of intestinal inflammation in PCOS and highlights fecal calprotectin as a promising, low-cost marker that could aid diagnosis or monitoring. These findings open the door to new interventions, such as microbiome-targeted therapies, to manage PCOS symptoms. If confirmed in future studies, strategies that reduce gut inflammation might improve hormonal balance and fertility outcomes in PCOS patients. It also reinforces the value of including microbiome-related biomarkers in gynecological evaluations.
Evidence for statin therapy in polycystic ovary syndrome.
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is a common endocrine disorder that affects women of reproductive age, characterized by irregular menstrual cycles, hyperandrogenism, and insulin resistance. It is often associated with metabolic dysfunctions and inflammation, leading to fertility issues and increased risk of type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease.
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This review highlights the potential benefits of statin therapy in women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), showing improvements in metabolic dysfunction, hyperandrogenism, and cardiovascular risk factors. Statins may offer a dual benefit for PCOS management, though further research is needed for long-term clinical outcomes.
What was reviewed?
This paper provides a review of the evidence supporting statin therapy for managing polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), focusing on its potential to reduce cardiovascular risks and address some of the metabolic complications associated with PCOS. The review discusses both the lipid-lowering effects of statins and their pleiotropic effects, including improvements in insulin resistance, hyperandrogenemia, and systemic inflammation. These secondary benefits may offer additional therapeutic value for women with PCOS, a condition commonly linked with metabolic and cardiovascular disturbances.
Who was reviewed?
The review examined existing studies and clinical trials investigating the use of statins in PCOS patients. The studies reviewed explored the effectiveness of statins like atorvastatin and simvastatin in reducing various metabolic and biochemical markers in women with PCOS, such as testosterone levels, insulin resistance, and inflammation. The review focused on understanding how statins could be beneficial in managing the hormonal and metabolic dysfunctions seen in PCOS.
What were the most important findings?
The review revealed promising evidence supporting statin therapy for women with PCOS, particularly due to its pleiotropic effects. Statins were shown to improve the lipid profile in women with PCOS, reducing LDL cholesterol levels, which is crucial given the elevated cardiovascular risks associated with the condition. Beyond lipid-lowering, statins also contributed to significant reductions in hyperandrogenemia, insulin resistance, and markers of systemic inflammation such as C-reactive protein (CRP). These findings suggest that statins could offer a dual benefit by improving both metabolic and reproductive parameters in women with PCOS.
Moreover, the review highlighted that statins like atorvastatin and simvastatin have comparable effects on testosterone reduction, an important aspect of managing hyperandrogenism in PCOS. The use of statins led to a decrease in testosterone levels that was similar to the effects of established antiandrogens. This effect was observed independently of the improvement in lipid profiles, which underscores the potential of statins to address some of the hormonal imbalances seen in PCOS.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The findings from this review suggest that statins may be a valuable addition to the treatment options for PCOS, especially for women who are at high risk of cardiovascular disease due to the metabolic disturbances commonly seen in the condition. The reduction in hyperandrogenemia, improvement in insulin sensitivity, and decrease in inflammation could provide significant therapeutic benefits, particularly for those who have not responded well to other treatments like insulin sensitizers or antiandrogens. However, the review also emphasized the need for further large-scale studies to validate the long-term efficacy of statins in improving fertility outcomes and reducing cardiovascular events in women with PCOS. The potential teratogenic risks of statins, particularly during pregnancy, warrant caution and a careful approach to their use in reproductive-age women.
Metformin use in women with polycystic ovary syndrome
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is a common endocrine disorder that affects women of reproductive age, characterized by irregular menstrual cycles, hyperandrogenism, and insulin resistance. It is often associated with metabolic dysfunctions and inflammation, leading to fertility issues and increased risk of type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease.
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This review discusses the role of metformin in treating PCOS-related infertility. It highlights its effectiveness in improving ovulation, reducing insulin resistance, and managing hyperandrogenism. Metformin is recommended as a first-line treatment for non-obese women with PCOS-related infertility, with benefits also seen in IVF and metabolic health.
What was reviewed?
This review examines the role of metformin in managing polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), specifically focusing on its effectiveness in treating PCOS-related infertility. The paper reviews evidence from randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and other studies, discussing the use of metformin as an insulin-sensitizing agent for women with PCOS who experience anovulatory infertility. It also explores metformin’s impact on metabolic dysfunctions, hyperandrogenism, and its potential use alongside other treatments like clomiphene for improving fertility outcomes in women with PCOS.
Who was reviewed?
The review considers various studies and clinical trials on the use of metformin in women with PCOS. These studies involve women with varying degrees of obesity and insulin resistance, who are experiencing anovulatory infertility, hyperandrogenism, or both. The review synthesizes results from RCTs that examined the effectiveness of metformin alone or in combination with other treatments like clomiphene citrate and aromatase inhibitors in improving ovulation, fertility, and reducing the metabolic disturbances associated with PCOS.
What were the most important findings?
The review highlights several key findings regarding the use of metformin in treating PCOS-related infertility. Metformin has shown efficacy in improving ovulation rates in women with anovulatory infertility, particularly in non-obese women. A Cochrane review of seven RCTs revealed that metformin significantly increased clinical pregnancy rates compared to placebo. However, while metformin showed promise, it did not outperform clomiphene citrate as a first-line treatment for ovulation induction in women with PCOS, particularly in obese patients. The review also found that metformin, when used in combination with clomiphene, can be effective for women who are resistant to clomiphene alone.
Additionally, the review emphasized that metformin has benefits beyond fertility induction. It helps reduce hyperinsulinemia and insulin resistance, which are common in women with PCOS, and can improve associated metabolic conditions such as dyslipidemia and obesity. Furthermore, metformin was found to reduce the risk of ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome (OHSS) in women undergoing in vitro fertilization (IVF). Although metformin’s role in improving long-term health outcomes, such as the prevention of type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and endometrial cancer, remains inconclusive, it offers significant short-term reproductive benefits.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The review suggests that metformin should be considered a suitable first-line treatment for non-obese women with anovulatory infertility due to PCOS. For women who are resistant to clomiphene or prefer an alternative to the oral contraceptive pill (OCP) for managing hyperandrogenic symptoms, metformin can be an effective option. Additionally, metformin’s role in reducing the risk of OHSS during IVF procedures underscores its importance in assisted reproductive treatments. The review also raises the need for further research to better define metformin’s long-term benefits in preventing the metabolic and reproductive complications associated with PCOS, as well as its potential to improve long-term health outcomes like diabetes prevention.
Role of Metformin in Polycystic Ovary Syndrome (PCOS)-Related Infertility
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is a common endocrine disorder that affects women of reproductive age, characterized by irregular menstrual cycles, hyperandrogenism, and insulin resistance. It is often associated with metabolic dysfunctions and inflammation, leading to fertility issues and increased risk of type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease.
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This review examines the role of metformin in treating PCOS-related infertility, highlighting its effectiveness in improving insulin sensitivity, reducing hyperandrogenism, and restoring ovulation. Metformin serves as a first-line therapy, offering significant benefits for women with anovulatory infertility due to PCOS.
What was reviewed?
This review explores the role of metformin in treating polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)-related infertility. PCOS is a common endocrinological disorder that can lead to infertility, characterized by insulin resistance, hyperandrogenism, and anovulation. The review discusses metformin’s mechanisms, its impact on insulin sensitivity, its role in improving ovulation, and its effectiveness in managing metabolic and hormonal imbalances in women with PCOS. The review also emphasizes the drug's benefits in improving menstrual cyclicity and reducing hyperandrogenism, ultimately aiding in fertility restoration.
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesizes findings from various clinical studies and trials examining the effects of metformin on women with PCOS. It draws on observational studies and randomized controlled trials to evaluate the efficacy of metformin in addressing infertility associated with PCOS. The women studied in these trials typically had anovulatory infertility, hyperandrogenism, and varying degrees of insulin resistance, and they were treated with metformin to assess its impact on ovulation and fertility.
What were the most important findings?
The review found that metformin has significant therapeutic benefits for women with PCOS, particularly in restoring menstrual regularity and improving ovulation rates. Metformin works primarily by improving insulin sensitivity, which reduces hyperinsulinemia—a key factor in the pathogenesis of PCOS. This insulin-sensitizing effect contributes to lower circulating androgen levels, which is crucial in managing symptoms like hirsutism and acne. In several studies, metformin, either alone or in combination with other treatments like clomifene citrate, successfully induced ovulation in women who were resistant to standard treatments.
Furthermore, metformin appears to improve metabolic dysfunctions common in PCOS, including insulin resistance, dyslipidemia, and obesity, all of which contribute to the infertility and long-term health risks associated with the condition. However, the review also noted that while metformin improves metabolic and reproductive outcomes, its efficacy in women with significant obesity is less pronounced. The review also highlights that metformin is generally well-tolerated, although some women may experience gastrointestinal side effects.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The review underscores metformin’s potential as a first-line treatment for women with PCOS-related infertility, especially for those who are insulin-resistant and non-obese. The findings suggest that metformin could be a safer and more accessible alternative to more invasive fertility treatments like in vitro fertilization (IVF). Moreover, metformin’s role in reducing the risk of ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome during assisted reproductive technology procedures makes it particularly valuable in IVF protocols. The review also emphasizes the need for further studies to determine the optimal dose and long-term benefits of metformin, particularly for women with more severe obesity or metabolic complications.
Usefulness of intermittent clomiphene citrate treatment for women with polycystic ovarian syndrome that is resistant to standard clomiphene citrate treatment
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is a common endocrine disorder that affects women of reproductive age, characterized by irregular menstrual cycles, hyperandrogenism, and insulin resistance. It is often associated with metabolic dysfunctions and inflammation, leading to fertility issues and increased risk of type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease.
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The study explored intermittent clomiphene citrate treatment (ICT) for women with PCOS who were resistant to standard CC treatment. ICT showed an 80.8% response rate, offering an effective and safer alternative to gonadotropin therapy with no risk of OHSS or multiple pregnancies.
What was studied?
The study investigated the efficacy of intermittent clomiphene citrate treatment (ICT) in women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) who were resistant to standard clomiphene citrate (CC) treatment. Clomiphene citrate is commonly used to induce ovulation in women with PCOS; however, some women do not respond to the standard treatment. This research aimed to assess whether a modified dosing schedule, using intermittent CC treatment, could help induce follicular growth in these resistant patients.
Who was studied?
The study focused on 42 infertile women diagnosed with PCOS who were resistant to standard CC treatment. Of these, 26 women underwent the intermittent CC treatment protocol, and their response to the treatment was monitored and analyzed. The patient cohort was selected based on their non-response to the standard 50 mg/day, 5-day CC regimen, which is typically used as a first-line treatment for anovulatory PCOS.
What were the most important findings?
The study found that intermittent CC treatment was highly effective for women who were resistant to standard CC treatment. The protocol involved administering 100 mg of CC for 5-day periods across different phases of the menstrual cycle. The results showed that 80.8% of the patients who had previously been resistant to standard CC treatment responded positively to ICT, with follicular growth observed in many of the cases. Notably, the majority of those who responded had only a single mature follicle, which is a safer outcome in terms of reducing the risk of multiple pregnancies or ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome (OHSS). Additionally, no cases of OHSS or multiple pregnancies were reported, making ICT a promising alternative to gonadotropin therapy, which carries higher risks and requires more intensive treatment.
The efficacy of ICT was particularly notable in patients resistant to the 100 mg dose of CC, where up to 78.2% responded positively after subsequent doses. This suggests that ICT may be more effective than simply increasing the dose of standard CC, providing a less invasive and lower-risk alternative for patients who fail the initial treatment.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings suggest that ICT could become a preferred treatment option for women with CC-resistant PCOS before advancing to gonadotropin therapy. ICT offers several advantages: it is less invasive, more cost-effective, and poses a lower risk of complications like OHSS and multiple pregnancies. By maintaining high serum FSH levels through repeated administration of CC, ICT seems to trigger follicular growth effectively without the need for prolonged or more invasive treatments. The study's outcomes could help reshape the treatment protocols for PCOS, offering a safer, more accessible alternative to gonadotropin therapy. However, further research with larger patient populations is necessary to validate these findings and assess the long-term efficacy of ICT in achieving successful pregnancy outcomes.
Maternal Iron Deficiency Anemia Affects Postpartum Emotions and Cognition
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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Anemia
Anemia
Anemia is a reduction in red blood cells or hemoglobin, often influenced by the gut microbiome's impact on nutrient absorption.
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The study explored the impact of iron deficiency anemia on postpartum cognitive and emotional health. Iron supplementation significantly improved depression, stress, and cognitive performance in anemic mothers, with potential implications for maternal and infant health.
What was studied?
The study investigated the impact of iron deficiency anemia (IDA) on maternal cognition, behavioral performance, mother-infant interaction, and infant development during the postpartum period. The focus was on how iron status, particularly in anemic mothers, affected their emotional well-being and cognitive function post-childbirth.
Who was studied?
The study focused on a cohort of 81 South African mothers who had normal birth weight, full-term babies. These mothers were divided into three groups: non-anemic controls, anemic mothers receiving a placebo, and anemic mothers receiving daily iron supplementation. The mothers were followed for 9 months postpartum.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed that iron-deficient anemic mothers exhibited cognitive and emotional deficits compared to their non-anemic counterparts. Specifically, mothers receiving iron supplementation showed a 25% improvement in depression, stress, and cognitive function (measured through Raven’s Progressive Matrices and Digit Symbol tests). In contrast, the placebo group did not show any significant improvement. Furthermore, the study identified strong associations between maternal iron status (hemoglobin, mean corpuscular volume, and transferrin saturation) and behavioral variables such as anxiety, stress, and depression. These findings suggest a direct relationship between maternal iron deficiency and impaired cognitive and emotional functioning.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study highlights the critical role of iron in maternal mental health and cognitive function during the postpartum period. The findings suggest that correcting iron deficiency through supplementation can significantly improve mood, stress, and cognitive functioning in postpartum mothers. This has profound implications for public health strategies, particularly in resource-poor settings where iron deficiency is prevalent. It also underscores the importance of early screening and treatment of IDA to prevent long-term negative effects on both maternal well-being and infant development. The potential for iron supplementation to improve mother-infant interactions and promote healthier developmental outcomes for infants is a key area for future research.
Fecal Microbiota Changes in Patients With Postpartum Depressive Disorder
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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This study investigates the link between gut microbiota and postpartum depressive disorder (PPD), identifying specific microbiota changes that correlate with depressive symptoms and hormonal levels. These findings could provide biomarkers for diagnosing and treating PPD.
What was studied?
This study focused on the relationship between gut microbiota and postpartum depressive disorder (PPD), investigating the potential correlation between gut microbial composition and the severity of depressive symptoms. The research explored whether specific microbiota patterns could be associated with the onset of PPD and if these patterns could serve as biomarkers for diagnosis and treatment.
Who was studied?
A total of 67 participants were involved in the study, consisting of 39 women diagnosed with PPD and 28 healthy controls (HCs). The participants were recruited from two hospitals in Shenzhen, China, and were aged between 20 and 49 years. The study targeted women who had given birth within the past year and had a confirmed diagnosis of PPD based on clinical evaluations.
Most important findings
The study revealed significant differences in the gut microbiota composition between PPD patients and healthy controls. Notably, PPD patients exhibited lower diversity and changes in the relative abundance of several microbial taxa. For example, the abundance of Firmicutes was significantly lower in PPD patients compared to healthy controls. Specific genera such as Faecalibacterium, Phascolarctobacterium, and Butyricicoccus were notably reduced in PPD patients, while Enterobacteriaceae levels were higher. The study also found correlations between certain bacteria and clinical indicators, including the severity of depressive symptoms and levels of sex hormones, suggesting a potential interaction between microbiota composition and hormonal changes in PPD.
Key implications
The findings suggest that gut microbiota may play a crucial role in the pathogenesis of PPD, potentially offering a new avenue for diagnostic and therapeutic strategies. Specific bacterial genera, such as Faecalibacterium and Phascolarctobacterium, could serve as biomarkers for PPD severity, and the microbiota’s interaction with sex hormones may provide insight into the hormonal aspects of postpartum depression. These results underline the importance of considering the microbiome in the treatment and management of PPD, though further research is needed to confirm these associations and explore causal relationships.
919 Syrup Alleviates Postpartum Depression by Modulating the Structure and Metabolism of Gut Microbes and Affecting the Function of the Hippocampal GABA/Glutamate System
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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This study explores how 919 syrup, a Chinese herbal remedy, alleviates postpartum depression (PPD) by modulating the gut microbiome and hippocampal GABA metabolism, offering a novel treatment approach.
What was studied?
This study investigated the therapeutic effects of 919 syrup, a Chinese herbal remedy, on postpartum depression (PPD). The researchers hypothesized that 919 syrup alleviates PPD symptoms by influencing the gut microbiome, altering fecal metabolism, and modulating hippocampal neurotransmitter levels, particularly GABA. To explore this, they utilized an animal model where female mice, subjected to induced postpartum depression, were treated with 919 syrup. The study aimed to uncover the potential mechanistic pathways through which 919 syrup could improve depressive behaviors by focusing on the relationship between the gut microbiota, metabolites, and brain functions associated with mood regulation.
Who was studied?
The study involved BALB/c mice, a strain known for its susceptibility to stress-induced depressive behaviors. The mice were divided into three groups: a control group, a postpartum depression (PPD) group, and a treatment group receiving 919 syrup. Each group was monitored for depressive behaviors, and a range of microbiological, metabolic, and behavioral assessments were conducted throughout the experiment. The focus was on how these groups differed in their gut microbiome composition, the metabolites in their feces, and the levels of neurotransmitters like GABA in their hippocampus, which is critical for mood regulation.
What were the most important findings?
The study demonstrated that 919 syrup effectively alleviates postpartum depression by restoring the balance of the gut microbiome and correcting metabolic disturbances. In the PPD group, lower levels of GABA in the hippocampus were observed, which were associated with increased depression-like behaviors. Treatment with 919 syrup led to a restoration of GABA levels and a significant improvement in depressive symptoms. Additionally, the fecal metabolite profile of the treated mice showed changes that correlated with improvements in gut microbiome composition. The presence of key bacteria such as Alloprevotella tannerae and Bacteroides sp. was linked to improved mood and GABA regulation. The study highlighted the complexity of the gut-brain axis and the role of microbiome-mediated metabolic pathways in mental health, specifically postpartum depression.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The results of this study suggest that 919 syrup may offer a novel, non-pharmacological approach to treating postpartum depression by targeting the gut microbiome and the hippocampal GABA system. This is particularly significant because traditional antidepressants are often not suitable for breastfeeding mothers due to their potential transfer into breast milk. By modulating the gut microbiota and improving metabolic function, 919 syrup presents a promising alternative for managing postpartum depression without compromising maternal or infant health. These findings also emphasize the need for a holistic approach to treating PPD, focusing not just on individual bacterial species but on the overall balance and function of the gut microbiome, a concept referred to as "GutBalance."
Gut microbiota: Linking nutrition and perinatal depression
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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This review investigates the relationship between gut microbiota and perinatal depression, highlighting how nutrition and probiotics may help regulate mood disorders during pregnancy and postpartum.
What was reviewed?
The article reviewed the relationship between gut microbiota, nutrition, and perinatal depression, a major or minor depressive episode during pregnancy (antenatal depression), after childbirth (postpartum depression). It explored how various nutrients and probiotics could influence mental health during the perinatal period, particularly focusing on how they modulate gut microbiota to affect mood disorders such as depression.
Who was reviewed?
The review focused on the role of the gut microbiome, various nutrients like vitamin D, omega-3 fatty acids, fiber, and iron, and probiotics in influencing perinatal depression. The review examined multiple studies and the mechanistic pathways by which these factors can modulate maternal mental health, highlighting the importance of maintaining a healthy microbiome during pregnancy and postpartum.
What were the most important findings?
The review highlighted several critical findings related to the gut microbiota's influence on perinatal depression. One of the most significant takeaways is that the gut-brain axis plays a pivotal role in the onset and progression of perinatal depression. Changes in the microbiome, particularly dysbiosis, were found to correlate with mood disturbances and anxiety. Nutrients such as vitamin D, omega-3 fatty acids, iron, and fiber can influence the gut microbiota, potentially mitigating symptoms of depression. Probiotic supplementation emerged as a promising intervention, although its efficacy remains controversial. The review also discussed the effects of specific bacterial genera in the gut, such as Bifidobacterium, Lactobacillus, and Roseburia, which are linked to mood regulation. However, the review also noted that while certain nutrients and probiotics showed potential, clinical trials are needed to conclusively determine their role in preventing or treating perinatal depression.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The most significant implication of this review is the potential for dietary and probiotic interventions to support mental health during pregnancy and postpartum. By modulating the gut microbiota through nutrition, there is an opportunity to prevent or reduce the severity of perinatal depression, which affects many women globally. Given the impact of perinatal depression on maternal and infant health, these findings suggest that clinicians should consider microbiome-targeted approaches, including dietary modifications and probiotics, as part of comprehensive mental health care for pregnant and postpartum women. However, the review also cautions that more robust clinical trials are required to validate the proposed interventions. The variability in responses to probiotic supplementation indicates that not all strains are equally effective, and personalized approaches may be necessary. Furthermore, the review highlights the complexity of the gut microbiome, which makes it difficult to pinpoint exact microbial profiles that could universally benefit maternal mental health.
The role of gut microbiota and blood metabolites in postpartum depression: A Mendelian randomization analysis.
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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This study identifies gut microbiota and blood metabolites causally associated with postpartum depression, revealing potential biomarkers and therapeutic targets for PPD.
What was studied?
This research investigated the causal relationship between gut microbiota, blood metabolites, and postpartum depression (PPD) using Mendelian randomization (MR) analysis. The study aimed to identify specific gut microbial species and metabolites that are linked to PPD and understand the mechanisms by which they may influence the condition.
Who was studied?
The study analyzed genetic data from large cohorts, including data from the MiBioGen consortium for gut microbiota, the FinnGen consortium for PPD, and the metabolomics GWAS server for blood metabolites. The research specifically examined participants of European ancestry, with the PPD dataset including 9,392 individuals diagnosed with PPD and 69,241 controls.
What were the most important findings?
The study identified five gut microbial species and 24 blood metabolites that were causally associated with PPD. Among the gut species, Bifidobacterium and Prevotellaceae were linked to a reduced risk of PPD, while Alphaproteobacteria was associated with an increased risk. The study also found that these microbial species could influence PPD by modulating blood metabolite levels, particularly xanthine and 1-arachidonoylglycerophosphoinositol (LysoPI). The most important blood metabolites associated with PPD included guanosine, xanthine, phosphate, and 2-aminobutyrate, with several metabolites being identified as potential biomarkers for PPD.
In terms of microbial associations, the research highlighted that Prevotellaceae and Bifidobacterium may protect against PPD by elevating levels of xanthine and LysoPI, which are involved in anti-inflammatory pathways. On the other hand, Alphaproteobacteria was found to increase the risk of PPD, possibly by promoting inflammation. This study underscores the complex interactions between the gut microbiome, metabolism, and mental health, offering new insights into the biological mechanisms that could inform PPD treatment strategies.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study offers significant implications for the understanding and potential treatment of PPD. By identifying specific gut microbial species and metabolites that influence PPD risk, it opens the door to new therapeutic approaches that target the gut microbiome. For example, interventions that modulate the gut environment, such as probiotic treatments or dietary modifications, may help alleviate PPD symptoms. Furthermore, the identification of blood metabolites as biomarkers could lead to more accurate and early detection of PPD, potentially improving patient outcomes. Overall, the findings suggest that regulating the gut microbiota and associated metabolic pathways could be a promising avenue for preventing and treating PPD.
Treatment of postpartum depression: Clinical, psychological and pharmacological options
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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This review explores the clinical, psychological, and pharmacological treatment options for postpartum depression (PPD), focusing on antidepressants, therapy, and alternative treatments like omega-3s and exercise, highlighting the importance of early intervention and individualized care for new mothers.
What was reviewed?
This article reviewed the clinical, psychological, and pharmacological treatment options available for postpartum depression (PPD). It explored the efficacy and safety of various interventions, including antidepressant medications, psychotherapy, hormone therapy, and other non-pharmacological treatments like exercise, acupuncture, and omega-3 fatty acids. The review also addressed the importance of early diagnosis and intervention for PPD and the challenges that clinicians face, particularly regarding medication use during breastfeeding.
Who was reviewed?
The review primarily discussed the treatment approaches for postpartum depression, focusing on evidence from clinical studies, randomized controlled trials, and meta-analyses involving postpartum women diagnosed with depression. It also considered the specific needs of breastfeeding mothers, the potential risks of medication, and the role of psychological therapies in alleviating depressive symptoms in new mothers.
What were the most important findings?
The review found that both pharmacological and psychological treatments for postpartum depression are effective, but each has specific advantages and challenges. Antidepressants, particularly sertraline, paroxetine, and nortriptyline, were found to be safe for use in breastfeeding mothers, with minimal adverse effects on infants. However, concerns about the long-term effects of antidepressants on infants remain. Psychotherapy, particularly interpersonal therapy (IPT) and cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), was shown to be effective in treating postpartum depression, with IPT demonstrating significant improvements in mood and social adjustment. Additionally, the review highlighted non-pharmacological treatments like bright light therapy, omega-3 fatty acids, and exercise as viable alternatives for women who prefer to avoid medications. These therapies showed promising results but still require more robust studies to confirm their effectiveness.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The review underscores the importance of individualized treatment plans for postpartum depression, as there is no one-size-fits-all approach. For clinicians, the review suggests that psychotherapy is often the preferred treatment due to its non-invasive nature, especially for women who are breastfeeding. Antidepressants remain an important option but should be prescribed with caution, considering the potential risks and benefits for both the mother and the infant. The review also emphasizes the need for early detection of postpartum depression and the use of screening tools like the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS) to identify women at risk. Lastly, it points to the value of support systems, including partner support and peer counseling, in the overall management of postpartum depression.
The Role ofNutrient Supplementation to Prevent Perinatal Depression. A Narrative Review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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This systematic review explores the impact of diet and nutritional supplementation on perinatal depression (PPD), highlighting protective effects from healthy dietary patterns, omega-3s, and micronutrients like Vitamin D and selenium, but emphasizes the need for further research.
What was reviewed?
This article presents a systematic review that examines the relationship between dietary intake and the risk of perinatal depression (depression during pregnancy or postpartum). The review investigates various nutritional factors, such as adherence to specific dietary patterns, the intake of essential nutrients, and supplementation. The objective was to assess whether certain dietary factors, including polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs), vitamins, calcium, and other micronutrients, could influence the risk of developing perinatal depression.
Who was reviewed?
The review considered a wide range of studies involving pregnant women or women within the first year postpartum. The studies reviewed included cohort studies, randomized controlled trials (RCTs), cross-sectional studies, and case-control studies. The studies focused on different dietary patterns and nutrient intakes, and how these factors related to the development of depression during pregnancy and the postpartum period.
What were the most important findings?
The review found mixed evidence regarding the role of diet and nutrition in perinatal depression. Several studies, particularly those focusing on healthy dietary patterns, multivitamin supplementation, and omega-3 fatty acids, showed protective effects against perinatal depression. These findings were most evident in women who adhered to a healthy diet, which was associated with lower depression scores. PUFA supplementation was also found to be beneficial, with some studies indicating improvements in depressive symptoms, although the results were inconsistent. Vitamin D, calcium, zinc, and possibly selenium intake were linked to a reduced risk of perinatal depression, with selenium supplementation showing a protective effect in some cohort studies. However, the evidence was inconclusive due to methodological limitations and variations in study design. Despite promising associations, the review concluded that more robust, longitudinal studies are needed to draw definitive conclusions about the impact of diet on perinatal depression.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The greatest implication of this review is that nutrition could be a modifiable risk factor for perinatal depression, offering potential preventive and therapeutic strategies. Given the rising prevalence of perinatal depression, particularly in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), incorporating nutritional interventions, such as omega-3 supplementation and promoting adherence to healthy dietary patterns, could be a cost-effective approach to improving maternal mental health. The review suggests that while evidence exists linking nutrition and perinatal depression, there is a need for more comprehensive and consistent research, especially in terms of longitudinal studies and better measurement of nutrient intake and depressive symptoms.
The effectiveness of iron supplementation for postpartum depression
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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This systematic review and meta-analysis protocol aims to evaluate the effectiveness of iron supplementation for postpartum depression, potentially providing clinical evidence for its role in improving maternal mental health and offering a cost-effective treatment option for women with postpartum depression and iron deficiency.
What was reviewed?
The review was a protocol for a systematic review and meta-analysis aimed at evaluating the effectiveness of iron supplementation in treating postpartum depression (PPD). The review seeks to analyze randomized controlled trials (RCTs) to gather evidence on the benefits of iron supplementation for PPD, as iron deficiency has been associated with increased risks of depression in postpartum women.
Who was reviewed?
The review included studies that focused on women diagnosed with postpartum depression, regardless of nationality, age, gender, or race. These women were treated with iron supplementation, either orally or intravenously, as part of their postpartum care. The review examined randomized controlled trials that compared iron supplementation against control treatments, such as psychological interventions or no treatment.
What were the most important findings?
The review protocol highlights that many studies have already established a link between iron deficiency anemia (IDA) and postpartum depression. The researchers expect to consolidate evidence on whether iron supplementation can help alleviate PPD symptoms, as iron is critical for several brain functions, including neurotransmitter production. Previous studies have demonstrated that iron depletion negatively impacts brain chemistry, with reduced iron stores being linked to increased risk of developing PPD. The protocol anticipates that this systematic review will confirm whether iron supplementation can improve PPD symptoms, measured primarily by the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS).
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The greatest implication of this review is that it could provide concrete evidence for clinicians regarding the effectiveness of iron supplementation in treating PPD. If the review confirms that iron supplementation has a significant effect, it could lead to broader clinical adoption of iron treatment as part of postpartum care, especially for women at risk of or diagnosed with PPD. This would be particularly beneficial in populations with high rates of iron deficiency or anemia, offering a potentially low-cost, accessible treatment option for improving maternal mental health. Furthermore, the findings could shift how clinicians manage PPD, encouraging early screening for iron deficiency and integrating iron supplementation into standard care protocols for postpartum women.
Dysmenorrhea increased the risk of postpartum depression in Chinese Han parturients
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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This study links dysmenorrhea to an increased risk of postpartum depression in Chinese women. It highlights the need for early PPD screening in women with a history of dysmenorrhea.
What was studied?
This study explores the relationship between dysmenorrhea (painful menstruation) and the risk of postpartum depression (PPD) among Chinese women. It specifically examines whether a history of dysmenorrhea increases the likelihood of developing PPD after childbirth. The research involved a case-control study of women who delivered at Baoan Maternal and Child Health Hospital, Shenzhen, China. The Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS) was used to assess postpartum depression, while logistic regression models were employed to analyze the relationship between dysmenorrhea and PPD, adjusting for various socio-demographic and pregnancy-related factors.
Who was studied?
The study included 360 women, with 120 diagnosed with PPD and 240 healthy controls who did not show signs of postpartum depression. All participants were parturients who gave birth between January 1, 2016, and December 31, 2016, at the hospital. These women were between 18 and 45 years old and were screened for PPD six weeks postpartum using the EPDS. The study aimed to evaluate the role of dysmenorrhea in the development of PPD, considering other factors such as age, education level, employment status, and prior mental health history. Importantly, the study also focused on the psychological aspects of postpartum care, with participants asked about their experience of dysmenorrhea prior to pregnancy.
Most important findings
The study found a significant association between dysmenorrhea and an increased risk of postpartum depression. Among the participants, 64.2% of women with PPD reported a history of dysmenorrhea, compared to 47.9% of women without PPD. The odds ratio (OR) for dysmenorrhea being associated with PPD was 1.95 in univariate analysis, and after adjusting for socio-demographic and pregnancy-related factors, the OR was 2.45, indicating a significantly higher risk. The study also found that women with dysmenorrhea during pregnancy were more likely to experience depression and anxiety during pregnancy, which may contribute to the development of PPD. Moreover, dysmenorrhea was correlated with low social support, further exacerbating the risk of PPD.
Key implications
The findings suggest that dysmenorrhea should be considered a potential risk factor for postpartum depression, especially for women who experience severe menstrual pain. Clinicians should be vigilant in screening for PPD among women with a history of dysmenorrhea, as early intervention may reduce the risk of developing postpartum mental health issues. Additionally, the study highlights the importance of improving social support systems for women with dysmenorrhea to mitigate the mental health risks associated with both dysmenorrhea and PPD.
A Comprehensive Review on Postpartum Depression
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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This comprehensive review of postpartum depression (PPD) explores its pathophysiology, risk factors, and treatment options. It emphasizes the need for early diagnosis, multidisciplinary care, and further research into the neurobiological causes of PPD to improve prevention and treatment strategies.
What was reviewed?
This paper is a comprehensive review on postpartum depression (PPD). It examines various aspects of PPD, including its pathophysiology, risk factors, diagnostic methods, and treatment options. The review delves into the biological, psychological, and social factors that contribute to PPD, explores the potential role of specific medications like methyldopa, and discusses contemporary pharmacological and non-pharmacological treatments for the disorder. The article also highlights the long-term implications of PPD on both mothers and children, emphasizing the importance of early diagnosis and intervention.
Who was reviewed?
The review focuses on studies related to PPD in new mothers. It draws from multiple research articles and clinical data to provide an understanding of how PPD develops, its risk factors, and the effectiveness of various treatments. The subjects reviewed include mothers suffering from PPD, particularly those affected by psychological risk factors like depression during pregnancy, stress, and lack of support. It also includes the pharmacological effects of medications such as methyldopa and their potential role in inducing PPD.
What were the most important findings?
The review identified several key findings regarding the prevalence and risk factors for PPD. PPD affects approximately 13-19% of new mothers, with a significant impact on both maternal health and infant development. The review highlighted the biological, psychological, and social factors associated with PPD. Biological factors such as hormonal changes, particularly the drop in progesterone and estradiol after childbirth, are believed to contribute to the onset of PPD. Psychologically, factors like a history of depression, anxiety, and stress during pregnancy are strongly linked to PPD. The review also points to specific events, such as a traumatic birth or lack of social support, as significant contributors to the development of the condition.
One important aspect discussed was the role of methyldopa, a drug used for preeclampsia during pregnancy, which has been shown to induce depressive symptoms in the postpartum period through mechanisms such as altered neurotransmitter levels and reduced cerebral blood flow. This insight underscores the complexity of PPD and highlights the need for careful monitoring of mothers on methyldopa. In terms of treatment, the review emphasizes the effectiveness of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) like sertraline in treating acute PPD. Other treatments, such as psychotherapy, neuromodulatory interventions like electroconvulsive therapy (ECT), and emerging treatments like brexanolone (a formulation of allopregnanolone), show promise in alleviating PPD symptoms. However, the review also noted that current treatment strategies are under-researched, and more robust clinical trials are needed.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The review stresses the need for increased awareness and early intervention, as untreated PPD can have long-lasting effects on both mothers and their children. The findings suggest that healthcare providers should integrate routine screenings for PPD in the postpartum care process, especially in vulnerable populations. The review also highlights the importance of addressing the psychological, social, and biological factors contributing to PPD, and the need for a multifaceted approach in both prevention and treatment. Furthermore, the review emphasizes that more research is needed to fully understand the neurobiological mechanisms behind PPD, as this will guide the development of more effective, targeted treatments.
Correlation of Serum Zinc Levels with Postpartum Depression-A Case- control Study in North Karnataka
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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This study demonstrates that low serum zinc levels correlate with increased severity of postpartum depression, suggesting the potential benefits of zinc supplementation in postpartum care.
What was studied?
This was a case-control study aimed at investigating the correlation between serum zinc levels and postpartum depression. The study sought to compare the serum zinc levels in postpartum women diagnosed with depression and healthy controls, using the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS) to categorize depression severity.
Who was studied?
The study involved 80 postpartum women, divided into two groups: 40 women with postpartum depression (EPDS score >10) and 40 healthy controls (EPDS score <10). Participants were aged between 20-30 years and were recruited from a tertiary care hospital in North Karnataka, India. All participants had their serum zinc levels measured, and data was analyzed to understand the relationship between zinc deficiency and depression severity.
What were the most important findings?
The study found significantly lower serum zinc levels in women with postpartum depression compared to healthy controls. A negative correlation was observed between serum zinc levels and the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale scores, suggesting that lower zinc levels were associated with more severe depressive symptoms. The study also identified risk factors for postpartum depression, including the age of the mother, mode of delivery, and education level. The findings suggest that zinc deficiency could play a role in the onset and severity of postpartum depression.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study implies that monitoring and addressing zinc deficiency could become an important aspect of managing postpartum depression. Given the negative correlation between zinc levels and depression severity, zinc supplementation could be considered as a potential intervention for preventing or alleviating postpartum depression. The results underscore the importance of nutritional support in postpartum care, particularly in regions where zinc deficiency is prevalent. This also calls for greater attention to maternal mental health and the integration of nutritional assessments into standard postpartum care practices. However, the small sample size and the exclusion of women on multivitamins or zinc supplements point to the need for larger, more inclusive studies to confirm these findings and explore optimal zinc supplementation strategies for postpartum women.
Diagnosis of peripartum depression disorder: A state-of-the-art approach from the COST Action Riseup-PPD
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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This review emphasizes peripartum depression as distinct from general depression, featuring pronounced anxiety, psychomotor symptoms, and obsessive thoughts, urging expanded diagnostic criteria to cover the full peripartum year and specific maternal symptomatology, crucial for improved diagnosis and tailored intervention.
What was reviewed?
The review synthesizes the latest research comparing peripartum depression (PPD) with major depressive disorder (MDD), emphasizing diagnostic criteria, prevalence, symptom profiles, developmental trajectory, and comorbidities. The researchers particularly focused on delineating PPD as a potentially distinct entity rather than merely a subtype or specifier of MDD. They reviewed evidence regarding clinical characteristics, diagnostic features, symptom presentation, cultural considerations, and associated risk factors. The review further explored risk factors unique to PPD, such as ovarian tissue expression differences, premenstrual syndrome, unintended pregnancies, and specific obstetric complications.
Who was reviewed?
This review synthesizes research literature rather than studying individual subjects. It includes studies from various databases covering pregnant and postpartum women diagnosed or at risk of peripartum depression (PPD), comparing these findings against major depressive disorder (MDD) populations in general. Special attention was given to differences across cultural settings, indicating a significant variation in prevalence and symptom manifestation.
What were the most important findings?
The review identified critical distinctions between PPD and general MDD. PPD exhibits less typical depressive symptoms such as profound sadness and suicidal thoughts, while significantly heightened symptoms include anxiety, irritability, obsessive intrusive thoughts about harming the infant, psychomotor agitation, and decision-making difficulties. Additionally, the onset of PPD is broader than current diagnostic criteria suggest, commonly starting anytime during pregnancy and potentially extending throughout the first postpartum year. Furthermore, there are distinct risk factors, notably related to hormonal fluctuations and obstetric complications, which differ markedly from general depression risk factors. Cultural variance significantly influences the prevalence and expression of PPD symptoms, necessitating culturally sensitive diagnostic approaches. The review underscored that clinicians need to consider PPD as potentially requiring distinct diagnostic criteria rather than merely a subset of MDD, emphasizing the importance of tailored diagnostic tools and criteria specific to the peripartum context.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The greatest implication of this review is advocating for revising and broadening diagnostic criteria for PPD, emphasizing the inclusion of anxiety and specific maternal-related symptoms. Extending the onset specifier throughout pregnancy and the entire postpartum year could significantly improve accurate diagnosis and intervention. Highlighting the unique characteristics of PPD could encourage tailored treatments, reduce stigma, and improve maternal and child health outcomes by ensuring better recognition, diagnosis, and management of this disorder.
Exposure to environmental chemicals and perinatal psychopathology
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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This review links prenatal chemical exposures to perinatal depression and anxiety through microbiome disruption and neuroinflammation. Environmental chemicals alter the gut-brain axis, emphasizing the need for integrative, preventative maternal mental health strategies.
What was reviewed?
This paper reviewed the growing body of literature examining how exposure to environmental chemicals, such as endocrine-disrupting chemicals (EDCs), heavy metals, pesticides, and air pollutants, contributes to perinatal psychopathology, particularly depression and anxiety during pregnancy and postpartum. The review assessed human and animal studies that link prenatal and early postnatal environmental exposures to altered neurobiology, behavior, and emotional outcomes, including disruptions of the gut-brain axis and inflammatory pathways.
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesized findings from both clinical populations of pregnant and postpartum individuals and preclinical animal models that explore mechanisms behind environmentally linked psychopathology. The human studies included pregnant and postpartum women exposed to chemicals such as bisphenol A (BPA), phthalates, lead, cadmium, and particulate matter. Animal studies allowed researchers to investigate mechanisms like neuroinflammation, HPA-axis disruption, neurogenesis, and microbiota alterations under controlled exposure conditions.
What were the most important findings?
The review emphasized that perinatal exposure to environmental chemicals significantly contributes to the risk of developing depression and anxiety. Mechanistically, the most consistent findings link chemical exposures with heightened neuroinflammation, dysregulation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis, and altered monoamine signaling, particularly in serotonin pathways. Several chemicals also disrupted the gut microbiota, implicating the gut-brain axis in environmentally driven psychopathology.
Heavy metals like lead and cadmium induced microglial activation and inflammatory cytokine production, contributing to anxiety- and depression-like behaviors. EDCs such as BPA and phthalates disrupted estrogen and glucocorticoid signaling, which are vital for mood regulation during the perinatal period. Importantly, both human and animal studies showed changes in gut microbial composition associated with these exposures. For example, exposure to BPA reduces microbial diversity and suppresses beneficial genera like Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium, while increasing pathobionts like Proteobacteria. These microbial shifts were frequently linked to increased gut permeability, systemic inflammation, and behavioral alterations relevant to perinatal mood disorders.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review highlights a critical intersection between environmental health, neurobiology, and the microbiome in shaping perinatal mental health. For clinicians, these findings underscore the need to consider environmental exposures as modifiable risk factors when assessing and treating pregnant and postpartum patients with mood disorders. Integrating environmental history into mental health screening could improve early detection and prevention strategies. Additionally, supporting gut microbial health through targeted nutritional and probiotic interventions may mitigate some of the inflammatory and neurochemical consequences of environmental toxicants. The evidence also supports advocacy for public health policies aimed at reducing pregnant women’s exposure to harmful environmental chemicals, particularly in vulnerable and underserved populations. Ultimately, these insights offer a strong rationale for multidisciplinary approaches in maternal mental health care that incorporate environmental toxicology, microbiome science, and neuropsychology.
Factors Related to Seeking Help for Postpartum Depression: A Secondary Analysis of New York City PRAMS Data
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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This study identifies significant barriers preventing women from seeking help for postpartum depression, notably stigma and socio-cultural factors. Active help-seeking behaviors significantly increase diagnosis rates, highlighting the importance of mental health education and stigma-reduction efforts, especially among Asian/Pacific Islander women and those with intended pregnancies.
What was studied?
This study analyzed the factors associated with seeking help for postpartum depression (PPD) among women experiencing recurrent depressive symptoms. It specifically aimed to identify socio-demographic and health-related factors influencing whether postpartum women sought medical assistance for their depressive symptoms, using secondary data from the New York City Pregnancy Risk Assessment Monitoring System (PRAMS) from 2016–2017.
Who was studied?
The study included 618 postpartum women from New York City who reported recurrent depressive symptoms on the PRAMS survey. These women represented various socio-demographic backgrounds, including different age groups, racial and ethnic identities, educational attainment levels, income brackets, and health conditions.
What were the most important findings?
The key finding was that most women experiencing postpartum depressive symptoms did not seek professional help, despite having significant depressive symptoms. Only 18% sought help, whereas being directly asked about depressive symptoms at prenatal or postnatal visits had less impact compared to active help-seeking behavior. The likelihood of receiving a formal PPD diagnosis was dramatically higher when women sought help on their own. Significant socio-demographic factors identified were income and pregnancy intentionality; higher-income women were more likely to seek help, while surprisingly, women with intended pregnancies were less likely to seek assistance.
Notably, Asian/Pacific Islander women had significantly lower help-seeking behaviors than other racial groups, reflecting pronounced cultural barriers and stigma surrounding mental health. Additionally, previous mental health history and visits for chronic illnesses emerged as critical health-related factors positively influencing help-seeking behaviors. Women with prior depression or anxiety or those who visited healthcare providers for chronic conditions were more likely to seek professional help, indicating a familiarity or reduced stigma towards accessing healthcare services.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study underscores the crucial role stigma reduction and mental health awareness can play in addressing postpartum depression. The markedly low help-seeking rates, particularly among API women and those with intended pregnancies, highlight the need for culturally sensitive educational interventions to normalize mental health discussions. The findings advocate incorporating mental health education within prenatal classes and routine postpartum visits. Furthermore, these insights suggest that clinicians should proactively address stigma and encourage openness about mental health to enhance early detection and treatment adherence for postpartum depression.
Gestational iron supplementation reverses depressive-like behavior in post-partum Sprague Dawley rats: Evidence from behavioral and neurohistological studies
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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This study highlights the role of gestational iron supplementation in alleviating depressive-like behavior in postpartum rats, showing improvements in neuronal health and mood regulation. It suggests that addressing maternal iron deficiency may be a promising strategy for managing postpartum depression.
What was studied?
The study explored the effects of gestational iron supplementation on depressive-like behavior in postpartum Sprague-Dawley rats, focusing on the behavioral and neurohistological changes associated with iron deficiency during pregnancy and its potential therapeutic effects.
Who was studied?
The study involved female Sprague-Dawley rats, which were crossed and divided into groups. During gestation, these rats received either iron supplementation, fluoxetine (a clinically effective antidepressant), desferrioxamine (an iron-chelating agent), or a vehicle (control). The focus was on the postpartum period, where the effects of these treatments on behavioral and neurohistological outcomes were examined.
What were the most important findings?
The study found that iron supplementation during gestation exerted significant antidepressant-like effects in postpartum rats. The rats that received iron treatment showed decreased immobility scores in the Forced Swim Test (FST), a widely used measure of depressive behavior. This effect was comparable to the group treated with fluoxetine. Additionally, the rats receiving iron demonstrated improved feeding behavior in the Novelty-Induced Hypophagia (NIH) test, indicating a reversal of depressive-like symptoms. Histologically, iron-treated rats showed a higher number of neurons with dendritic connections in the frontal cortex compared to the control groups. In contrast, rats treated with desferrioxamine or the vehicle exhibited signs of depression, including reduced feeding and lower neuron density, highlighting the negative impact of iron deficiency during gestation. These suggest that iron supplementation during pregnancy could potentially mitigate the adverse effects of gestational iron deficiency on the brain, including neuronal loss and reduced dendritic spine density, which are associated with depression. This provides insights into how improving iron levels in mothers during pregnancy may have lasting positive effects on mood regulation during the postpartum period.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study suggests that maternal iron supplementation could play a crucial role in preventing postpartum depression (PPD) by improving both behavioral and neurophysiological outcomes. Given that postpartum depression affects a significant number of women globally, this research could lead to better strategies for managing and preventing PPD, particularly in populations with known iron deficiency. Moreover, the neurohistological changes observed, such as increased neuronal density and dendritic spine connections in the frontal cortex, highlight the potential for iron to promote neuroplasticity and repair during critical developmental windows, offering broader implications for other neurodegenerative or mood disorders linked to iron deficiency.
Joint effects of traffic-related air pollution and hypertensive disorders of pregnancy on maternal postpartum depressive and anxiety symptoms
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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This study demonstrates significant associations between prenatal traffic-related air pollution exposure and postpartum depressive and anxiety symptoms, highlighting increased vulnerability among women with hypertensive pregnancy disorders. Findings support integrating environmental health assessments into postpartum mental health strategies.
What was studied?
This study examined the combined effects of prenatal exposure to traffic-related air pollution, specifically nitrogen oxides (NOx), and hypertensive disorders of pregnancy (HDPs), such as gestational hypertension, preeclampsia, and eclampsia, on postpartum depression (PPD) and anxiety symptoms among women. Researchers focused on how these environmental and biological factors jointly influence maternal mental health in the year following childbirth.
Who was studied?
The research involved 453 predominantly low-income Hispanic/Latina women from the Maternal and Developmental Risks from Environmental and Social Stressors (MADRES) cohort in Los Angeles, California. Traffic-related air pollution exposures were measured near the women's residences, and depressive and anxiety symptoms were assessed at multiple points (1, 3, 6, and 12 months) postpartum.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed significant associations between prenatal exposure to traffic-related NOx and increased postpartum depressive and anxiety symptoms. Specifically, higher prenatal exposure to NOx from major roads correlated with notably higher depressive and anxiety symptoms at 3 and 12 months postpartum. A repeated measures analysis confirmed these findings across the entire first year postpartum, indicating that consistent exposure to traffic emissions during pregnancy might substantially impact maternal mental health.
Importantly, women with hypertensive disorders of pregnancy (HDP) demonstrated greater vulnerability to the negative mental health impacts of air pollution. Among mothers with HDP, increased exposure to NOx from freeways/highways and overall traffic sources significantly correlated with elevated postpartum depressive and anxiety symptoms at 12 months postpartum compared to mothers without HDP. These findings suggest biological mechanisms such as inflammation and oxidative stress may mediate the joint effects of air pollution and HDPs, exacerbating mental health risks postpartum.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study highlights the importance of addressing environmental pollution exposure during pregnancy as a modifiable risk factor for postpartum mental health disorders. Clinicians should consider prenatal air quality exposure, particularly in mothers with hypertensive pregnancy conditions, as part of postpartum mental health risk assessments. Urban planners and policymakers could utilize these findings to implement targeted interventions, such as stricter emission controls and increased green spaces, to protect vulnerable populations. Additionally, the evidence supporting increased risk for women with HDPs emphasizes the need for integrated care approaches that consider environmental and physiological factors jointly in postpartum mental health screenings and interventions.
Postpartum Depression and Role of Serum Trace Elements
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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This review explores how deficiencies or imbalances in zinc, magnesium, iron, and copper contribute to postpartum depression. It supports trace element supplementation as a nonpharmacologic treatment strategy and calls for further research to solidify clinical protocols and explore microbiome interactions.
What Was Reviewed?
This review investigated the role of trace elements in the pathophysiology and potential treatment of postpartum depression (PPD). PPD, a subtype of major depressive disorder, affects up to 15% of women post-delivery and has significant implications for maternal mental health and child development. The authors reviewed human and animal studies linking altered levels of these trace elements to depressive symptoms in the postpartum period. Emphasis was placed on the biological mechanisms through which these elements influence neurotransmitter systems, hormonal balance, and neural development, all of which are implicated in the onset of PPD.
Who Was Reviewed?
The review drew from a diverse body of evidence, including clinical studies involving postpartum women, observational studies in non-pregnant depressed individuals, and animal models of depression. In particular, the authors examined data from populations at risk of nutrient deficiencies, such as women in developing countries and those consuming rice-based diets, as well as laboratory animals subjected to dietary or pharmacologic manipulations affecting trace element levels.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The review highlighted zinc, magnesium, iron, and copper as significant players in the neurobiological underpinnings of PPD. Zinc, the second most concentrated transition metal in the brain, influences neurotransmission, especially in serotonergic systems. Low serum zinc levels were consistently associated with depressive symptoms in postpartum women, and normalization followed antidepressant treatment. Magnesium plays a critical role in neurotransmitter metabolism and calcium channel regulation; its deficiency, especially due to fetal and lactational demands, was linked to depression-like behaviors and attenuated by supplementation in animal models. Iron deficiency, prevalent among women of reproductive age, impairs oxygen delivery, neurotransmitter synthesis, and myelination, all contributing to cognitive and mood disorders. Studies consistently showed that anemic women had more depressive symptoms postpartum. Copper’s role was more complex; while elevated levels were observed in some women with a history of PPD, other findings showed decreased levels in depressed individuals. Its involvement in catecholamine metabolism suggests both deficiency and excess can be problematic.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Review?
This review underscores the potential of using trace element profiling and supplementation as low-risk, accessible interventions for preventing or managing PPD. Given that many women avoid antidepressants due to concerns about side effects and transmission through breast milk, trace element therapy offers a compelling, nonpharmacologic alternative. Integrating micronutrient assessments into postpartum care could facilitate early identification of at-risk individuals and tailor nutritional strategies to mitigate mental health risks. Additionally, the review advocates for broader, longitudinal studies to establish causal links and optimize intervention protocols, ideally in tandem with microbiome research that could clarify nutrient-microbe-host interactions in maternal mental health.
Postpartum Depression in The Arab Region: A Systematic Literature Review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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This systematic review examines postpartum depression in Arab countries, revealing varying prevalence rates and highlighting socio-economic, marital, and health-related factors as major risk predictors. It advocates for routine screening and culturally sensitive interventions to address PPD effectively.
What was reviewed?
Thi review focused on the prevalence and risk factors of postpartum depression (PPD) in Arab countries. The review analyzed 25 studies that were published until February 2016, assessing PPD among mothers in various Arab countries. The studies included a combination of longitudinal and cross-sectional designs and investigated the various risk factors associated with PPD in the region. The primary aim was to determine the prevalence of PPD among Arab mothers and identify common risk factors such as socioeconomic status, obstetric complications, unwanted pregnancies, and family dynamics.
Who was reviewed?
The review focused on studies that examined PPD among mothers in Arab countries. The mothers studied were from diverse backgrounds, including urban and rural areas, and a range of socioeconomic statuses. These studies were conducted across various Arab countries, including the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Morocco, Lebanon, Egypt, Palestine, and others. The review considered studies that used tools like the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS), Mini-International Neuropsychiatric Interview (MINI), and Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) to assess the prevalence of PPD. These studies often considered both cultural and socio-economic variables, such as marital conflict, low income, and pregnancy complications, as potential risk factors for PPD.
What were the most important findings?
The review found that the prevalence of PPD in Arab countries varied widely, with some studies reporting prevalence rates as low as 8% and others as high as 74%. The majority of studies indicated a prevalence rate between 15-25%, consistent with rates found in other low and lower-middle-income countries. The studies revealed that the most significant risk factors for PPD in the Arab region included low socioeconomic status, unwanted pregnancies, marital and family conflicts, obstetric complications during pregnancy, and lack of social and partner support. Additionally, studies indicated that mothers who had infants with health issues, low birth weight, or who were formula-fed were more likely to experience PPD. Family dynamics, such as conflict with in-laws or lack of support from the husband, were also strong indicators. Several studies also noted that a history of depression, both personal and familial, significantly increased the likelihood of developing PPD.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review underscores the need for systematic interventions to address PPD in Arab countries. The high prevalence rates across the region emphasize the importance of integrating routine screening for PPD into postpartum care. Furthermore, the identification of socio-cultural and economic factors as major risk contributors suggests that culturally sensitive and appropriate mental health services must be developed and implemented. The review calls for policies that promote social support for new mothers, including improving marital relationships and reducing socioeconomic stress. The review also advocates for better training for healthcare providers to recognize and manage PPD, along with more widespread use of validated diagnostic tools such as the EPDS. In addition, the review highlights the need for more longitudinal studies to better understand the trajectory of PPD and its long-term effects on both mothers and their infants.
Risk Factors for Postpartum Depression: An Umbrella Review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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This umbrella review synthesizes research on postpartum depression risk factors, highlighting prenatal depression and current abuse as the strongest predictors. It emphasizes the need for targeted screening and early intervention to improve maternal health and outcomes for both mothers and their children.
What was reviewed?
This paper presents an umbrella review of risk factors for postpartum depression (PPD). The authors synthesized findings from 21 systematic reviews and meta-analyses published between 1996 and 2016. These reviews focused on identifying and evaluating risk factors for PPD, aiming to provide a comprehensive understanding of the factors that contribute to the disorder. The review methodology allowed for a broad exploration of numerous risk factors, including biological, psychological, and socio-economic influences, providing evidence for better-targeted prevention and screening strategies.
Who was reviewed?
The review focuses on research involving postpartum women who are either diagnosed with PPD or at risk of developing it. The reviewed studies included women from various socio-economic and cultural backgrounds, with a particular emphasis on those who had experienced high life stress, abuse, prenatal depression, or marital dissatisfaction. The umbrella review aggregates findings from studies examining diverse risk factors such as childhood trauma, abuse, sleep disturbances, lack of social support, and more, as well as how these factors may interact with the biological changes occurring during the postpartum period.
What were the most important findings?
The umbrella review identified 25 statistically significant risk factors for PPD. Among the most common were high life stress, lack of social support, current or past abuse, prenatal depression, and marital dissatisfaction. Prenatal depression and current abuse emerged as the two strongest predictors of PPD, with prenatal depression showing a strong correlation, and abuse increasing the odds of PPD by more than three times. Other important risk factors included poor quality sleep, history of depression, and negative experiences with breastfeeding. The findings suggest that psychological factors, particularly prenatal depression and abuse, play a major role in the development of PPD.
The review also pointed to socio-cultural factors like marital dissatisfaction and lack of support as significant contributors, particularly in high-stress or low-income settings. However, the review also noted a few risk factors with inconclusive findings, including a history of child abuse and complications like preeclampsia and HELLP syndrome, suggesting the need for more targeted research in these areas. Additionally, the authors pointed out that the methodological differences between the studies, including varied statistical methods and definitions of risk factors, made it difficult to compare results across studies.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This umbrella review highlights the importance of identifying high-risk groups for PPD and suggests that routine screening for depression during pregnancy is crucial for early intervention. The review advocates for more consistent and standardized risk factor definitions across studies to allow for more robust comparisons and insights. It also emphasizes the need for a multi-faceted approach to prevention and treatment that includes psychological support, social support systems, and effective healthcare interventions. The findings suggest that healthcare providers should prioritize screening for PPD, especially in women who exhibit strong risk factors such as prenatal depression or a history of abuse. Furthermore, the review stresses the need for integrated care models that involve obstetricians, midwives, mental health professionals, and social workers in supporting mothers through the perinatal period.
Risk Factors of Postpartum Depression
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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This review analyzes the risk factors for postpartum depression (PPD), highlighting key predictors such as a history of depression, lack of support, gestational diabetes, and birth complications. It calls for early screening and targeted interventions to address PPD and mitigate its long-term effects on mothers and children.
What was reviewed?
This review examines the risk factors associated with postpartum depression (PPD), drawing from a range of studies that analyze sociodemographic, biological, psychological, obstetric, pediatric, and cultural influences on the development of PPD. It highlights various studies, including meta-analyses, systematic reviews, case-control studies, and longitudinal research, providing a comprehensive understanding of the predisposing factors that contribute to the disorder. The review synthesizes these studies to identify high-risk groups, examine the strength of the associations between risk factors and PPD, and offer insights into possible mechanisms for preventing or diagnosing the condition early.
Who was reviewed?
The review draws on research involving postpartum women with PPD, as well as women at risk of developing the disorder. It includes studies from diverse populations, including those from high, middle, and low-income countries. The review focuses on maternal health, considering factors such as age, socioeconomic status, history of depression, medical conditions like gestational diabetes, delivery method, and social support, as well as obstetric and pediatric factors that may influence the likelihood of developing PPD. It also examines cultural aspects, including gender preferences and the impact of immigration status.
What were the most important findings?
The review identifies several key risk factors for PPD, with some factors showing stronger associations than others. The most significant predictors of PPD include a previous history of depression or psychiatric illness, depressive symptoms during pregnancy, lack of spousal and social support, gestational diabetes, and negative birth experiences. Women who had a history of psychiatric disorders, particularly depression, were found to be at a considerably higher risk of developing PPD. Additionally, a lack of emotional and instrumental support from partners, family, or society was frequently cited as a strong contributing factor. Physical and biological factors such as obesity, vitamin D deficiency, and complications during pregnancy were also linked to higher rates of PPD. Obstetric factors such as cesarean section delivery, multiple births, and preterm or low-birth-weight infants further increased the risk. Psychological factors, such as stress from life events and negative self-image, were also identified as contributing factors.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The review underscores the need for early identification and intervention for PPD. The identification of high-risk groups, such as women with previous psychiatric conditions, low social support, or complicated pregnancies, suggests that targeted screening for PPD should be integrated into routine postpartum care. Healthcare providers need to focus on providing comprehensive support, including mental health resources and social support interventions. Furthermore, the review calls for more research into genetic and epigenetic markers of PPD, as well as a better understanding of cultural factors influencing its prevalence and manifestations. The implications extend beyond maternal health, with long-term consequences for child development, emphasizing the need for multi-disciplinary approaches that involve obstetricians, pediatricians, and mental health professionals in the care of new mothers.
The association between anemia and postpartum depression: A systematic review and meta-analysis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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This systematic review and meta-analysis reveal a significant link between anemia (during pregnancy and postpartum) and postpartum depression, emphasizing the need for anemia prevention and treatment to reduce the risk of PPD.
What was reviewed?
This study is a systematic review and meta-analysis that investigates the association between anemia (both postpartum anemia and anemia during pregnancy) and postpartum depression (PPD). The review aims to provide a comprehensive assessment by synthesizing findings from multiple studies to evaluate whether anemia increases the risk of developing PPD in women.
Who was reviewed?
The review examined data from 10 studies involving pregnant and postpartum women. These studies focused on the relationship between anemia and the incidence of postpartum depression. The studies were selected based on specific inclusion criteria, including the presence of anemia and the use of depression diagnostic tools, such as the Edinburgh Postpartum Depression Scale (EPDS), to assess PPD.
What were the most important findings?
The meta-analysis found that there is a significant association between both postpartum anemia and anemia during pregnancy with an increased risk of postpartum depression. Specifically, the results showed a relative risk (RR) of 1.887 for postpartum anemia, with a 95% confidence interval (CI) of 1.255 to 2.838 (P=0.002), indicating a substantial risk increase for women with postpartum anemia. Similarly, anemia during pregnancy was also associated with a 24% increased risk of developing PPD, with a RR of 1.240 (95% CI: 1.001–1.536, P=0.048). These findings were consistent across different study designs, including cohort and cross-sectional studies. Subgroup analyses did not reveal significant differences in the association when examining variables such as the quality of studies, geographic region, or the timing of depression and anemia assessment. Notably, publication bias did not affect the overall results, as determined by funnel plot analysis and tests for bias.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings from this meta-analysis have significant implications for clinical practice. The study highlights the importance of screening for anemia during pregnancy and the postpartum period, as it is linked to an increased risk of postpartum depression. Clinicians should consider proactive measures for the prevention, identification, and treatment of anemia in pregnant women to mitigate the risk of PPD. This could involve regular monitoring of hemoglobin levels, nutritional interventions to address iron deficiency, and early psychological support for women diagnosed with anemia. By addressing both the physical (anemia) and mental health (depression) components of postpartum care, healthcare providers can improve maternal well-being and potentially reduce the long-term effects of depression on mothers and their infants.
The Impact of Cultural Factors Upon Postpartum Depression: A Literature Review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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This review examines how cultural factors influence postpartum depression, identifying both protective and harmful cultural practices. It emphasizes the need for culturally sensitive care and highlights the role of social support systems in mitigating depressive symptoms.
What was reviewed?
This literature review examines the impact of cultural factors on postpartum depression (PPD). It explores how different cultural practices, traditions, and beliefs influence the prevalence and severity of PPD. The review analyzes studies conducted globally, comparing postpartum women’s experiences with cultural rituals and social support systems. It categorizes the cultural factors into alleviating, deteriorating, and neutral influences on postpartum depression.
Who was reviewed?
The review primarily focuses on studies involving postpartum women from various cultural backgrounds. The women reviewed were from countries such as Taiwan, Hong Kong, Turkey, India, the United States, and Japan, each with distinct cultural practices and social norms regarding childbirth and the postpartum period. The studies reviewed examined women’s experiences with support systems, cultural practices like “doing the month” or Satogaeri bunben, and the role of family and community in alleviating or exacerbating depressive symptoms after childbirth.
What were the most important findings?
The review found that cultural factors play a significant role in postpartum depression, with different cultures having varying impacts on the severity of the condition. In some cultures, traditional postpartum practices were found to alleviate symptoms of PPD. For example, the practice of "doing the month" in Taiwan, which provides extensive rest and family support, was associated with lower levels of depression. Similarly, in cultures with strong family involvement, such as in Japan and Taiwan, postpartum women reported less depressive symptoms, especially when they received support from extended families. However, in cultures where there was a lack of support or negative family dynamics, such as conflicts with in-laws, postpartum depression was more pronounced.
Interestingly, the review also noted that in some cases, cultural factors might exacerbate postpartum depression. For instance, in some communities, social expectations, such as the cultural preference for male children, could trigger or worsen depression in women. In other instances, when cultural practices were not adhered to, such as in the case of Vietnamese or Arabic women in Australia, lack of support and disconnection from traditional rituals increased the risk of PPD.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The greatest implication of this review is the need for healthcare professionals to consider cultural contexts when diagnosing and treating postpartum depression. The findings suggest that while cultural practices can act as protective factors for some women, they can also increase the risk of PPD in others. Healthcare providers should be trained to recognize the role of culture in shaping women’s mental health experiences and be sensitive to these factors when developing care plans. Additionally, the review calls for further research into how cultural beliefs and practices influence mental health outcomes for postpartum women, emphasizing the importance of culturally sensitive interventions. The review also suggests that integrating traditional support systems with modern healthcare services could help alleviate PPD in certain cultural contexts.
The magnitude of postpartum depression among mothers in Africa: a literaturereview
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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This review explores the prevalence of postpartum depression (PPD) among African mothers, highlighting significant variation across countries and the need for culturally validated diagnostic tools to improve screening and treatment in postpartum care.
What was reviewed?
This is a literature review examining the magnitude of postpartum depression (PPD) among mothers in Africa. The review compiled findings from 21 research articles to analyze the prevalence of PPD across various African countries. It assessed studies that used different diagnostic tools, including the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS), Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9), and others. The review also highlighted the challenges that inconsistent data poses, including the absence of locally validated diagnostic tools for screening PPD.
Who was reviewed?
The review focused on research studies that assessed postpartum depression in African mothers. The studies included postpartum women aged 17-49 years, who attended healthcare facilities for routine care or immunization. These studies were conducted across various African countries, such as Uganda, Nigeria, Morocco, and South Africa. The reviewed studies utilized a range of diagnostic tools, including the EPDS, PHQ-9, Kessler Scale (K10), and others. Still, they also noted the lack of validation of these tools in local African languages and cultural contexts.
What were the most important findings?
The review revealed considerable variation in the prevalence of postpartum depression across different African countries. For example, studies that used the EPDS found PPD rates ranging from 6.9% in Morocco to 43% in Uganda. Other tools, like the PHQ-9 and Kessler scales, reported prevalence rates ranging from 6.1% to 44%. These findings emphasize that PPD is a significant public health issue in Africa, with higher rates than in many developed countries. The review also highlighted that the EPDS tool was effective in diagnosing PPD in the African context, with sensitivity and specificity results ranging from 75% to 100% and 87% to 98%, respectively. However, the review also pointed out that many studies did not validate their assessment tools for local African languages or cultural settings, which could affect the accuracy of the diagnoses.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The review underscores the need for culturally sensitive and locally validated diagnostic tools for assessing postpartum depression in African countries. The high prevalence rates of PPD suggest that it is an underrecognized and neglected public health issue. Clinicians in Africa should be encouraged to incorporate routine screening for PPD in postpartum care, using tools that are both reliable and contextually appropriate. This review calls for more research and policy initiatives to address the mental health needs of postpartum women in Africa, emphasizing the importance of early identification, treatment, and ongoing support. Additionally, the review stresses the need for a uniform approach to screening, ensuring that assessment tools are validated for the diverse cultural settings across the continent.
The Possible Effects of Zinc Supplementation on Postpartum Depression and Anemia
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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Anemia
Anemia
Anemia is a reduction in red blood cells or hemoglobin, often influenced by the gut microbiome's impact on nutrient absorption.
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Postpartum zinc supplementation shows promise in reducing postpartum depression risk and improving maternal zinc levels, though it may cause transient hematological changes when combined with iron.
What was studied?
This study focused on the effects of zinc supplementation on postpartum depression and anemia in women who had undergone cesarean sections. Specifically, it aimed to investigate the relationship between zinc supplementation and the reduction of postpartum depression symptoms (as assessed by the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale or EPDS) and its effect on the hematological status, including hemoglobin and hematocrit levels, of postpartum women.
Who was studied?
The study enrolled 197 postpartum women who had undergone cesarean sections and had postpartum anemia. These women were monitored for their zinc and hematological levels, and a subset of 148 women was included in the analysis concerning the relationship between zinc supplementation and postpartum depression.
What were the most important findings?
The study found that postpartum zinc supplementation significantly improved maternal zinc levels and reduced the risk of developing postpartum depression. In contrast, the combination of oral zinc and iron supplementation showed a transient negative effect on hemoglobin and hematocrit levels, though this effect was not clinically significant and resolved within a month postpartum. Zinc supplementation did not cause any severe adverse effects but did temporarily affect hematological parameters when combined with oral iron supplementation.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings suggest that postpartum zinc supplementation could be a beneficial intervention for preventing or alleviating postpartum depression, which is a major public health concern affecting a significant proportion of new mothers. This intervention appears to be relatively safe and could be considered as part of postpartum care, especially for women experiencing depression. However, clinicians should be cautious when combining zinc with iron supplementation, as this may cause short-term hematological disturbances. The study's limitations include its retrospective design and small sample size, which suggest that further research, particularly prospective studies, is necessary to confirm these findings and explore the optimal dosages and combination treatments for postpartum depression and anemia.
The Rate and Risk Factors of Postpartum Depression in Vietnam From 2010 to 2020: A Literature Review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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This review examines the prevalence and risk factors of postpartum depression in Vietnam, highlighting significant socio-economic, cultural, and personal contributors. It calls for early screening and more comprehensive support for mothers, especially in rural areas.
What was reviewed?
This review focused on the rate and risk factors of postpartum depression (PPD) in Vietnam, based on studies published from 2010 to 2020. It synthesized findings from 18 research articles that explored the prevalence and contributing risk factors for PPD among Vietnamese mothers. The review analyzed studies that used quantitative, qualitative, and mixed methods, assessing the prevalence of PPD across different time points postnatally, from one month to more than a year after childbirth. It also examined the tools used for screening, such as the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS), the Self-Reporting Questionnaire (SRQ-20), and the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM).
Who was reviewed?
The studies reviewed focused on postpartum women in Vietnam, typically ranging from one month to a year postpartum. These women came from different socio-economic backgrounds, with a majority being from rural and urban regions of Vietnam. The articles reviewed used both qualitative and quantitative research designs. These studies explored a wide range of risk factors for PPD, including personal factors such as education level, mental health history, and preparedness for motherhood, as well as family-related factors like lack of support and intimate partner violence. Environmental factors such as stressful life events and living in rural areas were also considered in these studies.
What were the most important findings?
The review revealed that the rate of postpartum depression in Vietnam varied significantly depending on the timing of the postnatal screening and the tool used to assess depression. The prevalence of PPD among Vietnamese women ranged from 8.2% to 37.1%. Studies using the EPDS typically showed higher prevalence rates in the first three months postpartum, with rates reaching 34.3%. The most common risk factors for PPD identified in these studies included low educational attainment, history of mental trauma, lack of family support, marital conflicts, and stressful life events. Other risk factors included intimate partner violence, especially emotional and physical abuse, and the cultural preference for sons, which added stress for new mothers. The review also highlighted that rural women, or those living in socioeconomically disadvantaged conditions, were more likely to experience PPD.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The findings underscore the importance of addressing PPD as a significant health issue in Vietnam. The high prevalence rates and the variety of risk factors identified point to the need for tailored interventions, including culturally sensitive screening programs. The review recommends that healthcare providers in Vietnam integrate routine PPD screenings in the first month postpartum, as current studies have largely neglected this early postnatal period. Additionally, the review calls for better education and mental health preparation for new mothers to address the personal and familial factors contributing to PPD. Policy-makers are encouraged to create supportive policies, including expanding mental health services in rural areas and providing better family support programs for new mothers, particularly those in vulnerable socio-economic situations. Furthermore, future research should explore PPD in the earliest postnatal stages, particularly in rural areas where support is minimal.
The role of gut microbiota in the pathogenesis and treatment of postpartum depression
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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This review highlights how gut microbiota disruptions contribute to postpartum depression via hormonal, inflammatory, and neurochemical pathways. It supports microbial modulation as a novel, noninvasive treatment strategy.
What Was Reviewed?
This review examined the role of gut microbiota in the pathogenesis and treatment of postpartum depression (PPD), focusing on how changes in the gut-brain axis contribute to depressive symptoms following childbirth. It consolidated data from both animal and human studies to explore the gut microbiome's mechanistic roles in hormone regulation, immune modulation, neurotransmitter synthesis, and metabolic pathways. The authors aimed to bridge gaps in understanding how microbial imbalances can serve as both biomarkers and therapeutic targets for PPD.
Who Was Reviewed?
The review considered evidence from a wide range of experimental models, including human subjects diagnosed with PPD and rodent models of induced postpartum depression. The reviewed human studies included microbiota comparisons between women with PPD and healthy postpartum controls. Additionally, several animal studies were referenced to assess causal relationships between microbial composition shifts and behavioral or molecular markers of depression.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
This review found strong evidence linking gut microbiota alterations to the onset and severity of PPD. Across both human and animal studies, women with PPD showed significant shifts in microbial phyla and genera, including decreased levels of Firmicutes, Faecalibacterium, and Lachnospiraceae, alongside increased Actinobacteria and Enterobacteriaceae. These shifts were consistently accompanied by decreased microbial diversity and lower abundance of short-chain fatty acid (SCFA)-producing bacteria, such as Faecalibacterium prausnitzii and Butyricicoccus. These microbial changes coincided with decreased serotonin (5-HT), altered tryptophan metabolism, impaired HPA axis function, and disruptions in hormonal levels such as estrogen and progesterone. Notably, a high Firmicutes-to-Bacteroidetes (F/B) ratio, elevated Proteobacteria, and increased Lactobacillus and Desulfovibrio were common microbial signatures in both human and animal PPD models.
Microbial metabolites, particularly SCFAs and neurotransmitter precursors, played key roles in modulating neuroendocrine and inflammatory pathways. For instance, reductions in butyrate and propionate levels were associated with lower brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) expression and increased systemic inflammation. Moreover, fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) and dietary fiber supplementation successfully reversed depressive phenotypes in mice, highlighting the therapeutic potential of microbiome modulation.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Review?
The most significant implication of this review is the recognition of the gut microbiome as a central player in the development and potential treatment of postpartum depression. Given the unique physiological state of postpartum women and their general avoidance of pharmacologic antidepressants during breastfeeding, microbial modulation through diet, probiotics, prebiotics, or FMT offers a promising, noninvasive treatment strategy. Additionally, specific microbial signatures, such as decreased Faecalibacterium and increased Actinobacteria, may serve as diagnostic biomarkers for early identification of PPD risk. This review advocates for integrating microbiome analysis into routine maternal mental health assessments and supports the development of targeted microbial therapies as part of precision medicine approaches for perinatal mood disorders.
Women’s experiences of psychological treatment and psychosocial interventions for postpartum depression: a qualitative systematic review and meta-synthesis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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This review explores women's experiences with psychological treatments for postpartum depression, emphasizing the importance of personalized care, supportive relationships, and social support systems. It highlights the positive outcomes of treatments like CBT and home visits, while stressing the need for flexibility and empathy in treatment delivery.
What was reviewed?
This review focuses on the experiences of women who had psychological treatment and psychosocial interventions for postpartum depression (PPD). It examines qualitative studies that explored how women perceive and experience different treatments, such as cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) and supportive home visits. The review aims to synthesize these findings to better understand the elements of psychological treatments that are beneficial for postpartum women, and to identify factors that may enhance the effectiveness of such interventions.
Who was reviewed?
The review considered studies involving postpartum women who had received psychological treatment for depression within the first year after childbirth. A total of eight studies were used in the meta-synthesis, involving 255 women from the UK, Australia, and Canada. The women in these studies had been diagnosed with PPD and received interventions such as CBT, listening visits, or other forms of psychological counseling. These studies explored the women's personal experiences with these treatments, including their satisfaction, the therapeutic relationships they built with health professionals, and their expectations of care.
What were the most important findings?
The review identified two primary themes that emerged from the studies: "Circumstances and Expectations" and "Experiences of Treatment." Women expressed a desire for flexible, individualized treatment that accommodated practical concerns such as childcare and transportation. Many participants highlighted the importance of social support, including help from family members, as a key factor in their ability to engage with treatment. A significant finding was that women preferred psychological treatments where they could choose the format and modality, such as one-on-one sessions or group therapy, and they valued treatments that allowed for emotional expression without judgment.
In terms of treatment outcomes, women reported improvements in their emotional well-being and mother-infant relationships after receiving psychological treatments. Most women found treatments like CBT and supportive home visits to help reduce depressive symptoms, improve confidence, and enhancing their ability to bond with their infants. However, some women expressed dissatisfaction with the number of sessions or the rigidity of treatment schedules, indicating that a more personalized approach could improve engagement and outcomes. Moreover, the relationship with the health professional played a crucial role in the treatment's success. Women emphasized the importance of a supportive, non-judgmental, and empathetic therapist, which helped them feel comfortable discussing their emotions and challenges.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The findings suggest several implications for improving PPD treatments. First, the review highlights the importance of tailoring interventions to the individual needs and circumstances of women, including their preferences for treatment formats and the flexibility of scheduling. Healthcare providers should prioritize establishing a strong therapeutic relationship based on trust and empathy to improve treatment engagement. Additionally, the review underscores the need for comprehensive support systems that extend beyond clinical settings, including practical and social support, which can significantly enhance treatment outcomes. Lastly, the review calls for further research on the efficacy of different psychological treatments, particularly those that combine therapeutic approaches with support for the mother-infant relationship.
Allopregnanolone in premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD)
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD) is a severe mood disorder linked to hormonal and neurochemical changes. Emerging research highlights the gut microbiome’s role in symptom modulation, opening new avenues for microbiome-targeted treatments alongside traditional therapies.
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This review identifies impaired sensitivity of GABA-A receptors to the neurosteroid allopregnanolone as central to PMDD, linking receptor plasticity and stress dysregulation to mood symptoms, and highlights promising treatments targeting this pathway.
What was studied?
This review comprehensively examined the role of the neuroactive steroid allopregnanolone (ALLO), a potent positive allosteric modulator of the GABA-A receptor (GABAA-R), in the pathophysiology of premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD). It focused on the evidence supporting altered sensitivity or dysregulation of GABAA-Rs in response to ALLO fluctuations across the menstrual cycle, linking these neurobiological changes to the characteristic mood symptoms and stress sensitivity of PMDD.
Who was studied?
As a review article, this paper synthesized findings from both human clinical studies and animal models, particularly rodents, to elucidate mechanisms underlying PMDD. Human studies included neuroendocrine and neurophysiological investigations of women diagnosed with PMDD compared to controls, focusing on hormonal dynamics, receptor sensitivity, stress response, and symptomatology. Rodent models primarily involved progesterone or ALLO withdrawal paradigms to mimic PMDD symptoms and investigate GABAA-R subunit changes and behavior.
What were the most important findings?
The review highlighted that PMDD is not caused by abnormal circulating hormone levels but rather by impaired CNS sensitivity to normal fluctuations of ALLO. In rodent models, rapid withdrawal from progesterone or ALLO induces anxiety- and depression-like behaviors linked to upregulation of the GABAA-R α4 subunit, implicating receptor plasticity in symptom manifestation. Clinical studies in women with PMDD demonstrated altered GABAA-R function, such as lack of ALLO-induced sedation during the luteal phase and elevated anxiety-potentiated startle responses, indicating dysfunctional receptor adaptation to hormonal changes. The review also detailed how ALLO modulates the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis, with women with PMDD showing altered stress responsivity likely due to impaired ALLO-GABAA-R interaction, leading to heightened stress sensitivity during the luteal phase. Importantly, treatments effective in PMDD, including selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) and novel GABA-modulating drugs appear to normalize ALLO-GABA signaling, further supporting this pathophysiological model.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This review consolidates strong evidence that PMDD is fundamentally a disorder of impaired neurosteroid modulation of GABAA-Rs, rather than hormone level abnormalities alone, positioning GABAA-R plasticity and ALLO sensitivity as central to its pathophysiology. Understanding this mechanism clarifies why PMDD symptoms cyclically align with hormonal fluctuations and why patients experience heightened stress sensitivity. Clinically, this suggests that future therapeutic strategies should target the neurosteroid-GABAergic system directly to restore receptor function or stabilize neurosteroid levels, promising more rapid and effective symptom relief than traditional antidepressants. Moreover, this framework encourages the development and testing of novel GABAergic agents tailored to PMDD and related reproductive mood disorders, enhancing personalized medicine for affected women worldwide.
Biological rhythms in premenstrual syndrome and premenstrual dysphoric disorder: a systematic review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD) is a severe mood disorder linked to hormonal and neurochemical changes. Emerging research highlights the gut microbiome’s role in symptom modulation, opening new avenues for microbiome-targeted treatments alongside traditional therapies.
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Women with PMS/PMDD experience disrupted biological rhythms, notably lower melatonin, higher nighttime temperature, and poor sleep quality. These circadian disturbances contribute to symptom severity, suggesting chronobiological targets for improved diagnosis and treatment.
What was reviewed?
This paper systematically reviewed the existing literature on biological rhythm disruptions in women with premenstrual syndrome (PMS) and premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD). The focus was on circadian and other biological rhythms, including sleep–wake cycles, melatonin secretion, core body temperature, cortisol, prolactin, and thyroid-stimulating hormone levels. The review synthesized findings from 25 studies that compared women diagnosed with PMS/PMDD to healthy controls, assessing both subjective and objective markers of biological rhythms to clarify their association with premenstrual symptoms and the underlying pathophysiology.
Who was reviewed?
The review analyzed studies published between 1989 and 2022 across multiple countries, involving women aged 18 to 45 diagnosed with PMS or PMDD using standardized criteria, mostly DSM-III-R to DSM-5. The total sample sizes varied widely, with some studies including over 600 participants. Healthy control groups consisted of women without PMS/PMDD or psychiatric disorders. Studies included diverse methodologies such as polysomnography, actimetry, hormonal assays, core body temperature measurements, and subjective sleep quality assessments, enabling comprehensive evaluation of biological rhythms in the premenstrual context.
What were the most important findings?
The review found consistent evidence that women with PMS/PMDD exhibit significant disruptions in biological rhythms compared to healthy controls. Notably, they present with lower nocturnal melatonin levels, elevated nighttime core body temperature, and poorer subjective sleep quality, all indicating altered circadian regulation. While objective sleep parameters and activity rhythms showed mixed or nonsignificant differences, hormonal rhythms such as cortisol and prolactin demonstrated inconsistent findings across studies. These rhythm disturbances likely contribute to the psychological and physiological symptoms experienced during the luteal phase. The review highlights melatonin dysregulation as a potential key factor in PMS/PMDD pathophysiology and calls for further research into circadian-based mechanisms and their therapeutic implications.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review highlights the importance of biological rhythm disruptions in PMS and PMDD, positioning circadian dysfunction, especially melatonin alterations, as a promising target for understanding symptom development and designing novel interventions. Clinicians should recognize that sleep complaints and temperature regulation abnormalities in these disorders reflect deeper circadian disturbances rather than isolated symptoms. The review advocates for integrating chronobiological assessments into clinical evaluations and exploring circadian-modulating treatments, such as light therapy or melatonin supplementation, to improve patient outcomes. It also calls for future research to clarify inconsistent findings in hormonal rhythms and to investigate the potential of personalized circadian therapies tailored to premenstrual symptom profiles.
Characteristics of the gut microbiota in women with premenstrual symptoms: A cross-sectional study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD) is a severe mood disorder linked to hormonal and neurochemical changes. Emerging research highlights the gut microbiome’s role in symptom modulation, opening new avenues for microbiome-targeted treatments alongside traditional therapies.
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This study identified specific gut microbiota alterations, including reduced butyrate- and GABA-producing bacteria, associated with premenstrual disorder severity, offering new insights into PMD pathophysiology and potential microbiome-targeted treatments.
What was studied?
This cross-sectional pilot study examined the gut microbiota characteristics in women experiencing premenstrual disorders (PMDs) compared to healthy controls, aiming to uncover microbial associations with the severity of premenstrual symptoms and to evaluate inflammatory markers indicative of bacterial translocation.
Who was studied?
The study involved 43 Japanese women aged 20 to 45 years, with 21 women experiencing PMDs severe enough to disrupt social functioning and 22 controls without significant premenstrual symptoms, all selected to exclude confounding factors like recent medication use, neuropsychiatric disorders, and gastrointestinal diseases.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed that although overall gut microbial diversity did not differ significantly, women with PMDs exhibited lower levels of the Bacteroidetes phylum and reduced abundance of butyrate-producing genera such as Butyricicoccus and Megasphaera, alongside decreased Parabacteroides, a GABA-related genus, while Anaerotaenia was elevated; these microbial shifts correlated with symptom severity, but inflammatory markers linked to endotoxemia showed no group differences, suggesting unique microbiome alterations in PMDs distinct from major depressive disorder.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
These findings suggest that specific gut microbiota alterations, particularly reductions in beneficial butyrate- and GABA-producing bacteria, may underlie premenstrual symptom severity through the gut-brain axis, highlighting potential microbiome-based biomarkers and therapeutic targets for PMDs, and warranting further longitudinal and intervention research to establish causality and clinical applications.
Determinants of premenstrual dysphoric disorder and associated factors among regular undergraduate students at Hawassa University Southern, Ethiopia
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD) is a severe mood disorder linked to hormonal and neurochemical changes. Emerging research highlights the gut microbiome’s role in symptom modulation, opening new avenues for microbiome-targeted treatments alongside traditional therapies.
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Among Ethiopian female university students, PMDD affects nearly two-thirds and links strongly to severe menstrual pain, irregular cycles, low social support, and contraceptive use. Early identification and comprehensive care are essential to alleviate its academic and psychological impacts.
What was studied?
This institutional-based cross-sectional study investigated the prevalence and determinants of premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD) among regular undergraduate female students at Hawassa University, Ethiopia. It aimed to quantify PMDD prevalence using a standardized premenstrual symptoms screening tool and to identify socio-demographic, clinical, psychological, gynecological, and behavioral factors associated with PMDD in this population.
Who was studied?
The study included 374 regular female undergraduate students aged 18 and above from the College of Medicine and Health Sciences at Hawassa University. Participants were selected using stratified random sampling and completed a self-administered questionnaire assessing premenstrual symptoms, menstrual characteristics, social support, contraceptive use, and behavioral factors. Students with illnesses or absent during data collection were excluded.
What were the most important findings?
The study found a high PMDD prevalence of approximately 63% among participants, significantly higher than many global estimates. Key factors independently associated with PMDD included severe menstrual pain, irregular menstrual cycles, poor or moderate social support, and contraceptive use. Severe dysmenorrhea exacerbated emotional and behavioral symptoms, while social support appeared protective. These findings indicate that PMDD substantially impairs daily functioning, including academic performance, and is influenced by a complex interplay of physiological, psychological, and social factors. The study emphasizes the importance of early screening and tailored interventions to mitigate PMDD's impact on student well-being and success.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study highlights PMDD as a prevalent and underrecognized condition with significant negative effects on young women’s mental health and academic performance in a low-resource setting. It underscores the urgent need for integrating PMDD screening and psychosocial support into university health services, especially focusing on managing menstrual pain, providing social support, and carefully evaluating contraceptive use. These findings advocate for multidisciplinary interventions that address both physical and psychological determinants of PMDD, aiming to improve quality of life and academic outcomes. Moreover, the research supports policymakers and educators in developing targeted health promotion programs and facilitating access to effective treatment for PMDD in similar contexts.
Impact of nutritional diet therapy on premenstrual syndrome
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD) is a severe mood disorder linked to hormonal and neurochemical changes. Emerging research highlights the gut microbiome’s role in symptom modulation, opening new avenues for microbiome-targeted treatments alongside traditional therapies.
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Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS)
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS)
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS) involves physical and emotional symptoms linked to hormonal fluctuations. Recent research highlights the role of heavy metals and gut microbiome imbalances in worsening these symptoms. Lifestyle changes, microbiome-targeted therapies, and toxin reduction show promise in effective PMS management.
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This review highlights the role of diet and micronutrients in modulating PMS symptoms, showing potential benefits of calcium, magnesium, vitamin D, and B vitamins, while emphasizing the need for personalized nutritional approaches and further microbiome-focused research.
What was reviewed?
This paper conducted a comprehensive review of current research on the effects of dietary and nutritional therapies on premenstrual syndrome (PMS) and premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD) symptoms. The authors analyzed data from various studies accessed through major databases like PubMed, ScienceDirect, and Scopus, focusing on dietary patterns, macro- and micronutrients, supplements, and their relationship to PMS symptom severity and management.
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesized findings from multiple clinical and observational studies involving women of reproductive age experiencing PMS, encompassing diverse populations and dietary behaviors. The included studies examined correlations between specific nutrients, food groups, supplements, and premenstrual symptom patterns.
What were the most important findings?
The review emphasized that while diet plays an important role in modulating PMS symptoms, the scientific evidence remains limited and inconsistent, especially regarding macronutrient intake—no strong correlations were found between protein, fat, carbohydrates, or fiber consumption and PMS symptoms. However, micronutrients such as calcium, magnesium, vitamin D, and B vitamins showed potential benefits in symptom reduction. Specifically, calcium and vitamin D supplementation were linked to decreased PMS symptom severity and improved quality of life, although definitive clinical recommendations require further trials. The role of vitamin B6 and broad-spectrum micronutrient supplementation was also noted, with both showing some efficacy in managing PMS-related psychological symptoms. Herbal supplements like evening primrose oil and curcumin demonstrated mixed results and warrant additional research. The review also highlighted the influence of dietary patterns, showing Western diets rich in processed foods and refined sugars positively associate with increased PMS symptoms, whereas traditional and healthy diets rich in fruits, vegetables, and whole foods correlate with reduced symptom severity.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review underscores the potential of nutritional therapy as a complementary approach to PMS symptom management. It calls for increased awareness among healthcare providers to educate women on adopting balanced dietary habits that may mitigate symptoms. Given the current limitations in evidence, it encourages personalized nutritional counseling and advocates for further research integrating microbiome and metabolomic insights to refine diet-based interventions. This can potentially facilitate the development of microbiome-targeted dietary strategies to improve PMS and PMDD outcomes.
Premenstrual disorders and PMDD – a review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD) is a severe mood disorder linked to hormonal and neurochemical changes. Emerging research highlights the gut microbiome’s role in symptom modulation, opening new avenues for microbiome-targeted treatments alongside traditional therapies.
•
Premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD) significantly impairs women’s lives due to abnormal sensitivity to hormonal fluctuations. Accurate diagnosis relies on prospective symptom tracking. Evidence supports SSRIs and hormonal treatments as effective management strategies. Emerging therapies and multidisciplinary care models promise improved outcomes for this complex and under-recognized disorder.
What was reviewed?
This paper provides a comprehensive review of premenstrual disorders (PMDs), with a specific focus on premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD). It synthesizes current knowledge regarding the definitions, classification, prevalence, diagnosis, etiology, and treatment of PMDs and PMDD. The review covers consensus guidelines from professional bodies such as the International Society for Premenstrual Disorders (ISPMD), diagnostic criteria from DSM-V and ICD-11, and evaluates various therapeutic approaches, including non-pharmacological interventions, pharmacotherapy (particularly SSRIs), hormonal treatments, novel agents targeting neuroactive steroids, and surgical options. It also highlights challenges in diagnosis, the significant impact on quality of life and suicidality risk, and research gaps.
Who was reviewed?
The review critically assesses a wide body of clinical, epidemiological, and mechanistic studies involving women experiencing PMDs and PMDD worldwide. It references population prevalence data, genetic and neurobiological studies, clinical trials evaluating treatments such as SSRIs and combined oral contraceptive pills (COCPs), and guidelines developed by multidisciplinary expert panels. The authors draw upon systematic reviews, randomized controlled trials, observational studies, and consensus statements to present a balanced perspective. The review specifically incorporates data related to symptom measurement tools like the Daily Record of Severity of Problems (DRSP) and discusses patient management strategies applicable in primary and specialist care settings.
What were the most important findings?
The review clarifies that PMDD represents a severe subset of PMDs, affecting approximately 5% of women, and carries significant physical, psychological, and social burdens, including a markedly increased risk of suicide attempts. It emphasizes that PMDD symptoms arise from abnormal sensitivity to normal menstrual hormonal fluctuations, especially allopregnanolone's paradoxical effect on GABA-A receptors, rather than altered hormone levels per se. Genetic factors, serotonergic dysregulation, inflammation, and stress history also contribute to pathophysiology. Accurate diagnosis depends on prospective symptom tracking over at least two menstrual cycles to confirm symptom cyclicity, severity, and functional impact.
Treatment must be multidisciplinary and individualized. SSRIs are the first-line pharmacological treatment, acting rapidly and effectively even when dosed intermittently in the luteal phase or symptom-onset, mitigating side effects associated with continuous dosing. Hormonal treatments, particularly COCPs containing drospirenone, show efficacy, though hormonal sensitivity varies and progestogen intolerance complicates therapy. Emerging therapies targeting allopregnanolone modulation and 5-alpha reductase inhibitors are under investigation but require further evidence. GnRH analogues and surgical oophorectomy remain options for severe refractory cases but carry significant risks, including bone density loss. Non-pharmacological approaches, including cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), dietary modifications, and supplements (calcium, magnesium, vitamin B6), provide complementary benefits.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review bridges the knowledge gap between evolving scientific insights into PMDD's neuroendocrine mechanisms and practical clinical management strategies. It advocates for a precision medicine approach tailored to individual hormonal sensitivities and symptom profiles. By synthesizing current evidence, it empowers clinicians to improve diagnostic accuracy through prospective symptom monitoring, recognize the disorder’s profound impact on mental health, and adopt evidence-based treatments, minimizing side effects. The emphasis on rapid SSRI efficacy and flexible dosing regimens offers clinicians practical tools to enhance adherence and patient quality of life. Moreover, highlighting the multidisciplinary nature of optimal care and emerging pharmacotherapies signals future directions for research and therapeutic innovation.
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder and the Brain
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD) is a severe mood disorder linked to hormonal and neurochemical changes. Emerging research highlights the gut microbiome’s role in symptom modulation, opening new avenues for microbiome-targeted treatments alongside traditional therapies.
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PMDD involves altered brain activation in prefrontal regions tied to hormone sensitivity. Symptoms appear cyclically with hormonal fluctuations, distinguishing it from other mood disorders. Understanding this brain-hormone interaction aids targeted treatment and improves clinical recognition of PMDD.
What was reviewed?
This paper reviewed the neurological basis of premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD), emphasizing its recognition as a distinct mood disorder linked to menstrual cycle hormonal fluctuations. It summarized advances in brain imaging and neurophysiological studies demonstrating altered brain function in PMDD patients, particularly in prefrontal cortex regions involved in executive function and emotion regulation. The review highlighted the significance of hormone sensitivity, especially to estradiol and progesterone, and how these hormonal changes affect cerebral blood flow and neural activation patterns in women with PMDD compared to controls.
Who was reviewed?
The review focused on women diagnosed with PMDD according to rigorous DSM criteria, including prospective symptom tracking. It integrated findings from neuroimaging studies (fMRI, PET), hormonal manipulation paradigms (gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonist followed by hormone add-back), and psychophysiological assessments conducted on small to moderate cohorts of women with PMDD and matched healthy controls. The studies collectively evaluated brain activation, cerebral blood flow, neurotransmitter activity, and behavioral correlates of hormone-driven mood symptoms.
What were the most important findings?
The review underscored that women with PMDD show abnormal activation in the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and medial frontal gyrus during cognitive tasks, regardless of hormonal state, suggesting a trait vulnerability. Brain activation differences correlated with symptom severity, especially irritability, which is a hallmark PMDD symptom. The cerebellum also showed heightened activity in PMDD. The disorder’s symptom manifestation requires the fluctuating hormonal environment of the luteal phase, implicating hormone sensitivity as a key pathophysiological factor. Unlike other mood disorders, PMDD’s brain dysfunction is specifically linked to normal hormonal changes rather than baseline abnormalities, explaining the cyclical nature of symptoms.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review clarifies that PMDD arises from an interaction between inherent brain vulnerabilities and normal hormonal fluctuations, particularly estradiol and progesterone. It encourages clinicians to view PMDD as a neurobiologically distinct disorder with predictable symptom timing linked to menstrual phases. These insights justify targeted hormonal and neuropharmacological treatments and support ongoing research into brain-based biomarkers and personalized therapies. The findings also highlight the importance of early diagnosis and symptom monitoring to improve patient care and quality of life for affected women.
Premenstrual dysphoric disorder-an undervalued diagnosis? A cross-sectional study in Hungarian women
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD) is a severe mood disorder linked to hormonal and neurochemical changes. Emerging research highlights the gut microbiome’s role in symptom modulation, opening new avenues for microbiome-targeted treatments alongside traditional therapies.
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Hungarian women with probable PMDD experience high rates of anxio-depressive symptoms and reduced well-being. Retrospective screening suggests higher-than-expected prevalence, highlighting the need for better diagnostic tools and tailored treatment to address this underrecognized disorder.
What was studied?
This cross-sectional study assessed the prevalence of probable premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD) among Hungarian women and examined the relationship between probable PMDD, anxio-depressive symptom severity, and overall well-being. The researchers aimed to validate a retrospective DSM-5-based PMDD screening tool in this population and explore psychological symptom patterns related to PMDD, using standardized questionnaires for depression, anxiety, and well-being.
Who was studied?
The study included 112 women of reproductive age from Hungary with regular menstrual cycles who were not using hormonal contraceptives and had no significant neurological, psychiatric, endocrine, or gynecological disorders. The participants were divided into two groups based on PMDD screening results: a probable PMDD group (n=67) and a non-PMDD group (n=45). They completed validated questionnaires measuring probable PMDD symptoms, anxio-depressive severity, and subjective well-being.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed a surprisingly high prevalence of probable PMDD at nearly 60%, exceeding international estimates, which the authors attribute partly to retrospective screening limitations and recruitment bias. Women with probable PMDD reported significantly greater depressive and anxiety symptoms and lower well-being than controls, regardless of menstrual cycle phase. Logistic regression confirmed that higher anxiety and depression scores predicted probable PMDD diagnosis. The findings corroborate prior evidence that PMDD involves substantial psychological distress that impacts life quality. Notably, anxiety symptom severity did not vary significantly across cycle phases, suggesting persistent affective symptoms. These results highlight the challenges of accurate PMDD diagnosis, especially given the burden of prospective symptom tracking, and underscore the need for tailored psychological assessment and treatment strategies.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study emphasizes that probable PMDD is a prevalent and underrecognized condition that severely affects women's mental health and well-being, even beyond the premenstrual phase. It highlights the utility and limitations of retrospective screening tools in estimating PMDD prevalence and calls for improved diagnostic protocols that balance accuracy with practicality. The findings advocate for personalized mental health support and further research to refine diagnostic tools and treatment approaches tailored to the needs of women with PMDD, especially in underrepresented populations.
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder: Epidemiology and Treatment
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD) is a severe mood disorder linked to hormonal and neurochemical changes. Emerging research highlights the gut microbiome’s role in symptom modulation, opening new avenues for microbiome-targeted treatments alongside traditional therapies.
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This review delineates PMDD’s unique neurobiology, highlighting hormone sensitivity, GABAergic dysfunction, and stress interaction. SSRIs provide rapid symptom relief, with hormonal and behavioral therapies complementing care. It emphasizes precise diagnosis and individualized, multidisciplinary treatment to improve outcomes in this debilitating disorder.
What was reviewed?
This paper presents a thorough review of the epidemiology, pathophysiology, and treatment options for premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD). It examines PMDD’s diagnostic criteria as established by DSM-5, highlighting the importance of mood symptoms and prospective symptom tracking for accurate diagnosis. The review synthesizes current understanding of PMDD’s biological underpinnings, including the role of neurosteroids like allopregnanolone, estrogen’s influence on serotonergic systems, brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) polymorphisms, and the impact of stress and inflammation. It further explores neuroimaging and psychophysiological findings that differentiate PMDD from other affective disorders. The review then evaluates therapeutic approaches, emphasizing SSRIs as the first-line treatment and discussing intermittent dosing strategies, hormonal therapies, cognitive-behavioral therapy, and alternative treatments.
Who was reviewed?
The authors critically analyzed studies involving women diagnosed with PMDD across community and clinical samples worldwide. The review includes epidemiological data, genetic and neurobiological research, and clinical trials assessing treatment efficacy. It references consensus guidelines from psychiatric and gynecological professional bodies, neuroimaging studies comparing PMDD patients to healthy controls, and meta-analyses evaluating pharmacologic and psychotherapeutic interventions. The paper also integrates findings from animal models of hormone sensitivity and neurosteroid modulation relevant to PMDD pathophysiology.
What were the most important findings?
Women with PMDD do not differ in peripheral hormone levels but show altered GABA_A receptor function and neurosteroid sensitivity, contributing to affective symptoms. Estrogen’s modulation of serotonin receptors and transporters further implicates serotonergic dysregulation in PMDD. Genetic factors such as polymorphisms in estrogen receptor and serotonin transporter genes, as well as BDNF variants, may increase susceptibility. Stress history correlates with PMDD diagnosis and may influence neurosteroid responses and HPA axis regulation. Neuroimaging reveals structural and functional brain differences in areas regulating emotion and cognition, including the amygdala and prefrontal cortex, with altered GABA and glutamate levels detected in PMDD patients.
Regarding treatment, SSRIs demonstrate moderate to large effect sizes in symptom reduction, with rapid onset of action allowing for intermittent or symptom-onset dosing regimens that minimize side effects and improve adherence. Hormonal treatments, particularly combined oral contraceptives containing drospirenone, show some efficacy but with high placebo responses and variable individual tolerance. Cognitive-behavioral therapy provides sustained symptom improvement and complements pharmacotherapy, though combined approaches do not necessarily enhance outcomes beyond monotherapy. Alternative therapies such as calcium supplementation and omega-3 fatty acids offer limited benefits and require further validation.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review consolidates the complex neurobiological, genetic, and psychosocial factors contributing to PMDD, underscoring its distinction from other mood disorders and the importance of precision in diagnosis and treatment. It reinforces SSRIs as the cornerstone of pharmacotherapy and advocates for flexible dosing strategies tailored to symptom patterns, enhancing patient quality of life and medication adherence. The emerging understanding of neurosteroid modulation opens promising avenues for novel therapeutics targeting GABAergic pathways. The findings call for multidisciplinary, individualized treatment plans incorporating pharmacological, psychological, and lifestyle interventions. The review highlights gaps in long-term safety data for hormonal therapies and the need for improved diagnostic tools and biomarkers. Overall, it equips clinicians with an evidence-based framework to optimize PMDD management and encourages ongoing research to address unmet clinical needs.
Premenstrual dysphoric disorder: General overview, treatment strategies, and focus on sertraline for symptom-onset dosing
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD) is a severe mood disorder linked to hormonal and neurochemical changes. Emerging research highlights the gut microbiome’s role in symptom modulation, opening new avenues for microbiome-targeted treatments alongside traditional therapies.
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Symptom-onset dosing of sertraline effectively reduces PMDD symptoms, especially mood-related ones, with fewer side effects and limited drug exposure. This targeted approach offers a promising, patient-friendly alternative to continuous SSRI treatment for premenstrual dysphoric disorder.
What was studied?
This paper studied the efficacy and tolerability of symptom-onset dosing of sertraline, a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI), for the treatment of premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD). The focus was on assessing whether administering sertraline starting at the onset of PMDD symptoms, rather than continuous or luteal-phase dosing, could effectively reduce symptom severity and improve clinical outcomes over six menstrual cycles. The study also explored the side effect profile and discontinuation symptoms associated with this targeted treatment approach.
Who was studied?
The study population comprised 252 women with prospectively confirmed PMDD, aged approximately 34 years on average, predominantly white (around 70%), and without significant medical or psychiatric comorbidities. These participants were randomized into two groups: 125 women received flexible doses of sertraline (50–100 mg/day) beginning at symptom onset and continuing until menstruation began, while 127 women received placebo treatment following the same schedule.
What were the most important findings?
The study demonstrated that symptom-onset treatment with sertraline significantly reduced the severity of PMDD symptoms compared to placebo. Specifically, women treated with sertraline showed statistically significant improvements in depressive symptoms as measured by clinician-rated scales and a significant reduction in the daily record of problem severity, including the anger/irritability subscale. While the reduction in premenstrual tension ratings narrowly missed statistical significance, sertraline outperformed placebo in global improvement ratings and had higher clinical response rates (67% vs. 52%). Noticeably, emission rates were not significantly different. The average duration of sertraline use was only about seven days per menstrual cycle, minimizing exposure to the drug and related side effects. Adverse effects, primarily nausea and insomnia, were more common in the sertraline group, but abrupt discontinuation did not lead to withdrawal symptoms. These findings indicate that targeted, short-term SSRI treatment timed to symptom onset is effective and well tolerated in managing PMDD.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This research challenges traditional views that antidepressants require continuous administration to be effective in PMDD treatment by demonstrating that symptom-onset dosing with sertraline is both efficacious and has a favorable side effect profile. This approach minimizes medication exposure and associated adverse effects, potentially improving adherence and reducing treatment costs. It provides a practical strategy to manage PMDD symptoms precisely when needed, aligning with the disorder's cyclical nature. Future research is needed to compare symptom-onset dosing directly with luteal-phase and continuous dosing regimens and to explore treatment strategies for non-responders to symptom-onset sertraline. Clinically, this study supports personalized, flexible pharmacotherapy for PMDD, enhancing therapeutic outcomes while mitigating risks.
Premenstrual Syndrome and Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder as Centrally Based Disorders
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD) is a severe mood disorder linked to hormonal and neurochemical changes. Emerging research highlights the gut microbiome’s role in symptom modulation, opening new avenues for microbiome-targeted treatments alongside traditional therapies.
•
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS)
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS)
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS) involves physical and emotional symptoms linked to hormonal fluctuations. Recent research highlights the role of heavy metals and gut microbiome imbalances in worsening these symptoms. Lifestyle changes, microbiome-targeted therapies, and toxin reduction show promise in effective PMS management.
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PMS and PMDD stem from neuroendocrine and neurochemical imbalances, especially altered allopregnanolone and GABA activity. Hormonal and neuroactive therapies improve symptoms, while microbiome and neuroinflammation represent promising research areas.
What was studied?
This review examined the neuroendocrine and neurobiological mechanisms underlying Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS) and Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD), emphasizing their classification as centrally based disorders influenced by hormonal fluctuations. It also discussed current and novel therapeutic strategies targeting neuroactive steroids and neuroinflammation in PMS/PMDD.
Who was studied?
The review synthesized findings from clinical, neuroimaging, pharmacological, and molecular studies involving women diagnosed with PMS and PMDD across various reproductive stages, incorporating prospective symptom tracking and biochemical assessments to explore hormone-neurotransmitter interactions and brain sensitivity.
What were the most important findings?
The review highlighted that PMS and PMDD are neuro-hormonal disorders marked by increased central nervous system sensitivity to normal cyclical fluctuations of estrogens and progesterone, especially its metabolite allopregnanolone. This neurosteroid modulates GABA_A receptor activity, affecting mood regulation, and its altered function correlates with emotional and behavioral symptoms in PMDD. Impairments in opioid and serotonergic systems also contribute. Neuroinflammation via GABAergic pathways and elevated pro-inflammatory markers may play a role. Treatment focuses on stabilizing hormones, mainly with combined hormonal contraception, and modulating neuroactive steroids. SSRIs reduce symptoms by affecting serotonin pathways. Novel therapies targeting neurosteroid pathways, including progesterone receptor modulators, 5α-reductase inhibitors, and GABA_A receptor antagonists, show promise. However, treatment responses vary depending on hormonal regimens and individual profiles. Emerging evidence also suggests the gut-brain axis and microbiome influence symptom severity through neuroimmune interactions, though further study is needed.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This review consolidates the understanding of PMS/PMDD as disorders rooted in neuroendocrine and neurochemical dysregulation, shifting the clinical perspective from purely gynecological or psychiatric frameworks to integrated neurobiological models. It underscores the necessity for personalized therapeutic approaches that combine hormonal regulation with neuroactive agents. The identification of neuroinflammation and microbiome influences opens novel research pathways and potential non-hormonal interventions. Clinicians should consider both established and emerging treatments to optimize symptom control, and researchers must prioritize elucidating the gut-brain interactions and refining neurosteroid-targeted therapies for improved patient outcomes.
Premenstrual syndrome, a common but underrated entity: review of the clinical literature
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS)
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS)
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS) involves physical and emotional symptoms linked to hormonal fluctuations. Recent research highlights the role of heavy metals and gut microbiome imbalances in worsening these symptoms. Lifestyle changes, microbiome-targeted therapies, and toxin reduction show promise in effective PMS management.
•
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD) is a severe mood disorder linked to hormonal and neurochemical changes. Emerging research highlights the gut microbiome’s role in symptom modulation, opening new avenues for microbiome-targeted treatments alongside traditional therapies.
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This review explores premenstrual syndrome (PMS) and premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD), focusing on symptoms, prevalence, risk factors, and treatment options.
What was reviewed?
This paper is a review of the clinical literature concerning premenstrual syndrome (PMS) and premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD). It focuses on their symptoms, prevalence, risk factors, etiology, and current diagnostic criteria. The review examines treatment options ranging from lifestyle changes to pharmacological interventions, and it highlights the impact of PMS and PMDD on women's health.
Who was reviewed?
The review focuses on the clinical characteristics and findings related to PMS and PMDD in women of reproductive age. It draws from a wide range of studies to summarize the current understanding of these conditions, examining both epidemiological data and clinical treatments.
What were the most important findings?
The review identifies key characteristics of PMS and PMDD, noting that these disorders manifest during the luteal phase of the menstrual cycle and subside with menstruation. It was found that PMS affects a significant portion of the female population, with the prevalence ranging from 10% to 98%, while PMDD affects 2-8% of women. Symptoms can be physical, such as bloating and breast tenderness, or psychological, including mood swings, irritability, and anxiety. The pathogenesis of PMS and PMDD is linked to hormonal fluctuations, particularly estrogen and progesterone, and the interaction of these hormones with central neurotransmitter systems, notably serotonin, GABA, and beta-endorphins.
The review highlights serotonin’s role in the pathogenesis, with women experiencing PMS showing lower serotonin levels in various bodily fluids. Although the exact cause remains unclear, studies suggest that serotonin may be the key mediator of the mood symptoms seen in these disorders. The review also addresses the controversial role of vitamins and minerals in the treatment of PMS, with limited evidence supporting their efficacy over a placebo. Furthermore, it outlines various therapeutic approaches, such as selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), combined oral contraceptives (COCs), and lifestyle changes, which have been shown to improve symptoms in many patients.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review underscores the importance of recognizing PMS and PMDD as significant health issues that can affect a woman’s quality of life. It suggests that, despite their prevalence, these disorders are often underdiagnosed. The review calls for better recognition and diagnosis, particularly using prospective symptom tracking over multiple cycles, as is recommended by the DSM-5 for diagnosing PMDD. Clinicians should consider both pharmacological and non-pharmacological treatments based on the severity of symptoms, as well as individualized care strategies, including SSRIs and COCs for more severe cases. Furthermore, the review suggests that future research should focus on understanding the complex hormonal and neurotransmitter interactions that underpin PMS and PMDD, potentially offering new avenues for treatment development.
Prevalence and associated factors of premenstrual dysphoric disorder among high school students in Finote Selam town, northwest Ethiopia
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD) is a severe mood disorder linked to hormonal and neurochemical changes. Emerging research highlights the gut microbiome’s role in symptom modulation, opening new avenues for microbiome-targeted treatments alongside traditional therapies.
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Among Ethiopian high school girls, PMDD affects one-third, linked to irregular cycles, depression, prolonged menstruation, and stress. Early screening and mental health support are crucial to improving well-being and academic success.
What was studied?
This cross-sectional study examined the prevalence of premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD) and its associated factors among high school female students in Finote Selam town, northwest Ethiopia. Using DSM-5 criteria and self-administered questionnaires, the study aimed to quantify PMDD prevalence and identify clinical, psychosocial, and menstrual-related predictors affecting this population's mental health and academic performance.
Who was studied?
The research included 548 high school female students aged 15 to 22 years with regular menstrual cycles, excluding those with serious illness or recent school transfers. Participants completed validated questionnaires assessing PMDD symptoms, depression, perceived stress, social support, menstrual characteristics, and behavioral factors such as substance use.
What were the most important findings?
The study found a high PMDD prevalence (33%), with physical symptoms like breast tenderness and fatigue being most common. Key factors significantly associated with PMDD included irregular menstrual cycles, depressive symptoms, longer menstruation duration, and high perceived stress. PMDD significantly impacted academic performance, social functioning, and psychological well-being. The findings aligned with prior Ethiopian and African studies but were higher than reports from developed countries, possibly reflecting sociocultural, infrastructural, and menstrual hygiene differences influencing symptom expression and health-seeking behaviors.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study highlights PMDD as a prevalent and underrecognized condition adversely affecting adolescent females' mental health and educational outcomes in low-resource settings. It emphasizes the urgent need for early screening, stress reduction interventions, and targeted mental health support within primary healthcare and school systems. Addressing menstrual health education, improving hygiene management, and mitigating psychosocial stressors could reduce PMDD burden and improve quality of life. These insights guide clinicians and policymakers toward culturally sensitive, accessible strategies for PMDD diagnosis and management in similar populations.
Tobacco consumption and premenstrual syndrome: A case-control study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS)
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS)
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS) involves physical and emotional symptoms linked to hormonal fluctuations. Recent research highlights the role of heavy metals and gut microbiome imbalances in worsening these symptoms. Lifestyle changes, microbiome-targeted therapies, and toxin reduction show promise in effective PMS management.
•
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD) is a severe mood disorder linked to hormonal and neurochemical changes. Emerging research highlights the gut microbiome’s role in symptom modulation, opening new avenues for microbiome-targeted treatments alongside traditional therapies.
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This study highlights the significant link between tobacco consumption and the increased risk of premenstrual syndrome (PMS) and premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD). Women who smoke are at higher odds of developing these disorders, with a dose-response relationship.
What was studied?
The study aimed to assess the relationship between tobacco smoking and premenstrual syndrome (PMS), including its more severe form, premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD). It focused on understanding how smoking may contribute to the occurrence of these menstrual disorders. The study utilized a case-control design, comparing women with PMS and PMDD to age-matched controls.
Who was studied?
The study population consisted of women diagnosed with PMS, women diagnosed with PMDD, and control groups who did not have PMS or PMDD. Participants were recruited from three major public hospitals and one family counseling center in Santiago de Compostela, Spain, ensuring a sample that included women of various age groups and social backgrounds. All participants completed a self-administered questionnaire that gathered information on their smoking habits, socio-demographic factors, and menstrual health.
What were the most important findings?
The study found that tobacco consumption is significantly associated with both PMS and PMDD. Specifically, current smokers had a higher likelihood of experiencing PMS and PMDD compared to non-smokers. This association was evident even among ex-smokers, although the odds ratio was less precise due to the small sample size of this group. The findings also indicated a dose-response relationship: women who smoked more than 15 cigarettes per day or those with higher pack-years of tobacco consumption had an increased risk of developing PMS and PMDD, suggesting a potential cumulative effect of tobacco exposure. The results were confirmed by a cubic spline model, which further demonstrated a correlation between the amount of tobacco consumed and the likelihood of developing these menstrual disorders.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study’s findings suggest that tobacco consumption may be a modifiable risk factor for the development of PMS and PMDD. Given the high prevalence of tobacco use among women globally, particularly in Europe and the United States, these results highlight the need for public health strategies aimed at reducing smoking in women, particularly those in their reproductive years. Health professionals should be aware of the potential link between smoking and these menstrual disorders, as this could inform both prevention and treatment strategies. This study calls for further research to explore the long-term effects of smoking cessation and whether reducing tobacco exposure could lower the risk of developing PMS or PMDD in susceptible women.
A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of Premenstrual Syndrome with Special Emphasis on Herbal Medicine and Nutritional Supplements.
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS)
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS)
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS) involves physical and emotional symptoms linked to hormonal fluctuations. Recent research highlights the role of heavy metals and gut microbiome imbalances in worsening these symptoms. Lifestyle changes, microbiome-targeted therapies, and toxin reduction show promise in effective PMS management.
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This systematic review and meta-analysis explores the effectiveness of herbal medicine and nutritional supplements in reducing PMS symptoms, highlighting significant reductions in physical, mood, and behavioral symptoms.
What was reviewed?
This article presents a systematic review and meta-analysis focusing on the effectiveness of herbal medicine and nutritional supplements in managing Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS). It reviews randomized controlled trials (RCTs) assessing the impact of various herbal remedies and supplements on both somatic and psycho-behavioral symptoms of PMS. The review highlights the safety, efficacy, and mechanisms of action of these treatments, while also addressing the limitations of current evidence.
Who was reviewed?
The review concentrates on women experiencing PMS, particularly those with both physical and psychological symptoms that significantly affect their daily functioning. It includes trials involving a wide range of herbal and nutritional interventions, aiming to provide clinicians with evidence of alternative therapies for managing PMS symptoms.
What were the most important findings?
The review reveals that herbal medicines and nutritional supplements can significantly reduce the severity of PMS symptoms, including physical, mood, and behavioral issues. It highlights specific interventions such as Vitex agnus castus (chaste tree), Zingiber officinale (ginger), and Crocus sativus (saffron) as particularly effective. The meta-analysis demonstrated a substantial reduction in Premenstrual Symptoms Screening Tool (PSST) scores, indicating notable symptom improvement. Additionally, the review found that certain interventions, such as Ginkgo biloba and vitamin B1, offered improvements in psychological symptoms like anxiety and depression.
Secondary findings also revealed positive effects on mood, physical symptoms, and behavior, with significant reductions in scores for physical symptoms and mood-related symptoms. The study concluded that herbal treatments, particularly when used over multiple cycles, have the potential to alleviate PMS symptoms significantly. However, it emphasized the need for high-quality trials to confirm these results and establish optimal treatment protocols. Importantly, the review also addressed the safety profile of these treatments, with most studies reporting mild adverse effects such as nausea or digestive discomfort.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The greatest implication of this review is that herbal medicine and nutritional supplements represent a viable, non-pharmacological option for managing PMS symptoms, offering a safer alternative to traditional treatments with fewer side effects. This study provides clinicians with evidence-based recommendations for integrating these alternative therapies into PMS management, especially for patients who prefer natural treatments or experience adverse reactions to conventional medications. The review also underscores the need for more robust, high-quality studies to refine treatment guidelines, improve symptom assessment tools, and explore the mechanisms underlying the therapeutic effects of herbal interventions. Clinicians can consider incorporating these findings into patient care plans while awaiting further evidence from future studies.
Characteristics of the Gut Microbiota in Japanese Patients with Premenstrual Syndrome
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS)
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS)
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS) involves physical and emotional symptoms linked to hormonal fluctuations. Recent research highlights the role of heavy metals and gut microbiome imbalances in worsening these symptoms. Lifestyle changes, microbiome-targeted therapies, and toxin reduction show promise in effective PMS management.
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This study explores the gut microbiota in Japanese women with Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS), finding significant differences in microbial composition and highlighting the potential role of Collinsella in PMS pathophysiology.
What was studied?
This study investigated the characteristics of the gut microbiota in Japanese women with Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS), aiming to compare the microbial composition between PMS-affected individuals and healthy controls. By analyzing stool samples using 16S rRNA gene sequencing, the study examined the diversity of the microbiome and sought to identify microbial genera potentially associated with the severity of PMS symptoms.
Who was studied?
The study involved a total of 168 women, including 24 diagnosed with PMS and 144 healthy controls. The participants were between the ages of 24 and 49, with the control group selected to match the PMS group in terms of age and other relevant demographic factors. Women with other health conditions, those who had recently used antibiotics, or those with major dietary restrictions were excluded from the study. The aim was to understand how differences in the gut microbiome between the two groups might correlate with PMS symptoms.
What were the most important findings?
The study found that the gut microbiota of women with PMS differed significantly from that of healthy controls. The PMS group exhibited higher α-diversity, which was assessed using the Simpson index, indicating a more varied microbial community. When comparing the overall microbial composition between the groups, there were notable differences in β-diversity and statistical tests. The study also identified several microbial genera that were more abundant in women with PMS. Notably, Collinsella was found to be significantly more abundant in the PMS group, particularly among women aged 30–40 years. This genus was found to be 4.5 times more abundant in the PMS group compared to the controls, and its presence correlated with the severity of PMS symptoms. Bifidobacterium and Blautia, known for their roles in carbohydrate metabolism, were also more prevalent in the PMS group, potentially linking microbiome composition with metabolic processes that could influence PMS symptoms.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings from this study suggest that the gut microbiota may play a significant role in the development and severity of PMS. The identification of Collinsella as a key player in the microbial composition of PMS-affected individuals opens new potential avenues for intervention. The findings imply that microbiome modulation, particularly through dietary adjustments or prebiotics targeting Collinsella, could offer a therapeutic strategy for managing PMS symptoms. The study also emphasizes the importance of further research to confirm these associations and explore the underlying mechanisms connecting microbiome imbalances with PMS.
Characteristics of the gut microbiota in women with premenstrual symptoms: A cross-sectional study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS)
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS)
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS) involves physical and emotional symptoms linked to hormonal fluctuations. Recent research highlights the role of heavy metals and gut microbiome imbalances in worsening these symptoms. Lifestyle changes, microbiome-targeted therapies, and toxin reduction show promise in effective PMS management.
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This study explores the association between gut microbiota composition and the severity of premenstrual symptoms, suggesting a potential role for microbiome-based therapies in managing PMS.
What was studied?
The study investigated the characteristics of the gut microbiota in women experiencing premenstrual symptoms, focusing on the potential association between gut microbial composition and the severity of these symptoms. The research aimed to identify microbial differences between women with premenstrual disorders (PMDs) and healthy controls, and to explore how these differences might correlate with the severity of premenstrual syndrome (PMS) symptoms.
Who was studied?
The study involved 56 women, including 27 women with self-reported premenstrual symptoms and 29 women without significant symptoms. Among the 27 women reporting PMS, 21 were further identified as having premenstrual disorders (PMDs) due to the significant interference of their symptoms with their social life. The control group consisted of 22 women with no significant premenstrual symptoms. These participants were matched by age and other demographic factors.
What were the most important findings?
The study found that there were notable differences in the gut microbiota between women experiencing premenstrual disorders (PMDs) and healthy controls. At the phylum level, the abundance of Bacteroidetes was significantly lower in the PMDs group. At the genus level, several bacteria were found to be either more or less prevalent in the PMDs group. Specifically, the PMDs group had lower levels of beneficial bacteria such as Butyricicoccus, Megasphaera, and Parabacteroides, while Anaerotaenia was more prevalent in this group. However, after applying false discovery rate correction, these differences were no longer statistically significant. The abundance of certain microbes, such as Anaerotaenia, correlated positively with the severity of PMS as measured by the Premenstrual Symptoms Questionnaire (PSQ), while Parabacteroides and Megasphaera were negatively associated with symptom severity.
These findings suggest that the gut microbiota may play a role in the pathophysiology of premenstrual disorders, potentially influencing the severity of symptoms. However, the study also noted that there were no significant differences in inflammatory markers (such as CRP, LBP, and sCD14) between the PMDs and control groups, which means that the microbiota’s role might not be directly related to inflammation but may involve other mechanisms such as gut-brain communication.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study provides preliminary evidence that the gut microbiota could be linked to the severity of premenstrual symptoms, suggesting that microbiome-based interventions might be a potential therapeutic strategy for managing PMS and PMDs. However, due to the cross-sectional nature of the study, it is not possible to establish causality between microbiota characteristics and the severity of premenstrual symptoms. The study's findings highlight the need for future longitudinal studies to confirm these associations and determine the potential therapeutic role of gut microbiota modulation. Furthermore, the identification of specific microbial imbalances could help develop microbiome-based biomarkers for the diagnosis and treatment of PMS and PMDs, providing a more personalized approach to care.
Epidemiology of Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS)-A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis Study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS)
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS)
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS) involves physical and emotional symptoms linked to hormonal fluctuations. Recent research highlights the role of heavy metals and gut microbiome imbalances in worsening these symptoms. Lifestyle changes, microbiome-targeted therapies, and toxin reduction show promise in effective PMS management.
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This systematic review and meta-analysis estimate the global prevalence of PMS, revealing wide variations across countries and highlighting the need for standardized diagnostic approaches.
What was reviewed?
This paper presents a systematic review and meta-analysis of the global prevalence of Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS). It focuses on synthesizing existing studies to determine the overall rate of PMS occurrence among women, analyzing factors influencing its prevalence, and exploring variations in prevalence rates across different countries and regions. The review compiles data from multiple sources to estimate the global burden of PMS and identify trends over time, employing meta-regression to examine factors that might affect PMS prevalence.
Who was reviewed?
The review examines data from studies involving women of reproductive age, specifically those diagnosed with PMS based on various symptom screening tools, such as the Premenstrual Symptoms Screening Tool (PSST), and other diagnostic scales. The included studies span different regions and countries, offering a broad view of PMS prevalence across diverse populations.
What were the most important findings?
The systematic review and meta-analysis found that the pooled prevalence of PMS across 17 studies was 47.8%, with substantial variation between different countries. The lowest prevalence was reported in France (12%), while Iran had the highest (98%). This wide range of prevalence is indicative of various factors, such as different diagnostic criteria, sample populations, and cultural or environmental influences on PMS reporting and diagnosis. The review also highlighted a trend of increasing PMS prevalence between 1996 and 2011, though the correlation with the year of study was not statistically significant.
Meta-regression analysis revealed a significant correlation between the sample size and the reported prevalence of PMS, with larger studies tending to report lower prevalence rates. The review also noted that the differences in measurement tools used to diagnose PMS across studies could contribute to the observed variability in prevalence. The results underscore the need for standardized diagnostic criteria and more comprehensive studies to better understand the factors driving PMS prevalence globally.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The findings of this review have significant implications for public health and clinical practice. The high global prevalence of PMS, with nearly half of reproductive-aged women affected, underscores the need for effective diagnostic and management strategies. Clinicians should be aware of the significant variation in PMS prevalence, influenced by geographical and methodological factors, which can impact patient care and treatment approaches. The review emphasizes the importance of further research to standardize diagnostic tools and explore the role of environmental, cultural, and genetic factors in PMS. Moreover, the findings suggest that larger, high-quality studies are needed to provide more reliable data on PMS prevalence, which can inform public health policies and interventions aimed at improving women's reproductive health globally.
Impact of nutritional diet therapy on premenstrual syndrome
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD) is a severe mood disorder linked to hormonal and neurochemical changes. Emerging research highlights the gut microbiome’s role in symptom modulation, opening new avenues for microbiome-targeted treatments alongside traditional therapies.
•
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS)
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS)
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS) involves physical and emotional symptoms linked to hormonal fluctuations. Recent research highlights the role of heavy metals and gut microbiome imbalances in worsening these symptoms. Lifestyle changes, microbiome-targeted therapies, and toxin reduction show promise in effective PMS management.
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This review highlights the role of diet and micronutrients in modulating PMS symptoms, showing potential benefits of calcium, magnesium, vitamin D, and B vitamins, while emphasizing the need for personalized nutritional approaches and further microbiome-focused research.
What was reviewed?
This paper conducted a comprehensive review of current research on the effects of dietary and nutritional therapies on premenstrual syndrome (PMS) and premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD) symptoms. The authors analyzed data from various studies accessed through major databases like PubMed, ScienceDirect, and Scopus, focusing on dietary patterns, macro- and micronutrients, supplements, and their relationship to PMS symptom severity and management.
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesized findings from multiple clinical and observational studies involving women of reproductive age experiencing PMS, encompassing diverse populations and dietary behaviors. The included studies examined correlations between specific nutrients, food groups, supplements, and premenstrual symptom patterns.
What were the most important findings?
The review emphasized that while diet plays an important role in modulating PMS symptoms, the scientific evidence remains limited and inconsistent, especially regarding macronutrient intake—no strong correlations were found between protein, fat, carbohydrates, or fiber consumption and PMS symptoms. However, micronutrients such as calcium, magnesium, vitamin D, and B vitamins showed potential benefits in symptom reduction. Specifically, calcium and vitamin D supplementation were linked to decreased PMS symptom severity and improved quality of life, although definitive clinical recommendations require further trials. The role of vitamin B6 and broad-spectrum micronutrient supplementation was also noted, with both showing some efficacy in managing PMS-related psychological symptoms. Herbal supplements like evening primrose oil and curcumin demonstrated mixed results and warrant additional research. The review also highlighted the influence of dietary patterns, showing Western diets rich in processed foods and refined sugars positively associate with increased PMS symptoms, whereas traditional and healthy diets rich in fruits, vegetables, and whole foods correlate with reduced symptom severity.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review underscores the potential of nutritional therapy as a complementary approach to PMS symptom management. It calls for increased awareness among healthcare providers to educate women on adopting balanced dietary habits that may mitigate symptoms. Given the current limitations in evidence, it encourages personalized nutritional counseling and advocates for further research integrating microbiome and metabolomic insights to refine diet-based interventions. This can potentially facilitate the development of microbiome-targeted dietary strategies to improve PMS and PMDD outcomes.
Premenstrual Syndrome and Exercise: A Narrative Review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS)
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS)
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS) involves physical and emotional symptoms linked to hormonal fluctuations. Recent research highlights the role of heavy metals and gut microbiome imbalances in worsening these symptoms. Lifestyle changes, microbiome-targeted therapies, and toxin reduction show promise in effective PMS management.
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This narrative review explores how exercise can help manage the symptoms of Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS), focusing on the physiological and psychological benefits of regular physical activity.
What was reviewed?
This narrative review examines the connection between Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS) and exercise. It explores the potential role of exercise in mitigating PMS symptoms and evaluates existing studies to understand how physical activity might alleviate both the physical and psychological impacts of PMS. The review also critiques the methodology of current research and emphasizes the need for further studies to refine exercise interventions for PMS management.
Who was reviewed?
The review targets women who experience PMS, particularly those suffering from physical, psychological, and behavioral symptoms that impact their quality of life. The study highlights the importance of understanding how exercise may serve as a complementary treatment for PMS. The aim is to improve the health outcomes and daily functioning of affected women.
What were the most important findings?
The review identifies key findings regarding the positive effects of exercise on PMS symptoms. PMS symptoms, which include fatigue, mood swings, bloating, and irritability, significantly impair women’s daily activities. The review suggests that exercise, especially aerobic and resistance exercises, can reduce these symptoms, improving both physical and psychological well-being. Regular physical activity helps decrease fatigue, relieve pain (including breast tenderness), and improve mood by regulating hormonal fluctuations. Studies reviewed show that exercise enhances estrogen and progesterone levels and promotes endorphin release, which further alleviates pain and stress.
Exercise improves overall well-being by stimulating the release of neurochemicals like endorphins, which play a crucial role in mood enhancement and pain reduction. Furthermore, exercise reduces the impact of PMS on daily life, including work performance and social engagement. However, the review highlights the inconsistency across studies regarding the optimal exercise prescription for PMS. It calls for more detailed research to determine the best exercise duration, intensity, and frequency needed to achieve maximum benefit.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review suggests that exercise is a cost-effective, accessible, and powerful non-pharmacological approach to managing PMS. It encourages clinicians to incorporate exercise recommendations into treatment plans, considering the physical and psychological benefits it offers. Regular physical activity can serve as a complementary treatment alongside pharmacological options, especially for women seeking a holistic management approach. The review also stresses the importance of personalized exercise prescriptions tailored to individual needs and symptom profiles. As research on exercise and PMS continues to evolve, clearer guidelines will emerge, allowing healthcare providers to better support women with PMS through structured exercise programs.
Premenstrual Syndrome and Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder as Centrally Based Disorders
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD) is a severe mood disorder linked to hormonal and neurochemical changes. Emerging research highlights the gut microbiome’s role in symptom modulation, opening new avenues for microbiome-targeted treatments alongside traditional therapies.
•
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS)
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS)
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS) involves physical and emotional symptoms linked to hormonal fluctuations. Recent research highlights the role of heavy metals and gut microbiome imbalances in worsening these symptoms. Lifestyle changes, microbiome-targeted therapies, and toxin reduction show promise in effective PMS management.
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PMS and PMDD stem from neuroendocrine and neurochemical imbalances, especially altered allopregnanolone and GABA activity. Hormonal and neuroactive therapies improve symptoms, while microbiome and neuroinflammation represent promising research areas.
What was studied?
This review examined the neuroendocrine and neurobiological mechanisms underlying Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS) and Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD), emphasizing their classification as centrally based disorders influenced by hormonal fluctuations. It also discussed current and novel therapeutic strategies targeting neuroactive steroids and neuroinflammation in PMS/PMDD.
Who was studied?
The review synthesized findings from clinical, neuroimaging, pharmacological, and molecular studies involving women diagnosed with PMS and PMDD across various reproductive stages, incorporating prospective symptom tracking and biochemical assessments to explore hormone-neurotransmitter interactions and brain sensitivity.
What were the most important findings?
The review highlighted that PMS and PMDD are neuro-hormonal disorders marked by increased central nervous system sensitivity to normal cyclical fluctuations of estrogens and progesterone, especially its metabolite allopregnanolone. This neurosteroid modulates GABA_A receptor activity, affecting mood regulation, and its altered function correlates with emotional and behavioral symptoms in PMDD. Impairments in opioid and serotonergic systems also contribute. Neuroinflammation via GABAergic pathways and elevated pro-inflammatory markers may play a role. Treatment focuses on stabilizing hormones, mainly with combined hormonal contraception, and modulating neuroactive steroids. SSRIs reduce symptoms by affecting serotonin pathways. Novel therapies targeting neurosteroid pathways, including progesterone receptor modulators, 5α-reductase inhibitors, and GABA_A receptor antagonists, show promise. However, treatment responses vary depending on hormonal regimens and individual profiles. Emerging evidence also suggests the gut-brain axis and microbiome influence symptom severity through neuroimmune interactions, though further study is needed.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This review consolidates the understanding of PMS/PMDD as disorders rooted in neuroendocrine and neurochemical dysregulation, shifting the clinical perspective from purely gynecological or psychiatric frameworks to integrated neurobiological models. It underscores the necessity for personalized therapeutic approaches that combine hormonal regulation with neuroactive agents. The identification of neuroinflammation and microbiome influences opens novel research pathways and potential non-hormonal interventions. Clinicians should consider both established and emerging treatments to optimize symptom control, and researchers must prioritize elucidating the gut-brain interactions and refining neurosteroid-targeted therapies for improved patient outcomes.
Premenstrual syndrome, a common but underrated entity: review of the clinical literature
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS)
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS)
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS) involves physical and emotional symptoms linked to hormonal fluctuations. Recent research highlights the role of heavy metals and gut microbiome imbalances in worsening these symptoms. Lifestyle changes, microbiome-targeted therapies, and toxin reduction show promise in effective PMS management.
•
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD) is a severe mood disorder linked to hormonal and neurochemical changes. Emerging research highlights the gut microbiome’s role in symptom modulation, opening new avenues for microbiome-targeted treatments alongside traditional therapies.
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This review explores premenstrual syndrome (PMS) and premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD), focusing on symptoms, prevalence, risk factors, and treatment options.
What was reviewed?
This paper is a review of the clinical literature concerning premenstrual syndrome (PMS) and premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD). It focuses on their symptoms, prevalence, risk factors, etiology, and current diagnostic criteria. The review examines treatment options ranging from lifestyle changes to pharmacological interventions, and it highlights the impact of PMS and PMDD on women's health.
Who was reviewed?
The review focuses on the clinical characteristics and findings related to PMS and PMDD in women of reproductive age. It draws from a wide range of studies to summarize the current understanding of these conditions, examining both epidemiological data and clinical treatments.
What were the most important findings?
The review identifies key characteristics of PMS and PMDD, noting that these disorders manifest during the luteal phase of the menstrual cycle and subside with menstruation. It was found that PMS affects a significant portion of the female population, with the prevalence ranging from 10% to 98%, while PMDD affects 2-8% of women. Symptoms can be physical, such as bloating and breast tenderness, or psychological, including mood swings, irritability, and anxiety. The pathogenesis of PMS and PMDD is linked to hormonal fluctuations, particularly estrogen and progesterone, and the interaction of these hormones with central neurotransmitter systems, notably serotonin, GABA, and beta-endorphins.
The review highlights serotonin’s role in the pathogenesis, with women experiencing PMS showing lower serotonin levels in various bodily fluids. Although the exact cause remains unclear, studies suggest that serotonin may be the key mediator of the mood symptoms seen in these disorders. The review also addresses the controversial role of vitamins and minerals in the treatment of PMS, with limited evidence supporting their efficacy over a placebo. Furthermore, it outlines various therapeutic approaches, such as selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), combined oral contraceptives (COCs), and lifestyle changes, which have been shown to improve symptoms in many patients.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review underscores the importance of recognizing PMS and PMDD as significant health issues that can affect a woman’s quality of life. It suggests that, despite their prevalence, these disorders are often underdiagnosed. The review calls for better recognition and diagnosis, particularly using prospective symptom tracking over multiple cycles, as is recommended by the DSM-5 for diagnosing PMDD. Clinicians should consider both pharmacological and non-pharmacological treatments based on the severity of symptoms, as well as individualized care strategies, including SSRIs and COCs for more severe cases. Furthermore, the review suggests that future research should focus on understanding the complex hormonal and neurotransmitter interactions that underpin PMS and PMDD, potentially offering new avenues for treatment development.
Premenstrual syndrome: New insights into etiology and review of treatment methods
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS)
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS)
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS) involves physical and emotional symptoms linked to hormonal fluctuations. Recent research highlights the role of heavy metals and gut microbiome imbalances in worsening these symptoms. Lifestyle changes, microbiome-targeted therapies, and toxin reduction show promise in effective PMS management.
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This review examines the latest insights into the etiology and treatment of Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS) and Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD), focusing on hormonal and neurosteroid imbalances.
What was reviewed?
This paper is a review of the etiology and treatment options for Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS) and Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD). It examines the underlying causes of these conditions, including hormonal fluctuations, neurotransmitter imbalances, and the role of neurosteroids like allopregnanolone. The review also analyzes a variety of treatment options, including pharmacological methods (SSRIs, hormonal therapies, neurosteroid treatments) and non-pharmacological interventions, to provide a comprehensive overview of how PMS and PMDD can be managed.
Who was reviewed?
The review focuses on women of reproductive age who experience PMS and PMDD, with special attention to those who suffer from severe symptoms that significantly impair their daily functioning. The article explores clinical data and findings from various studies to provide a thorough understanding of the disorder's impact on women's health, as well as the varying responses to treatment.
What were the most important findings?
The review highlights several key findings about the etiology and treatment of PMS and PMDD. One of the most significant insights is the role of hormonal fluctuations, particularly the progesterone metabolite allopregnanolone, in the onset of PMS symptoms. It is noted that this metabolite modulates the GABA-A receptor in the central nervous system (CNS), which may explain some of the mood and anxiety-related symptoms of PMS. The review also underscores the complexity of the disorder, as it involves multiple physiological systems, including the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis and neurotransmitter pathways such as serotonin.
SSRIs, commonly used to manage mood symptoms, provide rapid relief and are considered the first-line pharmacological treatment for severe cases. Hormonal therapies, particularly those that stabilize estrogen and progesterone levels, are also effective but require careful selection to avoid exacerbating symptoms. The review suggests that therapies targeting neurosteroids like allopregnanolone may offer new avenues for treatment, although more research is needed. In terms of treatment strategies, the review emphasizes the importance of personalized care, where treatments are tailored to individual symptoms and underlying mechanisms. For instance, oral contraceptives containing drospirenone and ethinylestradiol are effective for controlling physical symptoms, while SSRIs are more beneficial for psychological symptoms.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The greatest implication of this review is the need for a more nuanced approach to diagnosing and treating PMS and PMDD. By understanding the complex hormonal and neurochemical interactions involved, clinicians can better tailor treatments to individual patients. The review suggests that effective treatment goes beyond symptom alleviation to address the root causes of the disorders. Additionally, the paper points to the importance of considering non-pharmacological interventions alongside medications, particularly for patients who experience mild to moderate symptoms. Future research into the role of neurosteroids and their modulation in the CNS could lead to more targeted treatments with fewer side effects.
Tobacco consumption and premenstrual syndrome: A case-control study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS)
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS)
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS) involves physical and emotional symptoms linked to hormonal fluctuations. Recent research highlights the role of heavy metals and gut microbiome imbalances in worsening these symptoms. Lifestyle changes, microbiome-targeted therapies, and toxin reduction show promise in effective PMS management.
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Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD) is a severe mood disorder linked to hormonal and neurochemical changes. Emerging research highlights the gut microbiome’s role in symptom modulation, opening new avenues for microbiome-targeted treatments alongside traditional therapies.
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This study highlights the significant link between tobacco consumption and the increased risk of premenstrual syndrome (PMS) and premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD). Women who smoke are at higher odds of developing these disorders, with a dose-response relationship.
What was studied?
The study aimed to assess the relationship between tobacco smoking and premenstrual syndrome (PMS), including its more severe form, premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD). It focused on understanding how smoking may contribute to the occurrence of these menstrual disorders. The study utilized a case-control design, comparing women with PMS and PMDD to age-matched controls.
Who was studied?
The study population consisted of women diagnosed with PMS, women diagnosed with PMDD, and control groups who did not have PMS or PMDD. Participants were recruited from three major public hospitals and one family counseling center in Santiago de Compostela, Spain, ensuring a sample that included women of various age groups and social backgrounds. All participants completed a self-administered questionnaire that gathered information on their smoking habits, socio-demographic factors, and menstrual health.
What were the most important findings?
The study found that tobacco consumption is significantly associated with both PMS and PMDD. Specifically, current smokers had a higher likelihood of experiencing PMS and PMDD compared to non-smokers. This association was evident even among ex-smokers, although the odds ratio was less precise due to the small sample size of this group. The findings also indicated a dose-response relationship: women who smoked more than 15 cigarettes per day or those with higher pack-years of tobacco consumption had an increased risk of developing PMS and PMDD, suggesting a potential cumulative effect of tobacco exposure. The results were confirmed by a cubic spline model, which further demonstrated a correlation between the amount of tobacco consumed and the likelihood of developing these menstrual disorders.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study’s findings suggest that tobacco consumption may be a modifiable risk factor for the development of PMS and PMDD. Given the high prevalence of tobacco use among women globally, particularly in Europe and the United States, these results highlight the need for public health strategies aimed at reducing smoking in women, particularly those in their reproductive years. Health professionals should be aware of the potential link between smoking and these menstrual disorders, as this could inform both prevention and treatment strategies. This study calls for further research to explore the long-term effects of smoking cessation and whether reducing tobacco exposure could lower the risk of developing PMS or PMDD in susceptible women.
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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This Cochrane review confirms that structured exercise markedly reduces menstrual pain in primary dysmenorrhea but reveals no microbiome data, prompting a call for studies linking exercise interventions with gut–uterine microbial signatures.
What was reviewed?
This Cochrane systematic review and meta‑analysis evaluated the effectiveness and safety of structured exercise interventions for primary dysmenorrhea by synthesizing evidence from randomized controlled trials comparing various exercise modalities, including low‑intensity (e.g., yoga, stretching), high‑intensity (e.g., aerobic routines), and mixed‑intensity programs, against no‑treatment controls and non‑steroidal anti‑inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs). The authors searched multiple electronic databases up to July 2019 and applied rigorous selection and bias‑assessment procedures per the Cochrane Handbook.
Who was reviewed?
The analysis incorporated 12 RCTs enrolling a total of 854 women aged 15–49 years with clinically diagnosed primary dysmenorrhea (i.e., menstrual pain without underlying pelvic pathology). Ten trials (n = 754) contributed pain‑intensity data: nine contrasted exercise with no treatment, and one compared exercise to mefenamic acid. Participants reported moderate‑to‑severe menstrual pain affecting daily activities, and studies spanned educational and outpatient settings across diverse geographic regions.
Most important findings
Pooled data from nine trials (n = 632) demonstrated that exercise significantly reduced menstrual pain intensity, equating to a clinically meaningful 25 mm decrease on a 100 mm visual analogue scale compared to no exercise. This effect remained robust in sensitivity analyses, with both low‑ and high‑intensity regimens yielding substantial pain relief. Secondary outcomes, overall menstrual symptoms, rescue analgesic use, and quality‑of‑life metrics, were sparsely and inconsistently reported, precluding definitive conclusions. Importantly, none of the included trials assessed shifts in gut or uterine microbiome composition or correlations between microbial signatures and exercise response, underscoring a critical evidence gap for microbiome‑informed dysmenorrhea management.
Key implications
Clinicians can confidently recommend regular exercise, ideally 45–60 minutes per session, three or more times per week, as an accessible, low‑risk intervention for menstrual pain relief. The absence of microbiome data highlights the need for future research integrating microbial profiling to elucidate how exercise‑induced anti‑inflammatory effects may interact with host–microbiome dynamics, potentially refining personalized treatment strategies.
Nifedipine for primary dysmenorrhoea
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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Nifedipine may provide significant pain relief for women with primary dysmenorrhoea, but evidence quality is low. Larger studies are needed to confirm its effectiveness and safety.
What was studied?
The study assessed the effectiveness and safety of nifedipine as a treatment for primary dysmenorrhoea, a common condition where women experience painful uterine contractions during menstruation. Nifedipine, a calcium channel blocker, is widely used to inhibit uterine contractions during preterm labor, and the review explored whether it could also alleviate menstrual pain by inhibiting these contractions during menstruation. The study compared nifedipine to placebo to determine its impact on pain relief, the quality of life, and the need for additional medications.
Who was studied?
The participants were women of reproductive age (15-35 years) diagnosed with primary dysmenorrhoea, defined as menstrual pain due to uterine contractions without any underlying pelvic pathology. A total of 106 women participated across three randomized controlled trials (RCTs), though only 66 participants' data were usable for analysis. Women who experienced significant menstrual pain were included, with some trials focusing on women who had a history of using analgesics for pain relief.
Most important findings
The results suggested that nifedipine may provide pain relief compared to a placebo. Specifically, nifedipine showed a higher likelihood of any pain relief and significantly better outcomes for "good" or "excellent" pain relief. However, the overall quality of the evidence was very low, primarily due to small sample sizes and limited data. The nifedipine group also demonstrated a greater preference for ongoing use of the medication, with a majority indicating they would choose it over their previous analgesic treatments. Adverse effects such as headaches and facial flushing were reported in both the nifedipine and placebo groups, but they did not significantly differ between the two.
Key implications
The findings suggest that nifedipine could be an effective alternative treatment for primary dysmenorrhoea, especially for women who cannot use NSAIDs or hormonal contraceptives due to various health concerns. Despite the promising results, the low quality of the evidence calls for further research with larger sample sizes and better methodology. Future studies should also focus on comparing nifedipine to other established treatments for dysmenorrhoea and more thoroughly assessing adverse effects to better understand its safety profile in this context.
The role of probiotics in improving menstrual health in women with primary dysmenorrhoea
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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Three-month probiotic supplementation improved mental health and reduced NSAID reliance in women with primary dysmenorrhea, though it did not alter inflammatory cytokines or directly measure microbiome changes.
What was studied?
This randomized, double‑blind, placebo‑controlled trial evaluated whether three months of oral probiotic supplementation could improve menstrual health in women with primary dysmenorrhea. Investigators administered daily sachets containing six bacterial strains, Lactobacillus acidophilus BCMC 12130, L. casei subsp. BCMC 12313, L. lactis BCMC 12451, Bifidobacterium bifidum BCMC 02290, B. longum BCMC 02120, and B. infantis BCMC 02129—to one group and an inert placebo to another. They measured pain intensity (visual analog and verbal rating scales), quality of life (SF‑12v2 physical and mental health scores), frequency of NSAID use, and serum inflammatory cytokines before and after treatment.
Who was studied?
Seventy‑two premenopausal women aged 23–41 years with clinically confirmed primary dysmenorrhea at a Malaysian medical center enrolled in the study; 67 completed the trial. Researchers excluded participants with organic pelvic pathology, recent hormonal therapy, lactose intolerance, or allergy to study components. They maintained high compliance (>90%) through monthly follow‑ups and sachet counts. To conserve resources, they assayed inflammatory markers in serum from eight probiotic and six placebo participants selected at random.
Most important findings
Both groups experienced significant pain reduction and improved physical health over three cycles, but only the probiotic group showed a statistically significant gain in mental health. Probiotic recipients used fewer NSAIDs, suggesting reduced analgesic dependence, though this did not reach statistical significance. The trial detected no differences in IL‑6, IL‑8, or TNF‑α levels, and it did not assess shifts in gut microbial composition; thus, direct evidence of probiotic‑induced microbiome modulation remains unestablished.
Key implications
Clinicians may consider adjunctive probiotic therapy to enhance mental well‑being and potentially lower NSAID requirements in dysmenorrhea management, recognizing that objective anti‑inflammatory effects remain unproven. Future trials should include larger cohorts, non‑NSAID comparators, and direct microbiome profiling to elucidate how specific Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium strains influence estrogen metabolism, gut dysbiosis, and prostaglandin‑mediated pain pathways.
Acupuncture for Primary Dysmenorrhea: A Potential Mechanism from an Anti-Inflammatory Perspective
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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This review details how acupuncture and related therapies reduce inflammatory mediators, cytokines, chemokines, and leukocytes, to relieve primary dysmenorrhea, and underscores the need for microbiome-focused research.
What was reviewed?
This review systematically examines the anti‐inflammatory mechanisms by which acupuncture and related therapies alleviate primary dysmenorrhea (PD). The authors integrate evidence from clinical trials, animal models, and mechanistic studies to explore how various forms of acupuncture, including manual needling, electroacupuncture (EA), moxibustion, acupoint catgut embedding (ACE), and transcutaneous electrical stimulation (TEAS/TENS), modulate inflammatory pathways implicated in menstrual pain.
Who was reviewed?
The review encompasses clinical RCTs of women with PD—as defined by cyclic menstrual pain without organic pathology—and preclinical rodent models of dysmenorrhea. Clinical studies span conditions such as chronic pelvic pain and IBS to illustrate acupuncture’s broader visceral analgesic effects, while animal experiments detail cytokine, chemokine, and leukocyte changes in PD models subjected to specific acupoint stimulation protocols.
Most important findings
Acupuncture and its variants consistently downregulate proinflammatory mediators—such as TNFα, IL‑1β, IL‑6, and NF‑κB activation—and reduce leukocyte infiltration (neutrophils, eosinophils, mast cells) in uterine and systemic tissues. EA at SP6/CV4 decreases serum TNFα and IL‑1, mitigating uterine contractions and pain behaviors in rats, while moxibustion lowers PGF2α and elevates β‑endorphin and NK cell activity. ACE inhibits NLRP3 inflammasome components (caspase‑1, IL‑18) and downregulates COX‑2 expression. TEAS/TENS studies suggest reductions in chemokines like CXCL8 and CCL2, although direct PD data remain sparse. Notably, none of the reviewed trials assess gut or uterine microbiome shifts, indicating a critical gap for microbiome–inflammation interactions in PD.
Key implications
By mapping how acupuncture attenuates key inflammatory cascades, this review equips clinicians to consider acupuncture as a targeted nonpharmacological intervention for PD. The absence of microbiome data highlights an opportunity to investigate the gut–uterine axis, exploring how microbial metabolites may modulate inflammatory responses and acupuncture efficacy. Future trials integrating microbiome profiling alongside inflammatory biomarkers could yield comprehensive signatures for personalized PD management.
Primary Dysmenorrhea in Relation to Oxidative Stress and Antioxidant Status: A Systematic Review of Case-Control Studies
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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This systematic review highlights elevated oxidative stress and potential antioxidant deficiencies in women with primary dysmenorrhea. While oxidative markers such as MDA and NO were significantly higher, the evidence on antioxidant status remains inconclusive, suggesting a need for further research into therapeutic interventions.
What was studied?
This systematic review examined the relationship between oxidative stress, antioxidant status, and inflammation markers in women with primary dysmenorrhea. The review synthesized findings from six case-control studies to understand the role of oxidative stress and antioxidant markers in this common gynecological disorder, focusing on markers such as lipid peroxidation, nitric oxide (NO), and various antioxidants.
Who was studied?
The studies included 175 women diagnosed with primary dysmenorrhea and 161 controls. The participants were predominantly from Turkey, with one study from Nigeria. The women with dysmenorrhea were diagnosed based on clinical symptoms, including fluctuating, spasmodic menstrual cramps, typically associated with the onset of menstruation. The control group consisted of women without any menstrual pain or related symptoms. The mean ages of the women in the case and control groups ranged from 20 to 27 years.
Most important findings
The review found elevated levels of oxidative stress markers, particularly malondialdehyde (MDA), a product of lipid peroxidation, in women with primary dysmenorrhea compared to controls. Additionally, increased nitric oxide (NO) levels were consistently found in the dysmenorrhea group, which could indicate endothelial dysfunction. In contrast, the evidence regarding antioxidant status was less clear. Some studies indicated lower levels of antioxidants like vitamin E and total antioxidant status (TAS) in dysmenorrheal women, while others found no significant differences. The inflammation marker high-sensitivity C-reactive protein (hs-CRP) was studied in one study but showed no significant differences between the groups.
Key implications
The findings suggest that oxidative stress plays a significant role in the pathophysiology of primary dysmenorrhea. Elevated lipid peroxidation and NO levels point to potential mechanisms involving endothelial dysfunction and inflammatory processes. Although antioxidant deficiencies were observed, the limited number of studies and markers assessed prevents definitive conclusions. These findings highlight the potential for therapeutic interventions targeting oxidative stress and antioxidants to alleviate symptoms of primary dysmenorrhea, though more research is needed to confirm these effects.
Diagnosis and Management of Primary Dysmenorrhea
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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Primary dysmenorrhea is a common, underdiagnosed condition that causes significant pain and affects women’s daily lives. The study highlights its pathophysiology, diagnostic approach, treatment options, and the need for greater awareness and research into its management.
What was studied?
The article discusses primary dysmenorrhea, a prevalent and often underdiagnosed condition characterized by recurrent, crampy lower abdominal pain during menstruation. This condition is typically associated with the release of excess prostanoids during endometrial sloughing, which causes myometrial hypercontractility and resulting pain. The paper also addresses the physical, emotional, and economic impacts of dysmenorrhea and reviews both diagnostic and management strategies. Emphasis is placed on the identification and treatment of primary dysmenorrhea while ruling out secondary causes, such as endometriosis or fibroids, that can mimic its symptoms.
Who was studied?
The article refers to a wide range of women experiencing primary dysmenorrhea, with a focus on adolescents and women aged 14 to 20, as this group often experiences significant absenteeism from school and work due to the condition. The study outlines the symptoms, physical findings, and the impact of the disorder on quality of life. Women of all ages who report menstrual pain are included in the general study population, with a particular focus on those whose symptoms do not stem from other gynecologic or non-gynecologic conditions.
Most important findings
The study finds that primary dysmenorrhea is associated with higher levels of prostaglandins, which are linked to uterine muscle contractions, ischemia, and pain. The pain and associated symptoms, such as nausea and diarrhea, peak around the time of menstruation and typically resolve after 2–3 days. The article stresses the significant negative impact on daily activities and overall quality of life, noting that many women fail to seek medical help due to the normalization of menstrual pain. Treatments such as NSAIDs and hormonal contraceptives have been shown to effectively reduce symptoms, but a portion of women (up to 18%) remain resistant to NSAID therapy. The study also highlights the need for further research, especially on the central nervous system changes that may underlie the condition.
Key implications
Primary dysmenorrhea is a chronic condition with considerable impacts on women’s quality of life. It is often underdiagnosed, as women tend to normalize the pain and delay seeking treatment. There is a need for increased awareness among clinicians to ensure early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, which includes NSAIDs and hormonal therapies. Further research on the role of the central nervous system in dysmenorrhea is needed to explore potential avenues for targeted therapies.
To explore the mechanism of acupoint application in the treatment of primary dysmenorrhea by 16S rDNA sequencing and metabolomics
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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This study explores how graphene-based warm uterus acupoint paste (GWUAP) treats primary dysmenorrhea by regulating intestinal microbiota and metabolites, highlighting its potential as a non-drug alternative therapy.
What was studied?
This study investigates the mechanisms by which graphene-based warm uterus acupoint paste (GWUAP) can treat primary dysmenorrhea (PD). It explores the effects of GWUAP on uterine tissue, pain severity, and the intestinal microbiota in a PD rat model. By utilizing 16S rDNA sequencing and fecal metabolomics, the study aims to uncover how GWUAP influences the microbiome and related metabolic pathways to reduce dysmenorrhea symptoms. The key aspects explored include the modulation of microbial communities and metabolites that may contribute to the therapeutic effects of GWUAP.
Who was studied?
The study was conducted using sexually mature female Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats, which were randomly assigned to control, model, and treatment groups. The rats in the model and treatment groups were administered estradiol benzoate combined with oxytocin to induce PD-like symptoms, while the control group was untreated. The treatment group received GWUAP, an acupoint therapy, while the model and control groups did not. Fecal samples from these rats were analyzed for microbial diversity, and serum and uterine tissue were evaluated for inflammatory markers and structural changes. This study provides insights into how GWUAP impacts both microbiome composition and metabolites.
Most important findings
The study found that GWUAP effectively alleviated the symptoms of PD in rats, as evidenced by a significant reduction in the torsion scores, improved uterine tissue pathology, and a decrease in serum levels of inflammatory markers like TNF-α and PGF2α. Additionally, GWUAP treatment restored the balance of the intestinal microbiota by increasing the abundance of beneficial bacteria, such as Lactobacillus, and reducing harmful bacteria, like Romboutsia. Metabolomics analysis revealed that GWUAP influenced 32 metabolites related to therapeutic effects, and several metabolic pathways, including steroid hormone biosynthesis, were significantly regulated. This suggests that GWUAP may exert its therapeutic effect by restoring microbial diversity and influencing metabolic pathways related to inflammation and pain.
Key implications
These findings suggest that GWUAP could be a promising alternative therapy for managing primary dysmenorrhea, particularly for those seeking non-pharmacological treatments. By regulating both the gut microbiota and associated metabolites, GWUAP offers a multifaceted approach to treating PD, which could reduce reliance on NSAIDs and other pain relievers. Clinicians may consider incorporating GWUAP into treatment plans for PD, particularly for patients seeking holistic, non-invasive alternatives. Further research is necessary to explore the long-term effects and potential for GWUAP in clinical settings.
Management of dysmenorrhea through yoga: A narrative review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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Yoga, especially asanas, pranayama, and yoga nidra, significantly reduces menstrual pain and distress in women with dysmenorrhea. These practices improve pain tolerance and overall well-being, offering a non-pharmacological alternative to traditional treatments.
What was studied?
This narrative review focused on the use of yoga as a complementary therapy for managing dysmenorrhea, a condition characterized by painful menstrual cramps. The review examined various yoga techniques, including asanas, pranayama (breathing exercises), and yoga nidra (deep relaxation), assessing their impact on reducing pain, stress, and improving overall well-being in women with primary dysmenorrhea. The authors conducted an extensive search of the literature, analyzing 10 studies involving different forms of yoga to determine the effectiveness of these practices in alleviating menstrual pain and associated symptoms.
Who was studied?
The review included studies involving women with primary dysmenorrhea, a condition that affects a significant number of menstruating women, causing lower abdominal cramps and pain, often radiating to the back and thighs. The participants varied in age, but the studies primarily focused on young women, including adolescents and college-aged females, who self-reported menstrual pain. The studies included in the review used a range of yoga interventions, including specific asanas (physical postures), pranayama, and yoga nidra, practiced over various durations, from a few weeks to several months, and compared their effects to control groups or baseline measurements.
Most important findings
The review highlighted that yoga interventions, particularly asanas and pranayama, provided significant relief from dysmenorrhea symptoms, including pain intensity and duration. Notably, yoga practices such as Surya namaskar, Bhujangasana, Marjariasana, and Matsyasana, combined with relaxation and meditation techniques, led to a marked reduction in pain intensity and improved overall menstrual health. The practice of pranayama, which focuses on controlled breathing, showed improvements in pain tolerance by activating the parasympathetic nervous system, reducing pain perception, and enhancing relaxation. Yoga nidra, a deep relaxation technique, also proved effective in reducing menstrual distress and improving quality of life, likely by reducing stress and regulating hormonal imbalances associated with dysmenorrhea.
Key implications
The findings of this review suggest that yoga, as a non-pharmacological intervention, can serve as an effective complementary therapy for managing primary dysmenorrhea. The holistic approach of yoga, which combines physical postures, controlled breathing, and mental relaxation, addresses both the physiological and psychological aspects of menstrual pain. Yoga can offer a low-cost, accessible, and safe alternative for women who experience menstrual pain but prefer to avoid or reduce reliance on medication. The reduction in pain and improvement in quality of life observed in the studies make yoga a promising adjunct to conventional treatments for dysmenorrhea. However, further studies with larger sample sizes and rigorous methodology are needed to establish definitive conclusions.
Significant Increase in Depression in Women With Primary Dysmenorrhea
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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This systematic review highlights the significant association between primary dysmenorrhea and depression, emphasizing the need for integrated care that addresses both physical and mental health in affected women.
What was studied?
This systematic review and meta-analysis aimed to evaluate the relationship between primary dysmenorrhea and depression in women. The studies included in this analysis focused on the prevalence of depressive symptoms in women suffering from primary dysmenorrhea compared to those without dysmenorrhea. The pooled data demonstrated a significant 1.72-fold increased risk of depressive symptoms among women with dysmenorrhea, as well as significantly higher Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) scores. The study also considered the effects of various sociodemographic factors, pain severity, and the interplay between menstrual pain and mental health.
Who was studied?
The study involved a diverse group of women of reproductive age, with a focus on individuals diagnosed with primary dysmenorrhea. The participants were primarily from observational studies, including cross-sectional and case-control trials. The meta-analysis included data from over 3,000 women, with a specific comparison between those suffering from dysmenorrhea and a healthy control group of women without menstrual pain. The studies also varied by geographical location, age, and other sociodemographic factors that may influence both dysmenorrhea and depression, highlighting the heterogeneity in the results.
Most important findings
The analysis confirmed a significant association between primary dysmenorrhea and depression. Women with dysmenorrhea were found to have a much higher prevalence of depression, with 25.2% of dysmenorrhea sufferers reporting depressive symptoms, compared to 12.3% of the control group. Additionally, the BDI scores for women with dysmenorrhea were significantly higher, further supporting the link between menstrual pain and depression. However, some studies included in the meta-analysis did not find this association, indicating potential variability in individual responses or methodological differences.
Key implications
The findings suggest that primary dysmenorrhea is not just a physical condition but also significantly affects mental health, increasing the risk of depression. Clinicians should be aware of the potential for depressive symptoms in women with dysmenorrhea and consider integrating mental health assessments into the management of menstrual pain. Interventions targeting dysmenorrhea might reduce both physical and mental health burdens for affected women, improving their overall quality of life. Additionally, understanding the bidirectional relationship between chronic pain and mental health can help guide treatment strategies, such as addressing pain management alongside psychological support.
Effects of a Bovine Lactoferrin Formulation from Cow’s Milk on Menstrual Distress in Volunteers
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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FeLf improved psychological symptoms related to menstrual distress, particularly autonomic balance, in healthy women. However, no significant effects on menstrual pain or quality of life were observed.
What was studied?
This study explored the effects of a bovine lactoferrin formulation (FeLf) from cow's milk on menstrual distress. The researchers aimed to assess whether FeLf could alleviate various menstrual symptoms, including psychological distress and pain. FeLf, a complex of lactoferrin and iron, was administered daily from day ten of the luteal phase to day four of the follicular phase. The study measured menstrual distress using the Moos Menstrual Distress Questionnaire (MDQ), heart rate variability (as an index of autonomic nerve balance), and self-reported pain and quality of life scores.
Who was studied?
The study involved 35 healthy Japanese women aged 20–49 years, all with regular menstrual cycles. Participants were selected based on the presence of subjective dysphoria during menstruation, specifically pain. Women with allergies to dairy products or other exclusion criteria were excluded from the study. The study was conducted over two menstrual cycles, with participants receiving either FeLf or a placebo during their first cycle and switching treatments after a washout period.
Most important findings
The study found that FeLf significantly improved the MDQ score for the autonomic nervous system subscale, indicating better autonomic balance compared to the placebo. Specifically, parasympathetic nervous system activity was enhanced in the FeLf group. Additionally, heart rate variability (HFA) was significantly higher in the FeLf group, suggesting a beneficial effect on autonomic function during menstruation. However, no significant differences were found in menstrual pain intensity or overall quality of life between the FeLf and placebo groups. The study also noted that no side effects were reported during the intervention, suggesting FeLf is well-tolerated.
Key implications
The findings suggest that FeLf could be a beneficial non-pharmacological approach for improving the psychological and autonomic symptoms associated with menstrual distress. While it did not significantly reduce menstrual pain, its positive effects on the autonomic nervous system highlight its potential for alleviating the psychological aspects of dysmenorrhea. These results indicate that FeLf may offer a safe and effective alternative for women seeking relief from menstrual distress, particularly for those who prefer non-pharmacological treatments. However, further studies with larger sample sizes and longer treatment durations are needed to fully understand its impact on pain and overall quality of life.
The effects of vitamin D and calcium on primary dysmenorrhea: a systematic review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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Vitamin D and calcium supplementation can significantly reduce primary dysmenorrhea symptoms and reliance on analgesics. The inverse relationship between serum vitamin D and calcium levels and dysmenorrhea severity supports their use as effective adjunct therapies.
What was studied?
This review aimed to assess the effects of vitamin D and calcium supplementation on primary dysmenorrhea. Primary dysmenorrhea is characterized by painful menstrual cramps that occur in the absence of any pelvic pathology. The review involved an analysis of studies published between 2010 and 2020, focusing on the relationship between serum levels of vitamin D and calcium and the severity of dysmenorrhea. Various studies were examined that included interventions with either vitamin D, calcium, or a combination of both, to determine their impact on reducing pain and the reliance on analgesics during menstruation.
Who was studied?
The studies included in the review involved women of reproductive age who experienced primary dysmenorrhea. Participants had regular cycles and were not diagnosed with secondary dysmenorrhea or underlying reproductive disorders such as endometriosis. A total of 2,774 participants were included across the 17 studies, most of whom had a normal body mass index (BMI). These participants received vitamin D and/or calcium supplements, and their dysmenorrhea severity was assessed using various tools such as the Visual Analog Scale (VAS) or Numeric Rating Scale (NRS).
Most important findings
The review found a significant inverse relationship between serum vitamin D and calcium levels and the severity of primary dysmenorrhea. Specifically, low serum levels of vitamin D were associated with more severe menstrual pain. Supplementation with vitamin D and calcium led to a reduction in pain severity, with several studies reporting that participants who received these supplements experienced a reduction in their reliance on non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs). In some studies, high-dose vitamin D (e.g., 50,000 IU weekly) and calcium (1,200 mg daily) were found to significantly alleviate dysmenorrhea symptoms, improving overall quality of life for the participants. The review also highlighted the role of vitamin D in regulating inflammatory cytokines and calcium in uterine muscle contractions, both of which contribute to menstrual pain.
Key implications
The findings suggest that vitamin D and calcium supplementation could serve as an effective non-pharmacological treatment for primary dysmenorrhea. These supplements not only help in reducing pain intensity but also decrease the need for conventional pain relief medications, such as NSAIDs, which can have adverse side effects with long-term use. Given the widespread prevalence of vitamin D and calcium deficiency among women with dysmenorrhea, supplementation may offer a simple and safe alternative therapy for pain management.
Association between cigarette smoking and the risk of dysmenorrhea: A meta-analysis of observational studies
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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This meta-analysis demonstrates that cigarette smoking increases the risk of dysmenorrhea, with both current and former smokers showing a significantly higher likelihood of experiencing menstrual pain. Smoking cessation could be an effective intervention to alleviate symptoms.
What was studied?
This meta-analysis examined the association between cigarette smoking and the risk of dysmenorrhea, which refers to painful menstrual cramps. The analysis included 24 observational studies with a total of 27,091 participants. The aim was to synthesize previous findings on the relationship between smoking (both current and former) and the prevalence of dysmenorrhea, using statistical tools to assess the strength and consistency of this link. This is crucial as dysmenorrhea affects a large percentage of women, and identifying modifiable risk factors could lead to better prevention and management strategies.
Who was studied?
The study reviewed 24 observational studies involving women of reproductive age from diverse regions, including Europe, Asia, North America, and Oceania. The participants were categorized into smokers (current and former) and non-smokers, with ages ranging from 12 to 59 years. These studies varied in design, including case-control, cohort, and cross-sectional studies. The focus was on women who reported experiencing dysmenorrhea, with some studies specifying primary dysmenorrhea (painful menstruation without underlying pathology) and others reporting any form of menstrual pain.
Most important findings
The pooled analysis indicated that cigarette smokers were 1.45 times more likely to experience dysmenorrhea than non-smokers. Current smokers were 1.50 times more likely to suffer from dysmenorrhea compared to those who had never smoked. Former smokers had a 1.31-fold increased risk compared to non-smokers. Subgroup analysis showed that the association was strongest in cross-sectional studies and for primary dysmenorrhea, with smokers having a 56% increased likelihood of developing primary dysmenorrhea.
Key implications
The study strongly suggests that smoking, both current and former, significantly increases the risk of dysmenorrhea. This finding highlights the potential for smoking cessation programs as an intervention to reduce the prevalence of dysmenorrhea among women of reproductive age. The consistent association observed across different study types and regions underscores the relevance of smoking as a modifiable risk factor for this condition. Health education campaigns focused on the dangers of smoking and its impact on menstrual health could be instrumental in reducing the burden of dysmenorrhea.
Insight into Dysmenorrhea Research from 1992 to 2022: A Bibliometric Analysis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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A bibliometric analysis of dysmenorrhea research from 1992 to 2022 reveals increasing global interest in its pathogenesis, treatment, and functional connectivity. It emphasizes the role of prostaglandins, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, and traditional Chinese medicine in managing the condition.
What was studied?
This bibliometric analysis explores the global research trends and developments in dysmenorrhea over the past 30 years (1992-2022). The study investigates a broad range of publications from the Web of Science, focusing on the pathogenesis, treatment, and self-management strategies for primary dysmenorrhea (PD). The review categorizes the research into major themes, including the epidemiology of the condition, its associated risk factors, and the emerging focus on functional connectivity within the brain's neural networks. The paper also highlights significant contributions from traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) in treating dysmenorrhea, such as acupuncture and moxibustion.
Who was studied?
The analysis includes global studies on dysmenorrhea, with a particular focus on research originating from China, the United States, and Iran. The study investigates a variety of dysmenorrhea-related factors such as pathogenesis, treatment effectiveness, and the prevalence of PD across different age groups, notably in women aged 17–24. The research also explores self-management practices among women experiencing dysmenorrhea, including lifestyle changes, herbal treatments, and the use of non-pharmacological interventions like heating pads and exercise.
Most important findings
The study shows that prostaglandins, specifically PGF2α and PGE2, are widely recognized as the primary mediators in the pathogenesis of PD, causing painful uterine contractions. Functional connectivity studies have become an emerging area of research, linking dysmenorrhea with structural and functional changes in brain regions involved in pain processing. The bibliometric analysis reveals a steady increase in publications related to dysmenorrhea, particularly from China and the United States. Notably, NSAIDs continue to be the most common pharmacological treatment, although a growing body of research supports the use of traditional Chinese medicine, including acupuncture and herbal treatments, as adjunctive therapies. The most significant recent keyword trends include "functional connectivity," "endometriosis," and "herbal medicine."
Key implications
The increasing volume of research on dysmenorrhea highlights the global attention given to this common condition, with particular emphasis on understanding its pathophysiology and effective treatments. The role of traditional Chinese medicine is gaining recognition, but further clinical evidence is needed to substantiate its efficacy compared to conventional treatments. Given the varying prevalence rates, especially in young women, clinicians should consider individualized treatment strategies, including both pharmacological and non-pharmacological options. More research is needed to explore the mechanisms of functional connectivity and its relationship with pain sensitivity in dysmenorrhea.
Prevalence and Impact of Dysmenorrhea on Hispanic Female Adolescent
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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Primary dysmenorrhea is a common and impactful condition affecting young women. This review explores its pathophysiology, symptoms, and treatment options to improve diagnosis and management in clinical practice.
What was studied?
This review article examines primary dysmenorrhea (PD), a common gynecological condition characterized by painful uterine cramps that occur during menstruation in the absence of pelvic pathology. The study highlights the pathophysiology of PD, which involves the increased secretion of prostaglandins F2α (PGF2α) and E2 (PGE2) during the endometrial sloughing phase of menstruation. These prostaglandins trigger uterine contractions and ischemia, causing pain. The article also explores the various physical and psychological symptoms that accompany PD, including headache, nausea, mood disturbances, and fatigue. Additionally, the review covers the impact of PD on the quality of life (QOL) and the effectiveness of different treatment options, including pharmacological and non-pharmacological therapies.
Who was studied?
The article focuses on females of reproductive age, particularly young women aged 18–24, who are most commonly affected by primary dysmenorrhea. PD is often underdiagnosed as many women perceive menstrual pain as a normal part of menstruation and do not seek medical help. The study emphasizes the significant negative impact that PD has on the daily lives of these women, including high rates of absenteeism from school or work, reduced productivity, and a lower quality of life. The review provides insights based on various studies conducted across different populations, including young females from diverse cultural backgrounds.
Most important findings
The pathogenesis of primary dysmenorrhea is mainly driven by elevated levels of prostaglandins, particularly PGF2α and PGE2, which increase myometrial contractions and cause uterine ischemia. This leads to the hyper-sensitization of pain fibers, resulting in menstrual pain. The article also highlights that PD affects a large percentage of women, with 45% to 95% of females in reproductive age experiencing the condition, and 2% to 29% suffering from severe pain. The impact of PD on quality of life is significant, as it contributes to high absenteeism rates from school and work, as well as a decrease in productivity. For treatment, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) and hormonal contraceptives are the first-line options, both of which aim to reduce prostaglandin production. Non-pharmacological interventions like exercise and heat therapy have also been shown to reduce menstrual pain, although evidence on their efficacy is mixed.
Key implications
Primary dysmenorrhea is a widespread and underrecognized condition that significantly impairs the quality of life for many young women. Clinicians must be more proactive in diagnosing and managing PD, offering effective treatment options tailored to individual patient needs. NSAIDs and hormonal contraceptives remain the primary therapies, but non-pharmacological treatments, such as heat therapy and exercise, can be beneficial adjuncts. Furthermore, educating patients about PD, its treatment options, and encouraging shared decision-making between patients and healthcare providers is essential for optimizing patient satisfaction and treatment adherence.
Primary Dysmenorrhea: Pathophysiology, Diagnosis, and Treatment Updates
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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This review explores the pathophysiology, impact, and treatment of primary dysmenorrhea, emphasizing the role of prostaglandins and the significant effects on women’s quality of life. It highlights current pharmacological and non-pharmacological treatment options, suggesting a need for personalized, holistic approaches to management.
What was studied?
The study reviewed primary dysmenorrhea (PD), a common condition affecting many women of reproductive age, characterized by painful menstrual cramps that occur in the absence of pelvic pathology. The pain typically begins just before or at the onset of menstruation and lasts for up to 72 hours. The pathophysiology of PD is primarily driven by the elevated levels of prostaglandins, particularly PGF2α and PGE2, which stimulate uterine contractions and vasoconstriction, leading to ischemia, pain, and the activation of pain fibers. The study also examined how the condition affects quality of life (QOL) and identified various treatment options, including both pharmacological and non-pharmacological interventions. The review highlights the prevalence of PD and the negative impact it has on women’s physical and mental health, often resulting in absenteeism from school or work and impaired daily functioning.
Who was studied?
The review provides insights into primary dysmenorrhea based on research and evidence from a variety of clinical studies involving women of reproductive age who experience menstrual cramps. The studies reviewed primarily focus on young females, many of whom experience the onset of PD shortly after menarche, typically within 6 to 24 months. The review draws on data from diverse ethnic and geographic populations to provide a comprehensive overview of the condition, its impact on life, and the available treatment methods. It also includes various therapeutic interventions, such as nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), hormonal contraceptives, and non-pharmacological approaches like exercise, yoga, and acupuncture.
Most important findings
The primary finding of this study is the significant role of prostaglandins (PGF2α and PGE2) in the pathogenesis of primary dysmenorrhea. Elevated prostaglandin levels in the uterine tissues lead to intense contractions, ischemia, and hypoxia, which cause pain during menstruation. Women with PD experience higher levels of these prostaglandins compared to those without the condition, particularly in the luteal phase of their menstrual cycle. Additionally, the study underscores the broad physical and psychological impact of PD. Symptoms extend beyond pain and include fatigue, headaches, sleep disturbances, nausea, gastrointestinal issues, and emotional disturbances such as anxiety and depression.
Treatment for PD is typically aimed at reducing pain and improving quality of life (QOL). The most commonly recommended pharmacological treatments include NSAIDs and hormonal contraceptives, which help by reducing prostaglandin synthesis and regulating hormonal levels. However, the study emphasizes the need for a personalized approach to treatment, as some women may experience inadequate relief from standard therapies. Non-pharmacological interventions, such as exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and TENS (transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation), also provide relief for many women, but their efficacy varies, and further research is required to confirm their long-term benefits.
Key implications
The review highlights the need for better diagnosis, management, and education around PD. Despite being a common condition, PD is often underreported and inadequately treated. Women frequently endure severe symptoms without seeking medical advice due to embarrassment or the belief that menstrual pain is a natural, unavoidable part of menstruation. The review emphasizes that healthcare providers should focus on early intervention and educate women about available treatments. Additionally, considering the significant impact of PD on QOL, including absenteeism from school and work, healthcare providers must take a more proactive approach in both diagnosing and offering tailored treatment plans. Non-pharmacological interventions should be considered as adjuncts to standard treatments to improve overall patient outcomes, and the efficacy of these therapies should be further explored through well-designed studies.
Vitamin Effects in Primary Dysmenorrhea
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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This review evaluates the potential therapeutic role of vitamins (D, E, B1, C, K) in reducing primary dysmenorrhea symptoms, proposing them as alternatives to NSAIDs, with promising results, particularly in inflammation and oxidative stress modulation.
What was reviewed?
This narrative review explores the potential role of vitamins in the management of primary dysmenorrhea, a common menstrual disorder affecting many women. The authors examined studies focused on vitamin D, E, B1, C, and K supplementation, specifically their anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, and analgesic effects in reducing menstrual pain. The review synthesizes findings from clinical trials published within the last decade, highlighting emerging evidence on how vitamins could serve as alternatives to nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) in managing dysmenorrhea-related pain. The authors also explore the biochemical mechanisms through which these vitamins might alleviate symptoms by modulating inflammatory pathways and oxidative stress.
Who was reviewed?
The review includes data from 13 clinical trials involving women of reproductive age, primarily between 15 and 45 years, diagnosed with primary dysmenorrhea. The subjects were treated with various vitamin supplements, including vitamin D (alone or combined with calcium), vitamin E, vitamin B1, and vitamin C. Studies included randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and double-blind placebo-controlled designs, focusing on pain severity, menstrual symptoms, and overall quality of life. Several studies specifically targeted populations with vitamin deficiencies, particularly vitamin D.
Most important findings
Vitamin D supplementation emerged as particularly beneficial for reducing dysmenorrhea symptoms, likely due to its anti-inflammatory properties. Studies showed that high doses of vitamin D (up to 300,000 IU) led to significant pain reduction, especially in women with vitamin D deficiency. Vitamin E, through its antioxidant properties, also demonstrated effectiveness in alleviating pain and reducing menstrual blood loss. Vitamin B1 (thiamine) was effective in reducing pain severity after two months of supplementation, offering a safer alternative to NSAIDs. Vitamin K, when administered via acupuncture injection, resulted in rapid pain relief. The combination of vitamin E and vitamin C in one study showed improvements in oxidative stress markers, with a significant reduction in dysmenorrhea symptoms.
Key implications
This review highlights the potential for vitamins to serve as viable alternatives or adjuncts to NSAIDs in managing primary dysmenorrhea. Given the concerns about the side effects of long-term NSAID use, particularly gastrointestinal issues, vitamins with anti-inflammatory and antioxidant properties could provide a safer, non-pharmacological option for managing menstrual pain. However, the review calls for more clinical trials to refine dosage recommendations and further explore the underlying mechanisms, particularly the role of vitamins in modulating inflammatory markers such as prostaglandins. Additionally, further studies exploring the microbiome's involvement in dysmenorrhea and its potential interactions with vitamin supplementation could provide more insights into personalized treatment strategies.
Acupuncture with or without moxibustion for primary dysmenorrhea
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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This protocol outlines a systematic review and meta‐analysis plan to evaluate acupuncture, with or without moxibustion, for pain relief and safety in women with primary dysmenorrhea.
What was reviewed?
The authors designed a protocol to systematically review randomized controlled trials of acupuncture, with or without moxibustion, in the treatment of primary dysmenorrhea. They plan to search nine databases, including PubMed, Embase, and CNKI, from their inception to August 2020, using both MeSH terms and free‐text keywords related to dysmenorrhea, acupuncture, and moxibustion. Two independent reviewers will screen, extract data, and assess study quality using the Cochrane risk‐of‐bias tool, and RevMan 5.4 will facilitate meta‐analysis of primary and secondary outcomes.
Who was reviewed?
The protocol focuses exclusively on women of reproductive age diagnosed with primary dysmenorrhea according to the Canadian Society of Obstetricians and Gynecologists’ criteria. It excludes participants with organic pelvic pathology (such as endometriosis or fibroids) and those combining acupuncture or moxibustion with other complementary therapies. Control groups may include sham acupuncture, placebo, pharmacotherapy, or no treatment, ensuring comparability between arms.
Most important findings
As a protocol, this work does not report empirical findings; instead, it outlines its intent to evaluate pain intensity—measured by visual analog scale, numerical rating scale, or Cox retrospective symptom scale—as the primary outcome. It will also examine overall response rates, quality of life scores, and adverse events. The authors anticipate calculating risk ratios for dichotomous data and mean differences for continuous measures, applying fixed‐ or random‐effects models based on heterogeneity assessments.
Key implications
By predefining rigorous inclusion criteria and analytical methods, this protocol aims to generate high‐quality, evidence‐based recommendations on the efficacy and safety of acupuncture with or without moxibustion for primary dysmenorrhea. Its findings will guide clinicians in selecting optimal nonpharmacological pain management strategies and identify gaps for future research.
Metabolomics study on primary dysmenorrhea patients during the luteal regression stage
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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This metabolomics study identifies ten urinary biomarkers linked to primary dysmenorrhea, providing insights into the metabolic disruptions that contribute to PD and suggesting potential new therapeutic targets.
What was studied?
This study utilized ultra-performance liquid chromatography coupled with quadrupole-time-of-flight mass spectrometry (UPLC-Q/TOF-MS) to perform metabolomic profiling of urine samples from patients with primary dysmenorrhea (PD) during the luteal regression stage. The aim was to identify metabolic biomarkers associated with PD and understand the underlying biochemical changes during this stage of the menstrual cycle. The analysis revealed differences in urinary metabolites between PD patients and healthy controls, identifying ten significant biomarkers that could potentially serve as diagnostic tools or therapeutic targets for PD.
Who was studied?
The study included 36 patients diagnosed with primary dysmenorrhea and 27 healthy controls. The patients with PD were selected based on clinical criteria for severe dysmenorrhea symptoms, with pain severity recorded as greater than 8 on a standard pain scale. Urine samples were collected during the luteal regression stage, specifically three days prior to menstruation, a phase critical for understanding dysmenorrhea's biochemical profile. Both groups were from the Tianjin Maternity Hospital and Tianjin University of Chinese Medicine, all of whom provided informed consent.
Most important findings
The metabolomic analysis identified ten biomarkers significantly altered in PD patients during the luteal regression stage. These biomarkers included citrulline, ornithine, androstenedione, progesterone, phytosphingosine, dihydrocortisol, and 17-hydroxyprogesterone, all of which showed decreased levels in PD patients. In contrast, sphinganine, histidine, and 15-keto-prostaglandin F2α were found to be elevated in PD patients. These findings suggest that metabolic perturbations in steroid hormone biosynthesis, sphingolipid metabolism, and arginine/proline metabolism may contribute to the pathophysiology of dysmenorrhea. The study’s use of ROC curve analysis confirmed that several biomarkers had strong discriminatory power between PD patients and healthy controls, demonstrating their potential as diagnostic markers.
Key implications
The findings from this metabolomics study highlight the potential for using urinary biomarkers as a diagnostic and therapeutic approach for managing primary dysmenorrhea. By identifying specific metabolic changes associated with PD, this study opens avenues for the development of targeted therapies that could alleviate symptoms by modulating the identified metabolic pathways. Moreover, the study underscores the need for further research into how these biomarkers can be integrated into clinical practice, offering non-invasive, effective tools for early detection and personalized treatment plans for PD.
Associations between dysmenorrhea symptom-based phenotypes and vaginal microbiome: A pilot study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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This study links dysmenorrhea symptom phenotypes with distinct vaginal microbiome compositions, suggesting that microbiome imbalances contribute to more severe menstrual pain, which could be targeted in new treatments.
What was studied?
This pilot study aimed to explore the relationship between different symptom-based phenotypes of dysmenorrhea and the vaginal microbiome. Researchers hypothesized that variations in dysmenorrhea symptoms would be associated with differences in the vaginal microbiome during both on-menses and off-menses periods. The study involved a prospective, longitudinal design where 20 women, aged 15 to 24, were categorized into three dysmenorrhea phenotypes: mild localized pain, severe localized pain, and multiple severe symptoms with gastrointestinal involvement. Vaginal microbiome samples were collected using self-collected swabs during both phases of the menstrual cycle, and the microbiomes were analyzed using 16S rRNA gene sequencing to identify bacterial community compositions and their relationship to the severity of symptoms.
Who was studied?
The study focused on 20 women who met the inclusion criteria of being aged 15 to 24, with regular menstrual cycles (24–38 days), no major gynecological conditions such as endometriosis, and no use of hormonal contraceptives or antibiotics in the last three months. These women were grouped based on their dysmenorrhea symptom phenotypes: 12 participants with mild localized pain, 2 with severe localized pain, and 6 with multiple severe symptoms including gastrointestinal issues. Vaginal swabs were collected during the participants’ menstrual and non-menstrual periods to assess changes in the vaginal microbiome.
Most important findings
The study found significant differences in vaginal microbiome compositions between the dysmenorrhea phenotypes during menstruation, but not in the off-menses phase. The "multiple severe symptoms" phenotype exhibited a significantly lower abundance of Lactobacillus crispatus and a higher presence of Atopobium, Gardnerella, and Prevotella species compared to the "mild localized pain" phenotype during menstruation. These findings suggest that more severe symptoms of dysmenorrhea are linked to a dysbiotic vaginal microbiome, characterized by a reduced abundance of protective Lactobacillus and an overrepresentation of potentially pro-inflammatory bacteria. Additionally, changes in the vaginal microbiome from off-menses to on-menses were more pronounced in the "multiple severe symptoms" phenotype, showing a larger shift in bacterial abundances, particularly in the Lactobacillus and non-Lactobacillus groups.
Key implications
The findings of this study suggest that the vaginal microbiome may play a significant role in the severity of dysmenorrhea symptoms. Women with more severe symptom phenotypes exhibit microbiome profiles with higher levels of pro-inflammatory bacteria, which may contribute to increased pain and inflammation during menstruation. These results highlight the potential for targeting the vaginal microbiome in dysmenorrhea management, suggesting that interventions aimed at restoring a healthy microbial balance, such as probiotics or lifestyle changes, could offer new avenues for treating dysmenorrhea, particularly in cases with severe symptoms. Further research with larger sample sizes and more diverse populations is needed to confirm these findings and develop microbiome-targeted therapies for dysmenorrhea.
Relationship between Diet, Menstrual Pain and other Menstrual Characteristics among Spanish Students
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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This study links specific elements of the Mediterranean diet, particularly fruit and olive oil intake, to menstrual pain and characteristics, highlighting potential roles for anti-inflammatory foods in menstrual health among Spanish university women.
What was studied?
This cross-sectional study explored the relationship between adherence to the Mediterranean diet, consumption of local foods typical of southern Spain, alcohol intake, and menstrual characteristics, such as pain, cycle length, flow, and regularity, among Spanish university women. The researchers aimed to determine whether specific dietary patterns or local food consumption influenced menstrual pain (dysmenorrhea) and other key menstrual features. Dietary adherence was assessed using the KIDMED questionnaire, while menstrual pain was measured with a visual analogue scale. The study also evaluated the impact of alcohol consumption (measured in standard drink units) alongside these dietary factors.
Who was studied?
The research involved 311 female health science students, aged 18–35, enrolled at the University of Huelva, Andalusia, Spain, during the 2018/2019 academic year. Participants were included if they met the age criterion and were not abroad on an academic exchange at the time of data collection. The mean age was 21.17 years, and the sample predominantly reflected normal BMI ranges according to WHO classification. All women completed a self-report questionnaire on their dietary habits, menstrual characteristics, and local food and alcohol consumption.
Most important findings
The majority of participants had moderate adherence to the Mediterranean diet (MD), with only 29.6% demonstrating high adherence. Low adherence to the MD was associated with longer menstrual cycles, while daily olive oil consumption correlated with reduced menstrual flow. Eating less than two pieces of fruit per day markedly increased the risk of experiencing menstrual pain, and consuming pulses more than once a week also raised the likelihood of dysmenorrhea. In contrast, women consuming strawberries and olive oil daily were less likely to report menstrual pain, although these differences were not statistically significant. Alcohol consumption was positively correlated with cycle length, but not with menstrual pain. Consumption of cured ham was linked to heavier menstrual bleeding and a higher percentage of severe pain among women with dysmenorrhea. Notably, no overall association was found between total MD adherence and prevalence or intensity of menstrual pain, but specific dietary elements, particularly fruit intake, showed significant protective effects. These findings highlight nuanced dietary-microbiome interactions potentially relevant for menstrual health, especially regarding anti-inflammatory and antioxidant-rich foods like olive oil and fruit.
Key implications
This study suggests that while general adherence to the Mediterranean diet may not directly reduce menstrual pain, specific dietary behaviors, such as higher fruit consumption and regular use of olive oil, are associated with more favorable menstrual characteristics, including reduced pain and lighter menstrual flow. The findings support the potential of micronutrient-rich, anti-inflammatory foods in modulating menstrual health, possibly through effects on the gut and systemic inflammation. For clinicians, these results underscore the importance of dietary counseling for young women with menstrual complaints, promoting increased fruit intake and the use of olive oil while advising moderation in processed meat consumption. The observed associations also provide a foundation for further research into microbiome-mediated mechanisms underlying menstrual disorders and dietary interventions.
Effect of Vitamin D Supplementation on Primary Dysmenorrhea
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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A systematic review and meta-analysis showed that vitamin D supplementation effectively reduces primary dysmenorrhea pain, especially with doses over 50,000 IU weekly, with significant improvements in pain severity and serum 25(OH)D levels.
What was studied?
This study systematically reviewed the effectiveness of vitamin D supplementation in alleviating primary dysmenorrhea symptoms. Dysmenorrhea, characterized by painful menstruation, often results from an inflammatory response. The study focused on randomized controlled trials (RCTs) that examined the effects of oral vitamin D, assessing pain levels using the Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) and Numerical Rating Scale (NRS). A total of nine RCTs were included in the meta-analysis to evaluate various dosages and administration frequencies of vitamin D supplementation.
Who was studied?
The study analyzed data from 695 participants across multiple RCTs, including women diagnosed with primary dysmenorrhea. These women were selected based on a normal menstrual cycle and no underlying reproductive disorders like endometriosis or fibroids. The participants were primarily from different age groups and varied geographical regions. The trials compared vitamin D supplementation against a placebo, with varying doses ranging from 5000 IU to 300,000 IU.
Most important findings
The meta-analysis revealed a significant reduction in the severity of dysmenorrhea pain among those who received vitamin D supplementation compared to the placebo group. The standardized mean difference (SMD) was −1.404 (95% CI: −2.078 to −0.731), indicating a strong therapeutic effect. Subgroup analyses showed that a weekly dose of over 50,000 IU of vitamin D significantly alleviated pain, regardless of the duration of the supplementation period. Additionally, the studies found a positive correlation between higher serum levels of 25(OH)D and reduced pain intensity. Importantly, the analysis also highlighted the significant role of vitamin D in regulating prostaglandin (PG) levels, which are central to dysmenorrhea's pathophysiology.
Key implications
The findings suggest that vitamin D supplementation can be an effective alternative treatment for primary dysmenorrhea, especially for those who experience side effects or contraindications with NSAIDs or oral contraceptives. Given that vitamin D deficiency is common among women with dysmenorrhea, this study supports considering vitamin D as a first-line therapy for pain management in primary dysmenorrhea. However, careful monitoring of vitamin D levels is recommended to avoid potential toxicity, particularly with long-term high-dose supplementation. Further research is needed to establish optimal dosing strategies and explore potential interactions with other micronutrients or treatments.
Efficacy of Zinc Supplementation in the Management of Primary Dysmenorrhea
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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Zinc supplementation significantly reduces pain severity in women with primary dysmenorrhea, especially with longer durations of use, offering a safe and effective treatment option.
What was studied?
This study is a systematic review and meta-analysis that investigates the efficacy of zinc supplementation in managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD). Primary dysmenorrhea is a common condition marked by painful menstrual cramps that occur without an underlying pelvic pathology. The researchers aimed to assess the impact of zinc supplementation on pain severity and associated symptoms, with a focus on the dosage and treatment duration.
Who was studied?
The study reviewed randomized controlled trials (RCTs) that included women diagnosed with primary dysmenorrhea. Participants were predominantly adolescent and young adult females, particularly university students from regions where zinc deficiency is more prevalent. The trials considered different zinc dosages and the duration of treatment, focusing on their impact on reducing pain severity in women experiencing dysmenorrhea.
Most important findings
Zinc supplementation was found to significantly reduce the severity of menstrual pain compared to placebo. The meta-analysis revealed that doses as low as 7 mg/day of elemental zinc were sufficient to achieve clinically significant pain relief, and longer treatment durations (≥8 weeks) led to more substantial reductions in pain. Additionally, the study demonstrated that zinc supplementation had a favorable safety profile, with only mild side effects like gastrointestinal discomfort being reported. No significant difference in adverse events between the zinc and placebo groups was observed. The findings also suggested that zinc may exert its effects by modulating oxidative stress and inflammatory responses, particularly through the inhibition of prostaglandin production and enhancement of uterine microcirculation.
Key implications
The findings suggest that zinc supplementation is an effective and well-tolerated option for managing primary dysmenorrhea, with notable improvements in pain severity after regular use. Given its anti-inflammatory and antioxidant properties, zinc presents a promising non-pharmacological approach to pain relief in women with PD. The study supports the use of lower zinc doses as a practical and safe intervention, though further research is needed to explore the long-term effects and broader applicability across diverse populations.
Impact of Probiotic Supplementation and High-Intensity Interval Training on Primary Dysmenorrhea
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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HIIT significantly improved pain and physical fitness in women with primary dysmenorrhea, while probiotics showed some benefits in alleviating premenstrual symptoms. However, probiotics alone did not impact hormone levels or inflammation.
What was studied?
This randomized, double-blind, controlled trial investigated the effects of probiotic supplementation and high-intensity interval training (HIIT) on primary dysmenorrhea (PD). Researchers aimed to understand how these interventions influenced menstrual distress, pain severity, inflammation, hormonal modulation, and physical fitness in women. Participants were divided into different treatment groups receiving either HIIT, probiotics, both, or a placebo, with pre- and post-intervention assessments of various biochemical markers, hormone levels, menstrual pain, and overall physical health.
Who was studied?
The study included 65 female participants aged 18–40 years, diagnosed with primary dysmenorrhea, from a Taiwanese university. Participants were randomly assigned to control or intervention groups. Exclusion criteria included the use of hormone therapy, gastrointestinal disorders, and other medical conditions. Data on menstrual health and physical fitness were gathered before and after the 10-week intervention.
Most important findings
The study found significant improvements in menstrual distress, pain severity, and physical fitness among those who participated in HIIT, particularly in the groups that combined HIIT with probiotics. Pain levels, as measured by the Short-Form McGill Pain Questionnaire (SF-MPQ) and Visual Analog Scale (VAS), significantly decreased in the HIIT groups compared to those receiving only probiotics or placebo. Hormonal changes were also observed, with the HIIT groups experiencing a decrease in estradiol and prolactin, and an increase in progesterone and cortisol, indicating a hormonal modulation effect. However, probiotics alone did not significantly impact physical fitness or hormone levels.
Key implications
This study suggests that combining probiotic supplementation with HIIT may offer a promising complementary approach for managing primary dysmenorrhea by reducing pain and improving physical fitness. While probiotics showed some benefit in alleviating premenstrual symptoms, the lack of hormonal and inflammatory modulation calls for further research to explore the mechanisms through which probiotics interact with other treatments. The results support the integration of exercise and probiotics in holistic care strategies for women suffering from dysmenorrhea.
The Efficacy of Zinc Administration in the Treatment of Primary Dysmenorrhea
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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This study demonstrates that zinc supplementation, when combined with mefenamic acid, significantly reduces primary dysmenorrhea pain and incidence, offering a more effective treatment strategy than mefenamic acid alone.
What was studied?
This clinical trial evaluated the efficacy of zinc supplementation in combination with mefenamic acid in the treatment of primary dysmenorrhea. The study compared the effectiveness of this combined treatment to mefenamic acid alone in reducing pain severity and the incidence of dysmenorrhea over a three-month period. Primary dysmenorrhea is characterized by painful menstrual cramps caused by uterine contractions, and zinc has been hypothesized to alleviate these symptoms by modulating prostaglandin metabolism and reducing inflammation.
Who was studied?
The study involved 200 female university students who had a history of primary dysmenorrhea. Participants were between the ages of 18 and 26, with regular menstrual cycles and no significant diseases. The students were randomly assigned to one of two groups: the intervention group received zinc supplementation (220 mg daily) along with mefenamic acid (250 mg three times daily), while the control group received mefenamic acid along with a placebo. Both groups were followed for three months, and pain levels were measured before and after treatment using a standardized pain scale.
Most important findings
The study found significant improvements in pain reduction in both groups, but the intervention group (zinc + mefenamic acid) showed a greater reduction in pain severity. The mean pain score in the intervention group decreased from 5.3 to 1.2, a change of 4.1, while in the control group, it decreased from 5.8 to 2.9, a change of 2.9. Moreover, 64% of women in the intervention group no longer experienced dysmenorrhea after treatment, compared to only 33% in the control group. These findings suggest that zinc supplementation, in combination with mefenamic acid, is more effective in reducing primary dysmenorrhea symptoms than mefenamic acid alone.
Key implications
The study suggests that zinc supplementation could be an effective adjunct to traditional treatments for primary dysmenorrhea. By enhancing the action of mefenamic acid, zinc not only reduces pain severity but also lowers the incidence of dysmenorrhea. This treatment combination could serve as a more holistic approach to managing dysmenorrhea, potentially reducing reliance on NSAIDs and their associated side effects. Clinicians may consider recommending zinc supplementation for patients with primary dysmenorrhea, particularly in cases where conventional treatments provide limited relief.
Primary Dysmenorrhea: Assessment and Treatment
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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Primary dysmenorrhea is a prevalent condition that affects many women, particularly in their younger years. This review discusses its pathophysiology, impact on quality of life, and treatment options, including pharmacological, non-pharmacological, and alternative therapies.
What was studied?
This article examines primary dysmenorrhea, a common gynecological condition that causes pain before or during menstruation, in the absence of pelvic pathology. The study investigates the pathophysiology, including the overproduction of prostaglandins by the endometrium, which causes uterine hypercontractility and resulting ischemia. The article explores the implications of dysmenorrhea on quality of life, including its association with school and work absenteeism, and evaluates the effectiveness of various treatment approaches, such as nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), hormonal contraceptives, and alternative therapies like acupuncture, acupressure, and lifestyle modifications.
Who was studied?
The review focuses on women in their reproductive years who experience primary dysmenorrhea. It highlights that dysmenorrhea is particularly prevalent in women aged 17–24, with symptoms often emerging around 6 months after menarche. The study also notes that many women do not seek medical help due to the normalization of menstrual pain. Therefore, the condition is often underreported, with only a small percentage of women consulting healthcare providers. The article stresses the impact of dysmenorrhea on daily activities, sleep, concentration, and work, as well as its link to psychological stress.
Most important findings
The article underscores the pathophysiological role of prostaglandins, specifically prostaglandin F2α and E2, in the development of primary dysmenorrhea. These prostaglandins induce uterine contractions and ischemia, leading to pain. The review also highlights the prevalence of dysmenorrhea, which affects a significant number of menstruating women. Its impact on quality of life is profound, as dysmenorrhea can lead to school absenteeism, decreased productivity, and sleep disturbances. NSAIDs are considered first-line treatment as they reduce prostaglandin production, while hormonal contraceptives help by reducing menstrual flow and prostaglandin secretion. For women who are unable to use conventional treatments, alternative therapies such as lifestyle changes, transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS), acupuncture, and dietary supplements may offer relief.
Key implications
Primary dysmenorrhea remains underdiagnosed and undertreated, particularly in young women who may not seek medical advice. Clinicians should be proactive in diagnosing and managing dysmenorrhea, considering both pharmacological and non-pharmacological treatments. While NSAIDs and hormonal contraceptives are highly effective, alternative treatments should be explored for those who cannot tolerate these options. There is a need for greater education about the condition to reduce its impact on women’s lives and increase timely intervention.
Lactobacillus gasseri OLL2809 is effective especially on the menstrual pain and dysmenorrhea in endometriosis patients
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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Lactobacillus gasseri OLL2809 significantly reduced menstrual pain and dysmenorrhea in endometriosis patients, offering a potential non-hormonal alternative to traditional treatments. No adverse effects were reported.
What was studied?
This randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial evaluated the effectiveness of Lactobacillus gasseri OLL2809 in alleviating menstrual pain (dysmenorrhea) and related symptoms in patients with endometriosis. The study specifically focused on the ability of this probiotic strain to reduce pain during menstruation, improve overall quality of life, and provide an alternative to conventional pain management strategies such as NSAIDs and hormonal treatments. The participants received either Lactobacillus gasseri OLL2809 or a placebo daily for 12 weeks, and the outcomes were measured using the Visual Analog Scale (VAS) and the Verbal Rating Scale (VRS) for pain and dysmenorrhea.
Who was studied?
Sixty-six women, aged 18-45, diagnosed with endometriosis, were recruited for this study. The inclusion criteria required that the women had regular menstrual cycles and were experiencing significant dysmenorrhea associated with endometriosis. Participants were randomly assigned to receive either the active probiotic tablets containing L. gasseri OLL2809 or placebo tablets. Exclusion criteria included a history of recent hormone therapy, gastrointestinal issues triggered by dairy products, or any conditions that could interfere with the results, such as severe comorbidities or existing pelvic infections.
Most important findings
The study demonstrated that Lactobacillus gasseri OLL2809 significantly reduced both pain intensity and dysmenorrhea in participants with endometriosis. At 2 and 3 months after treatment initiation, the active treatment group showed a marked decrease in the VAS of pain intensity during menstruation, with a greater reduction in the VRS for dysmenorrhea compared to the placebo group. However, no significant improvements were observed in non-menstrual pelvic pain, nor was there a notable effect on serum CA-125 levels, a common marker for endometriosis severity. The probiotic was well-tolerated, with no adverse side effects reported.
Key implications
These findings suggest that Lactobacillus gasseri OLL2809 could be an effective non-hormonal alternative for managing menstrual pain and dysmenorrhea in patients with endometriosis. The significant improvements in pain scores indicate that probiotics may help reduce reliance on conventional painkillers like NSAIDs, which have side effects such as gastrointestinal issues. Given the lack of adverse effects, this treatment could provide a safer, long-term option for women seeking pain relief from endometriosis. However, future studies should investigate its mechanisms further, particularly the immunological and microbiome-related pathways through which L. gasseri exerts its effects.
Dysmenorrhea pattern in adolescences informing adult endometriosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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The study links adolescent dysmenorrhea patterns with adult endometriosis development. It suggests that early intervention, guided by dysmenorrhea frequency and onset, can reduce the risk of EMs and its associated complications, including infertility.
What was studied?
This study explores the relationship between dysmenorrhea patterns during adolescence and the development of adult endometriosis (EMs). Dysmenorrhea, a common symptom in adolescents, is frequently associated with EMs, a chronic condition that can lead to infertility if left untreated. The study sought to identify adolescent dysmenorrhea characteristics, such as frequency, onset, and severity, that could predict the likelihood of developing EMs in adulthood. By collecting data from 1,287 participants, including 641 women with EMs and 646 healthy controls, the study aimed to quantify the risks of adult EMs based on adolescent dysmenorrhea patterns and lifestyle factors.
Who was studied?
The study involved 1,287 female participants aged 18 to 55, with 641 diagnosed with EMs and 646 serving as healthy controls. Participants were matched for age and recruited from Shenzhen Maternity and Child Healthcare Hospital. Dysmenorrhea frequency, onset, intensity, and distress were among the key factors analyzed. Additional factors included family history of dysmenorrhea, physical activity levels, dietary habits, and sun-sensitivity, all of which were hypothesized to influence the development of EMs. The study focused on women who experienced menstrual pain during adolescence, investigating whether these early symptoms were predictive of later endometriosis.
Most important findings
The study identified a strong correlation between the frequency and onset of adolescent dysmenorrhea and the risk of developing adult EMs. Individuals who experienced frequent dysmenorrhea (often or always) during adolescence had a significantly higher risk of adult EMs. Those with dysmenorrhea occurring more than 12 months after menarche were found to be at an even greater risk. The study also highlighted lifestyle factors, such as high-intensity physical activity and sun-sensitive skin, as contributing to the frequency of dysmenorrhea. The predictive model, developed using logistic regression and validated with external cohorts, demonstrated strong predictive capabilities, with an area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) of 0.812.
Key implications
The findings underscore the importance of recognizing dysmenorrhea patterns in adolescence as early indicators of potential future endometriosis. Early identification of high-risk individuals based on dysmenorrhea frequency and onset can facilitate timely intervention and management, potentially reducing the long-term impact of EMs. This predictive model could guide healthcare providers in offering preventive care, improving disease outcomes, and minimizing fertility disruptions in adulthood. The study advocates for further research to validate these findings through long-term cohort studies and molecular analyses to refine the model and better understand the pathophysiology of EMs.
Comparative effectiveness of exercise interventions for primary dysmenorrhea
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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This network meta‑analysis ranks six exercise modalities for primary dysmenorrhea, showing resistance and multi‑component training best reduce pain and symptoms, with clear dosage guidelines for clinical implementation.
What was reviewed?
The authors conducted a systematic review and Bayesian network meta‑analysis of randomized controlled trials to compare the efficacy of six exercise modalities, mind‑body, stretching, aerobic, core‑strengthening, resistance, and multi‑component, against non‑exercise or active controls for the management of primary dysmenorrhea. They searched PubMed, Embase, the Cochrane Library, and Web of Science through May 23, 2024, extracted pain‑related outcomes, and ranked interventions using SUCRA values within a random‑effects framework.
Who was reviewed?
The review included 49 RCTs comprising 3,129 women aged 14–40 years suffering primary dysmenorrhea without identifiable pelvic pathology. Sample sizes ranged from 11 to 97 per arm; 1,640 women received exercise interventions and 1,489 served as controls (sham, no‐treatment, or pharmacologic). Baseline demographics showed no significant group differences, and pain intensity was primarily measured by the Visual Analog Scale, with secondary outcomes including pain duration and menstrual symptom scales.
Most important findings
All exercise interventions produced statistically and clinically significant pain reductions. Resistance and multi‑component exercise yielded the greatest decrease in pain intensity, while multi‑component and stretching exercises most effectively alleviated associated menstrual symptoms. Core‑strengthening and multi‑component regimens had the largest impact on shortening pain duration. Subgroup analyses indicated that 4–8 weeks of training conferred benefit across modalities; resistance exercise surpassed other forms when sessions exceeded eight weeks, especially with ≥30‑minute durations. Increased frequency (1–3 vs. >3 sessions/week) enhanced the effect of aerobic and multi‑component programs.
Key implications
This review offers clinicians quantitative guidance on prescribing specific exercise “doses” to relieve menstrual pain: recommending resistance or multi‑component routines of at least 30 minutes per session, three times weekly for 8+ weeks. It fills a critical gap by ranking modalities and parameters to inform nonpharmacologic pain management.
The effectiveness of self-care and lifestyle interventions in primary dysmenorrhea: a systematic review and meta-analysis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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Self-care interventions like exercise, heat, and acupressure significantly reduce menstrual pain in primary dysmenorrhea, with exercise showing the largest effect. These methods may be effective alternatives to medication.
What was studied?
This systematic review and meta-analysis investigated the effectiveness of self-care and lifestyle interventions for managing primary dysmenorrhea, a common condition that causes menstrual pain. The study analyzed the impact of interventions such as exercise, heat therapy, and acupressure on menstrual pain intensity, duration, and analgesic usage. It included 23 trials with 2302 women, focusing on non-pharmacological, participant-led self-care strategies that women could administer independently. The study also compared these interventions to traditional analgesic treatments and placebo controls to assess their effectiveness in reducing pain and improving quality of life.
Who was studied?
The review included studies with women diagnosed with primary dysmenorrhea, a condition characterized by painful menstrual cramps that occur in the absence of any underlying medical condition. The trials involved women of reproductive age, primarily adolescents and young adults, who self-reported menstrual pain. Studies from various countries, including Iran, Taiwan, and the USA, were included. The women in the trials used various self-care interventions, including exercise, yoga, acupressure, and heat therapy, to manage their menstrual pain. The total number of participants across all studies was 2302.
Most important findings
The meta-analysis revealed that all the self-care interventions examined (exercise, heat, and acupressure) led to significant reductions in menstrual pain. Exercise showed the largest effect, with a substantial reduction in pain intensity. Heat therapy and acupressure also showed moderate effects. In comparison to over-the-counter analgesics like ibuprofen, exercise and heat were more effective in reducing pain intensity. Acupressure, however, was found to be less effective than analgesic medication but still beneficial compared to no treatment. The interventions not only reduced pain intensity but also helped decrease the need for analgesics, highlighting their potential as effective alternatives or adjuncts to conventional medication.
Key implications
The findings suggest that self-care interventions like exercise, heat, and acupressure could be valuable tools for managing primary dysmenorrhea, especially for women who prefer non-pharmacological approaches or experience inadequate relief from medications. Exercise, particularly low-intensity activities like yoga and stretching, emerged as the most effective method for pain reduction. Heat therapy, despite its moderate effectiveness, can provide immediate pain relief and be easily implemented at home. Acupressure offers a low-risk alternative, though its efficacy is less compared to exercise and heat. These interventions may be recommended for individuals seeking a cost-effective, accessible, and non-invasive approach to managing menstrual pain.
Depression, anxiety, stress, and dysmenorrhea: a protocol for a systematic review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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This systematic review will investigate the relationship between dysmenorrhea and psychological distress, including depression, anxiety, and stress, aiming to provide insights into their bidirectional effects and improve clinical management strategies.
What was studied?
This systematic review protocol aims to investigate the association between dysmenorrhea (painful menstruation) and psychological distress, including depression, anxiety, and stress. The study will employ a meta-analysis to synthesize data from cohort, case-control, and cross-sectional studies published between 1990 and 2019. The primary focus is to explore how psychological disorders interact with dysmenorrhea, whether they exacerbate pain severity, and how the cycle of menstrual pain and psychological distress may influence each other. The review also seeks to identify possible sources of heterogeneity in previous studies, examining factors like study design, measurement methods, and population characteristics.
Who was studied?
The study will include empirical research articles involving women of various age groups, with no limitations regarding the type of dysmenorrhea or the presence of other chronic conditions. Studies must specifically address the relationship between dysmenorrhea and depression, anxiety, or stress. Research focusing on primary dysmenorrhea, psychological attributes, and their influence on pain perception will be included. The review will draw on data from diverse global populations, with studies of different methodological quality, ranging from descriptive to cohort studies.
Most important findings
This systematic review will synthesize data on the complex relationship between dysmenorrhea and psychological distress. Previous research suggests that psychological disorders like anxiety and depression are common in women with dysmenorrhea. The relationship between these conditions is thought to be bidirectional, with dysmenorrhea potentially increasing the risk of depression and anxiety, while pre-existing psychological distress exacerbates menstrual pain. Early reviews, such as those by Iacovides et al., proposed that severe dysmenorrhea might lead to heightened pain sensitivity, a theory that will be explored further in this systematic review. The review will also consider factors contributing to heterogeneity in findings, including the influence of socio-demographic variables like age, marital status, and family history of dysmenorrhea.
Key implications
This review has the potential to deepen our understanding of how dysmenorrhea and psychological distress interact, offering new insights into the management of both conditions. The results will provide clinicians with a better understanding of the psychological aspects of dysmenorrhea, highlighting the importance of addressing mental health when treating dysmenorrhea. The review aims to inform clinical practice by providing evidence for integrated treatment approaches that tackle both physical pain and mental health symptoms. Additionally, this research may pave the way for improved screening and early intervention strategies for women experiencing dysmenorrhea and psychological distress.
Dysmenorrhea increased the risk of postpartum depression in Chinese Han parturients
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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This study links dysmenorrhea to an increased risk of postpartum depression in Chinese women. It highlights the need for early PPD screening in women with a history of dysmenorrhea.
What was studied?
This study explores the relationship between dysmenorrhea (painful menstruation) and the risk of postpartum depression (PPD) among Chinese women. It specifically examines whether a history of dysmenorrhea increases the likelihood of developing PPD after childbirth. The research involved a case-control study of women who delivered at Baoan Maternal and Child Health Hospital, Shenzhen, China. The Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS) was used to assess postpartum depression, while logistic regression models were employed to analyze the relationship between dysmenorrhea and PPD, adjusting for various socio-demographic and pregnancy-related factors.
Who was studied?
The study included 360 women, with 120 diagnosed with PPD and 240 healthy controls who did not show signs of postpartum depression. All participants were parturients who gave birth between January 1, 2016, and December 31, 2016, at the hospital. These women were between 18 and 45 years old and were screened for PPD six weeks postpartum using the EPDS. The study aimed to evaluate the role of dysmenorrhea in the development of PPD, considering other factors such as age, education level, employment status, and prior mental health history. Importantly, the study also focused on the psychological aspects of postpartum care, with participants asked about their experience of dysmenorrhea prior to pregnancy.
Most important findings
The study found a significant association between dysmenorrhea and an increased risk of postpartum depression. Among the participants, 64.2% of women with PPD reported a history of dysmenorrhea, compared to 47.9% of women without PPD. The odds ratio (OR) for dysmenorrhea being associated with PPD was 1.95 in univariate analysis, and after adjusting for socio-demographic and pregnancy-related factors, the OR was 2.45, indicating a significantly higher risk. The study also found that women with dysmenorrhea during pregnancy were more likely to experience depression and anxiety during pregnancy, which may contribute to the development of PPD. Moreover, dysmenorrhea was correlated with low social support, further exacerbating the risk of PPD.
Key implications
The findings suggest that dysmenorrhea should be considered a potential risk factor for postpartum depression, especially for women who experience severe menstrual pain. Clinicians should be vigilant in screening for PPD among women with a history of dysmenorrhea, as early intervention may reduce the risk of developing postpartum mental health issues. Additionally, the study highlights the importance of improving social support systems for women with dysmenorrhea to mitigate the mental health risks associated with both dysmenorrhea and PPD.
Diagnosis of the menopause: NICE guidance and quality standards
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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NICE guidance recommends diagnosing menopause in women over 45 clinically, not with lab tests, while FSH measurement is reserved for suspected POI in women under 40, streamlining care and reducing unnecessary testing in clinical biochemistry laboratories.
What was reviewed?
This editorial summarizes and contextualizes the 2017 National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) guidelines and quality standards regarding the diagnosis of menopause and premature ovarian insufficiency (POI). The guidance, based on systematic reviews, critically evaluates the diagnostic utility of clinical indicators, ultrasound, and biochemical tests (particularly FSH, AMH, oestrogen, inhibin A and B), emphasizing appropriate diagnostic strategies for different age groups and clinical scenarios. The article also discusses the cost-saving implications and practical recommendations for clinical biochemistry laboratories in the UK, focusing on reducing unnecessary biochemical testing and streamlining diagnostic pathways.
Who was reviewed?
The review draws on evidence synthesized for NICE guideline development, including systematic reviews of studies involving perimenopausal and menopausal women, as well as those at risk for or suspected of POI. The population includes women over 45 presenting with menopausal symptoms, women aged 40–45 with possible menopausal features, and women under 40 with suspected POI, such as those with a history of cancer treatment or genetic syndromes like Turner syndrome. The referenced studies include a range of clinical cohorts and laboratory assessments across these age groups.
Most important findings
The NICE guideline, as summarized in this editorial, asserts that menopause in women over 45 should be diagnosed clinically—based on symptoms like vasomotor instability and menstrual irregularity—without reliance on laboratory or imaging tests. The evidence indicates that no single symptom or biochemical marker (including FSH, AMH, oestrogen, or inhibins) is sufficiently reliable in isolation for diagnosing menopause in this group. FSH is particularly unreliable due to its physiological fluctuations and interference from hormonal therapies. However, FSH measurement retains a role in diagnosing POI in women under 40, where elevated levels (>30 mIU/mL on two occasions) support the diagnosis, though a single test is inadequate due to hormonal variability. The review also emphasizes that AMH, despite its use as a marker of ovarian reserve, is not recommended for routine POI diagnosis due to assay variability and insufficient evidence for its diagnostic accuracy in this context.
Key implications
For clinical practice, the NICE guidance recommends diagnosing menopause in women over 45 based on symptoms alone, which reduces unnecessary and uninformative laboratory testing. This has significant resource-saving implications for healthcare systems. In women under 40 with suspected POI, FSH testing is appropriate, but diagnosis should be based on persistent elevations in FSH and compatible symptoms. Laboratories and clinicians should align their practice with these guidelines, minimizing inappropriate FSH testing in older women and focusing resources where diagnostic yield is greatest. This approach is expected to improve patient care, expedite appropriate referrals, and enhance long-term health outcomes while maximizing cost-effectiveness. The editorial provides actionable advice for laboratories, including audit and educational interventions to reduce unwarranted testing.
Vaginal microbiome of women with premature ovarian insufficiency: a descriptive cross-sectional study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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The study reveals that women with premature ovarian insufficiency on systemic hormone therapy maintain a Lactobacillus-dominated vaginal microbiome, similar to estrogenized women, though some show signs of bacterial vaginosis, indicating the influence of factors beyond estrogen.
What was studied?
This study aimed to characterize the vaginal microbiome of women with premature ovarian insufficiency (POI) who were receiving systemic hormone therapy (HT). Premature ovarian insufficiency, which leads to a decrease in ovarian activity before the age of 40, has various physiological and psychological impacts. The research focused on identifying the composition of the vaginal microbiome in these women, using 16S rRNA pyrosequencing to profile the microbial communities. The study classified vaginal samples into five phylogenetic groups based on bacterial predominance, comparing the results to existing knowledge of vaginal microbiomes in estrogenized women.
Who was studied?
The study involved 40 sexually active women diagnosed with POI who had been using systemic hormone therapy for at least six months. The average age of the participants was 37.13 years, with the mean age of POI diagnosis being 27.90 years. Women in the study had a range of hormone therapy regimens, including oral conjugated estrogen, 17β-estradiol, and tibolone. Participants with conditions like vulvovaginitis, current antibiotic use, or systemic illnesses were excluded. The study aimed to evaluate how long-term HT affects the vaginal microbiome, particularly focusing on the dominance of Lactobacillus species.
Most important findings
The study identified several significant microbial patterns in the vaginal microbiome of women with POI undergoing hormone therapy. The majority of participants had a microbiome dominated by Lactobacillus species, which is considered typical for women receiving estrogen. Specifically, Lactobacillus crispatus was found to be predominant in 33.4% of the participants, while Lactobacillus iners dominated another 33.4%. Smaller groups showed a predominance of Lactobacillus gasseri and Lactobacillus jensenii. However, 15.2% of the women had a vaginal microbiome characterized by anaerobic bacteria, such as Gardnerella and Prevotella, which are typically associated with bacterial vaginosis. The presence of these bacteria despite systemic estrogen supplementation suggests that factors beyond estrogen, such as sexual activity, diet, or immune response, may influence the vaginal microbiome.
Key implications
The findings suggest that systemic hormone therapy in women with POI largely supports the maintenance of a healthy vaginal microbiome dominated by Lactobacillus species, similar to women with preserved ovarian function. However, the presence of anaerobic bacteria in a significant proportion of women indicates that estrogen alone may not be sufficient to restore the vaginal ecosystem entirely. This highlights the need for additional strategies, such as probiotics or dietary adjustments, to address microbial imbalances in women with POI. The study also points to the potential role of other factors, such as sexual practices and immune response, in influencing vaginal health and microbial colonization.
The influence of the gut microbiome on ovarian aging
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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This review examines the relationship between gut microbiota and ovarian aging, highlighting microbial dysbiosis as a key factor in ovarian function decline. It explores microbiota-based therapies like FMT to delay ovarian aging and discusses the role of dietary and pharmacological interventions.
What was studied?
This review explores the complex interaction between the gut microbiota and ovarian aging. It focuses on the role of gut microbiota dysbiosis in ovarian aging, premature ovarian insufficiency (POI), and menopause. The review discusses the bidirectional relationship between the ovaries and the gut microbiome, highlighting how changes in microbial composition may influence ovarian function and aging. The authors also examine emerging therapeutic strategies, such as fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT), probiotics, and anti-aging interventions that target the gut microbiota to preserve ovarian function and delay aging.
Who was studied?
This review discusses findings from both human and animal models, including premenopausal and postmenopausal women, as well as murine and zebrafish models. The focus is on understanding how the gut microbiota composition changes across different stages of ovarian aging, including natural menopause and POI. Several studies on animal models of ovarian aging and iatrogenic menopause (caused by surgery or chemotherapy) are included, which help to elucidate the mechanisms underlying the gut-ovary axis.
Most important findings
The review highlights significant shifts in the gut microbiota composition during ovarian aging. In particular, dysbiosis (microbial imbalance) is linked to ovarian dysfunction, with changes in the abundance of specific microbial groups such as Bacteroides, Firmicutes, and Prevotellaceae. Lower microbial diversity and an imbalance in short-chain fatty acid (SCFA) producers like Faecalibacterium and Butyricimonas were observed in postmenopausal women and in animal models of POI. The gut microbiota is shown to affect estrogen metabolism through microbial β-glucuronidase (gmGUS), influencing circulating estrogen levels. Fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) studies in mice revealed that young microbiota could reverse age-related ovarian damage, suggesting the therapeutic potential of microbiota-based interventions. Additionally, the review discusses the role of dietary interventions, such as caloric restriction (CR), in modulating the gut microbiota and delaying ovarian aging.
Key implications
The findings suggest that gut microbiota plays a significant role in the aging process of the ovaries, and its manipulation may offer a new strategy for combating ovarian aging and preserving fertility. The bidirectional interaction between the microbiota and ovarian function points to potential therapeutic avenues, such as probiotics, prebiotics, or FMT, to restore youthful ovarian function and delay menopause. These strategies could be integrated with other anti-aging interventions like CoQ10, melatonin, and resveratrol to enhance reproductive health and prevent ovarian-related diseases. However, more research is needed to establish the exact mechanisms and therapeutic potential of these interventions.
The Role of Lifestyle and Dietary Factors in the Development of Premature Ovarian Insufficiency
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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The review examines how lifestyle factors like diet, exercise, and oxidative stress contribute to Premature Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) and explores potential interventions using antioxidants, phytoestrogens, and dietary changes.
What was studied?
This review focused on understanding the role of lifestyle and dietary factors in the development of Premature Ovarian Insufficiency (POI), a condition that leads to early menopause or infertility in women under 40. The study examined mechanisms such as oxidative stress, mitochondrial dysfunction, apoptosis, and inflammation, which contribute to ovarian aging. Additionally, it explored genetic, autoimmune, and iatrogenic factors, such as chemotherapy and exposure to environmental toxins, that increase the risk of POI. The role of lifestyle factors, particularly diet and energy availability, in influencing the development of POI was also discussed.
Who was studied?
The study includes a broad spectrum of women affected by POI, including those with genetic and autoimmune causes. It emphasizes the influence of lifestyle factors such as diet, body mass index (BMI), exercise, and environmental exposures in the onset and progression of POI. The study also highlights the impact of dietary habits, both plant-based and Western, as well as the role of specific nutrients and foods in either promoting or mitigating POI risk.
Most important findings
Oxidative stress was identified as a key mechanism in ovarian aging and dysfunction, with increased production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) leading to mitochondrial dysfunction and apoptosis in ovarian cells. Genetic and autoimmune factors were also shown to contribute significantly to POI. The review found that diet plays a crucial role in POI, with consumption of phytoestrogens, such as those from soy, legumes, and other plant-based foods, influencing reproductive health. However, an unhealthy plant-based diet may increase the risk of earlier menopause. In contrast, diets rich in fresh legumes, oily fish, and dairy products were found to be associated with delayed menopause. High-fat diets, often linked to obesity, exacerbate oxidative stress and inflammation, contributing to earlier ovarian decline. While exercise is generally beneficial, excessive or intense physical activity can disrupt the menstrual cycle, especially in women with low energy availability. Supplementing with antioxidants like melatonin and CoQ10 has shown potential in protecting ovarian function and reducing oxidative stress, particularly for women undergoing chemotherapy.
Key implications
The findings of this review suggest that lifestyle modifications, especially in terms of diet and exercise, can be powerful tools in managing or delaying POI. By adopting antioxidant-rich diets and avoiding those that exacerbate oxidative stress, women may be able to protect ovarian health. Personalized nutritional interventions, tailored to a woman’s genetic background, could also improve outcomes for those at risk of POI, potentially delaying the onset of the condition or mitigating its symptoms.
Metabolic dysregulation in patients with premature ovarian insufficiency revealed by integrated transcriptomic, methylomic and metabolomic analyses
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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This study identifies metabolic disruptions in POI, including altered amino acid and lipid metabolism. Key metabolites such as acetoacetate and HDCA were found to be potential biomarkers, shedding light on the oxidative stress and mitochondrial dysfunction involved in POI.
What was studied?
This study aimed to investigate the metabolic dysregulation observed in women with premature ovarian insufficiency (POI) through an integrated analysis of transcriptomics, methylomics, and metabolomics. POI, a condition characterized by early ovarian function loss, leads to infertility, hormonal imbalances, and increased metabolic and cardiovascular risks. The researchers sought to identify specific metabolic disruptions in POI patients that could provide insights into the pathophysiology of the condition. By profiling gene expression, DNA methylation patterns, and serum metabolites, the study aimed to uncover biomarkers and mechanistic pathways involved in POI development.
Who was studied?
The study included 40 women diagnosed with POI and 44 healthy, age-matched control women. The POI group was diagnosed based on clinical criteria, including elevated follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) levels, absent menstruation for at least four months, and low levels of anti-Müllerian hormone (AMH). The control group consisted of women with regular menstrual cycles and normal ovarian function. Both groups were matched for age and body mass index (BMI) to control for these potential confounding variables.
Most important findings
The study identified several key metabolic changes in women with POI, including disruptions in amino acid, fatty acid, and ketone body metabolism. Metabolites such as acetoacetate, arachidonate, and fumarate were found to be significantly altered in the sera of POI patients. The combination of hyodeoxycholic acid (HDCA) and acetoacetate was highlighted as a potential biomarker for POI, showing strong diagnostic potential with an area under the curve (AUC) of 0.955. An integrated analysis of transcriptomic and methylomic data revealed that genes associated with oxidative stress, including those involved in the peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR) signaling pathway and mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation, were upregulated in POI patients. These findings suggest that oxidative stress plays a crucial role in the metabolic disturbances observed in POI.
Key implications
The results from this study suggest that metabolic dysregulation in POI involves alterations in key metabolic pathways, including those related to oxidative stress and energy metabolism. Identifying specific metabolites and genes associated with these disturbances provides valuable insights into the underlying mechanisms of POI. The findings suggest that biomarkers such as acetoacetate and HDCA could be used for the early diagnosis of POI, potentially enabling better management of the condition. Moreover, interventions targeting oxidative stress and mitochondrial function may hold therapeutic promise for improving the ovarian health of women with POI.
Premature Ovarian Insufficiency: New Perspectives on Genetic Cause and Phenotypic Spectrum
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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This review provides a comprehensive look at the genetic and phenotypic aspects of Premature Ovarian Insufficiency (POI), emphasizing the roles of various genes and chromosomal abnormalities, and offering insights into personalized treatment options and future research directions.
What was studied?
This review explores the genetic and phenotypic aspects of Premature Ovarian Insufficiency (POI), focusing on both the clinical presentation and genetic causes. POI is characterized by the loss of ovarian function before the age of 40, and the study discusses the variety of genetic factors that contribute to the condition. The paper examines the roles of various genes affecting gonadal development, DNA repair, hormonal signaling, and immune regulation, as well as the impact of chromosomal abnormalities. It also highlights the use of animal models in understanding POI and the potential for personalized treatment options.
Who was studied?
The study focuses on women diagnosed with POI, particularly those with idiopathic and genetically influenced forms. It includes women of reproductive age who experience either primary or secondary amenorrhea and elevated gonadotropins. The review also considers familial cases of POI and explores the genetic basis behind these cases. The study includes both syndromic forms of POI, such as those associated with Turner syndrome, and nonsyndromic cases, which account for the majority of POI instances.
Most important findings
The review identifies numerous genes that play significant roles in the development of POI, such as FOXL2, BMP15, and NR5A1. These genes influence various stages of ovarian function, from gonadal development to follicle maturation and ovulation. Mutations in these genes can lead to premature loss of ovarian function. Chromosomal abnormalities, such as those found in Turner syndrome (45,X), also contribute to POI. Additionally, the study highlights the role of mitochondrial dysfunction and DNA damage repair genes in the onset of POI. While many cases of POI remain unexplained, the identification of candidate genes like FMR1, which is associated with familial POI, provides insights into potential molecular mechanisms. The review also notes that while POI can result from complete follicle depletion or dysfunction, some women retain residual ovarian function and may experience fluctuating symptoms, offering a chance for future fertility.
Key implications
The findings underscore the importance of genetic testing and counseling for women with POI, especially those with familial cases or syndromic POI. Identifying specific genetic mutations can help predict disease progression and inform personalized treatment strategies, including hormone replacement therapy and fertility preservation. The potential for residual ovarian function and fluctuating POI highlights the importance of early diagnosis and proactive management, particularly for fertility preservation. Further research into the genetic and molecular mechanisms underlying POI could lead to new therapeutic approaches, such as stem cell treatments and targeted gene therapies.
Premature ovarian insufficiency: an update on recent advances in understanding and management
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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This review explores the causes, clinical presentation, and management of Premature Ovarian Insufficiency (POI), highlighting the role of genetic, autoimmune, and environmental factors, and discusses advancements in fertility preservation and hormone replacement therapy.
What was studied?
This review focuses on Premature Ovarian Insufficiency (POI), its clinical presentation, causes, and the management strategies that have emerged over recent years. It investigates the mechanisms behind POI, which is characterized by premature cessation of ovarian function, and emphasizes the complexity of the condition, including its diverse etiology, from genetic mutations to autoimmune conditions and environmental factors. The review also explores advancements in diagnosis, including hormonal assays and imaging techniques, as well as innovative treatments such as hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility preservation strategies.
Who was studied?
The review discusses women diagnosed with POI, particularly those under 40, who experience the loss of ovarian function and infertility. The conditions examined include spontaneous POI, which is idiopathic in many cases, and iatrogenic POI caused by treatments like chemotherapy or radiation. The study also considers women with chromosomal abnormalities, such as Turner syndrome, and those with autoimmune disorders or genetic mutations linked to POI.
Most important findings
POI can result from a variety of genetic, autoimmune, and environmental factors. Genetic factors such as mutations in the FMR1 gene, chromosomal abnormalities like Turner syndrome, and autoimmune diseases are all major contributors to POI. In some cases, the condition is caused by iatrogenic factors, such as chemotherapy, radiation therapy, or bilateral oophorectomy. A critical diagnostic approach for POI includes elevated FSH levels and low estradiol, with additional tests like anti-Müllerian hormone (AMH) levels and pelvic ultrasound offering further diagnostic confirmation. The review also identifies the importance of timely hormone replacement therapy (HRT) to mitigate the symptoms of estrogen deficiency and to prevent long-term health risks like osteoporosis and cardiovascular diseases. Emerging treatments such as oocyte cryopreservation and in vitro activation (IVA) show potential for preserving fertility in women with POI, though research into stem cell therapies continues to advance.
Key implications
The review underscores the importance of early diagnosis and intervention in managing POI. Clinicians are encouraged to perform thorough genetic screening and consider the possibility of underlying autoimmune disorders, especially in patients with unexplained POI. Timely initiation of hormone therapy is critical to alleviate menopausal symptoms and prevent long-term health consequences, such as osteoporosis and cardiovascular disease. Fertility preservation, including egg freezing and in vitro fertilization (IVF) with donor eggs, offers options for women with POI who wish to conceive. Ongoing research into advanced therapies, such as stem cell treatments, holds promise for future management strategies, particularly in restoring ovarian function.
Premature Ovarian Insufficiency: Past, Present, and Future
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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This review investigates the genetic and non-genetic causes of Premature Ovarian Insufficiency (POI), highlighting recent advances in understanding its mechanisms and exploring novel therapeutic approaches such as hormone replacement therapy and stem cell treatments.
What was studied?
This review examines the multifaceted nature of Premature Ovarian Insufficiency (POI), focusing on both genetic and non-genetic causes. It explores the clinical presentation of POI, the factors influencing its development, and the potential therapeutic approaches. The paper emphasizes the complexity of POI's genetic background, including mutations and chromosomal abnormalities, and outlines the potential pathways to therapeutic intervention, such as hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and new methods like in vitro activation (IVA) and stem cell therapies. Additionally, it discusses the role of environmental factors, autoimmune diseases, and iatrogenic causes, as well as non-coding RNA in POI pathogenesis.
Who was studied?
The study centers on women affected by POI, focusing on both idiopathic and genetically influenced cases. It highlights women experiencing ovarian dysfunction before the age of 40, with a particular emphasis on those with familial cases of POI and those diagnosed after undergoing treatments like chemotherapy. The review also mentions the increased occurrence of POI in women with autoimmune conditions and those exposed to environmental toxins. Clinical outcomes are examined based on histological evaluations and the genetic findings across different populations.
Most important findings
The findings underline the significant genetic diversity in POI, with specific mutations in genes such as FMR1, FOXL2, and NOBOX playing a central role in the condition's onset. Autoimmune diseases, environmental factors, and chemotherapy treatments are recognized as major contributors to POI, with autoimmune oophoritis being one of the key non-genetic causes. Histologically, the ovaries in POI women are found to have atretic follicles and abnormal granulosa cells. Recent advances in understanding POI include the identification of non-coding RNA’s role in follicle maturation and the investigation into stem cell therapies, including exosome-based treatments, which show promise in restoring ovarian function. Moreover, the application of IVA to stimulate follicle activation offers new hope for fertility preservation in POI patients.
Key implications
The findings highlight the need for comprehensive genetic screening in women diagnosed with POI to identify potential hereditary causes. Genetic counseling and fertility preservation strategies, such as oocyte cryopreservation and oocyte donation, should be offered to women at risk. Hormone replacement therapy remains the mainstay of treatment to alleviate symptoms of estrogen deficiency and mitigate long-term risks such as osteoporosis and cardiovascular disease. Emerging therapies such as stem cell-derived exosomes and IVA could represent future breakthroughs in restoring ovarian function and improving fertility outcomes. Clinical management should also include regular monitoring of cardiovascular health and bone density, as well as psychological support to address the emotional challenges faced by women with POI.
Hormone Replacement Therapy Reverses Gut Microbiome and Serum Metabolome Alterations in Premature Ovarian Insufficiency
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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This study explored the role of hormone replacement therapy (HRT) in reversing gut microbiome and serum metabolome alterations in women with premature ovarian insufficiency (POI), identifying potential therapeutic targets for microbiome-based interventions.
What was studied?
The study aimed to explore the impact of hormone replacement therapy (HRT) on gut microbiome alterations and serum metabolome in women with premature ovarian insufficiency (POI). It focused on identifying the microbiome changes and metabolic shifts associated with POI and how HRT could mitigate these changes, providing insights into the pathophysiological mechanisms underlying POI.
Who was studied?
The study involved three groups of female participants: healthy controls, patients with POI who were not treated with HRT, and patients with POI treated with HRT. The subjects were recruited from the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at Sir Run Run Shaw Hospital, Zhejiang University School of Medicine. The research included fecal and serum sample analyses, focusing on gut microbiome and serum metabolome alterations.
Most important findings
The study found that patients with POI exhibited a significant increase in the abundance of Eggerthella, a genus of bacteria, in their fecal samples compared to healthy controls. This dysbiosis was reversed in patients receiving HRT. Additionally, serum metabolic alterations were identified in patients with POI, including elevated serum TGF-β1 levels, a factor associated with fibrosis. These metabolic changes were closely linked to gut microbiota composition, and the abundance of Eggerthella was positively correlated with altered metabolic signatures. In animal models, estrogen treatment alleviated ovarian fibrosis induced by Eggerthella lenta.
Key implications
The findings underscore the importance of the gut microbiome and serum metabolites in the development of POI. The observed dysbiosis, particularly the overabundance of Eggerthella, suggests that the microbiome may play a pivotal role in the disease's pathogenesis. HRT not only mimicked the hormonal balance typically seen in healthy individuals but also corrected the microbial imbalance and metabolic disturbances associated with POI. This highlights the potential of microbiome modulation as a therapeutic strategy for managing POI and related metabolic disorders, offering a new avenue for treating POI through personalized interventions targeting the gut microbiota.
Non-targeted metabolomics revealed novel links between serum metabolites and primary ovarian insufficiency: A Mendelian randomization study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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This study identifies 33 serum metabolites, including N-acetylalanine, linked to an increased risk of primary ovarian insufficiency (POI), offering new insights into the disease's genetic and metabolic causes.
What was studied?
The study aimed to explore the causal links between genetically determined metabolites (GDMs) and primary ovarian insufficiency (POI), a condition characterized by the early loss of ovarian function. The authors employed a Mendelian randomization (MR) approach, using genetic data from genome-wide association studies (GWAS) on 486 metabolites from 7824 European participants, alongside GWAS data on POI risk from the FinnGen Consortium. The study focused on identifying causal associations between serum metabolite levels and the risk of POI, ultimately revealing novel insights into the biological mechanisms underpinning the condition.
Who was studied?
The study involved genetic data from 7824 participants from two European cohorts, representing a diverse population of individuals of European descent. The participants were used to analyze the genetic correlations between 486 serum metabolites and POI. Additionally, the GWAS data for POI risk were sourced from 254 Finnish women diagnosed with POI and 118,228 control participants, ensuring a robust sample size for understanding the relationship between metabolites and POI.
Most important findings
The MR analysis identified 33 metabolites that had a potential causal effect on POI development. Among these, N-acetylalanine emerged as the most significantly associated metabolite, demonstrating a strong link to elevated POI risk across multiple MR methods. Other notable metabolites, such as threonine and glycerol 2-phosphate, were also found to be significantly correlated with an increased risk of POI. Furthermore, several "unknown" metabolites, including X-11437, were discovered to have significant associations with POI, highlighting the need for further investigation into these compounds. Additionally, metabolic pathway analysis revealed key metabolic pathways related to POI, including the biosynthesis of valine, leucine, and isoleucine, as well as the metabolism of glycine, serine, and threonine.
Key implications
This study provides critical insights into the genetic and metabolic underpinnings of POI, paving the way for potential biomarker identification and novel therapeutic strategies. The findings suggest that serum metabolites, especially N-acetylalanine, could serve as biomarkers for POI risk, helping in the early detection and management of the condition. Additionally, the study opens up avenues for further research into the "unknown" metabolites that might play a role in POI, encouraging a deeper exploration into their mechanistic pathways and potential clinical applications.
Primary ovarian insufficiency: Update on clinical and genetic findings
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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This review explores the genetic and clinical factors contributing to primary ovarian insufficiency (POI), highlighting key genes and the importance of early diagnosis, fertility preservation, and hormone replacement therapy.
What was studied?
This review investigates the clinical and genetic aspects of primary ovarian insufficiency (POI), a condition in which the ovarian follicles fail to function properly before the age of 40. The study focuses on the genetic background of POI, including its heritable nature and the various genes involved in both syndromic and non-syndromic forms of the condition. The research also examines the various factors that influence ovarian reserve depletion and dysfunction, such as the impact of genetic mutations in X-linked and autosomal genes. Additionally, the study looks at the increasing importance of POI as women delay conception and highlights the challenges it poses to women’s fertility and general health.
Who was studied?
The review focuses on the genetic causes and clinical presentation of POI in women under the age of 40. It includes both idiopathic and genetically predisposed cases, with a focus on women experiencing primary amenorrhea or secondary amenorrhea due to ovarian dysfunction. The study highlights the role of genetic factors, particularly X chromosome-linked defects, and examines the prevalence of POI in women with familial histories of early menopause. The research also covers the rising incidence of POI in younger women, which is becoming an increasingly important clinical challenge.
Most important findings
The review highlights the significant genetic contribution to POI, with many cases being heritable and associated with mutations in specific genes. X-linked defects, including the FMR1 premutation, are commonly linked to POI, especially in familial cases. The study identifies key genes involved in folliculogenesis, such as FIGLA, BMP15, and GDF9, which play crucial roles in ovarian development. Other genetic factors, such as mutations in the SYCE1 and NR5A1 genes, also contribute to POI. Additionally, the review discusses the clinical presentation of POI, which varies widely, and emphasizes the need for early diagnosis and effective management. Fertility preservation strategies and hormone replacement therapy (HRT) are important for managing the condition and improving quality of life.
Key implications
Clinicians must be aware of the multifactorial nature of POI, with a strong genetic component influencing its development. The identification of key genes responsible for POI provides a pathway for early genetic screening and diagnosis, enabling targeted treatment plans. Fertility preservation is a key concern, as many women with POI face challenges with conception. Early intervention with HRT can mitigate some of the long-term health effects, including cardiovascular disease and osteoporosis. Moreover, understanding the genetic basis of POI can improve counseling for women at risk and guide personalized treatment approaches.
Recent advances in the nutritional therapy for premature ovarian insufficiency
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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The review explores the potential of dietary supplements, including probiotics and phytoestrogens, to manage premature ovarian insufficiency (POI) symptoms. It highlights the safety, bioavailability, and efficacy of these nutrients for improving reproductive health and delaying ovarian function decline.
What was studied?
This paper investigates the role of dietary supplements in addressing the challenges associated with premature ovarian insufficiency (POI). This reproductive disorder causes the loss of ovarian function before the age of 40. POI leads to symptoms like irregular menstruation, hot flashes, mood changes, and reduced fertility. The review focuses on nutritional interventions, including functional nutrients from carbohydrates, fats, proteins, vitamins, and plant-based phytoestrogens. The paper also examines the potential of microbial-related nutritional substances, including probiotics, prebiotics, and synbiotics, in supporting ovarian function and reproductive health. The study examines various molecular, cellular, and tissue-level mechanisms through which these nutrients influence the body’s reproductive system.
Who was studied?
The review does not focus on a specific group of individuals but refers to various human and animal studies that explore the effects of different dietary and microbial nutrients on women with premature ovarian insufficiency. Studies on animal models and clinical trials in humans were included to evaluate the therapeutic potential of supplements such as probiotics, vitamins, and phytoestrogens in alleviating the symptoms and delaying ovarian function decline in POI patients.
Most important findings
Key findings in the review highlight the importance of certain dietary and microbial nutrients in managing the symptoms of POI. Nutrients like carbohydrates, fats, and proteins were found to influence the health of ovarian cells, delay ovarian aging, and improve fertility outcomes. Probiotics and prebiotics also showed promise in regulating reproductive functions, including the estrous cycle and ovarian viability. Additionally, phytoestrogens from vegetables and fruits were discussed for their antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, and mitochondrial-protective effects, which could help mitigate some symptoms of menopause and POI. Furthermore, the review emphasizes the bioavailability and safety of these nutritional supplements, which make them an appealing alternative or complement to hormone replacement therapy.
Key implications
The review suggests that dietary supplements, including microbial nutrients, could be valuable in managing premature ovarian insufficiency, potentially offering a safer, more natural option compared to hormone replacement therapy. This approach is particularly crucial for patients who may be concerned about the long-term risks associated with hormonal treatments. The findings also open up avenues for further research into how dietary and microbial interventions can be integrated into clinical practice to improve fertility and overall reproductive health in women with POI.
Metabolome-wide Mendelian randomization assessing the causal relationship between blood metabolites and primary ovarian insufficiency
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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This study identifies 27 metabolites linked to primary ovarian insufficiency (POI), revealing novel metabolic pathways and offering insights into POI biomarkers and therapeutic targets.
What was studied?
This study used Mendelian randomization (MR) to investigate the causal relationship between circulating metabolites and primary ovarian insufficiency (POI). The analysis utilized genetic variants linked to 278 circulating metabolites to assess their causal impact on the development of POI. The study aimed to identify metabolites that are causally associated with POI, with the potential for these metabolites to serve as biomarkers or therapeutic targets.
Who was studied?
The study employed summary-level genetic data from the UK Biobank, including 1931 POI patients and 216,861 control participants of European descent. The research focused on genetic variants that influence metabolite levels in these individuals, aiming to identify any causal links to POI. The participants' genetic variations provided the foundation for MR analysis, offering insight into the metabolic factors that contribute to POI risk.
Most important findings
The study identified 27 metabolites significantly associated with the risk of POI. Metabolites such as dodecanedioate, adrenate, indolepropionate, homocitrulline, and 3-methylhistidine were negatively associated with POI, indicating a protective effect, while others like oleate, tyrosine, linoleate, threonine, and uridine were positively associated with POI, indicating an increased risk. KEGG pathway enrichment analysis revealed six significant metabolic pathways, including unsaturated fatty acid biosynthesis, phenylalanine, tyrosine, and tryptophan biosynthesis, and linoleic acid metabolism. These findings underscore the importance of lipid metabolism and amino acid pathways in the development of POI.
Key implications
This study provides novel insights into the metabolic underpinnings of POI by integrating genomics and metabolomics. Identifying causal metabolites offers potential for new biomarkers that could assist in early POI detection, risk prediction, and possibly therapeutic intervention. Furthermore, the highlighted metabolic pathways could lead to targeted treatment strategies, particularly for managing the metabolic syndromes associated with POI, such as cardiovascular diseases and osteoporosis.
Hormone replacement therapy in young women with primary ovarian insufficiency and early menopause
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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The review discusses the therapeutic use of hormone replacement therapy (HRT) for managing POI and early menopause, highlighting its benefits in preventing complications like osteoporosis, cardiovascular disease, and depression.
What was studied?
This paper focuses on the role of hormone replacement therapy (HRT) in managing primary ovarian insufficiency (POI) and early menopause. POI is characterized by the cessation of ovarian function before the age of 40, leading to a significant reduction in estrogen (E2) levels, which in turn causes a range of health issues. The study highlights the importance of HRT as a therapeutic intervention to manage the hormonal deficiencies caused by POI. The review emphasizes various HRT options, including estrogen, progestin, and testosterone therapies, and discusses their role in alleviating the symptoms and preventing the long-term complications associated with POI, such as osteoporosis, cardiovascular disease, and psychological effects.
Who was studied?
The review addresses women with POI and early menopause, focusing on both spontaneous and iatrogenic causes of the condition. This includes women diagnosed before the age of 40, with a particular focus on spontaneous POI (sPOI). The paper also discusses special populations, such as those with Turner syndrome or genetic predispositions to POI, and highlights how the condition affects women differently across various age groups and life stages.
Most important findings
One of the key findings is that POI leads to a broad spectrum of health issues, including menopausal symptoms, decreased bone mineral density (BMD), and an increased risk of cardiovascular disease. HRT, particularly in the form of transdermal estradiol (E2) with cyclic progestin, is considered the most effective treatment to mimic normal ovarian function and alleviate symptoms. The review points out that continuing HRT until the age of natural menopause (around 50 years) is generally recommended, unless contraindications exist. The use of HRT helps reduce the risk of fractures, improves bone health, and has a favorable effect on mental health by mitigating symptoms of depression and anxiety.
Key implications
The paper underscores the critical role of physiologic HRT in maintaining the health and quality of life of women with POI. The benefits of HRT extend beyond symptom relief, including reducing the risk of bone loss, cardiovascular disease, and psychological stress. The findings emphasize that HRT should be personalized based on the individual's needs and that it should be continued until the natural age of menopause unless there are specific health risks. This approach is essential to preventing long-term complications and improving overall well-being for women with POI.
Impact of oxidative stress induced by heavy metals on ovarian function
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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This review highlights the impact of heavy metal-induced oxidative stress on ovarian function, contributing to premature ovarian insufficiency. It discusses the mechanisms by which metals like copper, arsenic, and cadmium induce ROS, leading to ovarian damage, and the potential therapeutic role of antioxidants.
What was studied?
This review examines the detrimental impact of heavy metals, including copper, arsenic, cadmium, mercury, and lead, on ovarian function, particularly through the induction of oxidative stress (OS). These heavy metals are known to generate reactive oxygen species (ROS), leading to cellular damage, apoptosis, and follicular atresia, all of which contribute to premature ovarian insufficiency (POI). The study focuses on the molecular and cellular mechanisms by which these metals affect ovarian health, highlighting their role in disrupting hormone production and accelerating ovarian aging.
Who was studied?
The review incorporates data from both human and animal studies, with a focus on research involving rodents as animal models. These studies explore the physiological effects of heavy metal exposure on ovarian cells, including granulosa cells and oocytes. It also examines the biochemical and physiological consequences of heavy metal toxicity in human populations, particularly those exposed to environmental pollutants, as well as laboratory findings that investigate the molecular mechanisms underlying ovarian damage caused by these metals.
Most important findings
The review underscores the significant role of oxidative stress in mediating the harmful effects of heavy metals on ovarian function. Metals like arsenic, cadmium, and mercury generate excessive ROS, which in turn disrupt mitochondrial function, induce DNA damage, and trigger apoptosis in ovarian cells. These metals also impair the activity of critical antioxidant enzymes, exacerbating oxidative damage. For example, copper exposure leads to follicular disruption and increased cell death, while arsenic accelerates ovarian failure by reducing levels of estrogen and anti-Müllerian hormone (AMH). Overall, the evidence suggests that these metals contribute to a decline in ovarian reserve, leading to early menopause and reduced fertility.
Key implications
The findings highlight the importance of addressing environmental heavy metal exposure as a potential risk factor for POI. The role of oxidative stress in the pathogenesis of ovarian dysfunction suggests that preventive measures, such as reducing exposure to environmental pollutants, could help protect ovarian health. Additionally, antioxidant treatments may offer a promising therapeutic approach to mitigate the damaging effects of oxidative stress caused by heavy metal exposure. Clinicians should consider these environmental factors when diagnosing and treating women with premature ovarian insufficiency.
Metabolic Profile of Patients with Premature Ovarian Insufficiency
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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This study examines the metabolic profile of women with premature ovarian insufficiency, finding significant changes in lipid and glucose metabolism. The results underscore the importance of early metabolic screening and management to reduce cardiovascular and metabolic risks associated with POI.
What was studied?
This study evaluated the metabolic profile of women with premature ovarian insufficiency (POI), a condition characterized by the loss of ovarian function before the age of 40. POI is associated with hypoestrogenism, amenorrhea, and elevated gonadotropin levels. The study specifically aimed to assess lipid metabolism, insulin resistance, and glucose metabolism in women with POI, and compare these parameters with those of age-matched healthy controls. The study analyzed various metabolic factors, including cholesterol levels, insulin sensitivity, and glucose concentrations, to understand how these factors contribute to the increased cardiovascular and metabolic risks in women with POI.
Who was studied?
The study included 56 women diagnosed with POI and 68 healthy women who served as controls. The mean age of the POI group was 30.7 years, while the control group had a mean age of 27.3 years. The women with POI were diagnosed based on the European Society for Human Reproduction and Embryology (ESHRE) criteria, which included secondary amenorrhea lasting 4-7 months, serum FSH levels greater than 40 IU/L, and estradiol levels lower than 50 pg/mL. The control group consisted of women with regular menstrual cycles and no history of hormonal or metabolic abnormalities. Both groups were matched for body mass index (BMI) to minimize potential confounding factors.
Most important findings
The study found significant differences in lipid and glucose metabolism between women with POI and healthy controls. The POI group had significantly higher total cholesterol (TC), low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C), and high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C) levels compared to the control group. However, triglyceride (TG) levels were similar between the two groups. In terms of glucose metabolism, fasting serum glucose was higher in the POI group, although insulin levels were lower. A significant positive correlation was found between fasting serum glucose and FSH levels in women with POI. Insulin resistance, as measured by the Homeostatic Model Assessment-Insulin Resistance (HOMA-IR), was higher in the POI group, indicating a higher risk of metabolic dysfunction.
Key implications
The findings suggest that women with POI exhibit significant metabolic disturbances, including altered lipid profiles and insulin resistance, which contribute to the higher risk of cardiovascular diseases and metabolic syndrome. These metabolic abnormalities should be considered in the clinical management of POI, with a focus on early screening for cardiovascular risk factors. Hormone replacement therapy (HRT) may be beneficial in addressing some of these metabolic disturbances, but lifestyle interventions such as diet and exercise are also crucial in managing metabolic health in these patients. Further studies are needed to explore the long-term impact of these metabolic disturbances and the efficacy of targeted therapies.
Evaluation of serum heavy metal levels on primary ovarian insufficiency
February 12, 2026
/
Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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This study explores the potential link between serum heavy metal levels and premature ovarian insufficiency. The higher levels of metals like lead and mercury in women with POI suggest environmental toxins may contribute to ovarian dysfunction, though the findings were not statistically significant.
What was studied?
This study investigated the serum levels of heavy metals in women with Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI). POI, a condition defined by the loss of ovarian function before the age of 40, can be influenced by various environmental factors, including exposure to heavy metals. The research aimed to assess the levels of aluminum, arsenic, mercury, manganese, and lead in women with POI and compare these levels to those in healthy women. The study sought to understand the potential relationship between elevated serum heavy metal levels and the onset of POI, which could help identify environmental risk factors for ovarian dysfunction.
Who was studied?
The study involved 46 women, divided into two groups: 23 women diagnosed with POI and 23 healthy women who served as the control group. The participants were matched by age, BMI, and gravidity, ensuring that these factors did not skew the results. The women with POI had been diagnosed based on clinical criteria, including amenorrhea for at least four months and elevated follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) levels. Women with a history of pelvic surgery, cancer, autoimmune diseases, endometriosis, or other chronic systemic diseases were excluded. Blood serum samples were collected from both groups to measure the levels of heavy metals.
Most important findings
The study found that the serum levels of aluminum, arsenic, mercury, manganese, and lead were higher in women with POI compared to the control group, though the differences were not statistically significant. Despite the lack of significant differences, the higher levels of these metals in the POI group suggest a potential link between environmental exposure to heavy metals and the development of POI. Specifically, the study highlights how metals like lead and mercury may contribute to ovarian dysfunction due to their toxicity. These metals can induce oxidative stress and disrupt the hormonal balance, potentially accelerating ovarian aging and depletion.
Key implications
While the study did not find statistically significant differences in serum metal levels between the two groups, it underscores the need for further research into the role of environmental heavy metals in ovarian health. Clinicians should be aware of the potential environmental risk factors, including heavy metal exposure, when diagnosing and managing women with POI. Future studies should aim to identify causal relationships and explore potential therapeutic interventions, such as detoxification or antioxidant therapies, to reduce the impact of heavy metal toxicity on ovarian function.
Primary ovarian insufficiency
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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Primary Ovarian Insufficiency affects young women with amenorrhea and elevated FSH levels. It involves follicle dysfunction or depletion and requires comprehensive diagnosis and management, including hormone therapy and fertility preservation.
What was studied?
This paper focuses on Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI), previously known as premature ovarian failure. POI is a condition in which the ovaries cease to function properly before the age of 40. The study investigates the clinical presentation, causes, and diagnostic challenges of POI, particularly in spontaneous 46,XX cases. It explores the mechanisms behind follicle dysfunction and depletion, as well as the relationship with autoimmune diseases and genetic factors, like mutations in the FMR1 gene.
Who was studied?
The paper discusses the condition in women under 40 with amenorrhea and elevated Follicle-Stimulating Hormone (FSH) levels. It highlights spontaneous cases of 46,XX primary ovarian insufficiency, which affects approximately 1 in 100 women. Family history and genetic tests, such as the FMR1 premutation, are examined as risk factors. The study does not focus on specific participant data but emphasizes the general clinical presentation and diagnostic approach for affected women.
Most important findings
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency can manifest through two primary mechanisms: follicle dysfunction (where follicles remain but fail to function properly) and follicle depletion (where no follicles are present). Approximately 10-15% of cases have a family history, and autoimmune diseases like thyroid dysfunction and adrenal insufficiency are associated with the condition. Genetic mutations, particularly in the FMR1 gene, can lead to POI, with 5-10% of women experiencing spontaneous remission, resulting in pregnancy. The study also underscores the need for hormonal therapy and fertility preservation options, as well as regular monitoring of bone health.
Key implications
The implications of this study for clinicians include the need for a comprehensive evaluation of women with suspected POI, involving genetic testing (such as for FMR1), karyotype analysis, and adrenal autoimmunity testing. Hormone-replacement therapy (HRT) should be considered for symptomatic women, and bone mineral density should be monitored to prevent osteoporosis. The emotional and psychological impact of POI also requires attention, as many women experience distress and fertility challenges. Additionally, there are increased risks of cardiovascular issues, and patients should be encouraged to follow bone and heart health guidelines.
Changes in the vaginal microbiota associated with primary ovarian failure
February 12, 2026
/
Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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This study identifies significant differences in vaginal microbiota between women with Primary Ovarian Failure (POF) and healthy controls, highlighting the role of Lactobacillus species in reproductive health and suggesting potential microbiota-targeted interventions for POF.
What was studied?
This research aimed to investigate the differences in the vaginal microbiota of women with Primary Ovarian Failure (POF) compared to healthy controls. Primary ovarian failure, characterized by the loss of ovarian function in women under 40, is a complex condition influenced by autoimmune dysfunction, genetic factors, and environmental exposures. The study used high-throughput 16S rRNA gene sequencing to profile the vaginal microbiota of 22 patients with POF and 29 healthy women. The research sought to explore the potential relationship between vaginal flora alterations and clinical characteristics of POF, focusing on how specific microbial communities might influence reproductive health outcomes.
Who was studied?
The study population consisted of 22 women diagnosed with Primary Ovarian Failure (POF) and 29 healthy women as controls. The patients with POF were aged between 20 and 40 years and had experienced the cessation of menstruation for at least four months, with high levels of follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) and low estradiol (E2) levels. Healthy control women were chosen based on having regular menstrual cycles and normal reproductive hormone levels, with exclusion criteria including recent antibiotic use, liver or kidney dysfunction, and other conditions that could affect reproductive health. The research aimed to identify microbial differences between women with POF and those with normal ovarian function.
Most important findings
The study revealed significant differences in the vaginal microbiota between patients with POF and healthy controls. Patients with POF exhibited a more diverse and richer vaginal microbiota compared to healthy women. The most notable microbial differences were seen in the relative abundance of Lactobacillus species. In the control group, Lactobacillus gallinarum was the dominant species, whereas in the POF group, L. iners became more prevalent while L. gallinarum decreased. Furthermore, the presence of Gardnerella and Prevotella species was more abundant in the POF group, correlating with higher serum FSH and LH levels and lower E2 levels, indicating a possible connection between these microbial shifts and reproductive health indicators. Notably, L. gallinarum was positively associated with estradiol (E2) levels, while L. iners was negatively correlated with these hormone levels. The study also identified a set of 34 genera whose relative abundances could help predict the occurrence of POF with high accuracy.
Key implications
The findings suggest that the vaginal microbiota, particularly the balance of Lactobacillus species, plays a critical role in the pathogenesis of Primary Ovarian Failure. The alteration of specific microbial populations, including an increase in L. iners and a decrease in L. gallinarum, may be linked to hormonal imbalances associated with POF. These results indicate that modifying the vaginal microbiota, potentially through the use of probiotics, could offer a new avenue for managing or delaying the onset of POF. Future research exploring the therapeutic potential of vaginal probiotics to restore microbial balance could improve reproductive outcomes in women with POF and help mitigate associated symptoms.
Association between premature ovarian insufficiency and gut microbiota
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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The study reveals a distinct gut microbiome profile in women with premature ovarian insufficiency (POI), with altered bacterial populations linked to hormonal changes, suggesting a potential role of the microbiome in POI pathogenesis and management.
What was studied?
This study aimed to explore the relationship between premature ovarian insufficiency (POI) and the gut microbiota. POI, which affects women under 40 and is marked by the early cessation of ovarian function, has multifactorial causes, including autoimmune diseases and hormonal imbalances. Recent research into gut microbiome studies has highlighted its influence on immune function and hormonal regulation. This study investigated the gut microbial community structure in women with POI compared to healthy controls, utilizing 16S rRNA gene sequencing to characterize the differences in microbial populations.
Who was studied?
The study included 35 women diagnosed with spontaneous POI and 18 healthy women as controls. All participants were aged between 24 and 40 years, with the POI group having a significantly higher body mass index (BMI) compared to controls. The women with POI had higher serum levels of follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), luteinizing hormone (LH), and testosterone (T), but lower levels of estradiol (E2) and anti-Müllerian hormone (AMH). The women in the control group had normal ovarian function, with regular menstruation and normal levels of FSH. The participants were recruited from the Shenzhen Maternity & Child Healthcare Hospital, and clinical and demographic data were also collected for analysis.
Most important findings
The gut microbiome of women with POI showed significant differences when compared to that of healthy controls. The major phyla present in both groups were Firmicutes, Bacteroidetes, Actinobacteria, and Proteobacteria, with Firmicutes being the dominant phylum in both groups. However, women with POI had a significantly higher Bacteroidetes/Firmicutes ratio, with notable increases in Bacteroides, Bifidobacterium, Megamonas, and Prevotella, while genera such as Blautia, Clostridium, Coprococcus, and Faecalibacterium were significantly decreased. These microbial changes were correlated with serum hormone levels, including estradiol, FSH, and LH. Specifically, higher levels of Bacteroides and a higher Bacteroidetes/Firmicutes ratio were associated with higher FSH and LH levels and lower estradiol.
Key implications
These findings suggest that the gut microbiota plays a role in the pathogenesis of POI, possibly influencing immune responses and hormone regulation. The altered gut microbial profile in women with POI, marked by an increase in certain bacterial genera and a disturbed Bacteroidetes/Firmicutes ratio, may contribute to the autoimmune processes and hormonal imbalances seen in POI. The correlation between gut microbiota composition and serum hormone levels indicates that microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs), such as probiotics, could potentially modulate the immune response and help manage POI symptoms.
Association of dietary preferences with primary ovarian insufficiency (POI)
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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This study identifies dietary habits that influence the risk of Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI), finding that high-fat dairy products increase risk while oily fish and pork offer protection, suggesting that dietary interventions could help prevent POI.
What was studied?
This study explored the association between dietary preferences and the risk of Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) using Mendelian randomization (MR). POI, characterized by premature cessation of ovarian function before the age of 40, is a leading cause of infertility in women. The researchers aimed to determine how specific dietary habits, including the consumption of dairy, fish, meat, and other food items, might influence the likelihood of developing POI. By applying MR, the study minimized confounding factors and reverse causality, providing causal estimates about the impact of diet on POI risk.
Who was studied?
The study involved a large dataset from the UK Biobank, which provided genetic information about 83 dietary preferences. POI-related data was sourced from the Finnish FinnGen database, specifically focusing on European women. The final analysis included genetic instrumental variables from these databases to explore the relationship between specific dietary habits and POI risk. Participants had various dietary preferences and represented a broad demographic, enabling the study to assess how different eating habits influence the development of POI.
Most important findings
The analysis revealed significant dietary associations with POI risk. Consumption of butter and full-fat dairy products was strongly associated with an increased risk of POI. Women who consumed butter had a nearly tenfold increase in risk, while full-cream milk was linked to an even greater risk. Interestingly, semi-skimmed milk also showed a significant association with an elevated risk. In contrast, certain dietary patterns were found to protect against POI. Regular consumption of oily fish, rich in omega-3 fatty acids, was associated with an 82% reduced risk of POI, and pork consumption also had a protective effect. Additionally, women who did not consume eggs had a significantly lower risk of POI.
Key implications
The findings highlight the potential role of diet in the prevention and management of POI. High-fat dairy products, particularly butter and full-fat milk, were associated with an increased risk of POI, suggesting that dietary fats may contribute to ovarian dysfunction. Conversely, the consumption of oily fish and pork was associated with a reduced risk of POI, likely due to their beneficial effects on inflammation and metabolic health. These results underscore the importance of dietary modification as a potential preventive strategy for women at risk of POI. Further studies are needed to refine these associations and explore the biological mechanisms through which diet influences ovarian function.
Characteristics of the vaginal microbiome in women with premature ovarian insufficiency
February 12, 2026
/
Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
•
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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This study identifies significant differences in vaginal microbiota between women with premature ovarian insufficiency (POI) and healthy controls, suggesting that microbial shifts could contribute to ovarian dysfunction and hormone imbalances in POI.
What was studied?
This study aimed to investigate the differences in the vaginal microbiome between women with premature ovarian insufficiency (POI) and healthy controls. POI is characterized by early ovarian failure, leading to amenorrhea and hormonal imbalance. The research sought to identify microbial community differences using 16S rRNA gene sequencing to explore how the vaginal microbiome might relate to hormonal levels and ovarian function. Specifically, it compared microbial compositions between 28 women with spontaneous POI and 12 healthy women, looking for patterns of microbial dysbiosis that might correlate with the disease.
Who was studied?
The study involved 40 women, aged 24 to 40 years, recruited from the Shenzhen Maternity and Child Healthcare Hospital. Of these, 28 women had spontaneous POI, diagnosed based on elevated serum levels of follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) and luteinizing hormone (LH), alongside low estradiol and anti-Müllerian hormone (AMH) levels. The remaining 12 women, with normal ovarian function and hormone levels, were selected as controls. The study excluded women with autoimmune diseases, recent antibiotic use, or other conditions that could affect the vaginal microbiota or reproductive health.
Most important findings
The study identified significant differences in the vaginal microbiomes of women with POI compared to healthy controls. The microbial community in women with POI showed a higher diversity, as indicated by the weighted UniFrac distance, suggesting a more complex microbiome. Lactobacillus species, which are typically abundant in the vaginal microbiota of healthy women, were significantly reduced in the POI group. In contrast, the genera Streptococcus, Gardnerella, and Anaerococcus were found in higher quantities in women with POI. Correlation analysis further revealed that the abundance of Lactobacillus was positively correlated with estradiol levels, while the abundance of Streptococcus was associated with increased FSH and LH levels. These microbial shifts were linked to the hormonal imbalances typical of POI, suggesting that the vaginal microbiome may play a role in the pathophysiology of the disease.
Key implications
The findings highlight that alterations in the vaginal microbiota, particularly a decrease in Lactobacillus and an increase in potentially pathogenic genera like Streptococcus and Gardnerella, are associated with POI. These changes may influence the inflammatory and immune responses in the vaginal environment, which could contribute to ovarian dysfunction. Understanding the link between microbiome composition and ovarian health in POI could lead to novel microbiome-targeted interventions, such as probiotic interventions, to restore balance and potentially mitigate the symptoms of POI. Future research should aim to explore the causality of these microbiome shifts and their direct impact on ovarian function.
Metabolic differences in women with premature ovarian insufficiency: a systematic review and meta-analysis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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This study investigates the metabolic differences in women with premature ovarian insufficiency (POI), highlighting increased waist circumference, cholesterol, and glucose levels. It underscores the importance of early metabolic screening and management to address the elevated cardiovascular risk associated with POI.
What was studied?
This systematic review and meta-analysis aimed to investigate the metabolic differences in women with premature ovarian insufficiency (POI) in comparison to healthy controls. POI is a condition marked by the loss of ovarian function before the age of 40, leading to symptoms such as estrogen deficiency, infertility, and increased risk of cardiovascular disease. The study assessed metabolic parameters such as waist circumference, systolic and diastolic blood pressure, glucose levels, lipid profiles (total cholesterol, LDL, HDL, triglycerides), and insulin levels. By pooling data from observational studies, the researchers sought to understand how these metabolic changes are linked to the onset of POI and their potential role in the long-term health risks associated with the condition.
Who was studied?
The study reviewed 21 observational studies involving 1,573 women with POI and 1,762 healthy women as controls. The women with POI were diagnosed based on clinical criteria, including elevated follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) levels and absent menstruation. The control group consisted of women with normal ovarian function and regular menstrual cycles. The age of the participants ranged from early adulthood to middle age, with the studies sourced from various regions, including the Middle East, Europe, East Asia, and Latin America.
Most important findings
The meta-analysis revealed significant differences in several metabolic parameters between women with POI and the control group. Women with POI had higher waist circumference, total cholesterol, low-density lipoprotein (LDL), high-density lipoprotein (HDL), triglycerides, and fasting glucose. Insulin levels were also marginally higher in the POI group, suggesting a potential link between POI and insulin resistance. However, no significant differences were observed in blood pressure measurements between the two groups. These findings suggest that metabolic abnormalities in POI may contribute to the higher cardiovascular risk associated with the condition.
Key implications
The findings of this study emphasize the need for early screening and ongoing management of metabolic health in women with POI. The increased risk of cardiovascular disease linked to metabolic abnormalities in POI underlines the importance of addressing factors such as lipid imbalances and insulin resistance in clinical practice. Hormone replacement therapy (HRT) may play a role in mitigating some of these metabolic disturbances, but further research is needed to determine the long-term benefits of such treatments on cardiovascular and metabolic health.
Plasma metabolomic characterization of premature ovarian insufficiency
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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This study identifies key metabolites altered in premature ovarian insufficiency (POI), including arachidonoyl amide and 18-HETE, which could serve as diagnostic biomarkers. The findings reveal insights into the metabolic disturbances of POI, offering potential therapeutic directions.
What was studied?
This study investigates the plasma metabolomic profile of patients with premature ovarian insufficiency (POI) using ultrahigh-performance liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (UHPLC–MS/MS). POI, which results in the loss of ovarian function before the age of 40, is associated with metabolic disturbances. The aim of the study was to characterize the metabolic changes in POI patients, specifically focusing on alterations in lipid and amino acid metabolism, and to evaluate whether these disturbances relate to ovarian reserve and could be used as diagnostic markers for POI.
Who was studied?
The study included 60 participants, 30 women diagnosed with POI and 30 age- and BMI-matched healthy controls. The participants were recruited from the Center for Reproductive Medicine at Nanfang Hospital, Southern Medical University. The inclusion criteria for POI were based on the European Society for Human Reproduction and Embryology (ESHRE) guidelines, which included a basal FSH level greater than 25 IU/L and oligo/amenorrhea for at least four months. The control group consisted of women with normal ovarian reserve and regular menstrual cycles.
Most important findings
The study identified 130 differentially expressed metabolites between the POI group and controls, highlighting significant alterations in lipid metabolism, amino acid metabolism, and caffeine metabolism. Metabolites such as arachidonoyl amide, 3-hydroxy-3-methylbutanoic acid, dihexyl nonanedioate, 18-HETE, cystine, and PG (16:0/18:1) were found to be potential biomarkers for POI. Notably, arachidonoyl amide showed a strong correlation with basal FSH levels and was identified as a promising diagnostic biomarker with an AUC value of 0.901. The study also revealed that disturbances in lipid metabolism, including changes in glycerophospholipids and fatty acyls, were associated with POI, which could explain the higher cardiovascular and metabolic risks seen in these patients.
Key implications
The findings of this study suggest that metabolomic profiling can be an effective tool in identifying biomarkers for POI, offering a non-invasive diagnostic approach that could complement existing hormonal tests like FSH and AMH. The identified metabolites also provide insight into the metabolic disturbances underlying POI, which could inform the development of therapeutic strategies targeting lipid and amino acid metabolism. Additionally, the study emphasizes the potential use of metabolic interventions or personalized treatment options to mitigate the long-term complications associated with POI, such as cardiovascular diseases and osteoporosis.
Premature ovarian insufficiency: a review on the role of tobacco smoke, its clinical harm, and treatment
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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Tobacco smoke significantly impacts ovarian function, leading to premature ovarian insufficiency. The review outlines the harmful effects of various tobacco-related toxins, such as nicotine, cadmium, and PAHs, and the associated reproductive consequences, including early menopause and reduced fertility.
What was studied?
This review investigates the impact of tobacco smoke on premature ovarian insufficiency (POI), a condition characterized by the early depletion of ovarian follicles and the onset of menopause before the age of 40. The study reviews the harmful effects of tobacco-related toxicants such as polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), heavy metals like cadmium, alkaloids including nicotine and cotinine, and benzo[a]pyrene, all of which contribute to ovarian damage. These toxicants can disrupt ovarian function by promoting apoptosis, oxidative stress, and DNA damage, leading to decreased fertility, early menopause, and a reduction in ovarian reserve.
Who was studied?
The review draws on data from human and animal studies, particularly focusing on the effects of tobacco exposure on women of reproductive age and animal models. The studies cited in the review examine the physiological and molecular consequences of smoking on ovarian tissues, granulosa cells, and oocytes, particularly how they respond to the harmful substances in tobacco smoke.
Most important findings
Tobacco smoke contains more than 5,000 harmful chemicals that damage the ovaries. The review identifies how smoking accelerates ovarian aging by promoting follicular atresia, particularly affecting primordial follicles. It also describes how the exposure leads to persistent oxidative stress, mitochondrial dysfunction, and lipid peroxidation, which impair oocyte quality and reduce fertility. Notably, the review discusses the toxic effects of compounds such as nicotine, cotinine, cadmium, and PAHs on ovarian function. For example, nicotine disrupts estrogen production and hinders follicle development, while PAHs have been shown to reduce follicular growth and cause oocyte dysfunction.
Key implications
The review highlights the need for targeted interventions to reduce smoking among women of reproductive age, given its detrimental effects on ovarian health and fertility. Smoking cessation should be a key focus in the management and prevention of POI. Additionally, the review suggests that antioxidant therapies and other treatments targeting oxidative stress may offer potential therapeutic options for women with POI. The findings also underline the importance of public health efforts to reduce smoking rates, as it is a modifiable risk factor for early menopause and reduced fertility.
Model construction and drug therapy of primary ovarian insufficiency by ultrasound-guided injection
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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This study demonstrates the effectiveness of ultrasound-guided hUC-MSC exosome injection in restoring ovarian function and fertility in POI rat models, offering a new therapeutic approach for women with POI.
What was studied?
This research focuses on the development of an innovative model for primary ovarian insufficiency (POI) using an ultrasound-guided injection method to improve therapeutic delivery. The study investigates the effectiveness of human umbilical cord mesenchymal stem cell (hUC-MSC) exosomes as a potential treatment for POI in animal models. It aims to evaluate the therapeutic potential of exosomes in restoring ovarian function, including hormone levels, ovarian cycles, and fertility. The study compares several POI models and tests the effects of hUC-MSC exosome therapy administered via ultrasound-guided injection.
Who was studied?
The study used female Wistar rats, aged 5–7 weeks, to create different POI models, including cyclophosphamide-induced POI (POI-C), busulfan-induced POI (POI-B), ultrasound-guided cyclophosphamide-induced POI (POI-U), and a maternal separation (MS) model. The rats were divided into groups based on the model type, and therapeutic interventions, including hUC-MSC exosome injections, were administered to evaluate their effects on ovarian function, fertility, and hormone levels.
Most important findings
The study found that the POI-U model, which involved ultrasound-guided cyclophosphamide injection, showed the least complications, higher success rates, and more stable outcomes compared to the other POI models. When hUC-MSC exosomes were injected into the ovaries under ultrasound guidance, the rats in the POI-U group exhibited significant improvements in ovarian function. These improvements were reflected in increased levels of estradiol (E2), anti-Müllerian hormone (AMH), and better estrous cycle regularity, while follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) and luteinizing hormone (LH) levels decreased. The exosome treatment also reduced ovarian apoptosis and improved fertility outcomes. Mechanistically, the exosomes worked by regulating ovarian immune and metabolic functions, possibly through the paracrine signaling pathway.
Key implications
This study highlights the potential of hUC-MSC exosomes as an alternative therapy for POI, offering a promising method to restore ovarian function and fertility. The ultrasound-guided injection technique provides a precise and less invasive approach for drug and cell therapy, enhancing the potential for clinical translation. Given the promising results, further preclinical and clinical studies are needed to explore the long-term effects and safety of hUC-MSC exosome therapy in treating POI.
Premature ovarian insufficiency: the context of long-term effects
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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Premature ovarian insufficiency (POI) leads to fertility issues, bone loss, cardiovascular risks, and cognitive decline. Early intervention, including hormone therapy and lifestyle changes, is vital for managing long-term health risks.
What was studied?
This review examines the long-term consequences of premature ovarian insufficiency (POI), a condition where ovarian function ceases before the age of 40. It delves into how estrogen deficiency affects various aspects of health, including fertility, bone mineral density, cardiovascular health, and mental well-being. The review also investigates the psychological and cognitive impacts of POI and its contribution to premature morbidity and mortality. The aim is to provide an overview of the risks and challenges that POI presents to affected women, particularly in the long term.
Who was studied?
The study focuses on women diagnosed with POI, particularly those with spontaneous POI, though it also includes women whose condition is induced by medical treatments such as chemotherapy or radiotherapy. It looks at women under 40 who experience the cessation of menstrual cycles for over four months, with elevated serum FSH levels. The review encompasses various cases, from those with idiopathic causes to those whose condition arises from genetic, autoimmune, or iatrogenic factors.
Most important findings
The review reveals that women with POI face significant health risks due to estrogen deficiency. These include a drastic reduction in fertility, with spontaneous conception rates ranging from 4% to 10%. Oocyte donation remains the most effective fertility treatment, with success rates of up to 40%. Estrogen loss also leads to a decrease in bone mineral density, increasing the risk of osteoporosis and fractures. Cardiovascular health is notably affected, with women exhibiting endothelial dysfunction, abnormal lipid profiles, and an increased risk of ischemic heart disease. Urogenital symptoms like vaginal dryness and sexual dysfunction are common due to the lack of estrogen, and while hormone replacement therapy (HRT) helps alleviate some symptoms, it does not fully address sexual dysfunction. Furthermore, cognitive decline and mood disorders such as depression and anxiety are prevalent, especially in women who experience POI due to surgical menopause or cancer treatments. In terms of cancer, while POI women may have a reduced risk of breast cancer due to shorter exposure to estrogen, they are at an elevated risk of other cancers, particularly when POI is induced by medical treatments.
Key implications
The implications of these findings are significant for the clinical management of women with POI. Clinicians must provide a comprehensive, individualized approach to care that includes not only fertility counseling but also measures to mitigate the long-term health risks, such as cardiovascular disease and bone mineral density loss. Regular monitoring of bone health, hormone replacement therapy, and psychological support are essential for improving the quality of life and preventing complications. Furthermore, women with POI should be encouraged to adopt a healthy lifestyle, including exercise, a balanced diet, and the avoidance of smoking, to reduce the risks associated with cardiovascular disease and osteoporosis.
Metformin protects ovarian granulosa cells in chemotherapy-induced premature ovarian failure mice through AMPK/PPAR-γ/SIRT1 pathway
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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This study demonstrates that metformin protects against chemotherapy-induced ovarian failure by reducing inflammation, oxidative stress, and senescence in granulosa cells via the AMPK/PPAR-γ/SIRT1 pathway.
What was studied?
This study investigates the protective effects of metformin (MET) on ovarian granulosa cells (GCs) in chemotherapy-induced premature ovarian failure (POF) mice. The research explores the therapeutic potential of MET, known for its anti-inflammatory and antioxidant properties, in mitigating the ovarian damage caused by chemotherapy agents such as cyclophosphamide (CTX) and busulfan (BUS). The study specifically examines the role of MET in reducing inflammation, oxidative stress, and senescence in GCs, ultimately aiming to protect ovarian function and improve reproductive outcomes in POF.
Who was studied?
The study used a chemotherapy-induced POF mouse model, where female mice (6-7 weeks old) were injected with cyclophosphamide and busulfan to induce ovarian dysfunction. These mice were then treated with MET to evaluate its protective effects. The study also involved primary ovarian granulosa cells (GCs) co-cultured with M1 macrophages to simulate inflammatory conditions observed in POF. This model was used to assess the molecular mechanisms underlying MET's effects on ovarian health, specifically focusing on the AMPK/PPAR-γ/SIRT1 signaling pathway.
Most important findings
The study found that MET administration significantly improved ovarian health in chemotherapy-induced POF mice. MET treatment led to an increase in ovarian weight and follicular development, alongside improvements in estrous cycle regularity and hormonal balance, as evidenced by increased estradiol (E2) and decreased follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) levels. The study also demonstrated that MET alleviated oxidative stress by upregulating antioxidant enzyme activities and reduced inflammation by inhibiting M1 macrophage polarization and pro-inflammatory cytokine production. In cell culture experiments, MET mitigated the damage to GCs induced by M1 macrophages, reducing ROS accumulation and cellular senescence. Furthermore, the protective effects of MET were linked to the activation of the AMPK/PPAR-γ/SIRT1 pathway, highlighting its role in enhancing cellular homeostasis and preventing follicular atresia.
Key implications
This study provides compelling evidence for the use of MET as a potential therapeutic intervention for POF, particularly in patients with chemotherapy-induced ovarian damage. By targeting inflammation and oxidative stress, MET may offer a novel approach to preserving ovarian function and fertility in women affected by POF. The activation of the AMPK/PPAR-γ/SIRT1 pathway could serve as a key mechanism for MET's protective effects, suggesting that similar pathways might be targeted in clinical treatments for ovarian insufficiency. Further research, particularly clinical trials, is needed to confirm the applicability of these findings in human patients.
The non-pathogenic Escherichia coli strain Nissle 1917 – features of a versatile probiotic
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Probiotics
Probiotics
Probiotics are live microorganisms that offer significant health benefits when administered in adequate amounts. They primarily work by modulating the gut microbiome, supporting a balanced microbial ecosystem. Probiotics have been shown to improve gut health, modulate immune responses, and even influence metabolic and mental health disorders. With growing evidence supporting their therapeutic potential, probiotics are increasingly recognized for their role in treating conditions like irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), antibiotic-associated diarrhea (AAD), and even mental health conditions like depression and anxiety through their impact on the gut-brain axis.
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E. coli Nissle 1917 is a non-pathogenic probiotic strain that inhibits pathogenic bacteria, reduces inflammation, and strengthens intestinal barrier function, with proven clinical efficacy in treating gastrointestinal diseases.
What was studied?
This article reviews the versatile properties of Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 (EcN), focusing on its microbiological, immunological, and pharmacological characteristics as a probiotic. The strain’s origins, isolation, and non-pathogenic nature were explored, highlighting its lack of virulence factors, and its beneficial properties such as inhibiting pathogenic bacteria, enhancing epithelial barrier function, and modulating inflammatory responses. The article also delves into its safety profile, genetic makeup, and clinical efficacy in treating gastrointestinal diseases like chronic constipation, inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD), and diarrhea. The review examines EcN’s unique ability to promote intestinal health and its mechanisms of action, offering insights into its widespread use as a therapeutic agent.
Who was studied?
The study focuses on Escherichia coli Nissle 1917, a strain that was first isolated by Alfred Nissle in 1917 due to its antagonistic effects against pathogenic enterobacteria. EcN is a non-pathogenic strain of E. coli, meaning it does not carry any pathogenic virulence factors, such as enterotoxins, cytotoxins, or adhesins, making it safe for use in humans. It is commonly used in medical and veterinary applications as a probiotic agent. Its biological activities, safety, and therapeutic applications were analyzed, highlighting its use in treating chronic gastrointestinal conditions and its efficacy in both human and animal models. The study also notes its genetic features, such as genomic islands and the presence of fitness factors that contribute to its probiotic properties.
Most important findings
EcN is distinguished from other E. coli strains due to its ability to inhibit the growth of pathogenic bacteria, such as Salmonella, E. coli O157:H7, and Clostridium perfringens. It is particularly noted for its immunomodulatory properties, including its ability to reduce inflammation and improve intestinal barrier function. The strain produces microcins, which inhibit the growth of competing bacteria, and it has a unique lipopolysaccharide (LPS) structure that is crucial for its anti-inflammatory effects. EcN has been shown to stimulate the production of defensins and strengthen tight junctions in intestinal cells, helping to prevent conditions like leaky gut. Clinical trials have demonstrated EcN's therapeutic potential in treating ulcerative colitis, chronic constipation, and infectious diarrhea.
Key implications
The findings suggest that E. coli Nissle 1917 is a highly effective probiotic with wide-ranging applications in gastrointestinal health. Its ability to inhibit pathogenic bacterial growth and modulate the immune system presents it as a potential therapeutic agent for chronic inflammatory diseases like ulcerative colitis and for improving gut health in general. EcN’s effects on the intestinal barrier and its ability to regulate inflammatory responses indicate its potential use in treating conditions associated with gut permeability and inflammation. Moreover, its safety profile and proven clinical efficacy make it a valuable alternative to traditional antibiotic treatments, especially for preventing and managing infections in both humans and animals.
Insights from 100 Years of Research with Probiotic E. Coli
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Probiotics
Probiotics
Probiotics are live microorganisms that offer significant health benefits when administered in adequate amounts. They primarily work by modulating the gut microbiome, supporting a balanced microbial ecosystem. Probiotics have been shown to improve gut health, modulate immune responses, and even influence metabolic and mental health disorders. With growing evidence supporting their therapeutic potential, probiotics are increasingly recognized for their role in treating conditions like irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), antibiotic-associated diarrhea (AAD), and even mental health conditions like depression and anxiety through their impact on the gut-brain axis.
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Probiotic-e-coli-nissle-1917 shows benefit in ulcerative colitis, infant diarrhea, and innate immune priming, with transient engraftment and microcin-based pathogen suppression, but no effect in Crohn’s disease. Safety is strong, though neonatal products require caution.
What was reviewed?
This review synthesized 100 years of clinical and mechanistic research on E. coli Nissle 1917 and other E. coliprobiotics. The review compared EcN (Mutaflor), Symbioflor 2, and Colinfant. It assessed human studies, animal models, genomics, and safety. The review also traced origins, dosing, colonization, and proposed modes of action and summarized outcomes in ulcerative colitis, infant diarrhea, functional gut disorders, and immune markers. It examined the proximity of probiotic strains to uropathogenic E. coli at the genomic level and noted microcin production, iron acquisition systems, and adhesins. The review by Wassenaar provided the integrated evidence base. It considered ethical issues for neonatal use where hemolysin appears. It mapped research trends and future applications against antimicrobial resistance.
Who was reviewed?
Adults with ulcerative colitis received EcN and showed remission maintenance comparable to mesalazine. Children with ulcerative colitis tolerated EcN and maintained remission. Patients with Crohn’s disease did not benefit. Healthy adults showed β-defensin induction after Symbioflor 2. Newborns and preterm infants colonized transiently with EcN and showed higher stool or mucosal IgA. Infants with acute viral diarrhea had shorter illness with EcN. Adults with constipation improved stool frequency. Liver cirrhosis data were limited. Elderly residents did not clear multidrug-resistant E. coli with EcN. Evidence for Colinfant came mainly from a single research group in infants.
Most important findings
EcN supports ulcerative colitis remission at rates similar to mesalazine. It does not treat Crohn’s disease. Its benefits likely reflect host–microbe signaling, not durable engraftment. Fecal detection in adults declines weeks after dosing. Human β-defensins rise after exposure to Symbioflor 2. Infant studies show higher EcN-specific IgA and fewer detected enteric pathogens. EcN produces microcins M and H47. These peptides inhibit Enterobacteriaceae and Shiga-toxin–producing E. coli in vitro. Strong iron uptake and yersiniabactin support nutrient competition against Salmonella in animal models. Genomes of EcN and Colinfant resemble uropathogenic E. coli, including adhesins and hemolysin loci, yet clinical safety is good. Symbioflor 2 harbors multiple genotypes with distinct traits. One genotype drives β-defensin induction. Another genotype colonizes more persistently. Together, these signatures point to a probiotic profile characterized by transient carriage, microcin-mediated pathogen suppression, innate immune priming, and iron-linked competitive exclusion.
Key implications
Clinicians can consider EcN to maintain remission in ulcerative colitis. It is not indicated for Crohn’s disease. Expect transient colonization and host-mediated effects. Benefits may come from microcins and defensin induction. Infant diarrhea may shorten with EcN. Monitor products for hemolysin in neonatal settings. Genomic proximity to uropathogens warrants vigilance, yet observed safety is strong. Probiotic strategies may regain value as antibiotic resistance grows. Personalization will matter because colonization varies. Use clear endpoints, stool microbiome reads, immune markers, and relapse rates to guide care.
Oral Administration of Probiotics Inhibits Absorption of the Heavy Metal Cadmium by Protecting the Intestinal Barrier
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Probiotics
Probiotics
Probiotics are live microorganisms that offer significant health benefits when administered in adequate amounts. They primarily work by modulating the gut microbiome, supporting a balanced microbial ecosystem. Probiotics have been shown to improve gut health, modulate immune responses, and even influence metabolic and mental health disorders. With growing evidence supporting their therapeutic potential, probiotics are increasingly recognized for their role in treating conditions like irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), antibiotic-associated diarrhea (AAD), and even mental health conditions like depression and anxiety through their impact on the gut-brain axis.
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This study highlights the protective effects of Lactobacillus plantarum CCFM8610 probiotics against cadmium toxicity by preserving intestinal barrier function and reducing oxidative stress, offering a potential therapeutic strategy for preventing heavy metal absorption.
What was studied?
This study investigates the effects of probiotics, particularly Lactobacillus plantarum CCFM8610, on the inhibition of cadmium (Cd) absorption in the intestines. The primary focus was on understanding how probiotics can protect the gut barrier and alleviate cadmium-induced oxidative stress and inflammation. The study aimed to test whether probiotics could prevent intestinal Cd absorption through mechanisms beyond Cd binding, specifically targeting gut barrier protection.
Who was studied?
The research was conducted on both human intestinal cell lines (HT-29) and mouse models. In vitro assays were used to evaluate the protective effects of probiotics on intestinal cell viability, tight junction integrity, and oxidative stress. The mouse model was used to assess how probiotics influence Cd accumulation in tissues, fecal Cd levels, and intestinal barrier function when exposed to Cd.
Most important findings
The study demonstrated that L. plantarum CCFM8610 significantly alleviated cadmium-induced cytotoxicity in human intestinal cells and protected tight junctions from disruption. In mice, probiotics with good Cd-binding and antioxidative abilities increased fecal Cd excretion and reduced Cd accumulation in tissues. Treatment with probiotics not only protected the intestinal barrier but also decreased Cd-induced inflammation and oxidative stress. Notably, L. plantarum CCFM8610, which exhibited both strong Cd-binding and antioxidative properties, showed the most significant protective effects. This strain’s antioxidative ability played a crucial role in mitigating Cd-induced oxidative damage and improving gut barrier function.
Key implications
The findings suggest that probiotics, particularly those with Cd-binding and antioxidative properties, can serve as an effective strategy to protect against heavy metal toxicity. The protective effect extends beyond merely binding to cadmium; probiotics can restore intestinal barrier integrity, reduce oxidative stress, and lower intestinal permeability, preventing further absorption of cadmium. The use of L. plantarum strains as a daily supplement could be a promising intervention to mitigate the adverse effects of environmental cadmium exposure, especially for populations at high risk of exposure.
Probiotics Mechanism of Action on Immune Cells and Beneficial Effects on Human Health
February 12, 2026
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Probiotics
Probiotics
Probiotics are live microorganisms that offer significant health benefits when administered in adequate amounts. They primarily work by modulating the gut microbiome, supporting a balanced microbial ecosystem. Probiotics have been shown to improve gut health, modulate immune responses, and even influence metabolic and mental health disorders. With growing evidence supporting their therapeutic potential, probiotics are increasingly recognized for their role in treating conditions like irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), antibiotic-associated diarrhea (AAD), and even mental health conditions like depression and anxiety through their impact on the gut-brain axis.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review examines the immunomodulatory effects of probiotics, detailing how they enhance immune functions through interactions with immune cells in the gut. Probiotics help regulate cytokine release, boost IgA production, and support gut health, offering potential therapeutic benefits for immune disorders.
What was studied?
The review explores the immunomodulatory effects of probiotics on the human immune system. It focuses on the mechanisms through which probiotics interact with immune cells, specifically in the gut, to regulate immune responses and improve overall health. The article emphasizes the role of probiotics in enhancing immune system functions, particularly in preventing infections, reducing inflammation, and maintaining homeostasis. It also delves into the molecular mechanisms, including cytokine release and receptor interactions, that facilitate these beneficial effects.
Who was studied?
The review synthesizes findings from in vitro, in vivo, and clinical studies involving various probiotic strains such as Lactobacillus, Bifidobacterium, and Escherichia coli, as well as their effects on different immune cells, including T lymphocytes, dendritic cells (DCs), macrophages, and B cells. It highlights studies on both healthy individuals and those with conditions such as inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), infections, allergies, and immune dysfunctions. The focus is on how these probiotic strains influence immune functions, such as the production of immunoglobulin A (IgA) and the modulation of inflammatory cytokines.
Most important findings
Probiotics, particularly strains of Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium, enhance immune responses by interacting with the gut's immune cells. They stimulate the production of IgA, modulate Treg (regulatory T) cells, and regulate the release of pro-inflammatory and anti-inflammatory cytokines. For instance, Lactobacillus casei and Lactobacillus rhamnosus were found to increase IgA production and enhance immune functions in both healthy and disease states. Probiotics also promote the expression of key immune receptors like TLR2 and CD206 on immune cells, thereby facilitating immune activation and modulation. Additionally, probiotics play a role in gut health by improving the intestinal barrier, preventing pathogen adhesion, and promoting beneficial microbial interactions. These effects are particularly important for managing conditions like IBD, allergies, and infections.
Key implications
The findings suggest that probiotics are an effective tool for enhancing immune system performance, particularly in regulating inflammatory responses and preventing immune-related disorders. The immunomodulatory properties of probiotics offer a potential therapeutic approach for conditions like allergies, IBD, and even infections. By modulating immune responses in the gut, probiotics may also have broader systemic effects on overall health, including influencing the gut-brain axis and the gut-lung axis. Further research into the specific molecular pathways and probiotic strains is needed to optimize their use in clinical practice.
Escherichia coli strain Nissle 1917—from bench to bedside and back
February 12, 2026
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Probiotics
Probiotics
Probiotics are live microorganisms that offer significant health benefits when administered in adequate amounts. They primarily work by modulating the gut microbiome, supporting a balanced microbial ecosystem. Probiotics have been shown to improve gut health, modulate immune responses, and even influence metabolic and mental health disorders. With growing evidence supporting their therapeutic potential, probiotics are increasingly recognized for their role in treating conditions like irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), antibiotic-associated diarrhea (AAD), and even mental health conditions like depression and anxiety through their impact on the gut-brain axis.
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Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 (EcN), a probiotic with a rich history, is now being engineered for therapeutic uses beyond gastrointestinal health, including metabolic disease treatment and immune modulation. Its potential in microbiome research and live vaccine development is also being explored.
What was studied?
The article provides a comprehensive historical and modern analysis of Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 (EcN), focusing on its discovery, development, and its probiotic properties. It outlines the origins of EcN, isolated by Alfred Nissle in 1917, and its subsequent use as a therapeutic agent. The review explores the strain's antagonistic activities, particularly its ability to inhibit the growth of harmful enteric pathogens like Salmonella, and the molecular mechanisms that support this action. Recent advancements in biotechnology have enhanced EcN’s use in clinical applications such as the treatment of gastrointestinal disorders, and in new areas like metabolic disease and pathogen-targeted therapy. The study also discusses the evolving role of EcN in microbiome research, its genomic sequencing, and its potential for use in live biotherapeutic products (LBPs).
Who was studied?
The study primarily focuses on the Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 strain, a specific bacterial strain known for its probiotic properties. The review touches on the history of EcN, tracing its origins back to its isolation from a soldier’s stool during World War I, who was notably resistant to dysentery despite exposure. Further research on its properties has expanded EcN’s use from a simple probiotic to a model organism in experimental biomedical studies. The article also discusses how EcN has been utilized in various clinical trials, ranging from treatment for infectious diseases to its potential in metabolic disorders.
Most important findings
EcN’s antagonistic activity against harmful pathogens has been well documented, with studies showing its efficacy in inhibiting Salmonella and other enteropathogenic bacteria in vitro and in vivo. The discovery of microcins, antimicrobial peptides produced by EcN, is central to this activity. EcN’s ability to produce siderophores allows it to compete for iron in the gut, depriving pathogens of a crucial nutrient.
Recent advancements in the genetic engineering of EcN have expanded its therapeutic potential. Engineered strains of EcN, such as those developed by Synlogic for the treatment of metabolic diseases like phenylketonuria (PKU) and hyperammonemia, demonstrate how EcN can be used as a live medicine. These strains are modified to produce enzymes that break down excess phenylalanine or ammonia, showcasing EcN’s versatility as a drug-delivery vehicle in the gastrointestinal tract. EcN’s potential as a live vaccine vector is being explored, with the strain being engineered to deliver antigens from various pathogens to the gut-associated lymphoid tissue, triggering immune responses.
Key implications
The historical and ongoing research into E. coli Nissle 1917 highlights its broad therapeutic potential, particularly in the realm of gastrointestinal health and infectious disease management. Its ability to outcompete harmful bacteria and modulate the gut microbiome makes it a valuable tool for treating a variety of conditions, from diarrhea to inflammatory bowel diseases. The development of engineered EcN strains opens up new possibilities for treating metabolic disorders and other non-gastrointestinal diseases, showcasing the promise of probiotics in modern medicine. Moreover, its use as a vaccine vector and in postbiotic therapies suggests a future where EcN plays a central role in immune modulation and disease prevention.
Microcins mediate competition among Enterobacteriaceae in the inflamed gut
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Probiotics
Probiotics
Probiotics are live microorganisms that offer significant health benefits when administered in adequate amounts. They primarily work by modulating the gut microbiome, supporting a balanced microbial ecosystem. Probiotics have been shown to improve gut health, modulate immune responses, and even influence metabolic and mental health disorders. With growing evidence supporting their therapeutic potential, probiotics are increasingly recognized for their role in treating conditions like irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), antibiotic-associated diarrhea (AAD), and even mental health conditions like depression and anxiety through their impact on the gut-brain axis.
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The study explores how Escherichia coli Nissle 1917’s microcins mediate competition in the inflamed gut, showing potential for therapeutic use in enterobacterial infections and colitis management.
What was studied?
This study examined the role of microcins produced by Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 (EcN) in mediating competition among Enterobacteriaceae in the inflamed gut. The researchers investigated how these small antimicrobial peptides enabled EcN to limit the expansion of both commensal and pathogenic Enterobacteriaceae, particularly under iron-limiting conditions, which are common during intestinal inflammation. The team conducted in vitro and in vivo experiments using mouse models of colitis to observe the impact of EcN’s microcin production on the gut microbiota, focusing on its ability to outcompete pathogens, such as Salmonella enterica, and pathobionts, including adherent-invasive E. coli (AIEC).
Who was studied?
The study primarily focused on Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 (EcN), its microcin-producing wild-type strain, and mutant strains incapable of producing microcins. The in vivo experiments were performed using specific pathogen-free (SPF) C57BL/6 mice treated with dextran sulfate sodium (DSS) to induce colitis, and germ-free mice to study colonization in the absence of pre-existing microbiota. Additionally, Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium (STm), AIEC, and a commensal E. coli (cEc) strain were used to model pathogen competition within the gut. Colonization levels, microbial community composition, and histopathological changes in the intestines were assessed.
Most important findings
The study demonstrated that microcins produced by EcN enabled it to limit the growth of competing Enterobacteriaceae during colitis. EcN's microcin genes (mcmA and mchB) were expressed under iron-limited conditions, enabling EcN to outcompete Salmonella and commensal E. coli in the inflamed gut. In DSS-treated mice, wild-type EcN reduced Salmonella colonization, while microcin mutants showed significantly lower competitive ability. Microcins, however, did not considerably impact the gut microbiota, suggesting their narrow-spectrum activity. Furthermore, therapeutic administration of wild-type EcN reduced Salmonella colonization and associated inflammation, with microcin mutants showing reduced effectiveness. This study provides the first in vivo evidence of microcin-mediated competition within the gut, showing microcins as a potential therapeutic tool for enterobacterial infections in inflammatory conditions.
Key implications
The findings suggest that microcins could be developed as targeted therapeutic agents to treat enterobacterial infections, particularly in the context of gut inflammation. Since microcins help beneficial bacteria, such as EcN, outcompete pathogens, they may offer an alternative to broad-spectrum antibiotics, preserving beneficial gut microbiota while suppressing harmful pathogens. Additionally, their role in nutrient competition, particularly for iron, highlights a potential pathway for manipulating gut microbial dynamics during dysbiosis or disease. The therapeutic use of microcin-producing probiotics may be beneficial for conditions such as colitis and inflammatory bowel diseases.
The probiotic Escherichia coli strain Nissle 1917 interferes with invasion of human intestinal epithelial cells by different enteroinvasive bacterial pathogens
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Probiotics
Probiotics
Probiotics are live microorganisms that offer significant health benefits when administered in adequate amounts. They primarily work by modulating the gut microbiome, supporting a balanced microbial ecosystem. Probiotics have been shown to improve gut health, modulate immune responses, and even influence metabolic and mental health disorders. With growing evidence supporting their therapeutic potential, probiotics are increasingly recognized for their role in treating conditions like irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), antibiotic-associated diarrhea (AAD), and even mental health conditions like depression and anxiety through their impact on the gut-brain axis.
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Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 (EcN) interferes with the invasion of human intestinal epithelial cells by various pathogens through a secreted component, not by microcins or physical contact, suggesting its potential as a therapeutic probiotic to prevent gastrointestinal infections.
What was studied?
This study focused on the probioticEscherichia coli Nissle 1917 (EcN) and its ability to interfere with the invasion of human intestinal epithelial cells by several enteroinvasive bacterial pathogens, including Salmonella enterica, Yersinia enterocolitica, Shigella flexneri, Legionella pneumophila, and Listeria monocytogenes. The researchers sought to determine whether EcN could inhibit bacterial invasion without affecting the viability of the pathogens. They explored the mechanisms behind this interference, specifically examining whether it was due to the production of microcins, physical contact, or secreted components.
Who was studied?
The study primarily investigated Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 (EcN), an established probiotic strain, and its isogenic microcin-negative mutant (SK22D). Various bacterial strains were used as invasive pathogens, including Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium, Yersinia enterocolitica, Shigella flexneri, Legionella pneumophila, and Listeria monocytogenes. Human intestinal epithelial cells (INT407 cells) were employed as a model for studying bacterial invasion, providing insight into EcN's anti-invasive properties in human gut cells.
Most important findings
The study revealed that E. coli Nissle 1917 (EcN) significantly interfered with the invasion of human intestinal epithelial cells by various enteroinvasive pathogens, reducing the invasion efficiency by up to 70%. This inhibitory effect was not dependent on direct physical contact between EcN and either the invasive bacteria or the epithelial cells. The anti-invasive effect of EcN was observed even when EcN was separated from the epithelial cells and pathogens by a membrane. Furthermore, the inhibition was not due to the production of microcins, as the microcin-negative mutant SK22D was equally effective in preventing invasion. This suggests that EcN's anti-invasive activity relies on a secreted component rather than bacteriocin-like substances. Notably, EcN did not affect the viability of the pathogens during the invasion process, suggesting that its primary role is to prevent entry into host cells rather than kill the bacteria.
Key implications
The findings suggest that Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 (EcN) offers a promising mechanism for preventing bacterial infections by inhibiting pathogen invasion into intestinal cells. This effect could be particularly beneficial in avoiding gastrointestinal infections caused by pathogens such as Salmonella, Shigella, and Listeria. Since EcN’s action does not rely on direct contact with pathogens or epithelial cells and does not affect pathogen viability, it represents a safe and effective probiotic strategy to enhance gut barrier function. The results highlight EcN's potential as a therapeutic agent in preventing bacterial invasion without disrupting the balance of the gut microbiota.
Intestinal effect of the probiotic Escherichia coli strain Nissle 1917 and its OMV
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Probiotics
Probiotics
Probiotics are live microorganisms that offer significant health benefits when administered in adequate amounts. They primarily work by modulating the gut microbiome, supporting a balanced microbial ecosystem. Probiotics have been shown to improve gut health, modulate immune responses, and even influence metabolic and mental health disorders. With growing evidence supporting their therapeutic potential, probiotics are increasingly recognized for their role in treating conditions like irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), antibiotic-associated diarrhea (AAD), and even mental health conditions like depression and anxiety through their impact on the gut-brain axis.
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This review explains how Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 and its outer membrane vesicles act on the intestinal barrier, immune signalling and dysbiotic microbiota in inflammatory bowel disease and how these features support probiotic and postbiotic strategies that target defined microbiome signatures.
What was reviewed?
The intestinal effect of Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 is the core focus of this narrative review, which examines how this probiotic strain and its outer membrane vesicles act on the gut barrier, the intestinal microbiome, and host immunity in states of health and disease. The authors describe the shift from a diverse microbiome rich in Firmicutes and Bacteroidetes to a dysbiotic pattern that shows loss of beneficial commensals and increased Gammaproteobacteria in inflammatory bowel disease and other intestinal disorders. They then position Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 as a non-pathogenic Gammaproteobacterium with probiotic potential, and they explore how its secreted factors and vesicles interact with epithelial and immune cells. The review integrates molecular work, animal models, and clinical data to link these microbial actions to outcomes such as maintenance of remission in ulcerative colitis, support of colonic health in Crohn's disease, and reduction of acute diarrhoea in children.
Who was reviewed?
The review brings together evidence from three main groups, which are cell-based systems, animal models, and human participants. In vitro work involves human intestinal epithelial cell lines such as T84 and HT 29, where exposure to Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 or its isolated vesicles alters tight junction protein expression and induces antimicrobial peptides. Animal studies mainly use mouse models of experimental colitis, for example, dextran sodium sulfate colitis, in which oral or rectal administration of live bacteria or purified vesicles reduces clinical scores, dampens mucosal cytokine release, and improves barrier structure. Human data come from clinical trials and observational studies in infants with acute diarrhoea, in adults with ulcerative colitis, in patients with colonic Crohn disease, and in individuals with diverticular disease, where Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 appears as a therapeutic or preventive option and where associated microbiome changes and clinical endpoints are recorded.
Most important findings
The review shows that dysbiosis in inflammatory bowel disease usually includes loss of key commensal groups, especially selected Firmicutes and Bacteroidetes, together with expansion of Gammaproteobacteria, yet Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 stands out as a beneficial member of this expanded group. In epithelial models, the strain enhances barrier integrity by increasing expression and correct localisation of tight junction proteins such as zonula occludens 1, zonula occludens 2, and specific claudins, while it reduces activity of some protein kinase C isoforms that disrupt junctions, and these actions limit paracellular leak in the presence of injurious stimuli. Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 also induces human beta defensin 2 through nuclear factor kappa B and activator protein 1 signalling and engages toll like receptors via flagellin, which leads to increased antimicrobial peptide production and a controlled pro inflammatory response that helps to restrain pathogens without excess tissue damage.
The authors identify outer membrane vesicles from Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 as a central mediator of these effects because the vesicles carry lipopolysaccharide, peptidoglycan, lipoproteins, DNA, RNA, and small regulatory RNAs, and they can cross the mucus layer and enter epithelial cells through clathrin-dependent uptake. In mouse colitis models, oral vesicles reproduce much of the anti-inflammatory and barrier protective activity of the live strain, and they reduce histologic injury, cytokine levels, and disease scores. The review compares these data to work on vesicles from Akkermansia muciniphila and Bacteroides fragilis. It suggests a shared postbiotic signature in which vesicle-producing commensals promote barrier repair, downregulate mucosal inflammatory mediators, and influence epithelial gene expression, possibly through transfer of small RNAs. At the same time, the authors also note the presence of the colibactin gene cluster in Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 and call for continued safety monitoring despite the favourable clinical record.
Key implications
For clinical practice, the review supports Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 as a microbiome-directed option that strengthens the intestinal barrier and modulates immune responses in inflammatory bowel disease and related gut disorders. Trials indicate that the strain can maintain remission in ulcerative colitis with comparable efficacy to mesalazine, can aid relapse prevention in colonic Crohn disease, and can shorten the course of acute infectious diarrhoea in children, which places it as a practical adjunct in selected patients. The emphasis on outer membrane vesicles suggests a future shift toward postbiotic strategies that use defined vesicle preparations or engineered vesicles to deliver beneficial bacterial signals without live organisms, which may improve safety in vulnerable hosts.
Improvement of a synthetic live bacterial therapeutic for phenylketonuria with biosensor-enabled enzyme engineering
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Probiotics
Probiotics
Probiotics are live microorganisms that offer significant health benefits when administered in adequate amounts. They primarily work by modulating the gut microbiome, supporting a balanced microbial ecosystem. Probiotics have been shown to improve gut health, modulate immune responses, and even influence metabolic and mental health disorders. With growing evidence supporting their therapeutic potential, probiotics are increasingly recognized for their role in treating conditions like irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), antibiotic-associated diarrhea (AAD), and even mental health conditions like depression and anxiety through their impact on the gut-brain axis.
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Engineered EcN for phenylketonuria was upgraded to SYNB1934 using biosensor-enabled PAL evolution, doubling gut phenylalanine conversion and keeping biocontainment, supporting development of an oral strain for diet-refractory PKU.
What was studied?
Engineered Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 phenylketonuria therapy was developed to improve degradation of phenylalanine in the gut using a second-generation live biotherapeutic, SYNB1934, built on the earlier strain SYNB1618. The investigators reasoned that PKU patients need an oral, lumen-active, genotype-independent way to clear excess phenylalanine before it enters the bloodstream. They created a trans-cinnamate biosensor, screened a >1-million–member PAL mutant library directly in EcN, and identified an evolved PAL (mPAL) with higher whole-cell activity. They then integrated mPAL and the same auxiliary Phe-uptake and LAAD modules used in SYNB1618 into the EcN chromosome, along with auxotrophic containment. They compared activity in simulated gut conditions, in non-human primates, and against the clinical first-generation strain.
Who was studied?
Library construction and biosensor screening were conducted in the probiotic EcN, ensuring that enzyme improvements reflected the physiology of the final chassis. Functional testing was performed using in vitro gastrointestinal simulations. Nonhuman primates were then given an oral peptide plus deuterated phenylalanine load to model postprandial Phe entry, followed by a single oral dose of SYNB1618 or SYNB1934 to compare the production of the strain-specific biomarker trans-cinnamate and its hepatic product, d5-hippurate. Previous human data from the earlier strain demonstrated safety, gut confinement, and biomarker output, positioning SYNB1934 as a more potent successor for future PKU trials in patients who fail or cannot tolerate existing PAH-dependent drugs.
Most important findings
The biosensor-guided "pop'n'sort" workflow enriched PAL variants with 25–100% higher whole-cell activity than wild type, and most retained activity even after brief acid exposure, making them suitable for oral dosing. One variant carrying S92G, H133M, I167K, L432I, and V470A substitutions became the core of SYNB1934 because it improved catalytic turnover without adding phenylalanine to the cell mass. In gut simulation, lyophilized SYNB1934 generated about twice as much trans-cinnamate per 2.5×10⁹ cells as SYNB1618, confirming a genuine strain-level gain. In nonhuman primates challenged with peptide and d5-phenylalanine, SYNB1934 produced approximately twofold higher plasma exposure to TCA and d5-TCA, and more than twofold higher urinary d5-hippurate levels than SYNB1618, demonstrating superior in vivo phenylalanine capture and conversion. Because wild-type EcN does not make these metabolites, they serve as clean strain-specific readouts. The authors therefore defined a microbiome therapeutic signature for PKU: an EcN backbone, chromosomally integrated high-activity PAL, PheP-mediated substrate uptake, a LAAD backup pathway, and a dapA-based biocontainment mechanism, with biomarker recovery in both plasma and urine.
Key implications
Clinicians can read this as proof that live-engineered EcN can be iteratively improved to deliver more phenylalanine-lowering activity without changing the route or the safety concept. A more active strain should allow either lower doses, fewer capsules, or greater phenylalanine disposal in patients who stay above target despite diet or who cannot take injectable PAL. Because the system operates within the lumen, it should be effective across all PKU genotypes, including those with no residual PAH. The work also shows that future EcN therapeutics should be reported with their sensor, payload, and containment modules, since minor enzyme upgrades can translate into clear systemic biomarker gains and can be tracked for precision microbiome therapy.
Lugdunin amplifies innate immune responses in the skin in synergy with host- and microbiota-derived factors
February 12, 2026
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Research Fast-Track (RFT) Designation
Research Fast-Track (RFT) Designation
OverviewThe Research Fast-Track (RFT) designation is a priority label used within the Microbiome Signatures framework to identify microbiome-targeted interventions that demonstrate exceptional translational potential and clinical relevance. This designation highlights interventions that warrant accelerated research, validation, and collaborative exploration due to their alignment with condition-specific microbiome signatures and their capacity to impact disease pathogenesis or […]
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Bitschar, K., Sauer, B., Focken, J. et al. Lugdunin amplifies innate immune responses in the skin in synergy with host- and microbiota-derived factors. Nat Commun 10, 2730 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-019-10646-7
What was studied?
This study investigated the immunomodulatory and antimicrobial properties of lugdunin, a thiazolidine-containing cyclic peptide antibiotic produced by Staphylococcus lugdunensis, in the context of Staphylococcus aureus skin colonization. The authors assessed lugdunin's capacity to enhance host innate immune responses and examined its synergy with both microbiota-derived and host-derived factors. Specifically, they explored lugdunin's ability to induce antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) and cytokines in primary human keratinocytes (PHKs) and mouse skin, its dependence on the TLR/MyD88 signaling pathway, and its synergistic bactericidal activity with host AMPs.
Who was studied?
The study used multiple experimental models, including in vitro stimulation of human primary keratinocytes, nasal and tracheal epithelial cells, and peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs). Murine models (C57BL/6 wild-type, MyD88 knockout, and 5xTLR knockout mice) were employed for in vivo analysis of cytokine expression and immune cell recruitment in response to epicutaneous lugdunin application.
What were the most important findings?
Lugdunin acts through a dual mechanism—direct antimicrobial activity and immunomodulation—to inhibit S. aureus colonization. Pretreatment of human keratinocytes and murine skin with lugdunin significantly reduced S. aureus adherence and colonization, particularly when combined with S. epidermidis-derived conditioned media. Lugdunin potently induced LL-37 and CXCL8 (MIP-2 in mice) expression, facilitating neutrophil and monocyte recruitment to the application site via a Toll-like receptor (TLR)/MyD88-dependent mechanism. This was supported by impaired cytokine expression and immune cell infiltration in TLR- and MyD88-deficient mice, indicating a reliance on these innate pathways.
Notably, lugdunin exhibited a strong synergistic antimicrobial effect against MRSA (USA300) when combined with human AMPs LL-37 and dermcidin-derived peptides (DCD-1 and DCD-1L). Combination index analysis (Fig. 5 b, page 9) confirmed synergistic killing, whereas sequential peptide application failed to replicate this effect (Fig. 6, page 10), underscoring the importance of simultaneous exposure. These synergistic effects were specific to S. aureus, as they did not extend to commensal or Gram-negative species.
Additionally, lugdunin outperformed other bacteriocins like nisin and gallidermin in inducing CXCL8 expression and immune cell recruitment (page 8). Notably, the immunostimulatory activity required the intact thiazolidine ring structure, as N-acetyl-lugdunin lacked this function.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings position lugdunin as a multi-functional, microbiota-derived molecule that enhances skin defense against S. aureus via synergistic antimicrobial and innate immune mechanisms. It establishes a new paradigm in which commensal-derived cyclic peptides can simultaneously suppress pathogens and amplify host defense pathways. This raises the possibility of using lugdunin, or lugdunin-producing commensals, as a topical therapeutic to reduce S. aureus burden, particularly in atopic dermatitis and MRSA-prone individuals. The synergistic interactions with host AMPs suggest a promising avenue for combination therapies that enhance cutaneous innate immunity without relying solely on conventional antibiotics.
Further, given this study's findings, Lugdunin's relevance extends far beyond acute Staphylococcus aureus skin infections. It holds substantial promise for broader therapeutic application in chronic conditions where S. aureus has been identified as a Major Microbial Association (MMA) in microbiome signatures.
Physical Activity and Breast Cancer Risk: Evidence, Mechanisms, and Clinical Implications
February 12, 2026
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Breast Cancer
Breast Cancer
Traditionally linked to genetic predispositions and environmental exposures, emerging evidence highlights the microbiome as a critical and underappreciated factor influencing breast cancer progression, immune response, and treatment outcomes.
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Resistance (Strength) Training
Resistance (Strength) Training
OverviewResistance (strength) training appears to exert modest but meaningful effects on the human gut microbiome. Unlike aerobic exercise, which often leads to pronounced changes in microbial diversity and taxonomic shifts, short-term resistance training tends to result in minimal changes in overall microbiome composition or alpha-diversity. However, this does not indicate a lack of functional impact. […]
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This review summarizes evidence linking physical activity to reduced breast cancer risk, with significant benefits for postmenopausal women. Mechanisms include hormonal modulation, reduced inflammation, enhanced immunity, and potential microbiome interactions, supporting exercise as a key preventive strategy.
What was reviewed?
This narrative review, “The Role of Physical Activity in Breast Cancer Prevention,” synthesizes epidemiological and mechanistic research on how physical activity influences breast cancer risk, with a particular focus on postmenopausal women. Drawing on cohort, case-control, and meta-analytic studies, the review evaluates the magnitude of risk reduction associated with various intensities and types of physical activity. It also explores the biological mechanisms underlying these associations, including hormonal regulation, inflammation, immune function, and metabolic changes. Notably, while the review does not directly assess microbiome composition, it highlights the multifactorial nature of breast cancer risk and the growing importance of modifiable lifestyle factors—such as exercise—that may intersect with microbiome-related pathways.
Who was reviewed?
The review encompasses evidence from multiple population subgroups, primarily focusing on women, since over 99% of breast cancer cases occur in females. It surveys data from premenopausal and postmenopausal women, including those with hereditary risk factors (e.g., BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutations) and those exposed to varying environmental and lifestyle risks. The review references studies with broad demographic representation, including cross-cultural research on breast cancer incidence in women who migrate from low- to high-risk countries, underscoring the significance of lifestyle and environmental exposures. While the review is not a systematic meta-analysis, it draws on systematic reviews, meta-analyses, and large-scale cohort studies to present a holistic view of the evidence.
Most important findings
A consistent body of evidence demonstrates a significant inverse association between physical activity, resistance training, and breast cancer risk. Systematic reviews and meta-analyses report risk reductions ranging from 10% to 80%, depending on the population, study design, and activity intensity. The average risk reduction is about 12–25%, with the strongest protective effect seen in postmenopausal women who engage in moderate-to-vigorous exercise sustained over the lifespan. The benefit is also evident for premenopausal women, particularly with vigorous activity. Importantly, the protective effect of physical activity appears independent of weight loss, indicating direct biological effects.
Mechanistically, physical activity is proposed to lower breast cancer risk through several pathways relevant to the emerging field of microbiome-host interaction. These include reductions in circulating estrogen, progesterone, and insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) levels, all of which are implicated in breast cancer pathogenesis. Exercise also leads to decreased levels of chronic inflammatory markers such as C-reactive protein (CRP) and enhances immune surveillance—specifically, increased natural killer cell activity, which is critical for the identification and destruction of abnormal cells. Notably, high-intensity interval training (HIIT) is linked to a more significant increase in natural killer cells compared to moderate exercise, suggesting a possible dose-response relationship.
Though not explicitly addressed in the review, these mechanisms may intersect with the gut microbiome, as both inflammation and estrogen metabolism are influenced by microbial communities. For example, the gut microbiota modulates systemic estrogen levels via β-glucuronidase expression and enterohepatic circulation, and physical activity is known to shape microbiome diversity and function. Therefore, the observed associations between exercise and breast cancer risk may, in part, be mediated by microbiome-driven metabolic and immunological pathways.
Key implications
The review strongly supports the promotion of physical activity as a viable, low-risk strategy to reduce breast cancer risk across diverse populations, especially among postmenopausal women. Public health recommendations should emphasize at least 150 minutes per week of moderate-intensity or 75 minutes of vigorous-intensity exercise, with additional benefits seen at higher activity levels. Clinicians should incorporate physical activity counseling into routine preventive care for women, regardless of baseline body weight or genetic risk. The potential for exercise to favorably modulate hormonal, inflammatory, and immune factors—possibly via microbiome interactions—underscores the need for further research into how these pathways converge. Integrating exercise into cancer prevention strategies may also complement emerging microbiome-targeted interventions, paving the way for more personalized, holistic approaches to breast cancer prevention.
Citation
Edwards D. The Role of Physical Activity in Breast Cancer Prevention. J Evol Health. 2019;4(1). doi:10.15310/J34146744
An expansion of rare lineage intestinal microbes characterizes rheumatoid arthritis
February 12, 2026
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Rheumatoid Arthritis
Rheumatoid Arthritis
OverviewRheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a systemic autoimmune disease marked by chronic joint inflammation, synovitis, and bone erosion, driven by Treg/Th17 imbalance, excessive IL-17, TNF-α, and IL-1 production, and macrophage activation. Emerging evidence links microbial dysbiosis and heavy metal exposure to RA, [1][2] with gut microbiota influencing autoimmune activation via Toll-like receptor (TLR) signaling, inflammasome activation, […]
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Rheumatoid arthritis gut microbiome dysbiosis is marked by Collinsella expansion and Faecalibacterium loss, disrupting gut barrier function and promoting inflammation. These findings reveal potential diagnostic biomarkers and mechanistic pathways for microbiome-targeted interventions.
What was studied?
This study investigated the gut microbiome composition and its immunological and metabolic impact in rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Using 16S rRNA sequencing, plasma metabolomics, and predictive modeling, the researchers analyzed fecal samples from RA patients, their first-degree relatives (FDRs), and healthy controls. They aimed to identify microbial signatures associated with RA and validate the functional relevance of key taxa through human epithelial cell models and a humanized mouse model of arthritis. The central objective was to elucidate the microbial and metabolite profiles predictive of RA onset and progression.
Who was studied?
The study enrolled 40 RA patients fulfilling the 2010 ACR classification criteria, 15 first-degree relatives without autoimmune symptoms, and 17 unrelated healthy controls. Exclusion criteria included antibiotic or probiotic use, gastrointestinal or other autoimmune diseases. All human participants were enrolled through the Mayo Clinic, with ethical approval and informed consent. Animal models included HLA-DQ8 transgenic mice used to confirm microbial effects on disease severity.
What were the most important findings?
The RA group exhibited significantly decreased gut microbial diversity compared to controls, a shift driven primarily by an expansion of rare taxa from the phylum Actinobacteria, notably Collinsella, Eggerthella, and Actinomyces, alongside a reduction in Faecalibacterium. Random forest models identified Collinsella, Eggerthella, and Faecalibacterium as the most predictive genera for RA. Collinsella abundance was correlated with increased IL-17A production, disrupted gut epithelial tight junctions (ZO-1), elevated intestinal permeability, and pro-inflammatory chemokine expression. Experimental validation in HLA-DQ8 mice showed increased arthritis incidence following Collinsella exposure. Metabolomic data revealed elevated levels of alpha-aminoadipic acid and asparagine in RA patients, with significant correlations to Collinsella abundance. These findings position Collinsella as a candidate pathobiont with mechanistic links to both immune modulation and mucosal barrier dysfunction.
Predict RA presence; linked to inflammation, epithelial dysfunction
Microbial Diversity
Reduced alpha- and beta-diversity in RA patients
Indicates dysbiosis and microbial imbalance relevant to disease state
Functional Validation
Collinsella increased IL-17A, gut permeability, CXCL1/5 in vitro and arthritis severity in mice
Establishes causal link between microbial taxa and RA pathology
Metabolomic Associations
Elevated alpha-aminoadipic acid, asparagine; correlated with Collinsella abundance
Suggests microbe-metabolite-immune axis may mediate RA progression
Predictive Modeling
Random forest and Boruta algorithms identified top discriminatory taxa
Validates potential for microbial biomarkers in RA diagnosis and screening
Therapeutic Considerations
MTX and hydroxychloroquine associated with increased microbial diversity
Microbiome recovery may mediate therapeutic effects; supports microbiome as adjunctive target
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study provides compelling evidence that RA is associated with dysbiosis marked by an expansion of rare microbial taxa, especially Collinsella and Eggerthella, which act as Major Microbial Associations (MMAs) influencing disease progression through immune activation and barrier disruption. The mechanistic data support Collinsella's contribution to gut permeability and pro-inflammatory cytokine expression, implicating it in the early pathogenesis of RA. The loss of Faecalibacterium, a butyrate-producing genus linked to epithelial health, further amplifies mucosal vulnerability. These insights endorse microbial biomarkers for RA risk stratification and underscore the therapeutic potential of microbiome modulation. Importantly, microbial features predictive of RA were not confounded by treatment regimens, enhancing their utility for diagnostic and preventive interventions.
Analyzing the impact of heavy metal exposure on osteoarthritis and rheumatoid arthritis: an approach based on interpretable machine learning
February 12, 2026
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Rheumatoid Arthritis
Rheumatoid Arthritis
OverviewRheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a systemic autoimmune disease marked by chronic joint inflammation, synovitis, and bone erosion, driven by Treg/Th17 imbalance, excessive IL-17, TNF-α, and IL-1 production, and macrophage activation. Emerging evidence links microbial dysbiosis and heavy metal exposure to RA, [1][2] with gut microbiota influencing autoimmune activation via Toll-like receptor (TLR) signaling, inflammasome activation, […]
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Machine learning analysis of NHANES data (2003–2020) identifies tungsten, cadmium, arsenic, and antimony as major risk factors for arthritis. SHAP-based models suggest these metals contribute to inflammation and cartilage degradation, reinforcing environmental exposure as a key component of arthritis development.
What Was Studied?
This study examined the impact of heavy metal exposure on the prevalence and differentiation of osteoarthritis (OA) and rheumatoid arthritis (RA) using interpretable machine learning models. Researchers analyzed data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) (2003–2020) to assess how various heavy metals contribute to arthritis risk.
Who Was Studied?
The study population consisted of 14,319 participants from NHANES who met specific inclusion criteria, including age ≥ 20 years and confirmed arthritis status via blood and urine heavy metal testing.
Key Findings
Using machine learning techniques such as LASSO regression and SHapley Additive exPlanations (SHAP), the study identified tungsten, cobalt, cadmium, antimony, arsenic, and blood cadmium as significant risk factors for arthritis, while molybdenum, thallium, lead, and mercury appeared to have a protective or neutral association. Cadmium exposure showed a strong correlation with rheumatoid arthritis (RA), likely due to its role in oxidative stress and inflammation, while arsenic exposure was linked to both osteoarthritis (OA) and RA, with previous studies indicating its contribution to cartilage degradation. Tungsten and antimony emerged as newly recognized risk factors, though their mechanisms remain unclear. In contrast, molybdenum exhibited a potential protective effect, possibly by counteracting inflammation. The study’s machine learning models demonstrated high predictive accuracy, with XGBoost achieving 81% accuracy in identifying arthritis and LightGBM distinguishing between OA and RA with 76% accuracy.
Greatest Implications
This study reinforces the environmental component of arthritis development, suggesting that heavy metal exposure contributes to arthritis risk and progression. Machine learning models, particularly SHAP-based interpretations, provide valuable predictive tools for early detection. The findings highlight tungsten, cobalt, cadmium, and arsenic as potential modifiable risk factors, paving the way for targeted interventions to reduce arthritis prevalence.
Association of Bitter Taste Receptor T2R38 Polymorphisms, Oral Microbiota, and Rheumatoid Arthritis
February 12, 2026
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Rheumatoid Arthritis
Rheumatoid Arthritis
OverviewRheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a systemic autoimmune disease marked by chronic joint inflammation, synovitis, and bone erosion, driven by Treg/Th17 imbalance, excessive IL-17, TNF-α, and IL-1 production, and macrophage activation. Emerging evidence links microbial dysbiosis and heavy metal exposure to RA, [1][2] with gut microbiota influencing autoimmune activation via Toll-like receptor (TLR) signaling, inflammasome activation, […]
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This study links T2R38 genotype to oral microbiota composition in rheumatoid arthritis, revealing microbial shifts modulated by taste receptor polymorphisms. Findings suggest buccal dysbiosis in RA is partially shaped by host genetics, offering new insight into mucosal immunity and potential biomarkers for disease risk and microbial-targeted therapy.
What was studied?
This study examined the relationship between T2R38 bitter taste receptor gene polymorphisms, the composition of the oral microbiota, and rheumatoid arthritis (RA) status. Specifically, it assessed whether the T2R38 genotypes (PAV/PAV, PAV/AVI, AVI/AVI) influenced the buccal microbial community and whether this interaction was associated with RA pathogenesis or oral microbial dysbiosis.
Who was studied?
The study involved 99 adults, including 35 individuals with clinically diagnosed RA and 64 non-RA controls. Most of the non-RA participants were first-degree relatives of the RA patients, considered at-risk individuals. Buccal swabs were collected from all participants for both genotyping of the TAS2R38 gene and 16S rRNA sequencing of the oral microbiome. Clinical features, inflammatory markers, and periodontal health symptoms were also recorded.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed significant shifts in the buccal microbiome between RA and non-RA individuals, independent of diversity indices. RA patients exhibited higher relative abundances of Streptococcus salivarius, Rothia mucilaginosa, and Leptotrichia, whereas non-RA individuals showed enrichment in Porphyromonas, Fusobacterium periodonticum, Aggregatibacter, and Capnocytophaga. These genera are known to modulate inflammation and mucosal immunity, aligning with recognized dysbiosis in RA.
Crucially, the TAS2R38 genotype modified the oral microbial profile. Supertasters (PAV/PAV) with RA had higher levels of Streptococcus salivarius—a known immunomodulatory commensal—compared to non-tasters (AVI/AVI). Conversely, Porphyromonas and Aggregatibacter, associated with periodontal disease and implicated in ACPA production, were depleted in RA. These findings suggest that T2R38 polymorphisms, which influence oral mucosal immunity through differential antimicrobial peptide expression, may shape oral microbial ecology in RA.
Indicators of RA-specific dysbiosis and mucosal immune adaptation
Non-RA-enriched taxa
↑ Porphyromonas, Fusobacterium, Aggregatibacter
Suggest immune exclusion of periodontal pathogens in RA
Genotype-microbiome interaction
PAV/PAV RA patients had ↑ Streptococcus salivarius
TAS2R38-mediated modulation of oral immunity
T2R38 polymorphism distribution
Overrepresentation of PAV/PAV in RA vs. published population controls
Suggests genetic predisposition influencing oral-immune axis in RA
Implications for ACPA development
Depletion of P. gingivalis and Aggregatibacter in established RA
Potential early immune targeting of citrullinating pathogens prior to disease onset
Alpha diversity
No significant differences by RA status or T2R38 genotype
Dysbiosis not reflected in richness but in compositional shifts
Beta diversity
Significant difference between RA and non-RA (p = 0.02)
Confirms distinct microbial communities between groups
Clinical translation
Supports microbiome-genotype risk models for RA; possible diagnostic and therapeutic value
May inform MBTI development targeting host-microbiome interactions mediated by taste receptors
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study provides novel evidence linking taste receptor polymorphisms, specifically TAS2R38, to oral microbiome composition and RA susceptibility. The differential microbial signatures observed—particularly the RA-associated depletion of periodontal pathogens in PAV/PAV individuals—support the idea that heightened T2R38-mediated immune surveillance may selectively modulate oral dysbiosis. This could have implications for early immune priming and autoantibody production via citrullination pathways involving P. gingivalis and A. actinomycetemcomitans.
For the Microbiome Signatures Database, this study contributes to defining RA-specific Major Microbial Associations (MMAs) in the oral cavity. Clinically, it highlights the potential of integrating genotypic screening (e.g., TAS2R38) with microbiome profiling as a stratification tool in RA risk assessment and precision therapeutics. It also supports future development of microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) aimed at restoring oral eubiosis in genetically susceptible individuals.
Dysbiotic Subgingival Microbial Communities in Periodontally Healthy Patients With Rheumatoid Arthritis
February 12, 2026
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Rheumatoid Arthritis
Rheumatoid Arthritis
OverviewRheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a systemic autoimmune disease marked by chronic joint inflammation, synovitis, and bone erosion, driven by Treg/Th17 imbalance, excessive IL-17, TNF-α, and IL-1 production, and macrophage activation. Emerging evidence links microbial dysbiosis and heavy metal exposure to RA, [1][2] with gut microbiota influencing autoimmune activation via Toll-like receptor (TLR) signaling, inflammasome activation, […]
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Subgingival microbiota in rheumatoid arthritis patients shows citrulline-producing and pro-inflammatory species enrichment despite periodontal health. These findings highlight Cryptobacterium curtum and networked anaerobes as potential contributors to RA pathogenesis and offer insight into early microbial biomarkers for immune-mediated disease.
What was studied?
This study investigated whether the subgingival microbiota in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) differs from that of healthy individuals, independent of periodontal disease. Because periodontitis itself profoundly alters the oral microbiome, the authors specifically recruited periodontally healthy individuals to isolate the effect of RA on subgingival microbial composition. Using 16S rRNA gene sequencing and advanced bioinformatics (QIIME, PhyloToAST, and PICRUSt), the researchers assessed microbial diversity, structure, and predicted functional pathways. They also applied network graph theory to identify co-occurrence patterns and keystone taxa.
Who was studied?
The study enrolled 22 RA patients and 19 age- and sex-matched non-RA controls, all of whom were periodontally healthy. Exclusion criteria included recent antibiotic use, smoking, and overt periodontal disease. Detailed clinical periodontal measures confirmed minimal probing depth, attachment loss, and bleeding on probing across all participants. RA patients were characterized further by disease activity scores, ESR, and ACPA levels, providing a robust context for interpreting microbial shifts.
What were the most important findings?
RA patients harbored a distinct subgingival microbial community that differed significantly in both membership and structure from that of non-RA controls. Nearly 42% of the microbial community differed in abundance, and 19% in taxonomic membership. Unlike the sparse, congeneric networks of healthy individuals, RA-associated microbiota formed dense, intergeneric co-occurrence hubs dominated by anaerobic gram-negative taxa. Notably enriched genera in RA included Cryptobacterium, Fretibacterium, Desulfovibrio, Treponema, and Prevotella, many of which are capable of producing inflammatory mediators or citrulline, a post-translational modification implicated in RA autoantigen formation. Among them, Cryptobacterium curtum emerged as a prominent taxon with a 100-fold greater abundance and 39-fold higher odds of detection in RA. This species produces citrulline via arginine metabolism, potentially linking the microbiome to autoantigen generation. Network analysis also highlighted metabolic pathways related to arachidonic acid and ether lipid metabolism, aligning microbial function with RA-associated inflammation.
Category
Findings in RA Patients
Clinical/Functional Implications
Community Structure
42% differed in abundance; 19% in membership
Indicates RA alters microbiome independent of periodontitis
Challenges assumption of their exclusivity in RA etiology
Network Topology
Highly connected intergeneric hub; 83 core species
Indicates coordinated microbial activity under RA influence
Functional Prediction
↑ Arachidonic acid and ether lipid metabolism pathways
Supports inflammatory contribution of RA oral microbiota
Notable Species
Cryptobacterium curtum (100× enriched, 39× odds)
Potential contributor to citrullinated autoantigen formation in RA
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study underscores the role of RA as a selective pressure on the oral microbiome, even in the absence of clinical periodontitis. The identification of a robust, RA-specific subgingival microbiome—enriched for pro-inflammatory and citrulline-producing taxa—suggests microbial contributions to RA pathogenesis beyond established periodontal pathogens like P. gingivalis and A. actinomycetemcomitans, which were not significantly different between groups. The tight interconnectivity among gram-negative anaerobes and the shared enrichment in metabolic pathways involved in inflammation imply a potential ecological and immunological role for the oral microbiome in driving systemic autoimmunity. C. curtum in particular warrants further investigation as a potential biomarker or microbial driver of RA. These findings support a microbiome-targeted approach to RA risk assessment and early intervention, especially in individuals with genetically or serologically defined risk.
Gut Microbial Composition and Function Are Altered in Patients with Early Rheumatoid Arthritis
February 12, 2026
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Rheumatoid Arthritis
Rheumatoid Arthritis
OverviewRheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a systemic autoimmune disease marked by chronic joint inflammation, synovitis, and bone erosion, driven by Treg/Th17 imbalance, excessive IL-17, TNF-α, and IL-1 production, and macrophage activation. Emerging evidence links microbial dysbiosis and heavy metal exposure to RA, [1][2] with gut microbiota influencing autoimmune activation via Toll-like receptor (TLR) signaling, inflammasome activation, […]
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This study explores the gut microbiome in early rheumatoid arthritis, revealing Prevotella enrichment and Collinsella depletion. These microbial shifts, seen before full disease onset, highlight the gut microbiome in early rheumatoid arthritis as a potential therapeutic target and biomarker for disease progression.
What was studied?
This study examined the gut microbiome in female patients with early rheumatoid arthritis (RA), including both preclinical and clinically apparent cases, compared to healthy female controls. Using 16S rRNA sequencing, the authors evaluated differences in microbial composition, diversity, and predicted functional pathways. The goal was to identify microbial shifts specific to early RA and their potential mechanistic contributions to disease onset and progression.
Who was studied?
The cohort included 29 Korean women with early RA—17 with preclinical RA and 12 with clinically apparent RA—and 25 age-matched healthy female controls. RA patients had not received disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARDs), minimizing confounding pharmaceutical effects. Participants were excluded if they had taken antibiotics, probiotics, or prebiotics recently. Disease activity, including DAS28, CRP, and ESR levels, was also recorded and correlated with microbial features.
What were the most important findings?
The gut microbiome in early RA patients showed significantly reduced alpha diversity and distinct beta diversity compared to healthy controls, suggesting early disruption of microbial community structure. Taxonomic profiling identified an enrichment of Bacteroidetes (particularly Prevotella) in RA patients, while Actinobacteria, especially the genus Collinsella and Bifidobacterium, were depleted. Prevotella’s overrepresentation is consistent with prior studies associating it with Th17-mediated inflammation. Functional prediction using PICRUSt revealed enrichment of iron acquisition genes (e.g., siderophore receptors) in RA patients, aligning with the anemia and heightened iron demand typical in RA. Conversely, genes involved in menaquinone (vitamin K2) biosynthesis, often linked to anti-inflammatory gram-positive bacteria, were enriched in healthy controls. Interestingly, preclinical and symptomatic RA patients had similar microbial compositions, but only symptomatic RA patients showed enrichment of LPS synthesis genes, correlating with elevated DAS28 scores and suggesting a role in systemic inflammation. These findings highlight Collinsella and Bifidobacterium depletion and Prevotella expansion as Major Microbial Associations (MMAs) in early RA.
Feature
Observation in Early RA
Clinical or Microbial Implication
Alpha Diversity
Decreased
Indicates early microbial dysbiosis
Prevotella (Bacteroidetes)
Enriched
Associated with Th17-driven inflammation
Collinsella (Actinobacteria)
Depleted
Potential loss of gut integrity, linked to immune modulation
Bifidobacterium
Depleted
Anti-inflammatory, supports gut health; reduced in RA patients
Iron Transport Genes (COG1629)
Enriched
Suggests siderophore-mediated iron competition and links to RA anemia
Menaquinone Biosynthesis Genes
Depleted
Indicates loss of gram-positive, anti-inflammatory functions
LPS Synthesis Genes (COG2148)
Elevated in symptomatic RA
Correlated with DAS28, indicating microbial contribution to disease severity
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study reinforces the central role of the gut microbiome in early rheumatoid arthritis pathogenesis, even before clinical onset. The identification of microbial signatures and functional traits such as iron metabolism and LPS biosynthesis provides mechanistic insight into how dysbiosis may modulate immune responses and systemic inflammation. The findings suggest that specific taxa, including Prevotella and Collinsella, may serve as early microbial biomarkers or therapeutic targets. Importantly, the enrichment of pro-inflammatory pathways in clinically apparent RA but not preclinical stages implies that microbial function, not just composition, influences disease transition and severity. This supports the future development of microbiome-targeted interventions for RA prevention and therapy, particularly in at-risk or early-stage patients.
Metagenome-wide association study of gut microbiome revealed novel aetiology of rheumatoid arthritis in the Japanese population
February 12, 2026
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Rheumatoid Arthritis
Rheumatoid Arthritis
OverviewRheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a systemic autoimmune disease marked by chronic joint inflammation, synovitis, and bone erosion, driven by Treg/Th17 imbalance, excessive IL-17, TNF-α, and IL-1 production, and macrophage activation. Emerging evidence links microbial dysbiosis and heavy metal exposure to RA, [1][2] with gut microbiota influencing autoimmune activation via Toll-like receptor (TLR) signaling, inflammasome activation, […]
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This study used gut microbiome metagenomics in rheumatoid arthritis to identify Prevotella enrichment and redox gene loss in RA. Findings reveal microbiome-host genomic interactions and metabolic shifts that define RA pathogenesis, offering population-specific microbial signatures and potential therapeutic targets based on microbial function and immunogenetic alignment.
What was studied?
This study conducted a metagenome-wide association study (MWAS) using deep shotgun sequencing to explore the gut microbiome’s role in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) in a Japanese cohort. It aimed to identify specific taxa, functional genes, and pathways that differentiate RA patients from healthy controls and to investigate how these microbial features may align with host genomic susceptibility to RA.
Who was studied?
A total of 124 individuals were included: 82 patients with RA and 42 healthy controls. All participants were Japanese, which allowed the study to explore population-specific host-microbiome interactions. Fecal samples were subjected to whole-genome shotgun sequencing with an average depth of 13 Gb per sample, allowing for species-level taxonomic resolution and robust functional inference.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed a significant enrichment of multiple Prevotella species—P. denticola, P. marshii, P. disiens, P. corporis, and P. amnii—in the RA gut microbiome. These taxa were associated with RA independent of previously reported P. copri. Notably, many of the enriched Prevotella species are typically found in the oral cavity, supporting the concept of oral-gut translocation in RA. Using a non-linear machine learning approach (UMAP with DBSCAN clustering), a specific taxa cluster was identified that distinguished RA patients based on microbial composition. Functionally, the abundance of a redox-related gene (R6FCZ7), attributed to various Bacteroides species, was significantly decreased in RA. This gene is implicated in reactive oxygen species management, linking redox stress to RA pathophysiology. Pathway analysis highlighted enrichment in fatty acid biosynthesis, glycosaminoglycan degradation, and adipocytokine signaling—processes central to joint inflammation and immune regulation. A key novel insight was the significant overlap between microbial and host genomic pathways, particularly Th17 cell differentiation and IL-17 signaling, underscoring a population-specific gut-host immunogenetic axis. Importantly, microbial diversity measures (alpha and beta) showed no significant differences between RA and control groups, suggesting that compositional and functional shifts, not diversity per se, underlie RA-associated dysbiosis.
Feature or Function
Finding in RA Patients
Implications for RA Pathogenesis
Prevotella spp. (e.g., P. denticola)
Significantly enriched
Major microbial associations; potential immune activators
R6FCZ7 gene (redox function)
Decreased abundance in Bacteroides species
Redox imbalance; linked to oxidative stress and joint inflammation
No significant alpha or beta diversity differences
Indicates dysbiosis in RA is compositional/functional rather than richness-based
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study represents a major advancement in understanding the gut microbiome's contribution to RA by leveraging high-resolution metagenomics and integrating microbial data with host GWAS results. The identification of multiple Prevotella species beyond P. copri, the depletion of redox-active genes in Bacteroides, and the alignment of microbial and genetic immune signaling pathways provide a mechanistic basis for how gut dysbiosis may drive RA onset and progression. These findings establish Major Microbial Associations (MMAs) for RA and offer direction for developing microbiome-targeted interventions such as probiotics or fecal microbial transplants. Moreover, the observed population-specific microbiome-genome linkage highlights the need for ethnicity-aware microbiome research in precision medicine. For the Microbiome Signatures Database, this study substantiates Prevotella spp. as dominant MMAs in RA and supports functional biomarkers involving metal ion binding and redox homeostasis as potential microbial targets in disease modulation.
Oral microbial dysbiosis linked to worsened periodontal condition in rheumatoid arthritis patients
February 12, 2026
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Rheumatoid Arthritis
Rheumatoid Arthritis
OverviewRheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a systemic autoimmune disease marked by chronic joint inflammation, synovitis, and bone erosion, driven by Treg/Th17 imbalance, excessive IL-17, TNF-α, and IL-1 production, and macrophage activation. Emerging evidence links microbial dysbiosis and heavy metal exposure to RA, [1][2] with gut microbiota influencing autoimmune activation via Toll-like receptor (TLR) signaling, inflammasome activation, […]
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This review highlights how oral microbiota in rheumatoid arthritis patients shows pathogenic enrichment, increased cytokines, and worsened periodontal outcomes. These dysbiotic patterns, involving taxa like Prevotella and Parvimonas, suggest diagnostic and therapeutic implications, reinforcing the need to monitor oral health in RA.
What was studied?
This study investigated the impact of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) on subgingival microbial communities and its relationship to periodontal health, systemic inflammatory markers, and RA disease severity. Using 16S rRNA high-throughput sequencing, the researchers profiled the subgingival microbiota of RA patients and healthy controls, evaluating periodontal parameters, salivary cytokine concentrations, and the inflammatory potential of oral biofilms via in vitro PBMC assays.
Who was studied?
A total of 42 patients with RA and 47 matched healthy controls were recruited. Inclusion required RA diagnosis per ACR/EULAR criteria, no recent antibiotics or periodontal treatment, and no other rheumatic or immunosuppressive conditions. Half of each group had chronic periodontitis, allowing for comparative analysis of periodontal status. Clinical measures included probing depth, clinical attachment level, anti-citrullinated protein antibody (ACPA) levels, and cytokine profiling.
What were the most important findings?
RA patients exhibited a significantly altered subgingival microbiota characterized by increased bacterial load, alpha diversity, and enrichment of pathogenic taxa such as Prevotella spp., Parvimonas micra, and Anaeroglobus geminatus. These shifts occurred even in RA patients without clinical periodontitis, suggesting RA-induced systemic inflammation contributes to microbial dysbiosis. The presence of RA was also associated with elevated salivary levels of proinflammatory cytokines including IL-2, IL-6, IL-17, IL-33, TNF-α, and IFN-γ, many of which were positively correlated with disease severity and periodontal destruction. Pathogenic taxa correlated with tender and swollen joint counts and salivary cytokines, while commensals such as Actinomyces and Rothia aeria were depleted and negatively correlated with inflammation. PICRUSt-predicted metagenomic analysis revealed functional enrichment in genes associated with lipopolysaccharide biosynthesis, peptidases, and amino acid metabolism in RA microbiota. These functions likely contribute to heightened inflammatory responses, as confirmed by the significantly increased IFN-γ secretion from PBMCs exposed to RA-derived biofilm.
Taxa or Parameter
Observation in RA Patients
Clinical or Functional Implication
Prevotella spp.
Increased even without periodontitis
Associated with RA severity and periodontal inflammation
Parvimonas micra
Elevated in RA with periodontitis
Correlated with tender/swollen joints and cytokines
Anaeroglobus geminatus
Enriched in RA subjects
Positively correlated with IL-17, TNF-α, IFN-γ
Selenomonas noxia
Increased in RA patients
Linked to salivary IL-6 and IL-33, and greater inflammatory potential
Actinomyces, Streptococcus, Rothia aeria
Depleted in RA
Negatively correlated with IL-17 and TNF-α, associated with oral health
Inflammatory cytokines
Elevated IL-2, IL-6, IL-17, IL-33, TNF-α, IFN-γ
Reflect systemic and local inflammation; linked to microbiota shifts
Functional pathways
Enrichment of peptidases, LPS biosynthesis, AA metabolism
Suggest microbial contribution to inflammation and tissue breakdown
IFN-γ secretion from PBMCs
Higher after RA biofilm exposure
Demonstrates heightened immunostimulatory potential of RA microbiota
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study provides compelling evidence that RA influences oral microbial ecology, driving dysbiosis that intensifies periodontal inflammation. The finding that RA patients without periodontitis still harbor enriched levels of periodontitis-associated taxa suggests that microbial dysbiosis may precede or exacerbate periodontal destruction through systemic inflammatory pathways. The identification of Prevotella spp., Selenomonas noxia, and Parvimonas micra as major microbial associations (MMAs) supports their role in RA-related oral pathology. These microbes may contribute to systemic autoimmunity through mechanisms like protein citrullination, thus implicating the oral microbiota as both a biomarker and a potential target for therapeutic intervention in RA. Importantly, the data support incorporating periodontal assessment and oral microbiota monitoring into RA management protocols and raise the potential for microbiome-based adjunctive therapies.
Oral Microbiota Identifies Patients in Early Onset Rheumatoid Arthritis
February 12, 2026
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Rheumatoid Arthritis
Rheumatoid Arthritis
OverviewRheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a systemic autoimmune disease marked by chronic joint inflammation, synovitis, and bone erosion, driven by Treg/Th17 imbalance, excessive IL-17, TNF-α, and IL-1 production, and macrophage activation. Emerging evidence links microbial dysbiosis and heavy metal exposure to RA, [1][2] with gut microbiota influencing autoimmune activation via Toll-like receptor (TLR) signaling, inflammasome activation, […]
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This study found that oral microbiota in early rheumatoid arthritis displays distinct bacterial enrichments and metabolic shifts. Key taxa, including Filifactor alocis and Porphyromonas endodontalis, were elevated in RA regardless of periodontal status, highlighting their potential as biomarkers and microbial contributors to RA pathogenesis.
What was studied?
This study evaluated the composition of the oral microbiota in untreated patients with early-onset rheumatoid arthritis (eRA), comparing it to age- and sex-matched healthy controls. The investigation employed multiplex 16S rRNA gene sequencing on saliva samples to identify microbial shifts associated with eRA, both with and without clinically defined periodontal disease. The analysis also included functional profiling via PICRUSt to determine whether predicted metabolic functions differed between the groups.
Who was studied?
The study included 61 patients diagnosed with early-onset rheumatoid arthritis (symptom duration ≤12 months) and 59 healthy controls. None of the patients had begun disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drug therapy. Participants were classified by periodontal status to assess whether microbial differences were independent of underlying periodontal disease. Smoking, corticosteroid use, and other demographic factors were also recorded to assess confounders.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed significant compositional and functional differences in the oral microbiota between eRA patients and controls. Saliva samples from eRA patients showed higher species richness and a more dispersed microbial profile. Notably, species enrichment included Prevotella pleuritidis, Porphyromonas endodontalis, Filifactor alocis, and Treponema denticola, all of which are strongly associated with periodontitis and inflammation. Importantly, these differences persisted regardless of the presence of periodontal disease. Functional predictions indicated increased pathways related to ornithine metabolism, glucosylceramidase activity, and beta-lactamase resistance, suggesting a pro-inflammatory and immunomodulatory shift in the microbial community. From a microbiome signatures perspective, Filifactor alocis emerged as a Major Microbial Association (MMA) due to its consistent elevation and known mechanistic involvement in arginine metabolism and ornithine production, both linked to citrullination—a process implicated in RA pathogenesis.
Microbial Feature or Function
eRA Patients (Enriched or Altered)
Clinical or Mechanistic Relevance
Filifactor alocis
Enriched
Arginine metabolism → ornithine; inflammation and RA induction
Porphyromonas endodontalis
Enriched
Periodontal pathogen; linked to Sjögren’s and systemic inflammation
Associated with inflammation, immune activation, and metabolic stress in RA
Microbial Diversity
Higher in eRA
Suggests unstable and dysbiotic oral ecosystem
Predicted KO functions
Elevated in eRA
Fatty acid metabolism, sphingolipid and steroid metabolism linked to immune dysregulation
What are the greatest implications of this study?
These findings offer early evidence that oral microbiota dysbiosis precedes and potentially contributes to the pathogenesis of rheumatoid arthritis. The enrichment of species such as Filifactor alocis and Porphyromonas endodontalis, coupled with shifts in microbial metabolic pathways, suggests a mechanistic link between oral microbial communities and systemic autoimmunity via processes like protein citrullination and immune activation. This supports the idea that the oral cavity may act as a trigger site in genetically susceptible individuals. Clinically, these bacterial taxa could serve as non-invasive biomarkers for eRA risk assessment, especially valuable in periodontally healthy patients, and may inform future microbiome-targeted interventions for early disease modulation.
Oral Microbiota Perturbations Are Linked to High Risk for Rheumatoid Arthritis
February 12, 2026
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Rheumatoid Arthritis
Rheumatoid Arthritis
OverviewRheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a systemic autoimmune disease marked by chronic joint inflammation, synovitis, and bone erosion, driven by Treg/Th17 imbalance, excessive IL-17, TNF-α, and IL-1 production, and macrophage activation. Emerging evidence links microbial dysbiosis and heavy metal exposure to RA, [1][2] with gut microbiota influencing autoimmune activation via Toll-like receptor (TLR) signaling, inflammasome activation, […]
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This study reveals oral microbiota dysbiosis in rheumatoid arthritis, with distinct shifts in high-risk individuals before clinical symptoms. Prevotella_6 and Rothia were enriched, while Neisseria oralis was depleted, suggesting early microbial signatures and potential targets for diagnostic and preventive strategies in rheumatoid arthritis.
What was studied?
This study investigated oral microbiota dysbiosis in individuals at high risk for rheumatoid arthritis (RA), patients with established RA, and healthy controls. By examining salivary samples, the researchers aimed to determine whether microbial alterations precede the clinical onset of RA and to identify microbial signatures associated with systemic autoimmunity. The study leveraged 16S rRNA gene sequencing to characterize the microbial community structure and its associations with anti-citrullinated protein antibodies (ACPA) and rheumatoid factor (RF) levels.
Who was studied?
A total of 79 participants were recruited from West China Hospital. These included 29 high-risk individuals who were ACPA-positive without clinical arthritis, 27 RA patients, and 23 healthy controls. All participants were age- and gender-matched. The RA patients were mostly receiving disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs and corticosteroids, while the high-risk individuals were treatment-naïve. None of the participants had used antibiotics or probiotics recently, and all were screened for autoimmune and gastrointestinal comorbidities.
What were the most important findings?
The study found that oral microbiota dysbiosis is evident in the pre-clinical stage of RA. High-risk individuals exhibited significantly reduced microbial diversity and compositional shifts compared to healthy controls and RA patients. Notably, the genera Rothia and Prevotella_6 were enriched in high-risk individuals, while Neisseria oralis and Defluviitaleaceae_UCG-011 were depleted. Prevotella_6 abundance increased progressively from healthy controls to high-risk individuals to RA patients, suggesting its role in disease transition. Importantly, P. gingivalis, a known periodontal pathogen implicated in RA, was paradoxically decreased in high-risk individuals. The study also uncovered correlations between specific genera and serum levels of ACPA and RF. For instance, Eubacterium nodatum_group and Tannerella were positively associated with ACPA in high-risk individuals, whereas Neisseria showed an inverse correlation. RA patients displayed additional shifts, including elevated Actinomyces and Lactobacillus, the latter of which correlated positively with ESR and CRP, linking microbial perturbation to systemic inflammation.
Key Finding
Microbial Associations
Clinical Implications
Reduced diversity in high-risk individuals
↓ Neisseria oralis, ↓ Defluviitaleaceae_UCG-011
Suggests early dysbiosis precedes RA symptoms
Enrichment of Rothia and Prevotella_6
↑ Rothia, ↑ Prevotella_6
Potential biomarkers for RA progression
Autoantibody correlations in high-risk group
↑ Tannerella, Eubacterium nodatum_group
Correlate with ACPA titers, linking microbes to immune activation
Functional prediction differences (KEGG)
↑ Bacterial toxin, ↓ fatty acid biosynthesis
Suggests proinflammatory metabolic profiles in RA oral microbiome
ROC curve for biomarker panel (11 genera)
Prevotella_6, Actinomyces, Rothia, others
Achieved AUC of 0.8; potential for early RA detection
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings support the hypothesis that oral microbiota dysbiosis is not merely a consequence of RA but may play a role in its pathogenesis. The distinct microbial shifts in high-risk individuals suggest that dysbiosis may contribute to immune priming and autoantibody production before clinical symptoms emerge. This aligns with the mucosal origin theory of RA. The identification of microbial genera such as Rothia and Prevotella_6 as potential early biomarkers provides a foundation for predictive models and microbiome-targeted interventions. Moreover, the correlation of microbial taxa with immunological markers underscores the potential of oral microbiota as a non-invasive diagnostic tool and as a mechanistic contributor to disease development. These insights could pave the way for preventive strategies in at-risk populations, including modulation of oral microbiota to delay or prevent RA onset.
Oral status in patients with early rheumatoid arthritis: a prospective, case-control study
February 12, 2026
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Rheumatoid Arthritis
Rheumatoid Arthritis
OverviewRheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a systemic autoimmune disease marked by chronic joint inflammation, synovitis, and bone erosion, driven by Treg/Th17 imbalance, excessive IL-17, TNF-α, and IL-1 production, and macrophage activation. Emerging evidence links microbial dysbiosis and heavy metal exposure to RA, [1][2] with gut microbiota influencing autoimmune activation via Toll-like receptor (TLR) signaling, inflammasome activation, […]
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This study shows that the oral microbiota in early rheumatoid arthritis includes enriched Tannerella forsythia and Streptococcus anginosus, correlating with increased periodontal attachment loss. These findings suggest early microbial dysbiosis may influence RA pathogenesis and serve as diagnostic biomarkers or targets for preventive care.
What was studied?
This prospective case–control study investigated oral microbiota in early rheumatoid arthritis (ERA) and its association with periodontal disease. The central aim was to determine whether a clinically meaningful loss of alveolar bone, as measured by clinical attachment level (CAL), could be detected in patients with ERA compared to healthy controls. A secondary objective was to assess whether distinct sub- and supragingival microbial patterns are present in ERA patients that may reflect a pathogenic or immunomodulatory role in early RA progression.
Who was studied?
The study involved 44 Caucasian adults: 22 ERA patients and 22 age-, gender-, and smoking-matched healthy controls. ERA patients had disease onset within two years and met 2010 ACR/EULAR classification criteria. Subjects were recruited from clinical and dental settings in Heidelberg, Germany. Exclusion criteria included biologic DMARD use, poor oral hygiene, recent antibiotics, systemic disease-related periodontitis, and pregnancy or lactation. Microbial samples were collected subgingivally and supragingivally, followed by real-time quantitative PCR targeting 43 oral species and nine major periodontal pathogens.
What were the most important findings?
ERA patients exhibited significantly more severe periodontitis than controls, with increased gingival bleeding, probing depth, and a higher number of missing teeth. Clinically meaningful CAL loss (3.4 mm vs. 2.7 mm; p < 0.0001) was observed in ERA patients. Despite similar plaque indices, inflammatory markers such as bleeding on probing were elevated. Microbiologically, subgingival Tannerella forsythia (6.77-fold increase, p = 0.033) and supragingival Streptococcus anginosus (3.56-fold increase, p = 0.028) were enriched in ERA patients. Conversely, protective taxa such as Leptotrichia spp., Rothia dentocariosa, Actinomyces spp., and Lactobacillus gasseri were depleted. These patterns support a shift toward an inflammatory microbial consortium early in RA.
Microbial Taxa
Enrichment/Depletion in ERA
Implication in ERA Pathophysiology
Tannerella forsythia
Enriched (6.77-fold)
Associated with severe periodontitis; candidate MMA in ERA
Known oral commensals; potential anti-inflammatory role
Corynebacterium durum
Depleted (0.17-fold)
Role in biofilm homeostasis; loss may promote dysbiosis
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study reinforces the concept that the oral microbiota in early rheumatoid arthritis displays pathogenic alterations that may contribute to systemic inflammation. Enrichment of T. forsythia and S. anginosus—previously implicated in periodontal disease—suggests they may act as early microbial triggers or modulators of RA pathogenesis. The findings highlight the need for integrating dental surveillance and periodontal interventions into early RA management. Moreover, they emphasize the potential utility of subgingival microbiome profiles as diagnostic biomarkers or therapeutic targets in RA. These microbial signatures should be considered Major Microbial Associations (MMAs) for ERA within the Microbiome Signatures Database framework.
Periodontal disease and the oral microbiota in new-onset rheumatoid arthritis
February 12, 2026
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Rheumatoid Arthritis
Rheumatoid Arthritis
OverviewRheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a systemic autoimmune disease marked by chronic joint inflammation, synovitis, and bone erosion, driven by Treg/Th17 imbalance, excessive IL-17, TNF-α, and IL-1 production, and macrophage activation. Emerging evidence links microbial dysbiosis and heavy metal exposure to RA, [1][2] with gut microbiota influencing autoimmune activation via Toll-like receptor (TLR) signaling, inflammasome activation, […]
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Oral microbiota in new-onset rheumatoid arthritis shows unique enrichment of Prevotella, Leptotrichia, and Anaeroglobus, independent of periodontitis severity. These taxa may act as microbial triggers or biomarkers for autoimmunity, suggesting the oral microbiome’s relevance in RA onset and potential for diagnostic or therapeutic targeting.
What was studied?
This study investigated the composition and diversity of the subgingival oral microbiota in patients with new-onset rheumatoid arthritis (RA), patients with chronic RA, and healthy controls. Using high-throughput 16S rRNA pyrosequencing, the authors aimed to determine whether microbial shifts in the oral cavity are associated with RA development. By focusing on treatment-naïve individuals with early RA, the study sought to eliminate confounding effects from immunosuppressive drugs, highlighting early microbial features that may precede or trigger RA onset.
Who was studied?
The study enrolled 31 patients with new-onset RA (defined as disease duration between 6 weeks and 6 months, and no history of steroid or disease-modifying antirheumatic drug use), 34 patients with chronic RA, and 18 age-, sex-, and ethnicity-matched healthy controls. All participants underwent periodontal examinations, subgingival sampling, and serological testing for rheumatoid factor (RF), anti-citrullinated protein antibodies (ACPA), and Porphyromonas gingivalis-specific antibodies.
What were the most important findings?
Patients with new-onset RA showed a significantly higher prevalence of moderate-to-severe periodontitis (PD) compared to controls, despite being younger and having low rates of smoking—suggesting that PD may be a distinct comorbidity or preclinical feature of RA. Although global oral microbial diversity did not differ significantly across groups, the presence of certain bacterial taxa such as Prevotella (OTU60) and Leptotrichia (OTU87) was unique to new-onset RA patients, regardless of PD status. Anaeroglobus geminatus (OTU99) was found to correlate with ACPA and RF titers and was significantly more prevalent in RA patients, highlighting it as a potential microbial biomarker of autoimmune activation. While P. gingivalis was more abundant in subjects with severe PD, its presence was not uniquely associated with RA, nor did it correlate with autoantibody levels.
Structured Table:
Key Findings
Microbial Associations
Implications
Higher prevalence of periodontitis in new-onset RA
Suggests microbial modulation of systemic autoimmunity
Exposure to P. gingivalis not RA-specific
Detected in ~80% of all groups
Challenges specificity of P. gingivalis as sole RA microbial trigger
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study demonstrates that specific oral microbial shifts precede or coincide with RA onset and may contribute to immune dysregulation. The detection of Prevotella, Leptotrichia, and Anaeroglobus geminatus as uniquely enriched in new-onset RA patients suggests that the subgingival microbiome could be involved in initiating or perpetuating systemic autoimmunity. Importantly, the lack of specificity of P. gingivalis to RA patients—despite its known peptidylarginine deiminase (PAD) activity—challenges its role as a singular microbial trigger. Instead, the data support a more nuanced model where periodontopathic bacteria and dysbiosis act in concert with genetic and environmental factors to promote RA. These findings underscore the importance of evaluating the oral microbiome as both a biomarker reservoir and a potential target for microbiome-modulating interventions in early RA.
Role of Some Heavy Metals in Rheumatoid Arthritis
February 12, 2026
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Rheumatoid Arthritis
Rheumatoid Arthritis
OverviewRheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a systemic autoimmune disease marked by chronic joint inflammation, synovitis, and bone erosion, driven by Treg/Th17 imbalance, excessive IL-17, TNF-α, and IL-1 production, and macrophage activation. Emerging evidence links microbial dysbiosis and heavy metal exposure to RA, [1][2] with gut microbiota influencing autoimmune activation via Toll-like receptor (TLR) signaling, inflammasome activation, […]
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This study explored the association between rheumatoid arthritis and heavy metal exposure, identifying a significant deficiency of copper in RA patients. No significant correlations were found for zinc, cobalt, lead, or nickel. The findings suggest that copper deficiency may play a role in RA, warranting further research on trace metals in autoimmune diseases.
What was studied?
This study investigated the association between heavy metal concentrations and rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Specifically, it examined the serum levels of zinc (Zn), cobalt (Co), lead (Pb), nickel (Ni), and copper (Cu) in RA-positive and RA-negative individuals. The study also analyzed variations in metal levels based on sex and two age groups (below 35 years and 35 years and above) to determine if these factors influenced the relationship between heavy metal exposure and RA.
Who was studied?
The study included blood samples from patients suspected of having RA, collected from diagnostic laboratories in Sargodha, Pakistan. The participants were grouped based on their RA status (RA-positive and RA-negative), sex, and age category. Serum metal concentrations were analyzed using atomic absorption spectrophotometry (AAS), and statistical comparisons were made using a two-sample t-test to determine differences between groups.
Most Important Findings
The study found a significant decrease in serum copper (Cu) levels in RA-positive patients compared to RA-negative individuals (p=0.04). However, there was no significant relationship between RA and the concentrations of zinc (Zn), cobalt (Co), lead (Pb), and nickel (Ni). Additionally, no significant correlation was observed between heavy metal concentrations and sex or age group within the RA-positive cohort. While some previous studies reported lower zinc levels in RA patients, this study did not find any significant association between RA and Zn deficiency. The findings also contradicted prior research that suggested elevated Pb levels in RA patients, as no significant difference was observed in this study. The observed variations between this study and previous research may be due to genetic, environmental, or dietary differences in the study populations.
Greatest Implications
The study provides evidence that copper deficiency may be associated with RA, potentially implicating copper in the disease's pathophysiology. This aligns with existing research suggesting that copper plays a role in inflammatory and immune system regulation. However, the lack of significant findings for other metals highlights the need for further research to determine their exact impact on RA development and progression. Given that previous studies have reported conflicting results regarding heavy metals and RA, it is crucial to consider factors such as geographic variation, dietary intake, and environmental exposures in future research. Understanding the role of trace metals in RA could contribute to novel therapeutic strategies, including dietary interventions or supplementation for patients with confirmed deficiencies.
Self-Balance of Intestinal Flora in Spouses of Patients With Rheumatoid Arthritis
February 12, 2026
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Rheumatoid Arthritis
Rheumatoid Arthritis
OverviewRheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a systemic autoimmune disease marked by chronic joint inflammation, synovitis, and bone erosion, driven by Treg/Th17 imbalance, excessive IL-17, TNF-α, and IL-1 production, and macrophage activation. Emerging evidence links microbial dysbiosis and heavy metal exposure to RA, [1][2] with gut microbiota influencing autoimmune activation via Toll-like receptor (TLR) signaling, inflammasome activation, […]
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This study on intestinal microbiota in rheumatoid arthritis spouses reveals shared dysbiosis, with enrichment of Streptococcus and Blautia and depletion of Roseburia. These shifts implicate environment-driven microbial patterns in RA pathogenesis and highlight potential microbiome-based interventions for at-risk populations.
What was studied?
Rheumatoid ArthritisThis study examined the composition of intestinal microbiota in individuals with rheumatoid arthritis (RA), their cohabiting spouses, and healthy controls to evaluate the relative contributions of environmental versus genetic factors to RA-associated dysbiosis. Utilizing 16S rRNA gene sequencing, the researchers compared microbial diversity and taxonomic profiles across the three groups and explored associations with clinical parameters to assess whether shared environments shape microbiota similarly in spouses of RA patients.
Who was studied?
The study cohort consisted of 30 RA patients, 30 of their cohabiting spouses (SPs), and 20 healthy control individuals (HCs). All RA participants fulfilled the 2010 ACR diagnostic criteria and tested positive for anti-cyclic citrullinated peptide (anti-CCP) antibodies. To control for environmental influences, RA-SP pairs were required to have lived together for a minimum of one year and to have similar dietary patterns. Participants were excluded if they had recent exposure to antibiotics or probiotics, autoimmune comorbidities, or known gastrointestinal disorders.
What were the most important findings?
The intestinal microbiota of RA patients differed significantly from that of healthy controls, and the microbiota of their cohabiting spouses exhibited an intermediate profile. A reduced Bacteroidetes-to-Firmicutes ratio was observed in both RA patients and spouses, driven by an enrichment of Firmicutes—particularly Streptococcus and Blautia—and a depletion of butyrate-producing, anti-inflammatory genera such as Roseburia and Lachnoclostridium. The microbial signatures of the spouses indicate that environmental factors, likely related to diet and shared living conditions, contribute to shaping gut dysbiosis in RA. Notably, Lachnoclostridium abundance positively correlated with patient age and RA disease duration, suggesting potential as a microbial marker for disease progression.
Microbial Feature
RA Patients
Spouses
Healthy Controls
Clinical/Pathogenic Implications
Streptococcus spp.
Increased
Increased
Low
Pro-inflammatory; linked to autoimmune activation
Blautia spp.
Increased
Increased
Low
Associated with cytokine upregulation (IL-8, TNF-α)
Roseburia spp.
Decreased
Decreased
High
Butyrate producer; anti-inflammatory; marker of eubiosis
Lachnoclostridium spp.
Decreased
Decreased
High
Butyrate producer; inversely correlated with RA severity
Bacteroidetes:Firmicutes Ratio
Reduced
Reduced
Balanced
Indicator of metabolic dysregulation and inflammation
The findings emphasize the significant role of shared environmental exposures in modulating intestinal microbiota and their potential impact on RA development. The intermediate dysbiotic profile observed in spouses supports the concept of a microbiota-mediated “pre-disease” state, which may predispose genetically susceptible individuals to immune dysregulation. The consistent enrichment of pro-inflammatory taxa (Streptococcus, Blautia) and loss of beneficial butyrate-producing genera (Roseburia, Lachnoclostridium) reinforce their classification as Major Microbial Associations (MMAs) in RA. These results suggest that microbiome-modifying strategies—such as personalized nutrition or probiotic supplementation—may be beneficial not only in RA management but also as preventive tools for at-risk populations. The study also supports incorporating microbiome profiling into RA risk assessment, particularly for first-degree relatives and long-term cohabitants.
Subgingival Microbiome in Rheumatoid Arthritis Patients with Periodontitis
February 12, 2026
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Rheumatoid Arthritis
Rheumatoid Arthritis
OverviewRheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a systemic autoimmune disease marked by chronic joint inflammation, synovitis, and bone erosion, driven by Treg/Th17 imbalance, excessive IL-17, TNF-α, and IL-1 production, and macrophage activation. Emerging evidence links microbial dysbiosis and heavy metal exposure to RA, [1][2] with gut microbiota influencing autoimmune activation via Toll-like receptor (TLR) signaling, inflammasome activation, […]
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This study links the subgingival microbiome in rheumatoid arthritis to elevated ACPAs via enrichment of A. butyrica, P. simiae, and P. stomatis. These bacteria contribute to citrullination and may be key microbial biomarkers or MBTI targets in RA-associated periodontitis.
What was studied?
This study investigated the subgingival microbiome in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients with periodontitis in a Taiwanese population. It aimed to characterize the compositional and functional differences in subgingival microbial communities between RA patients and matched healthy controls using 16S rRNA gene sequencing. The primary goal was to evaluate correlations between specific microbial taxa and levels of anti-citrullinated protein antibodies (ACPAs), which are hallmark autoantibodies in RA.
Who was studied?
Subjects included RA patients with periodontitis and matched control groups. Subgingival plaque samples were collected and categorized into three clinical groups: individuals with active periodontitis (PD), those with active RA and periodontitis (AM), and periodontally healthy individuals. The final analysis focused on the AM and PD groups for microbial profiling and immunologic correlations with ACPAs.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed significant differences in subgingival microbiota between RA patients and controls. In both AM and PD groups, Aminipila butyrica and Peptococcus simiae were enriched in RA patients and showed positive correlations with serum ACPA levels. A. butyrica, a strictly anaerobic, arginine-decomposing bacterium, encodes arginine deiminase, facilitating the production of citrulline—potentially leading to the formation of citrullinated antigens that induce ACPA production. This mechanism parallels that of P. gingivalis and supports its role as a potential Major Microbial Association (MMA) in RA.
Peptostreptococcus stomatis also demonstrated a strong positive correlation with ACPA levels and has been implicated in autoimmune processes, likely due to its ability to initiate NETosis and hypercitrullination via pore-forming toxins. Additionally, Streptococcus sanguinis was associated with increased ACPA levels in the PD group, while Pseudomonas batumici showed a negative correlation. PICRUSt2 functional prediction highlighted enrichment in arginine, ornithine, and proline interconversion pathways in RA patients, particularly those involving L-citrulline metabolism.
Microbial Taxa
Correlation with ACPA
Proposed Mechanism
Aminipila butyrica
Positive (AM & PD groups)
Arginine deiminase → citrulline → ACPA induction
Peptococcus simiae
Positive (AM & PD groups)
Potential PAD activation via NETosis
Peptostreptococcus stomatis
Strong positive (AM)
Immune-inflammatory trigger; linked to autoimmunity
This study highlights a mechanistic link between subgingival dysbiosis and systemic autoimmunity in RA, particularly through bacteria capable of driving citrullination. The enrichment of A. butyrica and P. simiae, coupled with elevated ACPAs, supports the hypothesis that periodontal microbiota contribute to RA pathogenesis through microbial or host protein citrullination. These findings underscore the diagnostic and therapeutic potential of targeting oral microbial communities—particularly those expressing arginine deiminase or capable of inducing NETosis—in RA patients. From a microbiome signatures perspective, A. butyrica, P. simiae, and P. stomatis are high-confidence MMAs that may serve as predictive biomarkers or targets for MBTIs, especially those modulating arginine metabolism or immunogenic bacterial citrullination.
Subgingival microbiome of rheumatoid arthritis patients in relation to their disease status and periodontal health
February 12, 2026
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Rheumatoid Arthritis
Rheumatoid Arthritis
OverviewRheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a systemic autoimmune disease marked by chronic joint inflammation, synovitis, and bone erosion, driven by Treg/Th17 imbalance, excessive IL-17, TNF-α, and IL-1 production, and macrophage activation. Emerging evidence links microbial dysbiosis and heavy metal exposure to RA, [1][2] with gut microbiota influencing autoimmune activation via Toll-like receptor (TLR) signaling, inflammasome activation, […]
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Subgingival microbiome in rheumatoid arthritis reveals microbial community shifts driven by disease activity, smoking, and treatment. Prednisolone use correlates with healthier profiles, while smoking promotes dysbiosis, highlighting microbial biomarkers for RA management.
What was studied?
This study analyzed the subgingival microbiome in patients with chronic rheumatoid arthritis (RA) to explore how oral bacterial communities correlate with RA disease activity and periodontal health status. Using 16S rDNA sequencing and qPCR, researchers characterized bacterial diversity and composition in subgingival plaque samples, seeking associations between microbial profiles and RA-related clinical parameters including medication use, disease severity, and lifestyle factors such as smoking.
Who was studied?
The study population included 78 RA outpatients (73% female, average age 57), all of whom met the 2010 ACR/EULAR classification criteria for RA. Subjects were excluded if they had diabetes, malignancy, Sjögren’s syndrome, or had taken antibiotics in the three months prior. Clinical periodontal exams were conducted, and extensive RA clinical data were obtained from medical records. Microbial samples were collected from the deepest interproximal subgingival sites, and sequencing was conducted to assess microbial community structure.
What were the most important findings?
The subgingival microbiome in RA patients was influenced by RA disease activity, smoking status, prednisolone use, and periodontal parameters such as probing depth and bleeding on probing. Two distinct microbial community types were identified. Patients with active RA exhibited lower microbial diversity and a higher abundance of facultative anaerobes such as Streptococcus and Veillonella, especially if they were on prednisolone. In contrast, those in remission—particularly current smokers—had a dysbiotic profile enriched with anaerobes like Fusobacterium, Treponema, and Fretibacterium. These shifts indicate that systemic inflammation and immunosuppressive therapies reshape local microbial communities. Interestingly, only 14% of samples were positive for Porphyromonas gingivalis, questioning its exclusivity in RA pathogenesis. Smoking significantly altered microbial composition, promoting pathogenic anaerobes and correlating with increased periodontal destruction.
Variable
Key Findings
Major Microbial Associations (MMAs)
Clinical Implications
RA Activity
Lower diversity in active RA; prednisolone use shapes microbial balance
Streptococcus, Veillonella, Actinomyces
Therapy may influence microbiome health and serve as indirect periodontal protection
Smoking
Smokers showed more pathogenic anaerobes, higher probing depth
Fusobacterium, Treponema, Fretibacterium
Smoking cessation critical for oral and systemic immune stability
Microbial typing could inform personalized RA and periodontal care pathways
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings emphasize that the subgingival microbiome in RA is shaped by a complex interplay of disease activity, treatment, and lifestyle. The distinct microbial community types (CT1 and CT2) linked to clinical subgroups suggest a potential stratification tool for identifying RA patients at elevated risk for periodontal complications or with immunologically modulated oral niches. Importantly, anti-inflammatory therapy, particularly prednisolone, was associated with a shift toward a healthier microbiome, indicating that immunomodulatory treatment indirectly supports oral microbial stability. The identification of specific taxa such as Fretibacterium, Treponema, Corynebacterium, and Actinomyces as major microbial associations (MMAs) provides potential microbial biomarkers for disease monitoring and targets for adjunctive therapies. The study supports integrating oral microbial profiling into RA patient care, with implications for personalized interventions and the design of microbiome-targeted therapies.
Variations in oral microbiome profiles in rheumatoid arthritis and osteoarthritis with potential biomarkers for arthritis screening
February 12, 2026
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Rheumatoid Arthritis
Rheumatoid Arthritis
OverviewRheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a systemic autoimmune disease marked by chronic joint inflammation, synovitis, and bone erosion, driven by Treg/Th17 imbalance, excessive IL-17, TNF-α, and IL-1 production, and macrophage activation. Emerging evidence links microbial dysbiosis and heavy metal exposure to RA, [1][2] with gut microbiota influencing autoimmune activation via Toll-like receptor (TLR) signaling, inflammasome activation, […]
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This study identifies oral microbiome biomarkers for arthritis screening, distinguishing RA from OA using salivary microbial profiles. It highlights Prevotella and Veillonella in RA and Rothia and Streptococcus in OA, supporting microbiome-based diagnostics.
What was studied?
This study investigated the differences in oral microbiome composition among patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA), osteoarthritis (OA), and healthy controls to identify potential oral microbial biomarkers for arthritis screening. Using 16S rRNA gene sequencing of saliva samples, the authors profiled the oral microbiota of 110 RA patients, 67 OA patients, and 155 healthy controls. They aimed to differentiate RA from OA through taxonomic and functional microbial differences and to evaluate the predictive power of selected taxa as diagnostic biomarkers.
Who was studied?
Saliva samples were obtained from 332 individuals: 110 diagnosed with RA, 67 with OA, and 155 healthy subjects. All RA participants met the 2010 ACR/EULAR criteria, and OA patients fulfilled the 1995 revised ACR classification criteria. Subjects with active periodontal disease or recent antibiotic/probiotic use were excluded to minimize confounding effects on microbial composition. Samples were standardized in collection conditions and processed using high-throughput sequencing for comparative microbial analysis.
What were the most important findings?
The study found that oral microbial diversity was elevated in both RA and OA compared to healthy controls. Specific microbial signatures differed between the two diseases. RA patients had greater relative abundances of Neisseria, Haemophilus parainfluenzae, Prevotella, Veillonella dispar, and Actinobacillus. In contrast, OA patients exhibited enrichment of Streptococcus, Actinomyces, Rothia, and Granulicatella. Functional predictions revealed metabolic pathway differences—most notably in lipopolysaccharide biosynthesis and glycolysis/gluconeogenesis—between RA and OA microbiota. A classifier based on eight distinct operational taxonomic units (OTUs) yielded an AUC of 0.8756 for differentiating RA from OA, demonstrating potential for non-invasive microbial diagnostics. Many of the identified taxa (e.g., Prevotella, Haemophilus, Veillonella) are Gram-negative anaerobes linked to mucosal inflammation and may influence systemic immune activation.
Functional shifts reflect inflammatory vs. degenerative mechanisms
Microbial Diversity
Elevated vs. healthy controls
Also elevated
Suggests broader dysbiosis across arthritis subtypes
AUC for Biomarker Model
0.8756
N/A
High predictive value for non-invasive screening
Major Microbial Associations (MMAs)
Prevotella, Haemophilus, Veillonella
Streptococcus, Rothia
Useful for microbiome-targeted diagnostics or interventions
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study highlights the value of the oral microbiome as a diagnostic reservoir for systemic autoimmune and inflammatory joint diseases. The differentiation between RA and OA via salivary microbiota offers a non-invasive screening avenue that could complement or improve upon existing serological markers. From a microbiome signature perspective, Prevotella, Veillonella dispar, and Haemophilus parainfluenzae represent key Major Microbial Associations (MMAs) in RA, whereas Streptococcus and Rothia were associated with OA. Functional distinctions in microbial metabolic pathways may also reflect pathophysiological differences, such as enhanced inflammatory signaling in RA. The findings support integrating oral microbiota profiles into arthritis diagnostics and reinforce the systemic relevance of mucosal microbiomes in chronic disease pathology.
Exploring the link between dietary zinc intake and endometriosis risk: insights from a cross-sectional analysis of American women
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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STOPs
STOPs
A STOP (Suggested Termination Of Practices) is a recommendation that advocates for the discontinuation of certain medical interventions, treatments, or practices based on emerging evidence indicating that these may be ineffective, harmful, or counterproductive in the management of specific conditions.
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This study links higher dietary zinc intake with increased endometriosis risk among American women, highlighting zinc’s complex role in immune modulation and estrogen-related pathways. Findings emphasize the importance of balanced intake for managing endometriosis risk.
What was studied?
This study investigated the association between dietary zinc intake and the risk of endometriosis among American women. Using cross-sectional data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) collected between 1999 and 2006, the researchers aimed to evaluate whether zinc intake, as a key nutritional factor, was linked to the prevalence of endometriosis. Zinc is known for its essential roles in immune modulation, antioxidative defense, and regulation of matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs), all of which are implicated in endometriosis progression.
Who was studied?
The study included 4,315 American women aged 20–54 years, of whom 331 were diagnosed with endometriosis based on self-reported doctor diagnoses. Participants’ dietary zinc intake was assessed using 24-hour dietary recall interviews, with additional data on demographics, lifestyle, and health covariates collected. Women with extreme caloric intakes or incomplete data were excluded to ensure robustness of results.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed a positive correlation between higher dietary zinc intake and the risk of endometriosis. Women consuming over 14 mg/day of zinc had a significantly higher adjusted odds ratio (1.60, 95% CI: 1.12–2.27, p = 0.009) compared to those with intake ≤8 mg/day. Zinc’s dual role in immune modulation and antioxidative defense was emphasized, particularly its regulation of matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) like MMP-2 and MMP-9, which are key enzymes in tissue remodeling and endometriotic lesion invasion. Interestingly, despite zinc’s known antioxidative and anti-inflammatory roles, excessive intake appeared to have a counterproductive effect. These nuanced findings highlight zinc’s complex role in endometriosis pathophysiology.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This research underscores the potential for dietary zinc as both a marker and modifiable factor in endometriosis risk. It raises questions about zinc’s dualistic effects, where optimal levels may support immune health, but excess intake could exacerbate estrogen-related pathways in endometriosis. Clinicians should be cautious when recommending zinc supplementation for reproductive health, particularly in populations at risk for endometriosis. Furthermore, this study strengthens the biological plausibility of microbiome involvement in endometriosis, as zinc is a crucial cofactor for microbial activity, and its imbalance may alter the gut and pelvic microbiota implicated in the disease.
Fruit and vegetable consumption and risk of endometriosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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STOPs
STOPs
A STOP (Suggested Termination Of Practices) is a recommendation that advocates for the discontinuation of certain medical interventions, treatments, or practices based on emerging evidence indicating that these may be ineffective, harmful, or counterproductive in the management of specific conditions.
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Higher fruit intake, especially citrus fruits, was inversely associated with laparoscopically confirmed endometriosis, suggesting a protective effect potentially linked to beta-cryptoxanthin. In contrast, cruciferous vegetables were linked to increased risk, highlighting the complex interplay between diet and endometriosis risk factors.
What Was Studied
This study explored the potential link between the consumption of fruits and vegetables and the risk of laparoscopically confirmed endometriosis. Using data collected from the Nurses' Health Study II, the researchers analyzed dietary habits over a 22-year period, investigating whether certain food groups and nutrients influenced the likelihood of developing endometriosis.
Who Was Studied
Participants included premenopausal women aged 25–42 years who were enrolled in the Nurses' Health Study II cohort. These women completed biennial surveys assessing health status, lifestyle factors, and dietary intake. Those with a history of endometriosis, cancer, infertility, or hysterectomy were excluded from the analysis, ensuring a focused evaluation of diet and disease development.
Most Important Findings
The study found an inverse relationship between fruit consumption, particularly citrus fruits, and the risk of endometriosis. Women who consumed citrus fruits frequently were less likely to develop endometriosis. Conversely, no significant association was found between total vegetable intake and the disease. Cruciferous vegetables, however, were unexpectedly linked to an increased risk. Beta-cryptoxanthin, a nutrient found in citrus fruits, appeared to play a protective role, and the beneficial effects of fruit consumption were especially notable among participants who had a history of smoking. These findings suggest a potential role for specific dietary components in either mitigating or exacerbating the risk of endometriosis.
Implications
The findings highlight the importance of dietary considerations in understanding endometriosis risk. The protective association of citrus fruits underscores the potential of targeted nutritional interventions to reduce risk. The increased risk observed with cruciferous vegetables raises questions about the role of gastrointestinal symptoms, as these vegetables are high in fermentable oligosaccharides, which could exacerbate symptoms and lead to increased diagnosis rates. Future studies exploring these dietary patterns in greater depth are warranted to clarify the underlying mechanisms and to guide dietary recommendations for those at risk.
Molecular detection of intrauterine microbial colonization in women with endometriosis
February 12, 2026
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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STOPs
STOPs
A STOP (Suggested Termination Of Practices) is a recommendation that advocates for the discontinuation of certain medical interventions, treatments, or practices based on emerging evidence indicating that these may be ineffective, harmful, or counterproductive in the management of specific conditions.
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A case-controlled molecular study on 32 women, half with endometriosis and half without, investigated microbial colonization in the intrauterine environment and ovarian cystic fluid. It found significant bacterial variations, with certain bacteria types increasing or decreasing, particularly after treatment with gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonist (GnRHa). The study suggests GnRHa treatment might promote sub-clinical infections in the intrauterine and ovarian environments.
What was studied?
The research focused on investigating microbial colonization in women’s intrauterine environment and cystic fluid, utilizing a molecular approach to detect bacterial presence. This involved examining variations in bacterial types and their implications in the context of endometriosis and treatment effects.
Who was studied?
The study included 32 women, evenly divided between those diagnosed with endometriosis and those without the condition. Each group was further split, with half receiving gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonist (GnRHa) treatment, to explore the treatment’s impact on microbial colonization.
What were the most important findings?
Key findings revealed a broad range of bacterial presence in both endometrial swabs and cystic fluids, with significant changes in bacterial families (decrease in Lactobacillacae and increase in Streptococcaceae, Staphylococaceae, and Enterobacteriaceae) observed in GnRHa-treated women with endometriosis. The 16S metagenome assay was more effective than traditional culture methods, particularly in identifying bacteria in ovarian endometrioma cystic fluid.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study’s findings suggest the presence of sub-clinical infections in the intrauterine environment and ovarian endometrioma cystic fluid, particularly following GnRHa treatment. This raises concerns about the potential for GnRHa therapy to promote silent infections, indicating a need for careful consideration and monitoring of such treatments in women with endometriosis.
A prebiotic dietary pilot intervention restores faecal metabolites and may be neuroprotective in Parkinson’s Disease
February 12, 2026
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Parkinson’s Disease
Parkinson’s Disease
Parkinson’s disease is increasingly recognized as a systemic disorder involving coordinated disturbances across the gut–brain axis, rather than a condition confined to dopaminergic neurodegeneration alone. Converging evidence implicates gut dysbiosis, altered microbial metabolites, impaired intestinal barrier integrity, and metal dyshomeostasis as upstream drivers of neuroinflammation and alpha-synuclein pathology. These interconnected microbiome, metabolomic, and metallomic signals provide a mechanistic framework for understanding disease initiation, progression, and therapeutic targeting beyond the central nervous system.
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Short-chain Fatty Acids (SCFAs)
Short-chain Fatty Acids (SCFAs)
Short-chain fatty acids are microbially derived metabolites that regulate epithelial integrity, immune signaling, and microbial ecology. Their production patterns and mechanistic roles provide essential functional markers within microbiome signatures and support the interpretation of MBTIs, MMAs, and systems-level microbial shifts across clinical conditions.
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A 4-week prebiotic diet in PD patients increased faecal SCFAs, improved gut-brain metabolite profiles, and alleviated gastrointestinal symptoms, but core dysbiosis persisted. Results support microbiota-directed dietary interventions as a promising adjunct for Parkinson's management.
What was studied?
This study, titled "A prebiotic dietary pilot intervention restores faecal metabolites and may be neuroprotective in Parkinson’s Disease," aimed to evaluate whether a short-term, fiber-rich prebiotic diet could modulate the gut microbiome and its metabolites in patients with Parkinson’s Disease (PD), with a particular emphasis on short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) and microbial metabolic signatures of potential neuroprotective relevance. The intervention consisted of a 4-week diet high in dietary fiber and daily intake of the prebiotic Lactulose. Researchers conducted comprehensive profiling, including gut metagenomics, faecal and urinary metabolomics, and clinical assessments (motor and gastrointestinal symptoms), to determine the effects of this dietary intervention on microbial composition, SCFA production, gut-brain-relevant metabolites, and clinical parameters.
Who was studied?
The study population consisted of 11 couples, each comprising a patient with idiopathic Parkinson’s Disease (mild to moderately advanced, Hoehn and Yahr stages 1–2) and their healthy spouse as a control (CO). Ten couples completed the intervention, resulting in 10 PD patients and 10 matched controls. All participants were aged ≤75 years, followed omnivorous diets, and were screened for exclusion criteria such as recent antibiotic use, gastrointestinal diseases, or veganism. The inclusion of spousal controls was designed to minimize dietary and environmental variability, given the pronounced "household effect" on microbiome composition. PD subjects started Lactulose for constipation management at the time of study entry, while controls received a prebiotic dose, ensuring matched intervention exposure.
Most important findings
The most significant findings centered on microbiome composition, metabolite profiles, and clinical outcomes. At baseline, PD patients displayed reduced faecal SCFA concentrations and characteristic gut bacterial dysbiosis, notably depletion of SCFA-producing taxa such as Blautia, Dorea, and Erysipelatoclostridium. Following the prebiotic intervention, both PD and control groups exhibited increased faecal SCFA levels, with a particularly notable rise in propionate among PD patients. This increase in SCFAs correlated inversely with disease severity and gastrointestinal symptom scores in PD, indicating possible clinical benefits.
Taxonomically, the diet induced a robust enrichment of multiple Bifidobacterium species in both groups, likely attributable to Lactulose, but failed to fully restore the PD-associated dysbiotic signature—key taxa remained depleted in PD after intervention. Importantly, urinary and faecal metabolomics demonstrated normalization of several PD-associated metabolite aberrations after the intervention, including reductions in potentially neurotoxic compounds (e.g., p-cresol sulfate, quinolinic acid) and increases in neuroprotective metabolites (e.g., myo-inositol, glutathione). Functional metagenomics revealed increased microbial genes related to fatty acid metabolism, glutathione synthesis, and other neuroprotective pathways in PD post-intervention. However, certain PD-specific microbial functional signatures, such as enhanced drug resistance and tryptophan degradation, persisted.
Key implications
This pilot study provides compelling evidence that a short-term, prebiotic-rich dietary intervention can beneficially modulate the gut microbiome and metabolite output in PD patients, particularly by enhancing SCFA production and shifting metabolic pathways toward neuroprotection. Importantly, these changes were accompanied by improvements in gastrointestinal symptoms and trends toward reduced motor severity. The marked enrichment of Bifidobacteria underscores the need to consider Lactulose use in microbiome studies of PD, as it may confound disease-specific microbial signatures. However, the persistence of core dysbiotic taxa in PD suggests that longer or more targeted interventions may be needed to fully normalize the gut ecosystem. For clinicians, these findings highlight the therapeutic promise of microbiota-directed dietary strategies in PD—especially for patients with fiber-deficient diets—but also the necessity for personalized, strain-specific approaches and careful consideration of potential interactions with standard PD treatments. Larger, longer-term, and placebo-controlled studies are required to validate these results and optimize intervention protocols.
Citation
Bedarf JR, Romano S, Heinzmann SS, Duncan A, Traka MH, Ng D, Segovia-Lizano D, Simon MC, Narbad A, Wüllner U, Hildebrand F. A prebiotic dietary pilot intervention restores faecal metabolites and may be neuroprotective in Parkinson’s Disease. npj Parkinson’s Disease. 2025;11:66. doi:10.1038/s41531-025-00885-5
The role of key gut microbial metabolites in the development and treatment of cancer
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Short-chain Fatty Acids (SCFAs)
Short-chain Fatty Acids (SCFAs)
Short-chain fatty acids are microbially derived metabolites that regulate epithelial integrity, immune signaling, and microbial ecology. Their production patterns and mechanistic roles provide essential functional markers within microbiome signatures and support the interpretation of MBTIs, MMAs, and systems-level microbial shifts across clinical conditions.
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This review explores the dual role of gut microbial metabolites in cancer, focusing on their anticancer and pro-carcinogenic effects. It emphasizes the potential of SCFAs, bacteriocins, and dietary modifications in preventing and treating cancer, with a focus on colorectal cancer and other common malignancies.
What was studied?
The review focuses on the role of gut microbial metabolites in cancer development and treatment. It highlights the complex interaction between gut microbiota, their metabolites, and the host’s immune system, emphasizing how these metabolites can both inhibit and promote carcinogenesis. Specific metabolites such as short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs), bacteriocins, and phenylpropanoid-derived compounds were explored for their potential anticancer activities. The review also discusses pro-carcinogenic metabolites like secondary bile acids, which can contribute to cancer progression through mechanisms such as inflammation and oxidative stress.
Who was studied?
The review examines existing studies, including in vitro and in vivo research on the effects of gut microbial metabolites on various cancers, including colorectal, breast, liver, and head and neck cancers. It evaluates the impacts of dietary patterns and microbiota composition on cancer risk and progression. The studies investigated range from clinical observations to animal models, focusing on the effects of microbial fermentation products like SCFAs and secondary bile acids on tumor growth, immune modulation, and inflammation.
Most important findings
Gut microbial metabolites, particularly SCFAs like butyrate, exhibit anticancer properties by promoting apoptosis, inhibiting cell proliferation, and modulating immune responses. However, metabolites like secondary bile acids can promote carcinogenesis by increasing oxidative stress and inflammation. The balance between these metabolites plays a crucial role in cancer risk, especially in colorectal cancer (CRC). Diets high in protein and fat can favor the production of harmful metabolites, whereas diets rich in fiber support the production of beneficial SCFAs, reducing cancer risk. Additionally, bacteriocins, antimicrobial peptides produced by certain gut bacteria, showed cytotoxic effects against cancer cells, suggesting their potential as novel therapeutic agents.
Key implications
This review underscores the importance of gut microbial metabolites in cancer prevention and therapy. While SCFAs and bacteriocins offer promise as therapeutic agents, the pro-carcinogenic effects of secondary bile acids highlight the need for further research on how to balance these metabolites for optimal health outcomes. The integration of diet-based interventions and microbiota modulation could become a key strategy in cancer prevention and treatment, especially when combined with traditional therapies. Future clinical studies are required to refine these approaches and develop more targeted cancer treatments that harness the microbiome’s potential.
Gut microbiome alterations precede graft rejection in kidney transplantation patients
February 12, 2026
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Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD)
Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD)
Dysbiosis in chronic kidney disease (CKD) reflects a shift toward reduced beneficial taxa and increased pathogenic, uremic toxin-producing species, driven by a bidirectional interaction in which the uremic environment disrupts microbial composition and dysbiotic metabolites accelerate renal deterioration.
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Short-chain Fatty Acids (SCFAs)
Short-chain Fatty Acids (SCFAs)
Short-chain fatty acids are microbially derived metabolites that regulate epithelial integrity, immune signaling, and microbial ecology. Their production patterns and mechanistic roles provide essential functional markers within microbiome signatures and support the interpretation of MBTIs, MMAs, and systems-level microbial shifts across clinical conditions.
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Gut microbiome dysbiosis precedes kidney transplant rejection, marked by loss of SCFA-producing taxa, reduced diversity, and enrichment of disease-associated bacteria. This prerejection signature reflects a prolonged CKD-like state and may serve as an early biomarker and therapeutic target.
What was studied?
Gut microbiome alterations preceding kidney transplant rejection form the focus of this original research article, which uses 16S rRNA gene sequencing to evaluate how microbial composition and function shift before, during, and after graft rejection. The study examines a multicenter cohort and emphasizes the role of short-chain fatty acid (SCFA)–producing taxa as a central microbiome signature. This research reveals that the gut microbiome in kidney transplant recipients shows a recovery trajectory over time, yet this trajectory is disrupted in patients who progress to rejection. Prior to rejection, patients develop a microbiome signature characterized by reduced diversity, reduced SCFA production potential, and increased enrichment of disease-associated genera. This prerejection microbiome resembles a prolonged chronic kidney disease (CKD) gut signature, suggesting that residual CKD-related dysbiosis may play a mechanistic role in immune dysregulation leading to rejection.
Who was studied?
The study analyzes 562 fecal samples collected from 245 individuals participating in the DZIF transplant cohort in Germany, of whom 217 were kidney transplant recipients and 28 were kidney donors. After applying inclusion and exclusion criteria, 76 patients experiencing biopsy-confirmed rejection events were compared with 141 non-rejection patients. A propensity-matched subcohort of 92 individuals (32 rejection, 60 non-rejection) was also analyzed to control for confounders such as age, sex, donor type, HLA mismatch, and time from transplant. Samples were drawn longitudinally before transplant, at predefined intervals post-transplant, at the time of rejection, and in the later post-rejection period, enabling assessment of temporal microbiome dynamics relative to transplant status and graft rejection.
Most important findings
Patients who later rejected their graft exhibited reduced Shannon diversity, lower Simpson evenness, and distinct beta-diversity clustering compared to non-rejection recipients. Key SCFA-producing genera—including Blautia, Faecalibacterium, Roseburia, Coprococcus, and the Ruminococcus torques group—were depleted prior to rejection. Conversely, Streptococcus and Fusobacterium, taxa associated with inflammation and CKD dysbiosis, were enriched. qPCR confirmed functional loss of SCFA-producing pathways, revealing decreased abundance of butyryl-CoA:acetate CoA-transferase (but) and methylmalonyl-CoA decarboxylase (mmdA), with trends toward reduction of bcd and acK enzymes. Pathway analysis (GOmixer) showed increased proteolytic fermentation, reactive nitrogen and oxygen species pathways, and ammonia metabolism in the prerejection state, while healthy controls demonstrated higher mucin degradation and carbohydrate fermentation capacity. Post-rejection, the microbiome began normalizing, with increasing SCFA-producing taxa and reduced inflammatory genera. Comparisons with a published CKD cohort confirmed strong overlap, suggesting rejection-associated dysbiosis represents a persistent CKD-like microbiome state.
Key implications
These findings position the gut microbiome as a predictive and modifiable factor in kidney transplant rejection. Depletion of SCFA-producing taxa and reduced microbial metabolic capacity may impair regulatory T cell modulation, weakening immune tolerance and facilitating rejection. Identifying a pre-rejection microbial signature offers potential for early-detection biomarkers, microbiome-targeted therapeutics, and dietary or microbial interventions aimed at restoring SCFA production, improving immune homeostasis, and enhancing long-term graft survival. Post-rejection normalization suggests that intervention windows may exist both before and after rejection episodes, further underscoring the microbiome’s relevance in clinical transplant management.
Lactulose Regulates Gut Microbiota Dysbiosis in Acute Pancreatitis with Intestinal Dysfunction
February 12, 2026
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Short-chain Fatty Acids (SCFAs)
Short-chain Fatty Acids (SCFAs)
Short-chain fatty acids are microbially derived metabolites that regulate epithelial integrity, immune signaling, and microbial ecology. Their production patterns and mechanistic roles provide essential functional markers within microbiome signatures and support the interpretation of MBTIs, MMAs, and systems-level microbial shifts across clinical conditions.
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In MSAP patients with gut dysfunction, lactulose and rhubarb similarly restored intestinal function, but lactulose more effectively reduced TNF-α and IL-6, enriched Bifidobacterium and Lactobacillales, suppressed Escherichia-Shigella and Enterococcus, and enhanced SCFA production, supporting its role as a microbiome-targeted intervention in acute pancreatitis.
What was studied?
This prospective, open-label, randomized controlled trial investigated whether lactulose regulates gut microbiota dysbiosis in acute pancreatitis patients with intestinal dysfunction and whether its effects on gut function, systemic inflammation, and short-chain fatty acid (SCFA) production were comparable or superior to Chinese herb rhubarb. Moderate-severe acute pancreatitis (MSAP) patients with gastrointestinal dysfunction (score of gut dysfunction > 5) were randomized 1:1 within 72 hours of onset to receive lactulose or rhubarb for 1 week, alongside standard AP care. The primary endpoints were recovery of intestinal function, assessed by tolerance of complete enteral nutrition and normalization of the gut dysfunction score, with secondary endpoints including infectious complications, organ failure, inflammatory cytokines, gut permeability markers, gut microbiota composition, and fecal SCFAs. The investigators used 16S rRNA gene sequencing (V3–V4 region, 97 % OTU clustering, SILVA v138 taxonomy) and LEfSe analysis to characterize microbial shifts, and GC–MS to quantify acetate, propionate, and butyrate in stool samples, enabling integration of clinical outcomes with microbiome and metabolite data.
Who was studied?
The study enrolled 73 adult MSAP patients (18–75 years) with early intestinal dysfunction at a single tertiary pancreatic center in China, of whom 83 were initially randomized and 73 completed per-protocol analysis (36 lactulose, 37 rhubarb). Baseline characteristics, including etiology (predominantly biliary pancreatitis, followed by hypertriglyceridemia), APACHE II, SIRS, modified Marshall, and MCTSI scores, were balanced between groups. Exclusion criteria eliminated those with organ failure, gastrointestinal bleeding, fistulas, malignancy, autoimmune disease, pregnancy, or prior use of prebiotics/probiotics within 4 weeks, refining the cohort to a relatively homogeneous MSAP population with early gut involvement. In parallel, 28 healthy volunteers without AP served as microbiome and SCFA controls, permitting differentiation between AP-associated dysbiosis and treatment-induced changes. Approximately half of the AP patients received cephalosporins, allowing stratified analyses of antibiotic versus non-antibiotic subgroups for microbiome outcomes.
Most important findings
Clinically, lactulose and rhubarb were equivalent in restoring intestinal function: about 70 % of patients in each arm tolerated complete enteral nutrition by day 7, and the gut dysfunction score normalized after roughly 6 days in both groups. Rates of infectious complications, organ failure, minimally invasive interventions, and hospital stay length were also similar, indicating non-inferiority of lactulose to an established TCM therapy at the level of classical AP outcomes. However, lactulose demonstrated a stronger systemic anti-inflammatory profile; both treatments reduced TNF-α, IL-6, CRP, and procalcitonin by day 7, but TNF-α and IL-6 fell to significantly lower levels in the lactulose group, suggesting more effective dampening of the inflammatory cascade that drives AP severity. D-lactate, a marker of gut permeability, decreased comparably in both arms, while diamine oxidase remained unchanged, indicating partial but not complete restoration of barrier integrity.
Microbiome analyses revealed a characteristic AP signature with reduced diversity and overrepresentation of pathobionts relative to healthy controls, dominated by Proteobacteria and Firmicutes, particularly Escherichia-Shigella and Enterococcus. In non-antibiotic patients, lactulose shifted the community structure toward a more eubiotic profile: Actinobacteriota increased, driven by enrichment of Bifidobacterium, while pathogenic Escherichia-Shigella and Enterococcus were reduced. Lactobacillales also expanded, aligning the community toward health-associated SCFA producers. In contrast, rhubarb-treated patients without antibiotics showed higher abundances of Escherichia-Shigella and Staphylococcus, preserving or even amplifying AP-associated pathobionts as major microbial associations. Under antibiotic exposure, both lactulose and rhubarb groups converged on similar microbiota dominated by Enterococcus and Lactobacillales, indicating that systemic antibiotics largely overrode prebiotic or herbal differentiation.
Metabolically, total SCFAs (acetate, propionate, butyrate) were reduced in AP relative to healthy controls and increased after 1 week of treatment in both arms, but lactulose elicited a quantitatively stronger response. In antibiotic-free patients, lactulose produced higher total SCFAs, particularly acetate, than rhubarb, consistent with its prebiotic fermentation by Bifidobacterium and Lactobacillus species. This coupling of Bifidobacterium enrichment, suppression of Escherichia-Shigella and Enterococcus, and increased SCFA output defines a coherent microbiome signal for lactulose in AP, positioning Bifidobacterium (and possibly Lactobacillales) as beneficial MMAs and Escherichia-Shigella/Enterococcus as targetable pathogenic MMAs within a microbiome signatures framework.
Key implications
For clinicians managing AP with early intestinal dysfunction, this study indicates that lactulose is a viable alternative to rhubarb for promoting gut functional recovery, with the additional advantages of stronger systemic anti-inflammatory effects and favorable microbiome remodeling. From a microbiome medicine perspective, lactulose acts as a microbiome-targeted intervention that aligns clinical improvement with correction of dysbiosis: it selectively expands Bifidobacterium and Lactobacillales, suppresses Proteobacteria-dominated pathobionts such as Escherichia-Shigella and Enterococcus, and restores SCFA production toward a healthier profile. These changes are mechanistically relevant, given the known roles of SCFAs in enhancing epithelial barrier function and modulating immune responses. The findings also highlight antibiotics as a major modifier of microbiome outcomes, often flattening differences between interventions, which is critical when interpreting microbiome-based therapies in hospitalized AP cohorts. Limitations include single-center design, modest sample size, use of 16S rather than metagenomics, and absence of a placebo arm, so some microbiome shifts may reflect natural recovery. Nevertheless, the concordance between improved inflammation, beneficial taxa shifts, and SCFA restoration supports lactulose as a candidate microbiome-targeted intervention (MBTI) for AP-associated dysbiosis and provides concrete MMAs (Bifidobacterium, Lactobacillales vs Escherichia-Shigella, Enterococcus, Staphylococcus) for inclusion in a microbiome signatures database.
Lactulose Improves Renal Function and Gut Microbiota in CKD
February 12, 2026
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Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD)
Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD)
Dysbiosis in chronic kidney disease (CKD) reflects a shift toward reduced beneficial taxa and increased pathogenic, uremic toxin-producing species, driven by a bidirectional interaction in which the uremic environment disrupts microbial composition and dysbiotic metabolites accelerate renal deterioration.
•
Short-chain Fatty Acids (SCFAs)
Short-chain Fatty Acids (SCFAs)
Short-chain fatty acids are microbially derived metabolites that regulate epithelial integrity, immune signaling, and microbial ecology. Their production patterns and mechanistic roles provide essential functional markers within microbiome signatures and support the interpretation of MBTIs, MMAs, and systems-level microbial shifts across clinical conditions.
•
Lactulose improved renal function in adenine-induced CKD rats by lowering uremic toxins, decreasing indole-producing taxa, and enriching Bifidobacterium and Lactobacillales. These microbiome shifts corresponded with reduced fibrosis and oxidative stress, demonstrating lactulose’s potential as a microbiome-targeted intervention for CKD.
What was studied?
This original research study examined how lactulose improves renal function and gut microbiota dysbiosis and uremic toxin production in adenine-induced chronic kidney disease (CKD) and whether these microbiome shifts translate into measurable improvements in renal function. The investigators used a well-established adenine CKD model, where adenine metabolism produces 2,8-dihydroxyadenine crystals that accumulate in proximal tubules and drive tubulointerstitial injury. After CKD establishment, rats were transitioned to either standard chow or lactulose-supplemented diets (3.0 percent or 7.5 percent), enabling assessment of lactulose’s capacity to alter dysbiosis, reduce serum indoxyl sulfate (IS), p-cresyl sulfate (PCS), and trimethylamine-N-oxide (TMAO), and mitigate renal fibrosis. The study integrated classical nephrology outcomes (serum creatinine, BUN, fibrosis quantification) with microbiome composition profiling using T-RFLP and SCFA quantification, thus offering a translational view of lactulose as a microbiome-targeted intervention (MBTI).
Who was studied?
The study evaluated male Wistar/ST rats induced into CKD through 0.75 percent adenine feeding for three weeks, a model confirmed by marked increases in serum creatinine, BUN, IS, and extensive tubulointerstitial fibrosis documented in the histological micrographs on page 6. After CKD induction, 36 rats were randomized into three groups: control (normal diet), 3.0 percent lactulose, and 7.5 percent lactulose (n=12 per group). An additional normal cohort served as a healthy reference. Fecal and serum sampling occurred at baseline, post-adenine induction, and four weeks after dietary intervention, allowing temporal comparison of renal, metabolic, and microbiome changes. No animals exhibited diarrhea or constipation, supporting model stability.
Most important findings
Lactulose produced dose-dependent improvements in renal function, with both 3.0 percent and 7.5 percent diets lowering serum creatinine and BUN relative to controls, as shown in the plots on page 5. Serum IS, which increased 8.5-fold after adenine, rose further in controls but fell significantly in both lactulose groups by week 4, indicating suppression of indole-producing taxa. PCS levels, markedly elevated in CKD, were likewise reduced. TMAO also trended downward in the 7.5 percent group. These toxin reductions strongly correlated with improvements in creatinine and BUN (scatter plots, page 6).
Microbiota analyses demonstrated that lactulose reduced the relative abundance of Bacteroides and Clostridium cluster XI, both major producers of indole precursors of IS, while increasing Bifidobacterium and Lactobacillales, as shown in the taxa-specific bar graphs on page 10. These represent key beneficial taxa in a CKD microbiome signature and major microbial associations (MMAs) relevant to the suppression of uremic toxins. Despite no large shifts in total SCFA levels across groups, lactulose nonetheless promoted compositional rebalancing toward SCFA-associated genera. Kidney histology (page 8) demonstrated a substantial reduction in tubulointerstitial fibrosis in lactulose groups, consistent with the observed reduction of IS and PCS, which are known drivers of ROS-mediated fibrosis. Lactulose also improved oxidative stress markers, decreasing AOPPs and increasing thiol content and GSH/GSSG ratio.
Key implications
This study provides a mechanistic foundation for using lactulose as an MBTI for CKD, demonstrating dual activity: suppression of IS- and PCS-producing bacterial taxa and restoration of beneficial, SCFA-producing commensals such as Bifidobacterium. The improvement in renal biomarkers aligns with microbiome shifts that reduce indole production and uremic toxin burden. By preventing further tubulointerstitial fibrosis and improving oxidative stress profiles, lactulose addresses upstream drivers of CKD progression rather than only downstream symptoms. Importantly, the findings validate lactulose as an agent capable of reversing core elements of CKD dysbiosis and restoring metabolic homeostasis, supporting its use as a clinically actionable MBTI candidate for nephrology.
Ciclopirox Antifungal and Anti-Inflammatory Review: Dermatology to Oncology
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Staphylococcus aureus (S. Aureus)
Staphylococcus aureus (S. Aureus)
Staphylococcus aureus is a versatile skin and mucosal commensal that can transition into a highly virulent pathobiont. Known for its immune-evasive strategies, toxin production, and antibiotic resistance, it plays a significant role in chronic infections and microbiome imbalance.
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Microsporum canis (M. canis)
Microsporum canis (M. canis)
OverviewMicrosporum canis (M. canis) is a zoophilic dermatophyte common in cats and dogs, responsible for 90% of feline dermatophytoses worldwide.[1][2] It has significant zoonotic potential, transmitting to humans through fomites or direct animal contact, causing severe superficial mycosis. M. canis is considered anthropo-zoophilic and can infect pediatric or immunocompromised patients, causing severe inflammatory responses such […]
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Ciclopirox and its salt form exhibit broad-spectrum antifungal, antibacterial, and anti-inflammatory activity via iron chelation and enzyme inhibition. With low resistance potential, they outperform many azoles and show promise in oncology, virology, and neuroinflammation, making them valuable tools in dermatology and beyond.
What was reviewed?
This review explores the therapeutic potential of ciclopirox (CPX) and its ethanolamine salt ciclopirox olamine (CPO)—two hydroxypyridone antifungal agents with broad-spectrum antimicrobial, anti-inflammatory, and iron-chelating properties. The paper examines their established role in dermatology and investigates their emerging uses in oncology, virology, immunology, and neurology. The authors describe CPX/CPO's unique mechanisms, structure–activity relationships, pharmacokinetics, and efficacy in diverse formulations including creams, shampoos, lacquers, and gels.
Who was reviewed?
The review draws on findings from in vitro studies, in vivo animal models, clinical trials, pharmacokinetic research, and microbial gene expression studies. It synthesizes data from both dermatological and non-dermatological disciplines, including microbiology, oncology, and virology, to contextualize CPX/CPO’s multifaceted utility.
Most important findings
Ciclopirox and its salt form, ciclopirox olamine, exhibit a unique mechanism of action that distinguishes them from conventional antifungals such as azoles and polyenes. Their primary mode involves intracellular iron chelation, targeting iron-dependent enzymes like ribonucleotide reductase and deoxyhypusine hydroxylase, thereby impairing fungal viability. Additionally, they disrupt mitochondrial function, energy metabolism, and membrane integrity, while also interfering with DNA repair, mitotic processes, and amino acid uptake.
Ciclopirox compounds exert potent anti-inflammatory effects by suppressing prostaglandins, leukotrienes, and pro-inflammatory cytokines including IL-1β, IL-6, and TNF-α. They are active against a wide spectrum of dermatophytes, Candida spp., Malassezia spp., Microsporum canis, and antibiotic-resistant bacteria, and demonstrate synergism with antifungal agents and mitochondrial electron transport chain (ETC) inhibitors. Notably, the review underscores microbiome-relevant implications, particularly in seborrheic dermatitis, where Malassezia dominance is accompanied by elevated levels of Staphylococcus aureus and S. epidermidis, along with reduced Cutibacterium, indicative of a dysbiotic profile. Ciclopirox effectively reduces these pathobionts while preserving beneficial taxa, highlighting its potential as a microbiome-friendly antifungal therapy.
Key implications
The review positions CPX/CPO as an underutilized multi-target agent with broad therapeutic value. In dermatology, they outperform many topical antifungals and reduce relapse in seborrheic dermatitis. Their low resistance potential and anti-inflammatory activity make them preferable to corticosteroid combinations. Outside dermatology, they show promise in cancer, HBV, HIV, SARS-CoV-2, polycystic kidney disease, type I diabetes, and stroke. Their iron-chelating mechanism offers a powerful avenue for targeting microbial virulence and host-pathogen interactions, which aligns with emerging interest in microbial metallomics and host–microbiome–metal ion dynamics.
Staphylococcus aureus Plasmids: Reservoirs of Antibiotic Resistance and Virulence Genes
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Staphylococcus aureus (S. Aureus)
Staphylococcus aureus (S. Aureus)
Staphylococcus aureus is a versatile skin and mucosal commensal that can transition into a highly virulent pathobiont. Known for its immune-evasive strategies, toxin production, and antibiotic resistance, it plays a significant role in chronic infections and microbiome imbalance.
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This study sequenced and analyzed plasmids from poultry-associated Staphylococcus aureus, uncovering diverse resistance and virulence genes, novel mobilizable plasmids, and highlighting poultry as a reservoir for clinically relevant resistance determinants transferable to human strains.
What was studied?
This original research article investigated the prevalence and genetic composition of plasmids in Staphylococcus aureus strains of poultry origin, with a focus on determinants of antibiotic and heavy metal resistance and virulence-associated genetic elements. The study aimed to address the underrepresentation of complete plasmid sequences in public databases by sequencing and analyzing the complete plasmid content from 18 poultry-associated S. aureus strains. Researchers classified these plasmids into three groups: (I) poultry-associated plasmids (including pAvX and pAvY variants), (II) plasmids previously reported in S. aureus from diverse hosts, and (III) entirely novel plasmids characterized for the first time in this study. Functional genetic analyses were performed to identify resistance genes, virulence factor genes, and elements relevant for plasmid maintenance and mobility, including toxin-antitoxin (TA) and restriction-modification (RM) systems.
Who was studied?
The study analyzed 18 S. aureus strains isolated from poultry and game birds (Gallus gallus, Perdix perdix, Phasianus colchicus, and Meleagris gallopavo) collected from Belgium, the USA, the UK, and Poland between 1976 and 2016. The strains represent various sequence types (STs) according to multilocus sequence typing (MLST), with most originating from poultry farms. These strains were selected to provide a broad view of plasmid diversity in avian-associated S. aureus. The plasmid sequences were obtained through next-generation sequencing, followed by functional and comparative genomic analyses.
Most important findings
The study revealed a high prevalence and diversity of plasmids in poultry-associated S. aureus. Group I plasmids (pAvX and pAvY variants) were found in 72% of strains and are associated with virulence factors but do not carry resistance determinants. Group II plasmids, found in 39% of strains, included previously characterized elements known to carry antibiotic resistance against aminoglycosides, beta-lactams, macrolides, and tetracyclines, as well as heavy metal (cadmium and arsenic) resistance genes. Notably, these plasmids are also present in human clinical isolates, highlighting cross-species transmission. Group III comprised novel plasmids (28% prevalence), such as pPA3, which exhibited a mosaic structure derived from other plasmids and carried multiple resistance determinants (erythromycin, tetracycline, cadmium) and virulence genes. Many plasmids harbored toxin-antitoxin systems (e.g., pemIK-Sa1, yefM/yoeB-Sa2, sprF3/sprG3) and mobility elements (oriT or mimics, mob genes), enhancing their maintenance and potential for horizontal transfer. The mosaicism and mobilizability of these plasmids underscore the dynamic nature of resistance and virulence gene dissemination in S. aureus, especially across human and animal reservoirs.
Key implications
This research highlights livestock-associated S. aureus, especially poultry strains, as significant reservoirs for resistance and virulence determinants that can be mobilized and transmitted to human strains. The presence of identical or highly similar plasmids in both animal and human isolates demonstrates the ease of resistance gene flow between species, facilitated by mobile genetic elements and TA systems. The identification of previously unknown plasmids and novel mobility elements (such as new oriT mimics) suggests that the true diversity and mobilization potential of S. aureus plasmids are underestimated. For clinical practice and infection control, these findings stress the importance of comprehensive plasmid surveillance in both human and animal settings, as well as the need for complete plasmid sequencing in genomic studies to better understand and curb the spread of antimicrobial resistance.
MntABC and MntH Enable Staphylococcus aureus to Overcome Host Nutritional Immunity and Manganese Starvation
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Staphylococcus aureus (S. Aureus)
Staphylococcus aureus (S. Aureus)
Staphylococcus aureus is a versatile skin and mucosal commensal that can transition into a highly virulent pathobiont. Known for its immune-evasive strategies, toxin production, and antibiotic resistance, it plays a significant role in chronic infections and microbiome imbalance.
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This study shows that Staphylococcus aureus uses MntABC and MntH transporters to overcome host-imposed manganese starvation via calprotectin, preserving SOD activity and enabling systemic infection.
What was studied?
This study investigated the roles of two manganese transport systems in Staphylococcus aureus—MntABC (an ATP-binding cassette transporter) and MntH (a NRAMP family transporter)—in enabling the bacterium to overcome manganese starvation imposed by the host protein calprotectin. Calprotectin, an antimicrobial protein released by neutrophils, sequesters manganese and zinc during infection as part of a broader nutritional immunity strategy. The researchers explored how MntABC and MntH allow S. aureus to retain manganese-dependent superoxide dismutase (SOD) activity and persist in systemic infection despite calprotectin-mediated metal withholding.
Who was studied?
The study utilized both wild-type and genetically modified S. aureus strains (mntC, mntH, and double mutants), tested in vitro and in vivo. Murine models included wild-type C57BL/6 mice and S100A9 knockout mice, which lack calprotectin. These models allowed the authors to assess bacterial burdens, metal distribution, and protein expression across different organs, particularly the liver and kidneys, during systemic infection.
Most important findings
The expression of both mntA (MntABC) and mntH increased in response to calprotectin exposure, indicating a manganese-specific starvation response. Double mutants lacking both MntABC and MntH showed significantly impaired growth in manganese-limited environments and had markedly reduced SOD activity, resulting in elevated oxidative stress. In wild-type mice, the double mutants demonstrated significantly reduced bacterial burdens in liver and kidneys, confirming their impaired virulence. However, in calprotectin-deficient mice, these defects were largely rescued in the liver, confirming calprotectin as the primary manganese-sequestering factor there.
Importantly, the study used engineered calprotectin variants to demonstrate that the loss of virulence in double mutants was due to manganese, not zinc, starvation. Moreover, LA-ICP-MS imaging showed that while manganese levels are inherently lower in the kidney than in the liver, infection further restricts local manganese and zinc concentrations—yet this restriction in kidneys occurred even without calprotectin, suggesting additional, CP-independent mechanisms of manganese sequestration.
Organ
Microbiome-relevant Insight
Liver
Calprotectin-dependent Mn sequestration limits S. aureus virulence; MntABC/MntH essential for manganese acquisition and oxidative stress defense
Kidney
Mn- and Zn-limited environment independent of calprotectin; other unidentified mechanisms contribute to Mn sequestration during infection
Key implications
This study emphasizes manganese as a critical nutrient that S. aureus must acquire during infection, highlighting the importance of microbial transport systems in overcoming nutritional immunity. The finding that manganese availability, not zinc, is the primary factor limiting S. aureus persistence underlines manganese sequestration as a potential therapeutic target. Moreover, the discovery of calprotectin-independent manganese restriction in the kidney suggests the existence of redundant or parallel host mechanisms to limit metal availability, pointing to underexplored targets in innate immunity. These insights underscore the role of manganese homeostasis in shaping microbial pathogenesis and the host’s metal-withholding defense network.
Staphylococcus aureus HrtA-heme-toxicity : ATPase function and heme-stress virulence reprogramming in S. aureus
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
•
Staphylococcus aureus (S. Aureus)
Staphylococcus aureus (S. Aureus)
Staphylococcus aureus is a versatile skin and mucosal commensal that can transition into a highly virulent pathobiont. Known for its immune-evasive strategies, toxin production, and antibiotic resistance, it plays a significant role in chronic infections and microbiome imbalance.
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HrtA is the ATPase of HrtAB that protects S. aureus from heme toxicity. Catalytic residues are essential in vitro and in vivo. Heme-stressed hrtA mutants undergo stringent-like reprogramming with a shift from cytolytic to immunomodulatory toxins, redefining virulence control by heme availability.
What was studied?
This study investigates Staphylococcus aureus HrtA-heme-toxicity, defining the biochemical function of HrtA, the ATPase subunit of the heme-regulated transporter HrtAB, and linking its catalytic activity to survival under heme stress and to genome-wide transcriptional remodeling. The authors characterize HrtA ATPase kinetics in vitro, identify essential catalytic residues by site-directed mutagenesis, test in vivo complementation during growth with toxic heme, and profile the heme-stress transcriptome of an hrtA mutant to explain previously observed virulence shifts. The work positions HrtAB at the interface of heme acquisition and heme detoxification in Staphylococcus aureus pathogenesis, a setting relevant to iron competition in host niches and to immunomodulatory toxin expression that shapes host–microbe interactions.
Who was studied?
Experiments used S. aureus strain Newman and an isogenic hrtA deletion mutant for growth and transcriptional analyses, with Escherichia coli BL21(DE3) expressing recombinant HrtA and engineered HrtA mutants for biochemical assays. Heme exposure for microarrays was 1 μM to permit growth of the mutant, while adaptation and dominance tests used up to 10 μM heme; biochemical assays assessed pH, temperature, ATP concentration, and divalent cation requirements. These designs isolated HrtA’s role in heme tolerance and linked catalytic competence to cellular phenotypes and global gene expression under heme stress.
Most important findings
Purified HrtA hydrolyzed ATP, establishing it as the ATPase of the HrtAB transporter. Activity saturated near 0.25 mM ATP, was optimal at pH 7 to 8, and required Mn²⁺ or Mg²⁺, with an unusual in vitro temperature optimum of 10 to 20°C as depicted in Figure 2 on page 4. Conserved motifs were functionally essential: K45 in Walker A, G145 in the ABC signature, and E167 in Walker B were each required for ATP hydrolysis; R76 outside these motifs reduced but did not abolish activity. Only catalytically competent HrtA complemented the heme-sensitive growth defect of the hrtA mutant, whereas catalytically inactive variants acted dominant-negatively in wild-type cells under heme challenge, consistent with multimeric ABC transporter architecture.
Genome-wide expression profiling revealed that more than 500 transcripts changed at least twofold in the hrtA mutant during heme exposure, with the pattern most similar to the stringent response, including approximately 37.4 percent overlap and strong up-regulation of RelA. Virulence determinants were markedly reprogrammed: transcripts for staphylococcal superantigen-like exotoxins were induced, while pore-forming toxins such as gamma hemolysin subunits and a leukotoxin were repressed, indicating a shift from cell-lytic to immunomodulatory toxin profiles. Table 3 on page 7 details these changes, including increases in fibrinogen-binding proteins and immunodominant antigens. Regulatory systems, including HssRS and multiple two-component regulators and metal homeostasis repressors such as Fur and CzrA, were differentially expressed, offering mechanisms for the breadth of the response.
Key implications
For microbiome-oriented pathogenesis frameworks, these data support heme as a contextual host signal that directs S. aureus virulence programming. HrtAB function safeguards against heme’s membrane-damaging toxicity and prevents a costly, immunomodulatory stress response; loss of HrtA precipitates stringent-like reprogramming and favors secreted factors that can reshape immune recruitment in host tissues. In microbiome signatures, S. aureus emerges as a pathobiont whose toxin repertoire and immune interference vary with iron-heme availability, suggesting niche-specific expression states during dysbiosis. Therapeutically, the results raise the prospect of targeting HrtAB or its regulator HssRS to potentiate heme stress and blunt virulence without directly inhibiting growth, a strategy that could complement nutritional immunity and reduce selective pressure for resistance.
Candida albicans Enables Staphylococcus aureus “Hitchhiking” Across Mucosa
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Staphylococcus aureus (S. Aureus)
Staphylococcus aureus (S. Aureus)
Staphylococcus aureus is a versatile skin and mucosal commensal that can transition into a highly virulent pathobiont. Known for its immune-evasive strategies, toxin production, and antibiotic resistance, it plays a significant role in chronic infections and microbiome imbalance.
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Candida albicans enables systemic Staphylococcus aureus infection via Als3p-mediated hyphal invasion. This “microbial hitchhiking” allows S. aureus to bypass epithelial barriers, with major implications for immunocompromised patients.
What was studied?
This study investigated a novel mechanism by which Candida albicans facilitates the invasion and systemic dissemination of Staphylococcus aureus through mucosal tissue. Specifically, the concept of Candida albicans Staphylococcus aureus 'hitchhiking' was examined, where researchers explored whether S. aureus can adhere to the invasive hyphal form of C. albicans via specific adhesin interactions, enabling it to bypass the need for a traditional epithelial breach. Key attention was given to the role of the C. albicans Als3p adhesin in mediating this “microbial hitchhiking,” allowing S. aureus to bind to fungal hyphae, penetrate tissue, and cause systemic disease. This hypothesis was tested through in vitro biofilm assays, ex vivo tongue models, and a murine model of oral co-colonization.
Who was studied?
The study used in vitro dual-species biofilm models, ex vivo murine tongue tissue, and immunosuppressed C57BL/6J mice. Multiple strains of S. aureus, including USA300 JE2 wild-type and 25 adhesin-deficient mutants, were tested for their binding ability to C. albicans hyphae. The fungal strains included C. albicans SC5314 wild-type, an Als3p-deficient mutant (als3Δ/Δ), and an Als3p-complemented strain. These models enabled evaluation of microbial binding, tissue invasion, and systemic dissemination under conditions mimicking human mucosal colonization in immunocompromised hosts.
Most important findings
The researchers found that S. aureus specifically binds to the hyphal form of C. albicans via the fungal Als3p adhesin. This interaction is essential for bacterial invasion across the mucosal barrier and subsequent dissemination. In vitro and real-time microscopy confirmed that S. aureus rapidly attaches to C. albicans hyphae. In the murine model, systemic infection and mortality occurred only when mice were co-colonized with S. aureus and Als3p-expressing C. albicans. Mice co-infected with the Als3p-deficient mutant showed no dissemination or mortality. Recovery of S. aureus and C. albicans from kidney tissue was only observed in mice infected with strains expressing Als3p. Additionally, three S. aureus adhesin mutants (ΔfnbB, ΔsasF, Δatl) showed significantly reduced hyphal binding, but no single staphylococcal adhesin was solely responsible, implying redundancy in adhesin interactions.
Tissue Site
Organism Recovered Only with Als3p
Tongue
S. aureus colonization enhanced by C. albicans presence regardless of Als3p
Kidney
S. aureus and C. albicans only recovered if Als3p was expressed
Key implications
This study introduces a paradigm-shifting concept in microbial pathogenesis: fungal-mediated bacterial invasion through mucosal surfaces. The discovery that C. albicans hyphae can serve as conduits for systemic S. aureus infection has profound clinical implications, particularly in immunocompromised patients where these microbes frequently co-colonize mucosal surfaces. This work identifies Als3p as a critical target for disrupting this pathogenic synergy, suggesting that Als3p or C. albicans inhibition may serve as a preventive strategy against invasive staphylococcal infections. The findings also underscore the need to screen for C. albicans colonization in critically ill patients as a risk factor for secondary bacterial sepsis.
Improved cure of bacterial vaginosis with single dose of tinidazole (2g), Lactobacillus rhamnosus GR-1, and Lactobacillus reuteri RC-14
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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Tinidazole
Tinidazole
Tinidazole is a nitroimidazole antimicrobial that selectively targets anaerobic bacteria and protozoa, reshaping the gut ecosystem by depleting pathogenic anaerobes while preserving commensals. Clinically validated for giardiasis, bacterial vaginosis, and colorectal surgery prophylaxis. Its DNA-disrupting and biofilm-penetrating actions reduce inflammatory triggers and create niches for healthy microbiota to rebound.
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This study shows that oral probiotics significantly boost cure rates of bacterial vaginosis when used with tinidazole, restoring a healthy vaginal microbiome.
What Was Studied?
This randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial investigated whether the combination of a single 2g dose of tinidazole and daily oral probiotics (Lactobacillus rhamnosus GR-1 and Lactobacillus reuteri RC-14) improved bacterial vaginosis (BV) cure rates in women, compared to tinidazole alone. BV, a condition characterized by dysbiosis in the vaginal microbiome and reduction of protective Lactobacillus species, has shown poor long-term response to antibiotic treatment alone. The study aimed to determine if probiotic supplementation could enhance the therapeutic efficacy of tinidazole by restoring a more favorable microbial balance.
Who Was Studied?
Sixty-four Brazilian women diagnosed with BV based on Amsel’s criteria and Nugent scoring participated in the study. The participants were randomly assigned to either a placebo group or a probiotic group, both of which received the same tinidazole dose. The probiotic group also received daily capsules containing L. rhamnosus GR-1 and L. reuteri RC-14 for four weeks. Women with other vaginal infections, recent antibiotic use, or immunosuppression were excluded. The trial assessed both subjective symptoms and microbiological cure at the end of the treatment period.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
At the end of the four-week treatment, the probiotic group exhibited a significantly higher cure rate compared to the placebo group as measured by Amsel’s criteria and Nugent score. Women in the probiotic group were assessed with “normal” vaginal microbiota based on Gram stain, compared to the placebo group. Importantly, the study also noted reduced BV-associated microbial morphotypes (Gram-variable rods, curved anaerobes) and a statistically significant improvement in key clinical indicators, including pH, discharge, and odor in the probiotic group. While both groups used tinidazole, the probiotics played a key role in enhancing microbiota restoration. Notably, the probiotic strains used in the study are known for producing biosurfactants, bacteriocins, and signaling molecules that can disrupt pathogenic biofilms, particularly those formed by Gardnerella vaginalis. This mechanism may explain their strong microbiome-modulating effect.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
This study provides robust clinical evidence supporting the adjunctive use of probiotics with antibiotics to treat BV and improve microbiota restoration. By demonstrating that oral administration of specific Lactobacillus strains significantly improves cure rates and promotes a return to healthy vaginal flora, the study bridges microbiome science with practical gynecological care. Clinicians managing recurrent or treatment-resistant BV can consider integrating targeted probiotic strains to reduce recurrence and enhance long-term remission. Additionally, the study underscores the need for strain-specific probiotic selection, given the inconsistent outcomes with nonspecific lactobacilli. The use of probiotics also holds promise in preserving drug efficacy and reducing the need for prolonged antibiotic exposure, which aligns with antimicrobial stewardship principles and microbiome health preservation.
Tinidazole in Anaerobic Infections
February 12, 2026
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Tinidazole
Tinidazole
Tinidazole is a nitroimidazole antimicrobial that selectively targets anaerobic bacteria and protozoa, reshaping the gut ecosystem by depleting pathogenic anaerobes while preserving commensals. Clinically validated for giardiasis, bacterial vaginosis, and colorectal surgery prophylaxis. Its DNA-disrupting and biofilm-penetrating actions reduce inflammatory triggers and create niches for healthy microbiota to rebound.
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This review evaluates tinidazole's antibacterial efficacy, pharmacokinetics, and clinical utility in anaerobic infections, highlighting its broad-spectrum activity and potential microbiome implications.
What Was Reviewed?
The article offers a comprehensive evaluation of tinidazole, a nitroimidazole antimicrobial agent. The review delves into its antibacterial spectrum, pharmacokinetics, clinical efficacy, and tolerability, particularly emphasizing its role in managing anaerobic infections. The authors systematically assess tinidazole's in vitro activity against obligate anaerobes, its pharmacological behavior in humans, and its therapeutic outcomes in both prophylactic and treatment settings.
Who Was Reviewed?
This review synthesizes data from various clinical studies and trials involving diverse patient populations subjected to tinidazole treatment. The populations include individuals undergoing elective colorectal and gynecological surgeries, patients with established anaerobic infections, and those receiving tinidazole for prophylactic purposes. The review encompasses findings from both controlled and observational studies, providing a broad perspective on tinidazole's clinical applications across different demographics and clinical scenarios.
What were the most important findings?
Tinidazole exhibits potent in vitro activity against a broad range of obligate anaerobic bacteria, including Bacteroides fragilis, Fusobacterium species, and Clostridium species, with minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs) typically around 1 µg/ml. The drug demonstrates bactericidal properties, with its efficacy being consistent across various culture media and relatively unaffected by inoculum size, although some variability exists with certain strains like Bacteroides melaninogenicus.
Pharmacokinetically, tinidazole is well-absorbed orally, achieving peak plasma concentrations within 0.5 to 2 hours post-administration and maintaining therapeutic levels for extended periods, which supports its suitability for both single-dose prophylaxis and sustained treatment regimens. Clinically, tinidazole has shown effectiveness in reducing postoperative anaerobic infections when administered prophylactically before surgeries, such as colorectal and gynecological procedures. However, the evidence from double-blind, placebo-controlled studies, particularly in gynecological surgery, remains equivocal, indicating a need for further research to establish definitive conclusions.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The review underscores tinidazole's efficacy as a therapeutic agent against anaerobic infections, highlighting its favorable pharmacokinetic profile and broad-spectrum activity. For clinicians, tinidazole presents as a viable option for both prophylactic and therapeutic interventions in anaerobic infections. However, the variability in clinical trial outcomes, especially concerning prophylactic use in gynecological surgeries, calls for cautious application and further investigation. Additionally, the potential implications on the microbiome warrant consideration, advocating for strategies that mitigate dysbiosis, such as adjunctive probiotic therapy or targeted antimicrobial stewardship, to preserve microbial homeostasis during treatment.
Nickel chelators and urease inhibition in Klebsiella pneumoniae and bacterial nickel transport
February 12, 2026
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Urease
Urease
Urease is a nickel-dependent microbial enzyme that breaks down urea into ammonia, altering local pH and nitrogen availability. While essential for microbial survival in acidic niches and nutrient-limited environments, urease activity also contributes to conditions like ulcers, urinary stones, colitis, and hepatic encephalopathy.
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What was studied?
This study investigated nickel chelators and urease inhibition to dissect how different classes of small molecules modulate urease activity and nickel uptake in ureolytic bacteria. Using a standardized high-throughput pH indicator assay, the authors screened 71 commercially available compounds for their capacity to inhibit urease-mediated hydrolysis of urea in Klebsiella pneumoniae and purified jack bean urease, then examined how selected metal chelators alter nickel import through canonical bacterial nickel transporters. By integrating urease activity assays with radiolabeled nickel uptake measurements in recombinant Escherichia coli expressing the NiCoT and Nik(MN)QO transporters, the work links extracellular chelation, transporter-specific nickel flux, and intracellular urease activation as a unified nickel-dependent virulence axis in ureolytic pathobionts.
Who was studied?
The primary microbiological model for ureolytic activity was Klebsiella pneumoniae subsp. pneumoniae, a clinically important, urease positive pathobiont implicated in pneumonia, urinary tract infection, and kidney stone formation. Purified jack bean urease served as a cell-free reference enzyme to separate direct catalytic inhibition from cell-level effects such as membrane permeability, metal competition, or global toxicity. For nickel transport experiments, the authors used E. coli XL1 Blue transformed with plasmids encoding either the NiCoT nickel permease from K. pneumoniae or the ATP-dependent energy coupling factor transporter Nik(MN)QO from Rhodobacter capsulatus, together with a Klebsiella aerogenes urease operon. This composite system allowed precise quantification of radiolabeled nickel uptake and urease activity as a function of individual chelators, thereby modelling how structurally distinct ligands may differentially affect nickel acquisition and urease maturation in gram-negative pathobionts that contribute to dysbiosis, uremic toxin generation, and pH-driven barrier injury in the human microbiome.
Most important findings
The screen identified 30 of 71 compounds that reduced the rate and or final extent of urease-driven pH rise by more than 25 percent in either K. pneumoniae or jack bean urease. Substrate analogues such as acetohydroxamic acid and hydroxyurea were highly effective against purified urease but much less active in whole cells, highlighting the barrier imposed by bacterial membranes and the influence of high ambient urea on competitive inhibitors. Transition state analogues phenyl phosphorodiamidate and N (n butyl)thiophosphoric triamide almost completely blocked ureolysis in K. pneumoniae, yet only phenyl phosphorodiamidate fully inhibited jack bean urease, consistent with the requirement for oxidative conversion of NBTPT to its more potent oxon form in order to achieve full catalytic blockade.
Nickel-targeted mechanisms yielded a much more nuanced picture. EDTA and diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid eliminated urease activity in K. pneumoniae but paradoxically increased activity of purified urease, likely by stripping inhibitory divalent cations such as zinc while lowering effective nickel availability in vivo. Dimethylglyoxime (DMG), nitrilotriacetic acid, and EDTA significantly decreased radiolabeled nickel uptake through both NiCoT and Nik(MN)QO, whereas oxalic acid and 1,2,4 butanetricarboxylic acid actually increased nickel import, especially via NiCoT. In the recombinant E. coli urease system, EDTA exerted the strongest reduction in urease activity, DMG and NTA showed intermediate effects, and oxalic acid together with 1,2,4 butanetricarboxylic acid enhanced urease activity in NiCoT expressing cells despite their chelating potential.
L cysteine and its ester derivatives emerged as particularly interesting from a microbiome perspective. At 1 mM, they completely abolished urease activity in K. pneumoniae, yet did not reduce nickel uptake through either transporter and instead increased jack bean urease activity. Combined with prior work in Streptococcus salivarius, these data support a regulatory mechanism in which cysteine acts as a signal that suppresses urease expression rather than a classical nickel chelator, implying that sulfur-containing metabolites in the gut or oral environment may downregulate urease-dependent ammonia generation without needing to overcome high metal loads. The study also identified previously unreported anti-ureolytic agents including carbon disulfide, N phenylmaleimide, tannic acid, gallic acid, 1,2,4 butanetricarboxylic acid, sodium pyrrolidinedithiocarbamate, and DTPA, with several compounds preferentially targeting cell free urease, others acting only in bacteria, and some displaying strong antibacterial as well as anti-ureolytic activity.
Key implications
For clinicians interested in microbiome modulation and metallomic targeting of ureolytic pathobionts, this work underscores that not all nickel chelators are functionally equivalent and that nickel chelators and urease inhibition must be evaluated in the context of transporter-specific nickel uptake, competing metal ions, and regulatory effects on urease expression. EDTA-like broad chelators can effectively suppress urease in low-nickel environments, yet may fail where total metal concentrations are high, as in livestock manure or potentially in metal-enriched human gut niches. Oxalic acid and 1,2,4 butanetricarboxylic acid show that some ligands can paradoxically enhance nickel import and urease activation, which is a caution for empiric use of organic acids in patients with urease-mediated disease, such as struvite stone formation, hyperammonemic encephalopathy, or severe dysbiosis in chronic kidney disease. L-cysteine demonstrates that regulatory down-modulation of urease can be decoupled from nickel chelation and may represent a distinct therapeutic strategy for lowering ammonia and pH drift in oral, gastric, and intestinal biofilms without provoking strong selective pressure on metal homeostasis. Conversely, agents such as 1,2,4-butanetricarboxylic acid can act as metallophores that increase nickel uptake and, in some transporter contexts, enhance urease activity, which is a critical consideration when designing microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs). This paper provides a mechanistic framework for selecting or avoiding specific chelators and phenolic compounds when designing microbiome-targeted interventions that seek to remodel nickel-dependent urease activity rather than simply killing bacteria.
Ureases: Historical aspects, catalytic, and non-catalytic properties – A review
February 12, 2026
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Urease
Urease
Urease is a nickel-dependent microbial enzyme that breaks down urea into ammonia, altering local pH and nitrogen availability. While essential for microbial survival in acidic niches and nutrient-limited environments, urease activity also contributes to conditions like ulcers, urinary stones, colitis, and hepatic encephalopathy.
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This review uncovers the dual role of urease as both a catalytic and multifunctional virulence protein with broad clinical and agricultural implications, highlighting its impact on microbiome composition, host-pathogen dynamics, and therapeutic strategy.
What was reviewed?
This review comprehensively examines the enzyme urease, focusing on both its classical catalytic activity—urea hydrolysis into ammonia and carbamate—and its lesser-known non-enzymatic biological roles. Historically significant as the first enzyme ever crystallized and the first protein shown to require nickel as a cofactor, urease has since been implicated in a wide range of biological processes, spanning nitrogen metabolism, virulence in microbial pathogenesis, plant defense, neurotoxicity, and bioinsecticidal activity. The paper delves into the structural, kinetic, and molecular properties of ureases, including their activation mechanisms involving nickel insertion, their evolutionary divergence among taxa, and the role of accessory proteins (e.g., UreD, UreF, UreG, UreE) in catalytic site maturation. Importantly, the review explores biological functions of ureases unrelated to ureolytic activity, such as immunomodulation, platelet aggregation, neurotoxicity, and membrane-disruptive activities, often mediated by urease-derived peptides like jaburetox.
In addition, the review provides a detailed classification and discussion of urease inhibitors, such as hydroxamic acids, polyphenols, quinones, and heavy metals, many of which act through nickel chelation or active site disruption.
Class of Inhibitor
Mechanism of Action
Hydroxamic Acids
Slow-binding inhibitor; interacts with Ni ions in active site;(e.g., Acetohydroxamic Acid)
Phosphorus Compounds
Binds to Ni ions; generates diamidophosphate post-hydrolysis; (e.g., Phosphoramidates)
Polyphenols
Forms metal complexes or oxidized quinones modify thiols;(e.g., Catechol)
Heavy Metals
Inactivates urease by binding to cysteine residues in mobile flap; (e.g., Bi3+, Cu2+)
Quinones
Covalent modification of cysteine in mobile flap; thiol oxidation; (e.g., Benzoquinone)
Who was reviewed?
This review encompasses a broad range of urease-producing organisms, including bacteria (e.g., Helicobacter pylori, Proteus mirabilis, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Cryptococcus neoformans), fungi, and plants (e.g., Canavalia ensiformis, Glycine max), with structural and functional insights derived from both natural and recombinant sources. The microbial taxa included are of special clinical interest due to their virulence mechanisms tied to urease activity or urease-derived functions. Data from both in vivo and in vitro experimental systems are integrated.
Most Important Findings
The review reveals that urease functions extend far beyond ammonia production via urea hydrolysis. Ureases are nickel-dependent metalloenzymes whose virulence-related capabilities involve both their enzymatic activity and structurally embedded, ureolysis-independent functions. These include pro-inflammatory signaling, platelet activation, immunomodulation, and neurotoxicity. Particularly in H. pylori, urease subunits (e.g., UreA and UreB) interact with host receptors such as CD74 to induce cytokine production (e.g., IL-8) and modulate immune responses. Insects and fungi are also affected by urease toxicity via peptides like jaburetox and soyuretox, which exhibit ion channel activity, membrane perturbation, and intracellular signaling effects. These activities are critical for the entomotoxic and antifungal properties observed in plant defense mechanisms.
From a microbiome standpoint, urease-positive pathogens are commonly enriched in dysbiotic states. Major pathogens with urease activity include H. pylori,P. mirabilis, K. pneumoniae, and C. neoformans, among others. Urease contributes to microbial survival in hostile pH environments, formation of urinary and gastric calculi, and systemic hyperammonemia, thereby modulating host-microbiota interactions in both the gut and urogenital tract. Notably, the review underscores the therapeutic potential of targeting urease pathways—including both enzymatic and structural features—for conditions such as hepatic encephalopathy, urinary tract infections, and H. pylori-associated diseases.
Greatest Implications
This review reframes urease as a multifunctional protein, positioning it as both a microbial virulence determinant and a target for pharmacological and agricultural interventions. Clinically, its role in pathogenesis via ammonia production and non-catalytic interactions implicates it in systemic diseases far beyond local infections, including cardiovascular and neurological disorders. For microbiome-targeted medicine, understanding urease as a functional trait rather than a taxonomic marker offers a mechanistic basis for identifying Major Microbial Associations (MMAs) and designing microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs), such as nickel chelators (lactoferrin, dimethylglyoxime (DMG), or a Low-Nickel Diet (LNiD). The dual catalytic and non-catalytic activities of urease also suggest the need for multi-modal inhibition strategies. In agriculture, urease-derived peptides could support biocontrol applications, while urease overexpression or peptide transgenesis could bolster crop resistance to pests and fungal pathogens.
Mycobiome Study Reveals Different Pathogens of Vulvovaginal Candidiasis Shape Characteristic Vaginal Bacteriome
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Vulvovaginal Candidiasis (VVC)
Vulvovaginal Candidiasis (VVC)
Vulvovaginal candidiasis (VVC) is a common fungal infection caused by Candida albicans. Disruptions in the vaginal microbiome and immune responses contribute to its development. Effective treatment involves both antifungal therapy and strategies to restore microbiome balance, preventing recurrent infections and addressing emerging antifungal resistance.
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This study investigated how vaginal mycobiome and bacteriome interact in VVC patients. It identified two community state types driven by Candida glabrata and Candida albicans, revealing bacterial and fungal interactions critical to VVC pathogenesis and treatment outcomes.
What was studied?
This study examined the interaction between the vaginal microbiota and mycobiota in patients with vulvovaginal candidiasis (VVC). The research focused on understanding the role of different Candida species, specifically Candida albicans and Candida glabrata, in the pathology of VVC, and how they influence the vaginal bacteriome. The study aimed to identify the microbial signatures associated with different VVC subtypes and how these signatures may influence disease outcomes and treatment effectiveness.
Who was studied?
The study involved 114 participants, including 44 women with VVC, 37 with bacterial vaginosis (BV), 33 with Ureaplasma urealyticum (UU) infection, and 47 healthy controls. These participants were recruited from Dezhou People's Hospital, Shandong, China. The study included both clinical and molecular assessments of the vaginal microbiome through 16S rRNA gene sequencing (for bacteria) and internal transcribed spacer (ITS) gene sequencing (for fungi). The research aimed to explore microbial shifts across different reproductive tract infections (RTIs) and how these shifts could potentially affect disease progression and treatment outcomes.
Most important findings
The study identified two community state types (CSTs) in VVC, based on the dominance of Candida species—C. glabrata (CST I) and C. albicans (CST II). The bacterial composition of the vaginal microbiome in VVC patients differed from that in healthy controls, with CST I being characterized by the presence of Prevotella (common in BV), and CST II by the presence of Ureaplasma (found in UU infections). The study also highlighted that while Lactobacillus predominated in healthy controls, its relative abundance was lower in VVC patients, with significant differences observed between the CSTs. Furthermore, CST II showed similarities to healthy controls in terms of the bacterial community, whereas CST I had a more disrupted microbiome, resembling that seen in BV. The researchers also found that fungal infections like C. albicans and C. glabrata could alter the vaginal environment, making it conducive for bacterial infections.
Key implications
This study underscores the importance of considering both the mycobiome and bacteriome in the diagnosis and treatment of VVC. The findings suggest that different types of Candida infections lead to distinct vaginal microbiota profiles, which could explain the variable treatment outcomes and recurrence rates in VVC patients. Understanding these microbial interactions can guide more effective, personalized treatment strategies, and may help address common clinical challenges like unsatisfactory cure rates and the high recurrence of VVC. The research also provides evidence for the co-occurrence of fungal and bacterial infections in VVC and highlights the need for a more integrated approach to microbiome analysis in future clinical settings.
Biosorption of Heavy Metals by Candida albicans
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Vulvovaginal Candidiasis (VVC)
Vulvovaginal Candidiasis (VVC)
Vulvovaginal candidiasis (VVC) is a common fungal infection caused by Candida albicans. Disruptions in the vaginal microbiome and immune responses contribute to its development. Effective treatment involves both antifungal therapy and strategies to restore microbiome balance, preventing recurrent infections and addressing emerging antifungal resistance.
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The study showed Candida albicans can resist and efficiently biosorb heavy metals, especially chromium, from contaminated water and soil. Optimal removal depends on pH, temperature, biomass state, and carbon source, highlighting C. albicans as a promising bioremediation agent for heavy metal pollution.
What was studied?
This research study investigated the resistance and biosorption capacity of the yeast Candida albicans against various heavy metals, particularly focusing on chromium (Cr(VI)) removal from aqueous solutions. The study examined how C. albicans grown in different conditions can tolerate high concentrations of heavy metals and efficiently remove them through biosorption mechanisms. It explored the effects of parameters such as pH, temperature, biomass concentration, and carbon sources on chromium removal, comparing living and dead biomass efficiency. The study also assessed the yeast’s capacity to remove heavy metals from contaminated soil and water samples, mimicking real environmental conditions.
Who was studied?
The study focused on a strain of Candida albicans isolated from the Bancote River in Mexico. Clinicians tested this strain for growth tolerance against multiple heavy metals, including chromium, lead, silver, zinc, cobalt, mercury, cadmium, arsenic, copper, and fluoride. They evaluated the yeast's biosorption capacity using both live and dried biomass under laboratory-controlled conditions and applied it to contaminated industrial samples. They confirmed the strain's morphology and identification using microscopic techniques, including germ tube and chlamydospore formation tests.
Most important findings
The Candida albicans strain demonstrated remarkable resistance to heavy metals, growing in concentrations up to 2000 ppm for chromium, zinc, lead, and copper; 1500 ppm for arsenic; 500 ppm for silver; and lower concentrations for cobalt, mercury, and cadmium. Biosorption efficiency varied across metals, with the highest removal rates for chromium, lead, silver, and cadmium. The study revealed that biosorption and reduction of Cr(VI) involve complex interactions influenced by pH and temperature, with acidic conditions favoring Cr(VI) protonation and enhanced attraction to yeast cell surfaces, and elevated temperatures accelerating redox reactions. Carbon source also impacted removal efficiency; fermentable sugars like sucrose and glucose enhanced chromium reduction more than non-fermentable sources. Importantly, C. albicans biomass was capable of removing chromium and other heavy metals from real industrial waste soil and water samples with removal rates exceeding 60%, highlighting its practical bioremediation potential.
Greatest implications of this study
This study demonstrates that Candida albicans possesses strong potential as a bioremediation agent for heavy metal-contaminated environments, particularly chromium-polluted water and soils. The yeast's ability to tolerate and efficiently biosorb multiple heavy metals under varying environmental conditions supports its application in eco-friendly and cost-effective remediation technologies. Understanding the optimal conditions for biosorption and the role of biomass state (live vs. dead) provides practical insights for designing bioreactors or treatment systems. The study also emphasizes the importance of carbon sources in enhancing biosorption efficiency, suggesting potential for tailoring growth media to maximize remediation outcomes. Clinically and environmentally, harnessing C. albicans for heavy metal removal offers a sustainable approach to mitigate the health risks associated with heavy metal pollution, which can cause severe toxicity and bioaccumulation through food chains.
Current patient perspectives of vulvovaginal candidiasis: incidence, symptoms, management and post-treatment outcomes
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Vulvovaginal Candidiasis (VVC)
Vulvovaginal Candidiasis (VVC)
Vulvovaginal candidiasis (VVC) is a common fungal infection caused by Candida albicans. Disruptions in the vaginal microbiome and immune responses contribute to its development. Effective treatment involves both antifungal therapy and strategies to restore microbiome balance, preventing recurrent infections and addressing emerging antifungal resistance.
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This contemporary survey validates historical data on VVC/RVVC prevalence, identifying common symptoms, risk factors, and treatment outcomes. It highlights antibiotics as a major risk factor and emphasizes the superior efficacy of physician-managed care compared to self-treatment, reinforcing the need for ongoing improvements in management strategies.
What was studied?
This study explored contemporary patient perspectives regarding vulvovaginal candidiasis (VVC) and recurrent vulvovaginal candidiasis (RVVC), focusing on incidence, clinical symptoms, diagnosis methods, management strategies, and post-treatment outcomes.
Who was studied?
The research involved 284 non-pregnant women recruited from university-affiliated Obstetrics and Gynecology clinics, as well as general community settings. The participants included predominantly Caucasian women (78%), along with African American (14%) and Asian women (8%), covering reproductive, perimenopausal, and postmenopausal age ranges.
What were the most important findings?
The study reaffirmed historical prevalence rates, with 78% of women experiencing at least one episode of VVC, and 34% having RVVC (defined as ≥4 episodes annually). Major clinical symptoms consistently reported were itching (91%), burning (68%), redness (58%), and cottage cheese-like discharge (56%). Antibiotic usage emerged as the leading identifiable risk factor (38%), followed by sexual intercourse (22%) and humid weather (11%). However, 55% reported episodes as idiopathic, with no identifiable trigger. Physicians diagnosed most cases (73%) using pelvic examinations and lab tests, prescribed antifungal treatments, and achieved an 84% symptom relief rate. In contrast, self-diagnosed/self-treated cases reported significantly lower relief rates (57%). Within RVVC patients, 71% relied on continual or intermittent antifungal therapy to control symptoms effectively, whereas nearly 20% failed to obtain adequate relief despite ongoing treatment.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study highlights the enduring high prevalence of VVC/RVVC despite advancements in diagnostic and therapeutic methods. It emphasizes the need for continued research into more effective, targeted treatments and indicates the importance of accurate clinical diagnosis over self-management. Furthermore, the similarity in symptom profiles between episodic VVC and RVVC suggests that future innovations in diagnostic and treatment strategies could benefit all affected populations. Clinicians should particularly note the high percentage of idiopathic cases, indicating the complexity of prevention and treatment approaches.
Dual Mechanisms of Action: Anti-Candida and Anti-Inflammatory Potential of Lactobacillus Fermentation Broth in Treating Vulvovaginal Candidiasis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Vulvovaginal Candidiasis (VVC)
Vulvovaginal Candidiasis (VVC)
Vulvovaginal candidiasis (VVC) is a common fungal infection caused by Candida albicans. Disruptions in the vaginal microbiome and immune responses contribute to its development. Effective treatment involves both antifungal therapy and strategies to restore microbiome balance, preventing recurrent infections and addressing emerging antifungal resistance.
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This study explored VAGINNE®, a Lactobacillus fermentation broth, showing strong anti-Candida and anti-inflammatory effects in mice with VVC. It enhanced microbiome health and reduced proinflammatory cytokines, highlighting a promising probiotic alternative to antifungal drugs.
What was studied?
This study investigated the dual anti-Candida and anti-inflammatory effects of VAGINNE®, a fermentation broth derived from Lactobacillus crispatus, Lactobacillus gasseri, and Lactobacillus jensenii, in treating vulvovaginal candidiasis (VVC). Using a controlled mouse model of Candida albicans-induced vaginal infection, the researchers examined the microbiome composition, cytokine levels, and tissue integrity following treatment with VAGINNE® compared to a standard antifungal agent (nystatin) and untreated controls.
Who was studied?
The experimental subjects were female BALB/c mice, aged seven weeks. The researchers inoculated the mice with Candida albicans to mimic human VVC and then divided them into four groups: a healthy control group, an infected group, a nystatin-treated group, and a group treated with VAGINNE®. They conducted microbiological, immunological, and histological analyses on vaginal lavage samples, plasma, and vaginal tissues.
Most Important Findings
VAGINNE® demonstrated a dual mechanism of action in combating Candida albicans. It significantly reduced the fungal burden in the vagina (from 1.67 × 10⁷ CFU/mL in infected controls to 6.15 × 10⁶ CFU/mL) and simultaneously restored beneficial Lactobacillus populations, reaching 1.19 × 10⁸ CFU/mL compared to just 1.20 × 10⁷ CFU/mL in infected animals. Histologically, mice treated with VAGINNE® exhibited preserved vaginal epithelial structure and reduced tissue invasion by fungal hyphae. Immunologically, VAGINNE® decreased levels of key proinflammatory cytokines associated with Th17-mediated immunity. Specifically, IL-17A, IL-22, and IL-23 were significantly reduced in vaginal tissues, while systemic inflammation markers IL-6 and IL-1β were also suppressed in plasma. These cytokines are crucial in fungal immunity but also contribute to excessive inflammation and tissue damage in VVC.
Thus, VAGINNE® not only restored microbiome balance and modulated the immune response, reducing local and systemic inflammation. This combination of microbial suppression and immune regulation reflects a targeted and multifaceted therapeutic strategy, contrasting the fungistatic nature of conventional azoles, which often leads to recurrence and resistance.
Greatest Implications of the Study
This study offers compelling evidence that microbiome-modulating therapies, particularly those using Lactobacillus-derived products, can effectively treat vulvovaginal candidiasis through both antifungal and anti-inflammatory mechanisms. VAGINNE® holds promise as a probiotic-based alternative to azole antifungals, especially in light of increasing drug resistance and recurrence rates in VVC. By promoting Lactobacillus regrowth, reducing fungal load, and downregulating cytokine-driven inflammation, VAGINNE® could support a paradigm shift in VVC management toward microbiome-friendly interventions. However, further clinical trials in human populations are necessary to confirm its safety and efficacy before widespread application.
Management of recurrent vulvovaginal candidosis: Narrative review of the literature and European expert panel opinion
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Vulvovaginal Candidiasis (VVC)
Vulvovaginal Candidiasis (VVC)
Vulvovaginal candidiasis (VVC) is a common fungal infection caused by Candida albicans. Disruptions in the vaginal microbiome and immune responses contribute to its development. Effective treatment involves both antifungal therapy and strategies to restore microbiome balance, preventing recurrent infections and addressing emerging antifungal resistance.
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This review assesses management strategies for recurrent vulvovaginal candidiasis, highlighting the limitations of current antifungal treatments, rising resistance concerns, and potential novel therapies. Emphasis is placed on accurate diagnostics, microbiome considerations, and individualized treatment approaches to improve patient outcomes.
What was reviewed?
This review evaluated the current management strategies for recurrent vulvovaginal candidiasis (RVVC), summarizing clinical guidelines, real-world clinical practices, therapeutic challenges, and expert opinions from a panel of European specialists. It specifically reviewed the effectiveness and limitations of existing antifungal therapies, diagnostic approaches, pathogen characteristics, and future therapeutic options.
Who was reviewed?
The review analyzed the collective expertise of a panel of 10 European gynecology specialists from countries including Belgium, Finland, France, Germany, Hungary, Italy, Poland, Romania, Spain, and the UK. These experts discussed RVVC management through structured online sessions, covering diagnosis, treatment regimens, patient experiences, and novel therapies. Their insights were compared against published scientific evidence and current clinical guidelines.
What were the most important findings?
The review identifies recurrent vulvovaginal candidiasis (RVVC) as primarily caused by Candida albicans, although infections by non-albicans species, particularly Candida glabrata, are increasingly common. Resistance to standard antifungal treatments like fluconazole, though still uncommon, is gradually rising due to repeated and prolonged exposure to antifungal medications. Fluconazole remains the recommended first-line treatment for acute episodes and maintenance therapy, yet a significant proportion of women experience recurrence after discontinuing maintenance treatment, highlighting the necessity for improved long-term therapeutic options.
The complexity of RVVC is underscored by its intricate microbiological environment, where interactions between Candida species, the host immune system, and vaginal microbiota play critical roles. Neutrophil dysfunction, genetic susceptibility, and diminished populations of protective Lactobacillus species in the vaginal microbiome significantly contribute to disease recurrence and severity. Diagnostic approaches relying on microscopy and culture are crucial but inconsistently implemented, often compromised by prior patient self-treatment. The review emphasizes promising future therapies, such as the selective antifungal oteseconazole and the novel glucan synthase inhibitor ibrexafungerp, alongside emerging immunotherapeutic vaccines targeting critical fungal proteins, which offer significant potential to improve patient outcomes.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The review underscores the urgent need for optimized diagnostic and treatment strategies for RVVC. It suggests that clinicians should carefully consider personalized regimens due to the significant recurrence rates and variability in patient response. New therapeutic agents, especially those targeting resistant strains and immune pathways, hold significant promise and should be a focus of future research. Moreover, enhancing clinician and patient awareness about RVVC's substantial impact on quality of life is vital for better patient care and adherence.
Metal Nanoparticles to Combat Candida albicans Infections: An Update
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Vulvovaginal Candidiasis (VVC)
Vulvovaginal Candidiasis (VVC)
Vulvovaginal candidiasis (VVC) is a common fungal infection caused by Candida albicans. Disruptions in the vaginal microbiome and immune responses contribute to its development. Effective treatment involves both antifungal therapy and strategies to restore microbiome balance, preventing recurrent infections and addressing emerging antifungal resistance.
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This review examines metal nanoparticles as innovative antifungal agents against Candida albicans. It highlights their multi-target actions, synergistic potential with antifungal drugs, and drug delivery benefits while emphasizing the need for further safety studies and clinical validation to combat resistance and biofilm-related infections.
What was reviewed?
This article is a comprehensive review focusing on the use of metal nanoparticles as novel antifungal agents against Candida albicans infections. It specifically examines the antifungal activity, mechanisms of action, synthesis methods, cytotoxicity concerns, and drug delivery potential of silver, gold, iron, and other metal nanoparticles. The review also discusses the challenges posed by traditional antifungal therapies and the promise of nanoparticle-based strategies to overcome drug resistance and biofilm-related treatment failures.
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesizes findings from multiple in vitro and in vivo studies involving Candida albicans cells in planktonic and biofilm states, experimental animal models of candidiasis, and mammalian cell lines used to evaluate nanoparticle cytotoxicity. It integrates results from research using a variety of metal nanoparticles, primarily silver (AgNPs), gold (AuNPs), and iron oxide nanoparticles (IONPs), and their functionalized or bimetallic forms. The studies encompass fungal strains that are susceptible and resistant to conventional antifungal drugs, as well as biofilms formed on mucosal surfaces and medical devices.
Most important findings
The review highlights that metal nanoparticles exhibit potent antifungal activity against Candida albicans through multi-target mechanisms, including metal ion release, induction of oxidative and nitrosative stress, disruption of the fungal cell wall and membrane, inhibition of enzymatic activities, interference with gene expression related to virulence and resistance, and mitochondrial and DNA damage. Silver nanoparticles, particularly when combined with fluconazole, demonstrated synergistic antifungal effects by reducing biofilm formation, decreasing ergosterol levels, and downregulating efflux pump proteins responsible for drug resistance. Gold nanoparticles, especially those functionalized with polymers like chitosan or polyethylene glycol, showed enhanced drug delivery capabilities with lower toxicity and effective inhibition of fungal growth and biofilm formation. Iron oxide nanoparticles proved effective as drug carriers, improving the potency of drugs like amphotericin B and miconazole, and inducing fungal cell damage through ROS generation.
Beyond these, other metal nanoparticles such as zinc oxide, titanium dioxide, copper oxides, and zirconium dioxide also showed antifungal and antibiofilm properties. Bimetallic nanoparticles, combining metals like silver and iron or silver and nickel, provided synergistic antifungal effects, reduced fungal virulence factors, and overcame drug resistance. Importantly, the synthesis methods, especially green synthesis using natural extracts, contributed to enhanced biocompatibility and reduced cytotoxicity. However, cytotoxicity to mammalian cells remains a significant consideration, with ongoing efforts to optimize nanoparticle properties for safety. The review also calls for further exploration of nanoparticle effects on polymicrobial biofilms involving C. albicans and bacterial species, and the role of fungal siderophore transporters in nanoparticle uptake.
Greatest implications of this review
This review underscores the potential of metal nanoparticles as a promising alternative or adjunct to conventional antifungal therapies, particularly for drug-resistant Candida albicans infections and biofilm-related candidiasis. The multi-target antifungal mechanisms of metal nanoparticles may minimize the emergence of resistance, a critical challenge in current treatment paradigms. Their ability to act as drug delivery vehicles could reduce effective drug doses and associated toxicity. The integration of green synthesis methods enhances their environmental and biological safety profiles, making clinical translation more feasible. Nevertheless, the review highlights the urgent need for further in vivo studies, clinical trials, and regulatory guidance to assess long-term safety, biodistribution, and potential adverse effects. Understanding nanoparticle interactions in polymicrobial biofilms and their uptake pathways can refine future antifungal strategies. Overall, metal nanoparticles represent a cutting-edge approach that could revolutionize antifungal therapeutics and improve outcomes for patients suffering from C. albicans infections.
Microbiota in vaginal health and pathogenesis of recurrent vulvovaginal infections: a critical review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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Vulvovaginal Candidiasis (VVC)
Vulvovaginal Candidiasis (VVC)
Vulvovaginal candidiasis (VVC) is a common fungal infection caused by Candida albicans. Disruptions in the vaginal microbiome and immune responses contribute to its development. Effective treatment involves both antifungal therapy and strategies to restore microbiome balance, preventing recurrent infections and addressing emerging antifungal resistance.
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This review clarifies the role of vaginal microbiota in health and recurrent infections, highlighting Lactobacillus complexity, pathogen interactions, and the need for personalized diagnostic and treatment approaches. It calls for deeper exploration into fungal and parasitic vaginal microbiome components to enhance understanding and clinical care of recurrent vulvovaginal infections.
What was reviewed?
This review analyzed existing knowledge of vaginal microbiota (VMB) in relation to vaginal health and recurrent vulvovaginal infections (RVVI), focusing specifically on bacterial vaginosis (BV), vulvovaginal candidiasis (VVC), and trichomoniasis (TV). The authors critically assessed current insights derived from advanced molecular techniques, highlighting how both bacterial and fungal communities influence vaginal health, and discussed the interactions among these communities and their role in the pathogenesis of recurrent infections.
Who was reviewed?
This critical review evaluated literature from diverse sources, including peer-reviewed studies identified through databases such as PubMed and Google Scholar. Included were studies employing both culture-dependent and culture-independent methods to characterize vaginal microbial communities in healthy women and those suffering from recurrent vaginal infections, including bacterial vaginosis, vulvovaginal candidiasis, and trichomoniasis.
What were the most important findings?
The review highlights the complexity and variability of vaginal microbiota, challenging the traditional view that Lactobacillus dominance universally signifies vaginal health. While Lactobacilli typically protect vaginal health by producing lactic acid, maintaining acidic conditions that prevent infections, certain species such as L. iners can instead contribute to instability and disease susceptibility. In bacterial vaginosis, reduced Lactobacilli and increased anaerobes, especially Gardnerella vaginalis, play a critical role. G. vaginalis contributes significantly to disease through biofilm formation and secretion of virulence factors, including vaginolysin and sialidases.
For vulvovaginal candidiasis and trichomoniasis, microbial interactions are key determinants of disease progression. Candida albicans, usually harmless in its yeast form, can shift to a pathogenic hyphal state under elevated pH or disrupted microbiota, highlighting crucial interactions between bacteria and fungi in maintaining health. In trichomoniasis, Trichomonas vaginalis actively damages vaginal epithelial cells and suppresses beneficial Lactobacilli through mechanisms including protease secretion and biofilm formation, exacerbated by symbiotic interactions with mycoplasmas and dsRNA viruses that further enhance virulence.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review stresses the importance of understanding individual variability and complex interactions within the vaginal microbiota when managing recurrent vulvovaginal infections. It emphasizes that traditional beliefs, such as universal Lactobacillus dominance indicating vaginal health, are oversimplifications. This knowledge demands that clinicians adopt more nuanced diagnostics and personalized approaches to treatment. Furthermore, the authors highlight critical gaps in our understanding of the fungal and parasitic components of the vaginal microbiota, suggesting a need for further research utilizing comparative genomics and longitudinal microbiome profiling to guide improved clinical management strategies for RVVI.
Vaginal microbiota: Potential targets for vulvovaginal candidiasis infection
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Vulvovaginal Candidiasis (VVC)
Vulvovaginal Candidiasis (VVC)
Vulvovaginal candidiasis (VVC) is a common fungal infection caused by Candida albicans. Disruptions in the vaginal microbiome and immune responses contribute to its development. Effective treatment involves both antifungal therapy and strategies to restore microbiome balance, preventing recurrent infections and addressing emerging antifungal resistance.
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This review discusses vaginal microbiota imbalance in vulvovaginal candidiasis and evaluates probiotics, postbiotics, synbiotics, and vaginal microbiota transplantation as novel treatments to improve outcomes and reduce antifungal resistance.
What was reviewed?
This paper reviewed the vaginal microbiota (VMB) and its relationship with vulvovaginal candidiasis (VVC), focusing on how disruptions in the vaginal microbial community contribute to the disease. It explored current antifungal treatment challenges, such as drug resistance and recurrence, and assessed emerging microbiome-based therapies including probiotics, postbiotics, synbiotics, and vaginal microbiota transplantation (VMT). The review synthesized findings from clinical trials, microbiome sequencing studies, and in vitro and animal research to evaluate how these interventions might restore vaginal microbial balance and improve VVC outcomes.
Who was reviewed?
The review drew on data from reproductive-age women, especially those affected by VVC or vaginal dysbiosis. It incorporated studies analyzing the vaginal microbial communities dominated by Lactobacillus species in healthy women versus dysbiotic communities associated with VVC. Clinical trials evaluating probiotic and postbiotic therapies and early-stage research on VMT were also included. The review highlighted key microbial signatures linked to vaginal health and infection, emphasizing the role of Candida species and the loss of protective Lactobacillus strains in disease progression.
Most important findings
The review identified that a healthy vaginal microbiota is dominated by Lactobacillus species, which produce lactic acid to maintain an acidic environment that suppresses Candida growth and modulates immune responses. Disruptions to this balance, through factors like antibiotics or hormonal changes, reduce Lactobacillus levels and raise vaginal pH, facilitating Candida overgrowth and VVC development. Conventional antifungal treatments face limitations due to resistance and recurrence. Probiotics, particularly Lactobacillus strains, demonstrated antifungal and immunomodulatory effects by competing with Candida, producing antimicrobial compounds, and supporting mucosal defenses. Postbiotics offer similar benefits without risks related to live microbes, while synbiotics enhance probiotic survival and activity. Vaginal microbiota transplantation is a promising but still experimental approach to restore microbial balance more effectively.
Greatest implications of this review
This review highlights the need to shift VVC management from solely antifungal drugs toward therapies that restore vaginal microbiota balance, aiming to reduce recurrence and drug resistance. Probiotics, postbiotics, synbiotics, and vaginal microbiota transplantation represent promising adjuncts or alternatives but require further high-quality clinical trials to confirm their safety, optimal protocols, and long-term efficacy. Integrating microbiome-focused treatments into clinical practice could improve patient outcomes by targeting the ecosystem dynamics underlying VVC rather than just the pathogen.
Vulvovaginal Candidiasis: A Current Understanding and Burning Questions.
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Vulvovaginal Candidiasis (VVC)
Vulvovaginal Candidiasis (VVC)
Vulvovaginal candidiasis (VVC) is a common fungal infection caused by Candida albicans. Disruptions in the vaginal microbiome and immune responses contribute to its development. Effective treatment involves both antifungal therapy and strategies to restore microbiome balance, preventing recurrent infections and addressing emerging antifungal resistance.
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This review clarifies mechanisms behind vulvovaginal candidiasis, emphasizing candidalysin-driven inflammation, microbiome complexity, and the potential of inflammasome-targeted therapies. It highlights Candida albicans' dominance, underscores mixed roles for Lactobacillus, and suggests personalized treatments and vaccine strategies as essential future directions in managing VVC.
What was reviewed?
This review article provided an extensive overview of vulvovaginal candidiasis (VVC), focusing on epidemiology, host immune response, fungal pathogenicity, microbiome interactions, and innovative therapeutic strategies. Specifically, it examined current knowledge surrounding Candida albicans and other Candida species as major pathogens in VVC, emphasizing the complexity of host-pathogen interactions and the multifactorial nature of this prevalent infection.
Who was reviewed?
The article synthesized information from various studies and clinical trials involving women who experience acute or recurrent VVC. It also included insights gained from animal models and cell-based studies designed to investigate underlying pathogenic mechanisms and host immune responses associated with VVC.
What were the most important findings?
The review highlighted several crucial findings regarding VVC pathogenesis. Candida albicans emerged as the primary causative agent, accounting for over 90% of cases, although non-albicans Candida (NAC) species, notably Candida glabrata, also significantly contributed to disease incidence. Key host-pathogen interactions were identified, including the yeast-to-hypha morphological transition as a critical event driving disease, accompanied by secretion of virulence factors such as candidalysin, a peptide essential for triggering inflammation. The NLRP3 inflammasome pathway was shown to be activated by candidalysin and other virulence factors, leading to neutrophil recruitment and inflammatory cytokine production, thus causing symptomatic inflammation rather than fungal clearance.
The microbiome was recognized as a potential factor influencing VVC development. Although Lactobacillus species generally maintain vaginal health through acid production, studies offered mixed findings regarding their protective role against Candida colonization. Some Lactobacillus strains provided antifungal effects, while others showed limited inhibitory activity, suggesting strain-specific differences in microbiome composition could influence susceptibility to infection.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The implications of this review are significant for clinical management and research directions. Recognizing VVC as an immunopathology rather than purely an infection emphasizes the need for treatments targeting inflammatory pathways, such as NLRP3 inflammasome inhibitors, alongside traditional antifungal therapies. The variability in microbial interactions points to personalized therapeutic approaches involving probiotics and microbiome modulation. Additionally, insights into fungal pathogenicity mechanisms, especially candidalysin's role, could guide the development of novel antifungal agents or vaccines, potentially reducing the global burden of VVC and recurrent episodes.
Vulvovaginal Candidosis: Current Concepts, Challenges and Perspectives
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Vulvovaginal Candidiasis (VVC)
Vulvovaginal Candidiasis (VVC)
Vulvovaginal candidiasis (VVC) is a common fungal infection caused by Candida albicans. Disruptions in the vaginal microbiome and immune responses contribute to its development. Effective treatment involves both antifungal therapy and strategies to restore microbiome balance, preventing recurrent infections and addressing emerging antifungal resistance.
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This review consolidates current knowledge on vulvovaginal candidosis, highlighting Candida albicans virulence factors, diagnostic challenges, and the need for precise clinical differentiation between colonization and infection. It advocates for microbiome-informed diagnostics, improved management strategies, and future research into antifungal resistance and novel therapeutic options.
What was reviewed?
This paper provides a comprehensive narrative review of vulvovaginal candidosis (VVC), focusing on the current concepts, challenges, and perspectives related to the epidemiology, pathogenesis, and diagnosis of this common fungal infection. It systematically synthesizes existing literature on the prevalence, microbial factors, host-pathogen interactions, diagnostic approaches, and virulence mechanisms of Candida species, particularly Candida albicans, the primary pathogen implicated. The review excludes treatment strategies but highlights the clinical burden and research gaps that remain in understanding VVC.
Who was reviewed?
The review draws on a broad spectrum of studies encompassing symptomatic and asymptomatic women of reproductive age worldwide. It includes epidemiological data from various countries, microbiological characterizations of Candida species isolated from vaginal samples, and immunological studies investigating host responses to Candida colonization and infection. The reviewed populations primarily consist of immunocompetent women, with an emphasis on those experiencing acute and recurrent vulvovaginal candidosis (RVVC).
What were the most important findings?
The review underscores that VVC affects approximately 70-75% of women at least once in their lifetime, with 5-8% developing recurrent episodes (RVVC). Candida albicans dominates as the causative species in 90-95% of infections, while non-albicans species, such as C. glabrata, C. tropicalis, and others, cause milder infections. The transition from Candida colonization to pathogenic infection involves complex virulence factors, including adhesins from the ALS gene family (notably ALS1-3 and ALS9), hydrolytic enzymes like secreted aspartyl proteinases (Saps), and phospholipases, which enhance fungal adherence, tissue invasion, and immune evasion. The formation of hyphae and the secretion of candidalysin toxin are crucial for tissue damage and immune activation. Host immune responses, including neutrophil recruitment and inflammasome activation, also critically shape disease outcomes.
Diagnostic challenges arise because colonization does not always equate to infection; microscopy detects hyphae in only 50-80% of cases, and culture or molecular methods improve sensitivity. Furthermore, over-the-counter self-treatment without proper diagnosis often leads to ineffective management and potential antifungal resistance. The review also highlights that Candida forms biofilms, which may contribute to antifungal resistance in vaginal infections, though researchers have yet to fully elucidate its exact role in VVC. The vaginal mycobiome in asymptomatic women is more diverse than previously appreciated, indicating a need to differentiate commensalism from pathogenic states more clearly.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review emphasizes the critical need for improved diagnostic accuracy to distinguish colonization from infection and prevent unnecessary or inappropriate antifungal use that drives resistance. It signals that future research should focus on the molecular mechanisms of Candida virulence, host-pathogen interactions, and the role of biofilms to identify new therapeutic targets. The growing understanding of the vaginal mycobiome and its complexity calls for integrative microbiome-based diagnostics and personalized treatment strategies. Furthermore, the review advocates for intensified research efforts and clinical awareness of VVC as a significant and neglected women's health issue, encouraging the exploration of alternative therapies, including probiotics and vaccination, which show promise in preclinical studies. Ultimately, better integration of microbiome insights into clinical practice will enhance patient outcomes and management of vulvovaginal candidosis.
Diagnosis of the menopause: NICE guidance and quality standards
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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NICE guidance recommends diagnosing menopause in women over 45 clinically, not with lab tests, while FSH measurement is reserved for suspected POI in women under 40, streamlining care and reducing unnecessary testing in clinical biochemistry laboratories.
What was reviewed?
This editorial summarizes and contextualizes the 2017 National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) guidelines and quality standards regarding the diagnosis of menopause and premature ovarian insufficiency (POI). The guidance, based on systematic reviews, critically evaluates the diagnostic utility of clinical indicators, ultrasound, and biochemical tests (particularly FSH, AMH, oestrogen, inhibin A and B), emphasizing appropriate diagnostic strategies for different age groups and clinical scenarios. The article also discusses the cost-saving implications and practical recommendations for clinical biochemistry laboratories in the UK, focusing on reducing unnecessary biochemical testing and streamlining diagnostic pathways.
Who was reviewed?
The review draws on evidence synthesized for NICE guideline development, including systematic reviews of studies involving perimenopausal and menopausal women, as well as those at risk for or suspected of POI. The population includes women over 45 presenting with menopausal symptoms, women aged 40–45 with possible menopausal features, and women under 40 with suspected POI, such as those with a history of cancer treatment or genetic syndromes like Turner syndrome. The referenced studies include a range of clinical cohorts and laboratory assessments across these age groups.
Most important findings
The NICE guideline, as summarized in this editorial, asserts that menopause in women over 45 should be diagnosed clinically—based on symptoms like vasomotor instability and menstrual irregularity—without reliance on laboratory or imaging tests. The evidence indicates that no single symptom or biochemical marker (including FSH, AMH, oestrogen, or inhibins) is sufficiently reliable in isolation for diagnosing menopause in this group. FSH is particularly unreliable due to its physiological fluctuations and interference from hormonal therapies. However, FSH measurement retains a role in diagnosing POI in women under 40, where elevated levels (>30 mIU/mL on two occasions) support the diagnosis, though a single test is inadequate due to hormonal variability. The review also emphasizes that AMH, despite its use as a marker of ovarian reserve, is not recommended for routine POI diagnosis due to assay variability and insufficient evidence for its diagnostic accuracy in this context.
Key implications
For clinical practice, the NICE guidance recommends diagnosing menopause in women over 45 based on symptoms alone, which reduces unnecessary and uninformative laboratory testing. This has significant resource-saving implications for healthcare systems. In women under 40 with suspected POI, FSH testing is appropriate, but diagnosis should be based on persistent elevations in FSH and compatible symptoms. Laboratories and clinicians should align their practice with these guidelines, minimizing inappropriate FSH testing in older women and focusing resources where diagnostic yield is greatest. This approach is expected to improve patient care, expedite appropriate referrals, and enhance long-term health outcomes while maximizing cost-effectiveness. The editorial provides actionable advice for laboratories, including audit and educational interventions to reduce unwarranted testing.
Factors associated with age at menarche, menstrual knowledge, and hygiene practices among schoolgirls in Sharjah, UAE
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This study explores the factors influencing age at menarche, menstrual knowledge, and hygiene practices among schoolgirls in Sharjah, UAE. It highlights how socioeconomic factors, education, and hygiene practices impact menstrual health outcomes.
What was studied?
This study focused on understanding the factors associated with age at menarche, menstrual knowledge, and hygiene practices among schoolgirls in Sharjah, UAE. The researchers aimed to identify the social, economic, and environmental factors influencing the timing of menarche, the level of knowledge these schoolgirls had about menstruation, and their menstrual hygiene practices. A cross-sectional survey was conducted with 410 schoolgirls aged 8–17 years across four private schools in Sharjah, UAE. The study also evaluated the relationship between socioeconomic status, body mass index (BMI), and other demographic factors in determining the age at which girls experience menarche.
Who was studied?
The study involved 410 schoolgirls from Sharjah, UAE, aged between 8 and 17 years. These participants were selected from both elementary and secondary grades across four private schools in Sharjah. The study excluded participants with diagnosed chronic conditions that could potentially influence the timing of menarche, such as endocrine, neurological, or musculoskeletal disorders. The cohort represented a mixture of Arabs and non-Arabs, with varying socioeconomic backgrounds. Data were gathered through self-administered questionnaires and anthropometric measurements, which were recorded in private spaces to ensure comfort and privacy.
Most important findings
The average age at menarche was found to be 11.5 years (SD ± 1.17), which is notably younger than the average age in other Gulf countries like Saudi Arabia and Kuwait. A significant association was observed between lower household income and delayed menarche, with girls from lower-income households experiencing menarche later. Additionally, younger participants (less than 12 years old) attained menarche earlier than their older counterparts. More than half (57.7%) of the participants had good menstrual knowledge, although 48.8% had minimal knowledge before menarche. As for menstrual hygiene, 54.7% of the participants adopted adequate practices, using disposable sanitary materials, changing them at least three times a day, and washing their bodies and genitalia with soap and water.
Key implications
The findings suggest that girls from higher socioeconomic backgrounds tend to experience menarche earlier and have better knowledge and hygiene practices. These results highlight the importance of addressing menstrual education in schools, particularly for younger girls, and ensuring that it is integrated early enough to prepare them for menstruation. The study underscores the need for policies to enhance menstrual education and hygiene practices, particularly in underprivileged communities, where such education is often lacking. Early intervention through school-based menstrual health education could bridge knowledge gaps and promote healthier menstrual practices, ultimately reducing reproductive health issues in the future.
Gut microbiota modulation: a narrative review on a novel strategy for prevention and alleviation of ovarian aging
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review explores how gut microbiota modulation influences ovarian aging and presents potential therapies like fecal microbiota transplantation and probiotics to prevent or alleviate ovarian aging, offering new strategies for preserving reproductive health.
What was studied?
This narrative review explores the connection between gut microbiota and ovarian aging, focusing on how modulation of the microbiome could offer a novel strategy for alleviating ovarian aging and preventing related disorders. The review investigates how the gut microbiota influences ovarian functions such as follicular development, oocyte maturation, and ovulation, and examines alterations in gut microbiota composition with aging, including its potential role in conditions like premature ovarian insufficiency (POI). Furthermore, the paper discusses interventions targeting gut microbiota, such as fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) and probiotic therapies, as potential strategies for delaying ovarian aging.
Who was studied?
The review includes data from studies on both human and animal models, including premenopausal and postmenopausal women, as well as murine and other species models. The review primarily focuses on women experiencing ovarian aging, such as those in menopause or with POI, and incorporates findings from animal studies investigating the relationship between gut microbiota composition and ovarian function.
Most important findings
The review reveals that ovarian aging is influenced by changes in the gut microbiota, with distinct differences in microbial composition observed in postmenopausal women compared to premenopausal women. Specifically, postmenopausal women exhibit lower gut microbiome diversity and altered abundances of microbial taxa, such as an increase in Bacteroides and a decrease in Firmicutes. The study also highlights the role of specific gut bacteria in regulating ovarian function. For example, the gut microbiota’s production of short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs), such as butyrate, influences ovarian function by modulating hormonal levels and immune responses. Furthermore, interventions like FMT and probiotics have shown potential in restoring a "younger-like" microbial profile and improving ovarian function in animal models, suggesting a promising therapeutic approach for human ovarian aging.
Key implications
This review underscores the potential for gut microbiota modulation as a novel strategy to combat ovarian aging and related reproductive health issues. The evidence linking gut microbiota dysbiosis to ovarian dysfunction highlights a new avenue for therapeutic interventions, particularly through FMT or probiotics, which could help preserve ovarian function, delay menopause, and improve fertility. However, further research, particularly human clinical trials, is needed to fully understand the mechanisms and efficacy of these microbiome-based interventions for ovarian aging.
Long-term postmenopausal hormone therapy and endometrial cancer
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) is one of the most effective treatments for women experiencing the symptoms of menopause, particularly vasomotor symptoms such as hot flashes and night sweats. But its benefits go beyond just symptom management. HRT can also play a key role in improving vaginal health by alleviating dryness and discomfort, which are common complaints among women in menopause. Additionally, it helps prevent bone loss, significantly reducing the risk of osteoporosis and fractures, which are more common after menopause. Despite its many benefits, HRT is not one-size-fits-all; it’s essential to tailor treatment based on individual health profiles, taking into account the risks like breast cancer, blood clots, and heart disease that come with prolonged use.
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Long-term use of estrogen and estrogen-progestin therapies significantly increases the risk of endometrial cancer, particularly for women with lower BMI. The risk is dose-dependent, with continuous-combined therapy having complex effects based on body weight.
What was studied?
This study investigates the association between long-term postmenopausal hormone therapy (HT) use and the risk of developing endometrial cancer. Specifically, it examines different HT regimens, including estrogen therapy (ET) and estrogen-progestin therapy (EPT), and how their duration and composition may influence the risk of endometrial cancer. The research uses data from the California Teachers Study (CTS), a large cohort of women, to analyze hormone therapy patterns and their correlation with endometrial cancer incidence.
Who was studied?
The study population consisted of 311 women diagnosed with invasive endometrial cancer and 570 control women, all part of the CTS cohort. The participants were postmenopausal women who had not undergone hysterectomy and were part of an ongoing study of California teachers. The study controlled for factors such as age, race, BMI, reproductive history, and other known endometrial cancer risk factors.
Most important findings
The study found that long-term use (≥10 years) of ET, short-sequential EPT, and continuous-combined EPT (progestin ≥25 days/month) were all associated with a significantly increased risk of endometrial cancer. The risk was most pronounced for women using ET and short-sequential EPT, with odds ratios (ORs) of 4.5 and 4.4, respectively. Continuous-combined EPT was associated with an OR of 2.1 for long-term use. The risk for continuous-combined EPT was higher among women with a BMI < 25 kg/m2, whereas heavier women (BMI ≥ 25 kg/m2) had a reduced or neutral risk. Furthermore, the duration of hormone therapy use showed a dose-dependent relationship with cancer risk, with longer durations significantly elevating the likelihood of endometrial cancer.
Key implications
The findings underscore the importance of considering both the type of hormone therapy and the duration of use when evaluating cancer risks in postmenopausal women. Clinicians should be aware that long-term use of ET or short-sequential EPT, especially in women with a lower BMI, significantly increases endometrial cancer risk. However, continuous-combined EPT may have a more complex risk profile, with its effects potentially modulated by body weight. These results suggest the need for personalized approaches to hormone therapy, where treatment regimens and duration are carefully tailored to minimize cancer risks, particularly in lean women.
Dietary Intake and Ovarian Cancer Risk: A Systematic Review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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This review examines the relationship between diet and ovarian cancer risk, finding that animal fats and dairy are linked to higher risk, while vegetables and bioactive compounds may offer protective benefits, although results are inconsistent across studies.
What was studied?
This systematic review investigates the association between dietary intake and ovarian cancer risk. The authors reviewed prospective cohort studies that assessed the impact of various dietary factors, including fats (animal and dairy), vegetables, fruits, micronutrients, and bioactive compounds like isoflavones and flavonoids, on ovarian cancer incidence. The review sought to provide a clearer understanding of how specific foods and dietary patterns might contribute to ovarian cancer risk, a key issue given the lack of conclusive evidence on the subject.
Who was studied?
The review incorporated data from 24 prospective cohort studies, including large cohorts like the Nurses' Health Study, the Women’s Health Initiative, and EPIC. These studies included thousands of women across various geographic regions, all of whom were followed over several years to track the relationship between their dietary habits and ovarian cancer risk. The review primarily focused on studies with over 200 ovarian cancer cases to ensure robust statistical power and to minimize the bias introduced by recall error in case-control studies.
Most important findings
The review identified several key associations, though the results were often inconsistent across studies. Increased intake of animal fats, dairy fats, and nitrates (primarily from processed meats) was generally linked to a higher risk of ovarian cancer. For example, a 30% higher risk was associated with animal fat consumption, while dairy fat showed a modest 1.53 relative risk in some cohorts. Conversely, diets rich in vegetables, particularly allium vegetables (e.g., garlic and onions), seemed to offer a protective effect, although these findings were not statistically significant in all studies. Isoflavones and flavonoids were found to be associated with a reduced risk of ovarian cancer in two studies, and tea consumption was linked to a lower risk in some cohorts.
Key implications
The findings highlight the complexity of dietary influences on ovarian cancer risk, with some foods showing promising protective effects while others contribute to increased risk. This review suggests that diets high in animal-based fats and nitrates from processed meats could be risk factors for ovarian cancer. On the other hand, incorporating more plant-based foods, especially vegetables like garlic and onions, and bioactive compounds like isoflavones, may reduce the risk. The inconsistent results call for further research with more rigorous dietary assessments, larger sample sizes, and studies considering specific ovarian cancer subtypes to provide more actionable insights for cancer prevention strategies. These findings could inform public health recommendations and help clinicians in advising patients on lifestyle modifications to reduce cancer risk.
Maternal Iron Deficiency Anemia Affects Postpartum Emotions and Cognition
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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Anemia
Anemia
Anemia is a reduction in red blood cells or hemoglobin, often influenced by the gut microbiome's impact on nutrient absorption.
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The study explored the impact of iron deficiency anemia on postpartum cognitive and emotional health. Iron supplementation significantly improved depression, stress, and cognitive performance in anemic mothers, with potential implications for maternal and infant health.
What was studied?
The study investigated the impact of iron deficiency anemia (IDA) on maternal cognition, behavioral performance, mother-infant interaction, and infant development during the postpartum period. The focus was on how iron status, particularly in anemic mothers, affected their emotional well-being and cognitive function post-childbirth.
Who was studied?
The study focused on a cohort of 81 South African mothers who had normal birth weight, full-term babies. These mothers were divided into three groups: non-anemic controls, anemic mothers receiving a placebo, and anemic mothers receiving daily iron supplementation. The mothers were followed for 9 months postpartum.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed that iron-deficient anemic mothers exhibited cognitive and emotional deficits compared to their non-anemic counterparts. Specifically, mothers receiving iron supplementation showed a 25% improvement in depression, stress, and cognitive function (measured through Raven’s Progressive Matrices and Digit Symbol tests). In contrast, the placebo group did not show any significant improvement. Furthermore, the study identified strong associations between maternal iron status (hemoglobin, mean corpuscular volume, and transferrin saturation) and behavioral variables such as anxiety, stress, and depression. These findings suggest a direct relationship between maternal iron deficiency and impaired cognitive and emotional functioning.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study highlights the critical role of iron in maternal mental health and cognitive function during the postpartum period. The findings suggest that correcting iron deficiency through supplementation can significantly improve mood, stress, and cognitive functioning in postpartum mothers. This has profound implications for public health strategies, particularly in resource-poor settings where iron deficiency is prevalent. It also underscores the importance of early screening and treatment of IDA to prevent long-term negative effects on both maternal well-being and infant development. The potential for iron supplementation to improve mother-infant interactions and promote healthier developmental outcomes for infants is a key area for future research.
Evidence for the Use of Complementary and Alternative Medicine for Pelvic Inflammatory Disease: A Literature Review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) is a complex interplay between pathogens, immune responses, and microbial communities. As research continues to uncover the microbiome's role in reproductive health, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as probiotics, prebiotics, and transplants are redefining how we prevent and treat PID. This page dives deep into these innovations, offering a glimpse into the future of personalized, biologically informed women’s healthcare.
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This review investigates the potential of Complementary and Alternative Medicine (CAM) in managing Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Therapies like Chinese Herbal Medicine and acupuncture show promise in improving symptoms and reducing inflammation, making them valuable adjuncts to conventional treatments.
What was studied?
This review focused on evaluating the role of Complementary and Alternative Medicine (CAM) in the treatment of Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). It aimed to assess the effectiveness, safety, and mechanisms behind various CAM therapies, such as Chinese Herbal Medicine (CHM), acupuncture, moxibustion, and other non-pharmaceutical interventions like pelvic exercises, hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT), and microwave physiotherapy. The study explored how these therapies could serve as adjunct treatments for PID, particularly in cases where conventional antibiotic treatments show limited success.
Who was studied?
The review synthesized evidence from multiple studies involving women diagnosed with PID, especially those suffering from chronic pelvic inflammatory disease (CPID), a condition with serious long-term implications such as infertility and chronic pelvic pain. These studies included patients who underwent CAM therapies either alone or in combination with conventional treatments. By evaluating the outcomes of these patients, the review aimed to determine whether CAM therapies could provide significant benefits in PID management.
What were the most important findings?
The review found that CAM therapies, particularly Chinese Herbal Medicine (CHM), acupuncture, and moxibustion, have shown promising results in managing PID symptoms, including inflammation and pelvic pain. CHM, such as Xaiyan decoction, was particularly effective in improving clinical outcomes in chronic PID patients, where conventional treatments often fail. Acupuncture and moxibustion were noted for their ability to reduce inflammation and improve blood circulation, which contributed to better symptom management in PID patients. Moreover, combining CAM therapies with traditional antibiotics appeared to offer enhanced therapeutic outcomes, reduced recurrence rates, and a decrease in the long-term use of antibiotics. These findings suggest that CAM therapies may have a role in supporting the treatment of PID, especially when used alongside conventional medical treatments.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study suggests that integrating CAM therapies into PID treatment plans could potentially improve patient outcomes, particularly in managing inflammation and alleviating symptoms like chronic pelvic pain. By reducing the need for prolonged antibiotic use, CAM offers a potential strategy to mitigate antibiotic resistance, which is a growing concern in PID treatment. However, the study also highlights the need for further high-quality, large-scale clinical trials to substantiate the effectiveness and safety of these treatments. With additional research, CAM could become a standard part of PID treatment protocols, offering a holistic approach to managing this complex condition.
Prevalence of hot flushes and night sweats around the world: a systematic review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal hot flashes are one of the most common and disruptive symptoms that women experience during the transition to menopause. Characterized by sudden sensations of heat, sweating, and flushing, hot flashes can significantly affect a woman’s quality of life, causing sleep disturbances, mood swings, and even long-term health consequences. Understanding the complex mechanisms behind hot flashes, as well as the role of microbiome-targeted therapies, offers new avenues for improving menopausal health.
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This systematic review explores the global prevalence of hot flashes and night sweats, revealing significant cultural and regional variations. It emphasizes the need for personalized, region-specific healthcare strategies to address these common menopausal symptoms.
What was studied?
This systematic review examines the global prevalence of hot flashes and night sweats, two of the most common vasomotor symptoms associated with menopause. The authors aimed to understand how these symptoms vary across different cultures, geographic regions, and menopausal stages. A total of 66 studies were included, with a focus on identifying prevalence patterns for hot flashes and night sweats in women from various continents, including North America, Europe, East Asia, Southeast Asia, Australia, Latin America, South Asia, the Middle East, and Africa. The studies also explored factors influencing symptom variation, such as lifestyle, diet, cultural attitudes, and climate.
Who was studied?
The studies included in the review involved women between the ages of 40 and 65 years, across different stages of menopause, including perimenopause, postmenopause, and those who underwent surgical menopause. The women were from diverse ethnic backgrounds, representing various global regions, including Caucasian, African-American, Hispanic, Asian, and Middle Eastern populations. Data was derived from large-scale studies, such as the Study of Women’s Health Across the Nation (SWAN), along with smaller cohort studies, offering insights into the cultural and regional differences in symptom prevalence and severity.
Most important findings
The review found that the prevalence of hot flashes and night sweats varied significantly across regions and ethnic groups. In North America, particularly among African-American women, the prevalence was notably high, with 46% reporting symptoms, while in Japan, it was much lower at around 18%. The study also highlighted how factors like ethnicity, culture, diet, and even climate influenced symptom reporting. For instance, women in colder climates or those with diets rich in soy were found to experience fewer symptoms. Additionally, lifestyle factors, such as smoking and alcohol consumption, were associated with higher rates of vasomotor symptoms. This variability emphasizes the need for region-specific healthcare strategies to manage menopause-related symptoms effectively.
Key implications
This review underscores the importance of considering cultural and regional factors when addressing menopausal symptoms, particularly hot flashes and night sweats. It suggests that healthcare providers should not only consider the global prevalence of these symptoms but also the unique cultural attitudes toward menopause that may influence symptom reporting and treatment-seeking behavior. Tailored interventions, including diet modifications and lifestyle adjustments, could potentially alleviate symptoms based on regional characteristics. Moreover, recognizing the diverse experiences of menopause globally can lead to better, more personalized care for women during the menopausal transition.
Hormone therapy and the risk of stroke: Perspectives ten years after the Women’s Health Initiative trials
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) is one of the most effective treatments for women experiencing the symptoms of menopause, particularly vasomotor symptoms such as hot flashes and night sweats. But its benefits go beyond just symptom management. HRT can also play a key role in improving vaginal health by alleviating dryness and discomfort, which are common complaints among women in menopause. Additionally, it helps prevent bone loss, significantly reducing the risk of osteoporosis and fractures, which are more common after menopause. Despite its many benefits, HRT is not one-size-fits-all; it’s essential to tailor treatment based on individual health profiles, taking into account the risks like breast cancer, blood clots, and heart disease that come with prolonged use.
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This review investigates the stroke risk associated with hormonal therapies in postmenopausal women, comparing oral and transdermal estrogen formulations and highlighting the need for individualized treatment plans based on age and cardiovascular health.
What was studied?
This study reviews the relationship between hormone therapy (HT) and the risk of stroke, with particular emphasis on postmenopausal women who use estrogen-based treatments. It evaluates data from large clinical trials like the Women’s Health Initiative (WHI), focusing on the risks associated with estrogen and progestogen therapies, including both oral and transdermal forms. The paper explores how estrogen therapy affects ischemic stroke risk, outlining the differences between estrogen alone and estrogen-progestogen combinations, as well as the dose-dependent effects on stroke. The study provides a comprehensive look at stroke mechanisms, estrogen's impact on the cardiovascular system, and how these therapies influence hemostasis and vascular health.
Who was studied?
The review primarily examines postmenopausal women from large clinical trials, including those enrolled in the Women’s Health Initiative (WHI), which consisted of women aged 50 to 79 years at baseline. The study also includes data from observational studies and other clinical trials, such as the Heart and Estrogen/progestin Replacement Study (HERS) and the Women’s Estrogen for Stroke Trial (WEST). It focuses on healthy women who were using hormonal therapies for menopause symptom management and those who participated in trials investigating the cardiovascular outcomes of these therapies. The paper also considers the impact of hormone therapy on women with specific risks for stroke, such as those with cardiovascular disease, and the potential for transdermal estrogen as a safer alternative in high-risk groups.
Most important findings
The study reveals estrogen therapy increases the risk of ischemic stroke by about one-third, a finding consistent across multiple clinical trials, including the WHI. The risk appears to be more pronounced in oral estrogen therapies, likely due to first-pass metabolism in the liver, which can alter coagulation pathways and increase thrombosis risk. In contrast, transdermal estrogen does not carry the same degree of risk, likely because it bypasses the liver. The estrogen-progestogen combination therapy showed a similar risk profile to unopposed estrogen in terms of stroke risk, with the addition of progestogen not offering additional protective benefits.
The study suggests that the timing of therapy initiation does not significantly alter stroke risk; both younger women starting hormone therapy soon after menopause and older women starting therapy later have similar stroke risk profiles. Furthermore, lower doses of estrogen, such as those used in transdermal estradiol (≤50μg/day) or low-dose oral conjugated estrogens (0.3 mg/day), were found to have no significant increase in stroke risk. However, the study highlights that stroke risk increases significantly with age, particularly for women aged 60 and older.
Key implications
Clinicians should recognize that while hormone therapy is effective for managing menopausal symptoms, particularly vasomotor symptoms, it also carries an increased risk of ischemic stroke. Transdermal estrogen may be a safer option, especially for women with cardiovascular risk factors, due to its lower association with thrombotic events. The study suggests that oral estrogen therapy should be used cautiously, particularly in older women or those with existing cardiovascular disease. For women aged under 60 or within 10 years of menopause, the absolute risk of stroke is low, but clinicians must still weigh the benefits of symptom relief against the small but real risk of stroke. The study further emphasizes that individualized therapy is critical, considering a patient’s age, cardiovascular health, and genetic predisposition to thrombosis when prescribing hormonal therapies.
Vaginal microbiome of women with premature ovarian insufficiency: a descriptive cross-sectional study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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The study reveals that women with premature ovarian insufficiency on systemic hormone therapy maintain a Lactobacillus-dominated vaginal microbiome, similar to estrogenized women, though some show signs of bacterial vaginosis, indicating the influence of factors beyond estrogen.
What was studied?
This study aimed to characterize the vaginal microbiome of women with premature ovarian insufficiency (POI) who were receiving systemic hormone therapy (HT). Premature ovarian insufficiency, which leads to a decrease in ovarian activity before the age of 40, has various physiological and psychological impacts. The research focused on identifying the composition of the vaginal microbiome in these women, using 16S rRNA pyrosequencing to profile the microbial communities. The study classified vaginal samples into five phylogenetic groups based on bacterial predominance, comparing the results to existing knowledge of vaginal microbiomes in estrogenized women.
Who was studied?
The study involved 40 sexually active women diagnosed with POI who had been using systemic hormone therapy for at least six months. The average age of the participants was 37.13 years, with the mean age of POI diagnosis being 27.90 years. Women in the study had a range of hormone therapy regimens, including oral conjugated estrogen, 17β-estradiol, and tibolone. Participants with conditions like vulvovaginitis, current antibiotic use, or systemic illnesses were excluded. The study aimed to evaluate how long-term HT affects the vaginal microbiome, particularly focusing on the dominance of Lactobacillus species.
Most important findings
The study identified several significant microbial patterns in the vaginal microbiome of women with POI undergoing hormone therapy. The majority of participants had a microbiome dominated by Lactobacillus species, which is considered typical for women receiving estrogen. Specifically, Lactobacillus crispatus was found to be predominant in 33.4% of the participants, while Lactobacillus iners dominated another 33.4%. Smaller groups showed a predominance of Lactobacillus gasseri and Lactobacillus jensenii. However, 15.2% of the women had a vaginal microbiome characterized by anaerobic bacteria, such as Gardnerella and Prevotella, which are typically associated with bacterial vaginosis. The presence of these bacteria despite systemic estrogen supplementation suggests that factors beyond estrogen, such as sexual activity, diet, or immune response, may influence the vaginal microbiome.
Key implications
The findings suggest that systemic hormone therapy in women with POI largely supports the maintenance of a healthy vaginal microbiome dominated by Lactobacillus species, similar to women with preserved ovarian function. However, the presence of anaerobic bacteria in a significant proportion of women indicates that estrogen alone may not be sufficient to restore the vaginal ecosystem entirely. This highlights the need for additional strategies, such as probiotics or dietary adjustments, to address microbial imbalances in women with POI. The study also points to the potential role of other factors, such as sexual practices and immune response, in influencing vaginal health and microbial colonization.
Exercise for dysmenorrhoea
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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This Cochrane review confirms that structured exercise markedly reduces menstrual pain in primary dysmenorrhea but reveals no microbiome data, prompting a call for studies linking exercise interventions with gut–uterine microbial signatures.
What was reviewed?
This Cochrane systematic review and meta‑analysis evaluated the effectiveness and safety of structured exercise interventions for primary dysmenorrhea by synthesizing evidence from randomized controlled trials comparing various exercise modalities, including low‑intensity (e.g., yoga, stretching), high‑intensity (e.g., aerobic routines), and mixed‑intensity programs, against no‑treatment controls and non‑steroidal anti‑inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs). The authors searched multiple electronic databases up to July 2019 and applied rigorous selection and bias‑assessment procedures per the Cochrane Handbook.
Who was reviewed?
The analysis incorporated 12 RCTs enrolling a total of 854 women aged 15–49 years with clinically diagnosed primary dysmenorrhea (i.e., menstrual pain without underlying pelvic pathology). Ten trials (n = 754) contributed pain‑intensity data: nine contrasted exercise with no treatment, and one compared exercise to mefenamic acid. Participants reported moderate‑to‑severe menstrual pain affecting daily activities, and studies spanned educational and outpatient settings across diverse geographic regions.
Most important findings
Pooled data from nine trials (n = 632) demonstrated that exercise significantly reduced menstrual pain intensity, equating to a clinically meaningful 25 mm decrease on a 100 mm visual analogue scale compared to no exercise. This effect remained robust in sensitivity analyses, with both low‑ and high‑intensity regimens yielding substantial pain relief. Secondary outcomes, overall menstrual symptoms, rescue analgesic use, and quality‑of‑life metrics, were sparsely and inconsistently reported, precluding definitive conclusions. Importantly, none of the included trials assessed shifts in gut or uterine microbiome composition or correlations between microbial signatures and exercise response, underscoring a critical evidence gap for microbiome‑informed dysmenorrhea management.
Key implications
Clinicians can confidently recommend regular exercise, ideally 45–60 minutes per session, three or more times per week, as an accessible, low‑risk intervention for menstrual pain relief. The absence of microbiome data highlights the need for future research integrating microbial profiling to elucidate how exercise‑induced anti‑inflammatory effects may interact with host–microbiome dynamics, potentially refining personalized treatment strategies.
Black cohosh (Cimicifuga spp.) for menopausal symptoms.
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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This review finds insufficient evidence that black cohosh effectively reduces menopausal symptoms. Hormone therapy outperforms black cohosh, which appears safe but needs further study for efficacy and impact on quality of life.
What was reviewed?
This Cochrane systematic review comprehensively assessed the clinical effectiveness and safety of black cohosh (Cimicifuga spp.) preparations for treating menopausal symptoms. The review synthesized data from randomized controlled trials comparing black cohosh to placebo, hormone therapy, red clover, fluoxetine, or other controls. It aimed to determine whether black cohosh reduces the frequency and severity of vasomotor symptoms (hot flushes, night sweats), vulvovaginal symptoms, and improves menopausal symptom scores, while evaluating its safety profile in perimenopausal and postmenopausal women.
Who was reviewed?
The review included sixteen randomized controlled trials involving a total of 2,027 women aged mostly between 50 and 56 years, all experiencing menopausal symptoms. Participants were perimenopausal or postmenopausal women recruited across various clinical and geographical settings, including the US, Germany, China, and Europe. Trials used oral monopreparations of black cohosh at doses ranging from 8 to 160 mg daily, over durations from 4 to 52 weeks. Control interventions included placebo, hormone therapy, red clover, fluoxetine, and other comparators.
Most important findings
Pooled evidence showed no statistically significant benefit of black cohosh over placebo in reducing the frequency or intensity of hot flushes or night sweats. Meta-analysis of five trials demonstrated a negligible mean difference in daily hot flush frequency and menopausal symptom scores. Comparisons of black cohosh with hormone therapy consistently favored hormone therapy, which significantly reduced vasomotor symptoms and menopausal scores. Trials comparing black cohosh to red clover or fluoxetine yielded inconclusive results due to limited data and heterogeneity. Safety data indicated no significant difference in adverse events between black cohosh and placebo, although reporting was incomplete. Data on secondary outcomes such as bone health, sexuality, quality of life, and cost-effectiveness were insufficient for conclusive analysis.
Key implications
Current evidence from randomized controlled trials does not support black cohosh as an effective treatment for menopausal vasomotor symptoms compared to placebo or hormone therapy. However, the overall quality of the evidence is moderate to low due to methodological limitations and heterogeneity among trials. Current safety data show that people generally tolerate black cohosh well, but researchers need to report findings more rigorously. Given the widespread use of black cohosh as a complementary therapy, researchers should conduct further high-quality, well-designed studies to clarify its efficacy, safety, and impact on quality of life and other clinically relevant outcomes. Understanding potential interactions with the microbiome and its influence on symptom modulation could enrich future investigations and help guide more targeted therapies for menopause.
Hormone replacement therapy for women previously treated for endometrial cancer
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) is one of the most effective treatments for women experiencing the symptoms of menopause, particularly vasomotor symptoms such as hot flashes and night sweats. But its benefits go beyond just symptom management. HRT can also play a key role in improving vaginal health by alleviating dryness and discomfort, which are common complaints among women in menopause. Additionally, it helps prevent bone loss, significantly reducing the risk of osteoporosis and fractures, which are more common after menopause. Despite its many benefits, HRT is not one-size-fits-all; it’s essential to tailor treatment based on individual health profiles, taking into account the risks like breast cancer, blood clots, and heart disease that come with prolonged use.
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This review highlights the lack of conclusive evidence on the safety of hormone replacement therapy (HRT) in women treated for early-stage endometrial cancer. While a small study found no significant increase in cancer recurrence risk, the low quality of the evidence leaves uncertainty about the benefits and risks of HRT use in these women.
What was studied?
This review investigates the use of hormone replacement therapy (HRT) in women previously treated for endometrial cancer. Specifically, it aims to evaluate the efficacy of HRT in relieving menopausal symptoms, such as hot flashes, night sweats, and vaginal dryness, in these women. The study also explores the potential risks associated with HRT use, particularly whether it might increase the risk of cancer recurrence or the development of new malignancies. The review includes data from randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and evaluates safety and symptom relief outcomes in women who have undergone surgical treatment for early-stage endometrial cancer.
Who was studied?
The review focuses on women who had been treated for endometrial cancer, particularly those with early-stage disease (stage I and II). Participants included in the studies had undergone hysterectomy and bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy (removal of the uterus, fallopian tubes, and ovaries) as part of their treatment. Women in these studies were often experiencing menopausal symptoms, either as a result of early menopause induced by cancer treatment or as a continuation of natural menopause. The review only included studies that addressed HRT use in these women and its potential risks and benefits.
Most important findings
The review identified a single RCT that compared the use of estrogen replacement therapy (ERT) to a placebo in women previously treated for early-stage endometrial cancer. The study showed no significant difference in the risk of tumor recurrence between the two groups, though the risk ratio (RR) was 1.17, indicating a slightly higher risk of recurrence in the HRT group, though this result was not statistically significant. There was no difference in the incidence of new cancers between the groups, although the data on this outcome were limited. The study also found no significant difference in overall survival or progression-free survival between the HRT and placebo groups. The quality of the evidence was considered very low due to the small sample size, risk of bias, and the early termination of the study due to recruitment challenges.
Key implications
The findings suggest that there is currently insufficient evidence to definitively guide clinical decision-making regarding HRT use in women who have been treated for early-stage endometrial cancer. While the single included RCT showed no clear evidence that HRT increases the risk of recurrence, the study was underpowered and had several methodological issues. Consequently, the use of HRT in this context should be individualized, considering the woman's menopausal symptoms, preferences, and the uncertainty surrounding the risks and benefits. More robust trials are needed to clarify whether HRT can be safely used for symptom relief without adversely affecting cancer outcomes in these patients.
Nifedipine for primary dysmenorrhoea
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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Nifedipine may provide significant pain relief for women with primary dysmenorrhoea, but evidence quality is low. Larger studies are needed to confirm its effectiveness and safety.
What was studied?
The study assessed the effectiveness and safety of nifedipine as a treatment for primary dysmenorrhoea, a common condition where women experience painful uterine contractions during menstruation. Nifedipine, a calcium channel blocker, is widely used to inhibit uterine contractions during preterm labor, and the review explored whether it could also alleviate menstrual pain by inhibiting these contractions during menstruation. The study compared nifedipine to placebo to determine its impact on pain relief, the quality of life, and the need for additional medications.
Who was studied?
The participants were women of reproductive age (15-35 years) diagnosed with primary dysmenorrhoea, defined as menstrual pain due to uterine contractions without any underlying pelvic pathology. A total of 106 women participated across three randomized controlled trials (RCTs), though only 66 participants' data were usable for analysis. Women who experienced significant menstrual pain were included, with some trials focusing on women who had a history of using analgesics for pain relief.
Most important findings
The results suggested that nifedipine may provide pain relief compared to a placebo. Specifically, nifedipine showed a higher likelihood of any pain relief and significantly better outcomes for "good" or "excellent" pain relief. However, the overall quality of the evidence was very low, primarily due to small sample sizes and limited data. The nifedipine group also demonstrated a greater preference for ongoing use of the medication, with a majority indicating they would choose it over their previous analgesic treatments. Adverse effects such as headaches and facial flushing were reported in both the nifedipine and placebo groups, but they did not significantly differ between the two.
Key implications
The findings suggest that nifedipine could be an effective alternative treatment for primary dysmenorrhoea, especially for women who cannot use NSAIDs or hormonal contraceptives due to various health concerns. Despite the promising results, the low quality of the evidence calls for further research with larger sample sizes and better methodology. Future studies should also focus on comparing nifedipine to other established treatments for dysmenorrhoea and more thoroughly assessing adverse effects to better understand its safety profile in this context.
Drugs for the treatment of menopausal symptoms.
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Estrogen therapy remains the most effective treatment for menopausal symptoms, with transdermal delivery preferred for safety. Non-hormonal options offer moderate relief; emerging therapies like SERMs and androgens show promise but require cautious use.
What was reviewed?
This review article comprehensively evaluates the current pharmacological treatments for menopausal symptoms, focusing on hormone replacement therapy (HRT), non-hormonal options, and emerging therapies. It addresses the efficacy, safety, and mechanisms of various estrogen, progestogen, androgen, selective estrogen receptor modulators (SERMs), and alternative compounds used to manage vasomotor symptoms, urogenital atrophy, bone loss, mood disorders, and sexual dysfunction in perimenopausal and postmenopausal women.
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesizes evidence from randomized controlled trials, observational studies, and meta-analyses involving diverse populations of menopausal women across clinical settings globally. It includes women experiencing a spectrum of menopausal symptoms such as hot flushes, night sweats, sleep disturbance, mood changes, urogenital atrophy, and metabolic complications. The review integrates findings on standard populations as well as subgroups with comorbidities affecting treatment decisions and outcomes.
Most important findings
The review confirms that estrogen therapy remains the most effective treatment for vasomotor and urogenital symptoms associated with menopause. It emphasizes the differential pharmacokinetics and safety profiles of oral versus transdermal estrogen, highlighting that non-oral routes tend to have fewer thromboembolic risks and more physiological hormone metabolism. Progestogens are necessary alongside estrogen in women with an intact uterus to prevent endometrial hyperplasia, though choice of progestogen influences side effects and tolerability. Non-hormonal agents such as gabapentin, clonidine, and selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) provide moderate relief for vasomotor symptoms, especially in women who cannot undergo HRT. Phytoestrogens and black cohosh lack consistent evidence for efficacy, and safety concerns remain, particularly hepatotoxicity with black cohosh. Newer therapies include tibolone, a synthetic steroid with tissue-selective effects, showing benefit for sexual function and bone health but with some cardiovascular risks in older women.
The review also touches on androgen therapy, particularly testosterone, which shows promise in treating hypoactive sexual desire disorder in surgically menopausal women, though concerns regarding breast cancer risk and cardiovascular effects necessitate cautious use. Emerging selective estrogen receptor modulators (SERMs) such as raloxifene and bazedoxifene offer fracture prevention and reduced breast cancer risk but may worsen vasomotor symptoms.
Key implications
Clinicians should tailor menopausal symptom management based on individual risk profiles, symptom severity, and patient preferences. Estrogen therapy remains first-line for significant symptoms but must be balanced against risks of thromboembolism and cancer, emphasizing the benefits of transdermal over oral routes when feasible. Non-hormonal alternatives offer options for those contraindicated for HRT but generally provide less symptom relief. The heterogeneity of menopause symptoms and comorbidities calls for personalized approaches, including consideration of novel SERMs and androgens. Further research into the interaction between menopausal therapies and the microbiome may enhance understanding of systemic effects and optimize treatment strategies. Safety monitoring, especially for long-term hormone use, remains paramount.
Mindfulness, cognitive behavioural and behaviour‐based therapy for natural and treatment‐induced menopausal symptoms: A systematic review and meta‐analysis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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This review and meta-analysis demonstrate that psychological interventions, such as CBT, MBT, and BT, can significantly reduce hot flash bother and menopausal symptoms. These findings are especially relevant for breast cancer survivors, offering a safe, non-hormonal alternative to HRT.
What was studied?
This systematic review and meta-analysis investigated the effectiveness of psychological interventions, specifically mindfulness-based therapy (MBT), cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), and behavior therapy (BT), in reducing vasomotor symptoms in women experiencing natural or treatment-induced menopause. The primary outcomes measured were the frequency and severity of hot flashes (referred to as "hot flush bother"), overall menopausal symptoms, and sexual functioning. The study included randomized controlled trials (RCTs) that assessed the impact of these psychological therapies compared to control groups, which typically consisted of waiting lists or general lifestyle advice.
Who was studied?
The review included data from twelve randomized controlled trials involving a total of 1,016 women. The participants were divided into two groups: those experiencing natural menopause and those with treatment-induced menopause, including survivors of breast cancer. These women were aged between 40 and 65 and had experienced hot flashes or other menopausal symptoms such as night sweats, vaginal discomfort, and sexual dysfunction. The women studied had varying baseline health conditions, including some who had undergone breast cancer treatments that induced early menopause.
Most important findings
The results of the meta-analysis revealed a significant reduction in hot flash bother, both in the short-term (less than 20 weeks) and medium-term (20 weeks or more), following psychological interventions. The standard mean difference (SMD) for hot flash bother was -0.54 for the short-term and -0.38 for the medium-term, indicating moderate reductions in the severity of hot flashes. The interventions also led to a reduction in overall menopausal symptoms (SMD = -0.34, short-term), but no significant effect was observed on hot flash frequency. The psychological therapies were particularly effective in the breast cancer survivor subgroup, who experience more severe and longer-lasting hot flashes than women undergoing natural menopause. No adverse effects were reported from these therapies, and sexual functioning was not significantly impacted by the interventions, though the data on sexual outcomes were limited.
Key implications
The findings suggest that mindfulness-based therapy, cognitive behavioral therapy, and behavior therapy can effectively reduce the severity and bother of hot flashes and overall menopausal symptoms, especially in women who cannot use hormone replacement therapy (HRT), such as breast cancer survivors. These therapies offer a promising non-hormonal treatment option and may improve the quality of life for women experiencing menopause, particularly for those with treatment-induced menopause. Although sexual functioning was not significantly improved in the studies, further research targeting this outcome could provide valuable insights. Clinicians should consider offering these psychological interventions to women seeking relief from menopausal symptoms, particularly those contraindicated for HRT. However, further studies with longer follow-up periods and a focus on sexual outcomes are needed to strengthen the evidence base.
Does Physical Exercise Lower Endometriosis Risk? Systematic Review Insights
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This systematic review found insufficient evidence to confirm that physical exercise reduces endometriosis risk or symptoms, though some data suggest a potential protective effect. Well-designed controlled trials are needed to clarify the role of exercise in endometriosis prevention and management.
What was reviewed?
This systematic review assessed the relationship between physical exercise and endometriosis, specifically examining whether exercise influences the prevalence or symptom improvement of endometriosis. The authors conducted a comprehensive search of English-language studies in PubMed from 1985 to 2012 using terms related to endometriosis and physical exercise. Only original observational or experimental studies that included laparoscopy-confirmed endometriosis and directly addressed the association between exercise and disease prevalence or outcomes were included. Out of 935 articles identified, just six met the inclusion criteria. The review synthesized evidence from these studies to evaluate if regular physical activity acts as a protective factor against the development or progression of endometriosis, as well as to consider whether pain related to endometriosis limits women’s ability to exercise.
Who was reviewed?
The review focused on women of reproductive age, primarily those with laparoscopically diagnosed endometriosis. The included studies were case-control or cohort studies, with varying sample sizes and demographic characteristics. The control groups consisted of women without endometriosis, as well as subgroups with or without infertility. The studies examined both women who engaged in regular physical activity and those who did not, enabling an exploration of potential associations between exercise habits and endometriosis risk or symptomatology.
Most important findings
Across the six studies included, findings regarding the relationship between physical exercise and endometriosis risk or symptom improvement were inconclusive and sometimes contradictory. Some studies indicated a potential protective effect of regular, vigorous physical activity, with reduced endometriosis risk observed among women who exercised more than 2–4 hours per week or engaged in higher-intensity activities. For example, one study found a 65% risk reduction in women with regular exercise, while another noted a 76% lower risk of endometrioma among those performing frequent, high-intensity exercise. However, these effects did not reach statistical significance in all studies, and the possibility of reverse causation—whereby women with endometriosis reduce activity due to pelvic pain—was raised. Notably, the review did not identify any controlled trials or studies specifically evaluating the direct impact of exercise on endometriosis symptoms or disease progression. Microbiome-related mechanisms were not directly addressed in the included studies, but the review highlighted that exercise may confer anti-inflammatory and antioxidant benefits, which are relevant given the inflammatory and oxidative stress components of endometriosis pathophysiology.
Key implications
The review underscores a significant gap in the literature regarding the effects of physical exercise on endometriosis prevention and management. Although some observational data suggest a possible inverse relationship between regular, vigorous exercise and endometriosis risk, the evidence is limited, and causality cannot be established. Importantly, no studies directly evaluated the impact of exercise on microbiome changes in endometriosis, nor did they consistently account for confounding variables or symptom-driven activity reduction. The authors call for well-designed, randomized controlled trials with standardized exercise protocols and validated outcome measures to clarify whether exercise can be recommended as a preventive or therapeutic intervention for endometriosis. Given the disease’s inflammatory and oxidative stress components, future research should also explore the interaction between exercise, systemic inflammation, and the reproductive tract microbiome.
The Effects of Toxic Heavy Metals Lead, Cadmium and Copper on the Epidemiology of Male and Female Infertility
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Infertility
Infertility
Infertility is the inability to conceive after 12 months of regular, unprotected sex. It affects both men and women and can be due to various physical, hormonal, or genetic factors. Treatments include medication, surgery, assisted reproductive technologies, and lifestyle changes.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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This review synthesizes evidence linking lead, cadmium, and copper exposure to male and female infertility, detailing mechanisms of reproductive toxicity, epidemiological patterns, and the potential role of microbiome alterations as mediators and biomarkers of reproductive risk.
What was reviewed?
This review comprehensively evaluated the effects of toxic heavy metals on the epidemiology of male and female infertility. The authors systematically searched and synthesized findings from articles published between 1982 and 2021 in databases such as PubMed, Google Scholar, Scopus, and others, focusing on the mechanistic and epidemiological associations between these metals and reproductive dysfunction. The review explores the multifaceted ways that heavy metal exposure, both environmental and occupational, influences reproductive health, including hormonal disruption, impaired gametogenesis, and direct damage to reproductive tissues. Special attention is given to the biochemical mechanisms by which these metals exert toxic effects, such as oxidative stress, enzyme inhibition, and endocrine disruption, all of which are highly relevant to clinicians concerned with environmental determinants of infertility.
Who was reviewed?
The review encompasses a broad range of human and animal studies, including epidemiological research on general populations and occupational groups, as well as controlled laboratory investigations in animal models. Human studies included both men and women from diverse geographic and occupational backgrounds, such as industrial workers, smokers, and populations with high environmental exposure. Animal research provided mechanistic insights, particularly regarding gamete quality, hormonal changes, and reproductive organ pathology following heavy metal exposure. Some studies included in the review also examined the reproductive health of non-human species to elucidate underlying biological processes and to support observed epidemiological trends in humans.
Most important findings
The review identifies strong associations between exposure to lead, cadmium, and copper and increased risk of infertility in both sexes. Cadmium, widely distributed in the environment, is linked to direct damage to the ovaries and testes, reduced sperm count, motility, and viability, as well as impaired oocyte maturation. It acts as a reproductive toxin by replacing zinc in enzymes and altering protein function, leading to oxidative stress and cytotoxicity. Lead exposure disrupts hormonal balance by interfering with calcium-mediated cellular activities and is associated with decreased sperm quality, impaired oocyte development, increased risk of miscarriage, and stunted fetal growth. Occupational and environmental exposures, such as working in lead mines or exposure to cigarette smoke, exacerbate these effects. Elevated copper levels, while copper is essential in trace amounts, are correlated with oxidative damage and sperm dysfunction at higher concentrations. The review highlights the impact of heavy metals on key microbiome-modulated processes (e.g., oxidative stress, inflammation) and notes that heavy metal exposure may alter the host's microbiome, which can further influence reproductive health outcomes.
Key implications
Clinicians should be aware of the significant impact that environmental and occupational exposures to lead, cadmium, and copper can have on reproductive health. The review supports incorporating environmental exposure histories into infertility assessments, particularly for patients with unexplained infertility or those with relevant occupational risks. The evidence also suggests that heavy metal-induced oxidative stress and endocrine disruption might be compounded or modulated by changes in the reproductive tract microbiome, indicating a potential avenue for future diagnostic and therapeutic interventions. Surveillance of heavy metal exposure, coupled with targeted interventions to reduce environmental risk, could improve fertility outcomes and inform public health strategies. Furthermore, the recognition of microbiome–heavy metal interactions opens the door to novel research on microbial biomarkers and microbiota-targeted therapies in infertility management.
Ospemifene for the treatment of menopausal vaginal dryness, a symptom of the genitourinary syndrome of menopause
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Ospemifene is an effective and safe treatment for menopausal vaginal dryness and dyspareunia, particularly in women with contraindications for estrogen therapy. It improves vaginal health without significantly affecting systemic hormone levels, providing an alternative treatment for genitourinary syndrome of menopause.
What was studied?
This article reviews the efficacy and safety of ospemifene for treating menopausal vaginal dryness, a symptom of the genitourinary syndrome of menopause (GSM). Ospemifene, a selective estrogen receptor modulator (SERM), has been shown to improve vaginal atrophy symptoms, particularly dryness and dyspareunia, in postmenopausal women. The article also highlights the benefits of ospemifene over other treatment options, including vaginal estrogen therapies and non-hormonal lubricants. Ospemifene's role in improving the quality of life for women suffering from GSM symptoms is examined, focusing on its impact on vaginal pH, cell composition, and sexual function.
Who was studied?
The study involved postmenopausal women suffering from moderate to severe symptoms of vulvovaginal atrophy (VVA) as part of the broader genitourinary syndrome of menopause (GSM). Participants were typically aged between 50 and 65 years and were recruited for several clinical trials. Women who participated in the studies had reported moderate to severe vaginal dryness, discomfort, and dyspareunia, all of which are prevalent symptoms of VVA. The study population included those with or without a uterus, and the trials focused on the safety and efficacy of ospemifene in improving these symptoms. The trials also included a variety of demographic factors such as body mass index (BMI) and hormonal therapy use.
Most important findings
The clinical trials assessed ospemifene's effects on several key symptoms of VVA, including vaginal dryness and dyspareunia. In the studies, ospemifene at doses of 60 mg daily demonstrated significant improvement in vaginal moisture and reduction in vaginal pH, which is often elevated in VVA. The treatment led to a dose-dependent increase in superficial vaginal epithelial cells and a reduction in parabasal cells, indicating a positive impact on vaginal health. Compared to placebo, ospemifene was found to significantly alleviate symptoms of vaginal dryness and dyspareunia, with patients reporting a marked improvement in sexual function, measured using the Female Sexual Function Index (FSFI). The most common side effects associated with ospemifene included hot flashes and urinary tract infections, but these were reported at lower frequencies than in placebo-treated groups.
Key implications
Ospemifene presents a promising alternative to traditional estrogen therapies for managing VVA in postmenopausal women, especially for those unable to use systemic or vaginal estrogen due to contraindications like breast cancer. This SERM offers localized treatment that targets the vaginal epithelium without significantly affecting systemic estrogen levels, making it a safer option for many women. Its efficacy in improving both objective and subjective measures of vaginal health is a significant advantage over non-hormonal therapies, such as moisturizers, which only offer temporary symptom relief. Given its favorable safety profile, including the absence of endometrial or breast cancer risks, ospemifene could become a standard treatment option for women with GSM symptoms, improving their quality of life. However, further studies examining the long-term effects and safety of ospemifene are necessary, particularly in populations with varying medical histories.
The role of probiotics in improving menstrual health in women with primary dysmenorrhoea
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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Three-month probiotic supplementation improved mental health and reduced NSAID reliance in women with primary dysmenorrhea, though it did not alter inflammatory cytokines or directly measure microbiome changes.
What was studied?
This randomized, double‑blind, placebo‑controlled trial evaluated whether three months of oral probiotic supplementation could improve menstrual health in women with primary dysmenorrhea. Investigators administered daily sachets containing six bacterial strains, Lactobacillus acidophilus BCMC 12130, L. casei subsp. BCMC 12313, L. lactis BCMC 12451, Bifidobacterium bifidum BCMC 02290, B. longum BCMC 02120, and B. infantis BCMC 02129—to one group and an inert placebo to another. They measured pain intensity (visual analog and verbal rating scales), quality of life (SF‑12v2 physical and mental health scores), frequency of NSAID use, and serum inflammatory cytokines before and after treatment.
Who was studied?
Seventy‑two premenopausal women aged 23–41 years with clinically confirmed primary dysmenorrhea at a Malaysian medical center enrolled in the study; 67 completed the trial. Researchers excluded participants with organic pelvic pathology, recent hormonal therapy, lactose intolerance, or allergy to study components. They maintained high compliance (>90%) through monthly follow‑ups and sachet counts. To conserve resources, they assayed inflammatory markers in serum from eight probiotic and six placebo participants selected at random.
Most important findings
Both groups experienced significant pain reduction and improved physical health over three cycles, but only the probiotic group showed a statistically significant gain in mental health. Probiotic recipients used fewer NSAIDs, suggesting reduced analgesic dependence, though this did not reach statistical significance. The trial detected no differences in IL‑6, IL‑8, or TNF‑α levels, and it did not assess shifts in gut microbial composition; thus, direct evidence of probiotic‑induced microbiome modulation remains unestablished.
Key implications
Clinicians may consider adjunctive probiotic therapy to enhance mental well‑being and potentially lower NSAID requirements in dysmenorrhea management, recognizing that objective anti‑inflammatory effects remain unproven. Future trials should include larger cohorts, non‑NSAID comparators, and direct microbiome profiling to elucidate how specific Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium strains influence estrogen metabolism, gut dysbiosis, and prostaglandin‑mediated pain pathways.
Hormone therapy for first-line management of menopausal symptoms: Practical recommendations
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) is one of the most effective treatments for women experiencing the symptoms of menopause, particularly vasomotor symptoms such as hot flashes and night sweats. But its benefits go beyond just symptom management. HRT can also play a key role in improving vaginal health by alleviating dryness and discomfort, which are common complaints among women in menopause. Additionally, it helps prevent bone loss, significantly reducing the risk of osteoporosis and fractures, which are more common after menopause. Despite its many benefits, HRT is not one-size-fits-all; it’s essential to tailor treatment based on individual health profiles, taking into account the risks like breast cancer, blood clots, and heart disease that come with prolonged use.
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This review sets a simple plan for menopausal hormone therapy first-line management, favors transdermal routes when risk exists, and backs local therapy for genitourinary symptoms with clear links to vaginal ecosystem health.
What was reviewed?
This review sets out menopausal hormone therapy as first-line management and gives clear, practical steps for safe symptom control in midlife. The authors explain how to match route, dose, and regimen to a woman’s risks and goals and describe oral, transdermal, and vaginal options and explain when to use each. They outline when to choose sequential or continuous combined regimens and how to time a switch to aim for amenorrhea. The review summarizes updated guidance after the early Women’s Health Initiative results and place strong weight on age and time since menopause. They describe how local vaginal therapy eases genitourinary syndrome of menopause and lowers urinary symptoms.
Who was reviewed?
The paper focuses on symptomatic peri- and postmenopausal women, especially those younger than 60 years or within 10 years of menopause. It covers women with obesity, insulin resistance, dyslipidemia, hypertension, smoking, and a personal or family history of venous thromboembolism. It guides care for women with prior hysterectomy who can use estrogen alone and for women who need a progestogen for endometrial protection. In addition, the review addresses women over 60 who continue therapy after careful review or who may start with local routes. It includes women with premature ovarian insufficiency who need earlier and longer replacement. The review provides steps to assess risk, choose a safe route, and adjust dose over time.
Most important findings
The authors support early initiation near menopause for the best balance of benefit and risk and oppose late initiation for primary prevention alone and favor transdermal estradiol when thrombotic or cerebrovascular risk exists because it avoids first-pass hepatic effects that can raise clot risk. They state that breast cancer risk with hormone therapy remains low in absolute terms and rises most with some combined regimens and longer use, while micronized progesterone or dydrogesterone may show a more favorable profile than medroxyprogesterone acetate. They explain that women with a uterus must receive adequate progestogen and may use a levonorgestrel intrauterine system to protect the lining and steady bleeding, which can help in obesity.
The review suggests sequential regimens in the transition and early postmenopause and a later move to continuous combined regimens to achieve amenorrhea. They advise that women over 60 who start therapy should often begin with transdermal or local routes and that vaginal estrogen or DHEA suits genitourinary syndrome of menopause. These local options improve vaginal dryness, dyspareunia, urgency, and post-coital cystitis and likely support a lactobacillus-dominant state and lower vaginal pH, which links to fewer urinary infections, although the review does not report taxa. They highlight the need for shared decisions, regular review, and lifestyle change alongside therapy.
Key implications
Clinicians should start with the woman’s goals and risks, aim to begin near menopause, and prefer transdermal estradiol when thrombotic, metabolic, or cerebrovascular risks exist and pair estrogen with an appropriate progestogen when the uterus is intact and consider a levonorgestrel intrauterine system for endometrial protection and bleeding control. Clinicians should address genitourinary syndrome of menopause with low-dose vaginal estrogen or DHEA to restore comfort and urinary health and record vaginal symptom relief and urinary tract infection events as proxy microbiome outcomes. These steps align symptom relief, safety, and vaginal ecosystem support in daily practice.
Elevated levels of whole blood nickel in a group of Sri Lankan women with endometriosis: a case control study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study identified elevated blood nickel levels in women with endometriosis, suggesting a potential role of nickel as a metalloestrogen in its pathogenesis.
What was studied?
This study investigated blood nickel and endometriosis by examining whether circulating levels of three metalloestrogens—nickel, cadmium, and lead—were associated with the presence of endometriosis in reproductive-age Sri Lankan women. The researchers aimed to determine whether elevated concentrations of these metals in whole blood might reflect an exposure pattern contributing to the accumulation of metals previously detected in ectopic endometrial tissue. Using highly sensitive analytic techniques, including Total Reflection X-ray Fluorescence and graphite furnace atomic absorption spectroscopy, the study quantified blood metal concentrations and evaluated their statistical relationship to surgically confirmed endometriosis. This work expands on prior findings showing these metals embedded in endometriotic lesions and attempts to clarify whether systemic metal burden may play a mechanistic or exposure-related role.
Who was studied?
The study enrolled 100 women of reproductive age undergoing laparoscopy or laparotomy at a major Sri Lankan hospital. Fifty women with visually confirmed endometriosis formed the case group, and fifty age-matched women without endometriosis served as controls. None were current smokers, minimising confounding from tobacco-related cadmium exposure. Both groups were similar in age and BMI, and indications for surgery among controls included dysmenorrhea, chronic pelvic pain, subfertility, or ovarian masses. All participants provided preoperative venous blood samples, which were processed under tightly controlled laboratory conditions with rigorous quality assurance to ensure high-precision trace metal measurement.
Most important findings
The key discovery was a significantly elevated geometric mean whole blood nickel concentration in women with endometriosis compared with controls. Nickel levels in cases averaged 2.6 μg/L, more than triple the 0.8 μg/L observed in controls. Cadmium and lead levels did not differ significantly, although cases showed slightly lower cadmium and slightly higher lead concentrations. Notably, blood nickel levels reported here fell within ranges considered nontoxic in general populations, yet the consistent elevation in cases suggests biologically relevant exposure or altered handling of nickel in affected women. Nickel’s known ability to activate estrogen receptors in vitro underscores its potential role as a metalloestrogen influencing ectopic tissue survival.
Metal
Cases (μg/L)
Controls (μg/L)
Statistical Significance
Nickel
2.6
0.8
Significant (P=0.016)
Cadmium
0.7
0.8
Not significant
Lead
11.0
6.9
Not significant
Interpretation
Elevated in endometriosis
Baseline levels
Nickel shows clear association
Key implications
These findings suggest that nickel exposure or retention may be associated with endometriosis, potentially through estrogen receptor activation or other endocrine-disrupting mechanisms. Although causality cannot be established from this study, the elevated systemic nickel burden aligns with the presence of nickel in ectopic lesions and contributes to the hypothesis that environmental metals may influence disease development. Future work should explore exposure sources, dose–response relationships, and mechanistic pathways linking trace metals to estrogen-dependent inflammatory disease.
Compositional and functional features of the female premenopausal and postmenopausal gut microbiota
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Menopause is linked to reduced gut microbiome diversity, loss of beneficial Firmicutes and Roseburia, and increased risk-associated taxa and metabolic pathways. These changes may contribute to higher metabolic and immune disease risk, highlighting the microbiome's potential as a therapeutic and biomarker target.
What was studied?
This original research article investigated compositional and functional differences in the gut microbiota between premenopausal and postmenopausal women using a metagenome-wide association study (MWAS). Shotgun metagenomic sequencing of fecal samples enabled the authors to compare not only the taxonomic diversity and abundance of gut microbes but also the metabolic modules and biochemical pathways associated with the gut microbiome in each group. The study aimed to clarify how menopause and the associated decline in endogenous estrogen affect the gut microbiome and its potential implications for metabolic and immune health risks in postmenopausal women. The research also explored how specific microbial taxa and their metabolic activities might contribute to disease risk profiles characteristic of postmenopausal status.
Who was studied?
The study cohort comprised 24 premenopausal and 24 postmenopausal women, carefully matched for age and body mass index (BMI) to control for confounding variables. All postmenopausal individuals experienced natural menopause and had not used antibiotics for at least one month prior to sample collection. Additional exclusion criteria included a history of chronic or current infection, malignancy, or recent antibiotic use. Clinical data collected included bone mineral density (BMD), blood lipid profiles, lifestyle, diet, and exercise habits. No significant differences were observed between the groups in these clinical and lifestyle factors, ensuring that the observed microbiome differences could be attributed primarily to menopausal status.
Most important findings
Postmenopausal women exhibited significantly reduced gut microbiome richness and diversity at the gene, species, and genus levels, as measured by Shannon index and taxon counts. Taxonomic shifts included depletion of Firmicutes and Roseburia species and enrichment of Bacteroidetes and the toluene-producing genus Tolumonas in postmenopausal women. Functionally, the pentose phosphate pathway, a key source of cellular antioxidant capacity, was more prevalent in premenopausal women, while metabolic modules involved in homocysteine and cysteine biosynthesis, glycolysis, and amino acid degradation were enriched in postmenopausal women. Notably, Tolumonas negatively correlated with BMD, suggesting a potential link with osteoporosis risk. The study also highlighted that higher homocysteine biosynthesis in the postmenopausal gut microbiome may contribute to increased cardiovascular risk. These compositional and functional shifts suggest that menopause leads to a gut microbial environment less supportive of antioxidant defense and potentially more conducive to metabolic and immune dysfunction.
Key implications
The findings underscore menopause-associated gut microbiome alterations as potential contributors to increased risks of metabolic, cardiovascular, and bone diseases in postmenopausal women. Reduced microbial diversity and depletion of beneficial taxa such as Roseburia may compromise host metabolism and immune function, while enrichment of taxa and pathways linked to harmful metabolites (e.g., homocysteine, toluene) may exacerbate disease risk. These insights suggest that the gut microbiome represents a promising therapeutic target for interventions (e.g., specific probiotics, dietary modulation, or fecal microbiota transplantation) aimed at improving metabolic and immune health outcomes in postmenopausal women. Moreover, identified microbial and functional signatures may serve as valuable biomarkers for risk stratification or monitoring of menopause-related disease progression.
Acupuncture for Primary Dysmenorrhea: A Potential Mechanism from an Anti-Inflammatory Perspective
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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This review details how acupuncture and related therapies reduce inflammatory mediators, cytokines, chemokines, and leukocytes, to relieve primary dysmenorrhea, and underscores the need for microbiome-focused research.
What was reviewed?
This review systematically examines the anti‐inflammatory mechanisms by which acupuncture and related therapies alleviate primary dysmenorrhea (PD). The authors integrate evidence from clinical trials, animal models, and mechanistic studies to explore how various forms of acupuncture, including manual needling, electroacupuncture (EA), moxibustion, acupoint catgut embedding (ACE), and transcutaneous electrical stimulation (TEAS/TENS), modulate inflammatory pathways implicated in menstrual pain.
Who was reviewed?
The review encompasses clinical RCTs of women with PD—as defined by cyclic menstrual pain without organic pathology—and preclinical rodent models of dysmenorrhea. Clinical studies span conditions such as chronic pelvic pain and IBS to illustrate acupuncture’s broader visceral analgesic effects, while animal experiments detail cytokine, chemokine, and leukocyte changes in PD models subjected to specific acupoint stimulation protocols.
Most important findings
Acupuncture and its variants consistently downregulate proinflammatory mediators—such as TNFα, IL‑1β, IL‑6, and NF‑κB activation—and reduce leukocyte infiltration (neutrophils, eosinophils, mast cells) in uterine and systemic tissues. EA at SP6/CV4 decreases serum TNFα and IL‑1, mitigating uterine contractions and pain behaviors in rats, while moxibustion lowers PGF2α and elevates β‑endorphin and NK cell activity. ACE inhibits NLRP3 inflammasome components (caspase‑1, IL‑18) and downregulates COX‑2 expression. TEAS/TENS studies suggest reductions in chemokines like CXCL8 and CCL2, although direct PD data remain sparse. Notably, none of the reviewed trials assess gut or uterine microbiome shifts, indicating a critical gap for microbiome–inflammation interactions in PD.
Key implications
By mapping how acupuncture attenuates key inflammatory cascades, this review equips clinicians to consider acupuncture as a targeted nonpharmacological intervention for PD. The absence of microbiome data highlights an opportunity to investigate the gut–uterine axis, exploring how microbial metabolites may modulate inflammatory responses and acupuncture efficacy. Future trials integrating microbiome profiling alongside inflammatory biomarkers could yield comprehensive signatures for personalized PD management.
Reducing Ovarian Cancer Mortality Through Early Detection: Approaches using Circulating Biomarkers
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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This review discusses liquid biopsy techniques for early ovarian cancer detection, focusing on circulating tumor cells, cell-free DNA, and extracellular vesicles. It highlights their potential to improve sensitivity, specificity, and prognosis prediction, providing a promising avenue for non-invasive cancer screening.
What was reviewed?
This review examined the current approaches for improving early detection of ovarian cancer, specifically focusing on the use of circulating biomarkers in liquid biopsies. It analyzed various molecular biomarkers, including circulating tumor cells (CTCs), cell-free DNA (cfDNA), and extracellular vesicles (EVs), and their potential roles in early-stage detection, monitoring recurrence, and predicting treatment responses.
Who was reviewed?
This review focused on the current advancements and methodologies related to the detection of ovarian cancer using liquid-based biomarkers. It did not evaluate specific individuals or patient groups but instead examined various biomarker types such as circulating tumor cells (CTCs), cell-free DNA (cfDNA), and extracellular vesicles (EVs) as potential tools for early diagnosis and monitoring of ovarian cancer. The review assessed numerous studies and research findings on these biomarkers and their clinical application, exploring how these molecular tools could improve ovarian cancer detection, prognosis, and treatment response.
What were the most important findings?
The review highlights the limitations of current ovarian cancer detection methods, such as CA125 and transvaginal ultrasonography, which have not significantly improved mortality rates. The main findings suggest that liquid-based biomarkers, particularly CTCs, cfDNA, and EVs, show promising potential for early detection. The use of CTCs, though not yet effective for early detection in ovarian cancer, is associated with prognosis and survival in advanced cases. More promising, however, are the advancements in the analysis of cfDNA and EVs, including their use for detecting mutations, methylation patterns, and tumor-associated markers like EpCAM and CD24, which could aid in distinguishing ovarian cancer from benign conditions. These biomarkers also hold the potential for identifying the tumor's genetic landscape, which could significantly improve early diagnosis and targeted therapy.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The findings underscore the need for more effective, non-invasive diagnostic tools for ovarian cancer. Liquid biopsy technologies that analyze CTCs, cfDNA, and EVs offer a less invasive alternative to traditional tissue biopsies, with the potential for earlier detection and continuous monitoring of treatment efficacy and recurrence. The review suggests that these technologies could be integrated into clinical practice for improving ovarian cancer screening, particularly through enhanced sensitivity and specificity in identifying early-stage disease. The review also calls for further clinical validation to demonstrate these biomarkers' diagnostic and prognostic value, as well as the need for new techniques to improve detection sensitivity for rare biomarkers.
POI: Premature Ovarian Insufficiency/Pregnancy or Infertility?
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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This case report describes a young woman with premature ovarian insufficiency who, despite infertility and diagnostic confirmation of POI, experienced spontaneous conception. The case underscores the unpredictable nature of POI and the need for ongoing investigation into its etiologies, including possible microbiome links.
What was studied?
This letter to the editor presents a detailed clinical case of premature ovarian insufficiency (POI) in a young woman, highlighting the diagnostic challenges, clinical course, and a rare instance of spontaneous pregnancy following a POI diagnosis. While primarily focused on the clinical aspects of POI, the article references current understanding of POI etiopathology, noting the associations with autoimmune diseases, chromosomal abnormalities, and environmental factors. The letter underscores the unpredictable nature of ovarian function in POI, stressing the possibility of intermittent ovarian activity and spontaneous conception even after apparent ovarian failure.
Who was studied?
The subject of this report is a 28-year-old woman presenting with primary infertility of 16 months’ duration, with a background of regular menses and no prior relevant medical or surgical history. After unsuccessful attempts at conception via intrauterine insemination (IUI) and in vitro fertilization (IVF), she was diagnosed with POI based on laboratory findings (FSH >65 mIU/mL, low estradiol, and undetectable anti-Müllerian hormone). Despite being listed for oocyte donation, she experienced spontaneous resumption of menses and subsequently conceived, ultimately delivering a healthy child.
Most important findings
The case illustrates several key points regarding POI. First, the diagnosis is often complex, relying on a combination of clinical and laboratory criteria, and is frequently made after failed fertility treatments. The underlying causes of POI remain poorly defined but include genetic, autoimmune, and environmental contributors. The report describes the possibility of spontaneous ovarian function resumption and pregnancy in women previously diagnosed with POI, a phenomenon supported by literature but uncommon in clinical practice. From a microbiome perspective, although this case report does not directly investigate microbial associations, the referenced etiologies (autoimmune mechanisms and environmental triggers) are areas where the microbiome may exert influence, warranting further investigation into the role of gut or reproductive tract microbiota in the pathogenesis or reversibility of POI.
Key implications
Clinically, this case emphasizes the need for ongoing counseling regarding the potential for spontaneous ovarian activity and conception in women with POI, even post-diagnosis. It highlights the limitations of current POI diagnostic criteria and the unpredictable course of the disease. This unpredictability suggests that, in select cases, natural conception remains possible, underscoring the importance of individualized patient management. For future research and microbiome signature databases, the case reinforces the value of investigating immune and environmental factors, including the microbiome, as possible contributors to both POI onset and its occasional reversibility.
The influence of the gut microbiome on ovarian aging
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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This review examines the relationship between gut microbiota and ovarian aging, highlighting microbial dysbiosis as a key factor in ovarian function decline. It explores microbiota-based therapies like FMT to delay ovarian aging and discusses the role of dietary and pharmacological interventions.
What was studied?
This review explores the complex interaction between the gut microbiota and ovarian aging. It focuses on the role of gut microbiota dysbiosis in ovarian aging, premature ovarian insufficiency (POI), and menopause. The review discusses the bidirectional relationship between the ovaries and the gut microbiome, highlighting how changes in microbial composition may influence ovarian function and aging. The authors also examine emerging therapeutic strategies, such as fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT), probiotics, and anti-aging interventions that target the gut microbiota to preserve ovarian function and delay aging.
Who was studied?
This review discusses findings from both human and animal models, including premenopausal and postmenopausal women, as well as murine and zebrafish models. The focus is on understanding how the gut microbiota composition changes across different stages of ovarian aging, including natural menopause and POI. Several studies on animal models of ovarian aging and iatrogenic menopause (caused by surgery or chemotherapy) are included, which help to elucidate the mechanisms underlying the gut-ovary axis.
Most important findings
The review highlights significant shifts in the gut microbiota composition during ovarian aging. In particular, dysbiosis (microbial imbalance) is linked to ovarian dysfunction, with changes in the abundance of specific microbial groups such as Bacteroides, Firmicutes, and Prevotellaceae. Lower microbial diversity and an imbalance in short-chain fatty acid (SCFA) producers like Faecalibacterium and Butyricimonas were observed in postmenopausal women and in animal models of POI. The gut microbiota is shown to affect estrogen metabolism through microbial β-glucuronidase (gmGUS), influencing circulating estrogen levels. Fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) studies in mice revealed that young microbiota could reverse age-related ovarian damage, suggesting the therapeutic potential of microbiota-based interventions. Additionally, the review discusses the role of dietary interventions, such as caloric restriction (CR), in modulating the gut microbiota and delaying ovarian aging.
Key implications
The findings suggest that gut microbiota plays a significant role in the aging process of the ovaries, and its manipulation may offer a new strategy for combating ovarian aging and preserving fertility. The bidirectional interaction between the microbiota and ovarian function points to potential therapeutic avenues, such as probiotics, prebiotics, or FMT, to restore youthful ovarian function and delay menopause. These strategies could be integrated with other anti-aging interventions like CoQ10, melatonin, and resveratrol to enhance reproductive health and prevent ovarian-related diseases. However, more research is needed to establish the exact mechanisms and therapeutic potential of these interventions.
A systematic review of randomised clinical trials – The safety of vaginal hormones and selective estrogen receptor modulators for the treatment of genitourinary menopausal symptoms in breast cancer survivors
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Breast Cancer
Breast Cancer
Traditionally linked to genetic predispositions and environmental exposures, emerging evidence highlights the microbiome as a critical and underappreciated factor influencing breast cancer progression, immune response, and treatment outcomes.
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Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) is one of the most effective treatments for women experiencing the symptoms of menopause, particularly vasomotor symptoms such as hot flashes and night sweats. But its benefits go beyond just symptom management. HRT can also play a key role in improving vaginal health by alleviating dryness and discomfort, which are common complaints among women in menopause. Additionally, it helps prevent bone loss, significantly reducing the risk of osteoporosis and fractures, which are more common after menopause. Despite its many benefits, HRT is not one-size-fits-all; it’s essential to tailor treatment based on individual health profiles, taking into account the risks like breast cancer, blood clots, and heart disease that come with prolonged use.
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This review assesses the safety of vaginal hormones and SERMs in treating genitourinary menopausal symptoms in breast cancer survivors. It finds no significant rise in serum estrogen levels or an increased risk of breast cancer recurrence, but more extensive studies are needed to confirm these findings.
What was studied?
This systematic review focused on the safety of vaginal hormone therapies and selective estrogen receptor modulators (SERMs) for the treatment of genitourinary menopausal symptoms (GMS) in breast cancer survivors. It specifically aimed to evaluate the risks of breast cancer recurrence associated with these treatments, as well as any significant rise in serum estrogen levels following their use. The study assessed randomized clinical trials (RCTs) that tested vaginal estrogen therapies, dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA), and oral SERMs, all of which are used to manage menopausal symptoms, particularly those affecting the genitourinary system. The review also aimed to clarify the clinical safety of these therapies in the context of breast cancer, where concerns about estrogenic effects potentially increasing the risk of cancer recurrence are prevalent.
Who was studied?
The review included breast cancer survivors who were treated with various forms of hormone therapy to manage genitourinary menopausal symptoms. The studies selected for this review specifically focused on postmenopausal women, ages 18 and older, who had previously been diagnosed with breast cancer and were undergoing treatments such as vaginal estrogen therapies (e.g., estriol and estradiol) and dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) gel. Participants in these trials did not have any active breast cancer or recurrence but had been treated for early-stage breast cancer, often receiving tamoxifen or aromatase inhibitors (AIs) as part of their post-cancer endocrine therapy.
Most important findings
The systematic review found that none of the included studies specifically assessed breast cancer recurrence, a critical factor for these patients. However, among the studies observing for serious adverse effects, no increased incidence of breast cancer recurrence was reported. Additionally, studies did not observe a persistent or significant rise in serum estrogen levels following the use of vaginal estrogen products or DHEA gel. The reviewed RCTs demonstrated that while vaginal estrogen may cause transient elevations in estrogen levels, these levels did not remain elevated over time, minimizing the risk of systemic absorption that could impact breast cancer recurrence. One study found transient estrogen rises in serum levels, but no significant long-term effects were noted. The review highlighted the need for larger RCTs with longer follow-up periods to better assess the potential risks of these therapies in breast cancer survivors.
Key implications
The findings suggest that vaginal estrogen and DHEA gel may be viable options for managing genitourinary menopausal symptoms in breast cancer survivors, as long as serum estrogen levels do not rise significantly or persistently. These therapies appear to be relatively safe with regard to breast cancer recurrence, based on current evidence, although more robust clinical trials with longer follow-up are needed. Given the complex relationship between hormonal treatments and cancer recurrence risk, clinicians should consider these findings carefully, especially in patients undergoing aromatase inhibitor therapy. While the review supports the use of vaginal estrogen as a second-line treatment for severe genitourinary symptoms in breast cancer survivors, it calls for more comprehensive trials to provide clearer evidence on long-term safety.
The gut microbiota in menopause: Is there a role for prebiotic and probiotic solutions?
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Menopause alters gut microbiota composition and estrogen metabolism, contributing to symptoms and disease risks. Prebiotic and probiotic interventions show promise for symptom relief and metabolic health improvement.
What was reviewed?
This review article explores the role of the gut microbiota in menopause and evaluates the potential of prebiotic and probiotic interventions as therapeutic strategies for managing menopausal symptoms. It summarizes current evidence on how the menopausal transition influences gut microbial diversity and composition, especially with sex hormone fluctuations, and how these microbial changes may contribute to common menopause-related conditions such as metabolic disorders, osteoporosis, inflammation, and cognitive decline.
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesizes data from a wide range of studies, including human observational cohorts, animal models, and clinical trials involving peri- and postmenopausal women. It covers studies investigating the gut microbiota composition across different menopausal stages and examines interventions with prebiotics and probiotics designed to modulate the microbiome in menopausal populations. Additionally, it includes mechanistic insights from rodent models and discusses potential translational applications for human health.
Most important findings
Menopause induces significant shifts in gut microbiota characterized by decreased diversity and a shift towards a composition resembling that of age-matched men, including reductions in beneficial bacteria like Roseburia and Lachnospira and increases in potentially detrimental taxa such as Bacteroidetes and Tolumonas. These microbial changes correlate with altered estrogen metabolism through the estrobolome, a collection of bacterial genes encoding β-glucuronidase and sulfatase enzymes that reactivate estrogens, impacting systemic estrogen levels and menopausal symptoms.
Emerging evidence indicates that gut dysbiosis during menopause may play a significant role in driving increased intestinal permeability, chronic systemic inflammation, and metabolic disturbances. Various prebiotic fibers, such as flaxseed and soybean fiber, and specific probiotic strains, including Lactobacillus acidophilus, L. gasseri, and L. rhamnosus, have demonstrated potential in alleviating menopausal symptoms. These interventions appear to work by enhancing gut microbial diversity, strengthening intestinal barrier function, modulating systemic inflammatory responses, and influencing estrogen metabolism. Collectively, these findings suggest that targeting the gut microbiota may offer a promising adjunct or alternative approach to managing menopause-associated health challenges.
Key implications
This review highlights the gut microbiota as an important and potentially modifiable factor influencing a wide range of menopause-associated health challenges. Accumulating evidence suggests that targeted modulation of the gut microbiome through prebiotic and probiotic interventions offers a promising non-hormonal therapeutic strategy to alleviate menopausal symptoms and manage related metabolic, inflammatory, and psychological conditions. However, to translate these findings into effective clinical practice, future research should prioritize elucidating the underlying causal mechanisms linking gut microbial alterations to menopausal health outcomes. In addition, there is a critical need to identify specific microbial strains, functional pathways, or metabolites that mediate these beneficial effects. Developing personalized, evidence-based microbiome-targeted therapies could ultimately enhance long-term health, reduce disease risk, and improve the overall quality of life for menopausal women.
Pelvic inflammatory disease: a family practice perspective
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) is a complex interplay between pathogens, immune responses, and microbial communities. As research continues to uncover the microbiome's role in reproductive health, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as probiotics, prebiotics, and transplants are redefining how we prevent and treat PID. This page dives deep into these innovations, offering a glimpse into the future of personalized, biologically informed women’s healthcare.
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Family practice perspectives highlight challenges diagnosing PID, advocating enhanced clinical suspicion, multi-antibiotic treatment adherence, and regular screening for asymptomatic infections to minimize severe reproductive complications such as infertility and ectopic pregnancies.
What was reviewed?
The paper reviewed key aspects of pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) management from the perspective of family practice physicians. The author assessed diagnostic accuracy, clinical presentations, and effective management strategies, focusing on risk factors, clinical criteria, diagnostic investigations, antimicrobial therapy, and prevention of PID, including asymptomatic forms linked to severe reproductive complications.
Who was reviewed?
This review examined family physicians' diagnostic and treatment practices for PID, evaluating the challenges encountered in the primary care setting. It synthesized available clinical data, expert guidelines, and recommendations to enhance diagnostic accuracy and improve treatment outcomes among women managed in outpatient family practice environments.
What were the most important findings?
This review highlighted several important insights into PID management. PID, primarily an infection of the upper genital tract involving pathogens such as Chlamydia trachomatis, Neisseria gonorrhoeae, anaerobic bacteria like Bacteroides, and aerobic bacteria such as Escherichia coli, poses diagnostic challenges due to its variable symptoms, ranging from mild discomfort to severe illness. A notable finding was the low diagnostic accuracy by clinical assessment alone, underscoring the necessity of adjunct diagnostic methods. Inflammatory markers such as erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) and C-reactive protein (CRP) significantly improved diagnostic certainty when positive. However, even with these markers, clinical diagnosis alone remains insufficient; thus, laparoscopy or endometrial biopsy is recommended for uncertain cases to enhance diagnostic precision.
The review underscored that many family physicians inadequately adhere to antibiotic treatment guidelines, often prescribing single antibiotics despite recommendations advocating combination therapy. Recommended antibiotic regimens consistently include doxycycline or tetracycline combined with other antibiotics like cefoxitin, ampicillin, or ceftriaxone to adequately cover common pathogens. Compliance with antibiotic regimens remains critical, especially among adolescents who may require hospitalization to ensure effective treatment completion. The review stressed that asymptomatic PID, often caused by Chlamydia trachomatis, is an important precursor to infertility and ectopic pregnancy. Therefore, the review strongly advocated screening and early treatment of sexually transmitted infections (STIs), particularly chlamydial infections, as an essential preventative measure.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The greatest implications involve the need for heightened clinical suspicion, better adherence to recommended multi-antibiotic treatments, improved diagnostic practices using biomarkers and laparoscopic confirmation when uncertainty exists, and proactive screening for asymptomatic infections. Emphasis on compliance and partner treatment to prevent recurrent infections also holds significant practical implications. Adopting these approaches in family practice will significantly reduce complications such as infertility, ectopic pregnancy, and chronic pelvic pain, thereby improving women's overall reproductive health outcomes.
Comparison of Gabapentin with Estrogen for treatment of hot flashes in post-menopausal women
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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This study demonstrates that gabapentin 300 mg/day is as effective as estrogen 0.625 mg/day for reducing hot flashes in post-menopausal women. It provides a viable non-hormonal alternative with fewer side effects, making it a good option for women unable or unwilling to take estrogen.
What was studied?
This study aimed to compare the effectiveness of gabapentin and estrogen in reducing the frequency and severity of hot flashes in post-menopausal women. The research included a clinical trial that randomized 100 post-menopausal women to receive either 100 mg/day or 300 mg/day of gabapentin, or 0.625 mg/day of conjugated estrogen for 12 weeks. The study measured the frequency and severity of hot flashes at baseline, 4 weeks, and 12 weeks of treatment to determine which treatment provided the greatest reduction in symptoms. The trial also assessed the side effects associated with each treatment, including gastrointestinal discomfort and other adverse effects.
Who was studied?
The study included 100 post-menopausal women between the ages of 45 and 65, all of whom had experienced moderate to severe hot flashes for at least 2 months. The women were recruited from outpatient clinics at Isfahan University Hospitals between April 2008 and February 2009. Exclusion criteria included a history of cardiovascular, neurological, liver, gallbladder, or chronic renal diseases, as well as those who had been on estrogen or gabapentin therapy in the previous 3 months. The study population was homogenous, consisting of white, married, non-smoking women with no concurrent non-hormonal treatments for hot flashes.
Most important findings
The study found that both gabapentin 300 mg/day and conjugated estrogen 0.625 mg/day were equally effective in significantly reducing both the frequency and severity of hot flashes. After 12 weeks of treatment, the group receiving gabapentin 300 mg/day showed a 64.7% reduction in hot flash frequency and a 62.2% reduction in severity, while the estrogen group showed a 62.4% reduction in frequency and a 67.3% reduction in severity. In contrast, the group receiving gabapentin 100 mg/day showed only a 38.5% reduction in frequency and a 23.9% reduction in severity, which was significantly lower than both the higher dose of gabapentin and estrogen. The side effects were minimal in both gabapentin groups, with only mild gastrointestinal discomfort reported in 8% of patients in each gabapentin group.
Key implications
The findings suggest that gabapentin 300 mg/day is an effective alternative to estrogen for managing hot flashes in post-menopausal women, particularly for those who cannot take hormone therapy due to contraindications or preference. While estrogen remains the most commonly used and effective treatment for hot flashes, gabapentin offers a non-hormonal alternative with fewer severe side effects. The study supports the use of gabapentin for those who do not respond to other non-hormonal treatments or prefer to avoid estrogen, but it also highlights the need for further research to determine the long-term efficacy and safety of gabapentin at different dosages. Clinicians should consider starting with a low dose of gabapentin (300 mg/day) and carefully monitor for adverse effects, particularly in patients with a history of dizziness or other neurological symptoms.
The microbiome and ovarian cancer: insights, implications, and therapeutic opportunities
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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This review explores how the microbiome influences ovarian cancer development, progression, and treatment response. It emphasizes microbial dysbiosis as a factor in carcinogenesis and offers insights into therapeutic opportunities like probiotics and fecal microbiota transplantation to improve treatment outcomes.
What was studied?
This review explores the role of the microbiome in ovarian cancer, with a focus on how microbial communities in the female reproductive and gastrointestinal tracts contribute to carcinogenesis and affect treatment responses. The paper investigates the mechanisms through which the microbiome influences ovarian cancer development, including immune modulation, DNA repair, inflammatory pathways, and estrogen metabolism. The authors also discuss how dysbiosis, an imbalance in microbial populations, can impact chemotherapy efficacy and contribute to cancer progression. Potential strategies to modulate the microbiome to improve treatment outcomes, such as diet, probiotics, and fecal microbiota transplantation, are also considered.
Who was studied?
The review incorporates data from both pre-clinical animal models and human studies involving ovarian cancer patients. It includes observational studies that track microbiome composition in ovarian cancer patients, particularly those with different stages and histological subtypes of cancer. The review also explores microbiome alterations in patients undergoing chemotherapy and other cancer treatments. Studies on animal models, particularly in mice, are used to illustrate how microbiome modulation impacts cancer progression and therapeutic efficacy.
Most important findings
The review identifies a clear link between microbial dysbiosis and ovarian cancer progression. One significant finding is that specific microbial populations in the female reproductive tract, such as the absence of Lactobacillus species, are associated with a higher risk of ovarian cancer. In contrast, the presence of certain bacteria like Akkermansia muciniphila and Bifidobacterium is linked to anti-tumor activity and improved treatment outcomes. The study highlights that microbial signatures in the gut microbiome, such as changes in Firmicutes and Bacteroidetes, may also influence ovarian cancer development. Additionally, the review suggests that the microbiome’s impact on cancer treatment can lead to changes in treatment efficacy and toxicity. Antibiotic use, which disrupts the gut microbiome, can reduce chemotherapy effectiveness, while supplementation with probiotics may help restore microbial balance and improve treatment outcomes.
Key implications
Understanding the microbiome’s role in ovarian cancer offers new avenues for improving diagnosis, prevention, and treatment strategies. The potential for microbiome-based biomarkers in early detection is highlighted, particularly in distinguishing between benign and malignant ovarian masses. Furthermore, therapeutic strategies that modulate the microbiome, such as probiotics, dietary changes, and fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT), could be explored to enhance the efficacy of chemotherapy and immunotherapy in ovarian cancer patients. Given the complexity of the microbiome and its influence on various cancer pathways, further research is necessary to identify specific microbial targets that could lead to personalized cancer therapies.
Complementary and Alternative Medicine for Menopause
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Mind-body therapies like hypnosis effectively reduce menopausal hot flashes; natural products and whole-system CAM approaches show mixed evidence. More high-quality research is needed.
What was reviewed?
This comprehensive critical review examined the effectiveness and safety of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) interventions for managing menopausal symptoms. It focused on mind-body practices, natural products, and whole-system approaches such as traditional Chinese medicine and acupuncture. The review synthesized evidence from randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and systematic reviews published through early 2017, aiming to clarify CAM's role in alleviating vasomotor symptoms (VMS), mood disturbances, sexual dysfunction, sleep problems, and other common menopausal complaints.
Who was reviewed?
The review encompassed a diverse cohort of menopausal and postmenopausal women, including healthy individuals and breast cancer survivors, drawn from multiple RCTs across various countries. Participants typically experienced vasomotor symptoms, mood disorders, sleep disruption, and quality-of-life impairments. The literature included trials with sample sizes ranging from small pilot studies to larger RCTs, focusing on CAM modalities used either as standalone treatments or adjuncts to conventional therapies.
Most important findings
The review identified that mind-body interventions, particularly hypnosis, consistently demonstrated clinically significant reductions in hot flash frequency and severity, with some studies showing up to 74% reduction in subjective hot flashes. Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) and relaxation techniques showed potential benefits in reducing distress and improving quality of life but were less effective in decreasing hot flash frequency. Mindfulness-based stress reduction and yoga may alleviate psychological symptoms and improve sleep quality but lack strong evidence for vasomotor symptom reduction.
Among natural products, evidence was mixed and inconclusive. Black cohosh showed inconsistent benefits, with some studies indicating no significant effect on menopausal symptoms, while combined preparations with other herbs appeared more promising. Phytoestrogens (soy, red clover) displayed variable results, often failing to achieve clinically meaningful improvements in vasomotor symptoms. Other supplements like vitamin E and evening primrose oil lacked robust evidence for efficacy.
Key implications
This review supports the use of mind-body interventions, especially hypnosis, as effective and safe CAM options for managing vasomotor and psychological menopausal symptoms. Other CAM therapies show potential but require further rigorous trials with standardized protocols to establish efficacy and safety. Healthcare providers should actively discuss CAM use with patients to provide integrative care and reduce risks from unregulated treatments. Incorporating microbiome-focused research may enhance understanding of CAM mechanisms and guide personalized therapeutic strategies for menopause.
Contraceptive potential of Hibiscus rosa-sinensis (Linn.)
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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Hibiscus rosa-sinensis shows potent antifertility effects through antiovulatory, antiimplantation, and antispermatogenic mechanisms in animal studies, supporting its development as a safe, natural contraceptive pending further research.
What was reviewed?
This review article provides a detailed update on the contraceptive potential of Hibiscus rosa-sinensis (Linn.), a widely cultivated ornamental shrub belonging to the Malvaceae family. The article focuses on the pharmacological effects of the plant’s extracts—primarily from flowers, leaves, stems, and roots—with an emphasis on their antifertility properties in both male and female animal models. It consolidates experimental findings on the antiovulatory, antiimplantation, androgenic, and antispermatogenic activities of various extracts and highlights the mechanisms by which H. rosa-sinensis interferes with reproductive processes. The review also discusses traditional medicinal uses of the plant in reproductive health and outlines the need for further research to develop standardized herbal contraceptives.
Who was reviewed?
The review draws on numerous preclinical studies conducted mostly on albino rats and mice, with extracts tested at various doses and routes of administration. Both male and female animals were used to assess the reproductive effects, including spermatogenesis suppression in males and estrous cycle disruption or implantation inhibition in females. Some studies also evaluated effects on reproductive organ weights, hormone levels, and histopathology. Limited clinical data, mainly from small trials or ethnomedical records, were referenced regarding contraceptive efficacy and safety in humans. The review includes research conducted across different seasons and geographical locations to account for phytochemical variation.
Most important findings
Evidence shows that extracts from H. rosa-sinensis flowers and roots possess strong contraceptive activities. In males, flower extracts reduce sperm count and motility, induce testicular degeneration, and modify androgenic parameters, suggesting antispermatogenic and androgenic effects. Female animals treated with flower or root extracts exhibit disrupted estrous cycles, ovarian follicular atresia, and reduced uterine and ovarian weights, consistent with antiovulatory and antiestrogenic actions. Post-coital antifertility effects have been demonstrated by inhibition of blastocyst implantation and luteolysis, accompanied by altered progesterone levels and uterine biochemical changes. The antifertility effects are dose-dependent and reversible, indicating potential for safe contraceptive development. Traditional uses support these pharmacological findings, with historical applications in controlling fertility and gynecological disorders.
Key implications
This updated review reinforces Hibiscus rosa-sinensis as a promising candidate for natural contraceptive development. Its multifaceted antifertility actions affecting both male and female reproductive physiology could address limitations of current synthetic contraceptives by offering fewer side effects and improved acceptability. Nonetheless, significant gaps remain, including the need for standardized extraction methods, identification of active constituents, comprehensive toxicity evaluations, and well-designed human clinical trials. Addressing these areas could enable translation of this plant’s contraceptive potential into practical, safe, and effective herbal contraceptive products, particularly valuable in resource-limited settings.
Microbiology profile in women with pelvic inflammatory disease in relation to IUD use
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) is a complex interplay between pathogens, immune responses, and microbial communities. As research continues to uncover the microbiome's role in reproductive health, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as probiotics, prebiotics, and transplants are redefining how we prevent and treat PID. This page dives deep into these innovations, offering a glimpse into the future of personalized, biologically informed women’s healthcare.
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This study identifies microbial differences in women with PID based on IUD use, highlighting a higher presence of anaerobic bacteria in IUD users and an increased risk of PID complications. These findings emphasize the need for careful monitoring of IUD users and further research into the microbiome’s role in PID development.
What was studied?
This study focused on the microbial profile of women with pelvic inflammatory disease (PID), in relation to intrauterine device (IUD) use. The researchers conducted a case-control study involving 51 women diagnosed with acute PID and 50 healthy women as controls. Endocervical specimens were collected from both groups and analyzed for microbial content to determine whether IUD use influences the microbial environment in the female genital tract and increases the risk of PID. The study aimed to compare the microbial characteristics of PID in IUD users versus non-users, with a focus on anaerobic and aerobic bacteria.
Who was studied?
The study involved two groups of women: 51 women diagnosed with acute PID, and 50 healthy women who served as controls. The women in the PID group had been admitted to the hospital with confirmed PID, while the control group was made up of healthy women attending outpatient gynecological checkups. The study further divided both groups into subgroups based on whether they used an IUD. Women with a history of IUD use were compared to those without IUDs to analyze any differences in microbial profiles and the risk of PID development.
What were the most important findings?
The study found significant differences in the microbial profiles of women with PID who used IUDs compared to those who did not. Specifically, IUD users with PID had significantly higher levels of Fusobacteria and Peptostreptococcus compared to non-IUD users with PID. These anaerobic bacteria were found more frequently in IUD users and were associated with both the development and complications of PID. Additionally, the presence of combinations of several anaerobic or aerobic microbes in the endocervix was linked to a higher risk of PID, especially among IUD users. The study also found that long-term use of IUDs appeared to increase the risk of complicated PID, as evidenced by the increased presence of multiple microbial species. There were no significant differences in the frequency of Neisseria gonorrhoeae or Chlamydia trachomatis infections between the two groups, suggesting that the microbiological etiology of PID in IUD users might involve different pathogens, particularly anaerobes.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The implications of this study are significant for understanding the role of IUDs in the development and complications of PID. The findings suggest that IUD use may promote an environment conducive to the growth of anaerobic bacteria, which can lead to an increased risk of PID and its complications, particularly in women with multiple microbial infections. Clinicians should be aware of the potential risks associated with IUDs, particularly in women with a history of PID or those at higher risk of infection. This study underscores the importance of monitoring microbial profiles in IUD users and suggests that long-term use may require closer surveillance and possibly different treatment protocols for PID. The study also emphasizes the need for further research into the interactions between IUDs and the vaginal microbiome to better understand the mechanisms through which IUDs may contribute to PID.
The Application of Complementary and Alternative Medicine in Polycystic Ovary Syndrome Infertility
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is a common endocrine disorder that affects women of reproductive age, characterized by irregular menstrual cycles, hyperandrogenism, and insulin resistance. It is often associated with metabolic dysfunctions and inflammation, leading to fertility issues and increased risk of type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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This review summarizes clinical and mechanistic evidence for complementary and alternative medicine in PCOS infertility, highlighting TCM, acupuncture, nutrient supplementation, and lifestyle interventions as effective, safe adjunct therapies with potential microbiome-mediated benefits.
What was reviewed?
This comprehensive review article examines the current clinical evidence and mechanistic insights for complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) approaches in the management of infertility associated with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS). The review synthesizes findings from clinical trials, animal studies, and mechanistic research to evaluate the safety, efficacy, and potential mechanisms of traditional Chinese medicine (TCM), acupuncture (including electroacupuncture, moxibustion, and related modalities), nutrient supplementation (vitamins and trace elements), and lifestyle interventions such as diet, exercise, Tai Chi, yoga, and Qigong. The review emphasizes both the clinical outcomes and the biological pathways involved, particularly those relevant to metabolic, endocrine, and inflammatory regulation.
Who was reviewed?
The article analyzes a broad spectrum of studies, including randomized controlled trials (RCTs), cohort studies, and preclinical animal research. The reviewed populations primarily consist of reproductive-age women diagnosed with PCOS and infertility, as well as animal models (mainly rats) induced with PCOS-like phenotypes for mechanistic studies. The included studies span diverse geographic regions, with a heavy emphasis on Chinese clinical practice and research, but also incorporate international evidence on CAM use in PCOS. Subpopulations considered include patients with insulin resistance, obesity, or poor ovarian response, and studies often include comparison groups receiving conventional Western medical therapy.
Most important findings
The review identifies strong evidence that CAM modalities, particularly TCM herbal formulas and acupuncture, can improve reproductive and metabolic outcomes in women with PCOS-related infertility. Key TCM monomers such as berberine, cryptotanshinone, and quercetin, as well as compound prescriptions like Liu Wei Di Huang, Gui Zhi Fu Ling, Shou Tai Pill, and Zi Shen Yu Tai Pill, demonstrate efficacy in clinical trials by improving insulin resistance (IR), regulating sex hormone levels, reducing inflammation, and promoting follicle development. Several studies report that these interventions also modulate the gut microbiome and metabolic pathways (e.g., PI3K/AKT/mTOR, IRS-1/PI3K/GLUT4), suggesting a microbiome-endocrine-immune axis relevant to PCOS pathophysiology.
Notably, some studies link improvements in insulin sensitivity and reduction in inflammatory markers to alterations in the intestinal flora, providing a basis for further microbiome signatures research. Nutrient supplementation (vitamins D, E, and trace elements) and lifestyle modifications (weight loss, exercise, Tai Chi, yoga) also offer measurable benefits in ovulation, metabolic parameters, and psychological well-being.
Key implications
For clinicians, this review supports the integration of CAM as adjuncts to conventional fertility treatments for PCOS, particularly in patients with metabolic disturbances, poor response to ovulation induction, or those seeking alternatives due to adverse reactions to standard therapies. The mechanistic evidence for microbiome involvement highlights new avenues for personalized medicine and database development of microbial signatures associated with improved reproductive outcomes. While the safety profile for most CAM interventions is favorable, the review calls for greater standardization, larger-scale RCTs, and rigorous monitoring of potential adverse effects. Overall, CAM offers a promising, multifaceted approach to improve fertility outcomes and quality of life in PCOS, meriting further clinical adoption and research.
User Outcomes for an App-Delivered Hypnosis Intervention for Menopausal Hot Flashes: Retrospective Analysis.
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal hot flashes are one of the most common and disruptive symptoms that women experience during the transition to menopause. Characterized by sudden sensations of heat, sweating, and flushing, hot flashes can significantly affect a woman’s quality of life, causing sleep disturbances, mood swings, and even long-term health consequences. Understanding the complex mechanisms behind hot flashes, as well as the role of microbiome-targeted therapies, offers new avenues for improving menopausal health.
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The study assessed the effectiveness of the Evia app, a smartphone-based hypnotherapy intervention, in reducing hot flash frequency and severity in menopausal women.
What was studied?
The study aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of an app-delivered hypnosis intervention, specifically the Evia app, for reducing the frequency and severity of hot flashes in menopausal women. Participants used the app, which included a five-week program of daily tasks such as educational readings, hypnotic inductions, and hot flash tracking. The app utilized audio-recorded hypnosis with imagery to induce a feeling of coolness, targeting both daytime and nighttime hot flashes. The study focused on the impact of this non-hormonal, non-pharmacological approach in improving hot flash outcomes.
Who was studied?
The study involved 410 women who downloaded and used the Evia app between November 6, 2021, and February 5, 2024. Participants were required to report experiencing at least three daily hot flashes at baseline and to complete at least one hot flash diary log. The women were divided into two groups: one group reported both daily hot flashes and night sweats, while the second group reported only daily hot flashes. These women varied in their menopausal stage, with some using hormone therapy and others not, providing a diverse sample to assess the efficacy of the app.
Most important findings
The results showed a significant reduction in the frequency of hot flashes. Among the women who experienced both hot flashes and night sweats, 76.3% reported a clinically significant reduction of at least 50% in daily hot flashes. In the group with only daily hot flashes, 56.8% of participants experienced a similar reduction. Additionally, both groups showed a significant decrease in hot flash severity. The study highlighted that the more frequently participants used the Evia app, the greater the reduction in hot flash frequency, although this correlation was small.
Key implications
The findings suggest that app-delivered hypnosis can be an effective, non-hormonal alternative for managing menopausal hot flashes, providing a promising tool for women who prefer non-pharmacological treatments. This approach increases access to hypnotherapy, especially for those who face barriers to in-person therapy, such as geographical limitations, cost, or time constraints. While further randomized controlled trials are needed to confirm these results, the study demonstrates the potential for mobile health interventions to improve women's quality of life during menopause.
Epidermiological markers in pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) among the women of reproductive age group
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) is a complex interplay between pathogens, immune responses, and microbial communities. As research continues to uncover the microbiome's role in reproductive health, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as probiotics, prebiotics, and transplants are redefining how we prevent and treat PID. This page dives deep into these innovations, offering a glimpse into the future of personalized, biologically informed women’s healthcare.
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This study identifies key socio-demographic factors associated with PID in women of reproductive age, highlighting the need for better education, healthcare access, and early intervention. It underscores the importance of targeting high-risk groups, including young, uneducated, and economically disadvantaged women, for improved reproductive health outcomes.
What was studied?
This study examined the epidemiological markers associated with pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) in women of reproductive age in the Akola-Washim city area, Maharashtra, India. The researchers analyzed data collected from 611 women diagnosed with PID over a three-year period (2009-2012). The primary goal was to explore the socio-demographic, reproductive, and lifestyle factors that may contribute to the prevalence of PID. The study utilized medical records and personal interviews to collect comprehensive data, which was then processed statistically to identify significant associations with PID risk. By examining variables like age, marital status, education, economic status, occupation, and reproductive history, the study aimed to identify patterns that could inform better public health strategies for preventing and managing PID.
Who was studied?
The study involved 611 women diagnosed with PID who were recruited from both government and private hospitals in the Akola-Washim area. The women were of reproductive age and were diagnosed with PID either based on clinical symptoms or through laboratory confirmation. The demographic information, including age, marital status, education, occupation, and economic status, was collected through hospital records and personal interviews. The sample population predominantly included women from rural areas and from various socio-economic backgrounds, with a focus on women from the Below Poverty Line (BPL) sector. This study sought to determine how various socio-demographic and health-related factors influenced the incidence of PID in this specific region.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed that several socio-demographic and health-related factors are significantly associated with PID risk. Women aged 20-25 years had the highest incidence of PID, followed by teenagers. Most of the women diagnosed with PID were married (86.08%), highlighting the link between sexual activity and infection. Additionally, uneducated women (80.03%) and those from lower economic backgrounds (62.02%) had a higher incidence of PID, suggesting that lack of knowledge about sexual health, hygiene, and reproductive care is a contributing factor. The study also identified a higher prevalence of PID among overweight women (48.28%) and those residing in rural areas (64.97%). Women with a history of ectopic pregnancies (60.39%) and habitual miscarriages (55.97%) were more likely to have PID. These findings underscore the role of education, economic status, and access to healthcare in the prevention of PID.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study has important public health implications, especially for developing strategies to reduce PID incidence and improve women’s reproductive health. The findings indicate that PID is more common in socio-economically disadvantaged groups, emphasizing the need for targeted education and healthcare interventions for young, uneducated, and economically disadvantaged women. Public health programs should focus on improving awareness about the risks of PID and the importance of early treatment, especially in rural areas. The study also highlights the importance of improving access to gynecological care and providing healthcare services that cater to the needs of working women, particularly in low-income settings. Future research should aim to confirm these findings through larger, more diverse studies and explore further preventive measures, particularly for high-risk groups.
The Gut Microbiome in Aging and Ovarian Cancer
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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This review examines how the aging gut microbiome affects ovarian cancer progression. It highlights microbial dysbiosis as a common feature in both aging and cancer, with implications for novel therapeutic strategies like probiotics and fecal microbiota transplantation to improve treatment outcomes.
What was studied?
This review explores the relationship between the gut microbiome, aging, and ovarian cancer. It highlights the impact of aging on the gut microbiota and its potential role in the progression of ovarian cancer. The review examines how microbial dysbiosis, particularly in phyla such as Firmicutes, Bacteroidetes, and Proteobacteria, is associated with both aging and ovarian cancer. It also delves into the interplay between the gut microbiome and ovarian cancer treatments, such as chemotherapy, and their effects on treatment outcomes.
Who was studied?
The review includes data from studies involving ovarian cancer patients, both in pre- and post-treatment stages, as well as healthy control subjects. Additionally, it references animal models, specifically mice, to understand the mechanistic relationship between the gut microbiome and ovarian cancer progression. It also explores the influence of aging by comparing microbial data from individuals across various age groups, highlighting the changes in the gut microbiome that accompany aging and how these changes might influence cancer risk and prognosis.
Most important findings
Key findings from the review indicate that both aging and ovarian cancer lead to shifts in the gut microbiome, particularly in the levels of certain microbial taxa. As individuals age, the abundance of beneficial bacteria, such as Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium, tends to decrease, while proinflammatory bacteria from the Proteobacteria phylum, like Escherichia species, increase. These same microbial shifts are observed in ovarian cancer patients, suggesting a link between gut dysbiosis and cancer progression. Additionally, Ruminococcaceae, a family of bacteria important for short-chain fatty acid production, tends to decrease in both aging and ovarian cancer, which may contribute to chronic inflammation and cancer development. Interestingly, the review notes that aging and ovarian cancer share common microbial alterations, but the effects of age on the microbiome appear to have a more significant impact on ovarian cancer outcomes, especially regarding immune modulation and inflammation.
Key implications
The review suggests that understanding the relationship between the gut microbiome, aging, and ovarian cancer could lead to novel therapeutic approaches. Modulating the gut microbiome through interventions such as probiotics or fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) could potentially improve cancer treatment outcomes, particularly in elderly ovarian cancer patients. Moreover, early identification of microbiome signatures in aging populations may help in predicting ovarian cancer risk and tailoring personalized therapies. However, the review also highlights the need for further research to establish causal links between microbial dysbiosis and cancer progression and to refine therapeutic strategies based on microbiome modulation.
Correlation of Heavy Metal Content in the Blood of Patients with Ovarian Cancer by Place of Residence
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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This study explores how the concentration of heavy metals, particularly zinc and copper, in the blood of ovarian cancer patients correlates with their recurrence-free survival. It highlights the potential of these metals as biomarkers for prognosis and suggests environmental factors play a role in cancer outcomes.
What was studied?
This study investigates the correlation between heavy metal content in the blood of patients with ovarian cancer and their place of residence. It specifically looks at the relationship between the levels of chromium, lead, cadmium, copper, and zinc in the blood and how these correlate with the recurrence-free survival rates of ovarian cancer patients. The research also explores how variations in heavy metal exposure, based on geographic location, might influence ovarian cancer prognosis and suggests the importance of considering these environmental factors in cancer treatment.
Who was studied?
The study analyzed 127 patients diagnosed with ovarian cancer at various stages (I-IV). The patients were divided based on their place of residence within the Ivano-Frankivsk region of Ukraine, which included districts like Ivano-Frankivsk, Kalush, Kolomyia, and Nadvirna. The study assessed blood samples to determine the concentration of various heavy metals and followed up on the recurrence-free survival of the patients over time, relating these findings to their geographic location and metal content in the blood.
Most important findings
The study found that there was a significant correlation between the zinc content in the blood of ovarian cancer patients and their place of residence. Patients living in Ivano-Frankivsk and Kalush districts, where zinc levels were higher, showed longer durations of recurrence-free survival. The highest levels of zinc and copper were associated with a more favorable prognosis, indicating a protective effect. However, no significant correlation was found between the content of chromium, lead, or cadmium in the blood and recurrence-free survival. This suggests that zinc and copper could serve as potential markers for ovarian cancer prognosis, while the role of other heavy metals requires further investigation.
Key implications
The findings suggest that monitoring the levels of certain heavy metals, particularly zinc and copper, in ovarian cancer patients could help in predicting their prognosis and tailoring individualized supportive therapies. The study also highlights the importance of considering environmental factors, such as geographic location and heavy metal exposure, in cancer treatment. While further research is necessary to confirm the role of zinc and copper, these findings offer new insights into how environmental factors may influence cancer progression and outcomes. This study advocates for a more personalized approach to ovarian cancer treatment, incorporating the impact of heavy metals and environmental exposure.
Life-course origins of the ages at menarche and menopause
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menarche
Menarche
Menarche marks the first occurrence of menstruation, signaling a pivotal moment in a young girl's transition to womanhood. Understanding this process helps to shed light on the hormonal, physical, and emotional changes that accompany puberty. Explore the importance of menarche, factors that influence its timing, and how it shapes women's health throughout their lives.
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A comprehensive review of evidence on the determinants and health implications of ages at menarche and menopause, highlighting their complex, independent origins and the influence of life-course genetic, environmental, and socioeconomic factors. No consistent direct association was found between the timing of menarche and menopause.
What was reviewed?
This comprehensive review examined the life-course origins and determinants of the ages at menarche (onset of first menstruation) and menopause (end of reproductive function) in women. The authors synthesized evidence from developmental biology, epidemiology, nutrition, demography, sociology, and psychology to explore the patterns, trends, and associations between these two reproductive milestones. The review particularly focused on the possible relationship between the timing of menarche and menopause, and considered the influence of genetic, epigenetic, hormonal, environmental, socioeconomic, nutritional, and psychosocial factors across a woman’s life course. The article also discussed implications for chronic disease risk, quality of life, and public health, and highlighted methodological challenges and recommendations for future research.
Who was reviewed?
The review encompassed a wide array of studies, including population-based cohorts, cross-sectional surveys, and case-control studies from diverse geographic regions and ethnic groups. The included literature spanned women of varying ages, racial and ethnic backgrounds (notably non-Hispanic whites, non-Hispanic blacks, Hispanics, Asians, and others), and socioeconomic strata. Research subjects ranged from girls in childhood and adolescence to postmenopausal women, including special populations exposed to unique environmental or hormonal influences (e.g., women exposed to diethylstilbestrol in utero or those affected by famine). While the majority of genetic studies focused on non-Hispanic white women, the review also highlighted studies involving minority or underserved groups, though it noted a general lack of data for these populations.
Most important findings
The review found that both early and late ages at menarche and menopause are associated with significant health and psychosocial outcomes. Early menarche is linked to increased risks for premature death, breast and endometrial cancers, depression, cardiovascular and metabolic diseases, and adverse psychosocial outcomes (e.g., early smoking, early sexual activity, and teenage pregnancy). Late menarche is associated with depression and reduced bone mineral density. Early menopause confers higher risks for cardiovascular disease, osteoporosis, and premature mortality, whereas late menopause is associated with increased risks for hormone-related cancers but longer life expectancy. Crucially, the review reported no consistent or robust association between age at menarche and age at menopause. Among 36 studies, only ten found a significant direct relationship, two found an inverse relationship, and the remainder reported null findings. Genetic heritability estimates for both menarche and menopause are moderate (44–72%), but known genetic variants explain only a small fraction of the variance. Environmental, socioeconomic, and psychosocial factors, such as childhood nutrition, body mass index, early-life adversity, breastfeeding, and stress, exert significant influence on the timing of both events, but their effects are complex and often population-specific.
Emerging evidence suggests that early-life exposures, such as in utero hormonal disruptions, rapid postnatal growth, and adverse socioeconomic conditions, may set developmental trajectories affecting reproductive aging. Obesity, both in childhood and adulthood, is associated with earlier menarche and later menopause. Socioeconomic status (SES) impacts both menarche and menopause, but the direction and strength of these associations can differ by race/ethnicity and across life stages. Psychosocial stress, especially in childhood, may accelerate both menarche and menopause, potentially through endocrine and epigenetic mechanisms.
Key implications
For clinicians, this review underscores the importance of considering a woman’s full life-course context when evaluating reproductive aging and related health risks. The lack of a strong or consistent association between age at menarche and age at menopause suggests that these events are influenced by partly independent mechanisms, with cumulative exposures over the life course playing critical roles. Interventions aimed at optimizing early-life nutrition, reducing childhood adversity, and addressing obesity and socioeconomic disadvantage may favorably influence reproductive health. For microbiome research, the review highlights potential links between metabolic states (e.g., obesity), inflammation, and reproductive timing, suggesting that microbial signatures associated with chronic inflammation or metabolic dysfunction could be relevant in mapping reproductive aging trajectories. However, direct microbiome associations remain unaddressed in the current literature, pointing to an important area for future research.
Pelvic inflammatory disease and infertility
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) is a complex interplay between pathogens, immune responses, and microbial communities. As research continues to uncover the microbiome's role in reproductive health, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as probiotics, prebiotics, and transplants are redefining how we prevent and treat PID. This page dives deep into these innovations, offering a glimpse into the future of personalized, biologically informed women’s healthcare.
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This review details the polymicrobial pathogenesis of PID, its major microbial culprits—including both classical STIs and vaginal anaerobes—and underscores the high risk of infertility. Early diagnosis, broad-spectrum treatment, and awareness of microbiome shifts are key to reducing reproductive morbidity.
What was reviewed?
This narrative clinical review discusses the pathogenesis, clinical evaluation, and management of pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) with a dedicated focus on fertility-related long-term sequelae. The article synthesizes current knowledge regarding PID’s microbial etiologies, diagnostic approaches, complications such as tubal infertility, and both medical and surgical management strategies. Special attention is given to the role of the microbiome in PID development and progression, particularly regarding upper genital tract infection by various microorganisms and their contribution to reproductive morbidity.
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesizes data and recommendations relevant to women of reproductive age who are at risk for, or have a history of, PID. It draws on evidence from studies involving women with clinically and laparoscopically diagnosed PID, women undergoing infertility evaluation, and specific population groups with higher reported PID incidence, such as those in developing nations and Indigenous Australian communities. The microbiological data reviewed come from studies isolating pathogens from women with PID and related infertility.
Most important findings
PID is a polymicrobial infection of the upper female genital tract, initiated by pathogens that disrupt the cervicovaginal barrier. Chlamydia trachomatis and Neisseria gonorrhoeae are implicated in 33–50% of cases, but other significant contributors include Mycoplasma genitalium, bacterial vaginosis-associated anaerobes, as well as respiratory and enteric organisms. The progressive ascent of these microbes, facilitated by alterations in the cervicovaginal microenvironment and host factors (e.g., menses, loss of mucus plug), leads to upper tract inflammation and damage. Despite adequate antimicrobial therapy, long-term sequelae are common: infertility (18%), ectopic pregnancy (0.6–2%), and chronic pelvic pain (30%). Tubal infertility, largely attributable to microbial damage and subsequent fibrosis or adhesions, is responsible for 25–35% of female infertility cases, with PID as the primary cause in over half. Notably, risk escalates with recurrent PID episodes and severity of tubal damage. The review underscores that even subclinical PID can have major reproductive consequences, and that the diversity of implicated microbes should be considered in diagnosis and management.
Key implications
For clinicians, this review emphasizes the importance of early suspicion, diagnosis, and treatment of PID to mitigate long-term reproductive sequelae, particularly tubal infertility. The polymicrobial nature of PID, including both classical sexually transmitted pathogens and diverse anaerobic and facultative organisms, highlights the need for comprehensive microbial assessment and broad-spectrum empirical therapy. The findings suggest that a history of PID should prompt early fertility evaluation and counseling, and that public health efforts in STI prevention and early intervention could substantially reduce infertility rates. From a microbiome perspective, the article reinforces the critical role of cervicovaginal microbial communities and their disruption in PID pathogenesis, supporting the inclusion of these microbial signatures in reproductive health databases for risk stratification and targeted interventions.
Potential biomarkers of infertility associated with microbiome imbalances
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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Microbiome dysbiosis and elevated miR-21-5p and miR-155-5p levels are strongly linked to unexplained infertility, suggesting their role as biomarkers. Correcting these microbiome imbalances could enhance fertility treatment success rates.
What was studied?
This study explored the relationship between microbiome imbalances in the vaginal and rectal environments and infertility in women experiencing repeated in vitro fertilization (IVF) failures. Researchers specifically investigated the expression levels of microRNAs (miRNAs), particularly miR-21-5p and miR-155-5p, alongside microbiota composition differences between infertile and fertile women. The study aimed to determine whether these microbiome alterations and miRNA levels could serve as potential biomarkers for unexplained infertility.
Who was studied?
The study included 287 women diagnosed with unexplained infertility who had experienced multiple IVF failures, along with 20 fertile women as controls. The infertile group was characterized by an average age of 40, had a history of at least two unsuccessful IVF attempts, and exhibited normal ovarian and tubal anatomy. The fertile group comprised women who had conceived naturally, were aged between 29 and 38, and had no infertility or autoimmune conditions. Vaginal and rectal swabs were collected for microbiota sequencing and miRNA expression analysis. Blood and saliva samples were also analyzed for immunometabolic markers.
What were the most important findings?
Significant microbiota differences between infertile and fertile groups emerged from this study. Infertile women showed reduced microbial diversity in their rectal microbiome, characterized by an increased ratio of Firmicutes to Bacteroidetes. This imbalance correlated with markers indicative of gut barrier dysfunction. In vaginal samples, infertile women demonstrated a unique microbial pattern, primarily an increased ratio of Lactobacillus brevis to Lactobacillus iners, which contrasts with the typical Lactobacillus dominance associated with healthy reproductive outcomes.
Two miRNAs—miR-21-5p and miR-155-5p—were notably elevated in both vaginal and rectal samples from infertile patients. MiR-21-5p was associated with increased gut permeability, fungal overgrowth, and reduced microbial diversity, whereas miR-155-5p correlated with inflammation and bacterial dysbiosis. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analyses confirmed that elevated levels of these miRNAs could reliably distinguish infertile women from fertile women, demonstrating their potential as effective biomarkers for infertility linked to microbiome imbalances.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The greatest clinical implication is the potential use of microbiome profiling and miRNA expression levels as diagnostic and prognostic tools in managing infertility, especially in cases of unexplained repeated IVF failures. Identifying microbiome dysbiosis and associated inflammatory markers through miRNAs may allow clinicians to personalize treatment plans, potentially involving microbiota-modifying therapies such as probiotics or targeted nutritional interventions. This approach could significantly enhance fertility treatment outcomes by restoring microbiome balance and reducing inflammatory states that adversely affect fertility. Moreover, understanding the link between gut and reproductive tract microbiota suggests that comprehensive evaluation and management of microbiome health should be integral to infertility assessments.
Bacterial isolates associated with pelvic inflammatory disease among female patients attending some hospitals in abuja, Nigeria
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) is a complex interplay between pathogens, immune responses, and microbial communities. As research continues to uncover the microbiome's role in reproductive health, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as probiotics, prebiotics, and transplants are redefining how we prevent and treat PID. This page dives deep into these innovations, offering a glimpse into the future of personalized, biologically informed women’s healthcare.
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This study identifies key bacterial pathogens associated with pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) in Abuja, Nigeria, highlighting the effectiveness of Cefotaxime in treatment. The research also stresses the role of socio-demographic factors in PID prevalence and calls for targeted health interventions.
What was studied?
This study focused on the bacterial isolates associated with pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) in female patients attending hospitals in Abuja, Nigeria. Researchers collected endocervical swabs from 100 women diagnosed with PID and analyzed the bacterial pathogens present using cultural and biochemical tests. The study aimed to identify the specific microorganisms causing PID in the region, their resistance to antibiotics, and the factors contributing to the disease's occurrence. This research is particularly significant as PID is a prevalent but underreported health issue, and understanding the microbiological landscape can help guide treatment strategies.
Who was studied?
The study involved 100 women diagnosed with PID, attending various hospitals in Abuja, Nigeria. The participants were primarily women of reproductive age, with confirmed cases of PID based on clinical symptoms and laboratory findings. The study population also included women from various socio-demographic backgrounds, with a focus on understanding how factors like marital status, age, and sexual behavior influenced PID prevalence. These women were selected based on clinical criteria, such as a history of recurrent lower abdominal pain, cervical tenderness, and elevated white blood cell count, which are indicative of PID.
What were the most important findings?
The study identified several bacterial pathogens responsible for PID in the region, with Staphylococcus aureus being the most prevalent isolate (16%), followed by Escherichia coli (10%), Streptococcus faecalis (8%), and others such as Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Klebsiella pneumoniae, and Proteus species. 55% of the samples yielded no bacterial growth, suggesting that PID may also involve pathogens that are not detectable through conventional culturing methods. The study also highlighted that polygamous married women were the most affected group (90%), followed by singles (50%). Women in the 25-35 years age group had the highest incidence, while those aged 36-45 had the least. This age-related trend might be associated with sexual activity, as younger women are more likely to engage in high-risk behaviors. In terms of antibiotic resistance, Cefotaxime emerged as the most effective treatment for both Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria, indicating its potential use as a frontline treatment for PID.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings from this study highlight the importance of understanding the local microbial landscape when diagnosing and treating PID. The identification of Staphylococcus aureus and Escherichia coli as the dominant pathogens highlights the need for targeted antibiotic therapy. The study also emphasizes the need for healthcare providers to consider socio-demographic factors, such as marital status and age, when addressing PID risks in women. The high prevalence of PID among polygamous women calls for focused public health interventions, including education on safe sexual practices and the promotion of early diagnosis and treatment. Moreover, the high occurrence of PID in the reproductive age group (25-35 years) suggests that sexual health education, coupled with routine screening for STIs and PID, could help reduce the incidence of this disease.
Cellular and molecular processes in ovarian cancer metastasis. A Review in the Theme: Cell and Molecular Processes in Cancer Metastasis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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This review explores the molecular mechanisms of ovarian cancer metastasis, focusing on the role of stromal cells and the metastatic routes—passive dissemination and hematogenous spread—while discussing therapeutic implications for targeting both cancer cells and the tumor microenvironment.
What was reviewed?
This review examined the cellular and molecular mechanisms involved in the metastasis of ovarian cancer. The article focused on the role of various cellular interactions, particularly those between ovarian cancer cells and the tumor microenvironment, which includes stromal cells, endothelial cells, cancer-associated macrophages, and cancer-associated adipocytes (CAAs). It also discussed the two major routes of ovarian cancer metastasis: passive dissemination and hematogenous metastasis, shedding light on the biological pathways and cellular behaviors that facilitate these processes.
Who was reviewed?
This review focused on the cellular and molecular processes involved in ovarian cancer metastasis. It specifically examined the interactions between ovarian cancer cells and various stromal components within the tumor microenvironment, including cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs), endothelial cells, macrophages, and adipocytes. The review did not study individual patients or groups of people but instead analyzed the broader mechanisms that underlie metastasis in ovarian cancer as reported in multiple research findings.
What were the most important findings?
The review highlighted key findings related to ovarian cancer metastasis. It emphasized the role of stromal cells, including cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs), endothelial cells, and macrophages, in facilitating tumor spread. These cells interact with cancer cells, contributing to tumor growth, angiogenesis, and immune modulation. The authors also discussed the two mechanisms of metastasis: passive dissemination through peritoneal fluid and hematogenous spread via circulating tumor cells. The omentum was identified as a primary site for ovarian cancer metastasis due to its unique stromal environment, which favors the colonization of cancer cells. Additionally, the review highlighted the importance of angiogenesis in metastasis, particularly through the vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) pathway, which is upregulated in ovarian cancer cells. The role of adipocytes in the tumor microenvironment, especially in providing lipids for cancer cell growth, was also discussed, with metformin being identified as a potential therapeutic agent to target adipocyte-cancer cell interactions.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The findings of this review have significant clinical implications, especially in developing therapeutic strategies for ovarian cancer. The detailed understanding of stromal cell involvement in cancer metastasis underscores the need for therapies targeting both cancer cells and their supportive microenvironment. Current treatments mainly focus on cancer cells, but the review suggests that targeting stromal components could enhance treatment effectiveness. Moreover, identifying stromal-specific metastasis-promoting factors and the signaling pathways involved, such as those triggered by VEGF and FGFs, offers new avenues for therapeutic intervention. The review also calls for further research on stromal reprogramming as a potential therapeutic strategy, advocating for more targeted approaches rather than broad stromal depletion, which may unintentionally promote metastasis. Overall, the review provides a roadmap for future research focused on improving survival rates in ovarian cancer patients by targeting metastasis through stromal cell interactions.
Herbal contraceptives: Evaluation of antifertility potential of Hibiscus rosa-sinensis (Linn.)
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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Hibiscus rosa-sinensis exhibits significant antifertility effects in animal models through antiovulatory, antiimplantation, and spermatogenic disruption mechanisms, highlighting its potential as a safe, reversible herbal contraceptive pending further research.
What was reviewed?
This review article examined the antifertility potential of Hibiscus rosa-sinensis Linn., a plant widely recognized in traditional medicine, with a focus on its possible use as a herbal contraceptive. It synthesized evidence from pharmacological studies, toxicological evaluations, and ethnomedicinal reports assessing the plant’s effects on female reproductive physiology. The review explored the mechanisms by which H. rosa-sinensis extracts influence ovarian function, estrous cycle regulation, implantation, and spermatogenesis, emphasizing the potential for the development of safe and reversible herbal contraceptives.
Who was reviewed?
The review incorporated preclinical data from various animal models, predominantly female albino rats and mice, to investigate the antifertility effects of different H. rosa-sinensis plant parts, including flowers, leaves, roots, and seeds. It covered studies evaluating estrogenic, antiovulatory, antiimplantation, and abortifacient activities through the administration of various extracts (benzene, ethanolic, aqueous) at different doses. Some studies also assessed effects on male reproductive parameters such as spermatogenesis. Human clinical data were limited, but traditional and ethnopharmacological uses of the plant in India and neighboring regions were considered.
Most important findings
The review found consistent evidence that H. rosa-sinensis flower extracts exert significant antifertility effects mediated through multiple pathways. The benzene extract of flowers disrupted estrous cycles by prolonging estrus and metestrus phases, increasing atretic follicles, and preventing the formation of corpora lutea, indicating antiovulatory activity. Estrogenic effects were demonstrated by increased uterine weight and premature vaginal opening in immature mice. Antiimplantation effects were confirmed by failure of blastocyst implantation and biochemical alterations in the endometrium, including changes in oxidative stress markers. Additionally, extracts showed abortifacient activity through progesterone suppression and luteolysis. In males, extracts induced reversible spermatogenic damage and reduced accessory sex organ weights. Importantly, the antifertility effects were dose-dependent and reversible upon discontinuation. Phytochemical analyses identified flavonoids, alkaloids, steroids, and other bioactive compounds as probable mediators. Despite promising pharmacological effects, the review emphasized variability in extract preparation and a lack of standardized formulations.
Key implications
This review highlights Hibiscus rosa-sinensis as a promising source for the development of herbal contraceptives, offering advantages such as reversibility and reduced side effects compared to synthetic drugs. The multifaceted antifertility mechanisms targeting ovarian function, implantation, and male fertility provide a broad basis for contraceptive applications. However, substantial gaps remain, including the need for rigorous toxicological evaluations, standardized extraction methods, clinical trials in humans, and a detailed understanding of molecular targets. Harnessing H. rosa-sinensis could contribute to safer, cost-effective contraceptive options, particularly in settings with limited access to modern pharmaceuticals, but careful research is needed to ensure efficacy, safety, and dosage consistency.
Onset of natural menopause in African American women
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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This prospective study of 17,070 African American women found smoking most strongly predicts earlier menopause, while higher BMI and oral contraceptive use are protective. Perceived racism showed suggestive but inconsistent associations with menopause timing, underscoring the need for further research on psychosocial stressors and reproductive aging.
What was studied?
This large prospective cohort study investigated predictors of the onset of natural menopause among African American women, with particular attention to the potential role of perceived experiences of racism. The researchers aimed to clarify how demographic, reproductive, lifestyle, and psychosocial factors, including experiences of racism, affect the timing of natural menopause. Data were drawn from the Black Women’s Health Study, with baseline and follow-up information (including exposures and outcomes) collected by mailed questionnaires between 1995 and 1999. Using Cox proportional hazards regression, the study evaluated associations between various risk factors (smoking, body mass index [BMI], oral contraceptive use, parity, education, physical activity, age at menarche, unilateral oophorectomy, and perceived racism) and the incidence of natural menopause over a four-year period.
Who was studied?
The analytic sample included 17,070 African American women in the United States who were aged 35 to 55 years and premenopausal at baseline in 1995. Participants were drawn from the broader Black Women’s Health Study, which initially enrolled 64,500 women via mailed questionnaires. Inclusion criteria for this analysis required premenopausal status at baseline and completion of at least one follow-up questionnaire in 1997 or 1999. The cohort was well-educated, with the majority having completed high school or higher education, making the results particularly applicable to similarly educated African American women in the U.S. Generalizability to women with less education or lower socioeconomic status may be limited.
Most important findings
The study found that current smoking was the strongest predictor of earlier natural menopause, with a hazard ratio of 1.43 for current smokers and 1.21 for ex-smokers compared to never smokers. There was a clear dose-response relationship between smoking intensity (pack years) and risk of earlier menopause. Higher BMI was inversely associated with risk: women with a BMI ≥30 had a 22% lower risk compared to those with a BMI of 20–24. Use of oral contraceptives for at least one year also delayed menopause. Other reproductive factors and education were not significantly associated with menopause onset. Unilateral oophorectomy was associated with earlier menopause only among younger women. For perceived racism, most hazard ratios were elevated, but few reached statistical significance. The most notable was a 32% increased risk for women who experienced being treated as "not intelligent" monthly and a 23% increased risk for those thinking about their race daily.
Key implications
This study underscores that similar to White women, smoking is the most consistent and modifiable risk factor for earlier menopause among African American women, with implications for counseling and preventive health. Higher BMI and oral contraceptive use appear protective against early menopause. The findings regarding racism are suggestive but not definitive; while some associations were present, they were generally modest and inconsistent, indicating a need for further research on psychosocial stressors and reproductive aging in this population. Clinicians should be aware of these factors when discussing reproductive health and menopause timing with African American women but should recognize that current evidence does not support strong, actionable links between perceived racism and menopause onset.
Potential for Phages in the Treatment of Bacterial Sexually Transmitted Infections
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Bacteriophage therapy presents a promising alternative to antibiotics for bacterial sexually transmitted infections, particularly against antibiotic-resistant strains like N. gonorrhoeae, through targeted bacterial destruction and minimal off-target effects, though significant clinical research and optimization remain essential for widespread application.
What was reviewed?
The review comprehensively examined bacteriophage therapy as a possible alternative to antibiotics for bacterial sexually transmitted infections. This review specifically explored the potential use of bacteriophages (phages) against various pathogens, including Neisseria gonorrhoeae, Chlamydia trachomatis, Treponema pallidum, Streptococcus agalactiae, Mycoplasma genitalium, Ureaplasma parvum, Ureaplasma urealyticum, Haemophilus ducreyi, Calymmatobacterium granulomatis, and Shigella species. The paper provided detailed discussions on epidemiology, antibiotic resistance, bacterial characteristics, and current research challenges associated with each pathogen. The authors addressed both direct phage application and phage-derived enzyme therapy.
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesized available data from existing studies on various bacterial pathogens responsible for sexually transmitted infections. It included an analysis of laboratory studies, animal models, and limited clinical trials involving human subjects, focusing especially on pathogens with emerging antibiotic resistance. These pathogens included multidrug-resistant strains of N. gonorrhoeae and emerging antibiotic-resistant strains of other pathogens such as S. agalactiae, M. genitalium, Ureaplasma species, and Shigella.
What were the most important findings?
The review established that bacteriophage therapy represents a promising alternative or adjunct to antibiotic treatment due to its targeted action against specific bacteria, thus reducing off-target effects and antibiotic resistance pressures. For N. gonorrhoeae, phages identified include prophages within its genome; however, more research is required for practical application. Chlamydia trachomatis phages demonstrated activity in vitro, showing potential to disrupt bacterial replication. For S. agalactiae, isolated temperate phages and their derived enzymes demonstrated success in vitro and in vivo. The review emphasized enzymatic phage therapies (endolysins and depolymerases) as a promising avenue, highlighting their effectiveness particularly against Gram-positive bacteria like S. agalactiae. Additionally, the review underscored the significant challenges in phage therapy, including difficulties in isolating suitable phages for intracellular pathogens like Chlamydia and culturing fastidious organisms such as M. genitalium, Ureaplasma, and T. pallidum. It pointed out that genetically engineered phages and phage-derived enzymes could significantly overcome these obstacles, enhancing their applicability in clinical settings.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The greatest implication of this review is that bacteriophage therapy could effectively address rising antibiotic resistance in bacterial sexually transmitted infections. Given the critical situation with multidrug-resistant pathogens, particularly N. gonorrhoeae, phage therapy might soon become necessary. The review calls for accelerated research to isolate and engineer bacteriophages with therapeutic potential, optimized delivery methods, and comprehensive clinical trials to validate safety and efficacy. Successful translation of phage therapy into clinical practice could revolutionize treatment approaches, preserving reproductive health, reducing antibiotic dependency, and preventing severe health complications associated with chronic and resistant BSTIs.
Medical-Grade Honey as a Potential New Therapy for Bacterial Vaginosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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Medical-grade honey demonstrates selective antimicrobial, anti-biofilm, and microbiome-restorative properties in bacterial vaginosis, with early evidence suggesting it may complement or replace antibiotics and reduce recurrence. Large-scale clinical trials are needed to establish its clinical utility.
What was reviewed?
This review article examines current evidence on the use of medical-grade honey (MGH) as a novel therapy for bacterial vaginosis (BV), a prevalent condition among women of reproductive age characterized by a dysbiosis of the vaginal microbiome. BV is associated with a reduction in protective, lactic acid-producing lactobacilli and an overgrowth of pathogenic anaerobes, often resulting in recurrent symptoms even after standard antibiotic treatment. The authors explore the multifaceted antimicrobial, anti-biofilm, prebiotic, probiotic, anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, and immunomodulatory properties of MGH, and how these may address the shortcomings of conventional therapies. The review synthesizes in vitro, animal, and limited clinical evidence, highlighting the mechanisms by which MGH can selectively inhibit BV-associated pathogens while supporting beneficial microbial populations.
Who was reviewed?
The review encompasses research involving a range of populations and experimental models: in vitro studies on pathogenic and commensal vaginal microbes; animal models, including rats and rhesus macaques, investigating the effects of honey or its constituents on vaginal flora and tissue; and small-scale clinical studies and case series with women experiencing BV or related gynecological disorders. The clinical evidence includes a pilot study using MGH in women with vaginal complaints (including BV), trials on honey-based therapies for cervicitis, and preclinical models examining the impact of honey on vaginal microbiota and tissue health. The reviewed populations predominantly comprise women of reproductive age, but also incorporate data from non-human models to elucidate mechanisms of action.
Most important findings
The review underscores that MGH exhibits broad-spectrum antimicrobial activity through multiple mechanisms—osmotic effects, acidic pH, hydrogen peroxide production, and diverse bioactive compounds (e.g., phenolics, flavonoids). Importantly, MGH's antimicrobial impact is selective: while it significantly inhibits BV-associated pathogens such as Gardnerella vaginalis and Atopobium vaginae, it generally spares or even promotes lactobacilli, which are central to a healthy vaginal microbiome. MGH also disrupts biofilms, a critical factor in BV recurrence and antibiotic resistance, by breaking down the extracellular matrix and preventing biofilm formation. Unlike antibiotics, which can further disrupt the microbiome and drive resistance, MGH supports restoration of the vaginal ecosystem via prebiotic and probiotic effects, encouraging growth of beneficial bacteria. Additional anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, and immunomodulatory properties may promote mucosal healing and reduce recurrence. Clinical evidence, though limited, suggests symptomatic and microscopic improvement in BV and related conditions with intravaginal MGH application.
Key implications
MGH represents a promising alternative or complementary therapy for BV, offering broad-spectrum antimicrobial action without promoting resistance and with the potential to restore a healthy vaginal microbiome. Its ability to eradicate biofilms and modulate inflammation gives it distinct advantages over conventional antibiotics, which are plagued by high recurrence rates, microbiome disruption, and increasing resistance. The favorable impact of MGH on lactobacilli and the microenvironment suggests a paradigm shift toward therapies that restore ecological balance rather than merely suppressing pathogens. However, robust clinical trials are urgently needed to confirm efficacy, optimal formulations, and long-term outcomes before routine clinical adoption.
The Role of Lead and Cadmium in Gynecological Malignancies
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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Breast Cancer
Breast Cancer
Traditionally linked to genetic predispositions and environmental exposures, emerging evidence highlights the microbiome as a critical and underappreciated factor influencing breast cancer progression, immune response, and treatment outcomes.
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This study explores the role of lead and cadmium in gynecological malignancies, focusing on their ability to mimic estrogen and induce oxidative stress, contributing to cancer development. It highlights their potential as biomarkers for early detection and treatment.
What was studied?
The paper investigates the impact of two toxic heavy metals, lead (Pb) and cadmium (Cd), on the development of gynecological cancers such as ovarian, endometrial, and cervical cancers. The authors explore how these metals contribute to cancer development, particularly through mechanisms like oxidative stress, DNA damage, and their ability to mimic estrogen. This review highlights the potential of Pb and Cd as biomarkers for cancer risk and progression, emphasizing their roles in the oncogenesis of gynecological malignancies.
Who was studied?
The study centers around women exposed to Pb and Cd, particularly those with gynecological cancers. It examines clinical and experimental research linking elevated metal levels to cancer occurrence, focusing on ovarian, cervical, and endometrial cancers. The research delves into the biological changes these metals cause, including hormonal disruption, oxidative stress, and DNA damage, all of which are associated with cancer development.
Most important findings
The study identifies the carcinogenic properties of Pb and Cd, showing that both metals function as metalloestrogens, activating estrogen receptors and mimicking estrogen’s effects. This mechanism contributes to hormone-dependent cancers like ovarian, endometrial, and cervical cancers. Elevated levels of Pb and Cd were found in neoplastic tissues of these cancers, establishing a clear connection between their presence and increased cancer risk. These metals were also found to disrupt oxidative stress regulation, leading to cellular damage. Pb has been linked to increased cancer risks, particularly breast cancer, while Cd similarly affects estrogen receptors, promoting hormone-related cancers. The study also points to the possibility of using Pb and Cd as biomarkers for early detection and progression monitoring of gynecological cancers.
Key implications
This research underscores the importance of reducing environmental and occupational exposure to Pb and Cd, which are modifiable risk factors for gynecological cancers. Identifying these metals as potential biomarkers provides a valuable tool for early detection and diagnosis, offering a new avenue for cancer risk assessment. Reducing exposure to these metals is essential to mitigate cancer risk, and further studies are needed to understand their full role in cancer development.
The Role of Lifestyle and Dietary Factors in the Development of Premature Ovarian Insufficiency
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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The review examines how lifestyle factors like diet, exercise, and oxidative stress contribute to Premature Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) and explores potential interventions using antioxidants, phytoestrogens, and dietary changes.
What was studied?
This review focused on understanding the role of lifestyle and dietary factors in the development of Premature Ovarian Insufficiency (POI), a condition that leads to early menopause or infertility in women under 40. The study examined mechanisms such as oxidative stress, mitochondrial dysfunction, apoptosis, and inflammation, which contribute to ovarian aging. Additionally, it explored genetic, autoimmune, and iatrogenic factors, such as chemotherapy and exposure to environmental toxins, that increase the risk of POI. The role of lifestyle factors, particularly diet and energy availability, in influencing the development of POI was also discussed.
Who was studied?
The study includes a broad spectrum of women affected by POI, including those with genetic and autoimmune causes. It emphasizes the influence of lifestyle factors such as diet, body mass index (BMI), exercise, and environmental exposures in the onset and progression of POI. The study also highlights the impact of dietary habits, both plant-based and Western, as well as the role of specific nutrients and foods in either promoting or mitigating POI risk.
Most important findings
Oxidative stress was identified as a key mechanism in ovarian aging and dysfunction, with increased production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) leading to mitochondrial dysfunction and apoptosis in ovarian cells. Genetic and autoimmune factors were also shown to contribute significantly to POI. The review found that diet plays a crucial role in POI, with consumption of phytoestrogens, such as those from soy, legumes, and other plant-based foods, influencing reproductive health. However, an unhealthy plant-based diet may increase the risk of earlier menopause. In contrast, diets rich in fresh legumes, oily fish, and dairy products were found to be associated with delayed menopause. High-fat diets, often linked to obesity, exacerbate oxidative stress and inflammation, contributing to earlier ovarian decline. While exercise is generally beneficial, excessive or intense physical activity can disrupt the menstrual cycle, especially in women with low energy availability. Supplementing with antioxidants like melatonin and CoQ10 has shown potential in protecting ovarian function and reducing oxidative stress, particularly for women undergoing chemotherapy.
Key implications
The findings of this review suggest that lifestyle modifications, especially in terms of diet and exercise, can be powerful tools in managing or delaying POI. By adopting antioxidant-rich diets and avoiding those that exacerbate oxidative stress, women may be able to protect ovarian health. Personalized nutritional interventions, tailored to a woman’s genetic background, could also improve outcomes for those at risk of POI, potentially delaying the onset of the condition or mitigating its symptoms.
Assessing the Impact of (Poly)phenol-Rich Foods on Cardiometabolic Risk in Postmenopausal Women
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Dietary intake of (poly)phenol-rich foods modestly improves cardiometabolic risk factors and reduces oxidative stress in postmenopausal women, with gut microbiome variability influencing outcomes.
What was studied?
This study conducted a dietary intervention to evaluate the effects of daily consumption of (poly)phenol-rich foods on cardiometabolic risk biomarkers in postmenopausal women. Over two months, participants supplemented their diets with specific foods rich in (poly)phenols, 85% cocoa dark chocolate, green tea, and a fruit juice blend (pomegranate, orange, and berries), to assess impacts on oxidative stress, inflammation, lipid profiles, blood pressure, and endothelial function.
Who was studied?
The study recruited 25 postmenopausal women aged 45 to 65 years from Murcia, Spain, with at least 12 months of amenorrhea, overweight or obesity, and at least one cardiometabolic risk marker such as high body fat or waist-to-hip ratio. Participants followed their usual Mediterranean-based diet during the trial and were free from endocrine, hepatic, or other severe pathologies. Smoking and restrictive diet users were excluded to avoid confounders.
Most important findings
The intervention provided a daily total of 1226 µmol (poly)phenols, mainly flavan-3-ols, hydrolyzable tannins, flavanones, anthocyanins, and phenolic acids, with dark chocolate contributing the most antioxidant capacity. After two months, participants showed slight but consistent improvements in multiple cardiometabolic parameters, including reduced systolic and diastolic blood pressure, decreased triglycerides and very-low-density lipoprotein cholesterol, and improvements in insulin resistance indices (HOMA-IR). Oxidative stress biomarker thiobarbituric acid-reacting substances (TBARs) significantly decreased, indicating a lowered oxidative burden. Additionally, improvements were observed in endothelial function biomarkers (sICAM-1, sVCAM-1) and anti-inflammatory adiponectin, though these changes were modest and subject to high inter-individual variability. The gut microbiome’s role is implicated as a key factor influencing (poly)phenol metabolism, affecting the bioavailability and subsequent health benefits of these compounds.
Key implications
This study supports the potential of dietary (poly)phenol-rich foods to ameliorate cardiometabolic risk factors during menopause by reducing oxidative stress and improving vascular and inflammatory markers. Given the variability in response linked to gut microbiome activity, personalized nutrition approaches that consider microbiome composition may optimize therapeutic effects. These findings highlight the importance of non-pharmacological, diet-based interventions as adjuncts or alternatives to hormone replacement therapy for managing menopause-associated cardiometabolic risk.
Primary Dysmenorrhea in Relation to Oxidative Stress and Antioxidant Status: A Systematic Review of Case-Control Studies
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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This systematic review highlights elevated oxidative stress and potential antioxidant deficiencies in women with primary dysmenorrhea. While oxidative markers such as MDA and NO were significantly higher, the evidence on antioxidant status remains inconclusive, suggesting a need for further research into therapeutic interventions.
What was studied?
This systematic review examined the relationship between oxidative stress, antioxidant status, and inflammation markers in women with primary dysmenorrhea. The review synthesized findings from six case-control studies to understand the role of oxidative stress and antioxidant markers in this common gynecological disorder, focusing on markers such as lipid peroxidation, nitric oxide (NO), and various antioxidants.
Who was studied?
The studies included 175 women diagnosed with primary dysmenorrhea and 161 controls. The participants were predominantly from Turkey, with one study from Nigeria. The women with dysmenorrhea were diagnosed based on clinical symptoms, including fluctuating, spasmodic menstrual cramps, typically associated with the onset of menstruation. The control group consisted of women without any menstrual pain or related symptoms. The mean ages of the women in the case and control groups ranged from 20 to 27 years.
Most important findings
The review found elevated levels of oxidative stress markers, particularly malondialdehyde (MDA), a product of lipid peroxidation, in women with primary dysmenorrhea compared to controls. Additionally, increased nitric oxide (NO) levels were consistently found in the dysmenorrhea group, which could indicate endothelial dysfunction. In contrast, the evidence regarding antioxidant status was less clear. Some studies indicated lower levels of antioxidants like vitamin E and total antioxidant status (TAS) in dysmenorrheal women, while others found no significant differences. The inflammation marker high-sensitivity C-reactive protein (hs-CRP) was studied in one study but showed no significant differences between the groups.
Key implications
The findings suggest that oxidative stress plays a significant role in the pathophysiology of primary dysmenorrhea. Elevated lipid peroxidation and NO levels point to potential mechanisms involving endothelial dysfunction and inflammatory processes. Although antioxidant deficiencies were observed, the limited number of studies and markers assessed prevents definitive conclusions. These findings highlight the potential for therapeutic interventions targeting oxidative stress and antioxidants to alleviate symptoms of primary dysmenorrhea, though more research is needed to confirm these effects.
Endometriosis and Ovarian Cancer: An Integrative Review (Endometriosis and Ovarian Cancer)
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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This review explores the link between endometriosis and ovarian cancer, focusing on genetic mutations like ARID1A, oxidative stress, and estrogen receptor loss, which contribute to the development of malignancy, particularly in the endometrioid and clear-cell subtypes.
What was studied?
This review focuses on the relationship between endometriosis and ovarian cancer, specifically examining how endometriosis, particularly ovarian endometriomas, can lead to malignancy. The review synthesizes data from various studies published over the past five years that explore this association, highlighting genetic, molecular, and inflammatory mechanisms that could contribute to ovarian cancer development. Endometriosis is increasingly recognized not as a benign condition but as one that, under certain circumstances, could evolve into cancer, with epithelial ovarian cancers (EOC) of the endometrioid and clear-cell subtypes being the most common among women with endometriosis.
Who was studied?
The review analyzed studies on women diagnosed with endometriosis and ovarian cancer, particularly those with epithelial ovarian carcinoma (EOC) associated with endometriosis. Studies were included from various clinical trial cohorts, case-control studies, and cross-sectional research. These studies focused on patients with tissue-proven endometriosis, those with endometriosis-associated ovarian cancer (EAOC), and control groups without endometriosis. The review also considered histological subtypes such as endometrioid carcinoma (EC) and clear-cell carcinoma (CCC), which are the most commonly observed malignancies in endometriosis-associated ovarian cancer.
Most important findings
The review found that women with endometriosis are at an increased risk for developing ovarian cancer, particularly of the endometrioid and clear-cell subtypes. Key genetic alterations were identified, including mutations in the ARID1A gene, which leads to the loss of the BAF250a protein and is a frequent event in both ovarian clear-cell carcinoma (OCCC) and endometrioid carcinoma (EAEC). The study also highlighted the role of oxidative stress in malignant transformation, driven by the iron in the fluid of endometriotic cysts, which promotes genetic mutations. Loss of estrogen receptors in some cases of endometriosis-associated carcinoma was observed, possibly contributing to the neoplastic transformation of endometriotic lesions. Additionally, the review pointed to the importance of understanding the distinct histologic features of endometriosis-associated cancers compared to non-endometriosis ovarian cancers, with earlier diagnosis and better prognosis often seen in cases associated with endometriosis.
Key implications
The findings suggest that women with endometriosis, especially those with ovarian endometriomas, are at an increased risk for developing ovarian cancer, specifically the endometrioid and clear-cell subtypes. These insights emphasize the need for closer monitoring of women with endometriosis, particularly in younger women, who are more likely to develop these types of ovarian cancer. The review also underscores the importance of genetic testing, such as identifying mutations in ARID1A and other key genes like PIK3CA and β-catenin, which may help in early detection and provide targets for more personalized treatment strategies. The findings highlight the role of inflammation and oxidative stress in the progression of ovarian cancer in these patients, suggesting potential therapeutic avenues such as antioxidants or inhibitors targeting these pathways. Furthermore, the study calls for more research into the molecular underpinnings of this link to improve early detection, prognosis, and treatment strategies for women at risk.
Severe hot flashes are associated with chronic insomnia
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal hot flashes are one of the most common and disruptive symptoms that women experience during the transition to menopause. Characterized by sudden sensations of heat, sweating, and flushing, hot flashes can significantly affect a woman’s quality of life, causing sleep disturbances, mood swings, and even long-term health consequences. Understanding the complex mechanisms behind hot flashes, as well as the role of microbiome-targeted therapies, offers new avenues for improving menopausal health.
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This study links severe hot flashes to chronic insomnia in perimenopausal and postmenopausal women, suggesting that managing hot flashes could improve sleep quality and reduce the health risks associated with insomnia.
What was studied?
The study investigated the relationship between hot flashes and chronic insomnia in midlife women. Researchers assessed the prevalence of hot flashes and the severity of insomnia in a population of women across different menopausal stages. The study focused on the association between severe hot flashes and the presence of chronic insomnia symptoms, including difficulty initiating sleep, maintaining sleep, and experiencing nonrestorative sleep. Additionally, it explored other factors such as chronic pain and health status that could influence the prevalence of insomnia among perimenopausal and postmenopausal women.
Who was studied?
The study included 982 women aged 35 to 65 years, representing a population in California, categorized into three menopausal groups: premenopause (57.2%), perimenopause (22.3%), and postmenopause (20.5%). The participants were asked about their hot flash experiences and insomnia symptoms, with chronic insomnia defined by persistent sleep disturbances for at least six months. The study also considered various demographic factors such as age, marital status, occupation, race/ethnicity, and health status, as well as the severity of hot flashes, to explore their relationship to insomnia.
Most important findings
The study found a significant association between the severity of hot flashes and the prevalence of chronic insomnia. Among women experiencing severe hot flashes, over 80% reported symptoms of chronic insomnia, including difficulty initiating sleep and nonrestorative sleep. Additionally, insomnia symptoms were more common in perimenopausal and postmenopausal women, with a substantial increase in insomnia as the severity of hot flashes increased. Other factors like chronic pain, poor health, and sleep apnea also contributed to the likelihood of chronic insomnia, but severe hot flashes remained a strong predictor.
Key implications
The study highlights the need for healthcare providers to systematically assess hot flash severity in women with insomnia, as addressing hot flashes could improve sleep quality. Given the high prevalence of both hot flashes and insomnia in midlife women, the findings suggest that targeting hot flashes in treatment plans could help reduce the negative impacts of chronic insomnia, improving overall health and well-being for perimenopausal and postmenopausal women.
Role of menopausal hormone therapy in the prevention of postmenopausal osteoporosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) is one of the most effective treatments for women experiencing the symptoms of menopause, particularly vasomotor symptoms such as hot flashes and night sweats. But its benefits go beyond just symptom management. HRT can also play a key role in improving vaginal health by alleviating dryness and discomfort, which are common complaints among women in menopause. Additionally, it helps prevent bone loss, significantly reducing the risk of osteoporosis and fractures, which are more common after menopause. Despite its many benefits, HRT is not one-size-fits-all; it’s essential to tailor treatment based on individual health profiles, taking into account the risks like breast cancer, blood clots, and heart disease that come with prolonged use.
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The review shows that menopausal hormone therapy osteoporosis prevention lowers fractures when started near menopause, favors transdermal routes for safety, and maps RANKL–OPG and cytokine shifts with clear microbiome relevance despite no direct microbiota data.
What was reviewed?
This review explains how menopausal hormone therapy for osteoporosis prevention works, which women benefit most, and how dose and route affect safety. The authors summarize evidence that systemic estrogen prevents postmenopausal bone loss and lowers fractures, while risks vary by age, time since menopause, and oral versus transdermal delivery. They describe how estrogen restrains osteoclast activity through the RANKL–OPG axis and reduces inflammatory cytokines that drive bone resorption. They note that benefits often fade after stopping therapy, and that decisions must weigh fracture reduction against rare vascular and breast risks.
Who was reviewed?
The guidance focuses on peri- and early postmenopausal women with vasomotor symptoms who are under 60 years or within 10 years of menopause and have low baseline risks for cardiovascular disease, stroke, thromboembolism, and breast cancer. It also covers women with premature ovarian insufficiency who need longer replacement and women after hysterectomy who can use estrogen alone. The review includes data from large randomized trials and cohort studies, such as Women’s Health Initiative analyses, and it addresses women who use oral or transdermal estradiol with or without a progestogen, as well as users of tibolone or tissue-selective estrogen complexes. The paper emphasizes that fracture reduction appears across baseline bone mineral density strata and progestogen use, while persistence of benefit after discontinuation remains uncertain.
Most important findings
The evidence shows that menopausal hormone therapy increases bone mineral density and reduces hip, vertebral, and other osteoporotic fractures in average-risk postmenopausal women, with a hip fracture reduction of around one-third in a major trial using conjugated equine estrogens plus medroxyprogesterone acetate. Transdermal estradiol avoids first-pass hepatic effects and does not raise venous thromboembolism and stroke risk to the same degree as oral estrogen, which supports transdermal use in women with vascular or metabolic risk. Estrogen restrains osteoclastogenesis by increasing osteoprotegerin and lowering RANKL signaling and by dampening IL-1, IL-6, and TNF activity; these immune shifts align with lower bone resorption and suggest indirect ties to gut microbiome–immune crosstalk, although the review reports no microbial taxa. Bone loss resumes after stopping therapy, yet prior users can retain a higher bone mineral density for some years; the fracture risk benefit may not persist. Lower-dose oral and transdermal regimens improve bone mineral density, but definitive fracture outcomes remain limited. Calcium and vitamin D with hormone therapy further lowers hip fractures versus either alone.
Key implications
Clinicians should consider menopausal hormone therapy for symptomatic women who are younger than 60 years or within 10 years of menopause and who have low baseline vascular and breast risks, with transdermal estradiol preferred when thrombotic risk exists. You should add a progestogen for women with a uterus to protect the endometrium and tailor the dose and route to symptoms and risk. You should not use menopausal hormone therapy as first-line primary prevention in older, asymptomatic women more than a decade past menopause. You should explain that fracture protection wanes after stopping and plan a long-term bone strategy. Because the review maps cytokine and RANKL–OPG shifts, teams building a microbiome signatures database can flag these immune changes as mechanistic links between estrogen status and bone, while noting that this review does not profile microbes.
Interaction of metals, menopause and COVID-19: A review of the literature
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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This review details how environmental metal exposures influence menopause onset, symptoms, and COVID-19 outcomes, emphasizing the potential for trace mineral supplementation and the need for monitoring heavy metal and micronutrient status in menopausal women.
What was reviewed?
This review article comprehensively examines the interplay between metal exposures, menopause, and COVID-19. The authors synthesize current evidence on how environmental and dietary exposure to metals, including heavy metals such as arsenic, cadmium, mercury, and lead, influences the onset and course of menopause and, in turn, how these factors may impact susceptibility to and outcomes from COVID-19. The review highlights the hormonal, metabolic, and immunological changes during menopause and how these are modulated by metal exposures, with a particular focus on trace minerals’ role in immune competence and the severity of SARS-CoV-2 infection.
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesizes data from epidemiological studies, clinical research, and mechanistic investigations involving women at various menopausal stages across diverse populations exposed to environmental metals. While some cited studies focus on the general female population, others investigate specific cohorts such as women in polluted regions, those with occupational metal exposure, or patients with COVID-19. Both human and relevant animal studies are included to elucidate pathogenic mechanisms, and supporting data from male and pediatric populations are referenced for context.
Most important findings
The review identifies several key microbiome-relevant associations and signatures. High blood levels of heavy metals, including arsenic, cadmium, lead, and mercury, are linked to disruptions in endocrine function, earlier or altered onset of menopause, and increased risk of age-related diseases such as osteoporosis and cardiovascular disease. For instance, arsenic exposure is associated with an earlier menopause, while cadmium can mimic estrogenic effects but also disrupt ovarian function and the timing of menopause. In postmenopausal women, mobilization of bone lead increases blood lead levels, potentially exacerbating toxic effects. Metal exposures are further implicated in modulating the immune response to SARS-CoV-2, with higher levels of toxic metals correlating with impaired respiratory function and more severe COVID-19 outcomes. Conversely, deficiencies in essential trace elements are associated with increased COVID-19 severity and poorer recovery. The review notes potential benefits of supplementation with zinc, magnesium, and selenium, especially in postmenopausal women, to support both immune function and mitigate the toxic effects of heavy metals.
Key implications
For clinicians, these findings underscore the importance of monitoring metal exposures and trace element status in menopausal and postmenopausal women, particularly in the context of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. Screening for and addressing deficiencies in zinc, selenium, and magnesium may be warranted to reduce vulnerability to severe COVID-19 and counteract the deleterious effects of heavy metals. The review also suggests that environmental and occupational history should be part of menopausal risk assessment, and that hormone replacement therapy may have added benefits in supporting immune resilience during viral infections. The need for further research into the interaction between environmental pollutants, metal metabolism, menopausal transition, and the gut microbiome is highlighted, especially for the development of personalized interventions and microbiome-informed risk stratification.
Targeting Oxidative Stress Involved in Endometriosis and Its Pain
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This review links oxidative stress, ferroptosis, immune activation, pain, and emerging gut microbiome changes to endometriosis progression and severity.
What was reviewed?
This review examined how oxidative stress drives the development, progression, and pain of endometriosis, with a central focus on redox imbalance, inflammation, iron dysregulation, and ferroptosis. The authors synthesized biochemical, cellular, animal, and clinical evidence showing that excess reactive oxygen species overwhelm antioxidant defenses such as glutathione systems, leading to lipid peroxidation, cytokine activation, angiogenesis, and ectopic lesion survival. The review also evaluated therapeutic strategies that target oxidative stress, including antioxidants, redox-active compounds, and lifestyle interventions, while linking these pathways to chronic pelvic pain and disease severity.
Who was reviewed?
The review drew on studies involving women of reproductive age diagnosed with endometriosis, along with supporting data from rodent models, in vitro endometrial cell systems, and biochemical assays. It incorporated evidence from peritoneal fluid, serum, eutopic and ectopic endometrial tissues, and immune cell studies. The authors also reviewed emerging work that examined gut microbial changes in animal models and human observational studies, although this evidence remained limited and exploratory rather than definitive.
Most important findings
The review established oxidative stress as a core driver of endometriosis pathology. Elevated reactive oxygen species, iron overload, and reduced antioxidant capacity promoted inflammation, extracellular matrix remodeling, angiogenesis, and lesion persistence. Macrophage activation and NF-κB signaling amplified cytokine release and pain-inducing prostaglandins. Ferroptosis emerged as a key mechanism linked to glutathione depletion and lipid peroxidation. Importantly, the review reported emerging associations between endometriosis and gut microbiome alterations. Animal studies showed that endometriosis induction altered gut microbial diversity over time, while oral antibiotics reduced lesion progression. Specific microbial-related findings included beneficial effects of Lactobacillus supplementation through IL-12 induction and reduced lesion growth, and inhibition of lesion progression by the gut-derived metabolite n-butyrate, linking microbial metabolites to reduced inflammation and oxidative stress.
Key implications
This review reframes endometriosis as a systemic oxidative and inflammatory disorder rather than a purely gynecologic condition. Targeting oxidative stress, glutathione pathways, iron metabolism, and immune activation may offer disease-modifying strategies beyond hormonal suppression. The emerging microbiome findings suggest that gut microbial modulation could complement antioxidant therapies by reducing inflammation and oxidative injury. For clinicians, the review supports integrated approaches that address redox imbalance, immune activation, pain mechanisms, and potentially microbiome-related pathways to improve symptom control and quality of life in endometriosis patients.
Probiotics as Anti-Tumor Agents: Insights from Female Tumor Cell Culture Studies
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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Breast Cancer
Breast Cancer
Traditionally linked to genetic predispositions and environmental exposures, emerging evidence highlights the microbiome as a critical and underappreciated factor influencing breast cancer progression, immune response, and treatment outcomes.
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Probiotics were shown to significantly reduce cancer cell proliferation, promote apoptosis, and inhibit migration in breast and ovarian cancer cells, suggesting their potential as adjunctive cancer therapies.
What was studied?
This study explores the effects of probiotics as potential anti-tumor agents in two female cancer cell lines: MDA-MB-231 (triple-negative breast cancer) and OVCAR-3 (ovarian adenocarcinoma). Researchers tested several probiotic strains, including Streptococcus thermophilus, Lactobacillus delbrueckii, and Bifidobacterium lactis, assessing their impact on cancer cell proliferation, migration, and protein expression related to the cell cycle and apoptosis.
Who was studied?
The study focused on two human cancer cell lines: MDA-MB-231, representing triple-negative breast cancer, and OVCAR-3, an ovarian adenocarcinoma cell line. These cell lines were chosen due to their relevance in aggressive forms of cancer, which are often characterized by high proliferation rates and metastatic potential. Probiotic strains were applied in vitro to test their anti-tumor effects.
Most important findings
The study demonstrated that probiotic lysates significantly reduced the proliferation of both cancer cell lines. Specifically, the Lactobacillus strains (E and F) showed the most promising anti-proliferative effects, with a reduction of up to 70% in cell proliferation. Western blot analysis revealed key molecular changes: an increase in phosphorylated p53 (a tumor suppressor protein) in the OVCAR-3 cells, suggesting a potential induction of apoptosis. Additionally, there was a notable decrease in proteins associated with cancer cell survival and migration, including cyclin D1 (critical for cell cycle progression), p-ERK1 (involved in survival signaling), and RhoA (linked to cell migration). The probiotic treatment reduced cell migration, particularly in the OVCAR-3 cells, without affecting non-cancerous cells, highlighting a degree of specificity for tumor cells.
Probiotic Strain
Actions
Streptococcus thermophilus
Antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, anti-mutagenic
Lactobacillus delbrueckii
Inhibits colitis-associated cancer development
Bifidobacterium lactis
Supports intestinal barrier function, anti-cancer
Lactobacillus acidophilus
Anticarcinogenic, immune stimulation
Lactobacillus rhamnosus
Anti-colon cancer, modulates gut microbiota
Lactobacillus casei
Immune system stimulation, anticarcinogenic
Key implications
The findings suggest that certain probiotic strains may offer new adjunctive therapies for cancer treatment, specifically in breast and ovarian cancers. Their ability to reduce tumor cell proliferation, promote cell death, and inhibit migration could complement existing treatments, potentially improving patient outcomes. However, further studies are needed, especially in vivo, to explore the full potential and safety of probiotics as cancer therapies. The specificity of probiotics for tumor cells without harming healthy cells is a critical factor for their future clinical use.
Metformin as a Potential Treatment Option for Endometriosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Metformin shows potential in treating endometriosis through anti-inflammatory, anti-angiogenic, anti-proliferative effects, and modulation of the gut microbiome. It could be a safe, effective alternative or adjunctive therapy, particularly in patients contraindicated for hormonal therapies or seeking fertility.
What was reviewed?
The paper reviewed the potential use of metformin as a pharmacological treatment for endometriosis, highlighting its diverse biological effects that could beneficially impact the disease. The review extensively explored the role of metformin as an insulin sensitizer, its mechanisms of action, and how these may influence critical aspects of endometriosis pathology, including inflammation, angiogenesis, adhesion, invasion, apoptosis, and interactions with the gut microbiome.
Who was reviewed?
The review examined data from in vitro studies, animal models, and limited human clinical studies on women with endometriosis. The research focused on experimental models that assessed metformin’s effects on endometrial stromal cells, endometrial implants, inflammatory markers, angiogenic factors, and metabolic pathways implicated in endometriosis.
What were the most important findings?
The review reported several crucial findings. Metformin exhibited significant anti-inflammatory properties by reducing cytokines such as IL-6, IL-8, and TNF-α. These anti-inflammatory actions were primarily mediated through the activation of AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK), which modulates inflammation pathways implicated in endometriosis. Metformin also demonstrated potent anti-angiogenic effects, reducing vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-9 levels, thus inhibiting the development and growth of new blood vessels necessary for endometriotic lesion survival. Metformin significantly reduced cell proliferation and promoted apoptosis in endometrial cells, partially by suppressing aromatase activity and by disrupting pathways critical for cell survival such as PI3K/Akt/mTOR. Metformin's impact on adhesion and invasion processes included downregulating adhesion molecules like VCAM-1, potentially reducing lesion formation and attachment.
Metformin influenced the gut microbiota by modulating the estrobolome, the gut microbiome involved in estrogen metabolism. Dysbiosis in endometriosis may exacerbate symptoms by increasing circulating estrogen levels, a mechanism that metformin can positively influence by enhancing beneficial bacterial populations.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review holds significant clinical implications. Metformin emerges as a promising candidate for treating endometriosis due to its broad-spectrum actions without serious adverse effects, unlike current hormonal therapies which can have significant side effects or limited long-term usability. The possibility of using metformin either alone or as an adjunct to existing treatments offers a versatile therapeutic strategy. Its beneficial role in managing obesity-associated hyperestrogenism and inflammation, combined with its safety profile, positions metformin as a potential first-line therapy or adjunctive treatment, especially valuable for women seeking to maintain fertility. The need for more extensive clinical trials was emphasized, underscoring metformin's therapeutic promise.
Interpretation of reproductive hormones before, during and after the pubertal transition—identifying health and disordered puberty
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menarche
Menarche
Menarche marks the first occurrence of menstruation, signaling a pivotal moment in a young girl's transition to womanhood. Understanding this process helps to shed light on the hormonal, physical, and emotional changes that accompany puberty. Explore the importance of menarche, factors that influence its timing, and how it shapes women's health throughout their lives.
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A comprehensive review of the hormonal regulation of puberty, diagnostic markers for distinguishing healthy from disordered puberty, and the implications for clinical practice, with emphasis on the endocrine framework relevant to future microbiome research.
What was reviewed?
This review article comprehensively examines the endocrine mechanisms governing puberty. It details the hypothalamic–pituitary–gonadal (HPG) axis and the dynamic hormonal changes that characterize healthy pubertal development, as well as the biochemical and clinical markers distinguishing normal puberty from pathological conditions such as precocious, delayed, or disordered puberty. The review systematically covers the roles of key hormones (GnRH, LH, FSH, sex steroids, inhibin B, AMH, INSL3), feedback mechanisms, and the diagnostic challenges in evaluating pubertal disorders. It also addresses the utility and limitations of various biochemical assays and stimulation tests in the context of clinical endocrinology, providing a critical framework for interpreting reproductive hormones in adolescents.
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesizes findings from a wide spectrum of studies involving healthy children and adolescents (both male and female) across different stages of pubertal development, as well as patients presenting with disorders of puberty. It draws upon clinical and biochemical data from cohorts with typical development, individuals with constitutional delay, and those with specific genetic, functional, or acquired causes of pubertal disorders (e.g., Klinefelter syndrome, Turner syndrome, congenital hypogonadotropic hypogonadism, PCOS, and others). The populations referenced include diverse pediatric and adolescent groups evaluated in both research and clinical practice settings, with a particular focus on those undergoing assessment for early, delayed, or otherwise atypical pubertal progression.
Most important findings
The review elucidates the intricate hormonal orchestration of puberty, emphasizing the central role of pulsatile GnRH secretion as a trigger for downstream gonadotropin (LH, FSH) and gonadal hormone production. It details how the amplitude and frequency of GnRH and LH pulses increase at pubertal onset, initiating a cascade that leads to sex steroid synthesis and secondary sexual development. Key microbial associations are less direct in this review, as the main focus is endocrine; however, the interplay between endocrine signals and potential external modulators (which may include microbiome influences on hormonal metabolism, though not directly discussed) is a growing area of interest.
Key implications
Clinicians must interpret reproductive hormone profiles within the broader context of clinical features, growth patterns, imaging, and, where necessary, genetic findings. Biochemical thresholds for puberty are assay-dependent and should be corroborated with clinical progression. The review underscores the importance of dynamic testing and longitudinal monitoring, given the limitations of single-point measurements in differentiating constitutional delay from pathological conditions. Advances in stimulation testing (e.g., kisspeptin) and the integration of novel biomarkers (inhibin B, AMH) offer enhanced diagnostic precision. While the review does not directly address the microbiome, it provides a robust endocrine framework onto which future research can map microbial associations influencing puberty and reproductive health.
Rethinking Menopausal Hormone Therapy: For Whom, What, When and How long?
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) is one of the most effective treatments for women experiencing the symptoms of menopause, particularly vasomotor symptoms such as hot flashes and night sweats. But its benefits go beyond just symptom management. HRT can also play a key role in improving vaginal health by alleviating dryness and discomfort, which are common complaints among women in menopause. Additionally, it helps prevent bone loss, significantly reducing the risk of osteoporosis and fractures, which are more common after menopause. Despite its many benefits, HRT is not one-size-fits-all; it’s essential to tailor treatment based on individual health profiles, taking into account the risks like breast cancer, blood clots, and heart disease that come with prolonged use.
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This review offers updated guidance on the use of menopausal hormone therapy, highlighting its benefits when started early, particularly for women with low cardiovascular risk. It stresses the importance of individualized care and decision-making when considering HT for managing menopausal symptoms.
What was studied?
The review explores the use of menopausal hormone therapy (HT) with a focus on its impact on cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk. It discusses the timing and formulation of HT, examining how these factors influence the safety and efficacy of HT in managing menopausal symptoms such as vasomotor symptoms (VMS). The study includes a thorough examination of evidence from key clinical trials, such as the Women's Health Initiative (WHI), and provides updated guidelines for the use of HT in symptomatic postmenopausal women, particularly those with varying levels of cardiovascular risk.
Who was studied?
The review primarily focuses on postmenopausal women, particularly those experiencing VMS, which include symptoms like hot flashes and night sweats. It also considers women with different levels of cardiovascular risk, including those with low CVD risk, those with established heart disease, and those with comorbid conditions such as obesity, diabetes, hypertension, and dyslipidemia. These women were included in clinical studies that assessed the effects of HT on cardiovascular health and menopausal symptoms.
Most important findings
The study found that HT is highly effective for managing menopausal symptoms, particularly VMS. However, its safety and efficacy are influenced by the timing of initiation and the method of administration. Starting HT early in menopause, particularly before the age of 60 or within 10 years of menopause, appears to have a protective effect on cardiovascular health, reducing risks compared to starting it later. Transdermal HT, which is delivered through the skin, is shown to be safer than oral HT in reducing the risk of venous thromboembolism (VTE) and improving lipid profiles. The benefits of HT on cardiovascular risk are less evident for women who start HT more than 10 years after menopause, and they may face an increased risk of stroke.
Key implications
The findings suggest that HT can be a safe and effective treatment for menopausal symptoms when used in the right population. Early initiation of HT, particularly using transdermal formulations, is crucial for maximizing its benefits and minimizing risks. The review emphasizes the importance of individualized care for menopausal women, particularly those with existing cardiovascular risk factors, and advocates for shared decision-making between clinicians and patients to weigh the potential benefits and risks of HT.
Diagnosis and Management of Primary Dysmenorrhea
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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Primary dysmenorrhea is a common, underdiagnosed condition that causes significant pain and affects women’s daily lives. The study highlights its pathophysiology, diagnostic approach, treatment options, and the need for greater awareness and research into its management.
What was studied?
The article discusses primary dysmenorrhea, a prevalent and often underdiagnosed condition characterized by recurrent, crampy lower abdominal pain during menstruation. This condition is typically associated with the release of excess prostanoids during endometrial sloughing, which causes myometrial hypercontractility and resulting pain. The paper also addresses the physical, emotional, and economic impacts of dysmenorrhea and reviews both diagnostic and management strategies. Emphasis is placed on the identification and treatment of primary dysmenorrhea while ruling out secondary causes, such as endometriosis or fibroids, that can mimic its symptoms.
Who was studied?
The article refers to a wide range of women experiencing primary dysmenorrhea, with a focus on adolescents and women aged 14 to 20, as this group often experiences significant absenteeism from school and work due to the condition. The study outlines the symptoms, physical findings, and the impact of the disorder on quality of life. Women of all ages who report menstrual pain are included in the general study population, with a particular focus on those whose symptoms do not stem from other gynecologic or non-gynecologic conditions.
Most important findings
The study finds that primary dysmenorrhea is associated with higher levels of prostaglandins, which are linked to uterine muscle contractions, ischemia, and pain. The pain and associated symptoms, such as nausea and diarrhea, peak around the time of menstruation and typically resolve after 2–3 days. The article stresses the significant negative impact on daily activities and overall quality of life, noting that many women fail to seek medical help due to the normalization of menstrual pain. Treatments such as NSAIDs and hormonal contraceptives have been shown to effectively reduce symptoms, but a portion of women (up to 18%) remain resistant to NSAID therapy. The study also highlights the need for further research, especially on the central nervous system changes that may underlie the condition.
Key implications
Primary dysmenorrhea is a chronic condition with considerable impacts on women’s quality of life. It is often underdiagnosed, as women tend to normalize the pain and delay seeking treatment. There is a need for increased awareness among clinicians to ensure early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, which includes NSAIDs and hormonal therapies. Further research on the role of the central nervous system in dysmenorrhea is needed to explore potential avenues for targeted therapies.
Metabolic dysregulation in patients with premature ovarian insufficiency revealed by integrated transcriptomic, methylomic and metabolomic analyses
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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This study identifies metabolic disruptions in POI, including altered amino acid and lipid metabolism. Key metabolites such as acetoacetate and HDCA were found to be potential biomarkers, shedding light on the oxidative stress and mitochondrial dysfunction involved in POI.
What was studied?
This study aimed to investigate the metabolic dysregulation observed in women with premature ovarian insufficiency (POI) through an integrated analysis of transcriptomics, methylomics, and metabolomics. POI, a condition characterized by early ovarian function loss, leads to infertility, hormonal imbalances, and increased metabolic and cardiovascular risks. The researchers sought to identify specific metabolic disruptions in POI patients that could provide insights into the pathophysiology of the condition. By profiling gene expression, DNA methylation patterns, and serum metabolites, the study aimed to uncover biomarkers and mechanistic pathways involved in POI development.
Who was studied?
The study included 40 women diagnosed with POI and 44 healthy, age-matched control women. The POI group was diagnosed based on clinical criteria, including elevated follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) levels, absent menstruation for at least four months, and low levels of anti-Müllerian hormone (AMH). The control group consisted of women with regular menstrual cycles and normal ovarian function. Both groups were matched for age and body mass index (BMI) to control for these potential confounding variables.
Most important findings
The study identified several key metabolic changes in women with POI, including disruptions in amino acid, fatty acid, and ketone body metabolism. Metabolites such as acetoacetate, arachidonate, and fumarate were found to be significantly altered in the sera of POI patients. The combination of hyodeoxycholic acid (HDCA) and acetoacetate was highlighted as a potential biomarker for POI, showing strong diagnostic potential with an area under the curve (AUC) of 0.955. An integrated analysis of transcriptomic and methylomic data revealed that genes associated with oxidative stress, including those involved in the peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR) signaling pathway and mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation, were upregulated in POI patients. These findings suggest that oxidative stress plays a crucial role in the metabolic disturbances observed in POI.
Key implications
The results from this study suggest that metabolic dysregulation in POI involves alterations in key metabolic pathways, including those related to oxidative stress and energy metabolism. Identifying specific metabolites and genes associated with these disturbances provides valuable insights into the underlying mechanisms of POI. The findings suggest that biomarkers such as acetoacetate and HDCA could be used for the early diagnosis of POI, potentially enabling better management of the condition. Moreover, interventions targeting oxidative stress and mitochondrial function may hold therapeutic promise for improving the ovarian health of women with POI.
The Female Reproductive Tract Microbiome and Cancerogenesis: A Review Story of Bacteria, Hormones, and Disease
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This review highlights the significant role of the female reproductive tract microbiome in the development of gynecological cancers, focusing on microbial dysbiosis, estrogen regulation, and potential therapeutic strategies.
What was studied?
This review paper explores the relationship between the female reproductive tract microbiome and cancerogenesis. It highlights how bacterial communities within the female reproductive system, especially in the cervix and vagina, influence the development of gynecological cancers, including endometrial, cervical, and ovarian cancers. The study discusses the dynamic changes in the microbiome, its association with carcinogenesis, and the potential role of dysbiosis—an imbalance in the microbiota—in cancer development. Specific bacteria, such as Lactobacillus species, and their protective roles in maintaining a healthy microbiome are emphasized. Conversely, microbial dysbiosis with an overgrowth of pathogenic bacteria may facilitate the progression of cancer by promoting chronic inflammation and genetic alterations in cells.
Who was studied?
The review addresses various studies that include both human and animal models. It incorporates research on the microbial composition of the lower and upper female reproductive tracts, including the vagina, cervix, endometrium, and ovaries. The studies also discuss the effects of microbial imbalances on women of different age groups and health conditions, including those with gynecological cancers, endometriosis, and those undergoing treatments like chemotherapy and radiotherapy. Additionally, the paper refers to molecular techniques like 16S ribosomal sequencing, which has enabled researchers to categorize the vaginal microbiome into distinct community state types, shedding light on the relationship between specific microbial populations and disease states.
Most important findings
Several significant findings emerged from this review. First, a healthy vaginal microbiome is predominantly composed of Lactobacillus species, which help maintain a low pH environment that prevents the overgrowth of harmful bacteria. However, dysbiosis, characterized by a decrease in Lactobacillus spp. and an increase in anaerobic bacteria, is linked to an increased risk of gynecological cancers. The paper also highlights the role of estrogen in modulating the microbiome, as higher estrogen levels promote the growth of Lactobacillus spp., while fluctuations in estrogen, such as those seen in menopause, can lead to microbial imbalances. Furthermore, specific bacteria like Chlamydia trachomatis, Mycoplasma genitalium, and Fusobacterium spp. are associated with the persistence of infections that increase cancer risk. Notably, Lactobacillus species seem to have a protective effect, with a higher prevalence in healthy women compared to those with gynecological cancers. However, bacteria such as Acinetobacter spp., Proteobacteria, and Brucella spp. have been found in ovarian cancer tissues, suggesting that they may play a role in carcinogenesis.
Key implications
The findings underscore the growing importance of the microbiome in the development and progression of gynecological cancers. Understanding the role of microbial communities in cancerogenesis could lead to new preventative and therapeutic strategies, such as microbiome modulation through probiotics, dietary interventions, or microbiome transplantation. The study also points to the potential of using the microbiome as a biomarker for early detection of cancer or assessing the efficacy of cancer treatments. Further research is needed to clarify the causal relationships between specific microbial species and cancer, as well as how treatments like chemotherapy or immunotherapy may influence the female reproductive tract microbiome.
Menopausal Changes in the Microbiome—A Review Focused on the Genitourinary Microbiome
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Menopause alters the gut, vaginal, and urinary microbiomes, decreasing Lactobacillus and increasing microbial diversity. These changes contribute to GSM, rUTI, and urinary symptoms. Hormone therapy and probiotics partially restore healthy microbiota, offering new avenues for genitourinary symptom management in postmenopausal women.
What was reviewed?
This article presents a comprehensive review of the effects of menopause on the female microbiome, with a specific focus on the genitourinary microbiome, encompassing the gut, vaginal, and urinary microbial communities. The review synthesizes evidence from recent clinical studies, observational data, and randomized controlled trials to elucidate the interplay between hormonal changes during menopause and alterations in these microbiomes. It particularly emphasizes the urinary microbiome, a relatively underexplored area, and its potential associations with common postmenopausal conditions such as genitourinary syndrome of menopause (GSM), recurrent urinary tract infections (rUTI), and lower urinary tract symptoms.
Who was reviewed?
The review includes data and findings from studies involving premenopausal and postmenopausal women of varying ages and ethnic backgrounds. The populations studied encompass healthy women, women with menopause-related symptoms, and those with urinary tract disorders, including rUTI, overactive bladder (OAB), interstitial cystitis/bladder pain syndrome (IC/BPS), and GSM. Subjects in the included studies range from healthy controls to those receiving hormone therapy, probiotics, or other microbiome-targeted interventions. The review draws on both cross-sectional and longitudinal analyses, as well as clinical trials from diverse geographic locations.
Most important findings
Menopause induces significant shifts in the gut, vaginal, and urinary microbiomes, largely driven by estrogen decline. In the gut, although phylum-level changes are inconsistent, postmenopausal women show increased Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes ratios, higher abundance of genera like Lachnospira, Roseburia, and Bilophila, and changes in short-chain fatty acid (SCFA) profiles. The vaginal microbiome becomes less dominated by Lactobacillus species post-menopause, with increased prevalence of anaerobes such as Gardnerella, Prevotella, Atopobium, and Finegoldia. Notably, hormone therapy and probiotic interventions can partially restore Lactobacillus dominance and lower vaginal pH—benefits linked to symptom improvement.
The urinary microbiome also undergoes notable changes: postmenopausal women exhibit increased alpha diversity and reduced Lactobacillus abundance, with more Gardnerella, Prevotella, and Mobiluncus. The review highlights a substantial overlap between vaginal and urinary microbiomes, underscoring the interconnectedness of these sites. Both local estrogen therapy and specific probiotic administration have shown promise in restoring a healthier microbiome and reducing infection risk.
Key implications
Understanding menopause-related microbiome alterations is critical for developing targeted strategies to manage genitourinary health in postmenopausal women. The decline in Lactobacillus and increased diversity in the urinary and vaginal niches underpin higher rates of GSM, rUTI, and urinary symptoms. Interventions such as hormone therapy and probiotics can beneficially modulate the microbiome, alleviate symptoms, and lower infection risk. Clinicians should recognize the interdependence of the gut, vaginal, and urinary microbiomes in postmenopausal women and consider microbiome-focused therapies as adjuncts to conventional management. Further research into the urinary microbiome’s role in disease and its manipulation remains an urgent clinical need.
Socioeconomic and Lifestyle Factors Affecting Age at Natural Menopause: Global Systematic Review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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This systematic review and meta-analysis reveals clear links between socioeconomic status, smoking, and age at natural menopause, with significant regional variation. These factors should inform clinical and microbiome research on menopausal timing and its health implications.
What was reviewed?
This systematic review and meta-analysis synthesized data from 46 community-based studies across 24 countries, assessing the influence of socioeconomic position (SEP) and lifestyle factors on age at natural menopause (ANM). The review sought to determine overall mean ANM globally, compare regional differences, and quantify the impact of SEP (education, occupation, income) and modifiable lifestyle factors (smoking, body mass index [BMI], and physical activity) on menopausal timing. The meta-analyses incorporated both published and previously unpublished results from the Australian Longitudinal Study on Women’s Health (ALSWH), applying rigorous inclusion criteria and harmonizing variable definitions to maximize comparability.
Who was reviewed?
The review included a diverse range of women from 46 population-based cohorts across six continents, with total sample sizes in the tens of thousands. Study populations varied in age, ethnicity, and region (Africa, Asia, Australia, Europe, Latin America, Middle East, USA). All included studies excluded women with surgical menopause and largely defined natural menopause according to World Health Organization criteria. Most studies were cross-sectional, with some prospective cohorts; ethnic details were inconsistently reported. The ALSWH sample (n≈7,500) contributed prospective, nationally representative data from Australia.
Most important findings
The pooled mean age at natural menopause was 48.8 years, but substantial regional variation was noted: ANM was lowest in African, Latin American, Asian, and Middle Eastern countries, and highest in Europe, Australia, and the USA. Socioeconomic indicators showed a clear, dose-response association with ANM. Higher education and occupation levels were significantly associated with later menopause, and these effects were more pronounced in developed regions. Smoking was robustly associated with earlier menopause, advancing ANM by nearly one year, with a stronger effect in developed regions. Overweight status and moderate to high physical activity were weakly associated with later ANM, but findings were inconsistent and attenuated after adjustment for confounders. No consistent association was observed between income and ANM. Importantly, the review highlights that region, SEP, and lifestyle factors together explained a substantial portion of the observed heterogeneity in menopausal timing.
Key implications
This review confirms that ANM is not only regionally variable but also socially and behaviorally patterned. Lower education and occupation levels and smoking are associated with earlier menopause, suggesting that modifiable social and lifestyle factors substantially influence reproductive aging and may affect long-term health risks (e.g., osteoporosis, cardiovascular disease). These findings underscore the importance of incorporating SEP and lifestyle factors in clinical risk stratification for postmenopausal health. For microbiome research and clinical databases, the strong associations of SEP and smoking with ANM suggest these variables should be considered key contextual factors when interpreting or designing studies on menopausal microbiome signatures. The inconclusive associations for BMI and physical activity highlight the need for further, harmonized investigations, ideally using pooled individual-level data from prospective cohorts.
Influence of tobacco smoking and alcohol drinking on dysmenorrhoea
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This study identifies a strong association between concurrent tobacco smoking and alcohol drinking and increased dysmenorrhea risk. It emphasizes the need for lifestyle modifications, such as smoking cessation and exercise, to reduce menstrual pain.
What was studied?
This study explored the influence of tobacco smoking and alcohol drinking on dysmenorrhea, a condition characterized by painful menstruation. It utilized data from the Taiwan Biobank, examining lifestyle factors such as smoking and alcohol consumption, alongside other demographic and health characteristics, to identify their relationship with the prevalence and severity of dysmenorrhea. The study aimed to understand how these substances influence menstrual pain, providing insights into potential lifestyle modifications that could mitigate dysmenorrhea symptoms.
Who was studied?
The study included 8,567 participants from the Taiwan Biobank, focusing on premenopausal women with varying patterns of alcohol and tobacco use. The participants were divided into four groups based on their tobacco and alcohol consumption: non-users, tobacco-only users, alcohol-only users, and those who used both tobacco and alcohol. Data were collected from a comprehensive questionnaire that included information on lifestyle, health behaviors, and demographic factors, with participants also categorized based on factors like educational level, body mass index (BMI), exercise habits, and parity.
Most important findings
The study found a significant association between concurrent alcohol and tobacco use and an increased risk of dysmenorrhea. Women who used both tobacco and alcohol had the highest odds of experiencing dysmenorrhea, with an adjusted odds ratio (AOR) of 3.19. In contrast, no significant association was observed for tobacco-only or alcohol-only users. Additionally, other factors like early menarche, higher education levels, and uterine problems were linked to a higher risk of dysmenorrhea. Conversely, regular exercise and multiparity were found to have a protective effect, reducing the likelihood of dysmenorrhea.
Key implications
This study highlights the complex interplay between lifestyle factors, such as smoking and alcohol consumption, and the risk of dysmenorrhea. The findings suggest that individuals who engage in both smoking and drinking are at a significantly higher risk of experiencing painful menstruation. Given the modifiable nature of these lifestyle factors, interventions targeting smoking cessation and reducing alcohol intake could help alleviate the severity of dysmenorrhea. Moreover, encouraging regular exercise and addressing reproductive health issues may further contribute to reducing dysmenorrhea risk, particularly in younger women.
Relationships between female infertility and female genital infections and pelvic inflammatory disease
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) is a complex interplay between pathogens, immune responses, and microbial communities. As research continues to uncover the microbiome's role in reproductive health, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as probiotics, prebiotics, and transplants are redefining how we prevent and treat PID. This page dives deep into these innovations, offering a glimpse into the future of personalized, biologically informed women’s healthcare.
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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A large-scale Taiwanese study found that upper and lower genital tract infections, but not comorbidities or bacterial vaginosis, independently increased infertility risk. PID and lower genital tract inflammation showed the strongest associations, emphasizing the critical role of reproductive tract infections in female infertility.
What was studied?
This population-based nested case-control study investigated the associations between female genital tract infections, selected comorbidities, and infertility using data from the Taiwan National Health Research Database (NHIRD) between 2000 and 2013. The study specifically evaluated whether infections such as pelvic inflammatory disease (PID), bacterial vaginosis (BV), and endometritis, as well as comorbid conditions like obesity, lipid metabolism disorders, and abortion history, were linked to an increased risk of diagnosed infertility. The research leveraged the large scope of the NHIRD, which includes nearly the entire Taiwanese population, to provide robust epidemiological insights. The analysis involved both univariate and multivariate conditional logistic regression to adjust for confounding variables and to isolate the independent associations of different infections and comorbidities with infertility risk in women, stratified by age groups (≤40 and >40 years).
Who was studied?
The study included 18,276 women newly diagnosed with infertility and 73,104 age-matched controls without infertility, all identified from the NHIRD. Controls were matched by age (within three years) and index year and were required to have a history of pregnancy but no prior diagnosis of infertility or use of ovulation stimulants or gonadotropins. Exclusion criteria covered prior hysterectomy, bilateral oophorectomy, cancer, prior chemotherapy or radiotherapy, polycystic ovary syndrome, ovarian failure, endometriosis, adenomyosis, amenorrhea, and Turner syndrome. The mean age of the cohort was 31 years, and the population was predominantly Han Chinese women residing in Taiwan. Patients were further stratified into two age groups (≤40 and >40 years) to assess potential age-related interactions with infertility risk factors.
Most important findings
The most significant finding was a robust association between upper and lower genital tract infections and increased risk of infertility, evident even after controlling for comorbidities and other confounders. Specifically, pelvic inflammatory disease involving the ovary, fallopian tube, pelvic cellular tissue, and peritoneum showed odds ratios (OR) of 4.82 and 6.03 for infertility. Cervical, vaginal, and vulvar inflammation had even higher associations, with ORs of 7.79 and 6.65. Clinicians found that BV and endometritis were associated with infertility in univariate analysis, but multivariate models did not confirm these associations, indicating that other factors or confounders may mediate their effect. Comorbidities such as obesity, lipid disorders, dysthyroidism, and abortion initially showed associations with infertility, but these did not persist after adjustment. Importantly, the study did not examine specific pathogens, but referenced the role of Chlamydia trachomatis, Neisseria gonorrhoeae, Mycoplasma genitalium, Ureaplasma urealyticum, and Trichomonas vaginalis as potential microbial contributors to tubal factor infertility.
Key implications
These findings reinforce the central role of female genital tract infections, particularly upper tract involvement and lower tract inflammation, in the pathogenesis of infertility. The lack of an independent association with bacterial vaginosis and endometritis after adjustment suggests that not all genital infections contribute equally to infertility risk and highlights the importance of distinguishing between associative and causal relationships. For clinicians, this underscores the need for vigilant screening, diagnosis, and management of PID and lower genital tract inflammation as part of infertility workups. The study’s population-based design adds weight to these recommendations, advocating for targeted prevention and early intervention strategies that could mitigate the risk of infertility associated with genital tract infections. These microbiome-related insights are particularly relevant for developing microbiome signatures and risk-stratification tools in reproductive medicine.
Premature Ovarian Insufficiency: New Perspectives on Genetic Cause and Phenotypic Spectrum
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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This review provides a comprehensive look at the genetic and phenotypic aspects of Premature Ovarian Insufficiency (POI), emphasizing the roles of various genes and chromosomal abnormalities, and offering insights into personalized treatment options and future research directions.
What was studied?
This review explores the genetic and phenotypic aspects of Premature Ovarian Insufficiency (POI), focusing on both the clinical presentation and genetic causes. POI is characterized by the loss of ovarian function before the age of 40, and the study discusses the variety of genetic factors that contribute to the condition. The paper examines the roles of various genes affecting gonadal development, DNA repair, hormonal signaling, and immune regulation, as well as the impact of chromosomal abnormalities. It also highlights the use of animal models in understanding POI and the potential for personalized treatment options.
Who was studied?
The study focuses on women diagnosed with POI, particularly those with idiopathic and genetically influenced forms. It includes women of reproductive age who experience either primary or secondary amenorrhea and elevated gonadotropins. The review also considers familial cases of POI and explores the genetic basis behind these cases. The study includes both syndromic forms of POI, such as those associated with Turner syndrome, and nonsyndromic cases, which account for the majority of POI instances.
Most important findings
The review identifies numerous genes that play significant roles in the development of POI, such as FOXL2, BMP15, and NR5A1. These genes influence various stages of ovarian function, from gonadal development to follicle maturation and ovulation. Mutations in these genes can lead to premature loss of ovarian function. Chromosomal abnormalities, such as those found in Turner syndrome (45,X), also contribute to POI. Additionally, the study highlights the role of mitochondrial dysfunction and DNA damage repair genes in the onset of POI. While many cases of POI remain unexplained, the identification of candidate genes like FMR1, which is associated with familial POI, provides insights into potential molecular mechanisms. The review also notes that while POI can result from complete follicle depletion or dysfunction, some women retain residual ovarian function and may experience fluctuating symptoms, offering a chance for future fertility.
Key implications
The findings underscore the importance of genetic testing and counseling for women with POI, especially those with familial cases or syndromic POI. Identifying specific genetic mutations can help predict disease progression and inform personalized treatment strategies, including hormone replacement therapy and fertility preservation. The potential for residual ovarian function and fluctuating POI highlights the importance of early diagnosis and proactive management, particularly for fertility preservation. Further research into the genetic and molecular mechanisms underlying POI could lead to new therapeutic approaches, such as stem cell treatments and targeted gene therapies.
Premature ovarian insufficiency: an update on recent advances in understanding and management
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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This review explores the causes, clinical presentation, and management of Premature Ovarian Insufficiency (POI), highlighting the role of genetic, autoimmune, and environmental factors, and discusses advancements in fertility preservation and hormone replacement therapy.
What was studied?
This review focuses on Premature Ovarian Insufficiency (POI), its clinical presentation, causes, and the management strategies that have emerged over recent years. It investigates the mechanisms behind POI, which is characterized by premature cessation of ovarian function, and emphasizes the complexity of the condition, including its diverse etiology, from genetic mutations to autoimmune conditions and environmental factors. The review also explores advancements in diagnosis, including hormonal assays and imaging techniques, as well as innovative treatments such as hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility preservation strategies.
Who was studied?
The review discusses women diagnosed with POI, particularly those under 40, who experience the loss of ovarian function and infertility. The conditions examined include spontaneous POI, which is idiopathic in many cases, and iatrogenic POI caused by treatments like chemotherapy or radiation. The study also considers women with chromosomal abnormalities, such as Turner syndrome, and those with autoimmune disorders or genetic mutations linked to POI.
Most important findings
POI can result from a variety of genetic, autoimmune, and environmental factors. Genetic factors such as mutations in the FMR1 gene, chromosomal abnormalities like Turner syndrome, and autoimmune diseases are all major contributors to POI. In some cases, the condition is caused by iatrogenic factors, such as chemotherapy, radiation therapy, or bilateral oophorectomy. A critical diagnostic approach for POI includes elevated FSH levels and low estradiol, with additional tests like anti-Müllerian hormone (AMH) levels and pelvic ultrasound offering further diagnostic confirmation. The review also identifies the importance of timely hormone replacement therapy (HRT) to mitigate the symptoms of estrogen deficiency and to prevent long-term health risks like osteoporosis and cardiovascular diseases. Emerging treatments such as oocyte cryopreservation and in vitro activation (IVA) show potential for preserving fertility in women with POI, though research into stem cell therapies continues to advance.
Key implications
The review underscores the importance of early diagnosis and intervention in managing POI. Clinicians are encouraged to perform thorough genetic screening and consider the possibility of underlying autoimmune disorders, especially in patients with unexplained POI. Timely initiation of hormone therapy is critical to alleviate menopausal symptoms and prevent long-term health consequences, such as osteoporosis and cardiovascular disease. Fertility preservation, including egg freezing and in vitro fertilization (IVF) with donor eggs, offers options for women with POI who wish to conceive. Ongoing research into advanced therapies, such as stem cell treatments, holds promise for future management strategies, particularly in restoring ovarian function.
Premature Ovarian Insufficiency: Past, Present, and Future
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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This review investigates the genetic and non-genetic causes of Premature Ovarian Insufficiency (POI), highlighting recent advances in understanding its mechanisms and exploring novel therapeutic approaches such as hormone replacement therapy and stem cell treatments.
What was studied?
This review examines the multifaceted nature of Premature Ovarian Insufficiency (POI), focusing on both genetic and non-genetic causes. It explores the clinical presentation of POI, the factors influencing its development, and the potential therapeutic approaches. The paper emphasizes the complexity of POI's genetic background, including mutations and chromosomal abnormalities, and outlines the potential pathways to therapeutic intervention, such as hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and new methods like in vitro activation (IVA) and stem cell therapies. Additionally, it discusses the role of environmental factors, autoimmune diseases, and iatrogenic causes, as well as non-coding RNA in POI pathogenesis.
Who was studied?
The study centers on women affected by POI, focusing on both idiopathic and genetically influenced cases. It highlights women experiencing ovarian dysfunction before the age of 40, with a particular emphasis on those with familial cases of POI and those diagnosed after undergoing treatments like chemotherapy. The review also mentions the increased occurrence of POI in women with autoimmune conditions and those exposed to environmental toxins. Clinical outcomes are examined based on histological evaluations and the genetic findings across different populations.
Most important findings
The findings underline the significant genetic diversity in POI, with specific mutations in genes such as FMR1, FOXL2, and NOBOX playing a central role in the condition's onset. Autoimmune diseases, environmental factors, and chemotherapy treatments are recognized as major contributors to POI, with autoimmune oophoritis being one of the key non-genetic causes. Histologically, the ovaries in POI women are found to have atretic follicles and abnormal granulosa cells. Recent advances in understanding POI include the identification of non-coding RNA’s role in follicle maturation and the investigation into stem cell therapies, including exosome-based treatments, which show promise in restoring ovarian function. Moreover, the application of IVA to stimulate follicle activation offers new hope for fertility preservation in POI patients.
Key implications
The findings highlight the need for comprehensive genetic screening in women diagnosed with POI to identify potential hereditary causes. Genetic counseling and fertility preservation strategies, such as oocyte cryopreservation and oocyte donation, should be offered to women at risk. Hormone replacement therapy remains the mainstay of treatment to alleviate symptoms of estrogen deficiency and mitigate long-term risks such as osteoporosis and cardiovascular disease. Emerging therapies such as stem cell-derived exosomes and IVA could represent future breakthroughs in restoring ovarian function and improving fertility outcomes. Clinical management should also include regular monitoring of cardiovascular health and bone density, as well as psychological support to address the emotional challenges faced by women with POI.
Fecal Microbiota Changes in Patients With Postpartum Depressive Disorder
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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This study investigates the link between gut microbiota and postpartum depressive disorder (PPD), identifying specific microbiota changes that correlate with depressive symptoms and hormonal levels. These findings could provide biomarkers for diagnosing and treating PPD.
What was studied?
This study focused on the relationship between gut microbiota and postpartum depressive disorder (PPD), investigating the potential correlation between gut microbial composition and the severity of depressive symptoms. The research explored whether specific microbiota patterns could be associated with the onset of PPD and if these patterns could serve as biomarkers for diagnosis and treatment.
Who was studied?
A total of 67 participants were involved in the study, consisting of 39 women diagnosed with PPD and 28 healthy controls (HCs). The participants were recruited from two hospitals in Shenzhen, China, and were aged between 20 and 49 years. The study targeted women who had given birth within the past year and had a confirmed diagnosis of PPD based on clinical evaluations.
Most important findings
The study revealed significant differences in the gut microbiota composition between PPD patients and healthy controls. Notably, PPD patients exhibited lower diversity and changes in the relative abundance of several microbial taxa. For example, the abundance of Firmicutes was significantly lower in PPD patients compared to healthy controls. Specific genera such as Faecalibacterium, Phascolarctobacterium, and Butyricicoccus were notably reduced in PPD patients, while Enterobacteriaceae levels were higher. The study also found correlations between certain bacteria and clinical indicators, including the severity of depressive symptoms and levels of sex hormones, suggesting a potential interaction between microbiota composition and hormonal changes in PPD.
Key implications
The findings suggest that gut microbiota may play a crucial role in the pathogenesis of PPD, potentially offering a new avenue for diagnostic and therapeutic strategies. Specific bacterial genera, such as Faecalibacterium and Phascolarctobacterium, could serve as biomarkers for PPD severity, and the microbiota’s interaction with sex hormones may provide insight into the hormonal aspects of postpartum depression. These results underline the importance of considering the microbiome in the treatment and management of PPD, though further research is needed to confirm these associations and explore causal relationships.
919 Syrup Alleviates Postpartum Depression by Modulating the Structure and Metabolism of Gut Microbes and Affecting the Function of the Hippocampal GABA/Glutamate System
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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This study explores how 919 syrup, a Chinese herbal remedy, alleviates postpartum depression (PPD) by modulating the gut microbiome and hippocampal GABA metabolism, offering a novel treatment approach.
What was studied?
This study investigated the therapeutic effects of 919 syrup, a Chinese herbal remedy, on postpartum depression (PPD). The researchers hypothesized that 919 syrup alleviates PPD symptoms by influencing the gut microbiome, altering fecal metabolism, and modulating hippocampal neurotransmitter levels, particularly GABA. To explore this, they utilized an animal model where female mice, subjected to induced postpartum depression, were treated with 919 syrup. The study aimed to uncover the potential mechanistic pathways through which 919 syrup could improve depressive behaviors by focusing on the relationship between the gut microbiota, metabolites, and brain functions associated with mood regulation.
Who was studied?
The study involved BALB/c mice, a strain known for its susceptibility to stress-induced depressive behaviors. The mice were divided into three groups: a control group, a postpartum depression (PPD) group, and a treatment group receiving 919 syrup. Each group was monitored for depressive behaviors, and a range of microbiological, metabolic, and behavioral assessments were conducted throughout the experiment. The focus was on how these groups differed in their gut microbiome composition, the metabolites in their feces, and the levels of neurotransmitters like GABA in their hippocampus, which is critical for mood regulation.
What were the most important findings?
The study demonstrated that 919 syrup effectively alleviates postpartum depression by restoring the balance of the gut microbiome and correcting metabolic disturbances. In the PPD group, lower levels of GABA in the hippocampus were observed, which were associated with increased depression-like behaviors. Treatment with 919 syrup led to a restoration of GABA levels and a significant improvement in depressive symptoms. Additionally, the fecal metabolite profile of the treated mice showed changes that correlated with improvements in gut microbiome composition. The presence of key bacteria such as Alloprevotella tannerae and Bacteroides sp. was linked to improved mood and GABA regulation. The study highlighted the complexity of the gut-brain axis and the role of microbiome-mediated metabolic pathways in mental health, specifically postpartum depression.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The results of this study suggest that 919 syrup may offer a novel, non-pharmacological approach to treating postpartum depression by targeting the gut microbiome and the hippocampal GABA system. This is particularly significant because traditional antidepressants are often not suitable for breastfeeding mothers due to their potential transfer into breast milk. By modulating the gut microbiota and improving metabolic function, 919 syrup presents a promising alternative for managing postpartum depression without compromising maternal or infant health. These findings also emphasize the need for a holistic approach to treating PPD, focusing not just on individual bacterial species but on the overall balance and function of the gut microbiome, a concept referred to as "GutBalance."
Alterations of Vaginal Microbiota in Women With Infertility and Chlamydia trachomatis Infection
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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This study identified vaginal microbiota dysbiosis, marked by Lactobacillus iners dominance, in infertile women infected with Chlamydia trachomatis. Post-antibiotic recovery suggested microbiome restoration could enhance fertility outcomes, highlighting microbiota profiling as a diagnostic tool.
What was studied?
This study investigated alterations in vaginal microbiota among women with infertility who were infected with Chlamydia trachomatis (CT), specifically examining microbiome profiles before and after antibiotic treatment. The researchers performed metagenomic analysis of sequenced 16S rRNA gene amplicons to identify microbiota variations and assess potential microbiome signatures predictive of CT infection in women experiencing tubal infertility.
Who was studied?
The study involved 25 women from Chenzhou, China, categorized into four distinct groups: healthy women without CT (CT-C), infertile women negative for CT (CT-N), infertile women positive for CT (CT-P), and infertile women who were CT-positive but post-treatment with azithromycin (CT-PT). All women were aged 20-49 years, non-pregnant, and had no other sexually transmitted infections at enrollment. Vaginal swabs were taken to perform microbial analyses and measure cytokine levels, providing comprehensive profiles of their vaginal microbiomes and inflammatory status.
What were the most important findings?
The study demonstrated clear differences in vaginal microbiota between infertile women infected with CT and those who were not. Women with infertility and CT infection exhibited significant vaginal microbiota dysbiosis characterized by reduced microbial diversity and distinct microbial profiles. Notably, CT-positive infertile women exhibited vaginal microbiota dominated by Lactobacillus iners, contrasting sharply with the typical Lactobacillus crispatus dominance observed in healthy vaginal environments. Other beneficial microbes, such as Bifidobacterium, Enterobacter, Atopobium, and Streptococcus, were significantly reduced in women infected with CT. Elevated levels of cytokines, particularly interferon (IFN)-γ and interleukin (IL)-10, were also observed, indicating a heightened inflammatory response. Post-treatment analysis revealed a substantial recovery of the vaginal microbiota, characterized by increased Lactobacillus abundance and the disappearance of CT genomic sequences, underscoring the effectiveness of azithromycin therapy.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study's greatest implication is the identification of specific microbiome signatures as predictive markers for CT infection in women experiencing infertility. This insight can enable clinicians to use vaginal microbiome profiles as diagnostic and predictive tools for CT infection, potentially guiding more targeted and personalized treatment strategies. The recovery of a healthy microbiome after antibiotic treatment highlights the possibility of using microbiome modulation (e.g., probiotics or other microbiota-directed therapies) to enhance fertility outcomes and reduce complications associated with CT infections. Such microbiome-based approaches could represent a new frontier in reproductive medicine, specifically targeting women at risk for infertility due to microbial dysbiosis and infections.
Gut microbiota: Linking nutrition and perinatal depression
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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This review investigates the relationship between gut microbiota and perinatal depression, highlighting how nutrition and probiotics may help regulate mood disorders during pregnancy and postpartum.
What was reviewed?
The article reviewed the relationship between gut microbiota, nutrition, and perinatal depression, a major or minor depressive episode during pregnancy (antenatal depression), after childbirth (postpartum depression). It explored how various nutrients and probiotics could influence mental health during the perinatal period, particularly focusing on how they modulate gut microbiota to affect mood disorders such as depression.
Who was reviewed?
The review focused on the role of the gut microbiome, various nutrients like vitamin D, omega-3 fatty acids, fiber, and iron, and probiotics in influencing perinatal depression. The review examined multiple studies and the mechanistic pathways by which these factors can modulate maternal mental health, highlighting the importance of maintaining a healthy microbiome during pregnancy and postpartum.
What were the most important findings?
The review highlighted several critical findings related to the gut microbiota's influence on perinatal depression. One of the most significant takeaways is that the gut-brain axis plays a pivotal role in the onset and progression of perinatal depression. Changes in the microbiome, particularly dysbiosis, were found to correlate with mood disturbances and anxiety. Nutrients such as vitamin D, omega-3 fatty acids, iron, and fiber can influence the gut microbiota, potentially mitigating symptoms of depression. Probiotic supplementation emerged as a promising intervention, although its efficacy remains controversial. The review also discussed the effects of specific bacterial genera in the gut, such as Bifidobacterium, Lactobacillus, and Roseburia, which are linked to mood regulation. However, the review also noted that while certain nutrients and probiotics showed potential, clinical trials are needed to conclusively determine their role in preventing or treating perinatal depression.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The most significant implication of this review is the potential for dietary and probiotic interventions to support mental health during pregnancy and postpartum. By modulating the gut microbiota through nutrition, there is an opportunity to prevent or reduce the severity of perinatal depression, which affects many women globally. Given the impact of perinatal depression on maternal and infant health, these findings suggest that clinicians should consider microbiome-targeted approaches, including dietary modifications and probiotics, as part of comprehensive mental health care for pregnant and postpartum women. However, the review also cautions that more robust clinical trials are required to validate the proposed interventions. The variability in responses to probiotic supplementation indicates that not all strains are equally effective, and personalized approaches may be necessary. Furthermore, the review highlights the complexity of the gut microbiome, which makes it difficult to pinpoint exact microbial profiles that could universally benefit maternal mental health.
The role of gut microbiota and blood metabolites in postpartum depression: A Mendelian randomization analysis.
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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This study identifies gut microbiota and blood metabolites causally associated with postpartum depression, revealing potential biomarkers and therapeutic targets for PPD.
What was studied?
This research investigated the causal relationship between gut microbiota, blood metabolites, and postpartum depression (PPD) using Mendelian randomization (MR) analysis. The study aimed to identify specific gut microbial species and metabolites that are linked to PPD and understand the mechanisms by which they may influence the condition.
Who was studied?
The study analyzed genetic data from large cohorts, including data from the MiBioGen consortium for gut microbiota, the FinnGen consortium for PPD, and the metabolomics GWAS server for blood metabolites. The research specifically examined participants of European ancestry, with the PPD dataset including 9,392 individuals diagnosed with PPD and 69,241 controls.
What were the most important findings?
The study identified five gut microbial species and 24 blood metabolites that were causally associated with PPD. Among the gut species, Bifidobacterium and Prevotellaceae were linked to a reduced risk of PPD, while Alphaproteobacteria was associated with an increased risk. The study also found that these microbial species could influence PPD by modulating blood metabolite levels, particularly xanthine and 1-arachidonoylglycerophosphoinositol (LysoPI). The most important blood metabolites associated with PPD included guanosine, xanthine, phosphate, and 2-aminobutyrate, with several metabolites being identified as potential biomarkers for PPD.
In terms of microbial associations, the research highlighted that Prevotellaceae and Bifidobacterium may protect against PPD by elevating levels of xanthine and LysoPI, which are involved in anti-inflammatory pathways. On the other hand, Alphaproteobacteria was found to increase the risk of PPD, possibly by promoting inflammation. This study underscores the complex interactions between the gut microbiome, metabolism, and mental health, offering new insights into the biological mechanisms that could inform PPD treatment strategies.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study offers significant implications for the understanding and potential treatment of PPD. By identifying specific gut microbial species and metabolites that influence PPD risk, it opens the door to new therapeutic approaches that target the gut microbiome. For example, interventions that modulate the gut environment, such as probiotic treatments or dietary modifications, may help alleviate PPD symptoms. Furthermore, the identification of blood metabolites as biomarkers could lead to more accurate and early detection of PPD, potentially improving patient outcomes. Overall, the findings suggest that regulating the gut microbiota and associated metabolic pathways could be a promising avenue for preventing and treating PPD.
The ovarian cancer-associated microbiome contributes to the tumor’s inflammatory microenvironment
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This review explores the ovarian cancer-associated microbiome's role in shaping the inflammatory microenvironment of tumors. It discusses how microbial dysbiosis and its metabolites contribute to cancer progression, immune suppression, and therapeutic resistance, suggesting microbiome modulation as a potential therapeutic strategy.
What was studied?
This review examines the ovarian cancer-associated microbiome and its contribution to the tumor’s inflammatory microenvironment. It focuses on how microbial alterations in the reproductive and gastrointestinal tracts may play a pivotal role in ovarian cancer development, progression, and therapeutic resistance. The review explores the presence of specific bacterial populations, such as Propionibacterium acnes, Firmicutes, and Proteobacteria, in ovarian cancer patients and their influence on tumor growth and immune responses. The paper also highlights the relationship between microbiome-derived metabolites and inflammation, and how this could lead to chronic inflammation within the tumor microenvironment, thus facilitating cancer progression.
Who was studied?
The review draws from various studies that involve ovarian cancer patients and healthy controls. Research from animal models, particularly mice, is also referenced to examine how specific bacteria interact with ovarian cancer cells. The study analyzes microbiome compositions in different tumor stages and the corresponding immune responses in patients diagnosed with ovarian cancer. Additionally, studies exploring how treatments like chemotherapy and antibiotics affect the microbiome and alter treatment outcomes are discussed.
Most important findings
A key finding from the review is the significant role of the microbiome in fostering an inflammatory tumor microenvironment. Certain bacteria like Propionibacterium acnes are enriched in ovarian cancer tissues and contribute to inflammation by activating inflammatory pathways such as the NF-kB signaling pathway, leading to the production of pro-inflammatory cytokines like TNF-α and IL-1β. The review also emphasizes the role of microbial metabolites, such as lipopolysaccharides (LPS), in promoting tumor progression by enhancing immune suppression and facilitating epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT). Dysbiosis in the gut and vaginal microbiomes has been linked to ovarian cancer, with specific microbial signatures influencing chemotherapy resistance. For example, microbial shifts during chemotherapy can disrupt the gut microbiota, leading to changes in tumor-associated immune cells like macrophages, further impeding the efficacy of treatment.
Key implications
The findings suggest that understanding the microbiome's role in ovarian cancer could lead to innovative therapeutic strategies, including microbiome modulation to improve treatment responses. By targeting microbial communities in the tumor microenvironment, such as using probiotics or fecal microbiota transplantation, it may be possible to reduce inflammation and enhance the body's immune response against tumors. Additionally, the microbiome could serve as a potential biomarker for early detection, prognosis, and even treatment response monitoring in ovarian cancer. However, more studies are needed to identify specific microbial species that can be used for clinical interventions and to clarify the mechanisms through which the microbiome influences cancer progression.
Risks, Benefits, and Treatment Modalities of Menopausal Hormone Therapy: Current Concepts
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) is one of the most effective treatments for women experiencing the symptoms of menopause, particularly vasomotor symptoms such as hot flashes and night sweats. But its benefits go beyond just symptom management. HRT can also play a key role in improving vaginal health by alleviating dryness and discomfort, which are common complaints among women in menopause. Additionally, it helps prevent bone loss, significantly reducing the risk of osteoporosis and fractures, which are more common after menopause. Despite its many benefits, HRT is not one-size-fits-all; it’s essential to tailor treatment based on individual health profiles, taking into account the risks like breast cancer, blood clots, and heart disease that come with prolonged use.
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The study emphasizes the risks and benefits of menopausal hormone therapy in managing vasomotor symptoms, osteoporosis, and cardiovascular health. It highlights the importance of timing, formulation, and route of administration in optimizing therapy for individual patients.
What was studied?
The study reviewed menopausal hormone therapy (MHT), focusing on the risks, benefits, and treatment modalities related to managing menopausal symptoms like vasomotor symptoms (VMS) and osteoporosis. It evaluated different formulations, routes of administration, and the clinical impact of MHT on cardiovascular health, bone health, and the risk of conditions like breast cancer. The review highlighted how MHT's safety and efficacy vary depending on timing, formulation, and patient health status, particularly in relation to the onset of menopause.
Who was studied?
The research examined women undergoing menopause, particularly those who are experiencing vasomotor symptoms, such as hot flashes and night sweats. The study included women within 10 years of menopause and those under 60 years of age, as this group tends to experience the most favorable outcomes with MHT. It also considered women with specific risks, including those with obesity, hypertension, or cardiovascular concerns, and assessed their response to both estrogen-only and combined estrogen-progestogen therapy. In addition, the study touched on the effects of MHT in older women and in those with a history of breast cancer or other estrogen-sensitive conditions.
Most important findings
The study found that MHT remains the most effective treatment for vasomotor symptoms, with significant improvements in the frequency and severity of hot flashes and night sweats. The review highlighted that early initiation of MHT, particularly within 10 years of menopause, has a favorable impact on cardiovascular health and bone health. The timing hypothesis suggests that initiating MHT closer to menopause may help reduce the risk of coronary artery disease and improve lipid profiles. The risks associated with MHT, including cardiovascular events and breast cancer, tend to increase with age and the duration of hormone use. Notably, transdermal estrogen was found to have a lower risk of venous thromboembolism and stroke compared to oral forms. For women with an intact uterus, progestogen therapy is necessary to prevent endometrial hyperplasia and cancer. The review also examined vaginal estrogen for genitourinary symptoms and found that it is effective for treating vaginal dryness and discomfort, with minimal systemic absorption. The overall benefit-risk profile of MHT is most favorable when it is used early in menopause and for women without contraindications such as a history of estrogen-sensitive cancers.
Key implications
Clinicians should tailor MHT based on the patient's age, timing since menopause, and risk profile. Transdermal estrogen is preferred for women with cardiovascular risks as it avoids first-pass metabolism, reducing the risk of thrombotic events. Progestogen should be added to estrogen therapy in women with a uterus to prevent endometrial cancer. Non-hormonal treatments are an option for women who cannot use hormones or prefer alternatives, and these may include medications like SSRIs/SNRIs and gabapentinoids. Vaginal estrogen remains the most effective treatment for genitourinary symptoms. For women under 60 or within 10 years of menopause, MHT provides substantial benefits in managing symptoms and preventing osteoporosis, while minimizing risks when used appropriately. The clinical decision to start, continue, or discontinue MHT should involve shared decision-making between the clinician and patient, incorporating lifestyle changes and regular monitoring for cardiovascular health and breast cancer risk.
Hormone Replacement Therapy Reverses Gut Microbiome and Serum Metabolome Alterations in Premature Ovarian Insufficiency
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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This study explored the role of hormone replacement therapy (HRT) in reversing gut microbiome and serum metabolome alterations in women with premature ovarian insufficiency (POI), identifying potential therapeutic targets for microbiome-based interventions.
What was studied?
The study aimed to explore the impact of hormone replacement therapy (HRT) on gut microbiome alterations and serum metabolome in women with premature ovarian insufficiency (POI). It focused on identifying the microbiome changes and metabolic shifts associated with POI and how HRT could mitigate these changes, providing insights into the pathophysiological mechanisms underlying POI.
Who was studied?
The study involved three groups of female participants: healthy controls, patients with POI who were not treated with HRT, and patients with POI treated with HRT. The subjects were recruited from the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at Sir Run Run Shaw Hospital, Zhejiang University School of Medicine. The research included fecal and serum sample analyses, focusing on gut microbiome and serum metabolome alterations.
Most important findings
The study found that patients with POI exhibited a significant increase in the abundance of Eggerthella, a genus of bacteria, in their fecal samples compared to healthy controls. This dysbiosis was reversed in patients receiving HRT. Additionally, serum metabolic alterations were identified in patients with POI, including elevated serum TGF-β1 levels, a factor associated with fibrosis. These metabolic changes were closely linked to gut microbiota composition, and the abundance of Eggerthella was positively correlated with altered metabolic signatures. In animal models, estrogen treatment alleviated ovarian fibrosis induced by Eggerthella lenta.
Key implications
The findings underscore the importance of the gut microbiome and serum metabolites in the development of POI. The observed dysbiosis, particularly the overabundance of Eggerthella, suggests that the microbiome may play a pivotal role in the disease's pathogenesis. HRT not only mimicked the hormonal balance typically seen in healthy individuals but also corrected the microbial imbalance and metabolic disturbances associated with POI. This highlights the potential of microbiome modulation as a therapeutic strategy for managing POI and related metabolic disorders, offering a new avenue for treating POI through personalized interventions targeting the gut microbiota.
Endometriosis-associated infertility: From pathophysiology to tailored treatment
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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This review synthesizes evidence on the multifactorial mechanisms underlying endometriosis-associated infertility, emphasizing inflammatory, hormonal, anatomical, and molecular drivers. It highlights advances in non-invasive diagnostics, individualized treatment, and the clinical promise of integrating molecular and microbiome signatures into care protocols for improved fertility outcomes.
What was reviewed?
This paper is a detailed review of the current knowledge on endometriosis-associated infertility, synthesizing recent advances in understanding the pathophysiology, diagnosis, and management of this complex and multifactorial condition. The review highlights that endometriosis is not only a localized pelvic disease but also a systemic condition with pleiotropic effects on reproductive health. The review scrutinizes the interactions between inflammation, hormonal dysregulation, altered pelvic anatomy, diminished ovarian reserve, impaired endometrial receptivity, and systemic immune changes, all of which collectively contribute to infertility in women with endometriosis. The authors further discuss animal models, molecular mechanisms, including genetic and epigenetic influences, and the role of stem cells and microRNAs in disease pathogenesis and clinical presentation.
Who was reviewed?
The review focuses on women of reproductive age affected by endometriosis, with particular attention to those experiencing infertility. It draws from a heterogeneous population including both clinical and experimental (animal) models, and examines evidence from diverse phenotypes, ranging from women with minimal, mild, or advanced disease to those with specific subtypes such as ovarian, peritoneal, or deep infiltrating endometriosis. The paper also reviews findings from meta-analyses, randomized controlled trials, cohort studies, and basic science research, ensuring a broad and representative scope of current evidence.
What were the most important findings?
Endometriosis-associated infertility is multifactorial, with the most important mechanisms involving a persistent pro-inflammatory microenvironment, hormonal imbalances, particularly estrogen dominance and progesterone resistance, and anatomical disruption from adhesions and fibrosis. The review underscores that only half of women with endometriosis-associated infertility have typical macroscopic lesions, which contributes to underdiagnosis and delays in treatment. A core finding is that chronic inflammation, stemming from elevated cytokines and immune cell dysfunction, distorts the follicular and endometrial microenvironments, ultimately impairing ovulation, fertilization, embryo development, and implantation. Diminished ovarian reserve, especially in women with ovarian endometriomas, is linked to oxidative stress, stromal fibrosis, and accelerated follicular depletion, which can be exacerbated by surgical interventions.
At the molecular level, the review identifies major microbial associations (MMA) and signatures such as dysregulation of specific genes (e.g., HOXA10, PR isoform B), aberrant DNA methylation, and microRNAs that alter gene expression and promote disease progression. The immune signature of the eutopic endometrium in affected women is notably pro-inflammatory, with increased type I macrophages and impaired regulatory T cell function. Stem cell trafficking and inappropriate differentiation play significant roles in lesion formation at both pelvic and extra-pelvic sites. On the diagnostic front, the review highlights promising advances in non-invasive biomarkers, particularly panels of serum-derived miRNAs with high sensitivity and specificity for disease detection. Treatment recommendations are increasingly individualized, combining surgical, medical, and assisted reproductive strategies tailored to disease severity, ovarian reserve, age, and patient preferences. Novel molecular diagnostic tools, such as transcriptomic-based endometrial receptivity assays and BCL6 testing, are emerging as potential game-changers for clinical decision-making.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review has major implications for clinical practice. It clarifies that endometriosis-associated infertility cannot be addressed with a single, uniform approach; rather, it demands individualized, multidisciplinary care informed by an understanding of both systemic and local pathophysiology. The integration of molecular and microbiome signatures into diagnostic and therapeutic protocols holds promise for earlier detection and more precise interventions. The review also calls attention to the significant impact of diagnostic delays, emphasizing the need for validated, non-invasive tests such as miRNA panels for timely diagnosis and intervention. The authors advocate for collaborative, specialized care in referral centers, incorporating both reproductive surgery and assisted reproductive technologies (ART). The review also recognizes the ongoing need for research to further elucidate molecular mechanisms, optimize biomarker panels, and refine therapeutic algorithms, particularly as new insights into the microbiome, genetics, and immune modulation emerge.
Non-targeted metabolomics revealed novel links between serum metabolites and primary ovarian insufficiency: A Mendelian randomization study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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This study identifies 33 serum metabolites, including N-acetylalanine, linked to an increased risk of primary ovarian insufficiency (POI), offering new insights into the disease's genetic and metabolic causes.
What was studied?
The study aimed to explore the causal links between genetically determined metabolites (GDMs) and primary ovarian insufficiency (POI), a condition characterized by the early loss of ovarian function. The authors employed a Mendelian randomization (MR) approach, using genetic data from genome-wide association studies (GWAS) on 486 metabolites from 7824 European participants, alongside GWAS data on POI risk from the FinnGen Consortium. The study focused on identifying causal associations between serum metabolite levels and the risk of POI, ultimately revealing novel insights into the biological mechanisms underpinning the condition.
Who was studied?
The study involved genetic data from 7824 participants from two European cohorts, representing a diverse population of individuals of European descent. The participants were used to analyze the genetic correlations between 486 serum metabolites and POI. Additionally, the GWAS data for POI risk were sourced from 254 Finnish women diagnosed with POI and 118,228 control participants, ensuring a robust sample size for understanding the relationship between metabolites and POI.
Most important findings
The MR analysis identified 33 metabolites that had a potential causal effect on POI development. Among these, N-acetylalanine emerged as the most significantly associated metabolite, demonstrating a strong link to elevated POI risk across multiple MR methods. Other notable metabolites, such as threonine and glycerol 2-phosphate, were also found to be significantly correlated with an increased risk of POI. Furthermore, several "unknown" metabolites, including X-11437, were discovered to have significant associations with POI, highlighting the need for further investigation into these compounds. Additionally, metabolic pathway analysis revealed key metabolic pathways related to POI, including the biosynthesis of valine, leucine, and isoleucine, as well as the metabolism of glycine, serine, and threonine.
Key implications
This study provides critical insights into the genetic and metabolic underpinnings of POI, paving the way for potential biomarker identification and novel therapeutic strategies. The findings suggest that serum metabolites, especially N-acetylalanine, could serve as biomarkers for POI risk, helping in the early detection and management of the condition. Additionally, the study opens up avenues for further research into the "unknown" metabolites that might play a role in POI, encouraging a deeper exploration into their mechanistic pathways and potential clinical applications.
To explore the mechanism of acupoint application in the treatment of primary dysmenorrhea by 16S rDNA sequencing and metabolomics
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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This study explores how graphene-based warm uterus acupoint paste (GWUAP) treats primary dysmenorrhea by regulating intestinal microbiota and metabolites, highlighting its potential as a non-drug alternative therapy.
What was studied?
This study investigates the mechanisms by which graphene-based warm uterus acupoint paste (GWUAP) can treat primary dysmenorrhea (PD). It explores the effects of GWUAP on uterine tissue, pain severity, and the intestinal microbiota in a PD rat model. By utilizing 16S rDNA sequencing and fecal metabolomics, the study aims to uncover how GWUAP influences the microbiome and related metabolic pathways to reduce dysmenorrhea symptoms. The key aspects explored include the modulation of microbial communities and metabolites that may contribute to the therapeutic effects of GWUAP.
Who was studied?
The study was conducted using sexually mature female Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats, which were randomly assigned to control, model, and treatment groups. The rats in the model and treatment groups were administered estradiol benzoate combined with oxytocin to induce PD-like symptoms, while the control group was untreated. The treatment group received GWUAP, an acupoint therapy, while the model and control groups did not. Fecal samples from these rats were analyzed for microbial diversity, and serum and uterine tissue were evaluated for inflammatory markers and structural changes. This study provides insights into how GWUAP impacts both microbiome composition and metabolites.
Most important findings
The study found that GWUAP effectively alleviated the symptoms of PD in rats, as evidenced by a significant reduction in the torsion scores, improved uterine tissue pathology, and a decrease in serum levels of inflammatory markers like TNF-α and PGF2α. Additionally, GWUAP treatment restored the balance of the intestinal microbiota by increasing the abundance of beneficial bacteria, such as Lactobacillus, and reducing harmful bacteria, like Romboutsia. Metabolomics analysis revealed that GWUAP influenced 32 metabolites related to therapeutic effects, and several metabolic pathways, including steroid hormone biosynthesis, were significantly regulated. This suggests that GWUAP may exert its therapeutic effect by restoring microbial diversity and influencing metabolic pathways related to inflammation and pain.
Key implications
These findings suggest that GWUAP could be a promising alternative therapy for managing primary dysmenorrhea, particularly for those seeking non-pharmacological treatments. By regulating both the gut microbiota and associated metabolites, GWUAP offers a multifaceted approach to treating PD, which could reduce reliance on NSAIDs and other pain relievers. Clinicians may consider incorporating GWUAP into treatment plans for PD, particularly for patients seeking holistic, non-invasive alternatives. Further research is necessary to explore the long-term effects and potential for GWUAP in clinical settings.
Primary ovarian insufficiency: Update on clinical and genetic findings
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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This review explores the genetic and clinical factors contributing to primary ovarian insufficiency (POI), highlighting key genes and the importance of early diagnosis, fertility preservation, and hormone replacement therapy.
What was studied?
This review investigates the clinical and genetic aspects of primary ovarian insufficiency (POI), a condition in which the ovarian follicles fail to function properly before the age of 40. The study focuses on the genetic background of POI, including its heritable nature and the various genes involved in both syndromic and non-syndromic forms of the condition. The research also examines the various factors that influence ovarian reserve depletion and dysfunction, such as the impact of genetic mutations in X-linked and autosomal genes. Additionally, the study looks at the increasing importance of POI as women delay conception and highlights the challenges it poses to women’s fertility and general health.
Who was studied?
The review focuses on the genetic causes and clinical presentation of POI in women under the age of 40. It includes both idiopathic and genetically predisposed cases, with a focus on women experiencing primary amenorrhea or secondary amenorrhea due to ovarian dysfunction. The study highlights the role of genetic factors, particularly X chromosome-linked defects, and examines the prevalence of POI in women with familial histories of early menopause. The research also covers the rising incidence of POI in younger women, which is becoming an increasingly important clinical challenge.
Most important findings
The review highlights the significant genetic contribution to POI, with many cases being heritable and associated with mutations in specific genes. X-linked defects, including the FMR1 premutation, are commonly linked to POI, especially in familial cases. The study identifies key genes involved in folliculogenesis, such as FIGLA, BMP15, and GDF9, which play crucial roles in ovarian development. Other genetic factors, such as mutations in the SYCE1 and NR5A1 genes, also contribute to POI. Additionally, the review discusses the clinical presentation of POI, which varies widely, and emphasizes the need for early diagnosis and effective management. Fertility preservation strategies and hormone replacement therapy (HRT) are important for managing the condition and improving quality of life.
Key implications
Clinicians must be aware of the multifactorial nature of POI, with a strong genetic component influencing its development. The identification of key genes responsible for POI provides a pathway for early genetic screening and diagnosis, enabling targeted treatment plans. Fertility preservation is a key concern, as many women with POI face challenges with conception. Early intervention with HRT can mitigate some of the long-term health effects, including cardiovascular disease and osteoporosis. Moreover, understanding the genetic basis of POI can improve counseling for women at risk and guide personalized treatment approaches.
Metformin, the Rise of a New Medical Therapy for Endometriosis? A Systematic Review of the Literature
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Metformin emerges as a promising non-hormonal therapy for endometriosis, showing potent anti-inflammatory, anti-angiogenic, and fertility-enhancing effects, with significant symptom relief in limited clinical testing.
What was reviewed?
The review systematically analyzed existing studies evaluating the potential of metformin as a therapeutic option for endometriosis. It specifically examined the biological mechanisms through which metformin might impact endometriosis, including its anti-inflammatory, anti-angiogenic, and antiproliferative effects. Additionally, the review assessed the results from studies using both animal models and cell cultures, as well as the single clinical study available involving women diagnosed with endometriosis.
Who was reviewed?
The systematic review encompassed in vitro cell culture experiments, animal model studies (primarily rats), and limited clinical data from women with endometriosis. The cell culture studies investigated human endometriotic stromal cells, assessing metformin’s impact on inflammation and proliferation markers. The animal studies involved rats with induced endometriosis, evaluating the reduction of lesion size and biochemical markers after treatment. Researchers drew clinical evidence from a single study involving 90 women diagnosed with stage 1-2 endometriosis who experienced infertility and symptoms such as pelvic pain, dysmenorrhea, and dyspareunia.
What were the most important findings?
The review highlighted multiple significant findings about metformin’s therapeutic potential. In vitro studies demonstrated that metformin effectively reduced inflammation by suppressing key proinflammatory cytokines like interleukin-1β (IL-1β) and IL-8. Metformin also inhibited aromatase activity, crucial in local estrogen production, thereby potentially reducing estrogen-driven endometriosis growth. Another essential finding was metformin’s capacity to modulate the Wnt2/β-catenin signaling pathway, a critical factor in the interaction between stromal and epithelial cells that facilitates lesion proliferation and maintenance. In animal models, metformin treatment significantly regressed endometriotic implants by reducing angiogenic factors such as vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), matrix metalloproteinase-9 (MMP-9), and inflammatory mediators IL-1β and IL-8. Notably, metformin reduced adhesion formation, an essential consideration in endometriosis management.
In the single clinical study reviewed, metformin treatment led to marked improvements in symptom relief, including significant reductions in pelvic pain, dysmenorrhea, and dyspareunia. Importantly, metformin use correlated with increased pregnancy rates, suggesting its potential benefits in fertility preservation among women with endometriosis.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The most critical implication of this systematic review is the promising potential of metformin as a new, non-hormonal treatment option for endometriosis. Metformin’s diverse beneficial effects offer a unique therapeutic profile distinct from conventional hormone-based therapies, which frequently have contraceptive side effects. Given metformin's general safety, affordability, and extensive use for conditions like PCOS and diabetes, its integration into endometriosis treatment could significantly improve patient outcomes, particularly in individuals contraindicated for or intolerant to hormonal therapy or those desiring pregnancy. The review emphasizes the necessity of further clinical trials to definitively establish metformin’s efficacy and optimal usage guidelines in treating endometriosis.
Role of Vaginal Microbiota Dysbiosis in Gynecological Diseases and the Potential Interventions
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This review reveals how vaginal microbiota dysbiosis underpins diverse gynecological diseases, highlights characteristic microbial signatures, and evaluates interventions—especially probiotics and vaginal microbiota transplantation—as emerging strategies to restore health and reduce recurrence.
What was reviewed?
This review comprehensively examines the role of vaginal microbiota dysbiosis, primarily the loss of Lactobacillus dominance and increased microbial diversity, in the pathogenesis and progression of a wide range of gynecological diseases, both infectious (e.g., bacterial vaginosis [BV], vulvovaginal candidiasis, trichomonal vaginitis, atrophic vaginitis, sexually transmitted infections including HPV, HSV-2, HIV, Neisseria gonorrhoeae, Mycoplasma genitalium, and Chlamydia trachomatis) and non-infectious (e.g., miscarriage, preterm birth, infertility, polycystic ovarian syndrome [PCOS], uterine fibroids, menstrual disorders, and intrauterine adhesions). The review also evaluates current and emerging interventions, including antibiotics, probiotics, and the novel approach of vaginal microbiota transplantation (VMT), to restore healthy microbial balance and mitigate disease risk and recurrence.
Who was reviewed?
The review encompasses studies involving a diverse population of women across different reproductive stages and clinical conditions, including those with various gynecological infections, infertility, endocrine disorders, and other non-infectious diseases. It references observational, clinical, and interventional research, from healthy women (to characterize community state types of the vaginal microbiome) to patients suffering from BV, recurrent infections, PCOS, and other gynecological pathologies. The included studies span multiple age groups, menopausal statuses, and geographic regions, offering a broad perspective on vaginal microbiota's clinical significance.
Most important findings
A healthy vaginal microbiota is typically dominated by Lactobacillus species, primarily L. crispatus, L. gasseri, L. jensenii, and L. iners, which maintain vaginal acidity, produce antimicrobials, and modulate immune responses, thereby protecting against pathogens. Dysbiosis is characterized by a reduction in Lactobacillus and an increase in diverse anaerobes such as Gardnerella, Atopobium, Prevotella, Megasphaera, Leptotrichia, Sneathia, and fungi like Candida. This shift is strongly associated with increased susceptibility to infections (BV, VVC, trichomoniasis, STIs), adverse reproductive outcomes (miscarriage, preterm birth, infertility), and endocrine/metabolic disorders (PCOS, uterine fibroids, menstrual disorders). The review highlights that antibiotic use, while effective, is limited by recurrence and resistance; probiotics show promise, particularly strains restoring Lactobacillus dominance, but clinical outcomes are variable. Notably, the review details the first clinical application of VMT, with promising results in refractory BV, suggesting its potential as a robust restorative therapy. Altered vaginal microbial signatures, such as decreased Lactobacillus and increased Gardnerella/Prevotella in BV, or increased Mycoplasma/Prevotella and decreased L. crispatus in PCOS, could serve as important biomarkers for clinical risk stratification and therapeutic targeting.
Key implications
The clinical management of gynecological diseases can be significantly improved by integrating strategies to modulate the vaginal microbiota. While antibiotics remain the standard of care, their limitations necessitate adjunctive or alternative therapies. Probiotics, particularly those containing key Lactobacillus species, can reduce recurrence and improve outcomes in both infectious and non-infectious gynecological conditions. VMT emerges as a highly promising intervention, capable of re-establishing a resilient, healthy vaginal microbiota, particularly for recurrent or treatment-resistant BV. However, broader clinical adoption requires larger trials, standardized protocols, and robust safety assessments. For clinicians, understanding the microbial signatures associated with specific diseases allows for more personalized, microbiome-informed therapeutic approaches and risk prediction.
Recent advances in the nutritional therapy for premature ovarian insufficiency
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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The review explores the potential of dietary supplements, including probiotics and phytoestrogens, to manage premature ovarian insufficiency (POI) symptoms. It highlights the safety, bioavailability, and efficacy of these nutrients for improving reproductive health and delaying ovarian function decline.
What was studied?
This paper investigates the role of dietary supplements in addressing the challenges associated with premature ovarian insufficiency (POI). This reproductive disorder causes the loss of ovarian function before the age of 40. POI leads to symptoms like irregular menstruation, hot flashes, mood changes, and reduced fertility. The review focuses on nutritional interventions, including functional nutrients from carbohydrates, fats, proteins, vitamins, and plant-based phytoestrogens. The paper also examines the potential of microbial-related nutritional substances, including probiotics, prebiotics, and synbiotics, in supporting ovarian function and reproductive health. The study examines various molecular, cellular, and tissue-level mechanisms through which these nutrients influence the body’s reproductive system.
Who was studied?
The review does not focus on a specific group of individuals but refers to various human and animal studies that explore the effects of different dietary and microbial nutrients on women with premature ovarian insufficiency. Studies on animal models and clinical trials in humans were included to evaluate the therapeutic potential of supplements such as probiotics, vitamins, and phytoestrogens in alleviating the symptoms and delaying ovarian function decline in POI patients.
Most important findings
Key findings in the review highlight the importance of certain dietary and microbial nutrients in managing the symptoms of POI. Nutrients like carbohydrates, fats, and proteins were found to influence the health of ovarian cells, delay ovarian aging, and improve fertility outcomes. Probiotics and prebiotics also showed promise in regulating reproductive functions, including the estrous cycle and ovarian viability. Additionally, phytoestrogens from vegetables and fruits were discussed for their antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, and mitochondrial-protective effects, which could help mitigate some symptoms of menopause and POI. Furthermore, the review emphasizes the bioavailability and safety of these nutritional supplements, which make them an appealing alternative or complement to hormone replacement therapy.
Key implications
The review suggests that dietary supplements, including microbial nutrients, could be valuable in managing premature ovarian insufficiency, potentially offering a safer, more natural option compared to hormone replacement therapy. This approach is particularly crucial for patients who may be concerned about the long-term risks associated with hormonal treatments. The findings also open up avenues for further research into how dietary and microbial interventions can be integrated into clinical practice to improve fertility and overall reproductive health in women with POI.
Gut microbiota: Emerging biomarkers and potential therapeutics for premature ovarian failure
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This paper explores how gut microbiota dysbiosis contributes to premature ovarian failure (POF) and highlights potential therapeutic interventions targeting GM for better management of POF.
What was studied?
This paper explores the role of gut microbiota in the development of premature ovarian failure (POF), a condition that significantly impacts female reproductive health. The research examines how dysbiosis, or an imbalance in the gut microbiota, contributes to ovarian dysfunction by influencing hormonal regulation, immune responses, and metabolic processes. It also addresses how alterations in the gut microbiome may lead to complications such as infertility, osteoporosis, and mental health issues, which are common in women affected by POF.
Who was studied?
The review primarily focuses on women diagnosed with premature ovarian failure, which occurs before the age of 40, leading to the early depletion of ovarian follicles and infertility. In addition to human studies, animal models are used to better understand how changes in gut microbiota influence ovarian health. The research also considers studies on chemotherapy-induced ovarian failure (CIPOF), exploring how GM modulation might protect against ovarian damage caused by chemotherapy treatments.
Most important findings
The review highlights that gut microbiota has a significant role in ovarian function, particularly through its interactions with the hypothalamic-pituitary-ovarian (HPO) axis, which regulates hormonal balance. Dysbiosis in the gut microbiome is linked to a reduction in ovarian reserve, accelerated ovarian aging, and the early onset of menopause. Notable microbial communities, such as Akkermansia and Lactobacillus, show altered abundances in POF patients, affecting immune responses and inflammation, which further exacerbate ovarian dysfunction. The study also emphasizes that GM dysbiosis is associated with conditions like osteoporosis and cardiovascular diseases, both of which are prevalent in POF patients. Furthermore, therapeutic strategies like fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) and the modulation of gut microbiota through probiotics or other agents have shown promise in improving ovarian function and mitigating symptoms of POF, especially in cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy.
Key implications
The findings suggest that gut microbiota could serve as a novel target for the prevention and treatment of premature ovarian failure. Modulating the gut microbiome may offer a promising strategy to restore ovarian function, delay the onset of menopause, and improve the fertility and quality of life of women with POF. These insights could lead to the development of personalized, microbiome-based interventions, providing more effective treatments for POF and ovarian dysfunction, particularly in women affected by chemotherapy.
Female infertility and diet, is there a role for a personalized nutritional approach in assisted reproductive technologies?
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This review highlights how dietary patterns, micronutrients, genetics, and the microbiome interact to influence female infertility and ART outcomes, supporting the role of personalized nutrition and microbiome-targeted interventions in reproductive medicine.
What was reviewed?
This comprehensive narrative review synthesized current research on the interplay between diet, genetics, epigenetics, and the microbiome in female infertility, with a focus on the impact of dietary patterns and nutrients on reproductive health and assisted reproductive technology (ART) outcomes. It critically appraised evidence from observational studies, randomized controlled trials, and animal research, covering macronutrients (proteins, carbohydrates, fats), micronutrients (vitamins, minerals), dietary patterns (Mediterranean, Western), and specific dietary components, such as prebiotics and probiotics. The review also discussed how nutritional factors interface with genetic and epigenetic mechanisms and the gut and vaginal microbiome, ultimately influencing female fertility and ART success.
Who was reviewed?
The review encompassed studies involving a diverse range of populations, including healthy women of reproductive age, women experiencing infertility, those undergoing ART procedures (e.g., IVF, ICSI), and relevant animal models (mice, rats, cattle, macaques, Drosophila). The reviewed evidence included large cohort studies (e.g., Nurses’ Health Study II), randomized controlled trials, and mechanistic studies exploring molecular and microbial pathways. The analysis particularly focused on women with different dietary patterns, micronutrient statuses, and genetic backgrounds, as well as those with specific reproductive disorders such as PCOS.
Most important findings
The review found that dietary patterns and specific nutrients play a significant role in female reproductive health and ART outcomes. Adherence to the Mediterranean diet, rich in plant-based foods, PUFAs, whole grains, and micronutrients, was consistently associated with improved ovulatory function, higher pregnancy rates, and enhanced ART outcomes, potentially mediated by anti-inflammatory and antioxidant effects. Conversely, Western diets high in trans fats, refined sugars, and red meat were linked to ovulatory disorders and lower fertility. Micronutrients such as folate, vitamin D, zinc, and selenium were positively associated with reproductive hormone profiles, oocyte quality, and ART success, though evidence on vitamin D was mixed. Genetic polymorphisms influenced folate metabolism and ART outcomes, highlighting the potential for personalized nutrition. Epigenetic modifications such as DNA methylation changes induced by dietary folate or histone modification by micronutrients were implicated in oocyte and embryo quality. Microbiome studies revealed that dietary fiber and prebiotic supplementation improved ART outcomes by enriching beneficial gut bacteria and reducing potentially harmful taxa. Higher follicular fluid levels of the microbial metabolite TMAO were associated with poorer embryo quality, implicating the gut microbiome in reproductive success. Favorable vaginal microbiome profiles, dominated by Lactobacillus species, were predictive of higher ART pregnancy rates.
Key implications
The review underscores the importance of considering diet, genomics, epigenetic status, and the microbiome in the management of female infertility and ART. Personalizing nutritional interventions based on genetic and microbial signatures holds promise for optimizing fertility treatments. Clinicians should be aware that dietary counseling, favoring Mediterranean-style diets, adequate intake of key micronutrients, and possibly prebiotic/probiotic interventions may improve reproductive outcomes. However, the heterogeneity of study designs and populations, as well as limited interventional evidence, means that further research is needed to establish precise, individualized nutritional guidelines for women seeking to conceive, particularly those undergoing ART.
Association between dietary trace minerals and pelvic inflammatory disease: Data from the 2015–2018 National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) is a complex interplay between pathogens, immune responses, and microbial communities. As research continues to uncover the microbiome's role in reproductive health, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as probiotics, prebiotics, and transplants are redefining how we prevent and treat PID. This page dives deep into these innovations, offering a glimpse into the future of personalized, biologically informed women’s healthcare.
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Higher dietary copper intake significantly lowers the risk of pelvic inflammatory disease in U.S. women, highlighting copper’s role in inflammation and reproductive health.
What was studied?
This cross-sectional study examined the association between dietary intake of trace minerals and pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) among women in the United States. Using data from the 2015–2018 National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys (NHANES), the study aimed to determine whether levels of these trace minerals in the diet correlated with PID risk. Multivariate logistic regression and restricted cubic spline analyses were performed to evaluate the relationships while controlling for demographic, lifestyle, and health covariates.
Who was studied?
The study analyzed data from 2,694 women aged 20 to 59 years, representative of the U.S. female population, who had complete data on dietary trace mineral intake and self-reported PID status. Participants were selected after excluding those with missing or incomplete data on PID, dietary intake, or key covariates. The diverse cohort included various ethnic backgrounds and socioeconomic statuses, with detailed assessments of BMI, smoking status, diabetes, hypertension, and reproductive health factors to adjust for potential confounding influences.
What were the most important findings?
The study found a significant inverse relationship between dietary copper intake and PID risk. Women with higher copper intake showed a notably lower odds of having PID, even after adjusting for multiple confounders, including age, race, BMI, smoking, and chronic health conditions. The strongest protective effect was observed in women consuming more than 1.49 mg/day of copper, which correlated with roughly a 70% reduction in PID odds compared to those with the lowest intake. No significant associations were found between PID and the intake of iron, selenium, or zinc. Subgroup analyses revealed that the inverse association with copper intake was consistent across most subgroups, except for underweight women. Age and BMI influenced the strength and shape of this relationship, with older and overweight women showing stronger linear or nonlinear protective effects from increased copper intake. Biologically, copper's known role in inflammatory regulation and oxidative stress defense likely underpins its protective association. Given PID’s inflammatory and polymicrobial nature, adequate copper intake may contribute to maintaining immune and microbial homeostasis in the reproductive tract.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This research highlights dietary copper intake as a potentially modifiable factor in reducing PID risk among women. Clinicians should consider dietary evaluation and counseling on adequate copper intake as part of comprehensive PID prevention strategies. The findings emphasize the importance of nutritional factors in reproductive health and suggest further studies should investigate the mechanistic pathways linking copper to immune modulation and microbiome regulation in PID. Public health efforts promoting balanced copper intake may help lower PID incidence and improve long-term reproductive outcomes. However, as the study is cross-sectional, causal relationships cannot be confirmed, and prospective studies are needed to validate these results and establish dietary recommendations.
Diet-driven microbiome changes and physical activity in cancer patients
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This review underscores the importance of diet and physical activity in modulating the gut microbiome of cancer patients. Diets like fiber-rich and Mediterranean diets show promise in improving cancer treatment outcomes. Exercise also enhances microbial diversity and immune function, potentially improving patient quality of life.
What was studied?
This mini-review explores the role of diet and physical activity in modulating the gut microbiome of cancer patients. It focuses on the impact of various dietary patterns, such as high-fat, fiber-rich, Mediterranean, ketogenic, and rice-beans diets, along with the potential influence of physical activity on the gut microbiome, immunity, and cancer progression. The review synthesizes both preclinical and clinical findings to understand how these lifestyle factors affect the gut microbial composition and their potential to improve cancer treatment outcomes and patient quality of life.
Who was studied?
The review includes studies on cancer patients, primarily focusing on the impact of diet and physical activity on the gut microbiome. Various clinical studies and trials involving patients with colorectal, breast, ovarian, and other cancers are discussed. These studies involve both dietary interventions and exercise regimens, exploring their effects on microbial diversity, inflammatory markers, and responses to cancer treatments like chemotherapy and immunotherapy.
Most important findings
The findings suggest that diet plays a critical role in shaping the gut microbiome, which in turn affects the body's response to cancer therapies. High-fat diets are associated with dysbiosis and an increased risk of tumor growth, while fiber-rich diets have been linked to positive shifts in the microbiome, such as the enrichment of beneficial bacteria like Faecalibacterium and Ruminococcaceae. Mediterranean diets also show a protective effect against cancer, with improvements in gut inflammation and microbial diversity. Additionally, regular physical activity is shown to independently modify the gut microbiome, increasing the presence of beneficial microbes like Akkermansia muciniphila, and reducing microbial taxa associated with inflammation and cancer progression.
Diet Type
Action
High-fat diet
Associated with microbial dysbiosis, tumor growth
Fiber-rich diet
Enrichment of beneficial bacteria, reduced tumor growth
Mediterranean diet
Reduced cancer risk, improved microbial diversity
Ketogenic diet
Disrupted microbial balance, varying effects on tumor growth
Rice and beans diet
Increased microbial diversity, higher SCFA levels
Physical activity
Increased gut microbial diversity, enhanced immune function
Key implications
This study highlights the importance of diet and exercise in managing cancer and enhancing treatment outcomes. Modifying the gut microbiome through personalized dietary interventions, such as high fiber or Mediterranean diets, could improve cancer treatment efficacy and reduce inflammation. Exercise, along with dietary changes, shows promise in maintaining gut homeostasis and improving the quality of life for cancer patients. These findings underscore the need for integrated treatment approaches involving clinicians, nutritionists, and physical therapists to optimize cancer care. However, further clinical trials are needed to better define the specific microbiome biomarkers that can guide personalized therapies.
Association between dietary magnesium intake and pelvic inflammatory disease in US women: a cross-sectional study of NHANES
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) is a complex interplay between pathogens, immune responses, and microbial communities. As research continues to uncover the microbiome's role in reproductive health, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as probiotics, prebiotics, and transplants are redefining how we prevent and treat PID. This page dives deep into these innovations, offering a glimpse into the future of personalized, biologically informed women’s healthcare.
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Higher dietary magnesium intake significantly reduces pelvic inflammatory disease risk in U.S. women, especially older adults, highlighting magnesium’s role in inflammation and reproductive health.
What was studied?
This cross-sectional study investigated the association between dietary magnesium intake and the risk of pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) in U.S. women. Using data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) cycles 2015–2018, the researchers examined whether higher dietary magnesium intake correlates with a reduced likelihood of PID. They applied weighted multivariable logistic regression models and restricted cubic spline (RCS) analysis to assess the dose-response relationship, adjusting for various demographic, lifestyle, and health-related confounders.
Who was studied?
The study analyzed data from 3,034 women aged 20 to 59 years who participated in NHANES 2015–2018. These women provided dietary intake information through two 24-hour recalls and self-reported their history of PID based on treatment for pelvic infection. Participants with missing data on PID status, magnesium intake, or key covariates were excluded. The sample represented a nationally weighted demographic, including diverse racial, socioeconomic, and health profiles, allowing generalization to U.S. women of reproductive and early middle age.
What were the most important findings?
The study found a significant inverse association between dietary magnesium intake and the risk of PID. Women in the highest quartile of magnesium intake had a 60.5% lower risk of PID compared to those in the lowest quartile after adjusting for potential confounders. The trend analysis indicated a linear negative relationship, with each increase in magnesium quartile corresponding to reduced PID odds. Subgroup analyses revealed that this association was stronger in older women (41–59 years) and specific subpopulations such as nonsmokers and those with normal or overweight BMI. The authors discussed biological plausibility: magnesium plays a key role in modulating inflammation and oxidative stress, both critical in PID pathogenesis. Magnesium's immune-enhancing properties and its inverse correlation with inflammatory markers like C-reactive protein (CRP) suggest that higher magnesium intake may mitigate inflammatory damage in the reproductive tract, potentially influencing the microbiome and pathogen susceptibility indirectly.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings highlight dietary magnesium as a potentially modifiable risk factor for PID, emphasizing nutrition’s role in gynecological health. Clinicians should consider dietary assessments and magnesium supplementation, especially for women at higher PID risk, as a preventative strategy alongside traditional treatments. The age-dependent effects underscore the need to tailor dietary guidance accordingly. This research advocates for further longitudinal and intervention studies to confirm causality and explore magnesium’s mechanistic impact on inflammation and the vaginal microbiome. Public health policies promoting magnesium-rich diets could contribute to reducing PID incidence and its serious reproductive consequences.
Management of dysmenorrhea through yoga: A narrative review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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Yoga, especially asanas, pranayama, and yoga nidra, significantly reduces menstrual pain and distress in women with dysmenorrhea. These practices improve pain tolerance and overall well-being, offering a non-pharmacological alternative to traditional treatments.
What was studied?
This narrative review focused on the use of yoga as a complementary therapy for managing dysmenorrhea, a condition characterized by painful menstrual cramps. The review examined various yoga techniques, including asanas, pranayama (breathing exercises), and yoga nidra (deep relaxation), assessing their impact on reducing pain, stress, and improving overall well-being in women with primary dysmenorrhea. The authors conducted an extensive search of the literature, analyzing 10 studies involving different forms of yoga to determine the effectiveness of these practices in alleviating menstrual pain and associated symptoms.
Who was studied?
The review included studies involving women with primary dysmenorrhea, a condition that affects a significant number of menstruating women, causing lower abdominal cramps and pain, often radiating to the back and thighs. The participants varied in age, but the studies primarily focused on young women, including adolescents and college-aged females, who self-reported menstrual pain. The studies included in the review used a range of yoga interventions, including specific asanas (physical postures), pranayama, and yoga nidra, practiced over various durations, from a few weeks to several months, and compared their effects to control groups or baseline measurements.
Most important findings
The review highlighted that yoga interventions, particularly asanas and pranayama, provided significant relief from dysmenorrhea symptoms, including pain intensity and duration. Notably, yoga practices such as Surya namaskar, Bhujangasana, Marjariasana, and Matsyasana, combined with relaxation and meditation techniques, led to a marked reduction in pain intensity and improved overall menstrual health. The practice of pranayama, which focuses on controlled breathing, showed improvements in pain tolerance by activating the parasympathetic nervous system, reducing pain perception, and enhancing relaxation. Yoga nidra, a deep relaxation technique, also proved effective in reducing menstrual distress and improving quality of life, likely by reducing stress and regulating hormonal imbalances associated with dysmenorrhea.
Key implications
The findings of this review suggest that yoga, as a non-pharmacological intervention, can serve as an effective complementary therapy for managing primary dysmenorrhea. The holistic approach of yoga, which combines physical postures, controlled breathing, and mental relaxation, addresses both the physiological and psychological aspects of menstrual pain. Yoga can offer a low-cost, accessible, and safe alternative for women who experience menstrual pain but prefer to avoid or reduce reliance on medication. The reduction in pain and improvement in quality of life observed in the studies make yoga a promising adjunct to conventional treatments for dysmenorrhea. However, further studies with larger sample sizes and rigorous methodology are needed to establish definitive conclusions.
Estrogenic Plants: to Prevent Neurodegeneration and Memory Loss and Other Symptoms in Women After Menopause
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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This review details the estrogenic activity, neuroprotective effects, and clinical relevance of medicinal plants for menopausal women, highlighting their potential to prevent cognitive decline and neurodegeneration via microbiome-associated mechanisms.
What was reviewed?
This comprehensive review synthesized current evidence on medicinal plants and natural compounds with estrogenic activity, focusing on their potential to prevent neurodegeneration, memory loss, and other menopause-related symptoms in women. The authors conducted an extensive literature search using SCOPUS, PubMed, and ScienceDirect, focusing on plants with established estrogenic activity. The paper details the pharmacological effects of these plants and their phytoestrogenic constituents, highlighting mechanisms involving estrogen receptor modulation, antioxidant, and anti-inflammatory actions. Special emphasis is placed on the potential of these compounds to alleviate cognitive deficits during menopause and aging, as well as their roles in preventing or treating neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's and Parkinson's disease.
Who was reviewed?
The review encompassed a wide range of studies, including preclinical research in cellular and animal models, as well as clinical trials and meta-analyses involving postmenopausal women. The included studies span healthy female and male subjects, women undergoing hormone replacement therapy (HRT), postmenopausal women, and patients with neurodegenerative conditions. The botanical scope was global, drawing on traditional medicinal plants from Europe, Asia, and the Americas, with particular focus on species commonly used in traditional Chinese medicine and Western herbalism.
Most important findings
The review identifies a diverse array of estrogenic plants, such as soy, red clover, black cohosh, sage (Salvia officinalis), ginger, and others, that contain phytoestrogens capable of binding to and modulating estrogen receptors. These plants offer cognitive and neuroprotective benefits through multiple mechanisms: selective estrogen receptor modulation, antioxidant effects, and anti-inflammatory actions. For instance, soy isoflavones, red clover, and Lespedeza bicolor have demonstrated memory-enhancing effects and reduction of amyloid-beta pathology in animal models of Alzheimer's disease. Some clinical trials report improvement in menopausal symptoms, quality of life, and cognitive performance with phytoestrogen supplementation, although results are sometimes inconsistent.
Key implications
The findings underscore the promise of estrogenic plants as safer, potentially effective alternatives to conventional HRT for managing menopausal symptoms and reducing neurodegenerative disease risk. Their selective activity on estrogen receptors, along with concurrent antioxidant and anti-inflammatory effects, positions them as multi-target interventions for aging-related cognitive decline. Importantly for clinical practice, these botanicals may offer neuroprotection without the increased risk of cancer and cardiovascular disease associated with conventional HRT, especially when used early in menopause. The review highlights the need for further high-quality, long-term clinical trials to clarify efficacy, optimal timing, and safety.
Integrated Metabolomics and Network Pharmacology Study on the Mechanism of Kangfuxiaoyan Suppository for Treating Chronic Pelvic Inflammatory Disease
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) is a complex interplay between pathogens, immune responses, and microbial communities. As research continues to uncover the microbiome's role in reproductive health, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as probiotics, prebiotics, and transplants are redefining how we prevent and treat PID. This page dives deep into these innovations, offering a glimpse into the future of personalized, biologically informed women’s healthcare.
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Kangfuxiaoyan suppository effectively treats chronic pelvic inflammatory disease by regulating key inflammatory and metabolic pathways, significantly reducing inflammation. Integrated metabolomics and network pharmacology clarify its therapeutic mechanisms, highlighting specific active ingredients and metabolic biomarkers for potential clinical use.
What was studied?
This study examined the therapeutic mechanisms of Kangfuxiaoyan suppository (KFXYS), a traditional Chinese medicine, in treating chronic pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) through integrated metabolomics and network pharmacology. Researchers conducted experiments using a rat model of CPID to assess the effects of KFXYS treatment on inflammation. They characterized the chemical ingredients of KFXYS, identified components absorbed into the bloodstream using advanced UPLC-Q-TOF/MS techniques, analyzed their pharmacokinetics, and employed network pharmacology to predict potential therapeutic targets and pathways. Additionally, metabolomics was used to uncover differential metabolites significantly related to inflammatory markers, helping to clarify how KFXYS exerts its therapeutic effects.
Who was studied?
The research involved female Sprague Dawley rats experimentally induced with CPID by implanting infectious materials. The rats were divided into several groups: normal, sham-operated, untreated CPID model, and KFXYS-treated groups. Blood and serum samples from these rats provided data for identifying absorbed chemical components and analyzing changes in metabolic profiles following treatment. By comparing inflammatory indicators such as interleukin levels and metabolic alterations, the study sought to understand KFXYS's effects at both biochemical and molecular levels.
What were the most important findings?
The study discovered significant therapeutic effects of KFXYS on CPID through multiple interconnected metabolic and molecular pathways. Treatment with KFXYS substantially reduced inflammation indicators, notably interleukin-1 (IL-1) and interleukin-6 (IL-6). Several key metabolites showed significant correlations with inflammation, particularly Leukotriene A4, 5-Hydroxyindoleacetic acid, Ornithine, Arginine, and specific phosphatidylcholine compounds. These metabolites were involved in critical pathways such as arginine and proline metabolism and glutathione metabolism. Network pharmacology further identified specific targets, including Arginase-1 (ARG1), nitric oxide synthases (NOS2 and NOS3), monoamine oxidase A (MAOA), and glutathione-related enzymes (GSTM1, GSTP1, and GSR), that KFXYS regulated to reduce inflammation and oxidative stress. Components identified with good absorption and pharmacokinetics included matrine, sophocarpine, aloin, esculetin, and various flavonoid glucuronides, strongly suggesting these compounds contributed to the therapeutic effect.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The implications of this research are profound for clinicians interested in novel, integrative treatments for CPID. The study clearly demonstrates how KFXYS, a multi-component herbal preparation, effectively reduces pelvic inflammation by modulating key metabolic and inflammatory pathways. These findings suggest significant potential for KFXYS as an alternative or complementary therapy to conventional antibiotics, particularly in the face of antibiotic resistance and associated side effects. Clinically, this approach could guide personalized treatment strategies and encourage further exploration of herbal and natural products through metabolomics and network pharmacology methods. The study underscores the importance of targeting multiple inflammatory and metabolic pathways to achieve comprehensive therapeutic outcomes in chronic inflammatory diseases like CPID.
New hopes and promises in the treatment of ovarian cancer focusing on targeted treatment—A narrative review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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This review explores the role of targeted therapies in ovarian cancer treatment, focusing on the potential of angiogenesis inhibitors, PARP inhibitors, and folate receptor alpha inhibitors. While promising, further clinical trials and personalized approaches are necessary to enhance survival and treatment outcomes.
What was studied?
This narrative review examines the advancements in targeted therapies for ovarian cancer. It focuses on recent developments in the treatment landscape, particularly on therapies such as angiogenesis inhibitors, PARP inhibitors, immune checkpoint inhibitors, and folate receptor alpha inhibitors. The review highlights the potential of these therapies in extending progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS) in ovarian cancer patients. It also emphasizes the importance of identifying biomarkers that could guide treatment decisions and help in personalizing therapies for patients, as well as the challenges that still need to be addressed for these therapies to be fully effective in clinical practice.
Who was studied?
The studies reviewed in this article involve ovarian cancer patients, including those with platinum-sensitive and platinum-resistant ovarian cancer. These patients often have varying genetic backgrounds, with a focus on those carrying BRCA1/BRCA2 mutations and those expressing folate receptor alpha (FRα). Clinical trials from multiple phases and different study designs were included to assess the effectiveness of therapies like bevacizumab, olaparib, and mirvetuximab soravtansine. Both early and advanced-stage patients were studied, and the review draws on findings from various regions and healthcare settings.
Most important findings
The review highlights the positive effects of targeted therapies such as bevacizumab, which is an anti-VEGF therapy. It has demonstrated an improvement in progression-free survival when combined with chemotherapy for advanced ovarian cancer, although its impact on overall survival remains limited. The PARP inhibitor olaparib has been particularly effective for patients with BRCA mutations, improving both overall and progression-free survival, especially in recurrent platinum-sensitive ovarian cancer. Mirvetuximab soravtansine, which targets folate receptor alpha, has shown promising results in platinum-resistant ovarian cancer patients who have high FRα expression. Despite the promise of immune checkpoint inhibitors, they have not yet demonstrated significant efficacy in ovarian cancer, with ongoing research needed to assess their potential. The review suggests that combining different targeted therapies might yield better results, although side effects and toxicity remain a challenge.
Key implications
The review suggests that while targeted therapies have provided new hope in ovarian cancer treatment, they are not curative and often only delay the recurrence of the disease. The key to improving treatment outcomes lies in better patient selection through genetic and molecular profiling, ensuring that patients receive the therapies most likely to be effective for their specific cancer subtype. Further clinical trials are needed, particularly for those with platinum-resistant ovarian cancer, as current treatment options are limited. Moreover, ongoing research into combining targeted therapies and identifying novel biomarkers will be essential to advancing treatment strategies and improving survival rates for ovarian cancer patients.
Significant Increase in Depression in Women With Primary Dysmenorrhea
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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This systematic review highlights the significant association between primary dysmenorrhea and depression, emphasizing the need for integrated care that addresses both physical and mental health in affected women.
What was studied?
This systematic review and meta-analysis aimed to evaluate the relationship between primary dysmenorrhea and depression in women. The studies included in this analysis focused on the prevalence of depressive symptoms in women suffering from primary dysmenorrhea compared to those without dysmenorrhea. The pooled data demonstrated a significant 1.72-fold increased risk of depressive symptoms among women with dysmenorrhea, as well as significantly higher Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) scores. The study also considered the effects of various sociodemographic factors, pain severity, and the interplay between menstrual pain and mental health.
Who was studied?
The study involved a diverse group of women of reproductive age, with a focus on individuals diagnosed with primary dysmenorrhea. The participants were primarily from observational studies, including cross-sectional and case-control trials. The meta-analysis included data from over 3,000 women, with a specific comparison between those suffering from dysmenorrhea and a healthy control group of women without menstrual pain. The studies also varied by geographical location, age, and other sociodemographic factors that may influence both dysmenorrhea and depression, highlighting the heterogeneity in the results.
Most important findings
The analysis confirmed a significant association between primary dysmenorrhea and depression. Women with dysmenorrhea were found to have a much higher prevalence of depression, with 25.2% of dysmenorrhea sufferers reporting depressive symptoms, compared to 12.3% of the control group. Additionally, the BDI scores for women with dysmenorrhea were significantly higher, further supporting the link between menstrual pain and depression. However, some studies included in the meta-analysis did not find this association, indicating potential variability in individual responses or methodological differences.
Key implications
The findings suggest that primary dysmenorrhea is not just a physical condition but also significantly affects mental health, increasing the risk of depression. Clinicians should be aware of the potential for depressive symptoms in women with dysmenorrhea and consider integrating mental health assessments into the management of menstrual pain. Interventions targeting dysmenorrhea might reduce both physical and mental health burdens for affected women, improving their overall quality of life. Additionally, understanding the bidirectional relationship between chronic pain and mental health can help guide treatment strategies, such as addressing pain management alongside psychological support.
Association between heavy metals exposure and infertility among American women aged 20-44 years: A cross-sectional analysis from 2013 to 2018 NHANES data
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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This cross-sectional study in American women found that higher urinary arsenic—and, to a lesser extent, cadmium—were associated with increased infertility risk, with lead exposure linked to infertility in older or overweight women, supporting the need for environmental exposure monitoring in reproductive health.
What was studied?
This original research article investigated the association between exposure to heavy metals, specifically cadmium (Cd), lead (Pb), mercury (Hg), and arsenic (As), and female infertility in a representative sample of American women. Using data from three cycles of the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES, 2013–2018), the study measured blood and urinary levels of these metals and examined their correlation with self-reported infertility. The primary aim was to clarify whether elevated levels of these toxic metals are linked to increased risk of infertility, adjusting for relevant demographic and health covariates.
Who was studied?
The study population consisted of 838 American women aged 20–44 years, selected from NHANES 2013–2018 cycles based on availability of laboratory and questionnaire data. Women with a history of hysterectomy, bilateral oophorectomy, or incomplete data were excluded. Infertility was defined via self-report, using the question: “Have you ever attempted to become pregnant for at least a year, without becoming pregnant?” The cohort was diverse in terms of ethnicity, education, and marital status, with significant differences in age and BMI between infertile and control women.
Most important findings
The study found that urinary arsenic (As) and cadmium (Cd) levels were significantly higher in infertile women compared to controls. After controlling for several covariates, including age, ethnicity, education, marital status, poverty index ratio, BMI, regular menstrual periods, pelvic infection, and smoking history, urinary arsenic remained significantly associated with infertility. Women with higher urinary As levels had a substantially increased risk of infertility. Urinary Cd was also associated with infertility in less-adjusted models, but this association weakened with full adjustment. Blood and urinary Pb levels were not associated with infertility overall, but stratified analyses revealed that both blood and urinary Pb were positively correlated with infertility in women aged 35–44 and in those with BMI ≥25, highlighting age and obesity as effect modifiers. Blood Hg was not significantly associated with infertility in any model.
Key implications
This study highlights the potential reproductive health risks posed by environmental exposure to heavy metals among women of reproductive age. The robust association between urinary arsenic and infertility suggests that arsenic exposure (likely from contaminated water or certain foods) may disrupt female reproductive function, potentially through oxidative stress and endocrine disruption. The findings also indicate that older and overweight/obese women may be more susceptible to the adverse reproductive effects of lead. From a clinical and public health perspective, these results support the need for routine monitoring of heavy metals in at-risk populations and for interventions aimed at reducing environmental exposures, especially in vulnerable subgroups. The study also highlights the value of using urine measurements to assess chronic exposure, as opposed to blood levels that may reflect only recent exposure.
Lactobacilli–lactoferrin interplay in Chlamydia trachomatis infection
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Infertility
Infertility
Infertility is the inability to conceive after 12 months of regular, unprotected sex. It affects both men and women and can be due to various physical, hormonal, or genetic factors. Treatments include medication, surgery, assisted reproductive technologies, and lifestyle changes.
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Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) is a complex interplay between pathogens, immune responses, and microbial communities. As research continues to uncover the microbiome's role in reproductive health, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as probiotics, prebiotics, and transplants are redefining how we prevent and treat PID. This page dives deep into these innovations, offering a glimpse into the future of personalized, biologically informed women’s healthcare.
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The study found a potent inhibitory effect against Chlamydia trachomatis infection using Lactobacillus brevis combined with lactoferrin, notably reducing bacterial adhesion, invasion, and inflammation. This indicates significant therapeutic potential in preventing chronic complications from genital infections.
What was studied?
This research study examined the interaction of two specific Lactobacillus strains (Lactobacillus brevis and Lactobacillus crispatus) and lactoferrin in the context of a genital infection caused by Chlamydia trachomatis. The researchers aimed to understand how lactobacilli and lactoferrin, individually and in combination, impact the infection process of C. trachomatis in cervical epithelial cells, specifically evaluating their effects on bacterial adhesion, invasion, intracellular replication, and the inflammatory response induced by infection.
Who was studied?
The study used an in vitro cell culture model involving human cervical epithelial HeLa cells. These cells were infected with Chlamydia trachomatis and exposed to either Lactobacillus brevis, Lactobacillus crispatus, bovine lactoferrin, or combinations thereof. This experimental setup simulated the genital environment, allowing the investigators to measure interactions and inflammatory responses directly relevant to human female genital tract infections.
What were the most important findings?
The most significant outcome was that the combination of Lactobacillus brevis and bovine lactoferrin showed the strongest inhibitory effect against C. trachomatis infection, especially during the early phases of bacterial adhesion and invasion into host cells. This combination notably reduced the formation of infectious bacterial units (IFUs), indicating a substantial decrease in bacterial load. Individually, Lactobacillus brevis was more effective than Lactobacillus crispatus in preventing chlamydial adhesion, while bovine lactoferrin significantly hindered bacterial internalization. Lactobacilli displayed effective co-aggregation with C. trachomatis elementary bodies (EBs), reducing bacterial infectivity. The study also highlighted that this combined treatment dramatically reduced levels of inflammatory cytokines IL-6 and IL-8, thus suggesting a potent anti-inflammatory effect beneficial in preventing chronic inflammation and subsequent tissue damage associated with persistent chlamydial infections.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study carries important clinical implications. The synergy between Lactobacillus brevis and bovine lactoferrin points towards a promising non-antibiotic strategy to prevent and manage genital infections caused by Chlamydia trachomatis. Given the rising concern of antibiotic resistance and chronic inflammation linked to persistent chlamydial forms, employing probiotics combined with lactoferrin could offer a safer, more sustainable method to maintain genital tract health. Moreover, the significant anti-inflammatory impact indicates potential utility in reducing the chronic complications of C. trachomatis infections, such as pelvic inflammatory disease and infertility. Translating these findings into clinical interventions, including topical probiotics and lactoferrin formulations, could notably enhance the current therapeutic approaches for sexually transmitted infections and associated inflammatory conditions.
What’s in a name: are menopausal “hot flashes” a symptom of menopause or a manifestation of neurovascular dysregulation?
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal hot flashes are one of the most common and disruptive symptoms that women experience during the transition to menopause. Characterized by sudden sensations of heat, sweating, and flushing, hot flashes can significantly affect a woman’s quality of life, causing sleep disturbances, mood swings, and even long-term health consequences. Understanding the complex mechanisms behind hot flashes, as well as the role of microbiome-targeted therapies, offers new avenues for improving menopausal health.
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The article redefines menopausal hot flashes as signs of underlying neurovascular dysregulation, linking them to chronic conditions like cardiovascular disease and cognitive decline. It advocates for more targeted, personalized treatments and further research into the physiological mechanisms behind these symptoms.
What was studied?
This article examines the concept of menopausal hot flashes and night sweats, proposing that they should not simply be viewed as "symptoms of menopause" but rather as manifestations of underlying pathophysiological processes, particularly autonomic neurovascular dysregulation. The authors review evidence linking these vasomotor disturbances to broader health concerns, such as cardiovascular disease, cognitive decline, and sleep disturbances, suggesting that hot flashes may reflect deeper issues related to autonomic regulation and vascular health.
Who was studied?
The review focuses on studies of women in the menopausal transition, specifically those experiencing hot flashes and night sweats across different geographical regions, including Australia, Great Britain, and the United States. The article highlights the variation in hot flash patterns based on factors like timing, severity, and duration, and discusses how these symptoms are linked to the risk of chronic conditions such as cardiovascular diseases and cognitive decline. The review also notes genetic factors and hormonal changes that may influence the presence and severity of these symptoms.
Most important findings
The article identifies four distinct patterns of vasomotor disturbances observed globally, suggesting that these patterns are not solely attributable to cultural or socioeconomic factors. It emphasizes the link between the severity and timing of hot flashes and the risk of chronic conditions such as cardiovascular diseases, osteoporosis, and mood disorders. The authors argue that hot flashes should be considered a manifestation of neurovascular dysregulation, potentially driven by hormonal changes during menopause. Genetic factors related to estrogen metabolism also appear to influence the severity and onset of these symptoms, underscoring the need for personalized treatment approaches.
Key implications
This review calls for a shift in how menopausal hot flashes are perceived and treated. By reframing hot flashes as manifestations of underlying autonomic neurovascular dysregulation, the article suggests that they should not merely be seen as symptoms to be tolerated but as early indicators of potential chronic health conditions. The authors advocate for further investigation into the pathophysiological mechanisms behind these symptoms, particularly concerning autonomic function and vascular health, to develop more effective, targeted treatments. This research could lead to personalized hormone therapy (MHT) regimens based on genetic profiles, improving outcomes for women in menopause.
What’s in a name: are menopausal ‘hot flashes’ a symptom of menopause or a manifestation of neurovascular dysregulation?
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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This review challenges the labeling of hot flashes as mere menopausal symptoms, proposing they signal underlying neurovascular dysregulation linked to chronic disease risk, and calls for new clinical and research approaches.
What was reviewed?
This narrative review critically examines the conventional framing of hot flashes and night sweats, collectively termed vasomotor symptoms (VMS), as mere symptoms of menopause. The authors argue for a paradigm shift, proposing that these phenomena are better understood as manifestations of underlying autonomic neurovascular dysregulation. The review synthesizes epidemiological, genetic, and mechanistic evidence to explore the etiological complexity of VMS, emphasizing associations with neurological (sleep, mood, cognition) and cardiovascular conditions. Drawing on large-scale longitudinal studies from Australia, the UK, and the US, the authors identify four consistent patterns of vasomotor disturbances and discuss their possible biological and genetic bases, independent of cultural or socioeconomic factors. The review also addresses the limitations of current research, including the lack of objective monitoring tools and standard terminology, and highlights emerging insights from genetic studies and neurobiological pathways (notably the hypothalamic KNDy neurons and neurokinin B signaling). The authors call for robust mechanistic research and advocate for the reclassification of VMS to better inform clinical practice and research strategies.
Who was reviewed?
The review considers data from diverse populations of women undergoing the menopausal transition, as reported in prominent longitudinal cohort studies such as the Australian Longitudinal Study of Women’s Health (ALSWH), the 1946 British birth cohort, and the Study of Women Across the Nation (SWAN, USA). These cohorts encompass women from multiple geographic, cultural, and socioeconomic backgrounds, allowing the review to draw generalizable conclusions about the universality of VMS patterns. The reviewed studies include women experiencing natural or surgical menopause (e.g., following bilateral oophorectomy), and incorporate genetic sub-studies examining variants related to estrogen metabolism, estrogen receptors, and neurotransmitter pathways. The focus is on midlife and older women, typically in the peri- and postmenopausal stages, and the analysis extends to those with and without VMS, as well as those with related comorbidities such as sleep disorders and cardiovascular disease.
Most important findings
The review’s central finding is that VMS, hot flashes, and night sweats are likely not merely transient symptoms of hormonal withdrawal, but rather indicators of underlying neurovascular dysregulation that may predispose women to chronic conditions of aging. Across countries, four distinct patterns of VMS (varying by onset, severity, and duration) recur, suggesting a biological underpinning rather than cultural artifacts. Notably, severe or persistent VMS are associated with increased risks for sleep disturbances (e.g., insomnia, obstructive sleep apnea), mood and cognitive disorders, and cardiovascular conditions such as endothelial dysfunction and coronary artery calcification. Genetic studies implicate variants in genes governing estrogen synthesis, metabolism, and signaling, as well as noradrenergic and serotonergic pathways, as contributors to individual susceptibility and symptom patterns. Evidence points toward disruption in hypothalamic KNDy neuron signaling and altered autonomic outflow (both sympathetic and parasympathetic) as mechanistic drivers. Pharmacological interventions targeting neurokinin B receptors, and established therapies such as menopausal hormone therapy (MHT), show variable efficacy depending on individual neurovascular profiles. The review highlights the limitations of self-reported symptom scales and the need for objective, standardized assessment tools.
Key implications
Reframing VMS as signs of autonomic neurovascular dysregulation rather than simply menopausal symptoms has pivotal clinical and research implications. It advocates for a more nuanced, mechanism-based approach to assessing and managing midlife women, particularly in stratifying risk for chronic diseases like cardiovascular disease, dementia, and osteoporosis. This perspective supports the development of personalized interventions, potentially informed by genetic and autonomic profiling, and underscores the need for investment in objective monitoring technologies and longitudinal studies.
Ospemifene, a novel selective estrogen receptor modulator for treating dyspareunia associated with postmenopausal vulvar and vaginal atrophy
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Ospemifene (60 mg/day) significantly reduces dyspareunia and improves vaginal health in postmenopausal women with vulvar and vaginal atrophy. It offers a non-estrogenic treatment option, especially for women who cannot use traditional hormone therapies.
What was studied?
The study investigated the efficacy, safety, and tolerability of ospemifene, a selective estrogen receptor modulator (SERM), for treating vulvar and vaginal atrophy (VVA) in postmenopausal women with moderate to severe dyspareunia (pain during sexual intercourse). This multicenter phase 3 study compared ospemifene (60 mg/day) with a placebo over a 12-week treatment period. The study assessed multiple efficacy endpoints, including vaginal cytology (percentage of parabasal and superficial cells) and vaginal pH, along with the severity of dyspareunia. The goal was to determine if ospemifene could alleviate VVA symptoms without causing significant systemic estrogenic effects, especially in the context of breast cancer survivors who cannot use estrogen-based treatments.
Who was studied?
The study involved 605 postmenopausal women, aged 40 to 80 years, who reported moderate to severe dyspareunia associated with VVA. These women were diagnosed with VVA, as defined by having less than 5% superficial cells in the vaginal smear and a vaginal pH higher than 5. They were randomized to receive either ospemifene 60 mg/day (303 participants) or a placebo (302 participants) for 12 weeks. Participants were excluded if they had certain health conditions, such as high blood pressure, significant gynecological disorders, or any history of estrogen-sensitive cancers. The study participants were primarily white (90%) and had body mass index (BMI) values ranging from 16.7 to 37.1 kg/m².
Most important findings
The study found that ospemifene significantly improved the key endpoints compared to placebo. After 12 weeks of treatment, the ospemifene group showed a 40.2% decrease in the percentage of parabasal cells and a 12.3% increase in superficial cells, whereas the placebo group showed no significant changes. Additionally, vaginal pH decreased by 0.94 in the ospemifene group, compared to just a 0.07 reduction in the placebo group. The most critical outcome, dyspareunia severity, was significantly reduced in the ospemifene group, with a decrease of 1.5 points on the severity scale, compared to a 1.2-point reduction in the placebo group. Furthermore, more women in the ospemifene group reported improvement in vaginal pain, with 38% experiencing no vaginal pain or mild pain after 12 weeks, compared to 28% in the placebo group. The safety profile of ospemifene was generally favorable, with hot flushes being the most reported treatment-related adverse event (6.6% vs 3.6% in the placebo group).
Key implications
The findings suggest that ospemifene is an effective treatment option for alleviating symptoms of VVA, particularly dyspareunia, in postmenopausal women. This is particularly important for women with estrogen-sensitive conditions who cannot use traditional estrogen therapies. Ospemifene offers a non-estrogenic alternative that targets the vaginal tissues and reduces the severity of VVA without inducing significant systemic estrogen effects, which could potentially harm breast or uterine tissue. The study also suggests that ospemifene could reduce reliance on vaginal lubricants, offering women an effective, long-term solution for managing vaginal dryness and discomfort. However, further research is necessary to fully assess the long-term safety of ospemifene, especially concerning its potential impact on the endometrium and breast tissue.
Premenopausal Bone Health: Osteoporosis in Premenopausal Women
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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This review outlines the evaluation and management of osteoporosis in premenopausal women, emphasizing secondary causes, appropriate BMD interpretation, and tailored treatment—highlighting the importance of individualized care and cautious pharmacotherapy in this population.
What was reviewed?
This review article comprehensively addresses the diagnosis, evaluation, and management of osteoporosis in premenopausal women, emphasizing the unique considerations in this population compared to postmenopausal women. The authors discuss the significance of low-trauma fractures and low bone mineral density (BMD) in premenopausal women, the limitations of using standard BMD diagnostic thresholds (T-scores), and recommend the use of age-matched Z-scores for assessment. The review explores special circumstances, such as pregnancy- and lactation-associated osteoporosis, and highlights the rarity but clinical importance of idiopathic osteoporosis (IOP) in younger women. The article also provides an extensive overview of secondary causes of osteoporosis in this population, including endocrine disorders, inflammatory diseases, nutritional deficiencies, and medication effects, as well as detailing appropriate laboratory evaluations and management strategies, both non-pharmacological and pharmacological.
Who was reviewed?
The review covers premenopausal women, particularly those presenting with low-trauma fractures and/or low BMD, as well as subgroups affected by unique physiological states like pregnancy and lactation. The article references studies involving diverse cohorts of premenopausal women, including those with idiopathic osteoporosis, women with secondary causes of bone loss (such as glucocorticoid excess, anorexia nervosa, estrogen deficiency, and celiac disease), and women exposed to risk-modifying medications. Certain referenced studies focus on women with specific conditions, but the review synthesizes findings broadly applicable to the general premenopausal female population at risk for or diagnosed with osteoporosis.
Most important findings
The review underscores that osteoporosis in premenopausal women is uncommon and often secondary to underlying conditions rather than being primary. The most frequent secondary causes include glucocorticoid excess, anorexia nervosa, estrogen deficiency, and celiac disease, all of which can disrupt bone formation and turnover through mechanisms such as chronic inflammation, malnutrition, hormonal derangements, and malabsorption. The article notes that low-trauma fractures in premenopausal women are strong predictors of future fracture risk, but the direct relationship between BMD (measured by DXA) and fracture risk in this group is less clear than in postmenopausal women. For diagnosis, the review recommends using Z-scores (not T-scores), with a Z-score below −2.0 indicating bone density below the expected range for age. Management should focus on treating underlying causes, optimizing nutrition and lifestyle, and reserving pharmacological therapy for women with major or multiple fractures or ongoing bone loss. Limited data support the use of bisphosphonates and teriparatide in select high-risk cases, but caution is warranted due to potential risks, especially regarding future pregnancies. The review also lists a broad array of secondary causes and outlines a structured laboratory assessment to identify them.
Key implications
For clinicians, the review highlights the importance of a thorough diagnostic workup to uncover secondary causes of osteoporosis in premenopausal women, as management often hinges on addressing these root issues. The findings justify a conservative approach to pharmacotherapy in most cases, with primary reliance on lifestyle modification, nutritional support, and targeted treatment of underlying conditions. The recommendations emphasize individualized care and caution regarding medication use in women of childbearing potential, given the possible long-term skeletal and fetal risks. Recognizing and managing secondary causes not only improves bone health but may also address broader metabolic and reproductive health concerns. The review provides practical guidance for clinical evaluation, risk stratification, and safe management, bridging the gap between research findings and day-to-day clinical practice.
Veozah (Fezolinetant): A Promising Non‐Hormonal Treatment for Vasomotor Symptoms in Menopause
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Veozah (fezolinetant) is an effective non-hormonal treatment for menopause-related vasomotor symptoms. It works by targeting the neurokinin 3 receptor and offers a promising alternative to estrogen therapy with minimal side effects, making it suitable for women with contraindications to hormone treatments.
What was studied?
The article explores the efficacy of Veozah (fezolinetant), a neurokinin 3 (NK3) receptor antagonist, as a non-hormonal treatment for vasomotor symptoms (VMS) associated with menopause. The review examines clinical trial data from the SKYLIGHT 1, SKYLIGHT 2, and SKYLIGHT 4 trials, which evaluated fezolinetant's ability to reduce the frequency and severity of hot flashes and night sweats in menopausal women. The article emphasizes the drug's innovative mechanism of action, as it modulates thermoregulation via the brain’s neuropeptide signaling, providing an alternative to traditional estrogen therapies.
Who was studied?
The studies reviewed involved postmenopausal women experiencing moderate to severe vasomotor symptoms. These women were aged 40 to 64 years and had been diagnosed with menopause. They participated in phase 3 clinical trials (SKYLIGHT 1, SKYLIGHT 2, and SKYLIGHT 4) that tested the effects of fezolinetant. The trials also included individuals with varying baseline characteristics, such as ethnicity and comorbidities, to ensure a broad understanding of the drug's effectiveness and safety across diverse populations.
Most important findings
Fezolinetant (Veozah) was found to be highly effective in reducing the frequency and severity of hot flashes in menopausal women. In the SKYLIGHT trials, it demonstrated a statistically significant reduction in hot flash frequency and severity compared to placebo, with no significant adverse effects. Fezolinetant works by targeting the neurokinin 3 receptor, which is involved in thermoregulation, and does not rely on estrogen. This makes it a promising non-hormonal alternative to traditional hormone replacement therapy (HRT). The most common side effects were mild gastrointestinal symptoms, such as abdominal pain and diarrhea. In the long-term SKYLIGHT 4 trial, fezolinetant showed continued efficacy and safety for up to 12 months, with a low incidence of serious adverse events. Unlike estrogen therapies, it does not affect steroid hormone levels, which makes it a safer option for women with contraindications to hormone-based treatments.
Key implications
Fezolinetant represents a breakthrough in menopause management, particularly for women who cannot or prefer not to use hormone-based therapies. It provides an effective, non-hormonal option for reducing VMS, with minimal side effects. This drug offers an important alternative for women with contraindications to estrogen therapy, such as those with a history of breast cancer or those who are concerned about estrogen’s associated risks. The ease of oral administration makes it accessible and convenient, expanding treatment options for women worldwide. Further studies, especially long-term trials, are needed to confirm its broader safety profile and long-term benefits. Clinicians should consider this option for women experiencing moderate to severe hot flashes who seek non-hormonal therapies.
Microbiota and Human Reproduction: The Case of Female Infertility
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Infertility
Infertility
Infertility is the inability to conceive after 12 months of regular, unprotected sex. It affects both men and women and can be due to various physical, hormonal, or genetic factors. Treatments include medication, surgery, assisted reproductive technologies, and lifestyle changes.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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This review summarizes the essential role of balanced reproductive microbiota, particularly Lactobacillus dominance, in fertility and IVF success, linking microbial dysbiosis to infertility and poorer pregnancy outcomes, and highlighting microbiome evaluation as key to improving reproductive health management.
What was reviewed?
This review comprehensively examined current research on the microbiota of the female reproductive system, focusing specifically on its role in infertility and reproductive health. It analyzed literature investigating both the lower reproductive tract (vaginal microbiota) and the upper reproductive tract (uterus, fallopian tubes, and ovaries). The authors reviewed the microbial composition of these regions, highlighting the dominance of Lactobacillus species under normal conditions, and explored how deviations from this balanced microbial community—referred to as dysbiosis—might affect fertility outcomes and influence the success rates of assisted reproductive technologies (ART), particularly in vitro fertilization (IVF).
Who was reviewed?
The review summarized studies involving women across various reproductive statuses, including fertile women, infertile women, and women undergoing ART procedures. Literature assessing microbial differences between fertile and infertile groups, particularly in terms of vaginal and uterine microbiota composition, formed the basis of the review. The authors also incorporated evidence related to microbiome shifts associated with different life stages, hormone fluctuations, lifestyle influences, and environmental exposures, providing clinicians with an extensive view of factors affecting reproductive microbiota dynamics.
What were the most important findings?
The central findings of the review emphasized the critical role of Lactobacillus species in maintaining reproductive health through their dominance in the reproductive tract, particularly in the vagina. Lactobacilli were identified as crucial for creating an acidic environment that inhibits pathogen growth. Dysbiosis, characterized by reduced Lactobacillus abundance and increased prevalence of anaerobic bacteria like Gardnerella vaginalis, Atopobium vaginae, and Ureaplasma spp., was strongly linked to infertility, chronic inflammatory conditions, and notably poorer outcomes in IVF treatments, including lower implantation rates and increased pregnancy complications. The review highlighted a significant continuity of bacterial communities along the reproductive tract, suggesting a microbiological link from the lower to upper regions. Moreover, the potential influence of male partner semen microbiota on female reproductive health was underscored, suggesting that fertility evaluations should also consider the microbiome of the male partner.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The review's greatest clinical implication is that clinicians should consider reproductive microbiota assessment as an integral part of fertility evaluations and infertility treatment strategies. Understanding the link between microbiota and infertility provides an opportunity to enhance reproductive outcomes by diagnosing and correcting microbial dysbiosis through targeted probiotics, lifestyle interventions, and possibly tailored antibiotic treatments. This approach could substantially improve IVF success rates and overall fertility management. Moreover, the identification of microbial signatures associated with fertility may facilitate personalized reproductive healthcare strategies, optimizing conditions not just for conception but also for the long-term reproductive health of couples and their offspring.
The Effect of Salvia Officinalis on Hot Flashes in Postmenopausal Women
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal hot flashes are one of the most common and disruptive symptoms that women experience during the transition to menopause. Characterized by sudden sensations of heat, sweating, and flushing, hot flashes can significantly affect a woman’s quality of life, causing sleep disturbances, mood swings, and even long-term health consequences. Understanding the complex mechanisms behind hot flashes, as well as the role of microbiome-targeted therapies, offers new avenues for improving menopausal health.
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This systematic review and meta-analysis found that Salvia officinalis significantly reduces the frequency of hot flashes in postmenopausal women, making it a promising non-hormonal alternative.
What was studied?
This systematic review and meta-analysis focused on the effect of Salvia officinalis (sage) on hot flashes in postmenopausal women. The study aimed to evaluate the impact of Salvia officinalis on the frequency, severity, and duration of hot flashes by analyzing four randomized controlled trials (RCTs). The data was pooled to assess the overall efficacy of this herbal remedy compared to a placebo. The researchers included studies published between 1990 and 2023, utilizing multiple databases to ensure comprehensive results.
Who was studied?
The study involved 310 postmenopausal women, aged 45 to 65, who were experiencing moderate to severe hot flashes. Participants had been postmenopausal for at least 12 months and reported at least three hot flashes per day. The trials included in the meta-analysis utilized different doses of Salvia officinalis extract, ranging from 100 mg to 280 mg daily. Participants were randomly assigned to either the intervention group (Salvia officinalis) or a placebo group, with some studies using a double-blind or triple-blind methodology to minimize bias.
Most important findings
The meta-analysis revealed that Salvia officinalis significantly reduced the frequency of hot flashes, with an effect size of −1.12, indicating a moderate to large reduction. However, it had no significant effect on the severity of hot flashes, with an effect size of −2.05, which was not statistically significant. Only one study examined the effect on the duration of hot flashes, but the data was insufficient to make conclusive findings. Overall, Salvia officinalis was found to be more effective than placebo in reducing hot flash frequency, but its impact on severity and duration was less clear.
Key implications
The findings suggest that Salvia officinalis may offer a non-hormonal, herbal alternative for managing hot flashes in postmenopausal women, particularly for those who cannot or prefer not to use hormone replacement therapy. While its effect on the severity and duration of hot flashes requires further investigation, the significant reduction in frequency supports its potential as a treatment option. Healthcare providers may consider recommending Salvia officinalis as a natural remedy, though more extensive studies are needed to solidify these findings and assess long-term safety and efficacy.
Inflammatory Markers in Dysmenorrhea and Therapeutic Options
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This review discusses inflammatory markers and therapeutic options in primary dysmenorrhea, focusing on prostaglandins, cytokines, and vasopressin, and evaluates treatments like NSAIDs, acupuncture, and physiotherapy.
What was studied?
This study explores the inflammatory markers involved in primary dysmenorrhea and examines therapeutic approaches to alleviate menstrual pain. The pathophysiology of dysmenorrhea is often complex, involving a combination of endocrine, vascular, and immune responses. Prostaglandins play a major role, but cytokines, such as TNFα and IL-6, are also significant in the inflammatory processes. The study reviews various pharmacological and non-pharmacological therapeutic options, including the use of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), hormonal contraceptives, acupuncture, and physiotherapy, to manage symptoms effectively.
Who was studied?
The study reviewed a range of clinical trials and literature focusing on women with primary dysmenorrhea. It draws from various studies on inflammatory markers, cytokine levels, and the effects of therapeutic interventions. The subjects included both healthy women and those suffering from primary dysmenorrhea, with a particular focus on comparing inflammatory markers and the effectiveness of treatments.
Most important findings
The study identifies key inflammatory markers, particularly prostaglandins (PGF2α, PGE2) and cytokines such as TNFα and IL-6, that are significantly elevated in women with dysmenorrhea. These markers contribute to uterine contractions and pain. Vasopressin, another important factor, was found to be higher in women with dysmenorrhea, intensifying ischemia and menstrual pain. In terms of treatment, NSAIDs remain the first-line therapy due to their ability to inhibit prostaglandin production and reduce inflammation. Non-pharmacological treatments like acupuncture and physiotherapy also show effectiveness, highlighting the importance of incorporating alternative methods for pain management. These treatments provide additional relief and offer a non-drug approach that may benefit women who cannot tolerate NSAIDs or prefer non-pharmacological options.
Key implications
The findings underline the importance of addressing inflammation in dysmenorrhea management. While NSAIDs are effective, the review suggests that integrating non-pharmacological treatments such as acupuncture, physiotherapy, and yoga could provide additional relief and should be further studied. Understanding the role of cytokines and prostaglandins in dysmenorrhea could lead to better-targeted treatments, potentially improving quality of life for many women.
Female Infertility Associated with Blood Lead and Cadmium Levels
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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Low blood lead and cadmium levels are linked to significantly increased odds of female infertility in US women of reproductive age, indicating even subclinical environmental exposures may adversely impact reproductive health.
What was studied?
This original research article investigated the association between blood levels of lead and cadmium (two common environmental heavy metals) and self-reported infertility among women in the United States. The study leveraged data from the 2013–2014 and 2015–2016 cycles of the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES), focusing on reproductive-aged women. The researchers measured blood concentrations of lead and cadmium using inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry and compared these levels between women who reported infertility (defined as attempting to conceive for at least one year without success) and women who were currently pregnant. Statistical analyses, including logistic regression adjusted for multiple confounders (age, ethnicity, income, education, marital status, smoking, alcohol use, physical activity, BMI), were performed to evaluate whether higher blood metal levels corresponded to increased odds of infertility.
Who was studied?
The study included 124 sexually experienced women aged 20–39 years who participated in the NHANES 2013–2016 cycles and had complete data on blood lead, cadmium, and relevant covariates. Of these, 82 were classified as “infertile” based on self-report, and 42 were “pregnant” at the time of the survey. Women with a history of hysterectomy or bilateral oophorectomy were excluded to ensure reproductive potential. The sample was demographically diverse, but no significant differences were found between infertile and pregnant groups regarding ethnicity, socioeconomic status, education, marital status, health behaviors, or BMI; the infertile group was, however, significantly older.
Most important findings
The study found that even low levels of blood lead and cadmium were associated with significantly increased odds of infertility. After adjusting for confounders, each two-fold increase in blood lead was associated with a 2.6-fold higher odds of infertility, and each two-fold increase in cadmium was associated with a 1.84-fold higher odds. A dose-response relationship was observed for blood lead, with higher tertiles corresponding to higher infertility odds (adjusted ORs for tertiles 2 and 3 vs. tertile 1: 5.40 and 5.62, respectively). Adjusted mean blood lead and cadmium levels were significantly higher in the infertile group compared to the pregnant group. These findings support the hypothesis that environmental exposure to lead and cadmium, even at low levels, may impair female reproductive function. Although the study primarily focused on heavy metal exposure, it is important to note that heavy metals can alter the gut and systemic microbiome, which may further impact reproductive health, though this was not directly assessed in this study.
Key implications
This study provides important evidence that low-level environmental exposure to lead and cadmium is associated with increased infertility risk among US women of reproductive age. These results challenge current safety thresholds for these metals and highlight the need for further population-based research to clarify reproductive toxicity at low exposure levels. Clinicians should consider environmental exposures, including heavy metals, as contributing factors in unexplained female infertility. While not directly examining microbiome profiles, the study’s findings are relevant to a microbiome signatures database, as heavy metal exposures are known to disrupt microbial communities and reproductive hormone regulation, which can influence fertility outcomes.
Female Fertility and Environmental Pollution
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is a common endocrine disorder that affects women of reproductive age, characterized by irregular menstrual cycles, hyperandrogenism, and insulin resistance. It is often associated with metabolic dysfunctions and inflammation, leading to fertility issues and increased risk of type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease.
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Environmental pollution—including heavy metals, air pollutants, and endocrine disruptors—negatively impacts female fertility through hormonal disruption, oxidative stress, and epigenetic changes. The review emphasizes the clinical need for exposure assessment and mitigation strategies to protect reproductive health.
What was reviewed?
This comprehensive review examined the impact of various environmental pollutants, including heavy metals, air pollutants, and endocrine disruptors, on female fertility. The authors analyzed the mechanisms by which these contaminants disrupt ovarian function, hormonal regulation, and oocyte quality, ultimately leading to reduced fertility. Special attention was given to the fixed, non-renewable nature of the female oocyte pool, which increases vulnerability to environmental insults. The paper also explored how pollution-induced oxidative stress, endocrine disruption, and epigenetic changes can impair oogenesis, follicular development, and embryo viability. Additionally, the review discussed the influence of environmental factors on the placental barrier, fetal development, and the potential for transgenerational effects. The article highlighted emerging concerns such as climate change, thermal stress, and the interaction between pollution and the microbiome as contributors to declining reproductive health.
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesized evidence from human epidemiological studies, animal experiments, and in vitro research. Human data included women of reproductive age, pregnant women, and those undergoing assisted reproduction, as well as population-level studies from polluted regions. Key animal models were referenced to elucidate mechanistic insights not easily obtained in humans. The review also incorporated studies on fetal and placental tissues and, where relevant, included cross-species data to highlight conserved biological responses to pollutants.
Most important findings
The review identified several key mechanisms by which environmental pollutants impair female fertility. Heavy metals such as lead, cadmium, and mercury accumulate in the body and can cross the placental barrier, leading to epigenetic modifications, oxidative stress, and disruption of steroidogenesis. These metals act as endocrine disruptors, affecting the hormonal milieu required for oocyte maturation and ovulation. Air pollution was associated with decreased ovarian reserve, lower rates of fertilization, increased miscarriage, and adverse IVF outcomes. Endocrine disruptors like bisphenol A (BPA) and phthalates were shown to alter gene expression, induce oxidative stress, and interfere with estrogen and androgen receptors, with strong evidence of negative effects on folliculogenesis, embryo development, and increased risk of conditions such as polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS). The review also highlighted the compounding effects of multiple pollutants and the role of the microbiome in modulating susceptibility to environmental toxins—an area of emerging relevance for microbiome signatures databases.
Key implications
For clinicians, this review underscores the critical importance of environmental exposures as modifiable risk factors in the management of female infertility. The findings advocate for thorough patient histories that include environmental, occupational, and lifestyle exposures. There is a strong rationale for patient education on minimizing contact with pollutants, advocating for public health policies that reduce environmental contamination, and counseling regarding timing and mode of assisted reproduction, particularly in high-pollution contexts. The mechanistic links between pollutants and reproductive dysfunction also suggest avenues for biomarker development, including the use of AMH and specific microbial signatures to assess exposure and risk. The review calls for further research on pollutant-microbiome interactions and the cumulative effects of pollutant mixtures, as well as expanded epidemiological studies to inform guidelines and interventions.
The application of metabolomics in ovarian cancer management: A systematic review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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This systematic review highlights the role of metabolomics in ovarian cancer management, identifying key metabolic alterations in lipids and amino acids that could improve diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment strategies. Further validation is needed for clinical application.
What was studied?
This systematic review focused on the application of metabolomics in ovarian cancer management, exploring how metabolomic analysis can be used for diagnosing, prognosing, and monitoring the treatment and recurrence of ovarian cancer. The review compiled and evaluated findings from 32 global studies that applied metabolomics to biofluids and tumor tissues in ovarian cancer patients. The review also assessed 18 targeted metabolomics studies for further validation. It aimed to highlight metabolite profiles and metabolic pathways that could potentially be used as clinical biomarkers for ovarian cancer detection and management.
Who was studied?
The review analyzed studies involving ovarian cancer patients, including those with both primary and recurrent cancers. The included studies had participants from diverse regions such as China, the USA, the UK, and Poland, totaling 3,634 participants. Of these, 1,724 had ovarian cancer, and 1,910 served as controls or had benign ovarian conditions. The studies employed various metabolomic techniques, including liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), to analyze biofluids like serum and urine, as well as tumor tissues from ovarian cancer patients.
Most important findings
The review found significant alterations in metabolites linked to ovarian cancer, especially phospholipids and amino acids. The most commonly reported findings were a down-regulation of lysophosphatidylcholine (LPC) and phosphatidylcholine (PC), and up-regulation of lysophosphatidylethanolamine (LPE) and ceramides. Amino acids such as histidine, citrulline, alanine, and methionine were also found to be down-regulated in ovarian cancer tissues. In addition, the combination of multiple metabolites in diagnostic panels showed improved sensitivity and specificity for diagnosing ovarian cancer, with lipid metabolism being a key area of focus. Dysregulated pathways, such as glutamine metabolism, were also linked to the aggressive nature of ovarian cancer, offering insight into prognosis and recurrence.
Key implications
The findings suggest that metabolomics has significant potential as a diagnostic and prognostic tool for ovarian cancer. The identification of specific metabolic signatures, particularly in phospholipid and amino acid metabolism, can aid in the early detection of ovarian cancer, which is typically diagnosed at an advanced stage. Furthermore, combining multiple metabolites into diagnostic panels could increase diagnostic accuracy, making it a promising approach for clinical use. However, further research is needed to validate these findings in larger and more diverse populations, as well as to integrate metabolomics with existing clinical biomarkers for better patient management.
The microbiome and gynecologic cancer: Cellular mechanisms and clinical applications.
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This review examines the role of the microbiome in gynecologic cancer development and treatment, emphasizing its potential for early diagnosis and therapeutic modulation. The microbiome’s influence on chemotherapy and immunotherapy responses offers new avenues for cancer management.
What was reviewed?
This review focuses on the significant role of the microbiome in gynecologic cancers, highlighting cellular mechanisms and clinical applications. The authors explore how microbial dysbiosis in the gastrointestinal and female reproductive tracts contributes to the development and progression of gynecologic cancers. Additionally, the review discusses how the microbiome impacts cancer therapies such as chemotherapy, immunotherapy, and radiation, with potential strategies for microbiome modulation in cancer treatment and prevention.
Who was studied?
The review synthesizes findings from various studies involving patients with gynecologic cancers such as cervical, uterine, ovarian, and vulvar cancers. It also includes data from animal models to understand how microbial communities in the reproductive and gastrointestinal tracts affect cancer biology. Additionally, clinical studies exploring microbiome changes during cancer treatments are discussed.
Most important findings
The review underscores that microbiome dysbiosis is a key factor in the carcinogenesis of gynecologic cancers. For example, a shift from a Lactobacillus-dominant vaginal microbiota to non-Lactobacillus species is associated with an increased risk of HPV persistence and cervical cancer. Similarly, alterations in the gut microbiome are linked to endometrial cancer and ovarian cancer, with specific microbial signatures influencing estrogen metabolism and inflammation. Furthermore, the microbiome has a role in modulating treatment outcomes. Studies indicate that the gut microbiome can influence the efficacy of chemotherapy and immunotherapy. Disruptions caused by antibiotics or chemotherapy lead to reduced treatment responses, while probiotic supplementation can enhance therapeutic efficacy.
Key implications
The findings emphasize the potential of microbiome modulation as a novel therapeutic strategy for gynecologic cancers. By understanding the microbial signatures associated with cancer progression, clinicians could use the microbiome for early detection, prognostication, and personalized treatment approaches. Modifying the microbiome with probiotics, prebiotics, or fecal microbiota transplantation may improve the efficacy of cancer therapies, especially in cases of treatment resistance. However, further research is needed to identify the most beneficial microbial species and the mechanisms through which they influence cancer pathogenesis and treatment.
Perception prevalence of the relationship between PID and infertility amongst women of reproductive age: A Nigerian study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) is a complex interplay between pathogens, immune responses, and microbial communities. As research continues to uncover the microbiome's role in reproductive health, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as probiotics, prebiotics, and transplants are redefining how we prevent and treat PID. This page dives deep into these innovations, offering a glimpse into the future of personalized, biologically informed women’s healthcare.
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A Nigerian study found only 10% of reproductive-age women recognized the link between PID and infertility, despite high education levels. The findings emphasize the need for improved public health campaigns and highlight the microbial etiology—chiefly Chlamydia trachomatis—behind PID-related infertility.
What was studied?
This cross-sectional study investigated the perception prevalence of the relationship between pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) and infertility among women of reproductive age in Rivers State, Nigeria. The primary aim was to assess awareness and understanding of the established link between PID, an ascending genital tract infection often caused by sexually transmitted infections (STIs) like Chlamydia trachomatis, and infertility, which is recognized globally as a major public health concern. The study evaluated awareness levels regarding PID, infertility, and their interrelationship, with particular interest in how education and age might influence these perceptions. Data were collected from women attending an enlightenment campaign hosted by the Mother and Baby Care Global Foundation and analyzed using SPSS.
Who was studied?
The study population comprised 250 women of reproductive age (20–49 years) who participated in a local health campaign in Port Harcourt, Rivers State, Nigeria. The mean age was 24 ± 4 years, with 46% aged 20–29, 34% aged 30–39, and 20% aged 40–49. Educational attainment was high in this cohort, with 80% holding tertiary qualifications and the remaining 20% having secondary education. All participants provided informed consent, and those under 15 or over 49 years were excluded from the study.
Most important findings
Despite high educational status among participants, only 30% were aware of PID and 45% were aware of infertility. Notably, only 10% recognized the relationship between PID and infertility, a figure that is low given the well-documented association between these conditions. The highest perception prevalence of the PID-infertility link was observed in women aged 30–39 years (6%). Microbiologically, the study reinforces that Chlamydia trachomatis and Neisseria gonorrhoeae are the primary pathogens implicated in PID, with Chlamydia infection alone accounting for up to 45% of tubal infertility in referenced literature. Approximately 85% of PID cases globally are attributable to STIs. The low perception prevalence found here suggests a significant gap in patient awareness, which is critical given the preventable nature of many PID-related infertility cases.
Key implications
The findings highlight an urgent need for targeted public health education and community-based interventions to raise awareness about PID and its reproductive consequences. Despite high levels of formal education, knowledge gaps persist, underlining that educational campaigns must be tailored and recurrent. From a microbiome perspective, recognizing the microbial etiology of PID, especially the role of Chlamydia trachomatis, should inform both clinical practice and public health messaging to improve screening, early diagnosis, and treatment. Enhanced awareness could contribute to reducing infertility rates attributable to PID, particularly in similar populations and settings.
Effects of a Bovine Lactoferrin Formulation from Cow’s Milk on Menstrual Distress in Volunteers
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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FeLf improved psychological symptoms related to menstrual distress, particularly autonomic balance, in healthy women. However, no significant effects on menstrual pain or quality of life were observed.
What was studied?
This study explored the effects of a bovine lactoferrin formulation (FeLf) from cow's milk on menstrual distress. The researchers aimed to assess whether FeLf could alleviate various menstrual symptoms, including psychological distress and pain. FeLf, a complex of lactoferrin and iron, was administered daily from day ten of the luteal phase to day four of the follicular phase. The study measured menstrual distress using the Moos Menstrual Distress Questionnaire (MDQ), heart rate variability (as an index of autonomic nerve balance), and self-reported pain and quality of life scores.
Who was studied?
The study involved 35 healthy Japanese women aged 20–49 years, all with regular menstrual cycles. Participants were selected based on the presence of subjective dysphoria during menstruation, specifically pain. Women with allergies to dairy products or other exclusion criteria were excluded from the study. The study was conducted over two menstrual cycles, with participants receiving either FeLf or a placebo during their first cycle and switching treatments after a washout period.
Most important findings
The study found that FeLf significantly improved the MDQ score for the autonomic nervous system subscale, indicating better autonomic balance compared to the placebo. Specifically, parasympathetic nervous system activity was enhanced in the FeLf group. Additionally, heart rate variability (HFA) was significantly higher in the FeLf group, suggesting a beneficial effect on autonomic function during menstruation. However, no significant differences were found in menstrual pain intensity or overall quality of life between the FeLf and placebo groups. The study also noted that no side effects were reported during the intervention, suggesting FeLf is well-tolerated.
Key implications
The findings suggest that FeLf could be a beneficial non-pharmacological approach for improving the psychological and autonomic symptoms associated with menstrual distress. While it did not significantly reduce menstrual pain, its positive effects on the autonomic nervous system highlight its potential for alleviating the psychological aspects of dysmenorrhea. These results indicate that FeLf may offer a safe and effective alternative for women seeking relief from menstrual distress, particularly for those who prefer non-pharmacological treatments. However, further studies with larger sample sizes and longer treatment durations are needed to fully understand its impact on pain and overall quality of life.
Altered Follicular Fluid Metabolic Pattern Correlates with Female Infertility and Outcome Measures of In Vitro Fertilization
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is a common endocrine disorder that affects women of reproductive age, characterized by irregular menstrual cycles, hyperandrogenism, and insulin resistance. It is often associated with metabolic dysfunctions and inflammation, leading to fertility issues and increased risk of type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This study identified 27 follicular fluid metabolites differentiating infertile from fertile women, developed a predictive Biomarker Score, and demonstrated strong correlations with IVF outcomes, providing a basis for personalized infertility management.
What was studied?
This original research investigated the metabolic profile of follicular fluid (FF) in women undergoing in vitro fertilization (IVF) to determine whether specific biochemical alterations correlate with female infertility and IVF outcomes. Using a targeted metabolomics approach, the study quantified 55 low molecular weight compounds, encompassing energy metabolites, purines, pyrimidines, antioxidants, oxidative/nitrosative stress markers, and amino acids, in FF samples. The research aimed to identify distinct metabolic signatures in infertile women compared to controls (fertile women whose partner’s infertility was the only impediment to conception), and to evaluate the relationship between these metabolic patterns and clinical IVF outcome measures, including oocyte development, embryo quality, and pregnancy rates. A cumulative Biomarker Score, based on deviations in 27 key FF metabolites, was developed to distinguish between fertile and infertile women and to predict IVF success.
Who was studied?
The study cohort consisted of 180 women attending a fertility clinic in Rome, Italy, from 2018 to 2020. The control group (n=35) was composed of women whose infertility was exclusively due to a male factor, ensuring their reproductive competence. The infertile group (n=145) included women diagnosed with endometriosis (n=19), polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS; n=14), age-related reduced ovarian reserve (AR-ROR; n=58), reduced ovarian reserve (ROR; n=29), unexplained infertility (UI; n=14), and genetic infertility (GI; n=11). All participants underwent standardized ovarian stimulation and IVF/ICSI protocols, with FF collected during oocyte retrieval. The study excluded women with mechanical reproductive barriers, cancer history, or premature ovarian failure, and controlled for confounding lifestyle and nutritional factors.
Most important findings
The metabolomic analysis revealed that 27 of 55 measured metabolites significantly differed between infertile and control groups. Infertile women generally exhibited lower FF glucose, higher lactate, elevated purine and pyrimidine catabolites (hypoxanthine, xanthine, uracil, pseudouridine), decreased antioxidants (ascorbic acid, glutathione, vitamin A, vitamin E, coenzyme Q10, carotenoids), increased oxidative/nitrosative stress markers (malondialdehyde, 8-hydroxy-2′-deoxyguanosine, nitrite, nitrate), and reduced levels of several amino acids (notably serine, threonine, arginine, valine, methionine, tryptophan, isoleucine, leucine). These metabolic anomalies were largely consistent across different infertility diagnoses, though some subgroup-specific patterns emerged (e.g., PCOS and GI showed normal FF glucose). The composite Biomarker Score robustly discriminated between control and infertile groups, with scores correlating inversely with key IVF outcomes—number and quality of oocytes/blastocysts, clinical pregnancy, and healthy live birth rates. The Biomarker Score showed high specificity and sensitivity in predicting fertility status and IVF success.
Key implications
This study underscores the central role of FF metabolic composition in female fertility and IVF outcomes. The identification of a 27-metabolite signature and its integration into a Biomarker Score offers a powerful, noninvasive tool for distinguishing fertile from infertile patients and predicting assisted reproduction success. The findings suggest that metabolic profiling of FF could inform personalized interventions to optimize the follicular environment, enhance oocyte quality, and improve IVF success rates. Furthermore, these metabolomic biomarkers could be incorporated into microbiome-multimetabolite databases, facilitating personalized reproductive medicine and potentially guiding future research into the interplay between follicular metabolites, the ovarian microenvironment, and the local microbiome.
The Role of Genital Tract Microbiome in Fertility: A Systematic Review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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This review underscores the importance of genital tract microbiome composition in fertility, particularly Lactobacillus crispatus dominance, which is linked to better fertility outcomes. Dysbiosis and pathogens like Gardnerella are associated with infertility, suggesting microbiome profiling could be key in improving ART success.
What was reviewed?
This systematic review explored the role of the genital tract microbiome in fertility, with a focus on its impact on both natural conception and assisted reproductive treatments (ARTs), such as in vitro fertilization (IVF). The review aimed to consolidate current research on the microbiome's correlation with infertility, discussing how dysbiosis in various areas of the genital tract, such as the vagina, cervix, endometrium, and even the fallopian tubes, affects fertility outcomes. The study involved an analysis of 26 selected articles published until February 2021, using methods like PCR and RNA sequencing to examine microbial diversity and its relationship with infertility.
Who was reviewed?
The review included studies on women and couples with infertility, focusing on those who were either attempting to conceive naturally or undergoing ART treatments. These studies compared the microbiomes of infertile women with those of fertile women and examined the differences in microbial compositions, particularly in the vaginal, cervical, and endometrial environments. Additionally, the review included studies that explored how microbial imbalances could affect ART success rates, such as implantation and pregnancy rates in IVF treatments.
What were the most important findings?
The review highlighted that the genital tract microbiome plays a pivotal role in fertility, particularly the vaginal microbiome. Lactobacillus species, especially Lactobacillus crispatus, were consistently identified as crucial for maintaining a healthy environment conducive to fertility. A Lactobacillus-dominated microbiota was associated with better fertility outcomes, while dysbiosis, characterized by a reduction in Lactobacillus and an overgrowth of pathogens like Gardnerella vaginalis, Ureaplasma species, and other Gram-negative bacteria, was linked to infertility and poor ART outcomes. Notably, the presence of pathogens such as Chlamydia trachomatis and Gardnerella vaginalis was associated with infertility, even in the absence of symptoms like bacterial vaginosis (BV), suggesting that asymptomatic infections still have a significant impact on fertility. The review also discussed how vaginal and endometrial microbiomes could differ, with non-Lactobacillus-dominated endometrial microbiomes correlating with lower rates of implantation and pregnancy in IVF cases. Importantly, no studies were identified that focused on the microbiome of the fallopian tubes, highlighting an area for future research.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The greatest implication of this review is that clinicians should consider the genital tract microbiome as a factor in infertility assessments and treatments. Dysbiosis, particularly a lack of Lactobacillus dominance, could serve as a diagnostic marker for fertility issues, and addressing microbiome imbalances through interventions such as probiotics or antibiotics could improve fertility outcomes. The review also emphasizes the need for standardized microbiome sampling and analysis methods to allow for more consistent and reliable clinical applications. Additionally, the importance of the vaginal microbiome, specifically Lactobacillus crispatus, as a predictor for ART success points to potential personalized treatments based on individual microbiome profiles, enhancing the precision of fertility treatments.
Paradigm Shift: A Comprehensive Review of Ovarian Cancer Management in an Era of Advancements.
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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This review maps advances in ovarian cancer management, from surgery and chemotherapy to targeted and emerging therapies, and highlights a need to integrate microbiome insights.
What was reviewed?
The focus keyphrase “Ovarian Cancer Management” guides this comprehensive narrative review of current strategies in preventing, diagnosing, and treating ovarian cancer. The article synthesizes advancements in surgical approaches, chemotherapy regimens, targeted therapies (including PARP inhibitors and anti-angiogenics), and emerging modalities such as immunotherapy, gene therapy, and drug repurposing.
Who was reviewed?
This review draws on peer-reviewed studies published between 2013 and 2023, identified via PubMed searches using terms like “ovarian cancer”, “ovarian tumour”, “ovarian carcinoma”, “advances”, “updates”, “overview”, “screening”, “prevention”, “diagnosis”, “prognosis”, “therapy” and “treatment” that appeared anywhere in the article. It includes evidence from clinical trials, molecular profiling projects (e.g., TCGA), and guideline recommendations from bodies such as NCCN and ESMO.
Most important findings
The review highlights that combining cytoreductive surgery with platinum-taxane chemotherapy remains standard frontline care, yet yields only marginal improvements in progression-free survival due to chemoresistance. Targeted agents—bevacizumab for VEGF inhibition and PARP inhibitors (olaparib, niraparib, rucaparib)—have improved outcomes, particularly in BRCA-mutant and homologous recombination-deficient tumors. Emerging treatments such as HIPEC, immunotherapies (e.g., anti-PD-1/PD-L1), gene therapy vectors, and small-molecule kinase inhibitors show promise in trials. Notably, the review does not address microbiome signatures or microbial associations, indicating a gap for future integration of microbiome research in OC management.
Key implications
This narrative underscores the paradigm shift toward personalized care in ovarian cancer management, driven by molecular profiling and targeted therapy development. It emphasizes the urgency of overcoming chemoresistance and tumor heterogeneity. The absence of microbiome data signals an opportunity for trials integrating microbial biomarkers to refine early detection, prognostication, and therapeutic stratification.
Endometriosis-Associated Ovarian Cancer: From Molecular Pathologies to Clinical Relevance
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This review explores the molecular pathogenesis of endometriosis-associated ovarian cancer, highlighting key genetic mutations, hormonal imbalances, and microRNA dysregulation that contribute to the disease. It discusses the potential for personalized treatment strategies based on molecular signatures to improve outcomes in affected patients.
What was studied?
This review examines the molecular pathogenesis of endometriosis-associated ovarian cancer (EAOC), focusing on the genetic, epigenetic, and microenvironmental factors that contribute to the transformation of benign endometriotic lesions into malignancies. The study explores how endometriosis, a chronic condition where endometrial-like tissue grows outside the uterus, increases the risk of developing certain types of ovarian cancer, particularly endometrioid and clear-cell carcinoma. The article discusses the roles of various genetic mutations, including those in genes like p53, K-ras, ARID1A, PIK3CA, and PPP2R1A, as well as the influence of hormonal imbalances, oxidative stress, and inflammation in driving the progression of EAOC.
Who was studied?
The review focuses on molecular and clinical studies involving patients with endometriosis, specifically those at an increased risk for developing ovarian cancer. It explores the genetic and molecular profiles of ovarian endometriotic lesions and compares them with those of normal ovarian tissues and ovarian cancer. The article also highlights the tumor microenvironment, including factors like estrogen signaling, oxidative stress, and microRNA dysregulation, that may contribute to cancer progression in women with endometriosis. The study integrates findings from various patient cohorts and experimental models, emphasizing the need for personalized treatment strategies based on molecular signatures.
Most important findings
The study identifies several key molecular factors involved in the malignant transformation of endometriosis to ovarian cancer. Genetic mutations, such as in the p53 and K-ras genes, along with microsatellite instability, play a critical role in the initiation and progression of tumors. ARID1A mutations, which affect chromatin remodeling, are frequent in clear-cell and endometrioid ovarian carcinomas, leading to genomic instability and increased tumor aggressiveness. Additionally, mutations in the PIK3CA gene, which is involved in the PI3K/AKT/mTOR signaling pathway, were found to be early events in the development of EAOC, particularly in clear-cell carcinoma. The loss of ARID1A expression often coexists with these mutations, further complicating tumor progression. The review also highlights the role of estrogen in promoting endometriotic cell proliferation through signaling pathways, contributing to carcinogenesis. MicroRNAs, including miR-200 and let-7, are involved in regulating epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition and oncogenicity, making them potential biomarkers for EAOC. Moreover, the tumor microenvironment, shaped by oxidative stress and inflammation, further accelerates the carcinogenic process.
Key implications
The molecular insights provided by this review suggest that targeting specific genetic and molecular pathways could be an effective approach to treating EAOC. For example, inhibiting the PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway, which is altered in many EAOC cases, or targeting microRNAs involved in tumor progression, could offer new therapeutic avenues. The review also emphasizes the importance of early detection, especially for patients with endometriosis who are at higher risk for developing ovarian cancer. Understanding the complex interplay between genetic mutations, hormonal factors, and the tumor microenvironment is crucial for developing more effective, personalized treatments for EAOC. Given the poor prognosis associated with clear-cell ovarian carcinoma, which is often diagnosed at advanced stages, the identification of specific molecular signatures could help tailor early interventions to improve patient outcomes.
Protective Mechanisms of Vaginal Lactobacilli against Sexually Transmitted Viral Infections
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This review explains how vaginal lactobacilli protect against viral sexually transmitted infections by strengthening epithelial barriers, reducing inflammation, and directly inactivating viruses.
What was reviewed?
This paper is a comprehensive narrative review that examined how vaginal lactobacilli protect against sexually transmitted viral infections by shaping the vaginal microenvironment, strengthening epithelial defenses, and modulating host immune responses. The authors synthesized molecular, microbiological, immunological, and clinical evidence to explain why Lactobacillus-dominated vaginal ecosystems are associated with reduced acquisition and persistence of viral pathogens, particularly human papillomavirus, human immunodeficiency virus, and herpes simplex virus. Rather than focusing on a single mechanism, the review emphasized a systems-level perspective in which microbial metabolites, epithelial barrier function, mucus integrity, and immune signaling act together to limit viral infectivity and inflammation.
Who was reviewed?
The review integrated data from multiple human populations, including healthy reproductive-age women, pregnant individuals, women with bacterial vaginosis or recurrent vulvovaginal infections, and cohorts at high risk for viral sexually transmitted infections. These clinical findings were supported by in vitro epithelial models, ex vivo human tissue systems, and animal studies designed to isolate specific microbial and immune mechanisms. By combining epidemiological associations with mechanistic experiments, the authors linked vaginal microbiota composition to clinically meaningful outcomes.
What were the most important findings?
The review established that vaginal lactobacilli exert antiviral protection through several converging mechanisms that extend beyond simple pathogen exclusion. Major microbial associations included Lactobacillus crispatus, Lactobacillus jensenii, Lactobacillus gasseri, and Lactobacillus vaginalis, which consistently correlated with lower prevalence and viral load of HPV, HIV, and HSV infections. Central to this protection was lactic acid production, which maintained vaginal pH at or below 4 and directly inactivated viral particles by destabilizing viral envelopes and fusion machinery. The authors highlighted that the D-lactic acid isomer, preferentially produced by L. crispatus, L. jensenii, and L. gasseri, preserved epithelial integrity by suppressing matrix metalloproteinases and reinforcing cell–cell adhesion. Hydrogen peroxide production by select Lactobacillus strains further contributed to virucidal activity and suppressed co-infecting bacteria that exacerbate inflammation.
Beyond direct antiviral effects, lactobacilli reduced epithelial permissivity to infection by enhancing tight junctions, maintaining mucus structure, and preventing degradation of protective mucins. Immunologically, lactobacilli dampened pro-inflammatory cytokines such as IL-6, IL-8, TNF-α, and RANTES while promoting antiviral interferon responses, thereby limiting immune activation that otherwise increases HIV susceptibility. In contrast, dysbiotic communities dominated by Gardnerella vaginalis, Prevotella, Atopobium, and Sneathia disrupted these defenses, raised vaginal pH, degraded mu
cus, and amplified inflammatory signaling, creating a permissive environment for viral transmission and persistence.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
For clinicians, this review underscores that vaginal viral susceptibility is tightly linked to microbial function rather than pathogen exposure alone. It supports therapeutic strategies that restore or preserve Lactobacillus-dominated ecosystems as adjuncts to antiviral prevention and treatment. Targeted probiotic or postbiotic approaches may reduce viral transmission risk while avoiding the collateral damage caused by repeated antimicrobial use.
Ovarian Cancer—Epidemiology, Classification, Pathogenesis, Treatment, and Estrogen Receptors’ Molecular Backgrounds
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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This review covers the epidemiology, genetics, and molecular mechanisms of ovarian cancer, focusing on the role of estrogen receptors and genetic mutations such as BRCA1/2. It emphasizes the importance of genetic testing and the potential of targeted therapies, including PARP inhibitors, for improving patient outcomes.
What was reviewed?
This review explores the epidemiology, classification, pathogenesis, treatment, and molecular background of estrogen receptors in ovarian cancer. It provides a comprehensive analysis of the various factors that contribute to the development and progression of ovarian cancer, with a specific focus on genetic factors such as mutations in BRCA1 and BRCA2, and the role of estrogen receptors in tumor growth and hormone-dependent carcinogenesis.
Who was reviewed?
The review does not focus on individual studies or specific patient populations but instead compiles data from a wide range of epidemiological and clinical research. It synthesizes information on ovarian cancer risk factors, the molecular biology of the disease, and therapeutic interventions from various scientific and clinical sources, offering insights into treatment approaches and ongoing research.
Most important findings
A key finding of the review is the growing understanding of the genetic and molecular underpinnings of ovarian cancer. Mutations in the BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes significantly increase the risk of developing ovarian cancer, with BRCA1 mutation carriers facing a 44% risk, while BRCA2 mutation carriers have a 17% risk. The review highlights the role of estrogen in ovarian cancer, noting that 60% of cases exhibit significantly elevated levels of estrogen receptor alpha (ERα). The review emphasizes the impact of estrogen receptors on ovarian cancer progression, with the imbalance between ERα and estrogen receptor beta (ERβ) playing a crucial role in carcinogenesis. Additionally, polymorphisms in the ESR1 gene, which encodes ERα, may affect estrogen receptor activity and influence both the development of ovarian cancer and the response to hormone therapies.
Key implications
The review’s findings have substantial clinical implications, particularly in the areas of genetic testing, early detection, and treatment strategies for ovarian cancer. The identification of BRCA1/2 mutations can guide personalized treatment with PARP inhibitors, which have proven effective for hereditary ovarian cancers. The understanding of estrogen receptor signaling, especially the role of ERα and ERβ, opens avenues for targeted therapies that could modulate estrogen activity to slow down cancer progression. Furthermore, the exploration of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the ESR1 gene provides new opportunities for predicting treatment outcomes and tailoring therapies based on individual genetic profiles. Despite advancements, the review stresses that there is still no effective screening method for early-stage ovarian cancer, highlighting the need for continued research into biomarkers and non-invasive detection methods.
The Role of Heavy Metals in the Biology of Female Cancers
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This review explores how heavy metals, including cadmium, lead, and mercury, contribute to the development of female cancers by mimicking estrogen, inducing oxidative stress, and causing DNA damage. These findings highlight the need for further research to understand the molecular mechanisms involved and develop effective prevention strategies.
What was studied?
The article reviewed the effects of heavy metals such as lead, cadmium, mercury, and arsenic on the development and progression of female cancers, particularly those related to the reproductive system, including breast, ovarian, and endometrial cancers. The review explores the mechanisms through which these metals disrupt cellular processes, including their potential to act as metalloestrogens, induce oxidative stress, impair DNA repair, and alter gene expression through epigenetic modifications. The paper emphasizes the role of these metals in carcinogenesis, especially in hormone-sensitive tissues.
Who was studied?
This review does not focus on specific individuals. Still, it compiles evidence from various studies involving both in vitro and in vivo models, as well as epidemiological research on the association between heavy metal exposure and cancer risk in women. The studies reviewed involve human tissues, cancer cell lines, and animal models, with a focus on how heavy metals influence estrogen receptors and cellular pathways that regulate growth, proliferation, and apoptosis in cancers such as breast, ovarian, and endometrial cancers.
Most important findings
The review discusses several significant findings, including how heavy metals such as cadmium, lead, and mercury can mimic estrogen by activating estrogen receptors, particularly estrogen receptor-alpha (ERα), and promoting cell proliferation. These metals are categorized as metalloestrogens, which have estrogen-like effects that contribute to the development of hormone-dependent cancers, such as breast and ovarian cancers. Additionally, heavy metals induce oxidative stress by generating reactive oxygen species (ROS), which damage cellular components such as DNA, proteins, and lipids. This oxidative damage leads to genetic mutations and contributes to cancer initiation and progression. Furthermore, heavy metals can cause epigenetic changes, which alter gene expression without changing the DNA sequence, and impair DNA repair mechanisms, which are essential for maintaining genomic integrity. The review also highlights the importance of understanding the molecular mechanisms by which these metals influence cancer biology, particularly in hormone-sensitive cancers.
Key implications
The review underscores the growing concern about environmental exposure to heavy metals and their potential role in the development of female cancers. Despite the known risks, many gaps remain in our understanding of the specific molecular mechanisms by which these metals contribute to cancer progression. The review suggests that heavy metals should be considered an important environmental factor in cancer prevention and treatment strategies. Given the potential for heavy metals to disrupt hormonal balance, further research is needed to develop better regulatory measures to limit exposure, especially in industrial and agricultural settings. Understanding the role of heavy metals in cancer biology also opens new avenues for therapeutic strategies aimed at targeting these metals and their molecular pathways.
Ovarian cancer in the world: Epidemiology and risk factors
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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This review analyzes the global epidemiology and risk factors of ovarian cancer, emphasizing the role of genetic predispositions, reproductive factors, and lifestyle choices. It highlights the disparities in incidence and mortality rates across regions and calls for better prevention and early detection strategies.
What was reviewed?
This review article examines the global epidemiology of ovarian cancer, focusing on its incidence, mortality rates, and risk factors. It highlights the geographical disparities in ovarian cancer rates, with a particular focus on variations across different human development index (HDI) countries. Additionally, the article emphasizes the diverse range of risk factors, such as genetic predispositions, reproductive health factors, hormonal influences, and lifestyle factors, and their implications for ovarian cancer incidence.
Who was reviewed?
The review utilizes findings from a broad collection of studies on ovarian cancer published between 1925 and 2018. It includes data from observational studies on various aspects of ovarian cancer epidemiology, including incidence and mortality across different geographic regions and populations. The authors reviewed information on demographic, reproductive, genetic, hormonal, and lifestyle-related risk factors and their influence on the occurrence of ovarian cancer. No specific individuals were studied; rather, the article provides an overview of global trends and the factors contributing to ovarian cancer risk.
Most important findings
The review identifies several critical findings related to ovarian cancer’s global epidemiology. First, it highlights ovarian cancer as the seventh most common cancer among women, with significant variations in incidence and mortality rates across different regions. High-income countries tend to have higher incidence rates, although their mortality rates have been declining in recent years due to better access to treatment. In contrast, lower-income countries face higher mortality rates, attributed to limited healthcare access and late-stage diagnoses.
Genetic factors, particularly mutations in the BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes, play a significant role in increasing ovarian cancer risk, with familial history also contributing to susceptibility. Reproductive factors, including age at first menstruation, pregnancy, and lactation, were found to influence ovarian cancer risk, with early pregnancies and breastfeeding reducing the risk. Hormonal contraceptive use was also associated with a reduced risk of ovarian cancer. Additionally, lifestyle factors such as obesity, diet, and physical activity significantly impact ovarian cancer risk, with obesity being linked to higher cancer mortality rates. The article also discusses the role of pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) and endometriosis in increasing the likelihood of ovarian cancer, especially among women with chronic inflammation.
Key implications
The review’s findings suggest several implications for public health, especially in the context of prevention, early detection, and treatment strategies for ovarian cancer. Understanding the geographic disparities in incidence and mortality rates calls for targeted health interventions and increased access to diagnostic and treatment services, particularly in low-income countries. The recognition of genetic and reproductive factors as key determinants in ovarian cancer risk underscores the importance of genetic counseling and early screening for high-risk populations, particularly those with a family history of ovarian or breast cancer. Furthermore, the identification of lifestyle factors as modifiable risks opens opportunities for prevention strategies, including promoting healthy diets, regular physical activity, and weight management. The review also stresses the need for ongoing research to better understand the roles of chronic inflammation and reproductive health conditions like PID and endometriosis in ovarian cancer development.
Spotlight on the gut microbiome in menopause: current insights
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Menopause reduces gut microbiome diversity and shifts composition toward a male-like profile, likely due to declining estrogen and progesterone. These changes may impact postmenopausal health and disease risk, highlighting the gut microbiome as a promising therapeutic target.
This review article synthesized the current evidence on the interplay between menopause, female sex hormones, and the gut microbiome in humans. The authors critically examined studies addressing how menopause, a period marked by drastic declines in estrogen and progesterone, affects gut microbiome diversity, composition, and function. Focus was given to the bi-directional relationship between sex hormones and the gut microbiota, including the concept of the “estrobolome” (the collection of microbial genes capable of metabolizing estrogens). The review also explored how menopause-associated hormonal changes may impact gut barrier integrity, increase microbial translocation, and potentially influence the risk of chronic diseases common in postmenopausal women, such as cardiovascular disease, metabolic syndrome, and osteoporosis. The article further discussed gaps in knowledge, including the influence of hormone therapy on the gut microbiome and the need for future longitudinal and mechanistic studies.
Who was reviewed?
The review encompassed human studies that compared premenopausal and postmenopausal women, often with age and BMI-matched men as additional comparison groups. Study populations varied in geography (including the US, Spain, China, Korea, and Austria), ethnicity (with some large studies focusing on Hispanic/Latino women), and health status (including women with and without HIV, and women with premature ovarian insufficiency). Sample sizes ranged from small (n<20 per group) to large-scale cohorts exceeding 1,000 participants. Some studies also included measurements of circulating sex hormones (estrogens and progesterone), allowing more direct assessment of hormonal-microbiome relationships.
Most important findings
Menopause is consistently associated with decreased gut microbiome diversity and a compositional shift that makes the microbiome of postmenopausal women more similar to that of men. Across studies, taxa such as Firmicutes (including Ruminococcus), Akkermansia muciniphila, and [Clostridium] lactatifermentans tend to decrease post-menopause, while Bacteroides, Prevotella, Dorea, Sutterella, and Butyricimonas often increase. Several studies link lower estrogen and progesterone levels with reduced microbial diversity and lower abundance of beneficial short-chain fatty acid-producing genera, while higher diversity and certain taxa (e.g., Ruminococcus, Clostridia) are associated with higher urinary or plasma estrogens. Moreover, the gut microbiome’s estrobolome potential is reduced after menopause, potentially limiting enterohepatic recycling of estrogens and progestins. Experimental and limited clinical data suggest declines in sex hormones may also impair gut barrier function, facilitating microbial translocation and systemic inflammation. However, findings are sometimes inconsistent, likely due to differences in study design, population, and sample size.
Key implications
This review highlights that menopause-induced hormonal changes are linked to reduced gut microbiome diversity, altered microbial composition, and lower estrobolome activity, collectively reflecting a shift toward a more “male-like” microbiome. These changes may contribute to increased risk of metabolic, cardiovascular, and bone diseases in postmenopausal women, although causality and underlying mechanisms remain to be clarified. The modifiable nature of the gut microbiome makes it a promising target for interventions aimed at improving menopause-related health outcomes. There is a pressing need for larger, longitudinal studies, and for research into the effects of menopausal hormone therapy on the gut microbiome. Understanding these relationships could open new avenues for personalized medicine in peri- and postmenopausal women.
Vasomotor Symptoms During Menopause: A Practical Guide on Current Treatments and Future Perspectives
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) is one of the most effective treatments for women experiencing the symptoms of menopause, particularly vasomotor symptoms such as hot flashes and night sweats. But its benefits go beyond just symptom management. HRT can also play a key role in improving vaginal health by alleviating dryness and discomfort, which are common complaints among women in menopause. Additionally, it helps prevent bone loss, significantly reducing the risk of osteoporosis and fractures, which are more common after menopause. Despite its many benefits, HRT is not one-size-fits-all; it’s essential to tailor treatment based on individual health profiles, taking into account the risks like breast cancer, blood clots, and heart disease that come with prolonged use.
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The review defines menopause vasomotor symptoms treatment and microbiome relevance, favors timely hormone therapy and transdermal routes, details effective nonhormone options, and highlights neurokinin antagonists for fast relief while separating vasomotor and genitourinary care for microbiome-aware practice.
What was reviewed?
This review explains menopause vasomotor symptoms treatment by summarizing pathophysiology, first-line hormone therapy, effective nonhormone options, and emerging agents. It describes how estrogen withdrawal narrows the hypothalamic thermoregulatory neutral zone through KNDy neuron signaling and how this neurobiology supports both hormone therapy and neurokinin receptor antagonists. It details the efficacy of systemic menopausal hormone therapy for hot flashes and night sweats, the importance of timing near menopause, and the risk differences by route and progestogen choice. In addition, it outlines practical prescribing, including when to choose transdermal estradiol, how to pair progestogen for endometrial protection, and how to handle bleeding and contraindications.
Who was reviewed?
The review focuses on midlife women with bothersome vasomotor symptoms, particularly those under 60 years of age or within 10 years of their final menstrual period. It addresses women with cardiometabolic risks, venous thromboembolism risks, obesity, diabetes, or prior coronary disease, and it highlights when transdermal routes and lower doses fit better. It also considers women with an intact uterus who require a progestogen with systemic estrogen, women after hysterectomy who may use estrogen alone, women with a history of breast cancer who should avoid systemic hormone therapy, and diverse groups who prefer or need nonhormone options such as SSRIs/SNRIs, gabapentin, oxybutynin, clonidine, or mind-body therapies. The review includes evidence that informs care for breast cancer survivors on tamoxifen, in whom paroxetine can interact, while venlafaxine does not.
Most important findings
Hormone therapy remains the most effective treatment for vasomotor symptoms and can reduce frequency and severity by about 90%, with the benefit greatest when initiated before age 60 or within 10 years of menopause. Transdermal estradiol limits first-pass hepatic effects and does not raise venous thromboembolism or ischemic stroke risk to the same degree as oral estrogen, which makes it preferable in women with vascular or metabolic risk. Progestogen choice matters for safety, with micronized progesterone or dydrogesterone showing more favorable thrombosis and breast profiles than several synthetic agents. Low-dose vaginal estrogen treats genitourinary syndrome of menopause but does not treat vasomotor symptoms, which underscores a separation between VMS control and local vaginal care that has downstream microbiome implications, even though this review presents no taxa.
Nonhormone options help many women who avoid or cannot use hormones. Low-dose paroxetine 7.5 mg reduces vasomotor symptom frequency and improves sleep but can inhibit CYP2D6 and interact with tamoxifen, while venlafaxine 75 mg can reduce vasomotor symptoms comparably to low-dose estradiol and lacks that interaction. Gabapentin 900 mg/day reduces hot flash frequency and can help sleep and migraine comorbidity, while oxybutynin improves symptoms but can cause anticholinergic effects, especially in older women. Clonidine provides a modest benefit with frequent side effects. Stellate ganglion block can reduce symptom severity in selected women. Novel neurokinin pathway agents such as fezolinetant produce rapid relief within days, which aligns with KNDy neuron biology and offers a hormone-free path. Estetrol appears promising but remains under study for vasomotor use.
Key implications
Clinicians should start vasomotor symptom therapy near menopause when possible, prefer transdermal estradiol in higher-risk women, and pair estrogen with an appropriate progestogen when the uterus is intact. Clinicians should separate vasomotor care from genitourinary care and recognize that local vaginal estrogen targets genitourinary symptoms rather than vasomotor symptoms, which allows teams to track vaginal outcomes and microbiome-sensitive endpoints in parallel while using systemic or neurokinin-based strategies for hot flashes. This approach aligns symptom relief with safety and prepares a framework to link route, regimen, and mucosal outcomes in a microbiome database, even though the review itself reports no microbial profiling.
Treatment of postpartum depression: Clinical, psychological and pharmacological options
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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This review explores the clinical, psychological, and pharmacological treatment options for postpartum depression (PPD), focusing on antidepressants, therapy, and alternative treatments like omega-3s and exercise, highlighting the importance of early intervention and individualized care for new mothers.
What was reviewed?
This article reviewed the clinical, psychological, and pharmacological treatment options available for postpartum depression (PPD). It explored the efficacy and safety of various interventions, including antidepressant medications, psychotherapy, hormone therapy, and other non-pharmacological treatments like exercise, acupuncture, and omega-3 fatty acids. The review also addressed the importance of early diagnosis and intervention for PPD and the challenges that clinicians face, particularly regarding medication use during breastfeeding.
Who was reviewed?
The review primarily discussed the treatment approaches for postpartum depression, focusing on evidence from clinical studies, randomized controlled trials, and meta-analyses involving postpartum women diagnosed with depression. It also considered the specific needs of breastfeeding mothers, the potential risks of medication, and the role of psychological therapies in alleviating depressive symptoms in new mothers.
What were the most important findings?
The review found that both pharmacological and psychological treatments for postpartum depression are effective, but each has specific advantages and challenges. Antidepressants, particularly sertraline, paroxetine, and nortriptyline, were found to be safe for use in breastfeeding mothers, with minimal adverse effects on infants. However, concerns about the long-term effects of antidepressants on infants remain. Psychotherapy, particularly interpersonal therapy (IPT) and cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), was shown to be effective in treating postpartum depression, with IPT demonstrating significant improvements in mood and social adjustment. Additionally, the review highlighted non-pharmacological treatments like bright light therapy, omega-3 fatty acids, and exercise as viable alternatives for women who prefer to avoid medications. These therapies showed promising results but still require more robust studies to confirm their effectiveness.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The review underscores the importance of individualized treatment plans for postpartum depression, as there is no one-size-fits-all approach. For clinicians, the review suggests that psychotherapy is often the preferred treatment due to its non-invasive nature, especially for women who are breastfeeding. Antidepressants remain an important option but should be prescribed with caution, considering the potential risks and benefits for both the mother and the infant. The review also emphasizes the need for early detection of postpartum depression and the use of screening tools like the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS) to identify women at risk. Lastly, it points to the value of support systems, including partner support and peer counseling, in the overall management of postpartum depression.
The effect of dietary intake on hot flashes in menopausal women
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal hot flashes are one of the most common and disruptive symptoms that women experience during the transition to menopause. Characterized by sudden sensations of heat, sweating, and flushing, hot flashes can significantly affect a woman’s quality of life, causing sleep disturbances, mood swings, and even long-term health consequences. Understanding the complex mechanisms behind hot flashes, as well as the role of microbiome-targeted therapies, offers new avenues for improving menopausal health.
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This study examines how dietary intake affects hot flash frequency in postmenopausal women. It finds that stable blood glucose levels, achieved through regular meals, reduce hot flash occurrences, suggesting dietary modifications as a potential treatment for menopausal symptoms.
What was studied?
This study examines the relationship between dietary intake and the frequency of hot flashes in postmenopausal women. The research investigates how blood glucose levels fluctuate before and after meals, and how these fluctuations correlate with the occurrence and severity of hot flashes. Two different studies, a controlled experimental design and an observational study, were used to explore this connection. The controlled study involved blood glucose manipulation in postmenopausal women, while the observational study required participants to document their food intake and hot flash occurrences over a 24-hour period.
Who was studied?
The study included postmenopausal women, aged 40 to 55, who were symptomatic and experienced daily hot flashes. The controlled study had a smaller sample of 10 participants, while the observational study had 21 participants. The women were selected based on specific inclusion criteria, including their daily experience of hot flashes, absence of hormone therapy use, and a lack of smoking history. Most participants were between 50-54 years of age, and the majority were Caucasian, with a few African American women included. The controlled study was performed in a clinical research center, while the observational study was conducted in a community setting.
Most important findings
The study found that hot flashes were more frequent when participants' blood glucose levels were lower, particularly in the 30 minutes before meals. In the controlled study, hot flashes were observed less frequently after meals, when blood glucose levels were higher. The observational study reinforced these findings, showing that the frequency of hot flashes increased as the time between meals grew longer. The results support the hypothesis that low blood glucose levels contribute to the occurrence of hot flashes, suggesting that maintaining stable blood glucose levels through regular meals could help reduce the frequency and severity of hot flashes.
Key implications
The study provides evidence that dietary intake, particularly maintaining stable blood glucose levels, may help alleviate the frequency and severity of hot flashes in postmenopausal women. This finding presents an opportunity for healthcare providers to focus on dietary interventions as an alternative or supplement to hormone therapy for managing hot flashes. Future research should explore dietary recommendations that can help stabilize blood glucose levels throughout the day, as well as the potential role of lifestyle changes such as meal timing and nutrient selection.
Bacterial vaginosis and its association with infertility, endometritis, and pelvic inflammatory disease
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) is a complex interplay between pathogens, immune responses, and microbial communities. As research continues to uncover the microbiome's role in reproductive health, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as probiotics, prebiotics, and transplants are redefining how we prevent and treat PID. This page dives deep into these innovations, offering a glimpse into the future of personalized, biologically informed women’s healthcare.
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This review details the links between bacterial vaginosis, endometritis, pelvic inflammatory disease, and infertility, highlighting the role of vaginal and endometrial microbiota disruptions and their impact on reproductive outcomes and management strategies.
What was reviewed?
This review article comprehensively examines the associations between bacterial vaginosis (BV), endometritis, pelvic inflammatory disease (PID), and infertility, with a particular focus on the underlying microbiome-related mechanisms. The paper synthesizes current evidence on how disruptions in the vaginal and endometrial microbiota, characterized predominantly by a loss of beneficial lactobacilli and an overgrowth of anaerobic bacteria, contribute to the pathogenesis of these gynecological conditions. The review covers diagnostic criteria, treatment options, recurrence issues, and the role of the vaginal and endometrial microbial signatures in affecting reproductive outcomes, both naturally and in assisted reproduction settings. It also explores potential mechanistic pathways linking these infections to infertility, including inflammation, immune responses, microbial toxin production, and increased susceptibility to sexually transmitted infections (STIs).
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesizes data from a broad range of studies involving women of reproductive age, particularly those diagnosed with BV, endometritis, or PID, as well as women experiencing infertility (including those undergoing fertility treatments such as in vitro fertilization [IVF]). It considers diverse populations, including women with tubal and non-tubal infertility, women with unexplained or idiopathic infertility, and those with recurrent implantation failure or miscarriage. The article also references clinical trials and meta-analyses, drawing on evidence from both symptomatic and asymptomatic women across multiple ethnic groups and geographic regions.
Most important findings
The review highlights that optimal vaginal health is typically characterized by a microbiota dominated by lactobacilli, which produce lactic acid and antimicrobial compounds, conferring protection against pathogenic bacteria. BV is marked by a depletion of these protective lactobacilli and an overgrowth of anaerobes such as Gardnerella vaginalis, Atopobium vaginae, Megasphaera spp., and others. This microbial imbalance is strongly associated with an increased risk of endometritis and PID, both of which are significant causes of infertility. Notably, more than 85% of PID cases are linked to BV-associated bacteria and/or STIs, but fewer than half involve classic pathogens like Neisseria gonorrhoeae or Chlamydia trachomatis, underscoring the importance of the broader vaginal microbiome.
BV increases the risk of acquiring STIs, which further amplify the risk of upper genital tract infections and infertility. Mechanistically, BV-related bacteria can induce genital tract inflammation, alter immune responses, produce enzymes that degrade cervical mucus, and facilitate pathogen ascension to the endometrium and fallopian tubes. Women with BV and non-lactobacillus-dominated endometrial microbiota have lower implantation and pregnancy rates, particularly in IVF settings. Chronic endometritis (CE) is highly prevalent among women with unexplained infertility and recurrent implantation failure, and cure of CE with antibiotics improves reproductive outcomes. Despite these associations, causality between BV and infertility is not fully established due to heterogeneity in diagnostic criteria, patient populations, and study designs.
Key implications
The review underscores the clinical importance of recognizing and treating BV, endometritis, and PID—especially in women with infertility or at risk of reproductive complications. Early diagnosis and appropriate antibiotic treatment for symptomatic BV and CE can improve fertility outcomes, particularly in IVF patients. The findings also call for a more nuanced understanding of the vaginal and endometrial microbiome, advocating for future research to refine the definitions of “normal” versus “abnormal” microbial states and to clarify the mechanisms linking microbial dysbiosis to infertility. Given the high recurrence rates and diagnostic challenges, integrating microbiome-based diagnostics and interventions (including probiotics) into preconceptional and fertility care may offer new avenues for improving women’s reproductive health.
Estrogens and breast cancer
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Estrogen
Estrogen
Estrogen is a steroid hormone primarily found in women, crucial for reproductive health, secondary sexual characteristics, and various physiological processes. It regulates menstrual cycles, supports pregnancy, and influences bone density and cardiovascular health. Dysregulation of estrogen levels can lead to various disorders and health complications.
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This study examines estrogen’s dual role in breast cancer, focusing on its effects on estrogen receptor-positive cancers and how different therapies, such as SERMs and aromatase inhibitors, mitigate risks while highlighting estrogen metabolism’s role in cancer risk.
What was studied?
The study investigates the relationship between estrogens and the development of breast cancer, focusing on how estrogen exposure impacts cancer risk and progression. The paper reviews various estrogenic compounds, including endogenous estrogens like estradiol and synthetic ones such as those used in hormone replacement therapy (HRT). It examines the molecular mechanisms by which estrogen acts on estrogen receptors (ER) to influence the proliferation of breast cancer cells. The study also evaluates the role of different estrogen metabolites and their involvement in cancer initiation, particularly highlighting the balance between estrogen's beneficial effects on bone and cardiovascular health and its potential carcinogenic effects in breast tissue. The relationship between estrogen receptor-positive (ER+) breast cancer and treatment strategies, including selective estrogen receptor modulators (SERMs) and aromatase inhibitors, is also discussed.
Who was studied?
The research mainly focuses on women, particularly those at risk of breast cancer due to hormonal factors such as early menarche, late menopause, and long-term use of HRT. It also includes studies on postmenopausal women and how the use of estrogen-based therapies (e.g., HRT) affects their cancer risk. Additionally, the study looks at breast cancer survivors who are undergoing treatment with SERMs or aromatase inhibitors, and those at higher risk due to genetic factors such as mutations in the BRCA1/BRCA2 genes. The paper also evaluates how estrogen receptor expression, specifically ER-alpha and ER-beta, plays a critical role in the progression of breast cancer and how treatment strategies can influence this.
Most important findings
The study highlights the dual role of estrogens in breast cancer development. On one hand, estrogen promotes the growth of ER-positive breast cancer cells by binding to estrogen receptors, which triggers cell proliferation and resistance to apoptosis. On the other hand, selective estrogen receptor modulators (SERMs) like tamoxifen and aromatase inhibitors (AIs) like letrozole have shown to significantly reduce estrogen-driven breast cancer risk by either blocking estrogen receptors or lowering estrogen levels in postmenopausal women. The paper emphasizes the importance of timing and type of estrogen exposure in cancer risk. For example, long-term exposure to estrogen (whether endogenous or exogenous) is a major risk factor for the development of breast cancer, whereas early use of SERMs or AIs reduces recurrence and metastasis. Additionally, the study examines the influence of estrogen metabolism, particularly the 16α-hydroxyestrone pathway, which is associated with increased cancer risk, while other pathways like the 2-hydroxyestrone pathway are considered protective. The findings indicate that personalized treatment based on estrogen receptor status, genetic factors, and metabolism is crucial for minimizing the carcinogenic effects of estrogen.
Key implications
Clinicians should recognize the critical role of estrogen exposure in both the prevention and progression of breast cancer, particularly in patients with estrogen receptor-positive (ER+) cancers. The study suggests that timing of estrogen exposure, such as starting hormone therapy early versus late in life, can have significant effects on cancer risk. Selective estrogen receptor modulators (SERMs) and aromatase inhibitors should be considered for postmenopausal women at high risk of breast cancer or those undergoing breast cancer treatment. Understanding estrogen metabolism and genetic predisposition can further guide clinicians in making personalized treatment decisions. Moreover, prolonged estrogen exposure, particularly through HRT, should be carefully monitored in women, with consideration of alternative therapies or reduced estrogen use where appropriate. Future research into estrogen metabolites and their relationship with microbiome-related health may provide additional insights into how estrogen influences breast cancer risk and progression.
Cervicovaginal microbiome and natural history of Chlamydia trachomatis in adolescents and young women
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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A longitudinal study in predominantly Black and Hispanic young women found that a molecular BV subtype (CST-IV-A) and a network of specific bacteria increase risk for Chlamydia trachomatis infection and reinfection, underscoring the clinical importance of cervicovaginal microbiome signatures.
What was studied?
This original research article investigated the influence of the cervicovaginal microbiome (CVM) on the natural history of Chlamydia trachomatis (CT) infection in adolescents and young women. The study employed a longitudinal, nested case-control design to examine microbiome profiles before, during, and after incident CT infection. Using molecular methods, specifically 16S rRNA gene sequencing and the molBV algorithm, the researchers characterized the CVM and identified molecular subtypes of bacterial vaginosis (BV) and community state types (CSTs). The study further developed a microbial risk score (MRS) to evaluate the combined effect of key microbial genera associated with CT risk and explored the relationship between post-infection microbiome states, CT reinfection, and reproductive sequelae such as pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) and miscarriage.
Who was studied?
The study cohort comprised 560 sexually active adolescent and young adult women (ages 13–21) attending the Mount Sinai Adolescent Health Center in New York City. The participants were predominantly Black and Hispanic, populations known to have disproportionately higher rates of CT infection. A total of 187 women with incident CT were matched with 373 controls by age, enrollment year, and prior CT history. Cervicovaginal samples and behavioral data were collected approximately every six months, allowing for longitudinal assessment of microbiome composition and clinical outcomes. The study design ensured comparability of cases and controls with respect to sexual risk behaviors and demographic factors.
Most important findings
The study revealed that a molecular BV subtype defined by the presence of CST-IV-A (characterized by Candidatus Lachnocurva vaginae) was a significant and independent risk factor for incident CT infection. Elevated molBV scores and increased bacterial diversity were observed both before and during CT infection in cases compared to controls, supporting the role of CVM dysbiosis in CT susceptibility. Using a polymicrobial risk score, the researchers identified a network of 10 bacterial genera, including Candidatus Lachnocurva vaginae, Prevotella, and Megasphaera, whose collective presence strongly predicted CT acquisition. Following antibiotic treatment, the CVM of cases generally reverted to a baseline-like state; however, persistent or emergent mBV-A states (molBV-positive with CST-IV-A) were associated with a markedly increased risk of CT reinfection. Post-treatment mBV-positive states also trended toward higher rates of PID and miscarriage, although these associations were limited by sample size. Notably, sexual risk behavior was not a significant mediator of the microbiome-CT association in this homogenous, high-risk cohort.
Key implications
This study provides robust evidence that specific molecular subtypes of BV, particularly those characterized by CST-IV-A and Candidatus Lachnocurva vaginae, confer increased risk for both initial CT infection and reinfection, independent of traditional behavioral risk factors. The findings suggest that microbiome profiling, and particularly the identification of high-risk BV subtypes, could be leveraged for targeted interventions in populations at elevated risk for CT and its complications. These results highlight the potential for microbiome-based therapeutic and preventive strategies, such as probiotics or targeted antimicrobial approaches, to reduce the incidence of CT and its sequelae. Moreover, the data support the inclusion of detailed microbial community signatures, rather than single-species markers, in risk prediction models for sexually transmitted infections.
Metabolome-wide Mendelian randomization assessing the causal relationship between blood metabolites and primary ovarian insufficiency
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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This study identifies 27 metabolites linked to primary ovarian insufficiency (POI), revealing novel metabolic pathways and offering insights into POI biomarkers and therapeutic targets.
What was studied?
This study used Mendelian randomization (MR) to investigate the causal relationship between circulating metabolites and primary ovarian insufficiency (POI). The analysis utilized genetic variants linked to 278 circulating metabolites to assess their causal impact on the development of POI. The study aimed to identify metabolites that are causally associated with POI, with the potential for these metabolites to serve as biomarkers or therapeutic targets.
Who was studied?
The study employed summary-level genetic data from the UK Biobank, including 1931 POI patients and 216,861 control participants of European descent. The research focused on genetic variants that influence metabolite levels in these individuals, aiming to identify any causal links to POI. The participants' genetic variations provided the foundation for MR analysis, offering insight into the metabolic factors that contribute to POI risk.
Most important findings
The study identified 27 metabolites significantly associated with the risk of POI. Metabolites such as dodecanedioate, adrenate, indolepropionate, homocitrulline, and 3-methylhistidine were negatively associated with POI, indicating a protective effect, while others like oleate, tyrosine, linoleate, threonine, and uridine were positively associated with POI, indicating an increased risk. KEGG pathway enrichment analysis revealed six significant metabolic pathways, including unsaturated fatty acid biosynthesis, phenylalanine, tyrosine, and tryptophan biosynthesis, and linoleic acid metabolism. These findings underscore the importance of lipid metabolism and amino acid pathways in the development of POI.
Key implications
This study provides novel insights into the metabolic underpinnings of POI by integrating genomics and metabolomics. Identifying causal metabolites offers potential for new biomarkers that could assist in early POI detection, risk prediction, and possibly therapeutic intervention. Furthermore, the highlighted metabolic pathways could lead to targeted treatment strategies, particularly for managing the metabolic syndromes associated with POI, such as cardiovascular diseases and osteoporosis.
A dietary intervention for postmenopausal hot flashes: A potential role of gut microbiome
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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A plant-based diet with soy reduces hot flashes in postmenopausal women, potentially by modulating gut bacteria linked to inflammation and estrogen metabolism.
What was studied?
This exploratory study investigated the impact of a low-fat, plant-based dietary intervention including daily cooked soybeans on the frequency and severity of postmenopausal hot flashes, with a particular focus on the role of the gut microbiome. The study aimed to identify microbial changes associated with symptom improvements, especially changes in bacteria known to influence estrogen metabolism and inflammation.
Who was studied?
The study enrolled 84 postmenopausal women aged 40–65 years experiencing at least two moderate-to-severe hot flashes per day. Participants were randomly assigned either to follow the dietary intervention or to continue their usual diets for 12 weeks. Gut microbiome analyses using deep shotgun metagenomic sequencing were conducted on stool samples from a subset of 11 women from the intervention group, collected before and after the dietary period.
Most important findings
The dietary intervention resulted in a dramatic 95% reduction in total hot flashes and a 96% decrease in moderate-to-severe hot flashes. Significant decreases were observed in both daytime and nighttime hot flashes. Although overall microbial diversity (alpha and beta diversity) did not change significantly, specific taxa exhibited changes in relative abundance. Notably, decreases in Porphyromonas and Prevotella corporis correlated with reductions in severe daytime hot flashes, and decreases in Clostridium asparagiforme correlated with reductions in total severe and severe nighttime hot flashes. These bacteria are linked to inflammatory pathways and estrogen metabolism. Increases in genera such as Erysipelatoclostridium, Fusicatenibacter, and Holdemanella, known for anti-inflammatory effects and fiber fermentation, were also observed. The plant-based diet rich in fiber and soy isoflavones likely modulated the microbiome to reduce systemic inflammation and improve estrogen receptor-mediated signaling, contributing to symptom relief. However, after correction for multiple testing, these associations were not statistically significant, highlighting the exploratory nature of the findings.
Key implications
This study provides preliminary evidence linking dietary modulation of the gut microbiome to reductions in menopausal vasomotor symptoms. The findings suggest that plant-based diets with soy may beneficially alter gut bacteria involved in inflammation and estrogen metabolism, offering a potential non-hormonal therapeutic avenue for hot flash management. Larger, controlled studies are necessary to confirm these microbiome-symptom relationships and to explore personalized dietary strategies targeting gut microbiota for menopausal symptom relief.
A Metabolomics Study of the Volatile Oil from Prunella vulgaris L. On Pelvic Inflammatory Disease
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) is a complex interplay between pathogens, immune responses, and microbial communities. As research continues to uncover the microbiome's role in reproductive health, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as probiotics, prebiotics, and transplants are redefining how we prevent and treat PID. This page dives deep into these innovations, offering a glimpse into the future of personalized, biologically informed women’s healthcare.
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This study shows volatile oil from Prunella vulgaris effectively reduces pelvic inflammation by correcting metabolic disruptions in a rat PID model, highlighting key inflammatory metabolites as biomarkers and suggesting therapeutic potential for herbal treatments in PID management.
What was studied?
Using metabolomics analysis, this study explored the effects of volatile oil extracted from Prunella vulgaris L. (PVVO) on pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) in rats. The research involved establishing a PID rat model to evaluate how PVVO treatment influenced metabolic pathways associated with the condition. Using gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS), the study compared metabolomic profiles between PID rats and healthy controls, and between untreated PID rats and those treated with PVVO, aiming to identify key metabolites and pathways affected by the oil.
Who was studied?
The study used female rats to establish an animal model of PID. Researchers induced PID using a standard infectious model involving bacterial agents, ensuring consistent inflammation and pathology similar to human PID. The experimental group received treatment with PVVO, while the control groups included healthy rats and untreated PID-model rats. Serum samples from these animals provided the basis for metabolomic analysis, facilitating comparisons of metabolite differences due to disease and PVVO treatment.
What were the most important findings?
The study found that PVVO significantly alleviated pelvic inflammation in the PID rat model. GC-MS analysis identified substantial differences in metabolic profiles between PID-affected rats and healthy controls. Specifically, PID rats exhibited significant perturbations in metabolites related to inflammatory and immune response pathways, amino acid metabolism, and lipid metabolism. After PVVO treatment, several metabolites such as arachidonic acid, glutamic acid, and leucine were markedly regulated, returning closer to normal levels. The Random Forest (RF) algorithm analysis highlighted these metabolites as crucial biomarkers indicative of PVVO's therapeutic effects. Thus, PVVO appeared to regulate metabolic pathways disrupted by PID, especially those involved in inflammation control and immune modulation, indicating its potential therapeutic utility.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The implications of this research are significant, indicating the potential of volatile oil from Prunella vulgaris L. as a novel treatment for PID. By demonstrating PVVO's capacity to modulate inflammation-related metabolites and pathways, this study offers evidence supporting further exploration of herbal-based therapeutic strategies in clinical settings. The clear identification of key biomarkers associated with PVVO treatment highlights metabolomics as a powerful tool in discovering new treatment mechanisms and monitoring therapeutic efficacy. Clinicians could potentially leverage these biomarkers for improved diagnosis and personalized treatment strategies. Additionally, these findings suggest an important direction for future research, especially clinical trials, to confirm efficacy and safety in humans, potentially broadening therapeutic options for PID.
Effect of Lactobacillus rhamnosus HN001 in Pregnancy on Postpartum Symptoms of Depression and Anxiety: A Randomised Double-blind Placebo-controlled Trial
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This study demonstrates that Lactobacillus rhamnosus HN001 reduces symptoms of postpartum depression and anxiety, providing a potential non-pharmaceutical treatment for new mothers.
What was studied?
The study evaluated the effect of Lactobacillus rhamnosus HN001 on postpartum symptoms of depression and anxiety. It aimed to determine whether probiotic supplementation during pregnancy and the postpartum period could reduce the severity of these symptoms in new mothers.
Who was studied?
The study included 423 pregnant women who were recruited between 14–16 weeks of gestation in Auckland and Wellington, New Zealand. Participants were randomized to either the Lactobacillus rhamnosus HN001 group or a placebo group. These women were assessed for symptoms of depression and anxiety postpartum, using tools such as the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS) and State Trait Anxiety Inventory.
What were the most important findings?
The study found that mothers who received Lactobacillus rhamnosus HN001 had significantly lower depression and anxiety scores during the postpartum period compared to those who received a placebo. The depression scores in the treatment group were 7.7 (SD = 5.4) compared to 9.0 (SD = 6.0) in the placebo group, with a statistically significant effect size of -1.2 (p = 0.037). Anxiety scores in the probiotic group were also lower (mean = 12.0) compared to the placebo group (mean = 13.0), with an effect size of -1.0 (p = 0.014). Importantly, the study also revealed that the probiotic group had significantly fewer women with clinically relevant levels of anxiety, as indicated by scores above the cut-off point.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings of this study suggest that Lactobacillus rhamnosus HN001 could be a beneficial intervention for managing postpartum depression and anxiety. Given that postpartum mental health disorders often go undiagnosed or untreated, particularly in women reluctant to use pharmaceutical medications during breastfeeding, this probiotic offers a promising alternative. The results provide strong support for the use of probiotics in maternal mental health care, as it is safe, well-tolerated, and non-invasive. However, further research is needed to replicate these findings and explore the mechanisms behind the probiotic's effect, including its impact on the gut-brain axis.
Urinary heavy metals and overall survival of advanced high-grade serous ovarian cancer: A nested case-control study in China
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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The study examines the association between urinary concentrations of heavy metals (arsenic, cadmium, mercury, lead) and survival in patients with advanced high-grade serous ovarian cancer. High levels of these metals correlate with worse outcomes, particularly lead, which significantly contributes to survival prognosis.
What was studied?
The study investigated the relationship between urinary concentrations of five heavy metals, arsenic (As), cadmium (Cd), chromium (Cr), mercury (Hg), and lead (Pb), and overall survival (OS) in patients with advanced high-grade serous ovarian cancer (HGSOC). Using a nested case-control design within the Ovarian Cancer Follow-Up Study (OOPS), the researchers aim to identify whether high levels of these metals in urine could serve as biomarkers for cancer prognosis and survival outcomes in women with HGSOC.
Who was studied?
The study focused on 318 women diagnosed with advanced high-grade serous ovarian cancer, with a 1:1 matched case-control design. The patients were recruited from Shengjing Hospital of China Medical University, Shenyang, China, and were matched for age at diagnosis, sample date, and body mass index. The cases were those who had passed away from the disease, and the controls were those who survived. The study excluded patients who had early-stage or non-serous ovarian cancer and those undergoing chemotherapy at the time of diagnosis, ensuring the cohort was limited to never-smokers to avoid confounding factors like smoking, which could affect metal accumulation.
Most important findings
The study found significant associations between higher urinary concentrations of arsenic, cadmium, mercury, and lead and worse overall survival for patients with advanced high-grade serous ovarian cancer. Specifically, individuals in the highest tertile for arsenic, cadmium, mercury, and lead concentrations had higher odds ratios for poor survival compared to those in the lowest tertile. The odds ratios (ORs) for arsenic, cadmium, mercury, and lead were 1.99, 2.56, 2.24, and 3.80, respectively, indicating a strong relationship between elevated metal levels and reduced survival. Additionally, a joint effect analysis revealed that mixtures of these heavy metals further exacerbated the association with poor survival outcomes, with lead contributing the most to this negative impact.
Key implications
This study suggests that urinary heavy metal concentrations, particularly of lead, cadmium, mercury, and arsenic, are associated with worse survival outcomes in advanced high-grade serous ovarian cancer. These findings support the notion that environmental exposures to these toxic metals might play a critical role in the prognosis of HGSOC. Given the persistent nature of these metals in the environment and their accumulation in the human body, they could serve as potential biomarkers for assessing cancer prognosis. The study calls for further research to validate these findings and explore mechanisms underlying the relationship between heavy metals and ovarian cancer survival, including their potential interaction with other environmental and genetic factors.
Urinary metals and metal mixtures and timing of natural menopause in midlife women
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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The study links higher urinary arsenic and lead concentrations to earlier menopause, suggesting that exposure to these metals accelerates ovarian aging. Women with higher environmental risk scores (ERS) experienced menopause earlier, emphasizing the role of metal mixtures in reproductive health.
What was studied?
The study investigated the relationship between urinary metal concentrations and the timing of natural menopause in midlife women, using data from the Study of Women’s Health Across the Nation (SWAN). It specifically examined 15 urinary metals, including arsenic, lead, cadmium, copper, mercury, and zinc, to assess how these metals, both individually and in mixtures, influenced the onset of menopause. The research aimed to fill the knowledge gap regarding the impact of environmental metal exposure on ovarian aging and the timing of menopause, a critical factor linked to various long-term health risks.
Who was studied?
The study population consisted of 1,082 premenopausal women, aged 45–56, from multiple racial and ethnic groups, including White, Black, Chinese, and Japanese women. The participants were enrolled in the SWAN study, a large, community-based, prospective cohort. These women were followed for an average of 4.1 years, during which they provided regular urine samples for analysis of metal concentrations. The study aimed to explore how various environmental exposures, specifically metals, affect the timing of natural menopause and associated health risks.
Most important findings
The study found that higher urinary concentrations of arsenic and lead were significantly associated with earlier natural menopause. Specifically, women in the highest quartile of urinary arsenic had an average menopause age 1.6 years earlier compared to those in the lowest quartile. Similarly, higher lead concentrations also correlated with earlier menopause. This suggests that exposure to certain metals may accelerate ovarian aging. Additionally, the study used an Environmental Risk Score (ERS) to quantify the cumulative effect of multiple metal exposures, showing that women with higher ERS values experienced menopause earlier, further emphasizing the role of metal mixtures in accelerating the menopausal transition. The study also observed no significant association with other metals like cadmium or mercury but highlighted the potential cumulative effects of metal mixtures on menopause timing.
Key implications
The study's findings emphasize that environmental exposure to heavy metals, such as arsenic and lead, may have significant public health implications by influencing the timing of natural menopause. Since earlier menopause is linked to various health risks such as cardiovascular diseases, osteoporosis, and cognitive decline, understanding the role of environmental toxins in this process could inform public health interventions aimed at reducing exposure to harmful metals. This research underscores the importance of considering both individual and combined exposures to metals in future epidemiological studies and public health policies.
Exposure to heavy metals and hormone levels in midlife women
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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This study links urinary heavy metal exposure (arsenic, cadmium, mercury, lead) to altered sex hormone levels in midlife women, with stronger effects during the perimenopausal transition. It suggests that metal exposure may accelerate ovarian aging and impact long-term health outcomes.
What was studied?
This study examined the associations between urinary heavy metals, including arsenic, cadmium, mercury, and lead, and the levels of key sex hormones (estradiol, follicle-stimulating hormone, testosterone, and sex hormone-binding globulin) in midlife women. The research used data from the Study of Women's Health Across the Nation (SWAN), a multi-ethnic cohort of women aged 45-56 years, followed over several years. The focus was on understanding how environmental exposures to heavy metals might influence hormone profiles during the menopausal transition, a critical period of reproductive aging, which can have long-term health implications for women, including cardiovascular disease, osteoporosis, and metabolic disorders.
Who was studied?
The study included 1,355 women from the SWAN cohort, representing a diverse range of racial and ethnic groups, including White, Black, Chinese, and Japanese women. Participants were aged 45-56 years at baseline (1999-2000). The analysis focused on midlife women who were followed through their menopausal transition, with hormone levels repeatedly measured up until 2017. Urinary metal concentrations were assessed at baseline, and serum hormone levels were measured annually. The cohort included women from different geographic locations across the U.S., providing insights into how environmental exposures affect sex hormone levels across various populations.
Most important findings
The study found that exposure to heavy metals significantly influenced hormone levels in midlife women. Specifically, a doubling in urinary mercury and lead concentrations was associated with lower estradiol (E2) levels by 2.2% and 3.6%, respectively. Additionally, higher lead concentrations were associated with higher follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) levels, by 3.4%. Cadmium exposure was linked to increased levels of sex hormone-binding globulin (SHBG) by 3.6%. However, no significant association was found between metals and testosterone levels. The joint effects of metal mixtures showed a negative association with E2 and a positive association with FSH. The study also noted that the associations were stronger in early and late perimenopausal stages.
Key implications
The findings of this study highlight the significant role that environmental heavy metals can play in altering sex hormone levels during midlife, a crucial period for women’s health. The associations between higher lead and mercury concentrations with reduced estradiol levels and increased follicle-stimulating hormone levels suggest that metal exposure may accelerate ovarian aging, a factor that could impact menopause timing and related health risks, such as cardiovascular diseases and osteoporosis. The study emphasizes the need for public health strategies to minimize heavy metal exposure and further underscores the importance of monitoring environmental toxins as part of women’s healthcare during midlife.
Urinary phthalate metabolite concentrations and hot flashes in women from an urban convenience sample of midlife women
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal hot flashes are one of the most common and disruptive symptoms that women experience during the transition to menopause. Characterized by sudden sensations of heat, sweating, and flushing, hot flashes can significantly affect a woman’s quality of life, causing sleep disturbances, mood swings, and even long-term health consequences. Understanding the complex mechanisms behind hot flashes, as well as the role of microbiome-targeted therapies, offers new avenues for improving menopausal health.
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The study links urinary phthalate metabolite levels with increased risk and frequency of hot flashes in midlife women, suggesting environmental exposure as a contributing factor. Associations varied by menopause status, BMI, race/ethnicity, and depressive symptoms.
What was studied?
This study investigated the relationship between urinary phthalate metabolite concentrations and hot flash experiences in midlife women. Researchers focused on four key hot flash outcomes, including the frequency, severity, and recent occurrence of hot flashes. The study evaluated whether phthalate exposure, derived from personal care products and plastics, was linked to a higher likelihood of experiencing hot flashes. By analyzing multiple phthalate metabolites in urine, the researchers sought to understand how common exposure to these chemicals might influence menopausal symptoms in women.
Who was studied?
The study included 728 premenopausal and perimenopausal women aged 45-54 from an urban convenience sample in Baltimore. The participants were diverse, comprising multiple racial/ethnic backgrounds, including Caucasian and African American women. Data was gathered via questionnaires on hot flash experiences, and urinary phthalate metabolite levels were measured from pooled samples over several weeks to assess exposure levels. Stratified analyses were performed to determine if associations differed by menopausal status, body mass index (BMI), race/ethnicity, and depressive symptoms.
Most important findings
The study found that higher levels of phthalate metabolites, particularly those from plastics, were significantly associated with a higher likelihood of experiencing hot flashes in the past 30 days, as well as with more frequent daily/weekly hot flashes. Specifically, higher concentrations of DEHP metabolites and phthalate mixtures from plastics (ΣPlastic) were linked to a 23-38% increase in the odds of daily or weekly hot flashes. Interestingly, associations varied by menopause status, with stronger links observed in perimenopausal women, and by race/ethnicity, where non-Hispanic white women exhibited stronger associations with certain phthalates. Furthermore, depressive symptoms influenced how phthalate exposure related to hot flash experiences, with women showing more depressive symptoms having stronger associations with personal care product phthalates.
Key implications
This study suggests that phthalates, especially those found in plastics and personal care products, may play a significant role in the onset and severity of hot flashes in midlife women. Given that phthalates are ubiquitous in the environment, this finding has important public health implications. It highlights the potential value of reducing exposure to phthalates to mitigate menopausal symptoms, particularly for women at higher risk, such as those with depressive symptoms or certain BMI levels. Further research is needed to explore the underlying mechanisms and to evaluate interventions aimed at reducing exposure.
Association between co-exposure to phenols and phthalates mixture and infertility risk in women
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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This study explores the relationship between co-exposure to phenols and phthalates and infertility risk in women of reproductive age, highlighting significant associations with BPA and DEHP metabolites.
What was studied?
This study investigated the combined effects of co-exposure to phenols and phthalates on infertility risk among women of reproductive age. Specifically, it examined whether the mixture of these endocrine-disrupting chemicals (EDCs) is associated with an increased risk of infertility. Data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) 2013–2016 were used, including 857 women aged 18-45 years. The study measured urinary metabolites of phenols and phthalates, along with reproductive health data, to explore their relationships with self-reported infertility.
Who was studied?
The study focused on 857 women of reproductive age (18-45 years) from the NHANES 2013–2016 data set. These women had available information on urinary phenol and phthalate metabolites, reproductive health questionnaires, and relevant covariates. The study excluded pregnant women, those who had undergone hysterectomy or oophorectomy, and those without full data on infertility history or other covariates.
What were the most important findings?
The study found significant associations between the combined exposure to phenols and phthalates and an increased risk of infertility. Higher levels of bisphenol A (BPA) and di(2-ethylhexyl) phthalate (DEHP) metabolites were positively linked to infertility risk. The analysis showed that the DEHP-BPA factor, derived through principal component analysis (PCA), had a strong positive association with infertility. Specifically, women in the higher quartiles of this DEHP-BPA mixture component had a significantly higher likelihood of infertility compared to those in the lower quartiles. Furthermore, the Bayesian kernel machine regression (BKMR) model confirmed that exposure to specific metabolites, including MEOHP, MEHHP, and BPA, significantly contributed to the increased risk of infertility. The study also highlighted that the risk of infertility grew with increasing concentrations of these pollutants, underscoring the cumulative effects of mixed exposures to environmental chemicals. These findings indicate that combined exposure to multiple EDCs, such as phenols and phthalates, rather than individual compounds, has a more profound impact on female fertility.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The most significant implication of this study is the recognition that environmental pollutants have a substantial impact on reproductive health in women. This study suggests that it is crucial to evaluate the combined effects of multiple pollutants, as exposure to these chemicals frequently occurs simultaneously in real-life settings. The findings highlight the need for more comprehensive regulations and preventive measures to reduce exposure to these EDCs, especially for women of reproductive age. Clinicians and researchers should consider the potential cumulative effects of these pollutants when diagnosing and treating infertility. Furthermore, future studies are needed to establish causal links and investigate the underlying biological mechanisms, such as epigenetic changes and hormone disruption, to better understand how these chemicals contribute to infertility.
Metformin in the Treatment of Infertility in PCOS: An Alternative Perspective
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This editorial reviews evidence on metformin for PCOS-related infertility, highlighting its benefits for ovulation induction, especially in women with longer fertility timelines, and advocating for individualized therapy over restrictive guidelines.
What was reviewed?
This editorial provides an alternative perspective on the use of metformin in treating female infertility associated with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), challenging the conservative stance of the 2007 ESHRE/ASRM consensus. The review critically evaluates the evidence base behind current recommendations, which suggest restricting metformin use to women with glucose intolerance. Nestler discusses pharmacological distinctions between metformin and clomiphene, evaluates the outcomes of landmark randomized controlled trials and meta-analyses, and considers patient-specific factors such as the urgency of conception and risk of multiparity. The editorial also addresses the potential benefits of metformin alone, combination therapy with clomiphene, and pre-treatment strategies, highlighting the need for individualized approaches to ovulation induction in PCOS patients.
Who was reviewed?
This editorial reviews data from women with PCOS, specifically those experiencing anovulatory infertility. The populations considered in the referenced trials and meta-analyses include both obese and non-obese women, with varying degrees of insulin resistance and diverse reproductive goals. The review pays particular attention to subgroups, women seeking immediate pregnancy (often seen by reproductive endocrinologists) versus those with a longer fertility timeline (frequently managed by gynecologists or medical endocrinologists), and distinguishes between those with and without glucose intolerance. The editorial also references studies with large and well-defined cohorts, such as the 1,639 subjects in the cited meta-analysis, and incorporates clinical experience from academic centers.
Most important findings
The key findings revolve around the nuanced role of metformin in PCOS-related infertility. The editorial notes that while clomiphene is more effective for rapid ovulation induction, metformin is associated with improved ovulation rates over longer treatment periods, especially in women not seeking immediate conception. Meta-analyses demonstrate that metformin enhances ovulation in a significant proportion of women with PCOS (up to 69% improvement in menstrual cyclicity, with 88% of responders achieving normal cycles). The addition of metformin to clomiphene increases cumulative ovulation and pregnancy rates, though the impact on live birth rates remains statistically inconclusive, possibly due to insufficient study power. Notably, metformin appears to reduce the risk of multiparity compared to clomiphene, an important consideration in clinical decision-making. The editorial also explores the benefit of pre-treatment with metformin, particularly in obese women, as a means to improve weight loss, ovulation induction success, and potentially reduce pregnancy complications.
Key implications
This review underscores the importance of individualized therapy in managing PCOS-related infertility. Metformin should not be restricted solely to women with glucose intolerance; rather, its use should be tailored according to patient fertility timelines and risk profiles. For women desiring rapid conception, clomiphene remains first-line, but adding metformin can boost ovulation rates. For those with a longer horizon, metformin (with lifestyle modification) offers a lower-risk approach that may restore ovulatory cycles and reduce the likelihood of multiple gestations. The editorial highlights the need for further research on metformin’s long-term reproductive outcomes and its role in combination or sequential therapy. Clinicians are encouraged to consider patient preferences, metabolic status, and the evolving evidence base to optimize fertility treatments in PCOS.
Menopausal hormone therapy and menopausal symptoms
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) is one of the most effective treatments for women experiencing the symptoms of menopause, particularly vasomotor symptoms such as hot flashes and night sweats. But its benefits go beyond just symptom management. HRT can also play a key role in improving vaginal health by alleviating dryness and discomfort, which are common complaints among women in menopause. Additionally, it helps prevent bone loss, significantly reducing the risk of osteoporosis and fractures, which are more common after menopause. Despite its many benefits, HRT is not one-size-fits-all; it’s essential to tailor treatment based on individual health profiles, taking into account the risks like breast cancer, blood clots, and heart disease that come with prolonged use.
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This review emphasizes the benefits and risks of MHT in managing menopause symptoms, including the prevention of long-term conditions. It advocates for individualized treatment plans, especially focusing on the timing of initiation.
What was studied?
The study explored the role of Menopausal Hormone Therapy (MHT) in managing symptoms of menopause, focusing on the use of estrogen and progestogen-based therapies. Specifically, it evaluated the therapeutic effects, the optimization of treatment methods for alleviating symptoms like vasomotor symptoms, and the prevention of long-term health risks such as osteoporosis, heart disease, and colorectal cancer.
Who was studied?
The research involved postmenopausal women, with a particular focus on women transitioning through menopause, both in early and late stages. The subjects were examined for risk factors like obesity, smoking, hypertension, and metabolic disorders, which can influence the outcomes of MHT. A significant number of these participants were in their late 50s and early 60s.
Most important findings
The study's findings revealed the effectiveness of MHT in the management of menopausal symptoms, especially vasomotor symptoms like hot flashes and night sweats. It was also found that MHT significantly reduces the risks of osteoporosis and colorectal cancer. However, the study highlighted the complexities of MHT use, particularly the varying risks associated with the timing of therapy initiation and the types of hormone preparations used. For example, estrogen-only therapy was linked to a reduced risk of breast cancer in certain groups, while combined estrogen-progestogen therapy showed increased risks of coronary heart disease and breast cancer, particularly when started later in life. The study also underscored that personalized MHT approaches, considering individual risk factors and timing, lead to more favorable outcomes.
Key implications
The primary implication is that while MHT offers significant benefits in managing menopausal symptoms and preventing long-term diseases, its risks must be carefully managed. Starting MHT within the “window of opportunity” during perimenopause or early postmenopause reduces cardiovascular and metabolic risks. However, therapy initiation after 60 years or more than 10 years postmenopause may increase the likelihood of adverse outcomes, including cardiovascular events and breast cancer. Hence, individualized treatment plans, based on patient health profiles and risks, are essential for optimizing MHT use.
Hormone replacement therapy in young women with primary ovarian insufficiency and early menopause
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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The review discusses the therapeutic use of hormone replacement therapy (HRT) for managing POI and early menopause, highlighting its benefits in preventing complications like osteoporosis, cardiovascular disease, and depression.
What was studied?
This paper focuses on the role of hormone replacement therapy (HRT) in managing primary ovarian insufficiency (POI) and early menopause. POI is characterized by the cessation of ovarian function before the age of 40, leading to a significant reduction in estrogen (E2) levels, which in turn causes a range of health issues. The study highlights the importance of HRT as a therapeutic intervention to manage the hormonal deficiencies caused by POI. The review emphasizes various HRT options, including estrogen, progestin, and testosterone therapies, and discusses their role in alleviating the symptoms and preventing the long-term complications associated with POI, such as osteoporosis, cardiovascular disease, and psychological effects.
Who was studied?
The review addresses women with POI and early menopause, focusing on both spontaneous and iatrogenic causes of the condition. This includes women diagnosed before the age of 40, with a particular focus on spontaneous POI (sPOI). The paper also discusses special populations, such as those with Turner syndrome or genetic predispositions to POI, and highlights how the condition affects women differently across various age groups and life stages.
Most important findings
One of the key findings is that POI leads to a broad spectrum of health issues, including menopausal symptoms, decreased bone mineral density (BMD), and an increased risk of cardiovascular disease. HRT, particularly in the form of transdermal estradiol (E2) with cyclic progestin, is considered the most effective treatment to mimic normal ovarian function and alleviate symptoms. The review points out that continuing HRT until the age of natural menopause (around 50 years) is generally recommended, unless contraindications exist. The use of HRT helps reduce the risk of fractures, improves bone health, and has a favorable effect on mental health by mitigating symptoms of depression and anxiety.
Key implications
The paper underscores the critical role of physiologic HRT in maintaining the health and quality of life of women with POI. The benefits of HRT extend beyond symptom relief, including reducing the risk of bone loss, cardiovascular disease, and psychological stress. The findings emphasize that HRT should be personalized based on the individual's needs and that it should be continued until the natural age of menopause unless there are specific health risks. This approach is essential to preventing long-term complications and improving overall well-being for women with POI.
Optimizing menopausal hormone therapy: For treatment and prevention, menstrual regulation, and reduction of possible risks
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) is one of the most effective treatments for women experiencing the symptoms of menopause, particularly vasomotor symptoms such as hot flashes and night sweats. But its benefits go beyond just symptom management. HRT can also play a key role in improving vaginal health by alleviating dryness and discomfort, which are common complaints among women in menopause. Additionally, it helps prevent bone loss, significantly reducing the risk of osteoporosis and fractures, which are more common after menopause. Despite its many benefits, HRT is not one-size-fits-all; it’s essential to tailor treatment based on individual health profiles, taking into account the risks like breast cancer, blood clots, and heart disease that come with prolonged use.
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This review links menopausal hormone therapy and vaginal microbiome care to safer symptom relief, bleeding control, and prevention. It favors transdermal estradiol and physiologic progestogens, and it highlights estriol plus lactobacilli for urogenital symptoms with minimal systemic exposure.
What was reviewed?
This review explains how menopausal hormone therapy and vaginal microbiome considerations shape modern care for peri- and postmenopausal symptoms, bleeding control, and long-term prevention. The article synthesizes evidence on estrogen and progestogen choices, timing of therapy, and routes of delivery. It highlights that all systemic estrogens relieve vasomotor and genitourinary symptoms to a similar degree, while the route and the paired progestogen drive differences in safety. The authors argue for transdermal estradiol to lower clot risk and for physiologic progesterone or dydrogesterone to limit breast effects. They also discuss estriol for local urogenital symptoms and note an estriol-plus-lactobacilli option that supports a healthy vaginal flora with very low systemic uptake. They frame sequential versus continuous combined regimens as tools to regulate bleeding and protect the endometrium, and they set the “window of opportunity” for starting therapy to enhance cardiometabolic benefit.
Who was reviewed?
The review focuses on symptomatic peri- and postmenopausal women, including those with high thrombotic or cardiovascular risk, and on younger women with premature ovarian insufficiency or surgical menopause who need longer replacement. It also considers women with intact uteri who require progestogen for endometrial protection and those who prefer local therapy for genitourinary syndrome of menopause. The discussion includes patients who need androgenic or antiandrogenic partial effects from chosen progestogens, and women who benefit from a levonorgestrel intrauterine device with transdermal estradiol when contraception and endometrial control matter.
Most important findings
The authors report that estrogen relieves symptoms across preparations, but delivery route changes risk. Transdermal estradiol can lower venous thromboembolism and stroke risk compared with oral forms, which supports it for women with clot or metabolic risk. The progestogen partner shapes breast outcomes; physiologic progesterone and dydrogesterone appear more breast-neutral than several synthetic agents and may lower risk signals seen in older trials that used medroxyprogesterone acetate. The paper links regimen choice to bleeding control: sequential regimens induce predictable withdrawal bleeding and suit perimenopause or early postmenopause, while continuous combined regimens aim for amenorrhea in established postmenopause. For endometrial protection, at least 10–14 days of a progestogen per cycle in sequential therapy, or daily progestogen in continuous therapy, remains essential.
Key implications
Clinicians can improve safety by starting therapy within the first 6–10 years after menopause and by favoring transdermal estradiol when thrombotic or metabolic risk is present. Pair estradiol with progesterone or dydrogesterone to maintain breast and vascular neutrality while protecting the endometrium. Use sequential regimens in the late reproductive transition and early postmenopause to manage bleeding, and move to continuous combined regimens for stable amenorrhea later. For genitourinary syndrome of menopause, consider estriol, and when suitable, use estriol with lactobacilli to support a lactobacillus-dominant vaginal microbiome at a very low estriol dose and with minimal systemic exposure. These points offer clear entries for a microbiome signatures database around lactobacillus-linked symptom relief and dose-sparing local therapy.
Menopausal hot flashes: mechanisms, endocrinology, treatment.
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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This review elucidates the neuroendocrine and thermoregulatory mechanisms of menopausal hot flashes, evaluating objective measurement and treatment strategies, with a focus on central sympathetic activation and the limited role of the microbiome or estrogen alone in HF etiology.
What was reviewed?
This comprehensive review synthesizes the current understanding of the mechanisms, endocrinology, and treatment options for menopausal hot flashes (HFs), emphasizing their physiological, neuroendocrine, and thermoregulatory underpinnings. The review details the characteristic clinical features of HFs, sudden intense warmth, sweating, and peripheral vasodilation, and investigates their temporal association with small core body temperature (Tc) elevations within a markedly narrowed thermoneutral zone. Freedman discusses the role of estrogen withdrawal, central sympathetic activation (particularly through α2-adrenergic receptors), and the complex neuroendocrine interactions involving norepinephrine (NE), serotonin (5-HT), and other neurotransmitters. The review also evaluates objective measurement techniques for HFs, including skin conductance and ambulatory monitors, and synthesizes findings from imaging studies exploring brain activation patterns during HFs. Treatment modalities, both hormonal and nonhormonal, including behavioral interventions, clonidine, serotonergic agents, isoflavones, and gabapentin, are critically reviewed in terms of efficacy and underlying mechanisms.
Who was reviewed?
The review encompasses findings from diverse populations: primarily peri- and postmenopausal women experiencing natural or surgical menopause, with some comparisons to asymptomatic women and men undergoing androgen deprivation for prostate cancer. Epidemiological data highlight racial and ethnic differences in HF prevalence (Caucasian women highest, Japanese and Chinese women lowest). Key physiological, endocrinological, and neuroimaging studies included both symptomatic and asymptomatic women, as well as breast cancer survivors who often experience treatment-induced HFs. Clinical trials of various treatments involved postmenopausal women with frequent HFs, including those with sleep complaints, and studies of objective HF measurement extended to men receiving GnRH agonists. The review thus offers a broad perspective, integrating findings from clinical, laboratory, and ambulatory settings across multiple demographic groups.
Most important findings
Menopausal hot flashes are characterized by a rapid, exaggerated heat dissipation response, sweating, vasodilation, and a feeling of internal heat, triggered by minimal Tc elevations within a greatly reduced thermoneutral zone. This narrowing is not solely attributable to estrogen depletion: while estrogen therapy effectively eliminates HFs, estrogen levels do not robustly correlate with HF presence or frequency, and additional factors must contribute. Elevated central sympathetic activity, mediated by α2-adrenergic receptors, appears critical in narrowing the thermoneutral zone; pharmacologic manipulation directly affects HF incidence. Objective monitoring via skin conductance and novel ambulatory devices provides reliable HF measurement, overcoming biases of self-reporting. Imaging studies demonstrate that the insular cortex, anterior cingulate, and brainstem are sequentially activated during HFs, linking physiological events to subjective experience. Treatment reviews show hormone therapy as the most effective, but nonhormonal options like paced respiration and clonidine are substantiated; SSRIs/SNRIs have mixed efficacy, and the role of serotonin is increasingly questioned. Botanical therapies show inconsistent benefit. Gabapentin exhibits moderate efficacy with known side effects. The review does not identify direct microbial associations or microbiome signatures related to HFs, and the role of the microbiome remains unaddressed in this context.
Key implications
For clinicians, this review underscores the multifactorial etiology of menopausal hot flashes, with central neuroregulatory dysfunction, rather than estrogen deficiency alone, being paramount. Treatments targeting central sympathetic tone (e.g., clonidine, behavioral relaxation) are rational, especially for women unwilling or unable to use hormone therapy. Objective monitoring methods, including skin conductance and ambulatory devices, may improve both diagnosis and evaluation of treatment response. The findings support individualized treatment, emphasize the need for thorough sleep disorder assessment in symptomatic women, and highlight areas for future research, particularly regarding central neuroregulatory pathways and novel therapeutic targets.
Menopausal hot flashes: mechanisms, endocrinology, treatment
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal hot flashes are one of the most common and disruptive symptoms that women experience during the transition to menopause. Characterized by sudden sensations of heat, sweating, and flushing, hot flashes can significantly affect a woman’s quality of life, causing sleep disturbances, mood swings, and even long-term health consequences. Understanding the complex mechanisms behind hot flashes, as well as the role of microbiome-targeted therapies, offers new avenues for improving menopausal health.
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The review explores the physiological mechanisms behind menopausal hot flashes, including thermoregulatory changes, sympathetic nervous activation, and estrogen depletion. It also examines treatments such as clonidine and behavioral therapies.
What was studied?
The review examines the physiological mechanisms behind menopausal hot flashes (HFs), which are characterized by rapid and exaggerated heat dissipation responses, such as sweating, peripheral vasodilation, and intense internal heat sensations. The study focuses on how small elevations in core body temperature trigger these responses, particularly within a reduced thermoneutral zone. The review also explores the involvement of estrogen depletion at menopause and its contribution to hot flashes, while addressing how the sympathetic nervous system and norepinephrine play key roles in the process.
Who was studied?
The review encompasses research on women experiencing menopausal hot flashes, particularly those in the climacteric period, as well as women undergoing surgical menopause or those treated with GnRH agonists for conditions like breast cancer. Studies comparing symptomatic and asymptomatic women, as well as cross-cultural studies on the prevalence of hot flashes in different ethnic groups, such as Caucasian, Japanese, and Chinese women, are also discussed. Additionally, the paper explores the effects of androgen depletion on men undergoing treatments for prostate cancer, providing a broader understanding of hot flashes across different populations.
Most important findings
The review identifies key mechanisms underlying the occurrence of hot flashes, including the narrowing of the thermoneutral zone due to elevated sympathetic activation, particularly through α2-adrenergic receptors. While estrogen depletion is essential for the onset of hot flashes, it is not the sole cause, as other factors like norepinephrine play a significant role. The review also highlights the effectiveness of clonidine, an α2-adrenergic agonist, in widening the thermoneutral zone and reducing hot flash frequency. Brain imaging studies reveal that areas such as the insula and anterior cingulate cortex are involved in the phenomenological experience of hot flashes, while circadian rhythms influence the timing of their occurrence.
Key implications
The findings suggest that hot flashes are a complex physiological phenomenon influenced by hormonal, neuroendocrine, and circadian factors. The narrowing of the thermoneutral zone due to elevated norepinephrine, in conjunction with estrogen withdrawal, forms the basis of their occurrence. Personalized treatment approaches, such as adrenergic modulation with clonidine or other therapies targeting norepinephrine, may offer more effective management strategies. Additionally, understanding genetic, cultural, and circadian differences in hot flash experiences can lead to better-tailored interventions, improving the quality of life for women experiencing this common menopausal symptom.
Menopause-Induced Metabolic Shifts: Implications for Cardiovascular and Metabolic Risk
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Cardiovascular Health
Cardiovascular Health
Recent research has revealed that specific gut microbiota-derived metabolites are strongly linked to cardiovascular disease risk—potentially influencing atherosclerosis development more than traditional risk factors like cholesterol levels. This highlights the gut microbiome as a novel therapeutic target for cardiovascular interventions.
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This study reveals that menopause induces significant metabolic changes, including shifts in amino acid and lipid metabolism, which contribute to the increased cardiovascular and metabolic risks in postmenopausal women.
What was studied?
The study examined the metabolic changes that occur during menopause, focusing on how menopause modulates circulating metabolites in midlife women. Researchers specifically analyzed 94 charged metabolites, including amino acids, fatty acids, and other small molecules, to assess how these metabolic changes correlate with the increased risk of chronic diseases, such as cardiovascular disease and diabetes, that affect postmenopausal women. The goal was to understand the broader metabolic shifts that occur during menopause and their potential implications for long-term health risks.
Who was studied?
The study involved 1,193 women from the Tsuruoka Metabolomics Cohort Study, a community-based cohort of Japanese women aged between 40 and 60 years. The participants were divided into three groups based on their menopausal status: premenopausal, menopausal transition, and postmenopausal. To ensure that the results were not influenced by factors such as hormone replacement therapy (HRT), participants with certain health conditions or who had recently used HRT were excluded. The cohort was selected from Tsuruoka City, Japan, and included a diverse group of women across various stages of menopause, allowing for a comprehensive analysis of the metabolic changes associated with this life stage.
Most important findings
The study revealed that menopause is associated with significant shifts in the metabolic profile of women, particularly in metabolites linked to cardiovascular and metabolic risks. As women transitioned from premenopausal to postmenopausal status, several metabolites, including those involved in the urea cycle, TCA cycle, and homocysteine metabolism, showed elevated levels. This included an increase in metabolites like ornithine, taurine, glutamine, and carnitine, which are connected to cardiovascular health risks, such as arteriosclerosis. These metabolic shifts could explain the heightened risk of cardiovascular diseases observed in postmenopausal women. Additionally, higher levels of amino acids such as glutamine and lysine were found, which are often associated with insulin resistance and increased risk for metabolic disorders like diabetes. The study also observed a shift in lipid metabolism, as certain lipid metabolites showed patterns similar to changes seen in traditional lipid markers like total cholesterol and LDL cholesterol, which also change during menopause. These findings suggest that menopause accelerates metabolic changes that may contribute to the development of chronic diseases.
Key implications
The implications of this study are significant for clinical practice, as they suggest that menopause is not only a time of hormonal changes but also a pivotal period for metabolic health. The findings highlight the need for clinicians to monitor metabolic markers in women during the menopausal transition, as these shifts may predict long-term health outcomes such as cardiovascular disease and diabetes. Clinicians should consider metabolic profiling as a tool for identifying women at higher risk for these conditions and may need to implement early interventions, such as lifestyle modifications, to mitigate these risks. Moreover, the results emphasize the importance of personalized prevention strategies, particularly in postmenopausal women, as metabolic changes become more pronounced during this stage.
Dietary advanced glycation end-products and postmenopausal hot flashes
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal hot flashes are one of the most common and disruptive symptoms that women experience during the transition to menopause. Characterized by sudden sensations of heat, sweating, and flushing, hot flashes can significantly affect a woman’s quality of life, causing sleep disturbances, mood swings, and even long-term health consequences. Understanding the complex mechanisms behind hot flashes, as well as the role of microbiome-targeted therapies, offers new avenues for improving menopausal health.
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This study shows that reducing dietary advanced glycation end-products (AGEs) through a plant-based diet significantly reduces hot flashes in postmenopausal women, offering a non-hormonal alternative for managing menopausal symptoms.
What was studied?
This study investigates the effects of dietary advanced glycation end-products (AGEs) on postmenopausal hot flashes. It specifically explores the impact of a low-fat, plant-based diet, including daily soybean consumption, on the frequency and severity of hot flashes in postmenopausal women. The analysis is a post-hoc analysis from a 12-week randomized clinical trial, in which participants were assigned to either the intervention group (following the plant-based diet) or the control group (maintaining their usual diet). Dietary AGEs were estimated based on participants' food intake, and the correlation between AGEs and hot flash frequency and severity was analyzed.
Who was studied?
The study involved 84 postmenopausal women aged 40 to 65 who reported at least two moderate-to-severe hot flashes daily. Participants were randomly assigned to either the intervention group or the control group. The intervention group followed a low-fat, plant-based diet that included 1/2 cup of cooked soybeans daily, while the control group maintained their usual dietary habits. Of the 84 women, 71 completed the entire study, and 63 provided complete hot flash and dietary data for the AGEs analysis. Participants were monitored for dietary adherence and changes in hot flash frequency and severity over the 12 weeks.
Most important findings
The study found that the intervention group experienced a 73% reduction in dietary AGEs, which was associated with significant reductions in hot flash severity and frequency. Specifically, severe hot flashes decreased by 92%, and moderate-to-severe hot flashes decreased by 88%. The correlation between dietary AGEs reduction and hot flash severity was significant, even after adjusting for changes in energy intake and body mass index. The findings suggest that the reduction in dietary AGEs through a plant-based diet plays a crucial role in alleviating menopausal vasomotor symptoms, independently of weight loss or other lifestyle factors.
Key implications
The results suggest that dietary AGEs may contribute to the pathogenesis of hot flashes in postmenopausal women, and reducing dietary AGEs through a plant-based diet may be an effective non-hormonal intervention. The study supports the use of diet as a tool for managing menopausal symptoms and highlights the importance of dietary modifications in reducing the risk of associated health conditions like cardiovascular disease and diabetes. This study suggests that a plant-based diet, low in AGEs, could be a sustainable and effective strategy for alleviating hot flashes and improving overall health in postmenopausal women.
Nutritional interventions during treatment for ovarian cancer: A narrative review and recommendations for future research
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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This review discusses the role of nutritional interventions in improving the nutritional status and clinical outcomes of women with ovarian cancer during treatment. It highlights the importance of personalized nutrition care and the need for more research to establish effective intervention strategies.
What was studied?
This narrative review explores the impact of nutritional interventions during ovarian cancer treatment, focusing on their effects on nutritional status, muscle mass, and clinical outcomes. The study evaluates various types of interventions, including individual nutrition counseling, oral nutritional supplements, perioperative immunonutrition, and exercise interventions. The review highlights the importance of addressing malnutrition and muscle loss, which are prevalent in ovarian cancer patients, particularly due to the hypermetabolic state caused by the cancer itself and its treatments. It also investigates the role of personalized nutrition care to mitigate treatment-related side effects and improve patient survival and quality of life.
Who was studied?
The review compiles evidence from multiple studies on women diagnosed with ovarian cancer, primarily in advanced stages (III and IV). These studies include various treatment regimens such as surgery, chemotherapy, and sometimes radiotherapy. The patients in the reviewed studies had varying nutritional statuses, many presenting with malnutrition or muscle loss at the time of diagnosis. The sample sizes varied across studies, ranging from small cohorts in pilot studies to larger retrospective and prospective cohort studies. The majority of the women studied had ovarian cancer at stages where malnutrition and muscle loss were already prevalent due to the disease and its treatment.
Most important findings
One of the key findings from the review is the widespread prevalence of malnutrition and muscle loss in women with ovarian cancer. Around 70% of these patients experience malnutrition at diagnosis, and approximately 40% suffer from muscle loss, which negatively impacts treatment outcomes. The review highlights several interventions that have shown promise, particularly individualized nutrition counseling and oral nutritional supplements, which have been associated with improvements in nutritional status and survival outcomes. The review also found that perioperative immunonutrition could reduce complications and length of hospital stays, though the results were inconsistent across studies. Nutrition and exercise interventions, such as multimodal prehabilitation programs, demonstrated improvements in dietary intake, muscle mass preservation, and overall quality of life during chemotherapy treatment. Notably, a retrospective study showed that improved nutritional status was linked to significantly better survival outcomes.
Key implications
The findings suggest that early and individualized nutritional interventions are critical for women with ovarian cancer, particularly during treatment. These interventions can prevent further nutritional decline, support muscle mass preservation, and improve clinical outcomes, such as reducing chemotherapy toxicities and improving overall survival. However, the review emphasizes that while the evidence is promising, there is a critical need for larger, more robust prospective studies to confirm these benefits and develop comprehensive clinical guidelines. The importance of integrating nutrition care into routine cancer treatment is clear, but future research should focus on the long-term impact of nutritional interventions, particularly after treatment ends, to prevent ongoing declines in nutritional status and muscle mass.
Research Progress on the Interaction between Intestinal Flora and MicroRNA in Pelvic Inflammatory Diseases
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) is a complex interplay between pathogens, immune responses, and microbial communities. As research continues to uncover the microbiome's role in reproductive health, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as probiotics, prebiotics, and transplants are redefining how we prevent and treat PID. This page dives deep into these innovations, offering a glimpse into the future of personalized, biologically informed women’s healthcare.
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This review highlights the crucial interactions between gut microbiota and microRNAs in pelvic inflammatory disease, revealing novel diagnostic markers and therapeutic targets.
What was reviewed?
This review article examined the current scientific progress on the interactions between the intestinal flora (gut microbiota) and microRNAs (miRNAs) in the pathogenesis and treatment of pelvic inflammatory disease (PID). It explores the reciprocal regulatory roles of gut microbiota and miRNAs, highlighting their contributions to immune-inflammatory processes, microbial balance, and disease progression in PID. The review also discusses emerging microbiome-targeted and miRNA-based therapeutic strategies.
Who was reviewed?
The authors synthesized evidence from a broad range of experimental, clinical, and animal studies focusing on women with PID and relevant model systems. These studies investigated changes in gut and reproductive tract microbiota, miRNA expression profiles linked to PID and related complications (e.g., endometritis, ectopic pregnancy), and how modulation of these factors affects inflammation and immune responses. The review also included findings on probiotics, prebiotics, fecal microbiota transplantation, and miRNA-based diagnostics and therapeutics.
What were the most important findings?
The review underscores that PID pathogenesis is closely associated with dysbiosis of the gut microbiota, which disrupts immune homeostasis and triggers chronic inflammation through pathways involving pro- and anti-inflammatory cytokines and immune cell dysregulation. miRNAs emerge as critical regulators, modulating inflammation by targeting signaling pathways like NF-κB, TLR4, and NLRP3 inflammasomes. Specific miRNAs are implicated in PID severity and progression by influencing immune cell function and microbial populations. Furthermore, miRNAs can directly alter the gut microbiome composition, while microbial metabolites influence host miRNA expression, establishing a bidirectional regulatory network. Interventions such as probiotics, prebiotics, dietary adjustments, and fecal microbiota transplantation show promise in restoring microbiome balance and modulating miRNA profiles to alleviate inflammation and improve PID outcomes. This integrated view highlights the microbiome-miRNA axis as a novel frontier for diagnostic markers and targeted therapies in PID.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review provides a compelling rationale for developing precision medicine approaches targeting both the microbiome and miRNAs to manage PID more effectively. Understanding the dynamic interplay between gut microbiota and miRNAs can facilitate the identification of novel biomarkers for early diagnosis and prognosis of PID. Additionally, microbiome and miRNA modulation could serve as adjunct or alternative therapies to conventional antibiotics, potentially reducing antibiotic resistance and improving long-term reproductive health. The review calls for further research into the mechanisms governing microbiome-miRNA interactions and clinical trials to validate microbiome-targeted and miRNA-based interventions. Ultimately, this could transform PID management by enabling personalized treatments that address the underlying immune-inflammatory dysregulation.
Endometriosis and Infertility: A review of the pathogenesis and treatment of endometriosis-associated infertility
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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This review details the multifactorial pathogenesis of endometriosis-associated infertility, emphasizing molecular, genetic, and inflammatory mechanisms, and evaluates current and emerging treatments, including IVF and novel regenerative therapies.
What was reviewed?
This comprehensive review explores the pathogenesis of endometriosis and its impact on infertility, focusing on the mechanisms by which endometriosis impairs fertility and the current and emerging treatment modalities. The article synthesizes evidence on the etiology of endometriosis, including retrograde menstruation, coelomic metaplasia, altered immunity, stem cell involvement, and genetics, and details how these factors culminate in altered pelvic anatomy, inflammatory microenvironments, and molecular changes in reproductive tissues. The review also evaluates the effects of endometriosis on gametes, embryo development, fallopian tube function, and endometrial receptivity, and discusses the effectiveness of treatments such as surgery, medical therapy, superovulation with intrauterine insemination (IUI), and in vitro fertilization (IVF). Future directions, including novel medical therapies, immune modulation, and stem cell-based approaches, are also considered.
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesizes data from a broad range of studies involving women of reproductive age, primarily aged 25–35, affected by endometriosis with and without infertility. It references epidemiologic data showing an increased prevalence of endometriosis among infertile women (up to 50%) and discusses animal models, such as baboons and mice, to elucidate mechanisms relevant to human disease. The populations reviewed include women with varying stages of endometriosis (minimal/mild to advanced), including those participating in surgical, medical, and assisted reproductive intervention trials. Data on genetic and stem cell contributions are drawn from both human and animal research.
Most important findings
Endometriosis is confirmed as a multifactorial, estrogen-dependent inflammatory disease with a robust association with infertility. Mechanistically, infertility arises from both mechanical disruption (e.g., adhesions, distorted pelvic anatomy) and complex molecular interactions involving immune dysregulation, increased inflammatory cytokines, altered gene expression (notably HOXA10 and Wnt signaling), and oxidative stress. These disrupt ovulation, gamete quality, embryo viability, tubal transport, and endometrial receptivity. Aberrant microbiome or microbial signatures are not a primary focus, but the inflammatory milieu, rich in cytokines and altered immune cell populations, could suggest potential secondary impacts on local microbial communities. Treatments are stage-dependent; surgery is most beneficial for minimal-moderate disease, while IVF remains the most effective for advanced cases. There is limited benefit from medical suppression unless used adjunctively before ART. Emerging approaches, such as stem cell therapy and immune modulation, hold promise for restoring endometrial function and correcting epigenetic alterations.
Key implications
For clinicians, this review underscores the need for individualized management in endometriosis-associated infertility, integrating disease stage, patient age, and reproductive goals. The multifactorial pathogenesis, including immune, genetic, and molecular disruptions, highlights the complexity of diagnosis and treatment, and supports the exploration of targeted, non-hormonal therapies and regenerative approaches. Recognizing the altered inflammatory and possibly microbial environment in the pelvis may inform future research and therapeutic strategies, especially for developing microbiome-informed diagnostic or treatment tools.
Genome-wide association analysis of pain severity in dysmenorrhea identifies association at chromosome 1p13.2, near the nerve growth factor locus
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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A GWAS study identifies a significant genetic association at the NGF gene locus on chromosome 1p13.2, which may explain variations in dysmenorrhea pain severity, suggesting potential new therapeutic targets for pain management.
What was studied?
This study investigates the genetic factors contributing to the severity of dysmenorrhea pain through a genome-wide association study (GWAS). The researchers focused on identifying genetic variations that correlate with self-reported pain intensity in dysmenorrhea among 11,891 women of European descent. The study identified a genome-wide significant association at chromosome 1p13.2, near the nerve growth factor (NGF) gene, which is implicated in pain modulation. The study employed a linear regression model, adjusting for age and body mass index (BMI), to identify a single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) associated with increased pain severity.
Who was studied?
The study cohort consisted of 11,891 unrelated females aged 18 to 45, of European descent, who reported their average dysmenorrhea pain severity on a 4-point ordinal scale. Participants were recruited from 23andMe, a personal genetics company, and the cohort included a wide range of individuals with varying pain severities. Notably, the study also gathered data on participants' comorbid conditions, such as endometriosis, polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), and depression, which have been associated with more severe dysmenorrhea pain.
Most important findings
The GWAS revealed a significant genetic association at the 1p13.2 locus, where a SNP (rs7523086) was found to co-localize with the NGF gene, which plays a critical role in pain regulation. The presence of the risk allele at this locus was associated with an increase in dysmenorrhea pain intensity, suggesting that NGF may be an important mediator of pain in dysmenorrhea. The study also highlighted that dysmenorrhea pain severity was influenced by age, BMI, and the presence of comorbid conditions like endometriosis and depression. The association with NGF aligns with existing knowledge of NGF's role in chronic pain disorders, indicating that NGF could be a potential therapeutic target for dysmenorrhea pain.
Key implications
The identification of the NGF gene locus as a genetic risk factor for dysmenorrhea pain severity offers new insights into the genetic underpinnings of this condition. The association between NGF and pain suggests that targeting NGF pathways could provide a novel treatment approach for women with severe dysmenorrhea. The findings also emphasize the importance of considering genetic predisposition when assessing dysmenorrhea severity, as well as the need for further research to explore the mechanistic role of NGF in dysmenorrhea and related pelvic pain disorders.
Pause menopause with Rhodiola rosea, a natural selective estrogen receptor modulator
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Rhodiola rosea shows promise as a natural selective estrogen receptor modulator, offering neuroprotective, cardiovascular, and bone health benefits for menopausal women with fewer risks than conventional therapies.
What was studied?
This study explored the potential of Rhodiola rosea (R. rosea), a natural selective estrogen receptor modulator (SERM), as a treatment for menopause symptoms and health risks. The authors reviewed molecular mechanisms by which R. rosea could mitigate cognitive decline, mood disturbances, cardiovascular disease, osteoporosis, and cancer associated with estrogen decline during menopause. Emphasis was placed on the neuroprotective, cardioprotective, anti-inflammatory, and anti-oxidative properties of R. rosea extracts, particularly focusing on the bioactive constituent salidroside and its interaction with estrogen receptors. The paper also presented a clinical case illustrating improvements in cognitive function and mood with R. rosea treatment in a menopausal woman.
Who was studied?
The study synthesized findings from in vitro, animal, and limited human clinical studies examining R. rosea extracts and salidroside effects on estrogen receptor modulation and menopause-related pathologies. These included ovariectomized rodent models simulating estrogen deficiency, human clinical trials assessing cognitive and mood improvements in stressed or fatigued adults, and case reports from menopausal women. The study focused on women in menopausal transition and postmenopause, at increased risk for neurocognitive, cardiovascular, and bone-related disorders due to estrogen decline.
Most important findings
Rhodiola rosea acts as a natural SERM with tissue-specific modulation of estrogen receptors, showing agonistic effects on brain, bone, and cardiovascular tissues while lacking uterotrophic or pro-carcinogenic activity. Salidroside demonstrated neuroprotective effects by enhancing synaptic function, memory, and executive function, partly via ERβ activation and anti-inflammatory pathways such as NF-κB inhibition. Cardiovascular benefits arose from improved endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) activity, enhanced nitric oxide production, and antioxidant protection reducing oxidative stress. Osteoprotective effects included inhibition of oxidative stress-induced osteoblast dysfunction, preventing bone loss in estrogen-deficient models. Importantly, R. rosea showed anti-cancer potential by inhibiting proliferation and inducing apoptosis in estrogen receptor-positive and -negative breast cancer cell lines without stimulating tumor growth. Clinically, R. rosea improved cognitive function, reduced anxiety, depression, and fatigue in menopausal and stressed individuals with minimal side effects, suggesting a favorable safety profile compared to synthetic SERMs and hormone replacement therapy (HRT).
Key implications
This review highlights Rhodiola rosea as a promising natural alternative to conventional HRT and synthetic SERMs for managing menopause-associated cognitive decline, mood disorders, cardiovascular risk, osteoporosis, and cancer risk. Its multi-targeted estrogen receptor modulation and anti-inflammatory, antioxidant mechanisms address critical pathways affected by estrogen loss. Unlike HRT, R. rosea may confer these benefits without increasing risks of cancer or thrombosis. However, clinical trials specifically in menopausal women are necessary to validate efficacy, optimal dosing, and long-term safety. The compound’s favorable side effect profile and neuroprotective properties make it a potential adjunct or alternative therapy, aligning well with growing patient interest in botanical and non-hormonal menopause treatments.
Metabolic risk factors and fertility disorders: A narrative review of the female perspective
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is a common endocrine disorder that affects women of reproductive age, characterized by irregular menstrual cycles, hyperandrogenism, and insulin resistance. It is often associated with metabolic dysfunctions and inflammation, leading to fertility issues and increased risk of type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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This review explores how metabolic risk factors—obesity, the female athlete triad, and oxidative stress—contribute to female infertility, highlighting associations with PCOS, endometriosis, and idiopathic infertility, and calling for improved metabolic assessment and molecular diagnostics in clinical practice.
What was reviewed?
This narrative review comprehensively examined the associations between metabolic risk factors and female fertility disorders, focusing on obesity, the female athlete triad (low energy intake, menstrual dysfunction, decreased bone density), and oxidative stress as potential contributors to infertility. The authors aimed to clarify how these metabolic conditions, alongside major infertility-related disorders such as polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) and endometriosis, impact women's reproductive health. The review synthesized evidence from 50 selected studies published between 2006 and 2020, integrating pathophysiological, genetic, lifestyle, and epidemiological perspectives. It also highlighted the prevalence, mechanisms, and clinical consequences of metabolic risks with female infertility and discussed gaps in current knowledge, especially regarding idiopathic infertility and the need for robust molecular markers.
Who was reviewed?
The review focused on studies involving women of reproductive age experiencing infertility. It included populations affected by PCOS, endometriosis, obesity, and those displaying characteristics of the female athlete triad. The selected studies varied in design but excluded animal research and clinical trials of pharmaceutical treatments. The review encompassed diverse geographic regions and considered women with both known and idiopathic infertility, as well as those undergoing assisted reproductive technology (ART). The aim was to gather data relevant to women at risk for or experiencing infertility due to metabolic and lifestyle factors.
Most important findings
The review established a clear and direct association between obesity and increased risk of female infertility, with obese women exhibiting up to a three-fold higher risk compared to those with normal body mass index (BMI). Obesity was linked to anovulation, reduced ART success rates, and increased miscarriage risk. Mechanistically, excess body fat disrupts ovarian steroidogenesis, induces hyperandrogenism, and promotes chronic low-grade inflammation, all of which impair reproductive function. PCOS was highlighted as a central metabolic-endocrine disorder, often comorbid with obesity, insulin resistance, and increased cardiovascular risk. Endometriosis risk showed a more complex relationship with BMI, with evidence suggesting both inverse and direct associations, possibly due to genetic and hormonal influences. The female athlete triad, though less well-studied in this context, was associated with hypothalamic suppression, menstrual dysfunction, and reduced fertility, primarily through chronic energy deficiency and altered estrogen signaling. Oxidative stress, driven by lifestyle factors (e.g., smoking, alcohol, drug use), was identified as a pervasive mediator, damaging DNA and germ cells, increasing risks for PCOS and endometriosis, and contributing to idiopathic infertility. The review emphasized a lack of large-scale population studies and molecular biomarker research linking metabolic status and infertility.
Key implications
For clinicians, the review underscores the necessity of assessing metabolic risk factors, especially obesity and undernutrition, when addressing female infertility. Interventions targeting weight management, healthy nutrition, and lifestyle modification may improve hormonal balance and reproductive outcomes, particularly in women with PCOS. The review also calls for interdisciplinary collaboration to integrate molecular, metabolic, and psychosocial approaches to infertility. Given the anticipated rise in obesity prevalence among women, proactive metabolic assessment and the development of diagnostic molecular signatures are critical for improving ART outcomes and reducing unexplained infertility. Further, the establishment of consensus definitions and large-scale biobank studies will be pivotal for advancing personalized infertility care.
Phthalate metabolite levels and menopausal hot flashes in midlife women
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal hot flashes are one of the most common and disruptive symptoms that women experience during the transition to menopause. Characterized by sudden sensations of heat, sweating, and flushing, hot flashes can significantly affect a woman’s quality of life, causing sleep disturbances, mood swings, and even long-term health consequences. Understanding the complex mechanisms behind hot flashes, as well as the role of microbiome-targeted therapies, offers new avenues for improving menopausal health.
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This study links higher levels of phthalate metabolites, particularly from personal care products, to an increased risk and severity of hot flashes in midlife women, suggesting that phthalate exposure could influence menopausal symptoms.
What was studied?
This study explores the association between urinary phthalate metabolite levels and the occurrence and severity of hot flashes in midlife women. Researchers specifically examined the metabolites of phthalates, chemicals commonly found in personal care products, and their potential link to the onset and frequency of menopausal hot flashes. The study focused on women aged 45 to 54 years, measuring phthalate metabolites such as MEP, MEHP, MEHHP, and others, to determine whether these metabolites were associated with a higher risk of experiencing hot flashes, including their severity and frequency.
Who was studied?
The study included 195 women aged 45 to 54 years, primarily Caucasian and African American, recruited from Baltimore city and its surrounding counties. The participants were selected from the Midlife Women's Health Study and included both women who had experienced hot flashes and those who had not. Women were classified based on their menopausal status (pre, peri, or postmenopausal) and their history of hot flashes. Urine samples were collected to measure phthalate metabolite levels, while detailed questionnaires assessed the frequency, severity, and duration of hot flashes.
Most important findings
The study found a significant association between higher urinary levels of phthalate metabolites, particularly those from personal care products (Sum PCP), and an increased risk of ever experiencing hot flashes. The findings revealed that higher levels of certain metabolites like MEP and MECPP were significantly linked to a higher likelihood of experiencing hot flashes in the past 30 days, as well as more frequent daily hot flashes. Specifically, the Sum PCP variable, which reflects exposure to phthalates in personal care products, was positively associated with both the occurrence and severity of hot flashes, including the most frequent (daily) occurrences.
Key implications
The findings suggest that exposure to phthalates, particularly from personal care products, may increase the likelihood and severity of hot flashes in midlife women. This adds to the growing body of evidence that phthalates, which have endocrine-disrupting properties, could potentially accelerate menopausal symptoms or exacerbate their intensity. Given the widespread use of phthalates in personal care products, these results imply that reducing exposure to these chemicals could be a potential strategy for mitigating hot flashes in susceptible women. Further research is needed to better understand the mechanisms by which phthalates may influence menopausal symptoms.
Estrogen and Thrombosis: A Bench to Bedside Review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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This study explores estrogen's effects on thrombosis risk in hormonal contraceptives and HRT, highlighting mechanisms of action, the role of different estrogen doses, and the importance of individualized risk assessments in preventing thromboembolic events.
What was studied?
The study reviewed estrogen's role in thrombosis, particularly focusing on how estrogen therapy, used in hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and contraception, affects the risk of thrombosis, including venous thromboembolism (VTE) and arterial thrombosis. It explored the mechanisms by which estrogen influences hemostasis and coagulation pathways, contributing to a prothrombotic environment. The paper also discussed estrogen's effects on various hemostatic and fibrinolytic variables, platelets, von Willebrand factor (vWF), and the coagulation cascade, providing a thorough overview of how estrogen administration, whether endogenous or exogenous, impacts thrombosis risk. The research emphasizes the clinical relevance of assessing individual risks when prescribing estrogen-based therapies, including in specific populations like transgender women and women with a high risk of thrombosis.
Who was studied?
The study focuses on women of reproductive age using hormonal contraceptives, postmenopausal women undergoing HRT, and those at a higher risk for thromboembolic events. The research also includes transgender women using estrogen therapy for gender-affirming care. It emphasizes populations using different estrogen formulations, such as combined oral contraceptives (COCs) and HRT containing either estrogen alone or combined with progestin. The study draws on data from animal models, clinical trials, and epidemiological studies that explore the effects of estrogen therapy across different age groups, health conditions, and genetic backgrounds, particularly those predisposed to thrombosis.
Most important findings
The study identifies estrogen's prothrombotic effects, notably its influence on the coagulation cascade, platelet function, and fibrinolysis. Estrogen significantly alters hemostatic factors, increasing plasma levels of procoagulant proteins such as factor II, factor VII, factor VIII, and fibrinogen, while reducing levels of protein S and tissue factor pathway inhibitor. These changes contribute to an increased risk of thrombosis, particularly in women using oral contraceptives or combined hormone replacement therapy (HRT). The study also highlights the dose-dependent effects of estrogen, noting that higher doses (e.g., early formulations of COCs with 150 µg of estrogen) are linked to a significantly higher risk of thromboembolic events compared to lower-dose formulations. Transdermal estrogen, which avoids the first-pass effect through the liver, was found to have a lower associated risk of thrombosis compared to oral estrogen. Additionally, the review discusses the role of progestins in exacerbating thrombosis risk, particularly with third and fourth-generation progestins, which further increase the risk when combined with estrogen. Finally, emerging data suggest that individualized risk assessments are essential, particularly for populations such as transgender women, who may have unique estrogen exposure patterns.
Key implications
The findings underscore the importance of individualized treatment plans for patients using estrogen-containing therapies. Clinicians should assess thrombosis risk in patients before initiating estrogen therapy, particularly those with pre-existing cardiovascular or clotting risks. The route of administration (oral vs. transdermal) plays a critical role in determining the level of risk, with transdermal estrogen being the safer option for women with cardiovascular concerns. For women with an intact uterus, the addition of progestin is necessary to prevent endometrial hyperplasia, but careful consideration should be given to the type of progestin used due to its potential contribution to thrombosis risk. Low-dose oral contraceptives and HRT formulations with estrogen alone may be appropriate for postmenopausal women who do not have contraindications, but long-term use should be carefully monitored. For high-risk women, such as those with a history of thrombosis or BRCA1/2 mutations, the study suggests alternative therapies or non-hormonal treatments may be warranted to minimize thrombosis risk.
Extended sub-chronic exposure to heavy metal mixture induced multidrug resistance against chemotherapy agents in ovarian cancer cells
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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This study investigates how sub-chronic exposure to lead, cadmium, and cobalt induces multidrug resistance in ovarian cancer cells, highlighting the role of drug efflux transporters and reduced apoptosis in treatment resistance. These findings underscore the importance of environmental metal exposure in cancer therapy effectiveness.
What was studied?
The research investigates how chronic exposure to a mixture of lead (Pb), cadmium (Cd), and cobalt (Co) at low, non-lethal doses can induce multidrug resistance (MDR) in the NIH-Ovcar3 human ovarian cancer cell line. The study focuses on whether prolonged exposure to these heavy metals results in resistance to chemotherapy drugs like cisplatin (CP), 5-fluorouracil (5-FU), and doxorubicin (DX), and explores the molecular mechanisms behind this resistance. The research aims to uncover whether the heavy metals could influence drug efflux pumps and apoptosis pathways, making chemotherapy less effective.
Who was studied?
The study utilized the NIH-Ovcar3 human ovarian cancer cell line, which is commonly used for research into chemotherapy resistance. The cells were exposed to a mixture of Pb, Cd, and Co at concentrations that were below known harmful levels, simulating the chronic exposure seen in real-world environments. The research observed the development of multidrug resistance over several generations (20 passages) to investigate how these cells adapted to low-dose heavy metal exposure. This was followed by treatment with chemotherapy agents to examine how the exposure affected the cells' responses to these drugs.
Most important findings
The study showed that prolonged exposure to low doses of Pb, Cd, and Co resulted in significant chemotherapy resistance in the ovarian cancer cells. These resistant cells exhibited cross-resistance to three chemotherapy agents: cisplatin, 5-fluorouracil, and doxorubicin. The most pronounced resistance was observed against cisplatin and doxorubicin, where resistant cells had over 2.1 and 2.87 times higher IC50 values compared to controls. Furthermore, the study highlighted the role of ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters, particularly P-glycoprotein (ABCB1), Breast Cancer Resistance Protein (ABCG2), and Multidrug Resistance-associated Protein 1 (ABCC1), in this resistance mechanism. These transporters were significantly overexpressed in the resistant cell population, supporting the hypothesis that heavy metal exposure upregulates cellular detoxification pathways. Additionally, the resistant cells exhibited lower apoptotic activity and increased motility, suggesting that the exposure may also contribute to a more invasive and metastatic phenotype.
Key implications
The findings of this study suggest that even low levels of heavy metal exposure, which are often deemed safe, could contribute to the development of multidrug resistance in ovarian cancer cells. This has critical implications for clinical practice, especially in environments with high environmental contamination. The study emphasizes the need for monitoring heavy metal exposure in patients with ovarian cancer, particularly in those undergoing chemotherapy, as it could influence the efficacy of treatment. Understanding the molecular mechanisms, including the involvement of ABC transporters and reduced apoptosis, offers potential targets for overcoming resistance and improving therapeutic strategies. This research also calls for further exploration of how environmental exposures to heavy metals might affect cancer progression and drug resistance over time.
Impact of oxidative stress induced by heavy metals on ovarian function
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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This review highlights the impact of heavy metal-induced oxidative stress on ovarian function, contributing to premature ovarian insufficiency. It discusses the mechanisms by which metals like copper, arsenic, and cadmium induce ROS, leading to ovarian damage, and the potential therapeutic role of antioxidants.
What was studied?
This review examines the detrimental impact of heavy metals, including copper, arsenic, cadmium, mercury, and lead, on ovarian function, particularly through the induction of oxidative stress (OS). These heavy metals are known to generate reactive oxygen species (ROS), leading to cellular damage, apoptosis, and follicular atresia, all of which contribute to premature ovarian insufficiency (POI). The study focuses on the molecular and cellular mechanisms by which these metals affect ovarian health, highlighting their role in disrupting hormone production and accelerating ovarian aging.
Who was studied?
The review incorporates data from both human and animal studies, with a focus on research involving rodents as animal models. These studies explore the physiological effects of heavy metal exposure on ovarian cells, including granulosa cells and oocytes. It also examines the biochemical and physiological consequences of heavy metal toxicity in human populations, particularly those exposed to environmental pollutants, as well as laboratory findings that investigate the molecular mechanisms underlying ovarian damage caused by these metals.
Most important findings
The review underscores the significant role of oxidative stress in mediating the harmful effects of heavy metals on ovarian function. Metals like arsenic, cadmium, and mercury generate excessive ROS, which in turn disrupt mitochondrial function, induce DNA damage, and trigger apoptosis in ovarian cells. These metals also impair the activity of critical antioxidant enzymes, exacerbating oxidative damage. For example, copper exposure leads to follicular disruption and increased cell death, while arsenic accelerates ovarian failure by reducing levels of estrogen and anti-Müllerian hormone (AMH). Overall, the evidence suggests that these metals contribute to a decline in ovarian reserve, leading to early menopause and reduced fertility.
Key implications
The findings highlight the importance of addressing environmental heavy metal exposure as a potential risk factor for POI. The role of oxidative stress in the pathogenesis of ovarian dysfunction suggests that preventive measures, such as reducing exposure to environmental pollutants, could help protect ovarian health. Additionally, antioxidant treatments may offer a promising therapeutic approach to mitigate the damaging effects of oxidative stress caused by heavy metal exposure. Clinicians should consider these environmental factors when diagnosing and treating women with premature ovarian insufficiency.
The Gut Microbiome Is Altered in Postmenopausal Women With Osteoporosis and Osteopenia.
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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This study identifies distinct gut microbiome and functional gene signatures associated with osteoporosis and osteopenia in postmenopausal women, highlighting key microbial taxa and metabolic pathways that may influence bone health and serve as potential targets for clinical intervention.
What was studied?
This research article investigated how the gut microbiome is altered in postmenopausal women with osteoporosis and osteopenia compared to healthy controls. The study aimed to characterize microbial diversity, taxonomic composition, and functional gene potential using shotgun metagenomic sequencing of fecal samples. Researchers sought to identify specific microbial taxa and metabolic pathways associated with bone health status, focusing on elucidating microbial signatures and potential mechanisms linking gut microbiota with bone metabolism in postmenopausal women.
Who was studied?
The study cohort consisted of 86 postmenopausal women aged 54 to 81 years, all at least 5 years post-menopause, recruited from the "Bugs’n’Bones" study at Massey University, New Zealand. Exclusion criteria included any systemic disease, gut-impacting food intolerances, smoking, high alcohol intake, recent antibiotic use, or significant weight change in the prior year. None were receiving medical treatment for osteoporosis or osteopenia. Based on WHO bone mineral density (BMD) T-score criteria, participants were classified as healthy (n=26), osteopenic (n=42), or osteoporotic (n=18).
Most important findings
The study found that both osteoporotic and osteopenic women had significantly different gut microbial taxonomic compositions compared to healthy controls, although their alpha diversity (Shannon and Simpson indices) did not differ. Beta diversity analyses and PERMANOVA confirmed significant community composition differences between healthy and diseased groups. Notably, healthy women showed higher abundances of unclassified Clostridia and methanogenic archaea (Methanobacteriaceae), including Methanobrevibacter smithii, while Bacteroides was more prevalent in osteoporotic and osteopenic groups. Other taxa such as Parabacteroides distasonis, Bacteroides uniformis, and Roseburia intestinalis were more abundant in osteopenic women, while Betaproteobacteria, Bacteroides stercoris, and Adlercreutzia were elevated in osteoporosis. Functional metagenomic analysis revealed that pathways related to carbohydrate metabolism, biosynthesis of secondary metabolites, phenylpropanoid and cyanoamino acid metabolism were enriched in osteoporotic and osteopenic groups, whereas replication and repair pathways were more prominent in healthy women. These results suggest a shift in the gut microbiome from health to osteopenia and osteoporosis, with specific microbial and functional signatures.
Key implications
This study provides the first shotgun metagenomic evidence that osteoporosis and osteopenia in postmenopausal women are associated with distinct gut microbiome signatures, both taxonomically and functionally. The findings highlight increased Bacteroides and decreased Clostridia and methanogenic archaea as potential microbial markers of bone loss, with functional shifts toward increased carbohydrate metabolism and secondary metabolite biosynthesis. These alterations may influence bone metabolism through mechanisms involving immune modulation, estrogen metabolism, and short-chain fatty acid production. The results underscore the potential for developing microbiome-based biomarkers and microbiome-targeted interventions targeting gut microbial communities to support bone health in postmenopausal women.
Associations of the fecal microbiome with urinary estrogens and estrogen metabolites in postmenopausal women
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Greater fecal microbiome diversity in postmenopausal women correlates with urinary estrogen metabolite profiles linked to lower breast cancer risk. Specific taxa, notably Clostridiales, are associated with beneficial estrogen metabolism signatures.
What was studied?
This original research article investigated the relationship between the diversity and composition of the fecal microbiome and urinary estrogen profiles in postmenopausal women. The study specifically aimed to determine whether urinary concentrations of estrogens and their metabolites, which are known to influence breast cancer risk, were associated with measures of gut microbial diversity and the relative abundance of specific microbial taxa. The researchers used 16S rRNA gene pyrosequencing to profile the fecal microbiome and liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry to quantify urinary estrone, estradiol, and 13 hydroxylated estrogen metabolites. Statistical analyses assessed associations between microbiome diversity metrics, microbial taxa, and various estrogen metabolite ratios that have been linked to breast cancer risk in prior studies, adjusting for confounders such as age, body mass index (BMI), and study design factors.
Who was studied?
The study population comprised 60 healthy postmenopausal women aged 55–69 years, randomly selected from members of Kaiser Permanente Colorado. Key exclusion criteria included current or recent use of antibiotics or hormone therapy, and any history of cancer or gastrointestinal disease. The participants were predominantly white (91%) and non-Hispanic (95%), with a median age of 64 years and a median BMI of 27, reflecting an overweight to obese cohort. All had received a recent normal screening mammogram and had not taken medications or had conditions likely to impact gut microbiota or systemic hormone levels. Fecal and urine samples were collected, shipped, and analyzed under standardized conditions.
Most important findings
The study found a statistically significant positive association between whole-tree phylogenetic diversity of the fecal microbiome and the urinary ratio of estrogen metabolites to parent estrogens. This ratio, as well as pathway-specific ratios, has been previously associated with a reduced risk of postmenopausal breast cancer. The relative abundance of the order Clostridiales (especially the family Ruminococcaceae) was directly correlated with the metabolites-to-parent estrogen ratio, while the genus Bacteroides was inversely correlated. These associations persisted after adjusting for age, BMI, sample collection variables, and study design. Notably, overall measures of microbial diversity, rather than the abundance of dominant phyla (Firmicutes or Bacteroidetes), were most strongly linked to favorable estrogen metabolite profiles.
Key implications
This study provides evidence that greater gut microbial diversity is associated with estrogen metabolite profiles considered protective against breast cancer in postmenopausal women. The findings suggest that the gut microbiota, particularly the diversity and specific taxa such as Clostridiales and Ruminococcaceae, may modulate systemic estrogen metabolism, possibly through deconjugation and enterohepatic recycling of estrogens. These data support the hypothesis that manipulation of the gut microbiome could influence estrogen homeostasis and, by extension, breast cancer risk. However, due to the cross-sectional design and small sample size, causality cannot be established, and findings regarding specific microbial associations should be considered exploratory. Further research with larger cohorts and longitudinal designs is warranted to confirm these associations and elucidate underlying mechanisms.
Treatment of Symptoms of the Menopause: An Endocrine Society Clinical Practice Guideline
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) is one of the most effective treatments for women experiencing the symptoms of menopause, particularly vasomotor symptoms such as hot flashes and night sweats. But its benefits go beyond just symptom management. HRT can also play a key role in improving vaginal health by alleviating dryness and discomfort, which are common complaints among women in menopause. Additionally, it helps prevent bone loss, significantly reducing the risk of osteoporosis and fractures, which are more common after menopause. Despite its many benefits, HRT is not one-size-fits-all; it’s essential to tailor treatment based on individual health profiles, taking into account the risks like breast cancer, blood clots, and heart disease that come with prolonged use.
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This guideline on menopausal symptom treatment prioritizes early initiation of hormone therapy, safe routes like transdermal estradiol, and vaginal care for genitourinary symptoms. It promotes a tailored approach considering cardiovascular and breast cancer risks.
What was studied?
This guideline reviews the treatment of menopausal symptoms, focusing on vasomotor symptoms (VMS) such as hot flashes and night sweats, as well as the genitourinary syndrome of menopause (GSM). The paper provides recommendations on managing these symptoms through menopausal hormone therapy (MHT) and non-hormonal treatments. It emphasizes the importance of individualizing therapy based on patient-specific risks and preferences, including the choice between oral, transdermal, and vaginal estrogen routes. The guideline also discusses the safety and efficacy of various therapies, including estrogen-progestogen combinations, and addresses issues like cardiovascular risk, venous thromboembolism, and breast cancer risk.
Who was studied?
The guideline focuses on postmenopausal women, specifically those who are experiencing troublesome vasomotor symptoms, genitourinary issues, and other climacteric symptoms. It addresses women under 60 years or within 10 years of menopause who are generally healthy but may have specific risks, such as cardiovascular concerns or breast cancer history. The document also includes considerations for women with a uterus who need progestogen therapy alongside estrogen and those with a history of breast cancer who need alternative, non-hormonal treatments. The focus is on personalizing treatment based on the severity of symptoms, health status, and patient preference.
Most important findings
The guideline emphasizes that menopausal hormone therapy (MHT) is the most effective treatment for vasomotor symptoms, particularly when initiated early (before age 60 or within 10 years of menopause). Estrogen therapy (ET) significantly reduces hot flashes and night sweats, while estrogen-progestogen therapy (EPT) is recommended for women with a uterus to protect the endometrium. The guideline favors transdermal estrogen over oral forms for women with cardiovascular risks due to lower thrombotic risks. Non-hormonal therapies, such as SSRIs, SNRIs, gabapentin, and clonidine, are recommended for women who cannot use hormones or prefer alternatives. Vaginal estrogen, including low-dose preparations, is recommended for genitourinary symptoms like vaginal dryness and dyspareunia, with benefits that likely extend to vaginal microbiome health, though microbial data is not provided in the guideline. The use of vaginal moisturizers and lubricants is also suggested for symptom relief in women not opting for hormone therapy. The paper underscores the need for regular screening for breast cancer and cardiovascular risks before initiating MHT and stresses that shared decision-making is crucial to managing menopausal symptoms effectively.
Key implications
Clinicians should initiate MHT for vasomotor symptom relief in women under 60 or within 10 years of menopause, taking into account individual risk factors like cardiovascular health and breast cancer risk. Transdermal estradiol should be prioritized for women with higher cardiovascular risks. For women with an intact uterus, a progestogen must be used to protect the endometrium. Non-hormonal alternatives should be considered for those who prefer not to use hormones or have contraindications. Clinicians should also prioritize vaginal estrogen for women suffering from genitourinary symptoms and consider vaginal lubricants and moisturizers as adjunctive treatments. While the guideline does not focus on the microbiome, the vaginal health benefits of estrogen may support a more favorable vaginal microbiome, emphasizing the importance of managing both symptoms and vaginal ecosystem health concurrently. These considerations should be incorporated into personalized treatment plans for optimal outcomes.
Characterizing the gut microbiota in females with infertility and preliminary results of a water-soluble dietary fiber intervention study.
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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This study shows gut microbiota differences between fertile and infertile women, highlighting improved fertility outcomes with dietary fiber (PHGG) supplementation that enhances beneficial gut bacteria, suggesting microbiome modulation as a viable strategy for improving reproductive success.
What was studied?
The study characterized the gut microbiota of women experiencing infertility and investigated the impact of supplementation with partially hydrolyzed guar gum (PHGG), a dietary fiber, on gut microbiota and pregnancy outcomes. Researchers compared the microbiota composition of infertile women against fertile controls and assessed changes following the administration of PHGG alongside assisted reproductive technology (ART).
Who was studied?
The study enrolled 36 women: 18 fertile women and 18 women diagnosed with infertility, matched by age. All participants were recruited from HORAC Grand Front Osaka Clinic, Osaka, Japan. Subsequently, 12 of the infertile women agreed to undergo combined treatment involving ART and dietary supplementation with PHGG. The participants' fecal samples were analyzed using 16S rRNA sequencing to determine microbiota composition.
What were the most important findings?
The study identified clear differences in gut microbiota composition between fertile and infertile women. Notably, infertile women exhibited decreased levels of beneficial bacteria such as Stenotrophomonas, Streptococcus, and Roseburia, while showing increased levels of the genera Unclassified [Barnesiellaceae] and Phascolarctobacterium. Additionally, an increased abundance of the phylum Verrucomicrobia was observed among infertile participants. These microbial differences suggest a potential dysbiosis associated with infertility. After dietary supplementation with PHGG, infertile women showed a significant shift in microbiota characterized by increased abundance of beneficial Bifidobacterium, particularly in women who successfully conceived. Predictive microbial signatures identified before treatment included lower levels of Paraprevotella and Blautia, coupled with increased Bifidobacterium abundance. Importantly, 7 out of 12 women (58.3%) who received PHGG supplementation alongside ART achieved pregnancy, indicating that dietary fiber could beneficially modulate the gut microbiome to enhance fertility outcomes.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The greatest implications of this study for clinicians lie in recognizing that gut microbiota dysbiosis is linked to infertility and can potentially be modified through dietary interventions. Supplementing infertile women with dietary fiber, specifically PHGG, may improve fertility outcomes by correcting gut microbiota imbalances. This study highlights the potential for personalized nutritional strategies, emphasizing dietary fiber supplementation to enhance the efficacy of ART. Clinicians should consider evaluating gut microbiota composition in infertility assessments and incorporate dietary interventions aimed at modulating the gut microbiota to improve fertility outcomes. Further large-scale studies are needed to validate these preliminary findings and establish dietary supplementation as a standard adjunct treatment for infertility.
Properties of Infertility Microbiome in a Review Article
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This review explores the impact of microbiome imbalances on infertility, with insights into microbial diagnostics and potential treatments to improve fertility outcomes.
What was reviewed?
This review article explored the crucial role of the microbiome in infertility, examining how microbial imbalances in both male and female reproductive systems contribute to infertility. The review synthesized findings from multiple studies that focused on the genital tract microbiome and its impact on fertility. The research emphasized the importance of understanding the microbiome's influence on reproductive health, particularly in conditions such as polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), endometriosis, and bacterial vaginosis, which are often linked to infertility.
Who was reviewed?
The studies reviewed in this article primarily focused on both male and female reproductive health, with particular attention to the microbiome’s role in infertility. Research on the female genital tract, including the vagina, endometrium, and uterus, was emphasized, as microbial imbalances in these areas are often associated with reproductive disorders. In men, the review covered how gut and urogenital microbiomes affect sperm quality and overall fertility. The review aimed to provide a comprehensive understanding of how microbial communities influence reproductive health and fertility outcomes.
What were the most important findings?
Key findings from this review highlighted the connection between microbial imbalances and infertility in both men and women. In females, the vaginal microbiome’s imbalance, particularly a reduction in Lactobacillus species, was associated with infertility, with bacteria like Gardnerella vaginalis and Atopobium vaginae contributing to conditions such as bacterial vaginosis. These imbalances lead to inflammation and reduced chances of successful implantation during IVF. In males, gut microbiome imbalances were linked to reduced sperm quality, with specific bacteria such as Mycoplasma genitalium being detrimental to sperm motility. The review also found that an unhealthy uterine microbiome contributes to recurrent implantation failure, signaling the need for microbiome management in fertility treatments.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The review’s greatest implications lie in its potential to improve fertility treatments through microbiome-based interventions. The findings suggest that microbiome analysis could be incorporated into infertility diagnostics, helping healthcare providers identify microbial imbalances that affect fertility. Personalized treatments, including probiotics or targeted antibiotics, could be prescribed to restore microbial balance and improve fertility outcomes, particularly for patients undergoing ART like IVF. This approach could lead to more tailored, effective fertility treatments and better success rates in assisted reproductive technologies, marking a significant shift in fertility care.
Metabolic Profile of Patients with Premature Ovarian Insufficiency
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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This study examines the metabolic profile of women with premature ovarian insufficiency, finding significant changes in lipid and glucose metabolism. The results underscore the importance of early metabolic screening and management to reduce cardiovascular and metabolic risks associated with POI.
What was studied?
This study evaluated the metabolic profile of women with premature ovarian insufficiency (POI), a condition characterized by the loss of ovarian function before the age of 40. POI is associated with hypoestrogenism, amenorrhea, and elevated gonadotropin levels. The study specifically aimed to assess lipid metabolism, insulin resistance, and glucose metabolism in women with POI, and compare these parameters with those of age-matched healthy controls. The study analyzed various metabolic factors, including cholesterol levels, insulin sensitivity, and glucose concentrations, to understand how these factors contribute to the increased cardiovascular and metabolic risks in women with POI.
Who was studied?
The study included 56 women diagnosed with POI and 68 healthy women who served as controls. The mean age of the POI group was 30.7 years, while the control group had a mean age of 27.3 years. The women with POI were diagnosed based on the European Society for Human Reproduction and Embryology (ESHRE) criteria, which included secondary amenorrhea lasting 4-7 months, serum FSH levels greater than 40 IU/L, and estradiol levels lower than 50 pg/mL. The control group consisted of women with regular menstrual cycles and no history of hormonal or metabolic abnormalities. Both groups were matched for body mass index (BMI) to minimize potential confounding factors.
Most important findings
The study found significant differences in lipid and glucose metabolism between women with POI and healthy controls. The POI group had significantly higher total cholesterol (TC), low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C), and high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C) levels compared to the control group. However, triglyceride (TG) levels were similar between the two groups. In terms of glucose metabolism, fasting serum glucose was higher in the POI group, although insulin levels were lower. A significant positive correlation was found between fasting serum glucose and FSH levels in women with POI. Insulin resistance, as measured by the Homeostatic Model Assessment-Insulin Resistance (HOMA-IR), was higher in the POI group, indicating a higher risk of metabolic dysfunction.
Key implications
The findings suggest that women with POI exhibit significant metabolic disturbances, including altered lipid profiles and insulin resistance, which contribute to the higher risk of cardiovascular diseases and metabolic syndrome. These metabolic abnormalities should be considered in the clinical management of POI, with a focus on early screening for cardiovascular risk factors. Hormone replacement therapy (HRT) may be beneficial in addressing some of these metabolic disturbances, but lifestyle interventions such as diet and exercise are also crucial in managing metabolic health in these patients. Further studies are needed to explore the long-term impact of these metabolic disturbances and the efficacy of targeted therapies.
The effect of herbal tea capsule on menopause hot flashes
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal hot flashes are one of the most common and disruptive symptoms that women experience during the transition to menopause. Characterized by sudden sensations of heat, sweating, and flushing, hot flashes can significantly affect a woman’s quality of life, causing sleep disturbances, mood swings, and even long-term health consequences. Understanding the complex mechanisms behind hot flashes, as well as the role of microbiome-targeted therapies, offers new avenues for improving menopausal health.
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This study demonstrates that herbal tea capsules significantly reduce the frequency, duration, and severity of hot flashes in postmenopausal women, offering a promising natural alternative to hormone therapy for managing menopausal symptoms.
What was studied?
This study investigates the effect of herbal tea capsules on reducing hot flashes in postmenopausal women. Researchers conducted a randomized clinical trial with 82 women experiencing hot flashes. One group received 450 mg of herbal tea capsules daily, while the other group received placebo capsules. The study measured the severity, duration, and frequency of hot flashes before, 4 weeks after, and 8 weeks after the intervention to assess the effectiveness of the herbal tea in alleviating menopausal symptoms.
Who was studied?
The study involved 82 women, aged 45 to 60, who had been experiencing hot flashes for at least three months. Participants were randomly assigned to two groups: one receiving herbal tea capsules and the other receiving placebo capsules. The inclusion criteria required participants to have frequent hot flashes, with at least three occurrences per day, and no recent use of hormone therapy or other treatments for menopausal symptoms.
Most important findings
The study found that women who took the herbal tea capsules experienced a significant reduction in the frequency, duration, and severity of their hot flashes compared to the placebo group. After 4 weeks of intervention, the herbal tea group showed a notable improvement in hot flash symptoms, and by the 8-week mark, the reductions were even more significant. The severity and frequency of hot flashes in the herbal tea group decreased dramatically, while the placebo group showed little to no change. These results suggest that herbal tea capsules may be an effective and non-invasive alternative for managing hot flashes in postmenopausal women.
Key implications
The findings of this study highlight the potential of herbal remedies, particularly herbal tea, as a safe, cost-effective, and non-invasive treatment for hot flashes in postmenopausal women. Given the widespread acceptance of herbal products and the concerns about the side effects of hormone therapy, this study provides evidence supporting the use of herbal tea capsules for managing menopausal symptoms. Healthcare providers may consider recommending herbal supplements like these to women seeking natural alternatives for alleviating hot flashes and improving their quality of life during menopause.
Comparative Effect of Nigella Sativa+ Black Pepper and Letrozole + Tamoxifen on Female Infertility in Women with Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome: A Randomized Clinical Trial
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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A randomized clinical trial found Nigella sativa plus black pepper significantly improved pregnancy rates and reproductive parameters versus letrozole plus tamoxifen in infertile women with PCOS, with comparable safety.
What was studied?
This randomized, double-blind clinical trial investigated the comparative efficacy of a herbal regimen, Nigella sativa (black seed) combined with black pepper, versus standard pharmacological ovulation induction (letrozole plus tamoxifen) in treating infertility among women with polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS). Over three menstrual cycles, participants received either the herbal combination or the pharmaceutical agents during days 3–7 of their cycle. The primary outcomes measured were endometrial thickness, dominant follicle size, and follicle count, as assessed by transvaginal ultrasound. The secondary outcomes included pregnancy rates and incidence of ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome (OHSS). The study aimed to determine whether the herbal regimen could offer a comparable or superior alternative to standard pharmacological treatments, with potential implications for safety, cost, and patient acceptability.
Who was studied?
The study enrolled 90 infertile women with PCOS, aged 18 to 42 years, who were referred to an infertility clinic associated with Jahrom University of Medical Sciences, Iran. Participants were diagnosed with PCOS according to the Rotterdam criteria, requiring two out of three features: oligo/amenorrhea, clinical or biochemical hyperandrogenism, and polycystic ovaries on ultrasound. Exclusion criteria included underlying medical conditions (e.g., endocrine disorders, liver/renal disease), abnormal laboratory results, and prior or ongoing use of fertility medications or relevant surgeries. Rigorous randomization and double-blinding ensured comparability between the intervention (Nigella sativa + black pepper) and control (letrozole + tamoxifen) groups, which were closely matched for age, BMI, and baseline hormonal profiles.
Most important findings
The intervention group (Nigella sativa + black pepper) demonstrated a significantly higher pregnancy rate compared to the letrozole + tamoxifen group. By the 12th day of the menstrual cycle, the herbal group also exhibited greater endometrial thickness and dominant follicle size, as well as increased follicle numbers, all with statistically significant differences. Importantly, the incidence of OHSS did not differ significantly between groups, suggesting that the herbal regimen did not increase the risk of this notable adverse effect. While the study did not directly assess microbiome composition, it is notable that both Nigella sativa and black pepper possess well-documented antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties, which may beneficially influence the metabolic and inflammatory milieu characteristic of PCOS, a condition that has been linked in other research to alterations in the gut and reproductive tract microbiota. The study also noted a significant reduction in serum LH levels in the herbal group, which is relevant given the role of LH/FSH imbalance in PCOS pathogenesis.
Key implications
This study suggests that Nigella sativa combined with black pepper may serve as an effective, low-cost, and low-side-effect alternative to standard pharmaceutical ovulation induction in infertile women with PCOS. The herbal regimen improved pregnancy rates and key reproductive parameters, with a safety profile comparable to conventional agents. The findings support further research into the mechanisms of action, including possible modulation of metabolic and inflammatory pathways relevant to PCOS and potentially mediated by the microbiome. If corroborated by larger and longer-term studies, these results could expand the therapeutic options for PCOS-related infertility, particularly where accessibility, cost, or side-effect profiles limit the use of standard medications.
Intermittent Fasting and Weight Management at Menopause
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Intermittent fasting improves weight, insulin sensitivity, and cardiovascular health in postmenopausal women, offering a promising non-pharmacological strategy for managing metabolic disorders.
What was studied?
This review assessed the impact of intermittent fasting (IF) on weight management and overall health in postmenopausal women. It focused on how different IF protocols, such as time-restricted feeding, alternate-day fasting, and the 5:2 method, affect metabolic health, weight control, insulin sensitivity, hormonal balance, and inflammation in women post-menopause. The review aimed to evaluate the potential benefits of IF in managing menopause-associated conditions, particularly metabolic syndrome, cardiovascular risk, and obesity, which are prevalent in postmenopausal women.
Who was studied?
The review consolidated findings from various studies involving postmenopausal women, typically aged between 45 and 65 years, who are at a heightened risk of developing metabolic conditions due to hormonal changes that occur during and after menopause. These women often experience significant weight gain, insulin resistance, and an increased risk of cardiovascular disease, making them a key demographic for evaluating non-pharmacological interventions like intermittent fasting. The studies included clinical trials and observational studies that explored the effects of IF protocols on metabolic health, specifically in postmenopausal women.
Most important findings
The review demonstrated that intermittent fasting (IF) could provide significant metabolic benefits for postmenopausal women, particularly in managing weight gain and improving insulin sensitivity. Studies indicated that IF could help reduce visceral fat and overall body weight, with improvements in metabolic biomarkers such as glucose levels, insulin sensitivity, and lipid profiles. Additionally, IF was found to influence hormonal levels, potentially reducing insulin and cortisol spikes, which are crucial for managing menopause-related metabolic disturbances. The positive impact of IF extended to cardiovascular health, where improvements in blood pressure and lipid profiles were observed. Furthermore, preliminary evidence suggested that IF could enhance cognitive function by improving brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), supporting neuronal health. Although promising, the review also highlighted the need for further research into the long-term effects of IF on bone health and its interaction with hormone replacement therapy (HRT), as these aspects were not comprehensively studied.
Key implications
The findings of this review suggest that intermittent fasting may be a beneficial non-pharmacological intervention for managing menopause-related metabolic and cardiovascular risks in women. IF provides a promising strategy to address obesity, insulin resistance, and other metabolic disorders without relying on medication. Its ability to improve hormonal balance, reduce inflammation, and potentially enhance cognitive function makes it a valuable tool for postmenopausal women. However, the review also emphasizes the need for individualized approaches to IF, as its effectiveness may vary based on the woman’s health status and adherence levels. Further research is required to explore its long-term impact, particularly regarding bone health, and to determine how it interacts with other therapeutic options such as HRT.
Menopausal Hot Flashes: A Concise Review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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This review synthesizes current evidence on menopausal hot flashes, focusing on neuroendocrine mechanisms, genetic factors, and a stepwise, personalized treatment approach, emphasizing new targets such as the KNDy neuronal system and CGRP for future therapies.
What was reviewed?
This comprehensive review article synthesizes current knowledge on menopausal hot flashes (HFs), focusing on epidemiology, pathophysiology, risk factors, and a stepwise approach to management. The review covers a spectrum of treatment options, including hormonal, nonhormonal, and alternative therapies, and highlights recent research on neuropeptides and genetic factors. Special emphasis is placed on the neuroendocrine mechanisms underlying HFs, such as the roles of estrogen deficiency, serotonin, norepinephrine, and the kisspeptin-neurokinin B-dynorphin (KNDy) neuronal system, alongside the potential involvement of calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP). The review integrates findings from epidemiological studies, clinical trials, and mechanistic research, providing clinicians with an updated framework for understanding and managing HFs.
Who was reviewed?
The article synthesizes findings from numerous population-based studies, meta-analyses, clinical trials, and basic science investigations involving peri- and postmenopausal women worldwide. The review draws on data from diverse geographic populations, including Indian, Turkish, Australian, European, North American, South American, and Asian cohorts, to frame the global prevalence and heterogeneity of HFs. Evidence is also incorporated from genetic association studies, neuroendocrine research in both human and animal models, and clinical trials assessing pharmacologic and nonpharmacologic treatments. Special consideration is given to subgroups such as women with breast cancer and those with specific contraindications to hormone replacement therapy.
Most important findings
Hot flashes affect approximately 85% of menopausal women, with duration and severity varying widely by geography, genetics, and lifestyle. Obesity, African descent, lower socioeconomic status, premenstrual syndrome, sedentary lifestyle, and smoking are consistently associated risk factors. Genetic variants, particularly in the tachykinin receptor 3 (NK3R) gene, have emerged as key contributors to vasomotor symptom susceptibility, offering potential targets for personalized therapy. The pathophysiology of HFs centers on hypothalamic thermoregulatory dysfunction, with estrogen deficiency, altered serotonin and norepinephrine signaling, and activation of the KNDy neuronal system (notably neurokinin B) all implicated. The review highlights the role of CGRP, a potent vasodilator, in mediating peripheral symptoms of HFs, underlining the complex neuropeptide interplay. Standard management prioritizes hormonal replacement therapy (HRT) for moderate-to-severe HFs, with selective serotonin and norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs/SNRIs) as effective nonhormonal alternatives. Gabapentin and other agents are reserved for specific scenarios or refractory cases. Novel therapies under investigation include neurokinin 3 receptor antagonists and stellate ganglion block. While alternative therapies (such as acupuncture and plant-based treatments) show promise in small studies, robust evidence remains limited.
Key implications
The review underscores the multifactorial, neuroendocrine basis of menopausal hot flashes, highlighting opportunities for targeted interventions beyond conventional HRT. The emerging roles of neuropeptides such as neurokinin B and CGRP, as well as genetic susceptibility loci, provide fertile ground for future research and development of individualized therapies. Clinicians are advised to adopt a stepwise, patient-centered approach to management, balancing symptom severity, comorbidities, and patient preferences. The integration of nonhormonal and alternative therapies may further expand treatment options, especially for women with contraindications to HRT. For microbiome researchers and clinicians, the article’s neuroendocrine focus suggests indirect but important avenues for exploring gut-brain axis and microbial modulation of neuropeptide pathways in menopausal symptomatology.
The effects of vitamin D and calcium on primary dysmenorrhea: a systematic review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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Vitamin D and calcium supplementation can significantly reduce primary dysmenorrhea symptoms and reliance on analgesics. The inverse relationship between serum vitamin D and calcium levels and dysmenorrhea severity supports their use as effective adjunct therapies.
What was studied?
This review aimed to assess the effects of vitamin D and calcium supplementation on primary dysmenorrhea. Primary dysmenorrhea is characterized by painful menstrual cramps that occur in the absence of any pelvic pathology. The review involved an analysis of studies published between 2010 and 2020, focusing on the relationship between serum levels of vitamin D and calcium and the severity of dysmenorrhea. Various studies were examined that included interventions with either vitamin D, calcium, or a combination of both, to determine their impact on reducing pain and the reliance on analgesics during menstruation.
Who was studied?
The studies included in the review involved women of reproductive age who experienced primary dysmenorrhea. Participants had regular cycles and were not diagnosed with secondary dysmenorrhea or underlying reproductive disorders such as endometriosis. A total of 2,774 participants were included across the 17 studies, most of whom had a normal body mass index (BMI). These participants received vitamin D and/or calcium supplements, and their dysmenorrhea severity was assessed using various tools such as the Visual Analog Scale (VAS) or Numeric Rating Scale (NRS).
Most important findings
The review found a significant inverse relationship between serum vitamin D and calcium levels and the severity of primary dysmenorrhea. Specifically, low serum levels of vitamin D were associated with more severe menstrual pain. Supplementation with vitamin D and calcium led to a reduction in pain severity, with several studies reporting that participants who received these supplements experienced a reduction in their reliance on non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs). In some studies, high-dose vitamin D (e.g., 50,000 IU weekly) and calcium (1,200 mg daily) were found to significantly alleviate dysmenorrhea symptoms, improving overall quality of life for the participants. The review also highlighted the role of vitamin D in regulating inflammatory cytokines and calcium in uterine muscle contractions, both of which contribute to menstrual pain.
Key implications
The findings suggest that vitamin D and calcium supplementation could serve as an effective non-pharmacological treatment for primary dysmenorrhea. These supplements not only help in reducing pain intensity but also decrease the need for conventional pain relief medications, such as NSAIDs, which can have adverse side effects with long-term use. Given the widespread prevalence of vitamin D and calcium deficiency among women with dysmenorrhea, supplementation may offer a simple and safe alternative therapy for pain management.
The 2020 Menopausal Hormone Therapy Guidelines
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) is one of the most effective treatments for women experiencing the symptoms of menopause, particularly vasomotor symptoms such as hot flashes and night sweats. But its benefits go beyond just symptom management. HRT can also play a key role in improving vaginal health by alleviating dryness and discomfort, which are common complaints among women in menopause. Additionally, it helps prevent bone loss, significantly reducing the risk of osteoporosis and fractures, which are more common after menopause. Despite its many benefits, HRT is not one-size-fits-all; it’s essential to tailor treatment based on individual health profiles, taking into account the risks like breast cancer, blood clots, and heart disease that come with prolonged use.
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The guideline links menopausal hormone therapy guidelines and vaginal microbiome care to safer symptom control, better GSM outcomes, and lower UTI risk through local estrogen, with timing and route choices that manage vascular and endometrial risk.
What was reviewed?
This guideline review explains how menopausal hormone therapy guidelines and vaginal microbiome evidence guide modern care across symptoms, prevention, and safety. The document defines baseline evaluation, sets clear indications and contraindications, and compares routes, doses, and combinations. It favors individualized therapy by symptom burden and risk, supports transdermal estradiol to limit thrombotic and metabolic effects, and links timing of initiation to cardiovascular outcomes. It also details care for genitourinary syndrome of menopause, notes that low-dose vaginal estrogen restores flora and acidity with minimal systemic absorption, and shows that systemic estrogen does not prevent recurrent urinary tract infections. The guidance stresses shared decisions, regular review, and careful oncologic input when breast cancer history or aromatase inhibitors are present.
Who was reviewed?
The guideline targets peri- and postmenopausal women with vasomotor symptoms, sleep and mood complaints, and genitourinary syndrome of menopause, including patients who need contraception or menstrual control during the transition. It covers women at higher risk of venous thromboembolism, stroke, or cardiometabolic disease who may benefit from transdermal estradiol, and women with premature ovarian insufficiency who need longer replacement. It also addresses women with prior breast cancer who require non-estrogen first-line options and those with recurrent UTIs who need local therapy that restores the vaginal ecosystem rather than systemic estrogen.
Most important findings
The guideline confirms that systemic menopausal hormone therapy remains the most effective treatment for vasomotor symptoms and improves menopause-specific and global quality of life. It supports the “window of opportunity” in which starting therapy before age 60 or within 10 years of menopause lowers all-cause and cardiovascular mortality, while later starts raise vascular risk. It advises that stroke and venous thromboembolism risks rise with age and oral routes, and it therefore prefers transdermal estradiol or lower doses when risk accumulates, with absolute stroke risk in younger starters remaining very low. For the endometrium, the guidance requires adequate progestogen exposure in women with a uterus and allows levonorgestrel IUS with systemic estrogen to control bleeding and protect the lining during the transition.
In GSM, the guideline states that topical vaginal estrogen (cream, tablet, ring) restores lactobacillus-dominant flora, increases epithelial maturation, and lowers vaginal pH, which eases dryness, dyspareunia, urgency, and recurrent UTIs. It notes minimal systemic absorption with low-dose vaginal estrogen but urges oncologist input for women on aromatase inhibitors. Additionally, It adds that systemic estrogen does not prevent recurrent UTIs, while local estrogen does, and it supports DHEA and ospemifene when estrogen is not suitable. It also observes that moisturizers and lubricants help symptoms yet do not rebuild the internal environment, which reinforces a microbiome-directed role for local estrogen. These points provide concrete microbiome-linked signatures: lactobacillus recovery with local estrogen, sustained acidic pH, and reduced UTI risk without systemic exposure.
Key implications
Clinicians should match route and regimen to risk, favor transdermal estradiol in women with vascular or metabolic risk, and ensure consistent endometrial protection with progestogen or levonorgestrel IUS. You should start therapy near menopause for vascular safety and avoid starting late for primary prevention alone. In GSM and recurrent UTIs, you should prioritize local estrogen to restore a lactobacillus-dominant vaginal microbiome, reserve systemic estrogen for broader symptoms, and consider DHEA or ospemifene when estrogen is unsuitable. You should involve oncology for women on aromatase inhibitors, monitor bleeding patterns, and reassess dose and route regularly. These steps align symptom relief, safety, and vaginal microbiome health in daily care.
Menopausal Hot Flashes: A Review of Physiology and Biosociocultural Perspective on Methods of Assessment
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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The review explores the physiological and cultural complexities of menopausal hot flashes, highlighting genetic, dietary, and cultural factors. It discusses emerging research areas like brain imaging and genetic polymorphisms, which could lead to better-targeted treatments.
What was reviewed?
The article presents a detailed review of menopausal hot flashes, examining both the physiological and biosociocultural factors that contribute to this common menopausal symptom. It highlights the lack of clarity regarding the exact causes and mechanisms of hot flashes, despite decades of research. The paper discusses how the understanding of hot flashes has expanded to include sociocultural aspects, such as the influence of diet and cultural perceptions, in addition to the biological factors like hormone levels. The review also addresses the various methods used in hot flash research, including neuroimaging and genetic studies.
Who was reviewed?
The paper primarily focuses on studies of menopausal women from both Western and Asian populations. It compares the prevalence of hot flashes in these groups, noting that women in Western countries, particularly the U.S., report more frequent symptoms than those in Asian countries like Japan. The review also considers how cultural factors affect the reporting of hot flashes, as well as how genetic variations, such as the ability to metabolize soy isoflavones into equol, contribute to the experience of hot flashes. Women from different cultural backgrounds, as well as those undergoing treatments like hormone therapy, are central to the studies reviewed.
Most important findings
The review finds that hot flash prevalence varies significantly across cultures, with Asian women, particularly in Japan, reporting fewer hot flashes than their Western counterparts. Dietary factors, such as higher soy intake in Japan, appear to play a role in this difference, as soy isoflavones have estrogen-like effects. Genetic factors also contribute to hot flash variability, with some women being "equol producers" who metabolize soy into a biologically active form that may help reduce hot flashes. Emerging research using neuroimaging and genetic analysis is shedding light on the brain mechanisms and genetic polymorphisms that could influence the severity and occurrence of hot flashes.
Key implications
The review underscores the need for more nuanced research into hot flashes that considers both biological and cultural influences. It suggests that treatments for hot flashes should be personalized, taking into account cultural differences in symptom reporting and the role of diet. The development of better research tools, including neuroimaging and genetic studies, is crucial for uncovering the mechanisms behind hot flashes. Such advancements could lead to more targeted and effective treatments, especially in light of the complexities involved in how hot flashes are experienced and managed across different populations.
High Prevalence of Nickel Allergy in an Overweight Female Population: A Microbial Metallomics Commentary
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Microbial Metallomics
Microbial Metallomics
Microbial Metallomics is the study of how microorganisms acquire, use, regulate, and transform metals in any biological or environmental context.
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Low‑Nickel Diet (LNiD)
Low‑Nickel Diet (LNiD)
A low-nickel diet (LNiD) is a therapeutic dietary intervention that eliminates high-nickel foods, primarily plant-based sources such as legumes, nuts, whole grains, and cocoa, to reduce systemic nickel exposure. It is clinically validated for managing systemic nickel allergy syndrome (SNAS) and nickel-induced eczema. Its relevance is well-established in microbiome modulation, with studies demonstrating clinical benefits in conditions such as endometriosis, fibromyalgia, irritable bowel syndrome, and GERD.
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Overweight women show high rates of nickel allergy and benefit metabolically from a low-nickel diet. The study suggests a role for nickel-selective microbes and metallomic drivers of obesity and inflammation, particularly in perimenopausal women with metabolic syndrome.
What was studied?
This pilot observational analysis examined the high prevalence of nickel allergy in overweight adults and the potential impact of a low-nickel diet on body mass index (BMI) and waist circumference. The focus keyphrase nickel allergy in overweight females appears directly in this section, as the study centers on metabolic and inflammatory profiles in individuals with elevated BMI who exhibit delayed hypersensitivity to nickel. Drawing from patch-test results, metabolic data, and dietary intervention outcomes, the investigators evaluated whether nickel-sensitive overweight subjects—especially women—display a distinctive clinical pattern. The study connects systemic nickel exposure not only to dermatologic and gastrointestinal symptoms but also to metabolic derangements and potential microbiome-related mechanisms, including the role of nickel-dependent bacteria such as Helicobacter pylori (page 6), which may promote inflammation and alter gut energy extraction.
Who was studied?
Eighty-seven overweight adults (BMI >26 kg/m²) were consecutively enrolled at an Italian Red Cross preventive health program. The population was predominantly female (72 of 87; 82.8%), enabling more detailed analysis in women. Laboratory, anthropometric, and metabolic assessments were collected for all participants, including liver enzymes, glucose, insulin, lipid profile, and HOMA-IR (page 4). Patch testing for nickel sulfate identified 45 nickel-allergic individuals, with the overwhelming majority being women (43 of 45). Among nickel-allergic participants, 43 women and 2 men initiated a low-nickel diet. Twenty-four women completed the 24-week follow-up, permitting analysis of longitudinal anthropometric outcomes.
Most important findings
In this cohort, nickel allergy appeared substantially more common in overweight women than in the general population, and higher still when metabolic syndrome and hepatic steatosis were present. Individuals adhering to a low-nickel diet demonstrated clinically relevant reductions in BMI, waist circumference, and body fat. Mechanistically, the study highlights intersecting inflammatory and microbiome pathways: IL-17–driven immune activity, menopausal immune shifts, and nickel-dependent bacteria such as H. pylori, which may collectively intensify metabolic dysfunction. The findings suggest that excess dietary nickel may amplify systemic inflammation and alter gut microbial composition, thereby contributing to obesity-associated phenotypes.
Domain
Condensed Insight
Nickel allergy prevalence
Overweight women showed a 59.7% nickel allergy rate versus 12.5% in the general female population. Prevalence increased to 61.1% in those with metabolic syndrome and liver steatosis.
Anthropometric response to low-nickel diet
After 24 weeks, nickel-allergic overweight women experienced a mean BMI reduction of 4.2 ± 0.5 kg/m² and a waist decrease of 11.7 ± 0.6 cm, with parallel declines in body fat percentage.
Inflammatory mechanisms
Obesity and nickel allergy both upregulate IL-17; menopausal estrogen decline further enhances Th17 activity, potentially intensifying systemic inflammation in nickel-sensitive women.
Microbiome-related effects
Nickel supports growth of specific bacteria, including H. pylori. High dietary nickel may favor nickel-dependent gut microbes, promoting inflammation and metabolic imbalance; low-nickel diets may aid eradication.
Key implications
This study suggests that nickel allergy may be substantially more common in overweight females than in the general population, and that reducing dietary nickel could meaningfully improve anthropometric outcomes in nickel-sensitive individuals. The combination of inflammatory pathways, estrogen-related shifts in IL-17 biology, and nickel-dependent microbial ecology positions nickel exposure as a possible modifiable factor in obesity and metabolic dysfunction. Although preliminary and limited by sample size and lack of control group, these findings imply that clinicians addressing unexplained weight gain, metabolic syndrome, gastrointestinal symptoms, or systemic inflammation—especially in perimenopausal women—may consider evaluating nickel sensitivity and dietary nickel intake.
Circulating interleukin-8 and tumor necrosis factor-α are associated with hot flashes in healthy postmenopausal women
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal hot flashes are one of the most common and disruptive symptoms that women experience during the transition to menopause. Characterized by sudden sensations of heat, sweating, and flushing, hot flashes can significantly affect a woman’s quality of life, causing sleep disturbances, mood swings, and even long-term health consequences. Understanding the complex mechanisms behind hot flashes, as well as the role of microbiome-targeted therapies, offers new avenues for improving menopausal health.
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This study shows that the severity of hot flashes in postmenopausal women correlates with increased levels of pro-inflammatory cytokines, particularly IL-8 and TNF-α. These findings suggest a connection between hot flashes and systemic inflammation, which may contribute to chronic diseases in this population.
What was studied?
This study investigates the relationship between hot flashes and circulating pro-inflammatory cytokines, specifically interleukin-8 (IL-8) and tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α), in healthy postmenopausal women. Researchers aimed to understand whether the intensity of hot flashes correlates with levels of these inflammatory markers, which are associated with systemic inflammation. The study measured cytokine levels and leukocyte numbers across different severity groups of hot flashes, ranging from none to severe, to examine potential inflammatory links.
Who was studied?
The study included 202 healthy postmenopausal women aged 45 to 60 years, with participants divided into four groups based on their hot flash severity: none (Group N), mild (Group m), moderate (Group M), and severe (Group S). The women were selected based on specific inclusion criteria, including having no significant chronic systemic diseases and a BMI between 18 and 30 kg/m². The study controlled for factors such as age, body mass index (BMI), menopausal duration, and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) levels to focus on the association between hot flash severity and cytokine levels.
Most important findings
The study found significant associations between the severity of hot flashes and elevated levels of IL-8 and TNF-α. Specifically, women with severe hot flashes had 37.19% higher IL-8 and 51.27% higher TNF-α levels compared to those with no hot flashes, indicating a positive relationship between hot flash severity and these pro-inflammatory cytokines. Mild and moderate hot flash groups did not show significant differences in cytokine levels. The results suggest that hot flashes may be linked to low-grade systemic inflammation, which could contribute to the development of cardiovascular disease and other systemic conditions in postmenopausal women.
Key implications
The study's findings suggest that hot flashes could be a marker for systemic inflammation in postmenopausal women, potentially increasing the risk of developing chronic diseases such as cardiovascular issues and insulin resistance. The elevated levels of IL-8 and TNF-α associated with severe hot flashes highlight the need for targeted treatments to manage both the symptoms of hot flashes and the underlying inflammatory process. Understanding the inflammatory mechanisms behind hot flashes could lead to more effective interventions, potentially improving the overall health outcomes for postmenopausal women.
A cross-sectional pilot study of birth mode and vaginal microbiota in reproductive-age women Original paper
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This study suggests that birth mode may influence the vaginal microbiota, with C-section delivery potentially linked to a less protective microbiome and higher odds of Molecular-BV in adulthood.
What was studied?
This study explored the relationship between birth mode (C-section or vaginal delivery) and the vaginal microbiota in adult women. It aimed to understand whether the microbiota's composition in reproductive-age women was influenced by their birth mode. Vaginal microbiota was assessed using amplicon sequencing of the 16S rRNA gene, which was then categorized into distinct community state types (CSTs).
Who was studied?
The study included 144 adult women, previously part of two different U.S. cohort studies. These women were contacted again to participate in the current research, and a brief survey was administered. The participants were asked about their birth mode and other relevant personal health factors. Vaginal microbiota from a single sample per participant was analyzed, focusing on the relative abundance of Lactobacillus species and the presence of molecular bacterial vaginosis (Molecular-BV).
Most important findings
The study found a non-significant trend suggesting that women born by C-section may have an increased likelihood of having a vaginal microbiota composition indicative of Molecular-BV, characterized by a low abundance of Lactobacillus spp. The presence of the bacterium Prevotella bivia was notably associated with C-section birth. In the study with the larger sample size (88 women), C-section delivery appeared to triple the odds of Molecular-BV compared to vaginal delivery, while the smaller study showed no such association. These findings suggest a possible long-lasting effect of birth mode on vaginal microbiota, but the study's limitations, such as small sample size and varying participant characteristics, warrant caution.
Key implications
The findings underscore the potential long-term impact of birth mode on vaginal microbiota and highlight a connection between C-section delivery and the reduced presence of Lactobacillus, a protective bacterium in the vagina. This could have implications for women's reproductive health, including the risk of bacterial vaginosis (BV) and its associated complications, such as STIs and adverse pregnancy outcomes. However, given the study's limitations, further longitudinal research is needed to confirm these findings and explore the biological mechanisms behind them.
Association between cigarette smoking and the risk of dysmenorrhea: A meta-analysis of observational studies
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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This meta-analysis demonstrates that cigarette smoking increases the risk of dysmenorrhea, with both current and former smokers showing a significantly higher likelihood of experiencing menstrual pain. Smoking cessation could be an effective intervention to alleviate symptoms.
What was studied?
This meta-analysis examined the association between cigarette smoking and the risk of dysmenorrhea, which refers to painful menstrual cramps. The analysis included 24 observational studies with a total of 27,091 participants. The aim was to synthesize previous findings on the relationship between smoking (both current and former) and the prevalence of dysmenorrhea, using statistical tools to assess the strength and consistency of this link. This is crucial as dysmenorrhea affects a large percentage of women, and identifying modifiable risk factors could lead to better prevention and management strategies.
Who was studied?
The study reviewed 24 observational studies involving women of reproductive age from diverse regions, including Europe, Asia, North America, and Oceania. The participants were categorized into smokers (current and former) and non-smokers, with ages ranging from 12 to 59 years. These studies varied in design, including case-control, cohort, and cross-sectional studies. The focus was on women who reported experiencing dysmenorrhea, with some studies specifying primary dysmenorrhea (painful menstruation without underlying pathology) and others reporting any form of menstrual pain.
Most important findings
The pooled analysis indicated that cigarette smokers were 1.45 times more likely to experience dysmenorrhea than non-smokers. Current smokers were 1.50 times more likely to suffer from dysmenorrhea compared to those who had never smoked. Former smokers had a 1.31-fold increased risk compared to non-smokers. Subgroup analysis showed that the association was strongest in cross-sectional studies and for primary dysmenorrhea, with smokers having a 56% increased likelihood of developing primary dysmenorrhea.
Key implications
The study strongly suggests that smoking, both current and former, significantly increases the risk of dysmenorrhea. This finding highlights the potential for smoking cessation programs as an intervention to reduce the prevalence of dysmenorrhea among women of reproductive age. The consistent association observed across different study types and regions underscores the relevance of smoking as a modifiable risk factor for this condition. Health education campaigns focused on the dangers of smoking and its impact on menstrual health could be instrumental in reducing the burden of dysmenorrhea.
Menopausal hormone therapy increases the risk of gallstones: Health Insurance Database in South Korea (HISK)-based cohort study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) is one of the most effective treatments for women experiencing the symptoms of menopause, particularly vasomotor symptoms such as hot flashes and night sweats. But its benefits go beyond just symptom management. HRT can also play a key role in improving vaginal health by alleviating dryness and discomfort, which are common complaints among women in menopause. Additionally, it helps prevent bone loss, significantly reducing the risk of osteoporosis and fractures, which are more common after menopause. Despite its many benefits, HRT is not one-size-fits-all; it’s essential to tailor treatment based on individual health profiles, taking into account the risks like breast cancer, blood clots, and heart disease that come with prolonged use.
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This study shows that menopausal hormone therapy increases the risk of gallstones, especially with topical estrogen and tibolone. However, no increased risk for gallbladder cancer was found. These findings underscore the need for caution in prescribing hormone therapy, particularly for women with higher gallstone risk factors.
What was studied?
The study examined whether menopausal hormone therapy (MHT) increases the risk of developing gallstones and gallbladder cancer. It utilized data from the Korea National Health Insurance Corporation between 2002 and 2019. Participants were divided into MHT and non-MHT groups, and MHT users were further subdivided based on the type of hormone therapy they received, including tibolone, combined estrogen plus progestin, oral estrogen alone, and topical estrogen. The primary outcomes measured were the incidence of gallstones and gallbladder cancer in these groups.
Who was studied?
The study included over 1.3 million women, with 381,711 women using MHT and 1,004,034 women in the non-MHT group. Participants were aged 40 years or older and had undergone menopause by the time of inclusion. Women who had a history of gallbladder disease, cancer, or who had undergone a cholecystectomy were excluded from the analysis. The study followed these women for an average period of 11 to 13 years to determine the risk of gallstones and gallbladder cancer associated with different types of MHT.
Most important findings
The study found that all types of MHT, including tibolone, increased the risk of gallstones, with hazard ratios (HR) ranging from 1.146 to 1.602 for different hormone therapies. The highest risk was observed in the topical estrogen group (HR: 1.602). Tibolone, which had not been extensively studied in previous research, was also found to increase the risk of gallstones. No significant increase in the risk of gallbladder cancer was observed across any hormone therapy group. Furthermore, age, obesity, and smoking were significant factors that influenced the risk of gallstones, with higher risks observed in older women, those with a higher body mass index (BMI), and current smokers.
Key implications
The findings of this large-scale cohort study suggest that all types of MHT, including tibolone and various estrogen formulations, significantly increase the risk of gallstones. This highlights the importance of considering these risks when prescribing hormone therapy, particularly for women with risk factors such as obesity or older age. While the study did not find an increased risk of gallbladder cancer associated with MHT, the relationship between sex hormones and gallbladder cancer warrants further investigation. Clinicians should exercise caution when prescribing MHT, especially in women at higher risk for gallstones, and consider alternatives or closer monitoring for these patients.
Physical Activity and Exercise Improve Quality of Life in Endometriosis: A Systematic Review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This review found that physical activity and exercise significantly improved pain, emotional well-being, and perceived control in women with endometriosis, supporting their use as safe and effective complementary therapies.
What was reviewed?
This systematic review and meta-analysis evaluated the effectiveness and safety of physical activity (PA) and exercise as adjunctive therapies for women with endometriosis. The authors synthesized data from six randomized controlled trials (RCTs) comprising 251 participants to determine whether structured exercise interventions could alleviate symptoms such as pain, poor quality of life, pelvic floor dysfunction, and bone loss. Despite methodological heterogeneity and incomplete reporting in several studies, a meta-analysis of two RCTs was feasible and focused on the impact of exercise on three domains of the Endometriosis Health Profile-30 (EHP-30): pain, control and powerlessness, and emotional well-being.
Who was reviewed?
The review population consisted of women aged 16 to 51 years with diagnosed endometriosis. Three RCTs required laparoscopic confirmation of endometriosis, while others did not disclose diagnostic criteria. Participants included women with varying disease severity, some with chronic pelvic pain or prior surgical or hormonal treatments. Interventions ranged from Hatha yoga and progressive muscle relaxation to aerobic and resistance exercises, virtual reality (VR) training, and telehealth-based exercise programs.
Most important findings
Across the included trials, physical activity and exercise were generally well-tolerated and resulted in meaningful improvements in multiple domains relevant to endometriosis:
Outcome
Finding
Quality of life
Meta-analysis showed significant improvements in pain (WMD -20.22), control and powerlessness (WMD -23.07), and emotional well-being (WMD -14.35).
Pain reduction
Studies showed reduced daily pain levels in yoga groups and improvements in VAS pain scores, though some did not reach statistical significance.
Mental health
Progressive muscle relaxation and supervised exercise improved mental health scores on SF-36 and EHP-30 scales.
Pelvic floor dysfunction
Exercise had positive, though inconsistently significant, effects on dyspareunia and related symptoms.
Bone mineral density
One study found that exercise mitigated GnRH agonist-induced femoral neck bone loss.
Key implications
This review highlights that physical activity and structured exercise interventions can significantly enhance quality of life, particularly by alleviating pain and improving emotional well-being, for women with endometriosis. The findings suggest that exercise may serve as a complementary, non-pharmacologic therapy with systemic anti-inflammatory and neuromodulatory effects. However, the evidence base remains limited by small sample sizes, inconsistent outcome measures, short follow-up durations, and variable intervention types. The review underscores the urgent need for large-scale, standardized RCTs evaluating patient-centered outcomes using validated tools to better characterize optimal exercise modalities and dosing strategies in endometriosis care.
The Role ofNutrient Supplementation to Prevent Perinatal Depression. A Narrative Review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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This systematic review explores the impact of diet and nutritional supplementation on perinatal depression (PPD), highlighting protective effects from healthy dietary patterns, omega-3s, and micronutrients like Vitamin D and selenium, but emphasizes the need for further research.
What was reviewed?
This article presents a systematic review that examines the relationship between dietary intake and the risk of perinatal depression (depression during pregnancy or postpartum). The review investigates various nutritional factors, such as adherence to specific dietary patterns, the intake of essential nutrients, and supplementation. The objective was to assess whether certain dietary factors, including polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs), vitamins, calcium, and other micronutrients, could influence the risk of developing perinatal depression.
Who was reviewed?
The review considered a wide range of studies involving pregnant women or women within the first year postpartum. The studies reviewed included cohort studies, randomized controlled trials (RCTs), cross-sectional studies, and case-control studies. The studies focused on different dietary patterns and nutrient intakes, and how these factors related to the development of depression during pregnancy and the postpartum period.
What were the most important findings?
The review found mixed evidence regarding the role of diet and nutrition in perinatal depression. Several studies, particularly those focusing on healthy dietary patterns, multivitamin supplementation, and omega-3 fatty acids, showed protective effects against perinatal depression. These findings were most evident in women who adhered to a healthy diet, which was associated with lower depression scores. PUFA supplementation was also found to be beneficial, with some studies indicating improvements in depressive symptoms, although the results were inconsistent. Vitamin D, calcium, zinc, and possibly selenium intake were linked to a reduced risk of perinatal depression, with selenium supplementation showing a protective effect in some cohort studies. However, the evidence was inconclusive due to methodological limitations and variations in study design. Despite promising associations, the review concluded that more robust, longitudinal studies are needed to draw definitive conclusions about the impact of diet on perinatal depression.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The greatest implication of this review is that nutrition could be a modifiable risk factor for perinatal depression, offering potential preventive and therapeutic strategies. Given the rising prevalence of perinatal depression, particularly in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), incorporating nutritional interventions, such as omega-3 supplementation and promoting adherence to healthy dietary patterns, could be a cost-effective approach to improving maternal mental health. The review suggests that while evidence exists linking nutrition and perinatal depression, there is a need for more comprehensive and consistent research, especially in terms of longitudinal studies and better measurement of nutrient intake and depressive symptoms.
Insight into Dysmenorrhea Research from 1992 to 2022: A Bibliometric Analysis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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A bibliometric analysis of dysmenorrhea research from 1992 to 2022 reveals increasing global interest in its pathogenesis, treatment, and functional connectivity. It emphasizes the role of prostaglandins, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, and traditional Chinese medicine in managing the condition.
What was studied?
This bibliometric analysis explores the global research trends and developments in dysmenorrhea over the past 30 years (1992-2022). The study investigates a broad range of publications from the Web of Science, focusing on the pathogenesis, treatment, and self-management strategies for primary dysmenorrhea (PD). The review categorizes the research into major themes, including the epidemiology of the condition, its associated risk factors, and the emerging focus on functional connectivity within the brain's neural networks. The paper also highlights significant contributions from traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) in treating dysmenorrhea, such as acupuncture and moxibustion.
Who was studied?
The analysis includes global studies on dysmenorrhea, with a particular focus on research originating from China, the United States, and Iran. The study investigates a variety of dysmenorrhea-related factors such as pathogenesis, treatment effectiveness, and the prevalence of PD across different age groups, notably in women aged 17–24. The research also explores self-management practices among women experiencing dysmenorrhea, including lifestyle changes, herbal treatments, and the use of non-pharmacological interventions like heating pads and exercise.
Most important findings
The study shows that prostaglandins, specifically PGF2α and PGE2, are widely recognized as the primary mediators in the pathogenesis of PD, causing painful uterine contractions. Functional connectivity studies have become an emerging area of research, linking dysmenorrhea with structural and functional changes in brain regions involved in pain processing. The bibliometric analysis reveals a steady increase in publications related to dysmenorrhea, particularly from China and the United States. Notably, NSAIDs continue to be the most common pharmacological treatment, although a growing body of research supports the use of traditional Chinese medicine, including acupuncture and herbal treatments, as adjunctive therapies. The most significant recent keyword trends include "functional connectivity," "endometriosis," and "herbal medicine."
Key implications
The increasing volume of research on dysmenorrhea highlights the global attention given to this common condition, with particular emphasis on understanding its pathophysiology and effective treatments. The role of traditional Chinese medicine is gaining recognition, but further clinical evidence is needed to substantiate its efficacy compared to conventional treatments. Given the varying prevalence rates, especially in young women, clinicians should consider individualized treatment strategies, including both pharmacological and non-pharmacological options. More research is needed to explore the mechanisms of functional connectivity and its relationship with pain sensitivity in dysmenorrhea.
Prevalence and Impact of Dysmenorrhea on Hispanic Female Adolescent
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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Primary dysmenorrhea is a common and impactful condition affecting young women. This review explores its pathophysiology, symptoms, and treatment options to improve diagnosis and management in clinical practice.
What was studied?
This review article examines primary dysmenorrhea (PD), a common gynecological condition characterized by painful uterine cramps that occur during menstruation in the absence of pelvic pathology. The study highlights the pathophysiology of PD, which involves the increased secretion of prostaglandins F2α (PGF2α) and E2 (PGE2) during the endometrial sloughing phase of menstruation. These prostaglandins trigger uterine contractions and ischemia, causing pain. The article also explores the various physical and psychological symptoms that accompany PD, including headache, nausea, mood disturbances, and fatigue. Additionally, the review covers the impact of PD on the quality of life (QOL) and the effectiveness of different treatment options, including pharmacological and non-pharmacological therapies.
Who was studied?
The article focuses on females of reproductive age, particularly young women aged 18–24, who are most commonly affected by primary dysmenorrhea. PD is often underdiagnosed as many women perceive menstrual pain as a normal part of menstruation and do not seek medical help. The study emphasizes the significant negative impact that PD has on the daily lives of these women, including high rates of absenteeism from school or work, reduced productivity, and a lower quality of life. The review provides insights based on various studies conducted across different populations, including young females from diverse cultural backgrounds.
Most important findings
The pathogenesis of primary dysmenorrhea is mainly driven by elevated levels of prostaglandins, particularly PGF2α and PGE2, which increase myometrial contractions and cause uterine ischemia. This leads to the hyper-sensitization of pain fibers, resulting in menstrual pain. The article also highlights that PD affects a large percentage of women, with 45% to 95% of females in reproductive age experiencing the condition, and 2% to 29% suffering from severe pain. The impact of PD on quality of life is significant, as it contributes to high absenteeism rates from school and work, as well as a decrease in productivity. For treatment, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) and hormonal contraceptives are the first-line options, both of which aim to reduce prostaglandin production. Non-pharmacological interventions like exercise and heat therapy have also been shown to reduce menstrual pain, although evidence on their efficacy is mixed.
Key implications
Primary dysmenorrhea is a widespread and underrecognized condition that significantly impairs the quality of life for many young women. Clinicians must be more proactive in diagnosing and managing PD, offering effective treatment options tailored to individual patient needs. NSAIDs and hormonal contraceptives remain the primary therapies, but non-pharmacological treatments, such as heat therapy and exercise, can be beneficial adjuncts. Furthermore, educating patients about PD, its treatment options, and encouraging shared decision-making between patients and healthcare providers is essential for optimizing patient satisfaction and treatment adherence.
Primary Dysmenorrhea: Pathophysiology, Diagnosis, and Treatment Updates
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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This review explores the pathophysiology, impact, and treatment of primary dysmenorrhea, emphasizing the role of prostaglandins and the significant effects on women’s quality of life. It highlights current pharmacological and non-pharmacological treatment options, suggesting a need for personalized, holistic approaches to management.
What was studied?
The study reviewed primary dysmenorrhea (PD), a common condition affecting many women of reproductive age, characterized by painful menstrual cramps that occur in the absence of pelvic pathology. The pain typically begins just before or at the onset of menstruation and lasts for up to 72 hours. The pathophysiology of PD is primarily driven by the elevated levels of prostaglandins, particularly PGF2α and PGE2, which stimulate uterine contractions and vasoconstriction, leading to ischemia, pain, and the activation of pain fibers. The study also examined how the condition affects quality of life (QOL) and identified various treatment options, including both pharmacological and non-pharmacological interventions. The review highlights the prevalence of PD and the negative impact it has on women’s physical and mental health, often resulting in absenteeism from school or work and impaired daily functioning.
Who was studied?
The review provides insights into primary dysmenorrhea based on research and evidence from a variety of clinical studies involving women of reproductive age who experience menstrual cramps. The studies reviewed primarily focus on young females, many of whom experience the onset of PD shortly after menarche, typically within 6 to 24 months. The review draws on data from diverse ethnic and geographic populations to provide a comprehensive overview of the condition, its impact on life, and the available treatment methods. It also includes various therapeutic interventions, such as nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), hormonal contraceptives, and non-pharmacological approaches like exercise, yoga, and acupuncture.
Most important findings
The primary finding of this study is the significant role of prostaglandins (PGF2α and PGE2) in the pathogenesis of primary dysmenorrhea. Elevated prostaglandin levels in the uterine tissues lead to intense contractions, ischemia, and hypoxia, which cause pain during menstruation. Women with PD experience higher levels of these prostaglandins compared to those without the condition, particularly in the luteal phase of their menstrual cycle. Additionally, the study underscores the broad physical and psychological impact of PD. Symptoms extend beyond pain and include fatigue, headaches, sleep disturbances, nausea, gastrointestinal issues, and emotional disturbances such as anxiety and depression.
Treatment for PD is typically aimed at reducing pain and improving quality of life (QOL). The most commonly recommended pharmacological treatments include NSAIDs and hormonal contraceptives, which help by reducing prostaglandin synthesis and regulating hormonal levels. However, the study emphasizes the need for a personalized approach to treatment, as some women may experience inadequate relief from standard therapies. Non-pharmacological interventions, such as exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and TENS (transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation), also provide relief for many women, but their efficacy varies, and further research is required to confirm their long-term benefits.
Key implications
The review highlights the need for better diagnosis, management, and education around PD. Despite being a common condition, PD is often underreported and inadequately treated. Women frequently endure severe symptoms without seeking medical advice due to embarrassment or the belief that menstrual pain is a natural, unavoidable part of menstruation. The review emphasizes that healthcare providers should focus on early intervention and educate women about available treatments. Additionally, considering the significant impact of PD on QOL, including absenteeism from school and work, healthcare providers must take a more proactive approach in both diagnosing and offering tailored treatment plans. Non-pharmacological interventions should be considered as adjuncts to standard treatments to improve overall patient outcomes, and the efficacy of these therapies should be further explored through well-designed studies.
Vitamin Effects in Primary Dysmenorrhea
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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This review evaluates the potential therapeutic role of vitamins (D, E, B1, C, K) in reducing primary dysmenorrhea symptoms, proposing them as alternatives to NSAIDs, with promising results, particularly in inflammation and oxidative stress modulation.
What was reviewed?
This narrative review explores the potential role of vitamins in the management of primary dysmenorrhea, a common menstrual disorder affecting many women. The authors examined studies focused on vitamin D, E, B1, C, and K supplementation, specifically their anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, and analgesic effects in reducing menstrual pain. The review synthesizes findings from clinical trials published within the last decade, highlighting emerging evidence on how vitamins could serve as alternatives to nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) in managing dysmenorrhea-related pain. The authors also explore the biochemical mechanisms through which these vitamins might alleviate symptoms by modulating inflammatory pathways and oxidative stress.
Who was reviewed?
The review includes data from 13 clinical trials involving women of reproductive age, primarily between 15 and 45 years, diagnosed with primary dysmenorrhea. The subjects were treated with various vitamin supplements, including vitamin D (alone or combined with calcium), vitamin E, vitamin B1, and vitamin C. Studies included randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and double-blind placebo-controlled designs, focusing on pain severity, menstrual symptoms, and overall quality of life. Several studies specifically targeted populations with vitamin deficiencies, particularly vitamin D.
Most important findings
Vitamin D supplementation emerged as particularly beneficial for reducing dysmenorrhea symptoms, likely due to its anti-inflammatory properties. Studies showed that high doses of vitamin D (up to 300,000 IU) led to significant pain reduction, especially in women with vitamin D deficiency. Vitamin E, through its antioxidant properties, also demonstrated effectiveness in alleviating pain and reducing menstrual blood loss. Vitamin B1 (thiamine) was effective in reducing pain severity after two months of supplementation, offering a safer alternative to NSAIDs. Vitamin K, when administered via acupuncture injection, resulted in rapid pain relief. The combination of vitamin E and vitamin C in one study showed improvements in oxidative stress markers, with a significant reduction in dysmenorrhea symptoms.
Key implications
This review highlights the potential for vitamins to serve as viable alternatives or adjuncts to NSAIDs in managing primary dysmenorrhea. Given the concerns about the side effects of long-term NSAID use, particularly gastrointestinal issues, vitamins with anti-inflammatory and antioxidant properties could provide a safer, non-pharmacological option for managing menstrual pain. However, the review calls for more clinical trials to refine dosage recommendations and further explore the underlying mechanisms, particularly the role of vitamins in modulating inflammatory markers such as prostaglandins. Additionally, further studies exploring the microbiome's involvement in dysmenorrhea and its potential interactions with vitamin supplementation could provide more insights into personalized treatment strategies.
Risk of Endometrial Cancer in Women With Pelvic Inflammatory Disease
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) is a complex interplay between pathogens, immune responses, and microbial communities. As research continues to uncover the microbiome's role in reproductive health, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as probiotics, prebiotics, and transplants are redefining how we prevent and treat PID. This page dives deep into these innovations, offering a glimpse into the future of personalized, biologically informed women’s healthcare.
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Women with pelvic inflammatory disease have a higher risk of endometrial cancer, especially older and hypertensive women, highlighting the need for vigilant care.
What was studied?
This population-based retrospective cohort study investigated whether pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) increases the risk of endometrial cancer (EC). Utilizing Taiwan’s National Health Insurance Research Database (NHIRD), the research explored the long-term incidence of EC among women diagnosed with PID compared to matched controls without PID, while adjusting for key demographic and health factors.
Who was studied?
The study examined a large cohort of women diagnosed with PID and a control group without PID from a nationally representative Taiwanese population. Both groups were followed over several years to track new cases of endometrial cancer. The analysis accounted for variables such as age, socioeconomic status, urbanization level, occupation, and comorbidities like hypertension and diabetes.
What were the most important findings?
Women with a history of PID showed a notably higher risk of developing endometrial cancer than women without PID. This increased risk was particularly evident among older women and those with hypertension. Moreover, the interval between PID diagnosis and EC occurrence was shorter in the PID group, suggesting that chronic pelvic inflammation may accelerate endometrial carcinogenesis. The findings reinforce the role of persistent inflammation and immune dysregulation as drivers of cancer development in the reproductive tract.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study underscores the importance of recognizing PID as a significant risk factor for endometrial cancer, especially in women over 50 and those with comorbid conditions like hypertension. Clinicians should incorporate this knowledge into patient management, emphasizing timely diagnosis and aggressive treatment of PID to reduce long-term cancer risks. The data also point toward the potential benefit of inflammation-targeted therapies and regular surveillance in women with PID. Future research should explore mechanistic pathways and preventive strategies to mitigate this elevated cancer risk.
Acupuncture with or without moxibustion for primary dysmenorrhea
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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This protocol outlines a systematic review and meta‐analysis plan to evaluate acupuncture, with or without moxibustion, for pain relief and safety in women with primary dysmenorrhea.
What was reviewed?
The authors designed a protocol to systematically review randomized controlled trials of acupuncture, with or without moxibustion, in the treatment of primary dysmenorrhea. They plan to search nine databases, including PubMed, Embase, and CNKI, from their inception to August 2020, using both MeSH terms and free‐text keywords related to dysmenorrhea, acupuncture, and moxibustion. Two independent reviewers will screen, extract data, and assess study quality using the Cochrane risk‐of‐bias tool, and RevMan 5.4 will facilitate meta‐analysis of primary and secondary outcomes.
Who was reviewed?
The protocol focuses exclusively on women of reproductive age diagnosed with primary dysmenorrhea according to the Canadian Society of Obstetricians and Gynecologists’ criteria. It excludes participants with organic pelvic pathology (such as endometriosis or fibroids) and those combining acupuncture or moxibustion with other complementary therapies. Control groups may include sham acupuncture, placebo, pharmacotherapy, or no treatment, ensuring comparability between arms.
Most important findings
As a protocol, this work does not report empirical findings; instead, it outlines its intent to evaluate pain intensity—measured by visual analog scale, numerical rating scale, or Cox retrospective symptom scale—as the primary outcome. It will also examine overall response rates, quality of life scores, and adverse events. The authors anticipate calculating risk ratios for dichotomous data and mean differences for continuous measures, applying fixed‐ or random‐effects models based on heterogeneity assessments.
Key implications
By predefining rigorous inclusion criteria and analytical methods, this protocol aims to generate high‐quality, evidence‐based recommendations on the efficacy and safety of acupuncture with or without moxibustion for primary dysmenorrhea. Its findings will guide clinicians in selecting optimal nonpharmacological pain management strategies and identify gaps for future research.
The effectiveness of iron supplementation for postpartum depression
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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This systematic review and meta-analysis protocol aims to evaluate the effectiveness of iron supplementation for postpartum depression, potentially providing clinical evidence for its role in improving maternal mental health and offering a cost-effective treatment option for women with postpartum depression and iron deficiency.
What was reviewed?
The review was a protocol for a systematic review and meta-analysis aimed at evaluating the effectiveness of iron supplementation in treating postpartum depression (PPD). The review seeks to analyze randomized controlled trials (RCTs) to gather evidence on the benefits of iron supplementation for PPD, as iron deficiency has been associated with increased risks of depression in postpartum women.
Who was reviewed?
The review included studies that focused on women diagnosed with postpartum depression, regardless of nationality, age, gender, or race. These women were treated with iron supplementation, either orally or intravenously, as part of their postpartum care. The review examined randomized controlled trials that compared iron supplementation against control treatments, such as psychological interventions or no treatment.
What were the most important findings?
The review protocol highlights that many studies have already established a link between iron deficiency anemia (IDA) and postpartum depression. The researchers expect to consolidate evidence on whether iron supplementation can help alleviate PPD symptoms, as iron is critical for several brain functions, including neurotransmitter production. Previous studies have demonstrated that iron depletion negatively impacts brain chemistry, with reduced iron stores being linked to increased risk of developing PPD. The protocol anticipates that this systematic review will confirm whether iron supplementation can improve PPD symptoms, measured primarily by the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS).
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The greatest implication of this review is that it could provide concrete evidence for clinicians regarding the effectiveness of iron supplementation in treating PPD. If the review confirms that iron supplementation has a significant effect, it could lead to broader clinical adoption of iron treatment as part of postpartum care, especially for women at risk of or diagnosed with PPD. This would be particularly beneficial in populations with high rates of iron deficiency or anemia, offering a potentially low-cost, accessible treatment option for improving maternal mental health. Furthermore, the findings could shift how clinicians manage PPD, encouraging early screening for iron deficiency and integrating iron supplementation into standard care protocols for postpartum women.
Gynecologists and pelvic inflammatory disease: do we actually know what to do?
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) is a complex interplay between pathogens, immune responses, and microbial communities. As research continues to uncover the microbiome's role in reproductive health, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as probiotics, prebiotics, and transplants are redefining how we prevent and treat PID. This page dives deep into these innovations, offering a glimpse into the future of personalized, biologically informed women’s healthcare.
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This study highlights significant gaps in gynecologists' knowledge regarding Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Misdiagnosis, inadequate treatment duration, and poor adherence to guidelines were noted. Enhanced training and culturally adapted guidelines are urgently recommended to address misconceptions and improve patient outcomes.
What was studied?
This observational cross-sectional study aimed to assess the knowledge, awareness, and clinical practice of Jordanian gynecologists concerning Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Researchers evaluated gynecologists’ understanding of PID diagnosis, treatment, and management through an online questionnaire involving 172 gynecologists practicing in Jordan. The study specifically examined gynecologists’ awareness of PID’s clinical presentation, diagnostic investigations, therapeutic strategies, and the perceived prevalence and implications of PID within the Jordanian cultural context.
Who was studied?
The participants were 172 gynecologists practicing in Jordan. The study included various demographics, with 57% female and 43% male respondents, ranging widely in age and educational backgrounds. Over half (55.8%) were under the age of 45, reflecting a younger medical cohort actively practicing in Jordan.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed several crucial insights regarding gynecologists' perceptions and clinical handling of PID. Although 68.6% recognized PID as a significant health issue in Jordan, there was notable confusion around its clinical presentation, diagnosis, and appropriate management. Major microbial associations identified by participants were anaerobic bacteria such as Escherichia coli and Streptococcus, followed by Chlamydia trachomatis, and rarely Neisseria gonorrhoeae. Surprisingly, despite these pathogens being critical in PID, clinicians rarely requested targeted tests for C. trachomatis and N. gonorrhoeae. Significant gaps emerged regarding adherence to international guidelines, with only 51% correctly identifying laparoscopy as a diagnostic tool, and fewer employing recommended treatment durations. While CDC guidelines suggest a minimum 14-day antibiotic regimen, many gynecologists treated for shorter periods. Gynecologists frequently identified IUCD insertion as a major PID risk factor, despite modern IUCDs having minimal association.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study underscores the urgent need for clearer, culturally adapted clinical guidelines and enhanced physician education on PID in Jordan and similar conservative societies. The findings highlight significant discrepancies between current clinical practice and established international standards, potentially leading to suboptimal patient outcomes and complications like infertility and chronic pelvic pain. Additionally, it draws attention to updating perceptions regarding IUCD risks, employing proper diagnostic tests (including C. trachomatis and N. gonorrhoeae testing), and adopting appropriate treatment protocols. The study strongly recommends targeted educational programs and continuous professional development efforts for gynecologists, emphasizing accurate diagnosis, informed therapeutic approaches, and heightened awareness of PID's diverse clinical presentations.
High Physical Activity Level May Reduce Menopausal Symptoms
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal hot flashes are one of the most common and disruptive symptoms that women experience during the transition to menopause. Characterized by sudden sensations of heat, sweating, and flushing, hot flashes can significantly affect a woman’s quality of life, causing sleep disturbances, mood swings, and even long-term health consequences. Understanding the complex mechanisms behind hot flashes, as well as the role of microbiome-targeted therapies, offers new avenues for improving menopausal health.
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This study reveals that higher levels of physical activity, especially during leisure time, are linked to reduced severity of menopausal symptoms, particularly urogenital and somato-vegetative issues. It suggests incorporating physical activity into the management plan for menopausal women, particularly postmenopausal women.
What was studied?
This study explored the relationship between physical activity (PA) and the severity of menopausal symptoms in women, focusing on the effects of PA in different domains: leisure time, household activities, work, and transportation. The study aimed to identify how varying levels of PA during different activities relate to the frequency and intensity of menopausal symptoms, particularly vasomotor, urogenital, somato-vegetative, and psychological symptoms. The researchers also investigated whether women with higher PA levels reported less severe menopausal symptoms, in comparison to those with lower activity levels.
Who was studied?
The study involved 305 women aged 40-65, recruited from women’s health clinics in Silesia, Poland. The participants were categorized into three groups based on their menopausal status: premenopausal, perimenopausal, and postmenopausal. The women had no history of serious illness, psychiatric disorders, or hormonal therapy use in the prior 3 months. The study focused on women with varying levels of physical activity, which were assessed using the International Physical Activity Questionnaire (IPAQ). These women were also assessed for the severity of their menopausal symptoms using the Menopause Rating Scale (MRS).
Most important findings
The study found that physical activity during leisure time was significantly associated with less severe menopausal symptoms, particularly urogenital symptoms. Postmenopausal women with higher levels of PA during leisure time were less likely to report severe urogenital and somato-vegetative symptoms compared to those with lower PA levels. Specifically, 59.66% of postmenopausal women reported high levels of PA, and fewer of these women experienced severe symptoms compared to those with low PA levels. The results also indicated that moderate to high PA levels were linked with less severe menopausal symptoms overall. However, no significant differences were found for symptoms in the psychological domain. Interestingly, women who had low PA levels at work reported more severe somato-vegetative symptoms.
Key implications
The study suggests that engaging in physical activity, particularly during leisure time, is beneficial for reducing the severity of menopausal symptoms. This finding is crucial for menopausal women, especially those who are postmenopausal or experiencing symptoms related to menopause. Clinicians should consider recommending physical activity as part of a holistic approach to managing menopausal symptoms, particularly for those who cannot or prefer not to use hormone replacement therapy (HRT). Additionally, promoting higher PA levels at work could help mitigate somato-vegetative symptoms such as joint pain and muscle discomfort. The lack of significant findings for psychological symptoms suggests that further research is needed to explore whether specific types or intensities of physical activity might impact mood and mental well-being during menopause.
Ovarian Cancer and the Microbiome: Connecting the Dots for Early Diagnosis and Therapeutic Innovations—A Review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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This review explores the role of the microbiome in ovarian cancer, emphasizing its potential for early diagnosis and treatment. The use of microbiome-based biomarkers and therapies like fecal and vaginal microbiome transplantation offers promising new avenues for cancer care.
What was reviewed?
This review explores the relationship between the microbiome and ovarian cancer, specifically how the gut and cervicovaginal microbiota influence the development, progression, and treatment of the disease. The review also delves into the potential of microbiome-based biomarkers for early diagnosis and therapeutic strategies, including microbiome transplantation approaches like fecal and vaginal microbiome transplantation (FMT and VMT).
Who was studied?
The review synthesizes findings from various studies involving patients with ovarian cancer, healthy controls, and animal models. It discusses the microbiome alterations observed in the gut and cervicovaginal regions and their association with ovarian cancer. The studies reviewed provide insights into how microbiome dysbiosis contributes to cancer progression, with a particular focus on microbial signatures in different stages of the disease.
Most important findings
The review highlights the significant role of microbiome dysbiosis in ovarian cancer pathogenesis. Alterations in the gut microbiome, particularly an increase in Bacteroides, Prevotella, and Proteobacteria, are associated with increased cancer risk. In the cervicovaginal microbiome, a decrease in Lactobacillus species is linked to cancer progression. The review also underscores the impact of inflammatory cytokines, such as IL-6, which are influenced by the microbiome and contribute to tumor growth. Additionally, infections like Chlamydia, which are associated with pelvic inflammatory disease (PID), can increase the risk of ovarian cancer by triggering inflammation. The review further suggests that microbial signatures, such as changes in Lactobacillus and Acinetobacter populations, could be used as biomarkers for early detection and prognosis of ovarian cancer.
Key implications
The findings in this review suggest that the microbiome could be a valuable diagnostic tool and therapeutic target in ovarian cancer. The identification of microbial signatures linked to ovarian cancer offers the potential for non-invasive biomarkers that could improve early detection and prognosis. Moreover, the manipulation of the microbiome through therapies like FMT and VMT holds promise for enhancing the effectiveness of existing treatments and overcoming chemotherapy resistance. However, the review stresses the need for more research to validate these findings and determine how best to apply microbiome-based therapies in clinical settings. Understanding the complex interactions between the microbiome and ovarian cancer could lead to personalized treatment approaches based on an individual's microbiome profile, offering new hope for more effective cancer therapies.
Evaluation of serum heavy metal levels on primary ovarian insufficiency
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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This study explores the potential link between serum heavy metal levels and premature ovarian insufficiency. The higher levels of metals like lead and mercury in women with POI suggest environmental toxins may contribute to ovarian dysfunction, though the findings were not statistically significant.
What was studied?
This study investigated the serum levels of heavy metals in women with Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI). POI, a condition defined by the loss of ovarian function before the age of 40, can be influenced by various environmental factors, including exposure to heavy metals. The research aimed to assess the levels of aluminum, arsenic, mercury, manganese, and lead in women with POI and compare these levels to those in healthy women. The study sought to understand the potential relationship between elevated serum heavy metal levels and the onset of POI, which could help identify environmental risk factors for ovarian dysfunction.
Who was studied?
The study involved 46 women, divided into two groups: 23 women diagnosed with POI and 23 healthy women who served as the control group. The participants were matched by age, BMI, and gravidity, ensuring that these factors did not skew the results. The women with POI had been diagnosed based on clinical criteria, including amenorrhea for at least four months and elevated follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) levels. Women with a history of pelvic surgery, cancer, autoimmune diseases, endometriosis, or other chronic systemic diseases were excluded. Blood serum samples were collected from both groups to measure the levels of heavy metals.
Most important findings
The study found that the serum levels of aluminum, arsenic, mercury, manganese, and lead were higher in women with POI compared to the control group, though the differences were not statistically significant. Despite the lack of significant differences, the higher levels of these metals in the POI group suggest a potential link between environmental exposure to heavy metals and the development of POI. Specifically, the study highlights how metals like lead and mercury may contribute to ovarian dysfunction due to their toxicity. These metals can induce oxidative stress and disrupt the hormonal balance, potentially accelerating ovarian aging and depletion.
Key implications
While the study did not find statistically significant differences in serum metal levels between the two groups, it underscores the need for further research into the role of environmental heavy metals in ovarian health. Clinicians should be aware of the potential environmental risk factors, including heavy metal exposure, when diagnosing and managing women with POI. Future studies should aim to identify causal relationships and explore potential therapeutic interventions, such as detoxification or antioxidant therapies, to reduce the impact of heavy metal toxicity on ovarian function.
The Vaginal Microbiome in Health and Disease—What Role Do Common Intimate Hygiene Practices Play?
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This review explains how the vaginal microbiome regulates immune balance, protects against infection, and influences reproductive and gynecologic health.
What was reviewed?
This paper is a comprehensive narrative review that examined the vaginal microbiome as a central regulator of vaginal health, reproductive outcomes, and susceptibility to infection and inflammation. The authors synthesized microbiological, immunological, and clinical evidence to explain how vaginal microbial communities interact with epithelial barriers, innate immune signaling, and hormonal cycles to maintain a low-inflammatory, pathogen-resistant environment. The review emphasized that the vaginal microbiome is uniquely structured compared with other body sites, with dominance by specific lactic acid–producing bacteria representing an evolved host–microbe partnership rather than a generic feature of microbial diversity. The paper also explored how disruption of this ecosystem contributes to gynecologic and obstetric disease across the lifespan.
Who was reviewed?
The review drew on data from diverse human populations, including healthy reproductive-age women, pregnant individuals, postmenopausal women, adolescents, and patients with vaginal dysbiosis–associated conditions. Clinical cohorts included women with bacterial vaginosis, vulvovaginal candidiasis, sexually transmitted infections, infertility, preterm birth, pelvic inflammatory disease, and increased HIV acquisition risk. These findings were supported by longitudinal cohort studies, metagenomic analyses, in vitro epithelial models, and limited animal data, allowing the authors to integrate microbial composition with immune and clinical outcomes.
What were the most important findings?
The review established that vaginal health is most consistently associated with microbiomes dominated by Lactobacillus species, particularly Lactobacillus crispatus, Lactobacillus jensenii, Lactobacillus gasseri, and Lactobacillus iners. These organisms maintain a low vaginal pH through lactic acid production, suppress pathogen growth, and modulate immune signaling to favor tolerance rather than inflammation. The authors emphasized that lactic acid, rather than hydrogen peroxide alone, is the key antimicrobial and immunomodulatory molecule, reinforcing epithelial tight junctions, reducing pro-inflammatory cytokine expression, and inhibiting viral and bacterial pathogens. In contrast, dysbiotic states such as bacterial vaginosis were characterized by reduced Lactobacillus dominance and increased abundance of anaerobes including Gardnerella vaginalis, Atopobium vaginae, Prevotella, Mobiluncus, and Sneathia.
These communities increased vaginal pH, produced proteases and biogenic amines, disrupted mucus and epithelial barriers, and triggered innate immune activation through Toll-like receptor signaling. The review also highlighted important population-level variation, noting that some asymptomatic women harbor non–Lactobacillus-dominated communities yet maintain relative health, underscoring the need for context-specific interpretation. Importantly, the authors linked vaginal dysbiosis to systemic consequences, including increased risk of preterm birth, heightened HIV susceptibility through mucosal inflammation, and altered reproductive outcomes.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
For clinicians, this review reinforces that vaginal health depends on functional microbial ecology rather than simple pathogen absence. It supports diagnostic and therapeutic strategies that prioritize restoration of protective Lactobacillus-dominated communities and reduction of inflammation, rather than repeated broad-spectrum antimicrobial use that destabilizes microbial resilience and increases recurrence risk.
Possible Therapeutic Mechanisms and Future Perspectives of Vaginal Microbiota Transplantation
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Vaginal microbiota transplantation (VMT) successfully treats bacterial vaginosis by restoring Lactobacillus dominance, lowering vaginal pH, and inhibiting pathogens through nutritional competition, antimicrobial production, and enhanced epithelial adhesion, promising broad clinical applications for reproductive health.
What was reviewed?
This paper reviewed the current state, therapeutic mechanisms, potential clinical applications, and future perspectives of vaginal microbiota transplantation (VMT). Specifically, it discussed how VMT, which involves transferring healthy vaginal microbiota to a recipient with disrupted vaginal flora, can potentially restore microbial balance, reduce infection risk, and support overall reproductive health. The authors detailed the microbiota’s protective roles, emphasizing Lactobacillus species' dominance and their mechanisms, including competitive nutrition, bactericidal and virucidal activities, hydrogen peroxide production, and epithelial adhesion.
Who was reviewed?
The review summarized studies involving women who underwent vaginal microbiota transplantation (VMT), primarily for bacterial vaginosis (BV). It referenced clinical trials where symptomatic, recurrent BV patients received healthy donor microbiota. Additionally, the review assessed research that explored mechanisms by which Lactobacillus species influence the vaginal microbial environment, drawing from in vitro, animal, and limited human studies.
What were the most important findings?
The key findings underscored Lactobacillus species' pivotal role in vaginal health, where they maintain an acidic environment through lactic acid production, effectively limiting pathogenic colonization by organisms such as Gardnerella vaginalis, Neisseria gonorrhoeae, and Chlamydia trachomatis. VMT studies demonstrated success in restoring a Lactobacillus-dominated microbiota, significantly alleviating symptoms of recurrent bacterial vaginosis without severe adverse effects. The review highlighted three primary therapeutic mechanisms: increased nutritional competition against pathogens, enhanced production of antimicrobial compounds (lactic acid, hydrogen peroxide, bacteriocins), and improved bacterial adherence to vaginal epithelial cells, collectively restoring the protective microbiome barrier. Current knowledge gaps include understanding the roles of fungi and viruses in the vaginal microbiome and optimizing donor microbiota storage methods.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The greatest implication of this review is that VMT has substantial potential as a safe, non-antibiotic alternative to managing vaginal dysbiosis, particularly recurrent bacterial vaginosis, and possibly other reproductive disorders. Successfully restoring and maintaining a healthy Lactobacillus-rich vaginal microbiota could significantly reduce complications associated with chronic infections, pelvic inflammatory diseases, infertility, and potentially even sexually transmitted infections. As research evolves, standardized protocols, comprehensive donor screening, and storage strategies akin to fecal microbiota transplantation could facilitate broader clinical adoption, transforming the management of female reproductive health issues.
Metabolomics study on primary dysmenorrhea patients during the luteal regression stage
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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This metabolomics study identifies ten urinary biomarkers linked to primary dysmenorrhea, providing insights into the metabolic disruptions that contribute to PD and suggesting potential new therapeutic targets.
What was studied?
This study utilized ultra-performance liquid chromatography coupled with quadrupole-time-of-flight mass spectrometry (UPLC-Q/TOF-MS) to perform metabolomic profiling of urine samples from patients with primary dysmenorrhea (PD) during the luteal regression stage. The aim was to identify metabolic biomarkers associated with PD and understand the underlying biochemical changes during this stage of the menstrual cycle. The analysis revealed differences in urinary metabolites between PD patients and healthy controls, identifying ten significant biomarkers that could potentially serve as diagnostic tools or therapeutic targets for PD.
Who was studied?
The study included 36 patients diagnosed with primary dysmenorrhea and 27 healthy controls. The patients with PD were selected based on clinical criteria for severe dysmenorrhea symptoms, with pain severity recorded as greater than 8 on a standard pain scale. Urine samples were collected during the luteal regression stage, specifically three days prior to menstruation, a phase critical for understanding dysmenorrhea's biochemical profile. Both groups were from the Tianjin Maternity Hospital and Tianjin University of Chinese Medicine, all of whom provided informed consent.
Most important findings
The metabolomic analysis identified ten biomarkers significantly altered in PD patients during the luteal regression stage. These biomarkers included citrulline, ornithine, androstenedione, progesterone, phytosphingosine, dihydrocortisol, and 17-hydroxyprogesterone, all of which showed decreased levels in PD patients. In contrast, sphinganine, histidine, and 15-keto-prostaglandin F2α were found to be elevated in PD patients. These findings suggest that metabolic perturbations in steroid hormone biosynthesis, sphingolipid metabolism, and arginine/proline metabolism may contribute to the pathophysiology of dysmenorrhea. The study’s use of ROC curve analysis confirmed that several biomarkers had strong discriminatory power between PD patients and healthy controls, demonstrating their potential as diagnostic markers.
Key implications
The findings from this metabolomics study highlight the potential for using urinary biomarkers as a diagnostic and therapeutic approach for managing primary dysmenorrhea. By identifying specific metabolic changes associated with PD, this study opens avenues for the development of targeted therapies that could alleviate symptoms by modulating the identified metabolic pathways. Moreover, the study underscores the need for further research into how these biomarkers can be integrated into clinical practice, offering non-invasive, effective tools for early detection and personalized treatment plans for PD.
Protective Roles of Honey in Reproductive Health: A Review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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Honey exerts protective effects in reproductive health by modulating oxidative stress, supporting hormonal balance, and selectively inhibiting pathogens while preserving beneficial microbiota, making it a promising adjunct in fertility support, menopause symptom relief, and vulvovaginal candidiasis management.
What was reviewed?
This comprehensive review synthesized current evidence regarding the protective roles of honey in reproductive health, focusing on both male and female fertility, menopause-related symptoms, reproductive toxicity, and vulvovaginal candidiasis. The review explored honey’s biochemical composition, rich in antioxidants, phytoestrogens, and antimicrobial components, and its traditional and emerging therapeutic applications. Emphasis was placed on honey’s impact on reproductive organ health, hormonal balance, microbial modulation (particularly vaginal microbiota), antioxidant defenses, and its utility as a natural alternative or adjunct to conventional therapies.
Who was reviewed?
The review encompassed a broad range of studies involving both animal models (primarily rats) and humans. Included were in vivo and in vitro experiments, randomized clinical trials, and epidemiological data. The populations reviewed spanned healthy and diseased states: men and women of reproductive age, postmenopausal women, pregnant women, and individuals with vulvovaginal candidiasis. Both traditional and modern clinical contexts were considered, making the findings broadly applicable to diverse patient groups.
Most important findings
Honey demonstrates multifaceted benefits in reproductive health through several mechanisms, many of which intersect with microbiome dynamics. Notably, honey’s antioxidant-rich composition (including flavonoids like quercetin and kaempferol) confers protection against oxidative stress in reproductive tissues, an effect substantiated in animal models exposed to toxins such as bisphenol A and cigarette smoke. Honey has shown efficacy in improving sperm quality, motility, and testosterone levels, and serves as a natural cryoprotectant in semen preservation across multiple species. In females, honey supplementation (notably Tualang and Manuka varieties) mitigates menopausal atrophy of the vagina and uterus, likely due to its phytoestrogenic and prebiotic properties, which help maintain mucosal integrity and possibly support beneficial Lactobacillus populations.
A particularly significant microbiome-related detail is honey’s selective antimicrobial action: it inhibits Candida albicans (the main cause of vulvovaginal candidiasis) without suppressing commensal Lactobacillus, thus preserving or restoring a healthy vaginal microbiota. Clinical trials comparing honey (alone or combined with yogurt) to conventional azole antifungals found similar or superior symptom resolution with honey, and no significant adverse effects. Furthermore, honey’s acidity and osmolarity create an environment unfavorable for pathogenic microbes while supporting microbial homeostasis.
Key implications
For clinicians, this review highlights honey as a promising natural adjunct or alternative for managing reproductive health conditions. Its antioxidant and estrogenic activities suggest utility in mitigating toxin-induced reproductive damage, supporting fertility, and managing menopause-related vaginal symptoms without the risks associated with hormone replacement therapy. Notably, honey’s selective antimicrobial properties make it an attractive candidate for treating recurrent vulvovaginal candidiasis, especially amid growing antifungal resistance. Incorporating honey into clinical practice could support microbial health (especially in the vaginal ecosystem), reduce reliance on pharmaceuticals, and offer patients a well-tolerated, cost-effective therapeutic option. Further research is warranted to establish standardized dosing, identify optimal honey varieties, and elucidate detailed mechanisms of microbiome modulation.
Daily Vaginal Microbiota Fluctuations Associated with Natural Hormonal Cycle, Contraceptives, Diet, and Exercise
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Vaginal microbiota composition in young women varies daily with hormonal cycles, contraceptive use, diet, and exercise, affecting Lactobacillus dominance and community stability linked to reproductive health.
What was studied?
This research investigated how the vaginal microbiota of healthy young women fluctuates daily in association with the natural hormonal cycle, contraceptive use, diet, and exercise. The authors used daily self-collected vaginal swabs over a period of 10 weeks to assess microbial community dynamics with high temporal resolution through 16S rRNA gene sequencing. The study sought to understand the role of endogenous estradiol, exogenous hormonal contraceptives, and lifestyle factors in regulating vaginal microbial diversity, Lactobacillus dominance, and community stability.
Who was studied?
The participants included 26 healthy female college students aged 18 to 22 years from Wellesley College. They submitted daily vaginal swabs while recording information about their menstrual cycle, contraceptive use, dietary habits, exercise routines, and mood (collected during the second year). The cohort was categorized based on contraceptive use into women not using hormonal contraceptives, those using combined estrogen-progestin systemic contraceptives, and those using locally released progestin-only contraceptives. This diverse grouping allowed comparison of how different hormonal exposures and lifestyle factors influence the vaginal microbiome.
Most important findings
The vaginal microbial communities clustered into five distinct community state types dominated by different Lactobacillus species or more diverse anaerobic bacteria. During menstruation, microbial diversity increased significantly while Lactobacillus abundance decreased, indicating a disruption in the typically protective Lactobacillus dominance linked to menstrual bleeding and hormonal fluctuations. The study revealed a strong correlation between estradiol levels and vaginal microbial diversity and stability in naturally cycling women and those on combined contraceptives, but this relationship was disrupted in users of local progestin-only contraceptives. Women using local progestin-only contraceptives exhibited altered microbial fluctuations and lower Lactobacillus levels, suggesting that hormonal composition and release method affect microbiome structure. Additionally, a vegetarian diet and increased exercise were associated with greater microbial diversity, highlighting lifestyle as a modulator of vaginal microbiota. Mood did not show significant associations, though the data were limited. These results emphasize the dynamic nature of the vaginal microbiome, shaped by hormonal and environmental factors.
Key implications
The findings of this study suggest that ovarian hormones, particularly estradiol, play a critical role in maintaining vaginal microbial stability and Lactobacillus dominance, which are important for reproductive health. Hormonal contraceptives influence these dynamics in complex ways depending on hormone type and delivery method, with local progestin-only contraceptives potentially disrupting beneficial microbial communities. Lifestyle factors such as diet and exercise also contribute to shaping the vaginal microbiome. This highlights the importance of considering both endogenous and exogenous hormonal influences alongside lifestyle factors when evaluating vaginal health. The study also underscores the value of high-frequency longitudinal sampling to capture rapid microbial changes, which could inform future interventions for preventing vaginal microbial dysbiosis and associated reproductive complications.
Menopause Alters Gut Microbiome and Increases Cardiometabolic Risk in Hispanic Women
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Menopause in Hispanic/Latina women is linked to distinctive gut microbiome and estrobolome alterations, resembling those in men, and these microbial changes are associated with increased cardiometabolic risk. The study identifies specific microbiome signatures potentially mediating menopause-related metabolic effects.
What was studied?
The study explored how menopause affects the gut microbiome and estrobolome (the subset of gut bacteria involved in metabolizing sex hormones), and how these changes may relate to cardiometabolic risk factors. Using a large, well-characterized sample from the Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos (HCHS/SOL), researchers performed shotgun metagenomic sequencing on stool samples from about 2300 participants, including premenopausal women, postmenopausal women, and age-matched men. A subset also underwent serum metabolomics to assess sex hormone metabolites. The primary aims were to assess whether menopause alters gut microbiome diversity and composition, to identify specific microbial taxa and functions associated with menopausal status, and to investigate the relationship between these microbiome features, circulating sex hormone metabolites, and cardiometabolic risk profiles.
Who was studied?
Participants were drawn from the HCHS/SOL, a large, diverse cohort of Hispanic/Latino adults in the US. The analytic sample included 295 premenopausal women, 1,027 postmenopausal women, and 978 men (divided into groups age-matched to pre-and postmenopausal women). Exclusion criteria included cancer and insufficient sequencing data. Menopausal status was based on self-report and further refined to exclude women with surgical menopause, hormone therapy, or ambiguous menopausal status. Men were matched to women by age, BMI, Hispanic/Latino background, and nativity to control for confounders. Cardiometabolic risk factors and detailed demographic and lifestyle data were collected for all participants. Serum metabolomics data were available for a subset of 346 women.
Most important findings
Postmenopausal women exhibited lower gut microbiome diversity and a composition more similar to men than to premenopausal women, even after adjusting for age and confounders. Specific taxa enriched in postmenopausal women included Bacteroides sp. strain Ga6A1, Prevotella marshii, and Sutterella wadsworthensis, while Escherichia coli-Shigella spp., Oscillibacter sp., Akkermansia muciniphila, Clostridium lactatifermentans, Parabacteroides johnsonii, and Veillonella seminalis were depleted. Functionally, postmenopausal women had increased microbial sulfate transport systems and decreased abundance of β-glucuronidase, a key estrobolome enzyme, suggesting reduced microbial deconjugation of sex steroid hormones. Correlations between gut microbial features and serum progestin metabolites in postmenopausal women indicate active microbial participation in sex hormone retention. Menopause-related microbiome changes, especially the loss of beneficial species like C. lactatifermentans, were associated with adverse cardiometabolic profiles, including higher waist circumference, lower HDL, and higher blood pressure.
Key implications
The findings suggest that menopause-induced hormonal changes drive a shift in the gut microbiome toward a less diverse, more male-like composition, with reductions in both beneficial bacteria and estrobolome activity. These microbial shifts may reduce the potential for microbial reactivation of sex steroid hormones, potentially exacerbating the hormonal deficiency of menopause. The observed associations between menopause-related microbiome alterations and adverse cardiometabolic risk factors underscore the gut microbiome’s potential role in mediating increased metabolic risk after menopause. These results highlight the need for further research on microbiome-targeted interventions or hormone therapies to mitigate postmenopausal metabolic risk and suggest that microbiome signatures could be useful biomarkers for menopausal status and related health risks.
Characterization of the Vaginal Microbiome in Women with Infertility and Its Potential Correlation with Hormone Stimulation during In Vitro Fertilization Surgery
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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This study shows women with secondary infertility have persistently altered, less diverse vaginal microbiomes unresponsive to IVF hormone stimulation. Increased Atopobium and decreased Lactobacillus may hinder IVF success, suggesting microbiome-targeted interventions could benefit infertility care.
What was studied?
This study investigated the composition and diversity of the vaginal microbiome in women experiencing secondary infertility who were undergoing in vitro fertilization and embryo transfer (IVF-ET). The researchers compared the vaginal microbiota of 30 women with secondary infertility to that of 92 healthy, reproductive-age women. They also evaluated whether hormone stimulation during IVF affected the vaginal microbiome in these infertile patients. By analyzing vaginal swab samples using 16S rRNA gene sequencing, the study aimed to clarify how the microbiome’s structure changes in infertile women, its sensitivity to hormonal manipulation, and the potential implications for IVF outcomes.
Who was studied?
The study included 30 Chinese women aged 23–42 years diagnosed with secondary infertility and scheduled for IVF-ET, alongside 92 age-matched healthy women with no history of infertility or reproductive complications. All participants were HIV negative, had regular menstrual cycles, and had not received significant treatments within four weeks prior to enrollment. Vaginal swabs from infertile women were collected both before ovulation induction and after hormone stimulation. Healthy controls provided samples during both the follicular phase and the ovulation period, allowing for assessment of natural cyclic changes versus those observed in infertile women during IVF.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed that women with secondary infertility exhibited significantly reduced vaginal microbiome diversity and richness compared to healthy controls during the follicular phase. The vaginal microbiome of infertile women was notably less dynamic than that of healthy women, who displayed substantial microbial fluctuations during ovulation. Infertile women demonstrated a persistent alteration in their microbiome, with increased abundance of genera such as Atopobium, Aerococcus, and Bifidobacterium, and a decreased presence of protective genera like Lactobacillus and Leuconostoc. In contrast, healthy women experienced predictable microbiome shifts with hormonal changes, particularly an increase in beneficial bacteria during ovulation. Importantly, hormone stimulation with GnRH agonist and r-hCG during IVF had no significant effect on the vaginal microbiome of infertile women, indicating a form of hormone insensitivity. Further correlation analysis suggested that the altered microbiome in infertile patients involves synergistic dysbiotic interactions between various anaerobic bacteria, such as Atopobium, Prevotella, Bifidobacterium, and Megasphaera.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study strongly suggests that a stable, hormone-responsive vaginal microbiome is critical for female reproductive health and successful IVF outcomes. The finding that infertile women’s vaginal microbiota remain dysbiotic and largely unresponsive to hormonal stimulation points to an underlying microbiological barrier to fertility that current IVF protocols may not address. For clinicians, these results highlight the importance of evaluating and potentially modifying the vaginal microbiome in women undergoing IVF, particularly those with a history of secondary infertility. Personalized interventions, such as microbiome modulation through probiotics or targeted antimicrobials, could enhance the effectiveness of ART by restoring a healthy, Lactobacillus-dominated microbiota and improving receptivity to hormonal treatments. This study also underscores the need for future large-scale research to refine microbiome-targeted diagnostics and therapies as adjuncts to conventional infertility treatments.
A metabolic view on menopause and ageing
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Cardiovascular Health
Cardiovascular Health
Recent research has revealed that specific gut microbiota-derived metabolites are strongly linked to cardiovascular disease risk—potentially influencing atherosclerosis development more than traditional risk factors like cholesterol levels. This highlights the gut microbiome as a novel therapeutic target for cardiovascular interventions.
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This study reveals significant metabolic changes in postmenopausal women, including a pro-atherogenic lipid profile and increased amino acids linked to cardiovascular and metabolic risk, emphasizing menopause as a key factor in long-term health risks.
What was studied?
The study focused on the impact of menopause on metabolic changes, particularly the effects of menopause on lipid and amino acid profiles, and their contribution to future cardiovascular and metabolic risks. It analyzed the metabolomic data from 26,065 individuals of Northern European ancestry, examining how menopause alters a broad spectrum of 135 serum metabolites, including lipoproteins, fatty acids, amino acids, and small molecules related to energy metabolism. The study aimed to assess the systemic metabolic shifts associated with menopause, considering not only traditional lipid measures but also detailed lipid subclass measurements and amino acid concentrations, which are emerging as key players in cardiovascular disease (CVD) and metabolic disorders.
Who was studied?
The study involved a large cohort of 26,065 participants, consisting of 16,107 Finnish individuals and 9,958 Estonian individuals. Participants were from a range of ages, predominantly from 40 to 75 years, with the analysis particularly focused on women in the menopausal transition (ages 40-55 years). The study excluded individuals using hormone replacement therapy (HRT), those with diabetes or on lipid-lowering medications, and pregnant women, to focus on natural metabolic shifts associated with menopause. The cohort was racially and ethnically homogenous, primarily consisting of individuals of Northern European descent, which may limit generalizability to other populations.
Most important findings
Postmenopausal women showed significantly higher concentrations of total cholesterol, esterified cholesterol, and lipoprotein subclasses, alongside higher concentrations of apoB and smaller, denser HDL particles. These changes align with increased cardiovascular risk. Higher levels of amino acids such as glutamine, tyrosine, and isoleucine were observed in postmenopausal women, which are linked to increased risk for metabolic diseases like Type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular diseases. Postmenopausal women exhibited increased levels of monounsaturated fatty acids and omega-7 and omega-9 fatty acids, which are associated with lipid metabolism and may influence CVD risk pathways. The study also found that a rapid increase in atherogenic lipid measures occurred between the ages of 45 and 50, coinciding with the onset of menopause, highlighting menopause's role in altering lipid metabolism and contributing to long-term metabolic and cardiovascular risks.
Key implications
The findings from this study underline menopause as a pivotal factor influencing metabolic shifts that increase the risk of cardiovascular and metabolic diseases. The changes in lipid and amino acid profiles suggest that menopause accelerates a shift towards a pro-atherogenic state, which can predispose women to conditions like heart disease and type 2 diabetes. These insights are crucial for clinicians as they highlight the need for early monitoring of metabolic health during the menopausal transition. The study also emphasizes the importance of considering metabolic profiling, including lipoprotein subclass and amino acid measures, as potential biomarkers for future cardiovascular risk in postmenopausal women. Additionally, the role of menopause in influencing fatty acid metabolism suggests that interventions targeting diet and lifestyle may be necessary to mitigate these risks.
Primary ovarian insufficiency
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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Primary Ovarian Insufficiency affects young women with amenorrhea and elevated FSH levels. It involves follicle dysfunction or depletion and requires comprehensive diagnosis and management, including hormone therapy and fertility preservation.
What was studied?
This paper focuses on Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI), previously known as premature ovarian failure. POI is a condition in which the ovaries cease to function properly before the age of 40. The study investigates the clinical presentation, causes, and diagnostic challenges of POI, particularly in spontaneous 46,XX cases. It explores the mechanisms behind follicle dysfunction and depletion, as well as the relationship with autoimmune diseases and genetic factors, like mutations in the FMR1 gene.
Who was studied?
The paper discusses the condition in women under 40 with amenorrhea and elevated Follicle-Stimulating Hormone (FSH) levels. It highlights spontaneous cases of 46,XX primary ovarian insufficiency, which affects approximately 1 in 100 women. Family history and genetic tests, such as the FMR1 premutation, are examined as risk factors. The study does not focus on specific participant data but emphasizes the general clinical presentation and diagnostic approach for affected women.
Most important findings
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency can manifest through two primary mechanisms: follicle dysfunction (where follicles remain but fail to function properly) and follicle depletion (where no follicles are present). Approximately 10-15% of cases have a family history, and autoimmune diseases like thyroid dysfunction and adrenal insufficiency are associated with the condition. Genetic mutations, particularly in the FMR1 gene, can lead to POI, with 5-10% of women experiencing spontaneous remission, resulting in pregnancy. The study also underscores the need for hormonal therapy and fertility preservation options, as well as regular monitoring of bone health.
Key implications
The implications of this study for clinicians include the need for a comprehensive evaluation of women with suspected POI, involving genetic testing (such as for FMR1), karyotype analysis, and adrenal autoimmunity testing. Hormone-replacement therapy (HRT) should be considered for symptomatic women, and bone mineral density should be monitored to prevent osteoporosis. The emotional and psychological impact of POI also requires attention, as many women experience distress and fertility challenges. Additionally, there are increased risks of cardiovascular issues, and patients should be encouraged to follow bone and heart health guidelines.
Post-Coital Antifertility Activity of Hibiscus rosa-sinensis Linn. roots
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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The ethanolic root extract of Hibiscus rosa-sinensis shows potent, reversible post-coital antifertility effects in rats via estrogenic mechanisms, supporting its potential as a safe herbal contraceptive.
What was studied?
This original research study investigated the post-coital antifertility and estrogenic activities of the ethanolic extract of Hibiscus rosa-sinensis Linn. roots. The primary aim was to evaluate the extract's ability to prevent implantation in pregnant rats and to assess its effects on uterine weight, histology, and vaginal cytology, which are indicative of estrogenic activity. The study focused on exploring the potential contraceptive effects of the root extract, an area less studied compared to other parts of the plant, like flowers or leaves.
Who was studied?
The study utilized female albino Wistar rats for antifertility testing and immature ovariectomized female rats for estrogenic activity assessment. Animals were maintained under standard laboratory conditions, and only rats with regular estrous cycles were selected for the experiments. For toxicity evaluation, adult albino mice of both sexes were used. The post-coital antifertility testing involved treating pregnant rats with oral doses of 200 and 400 mg/kg body weight of the ethanolic root extract from day 1 to day 7 of pregnancy, followed by laparotomy to assess implantation on day 10.
Most important findings
The study demonstrated potent post-coital antifertility activity, with the 400 mg/kg dose producing 100% inhibition of implantation, while the 200 mg/kg dose showed partial inhibition (16.66%). No toxic effects or weight changes were observed, and the antifertility effect was reversible as treated rats conceived normally after discontinuation. Estrogenic activity was evident as the 400 mg/kg extract significantly increased uterine weight, uterine diameter, and endometrial thickness compared to controls. Histological analysis revealed uterine inflation, increased epithelial cell proliferation, and fluid accumulation resembling the proestrous/estrous state. Vaginal smears indicated increased cornification, consistent with estrogenic stimulation. Co-administration of the extract with ethinyl estradiol further enhanced these parameters, indicating no antiestrogenic effect. The findings suggest the extract's antifertility action is likely mediated by estrogenic mechanisms, causing anti-implantation effects.
Key implications
This study supports the traditional use of Hibiscus rosa-sinensis roots as a potential herbal contraceptive through anti-implantation and estrogenic effects. The extract's strong and reversible inhibition of implantation with no overt toxicity indicates promise for developing safe, plant-based contraceptive agents. These findings encourage further research into isolation of active phytochemicals, mechanism elucidation, and evaluation of clinical applicability. Given the current challenges with synthetic contraceptives, including side effects and discontinuation, such herbal alternatives could provide safer, more acceptable fertility regulation options, especially in resource-limited settings.
Female Fertility and the Nutritional Approach: The Most Essential Aspects
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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A narrative review examining how dietary patterns, nutrients, and gut microbiota impact female fertility, highlighting the Mediterranean diet’s benefits, the risks of Western diets, key micronutrients, and the clinical importance of individualized nutritional care for women planning pregnancy or experiencing infertility.
What was reviewed?
This comprehensive narrative review focused on the relationship between dietary factors, nutritional supplementation, and female fertility, with an emphasis on how dietary patterns and specific nutrients influence reproductive outcomes. The authors synthesized current evidence regarding the effects of macronutrients (carbohydrates, fats, proteins), micronutrients (vitamins, minerals), phytoestrogens, gluten, antioxidants, caffeine, alcohol, and the gut microbiota on female fertility. Special attention was given to the Mediterranean versus Western-style dietary patterns and their associations with ovulatory health, metabolic disorders such as polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), endometriosis, and assisted reproductive technology (ART) outcomes. The review also detailed how specific nutrients and bioactive food components interact with underlying hormonal, metabolic, and inflammatory pathways relevant to the reproductive system.
Who was reviewed?
The review encompassed a broad population of reproductive-aged women, including those planning pregnancy, experiencing infertility (of both known and idiopathic causes), and those undergoing ART. Studies drawn upon in the review included healthy women, women with metabolic and reproductive disorders (notably PCOS and endometriosis), and subgroups with dietary deficiencies or excesses. The review also referenced evidence regarding women with specific conditions such as celiac disease and those with varying levels of micronutrient status. While primarily focused on the female population, some comparative insights referenced male fertility or lifestyle factors, though male infertility was not the core subject.
Most important findings
The review underscores that dietary patterns have a significant impact on female fertility. Diets high in trans fats, refined carbohydrates, and added sugars are associated with higher risks of ovulatory disorders, insulin resistance, PCOS, and reduced ART success. Conversely, adherence to the Mediterranean diet, rich in dietary fiber, plant-based proteins, omega-3 fatty acids, vitamins, and minerals, is linked to improved ovulatory function, better metabolic profiles, and higher fertility rates, including among women undergoing ART. Micronutrients such as folic acid, vitamin D, iodine, and iron are particularly important, with deficiencies in these linked to impaired fertility, increased time to conception, and adverse pregnancy outcomes. The review highlights inconsistent findings regarding dairy fat, protein sources, and phytoestrogens, noting the need for individualized dietary recommendations. Importantly, the composition of the gut microbiota emerges as a potentially critical mediator of fertility, with Western diets promoting dysbiosis and inflammation, while fiber-rich, plant-based diets foster beneficial microbial shifts (notably increased Bifidobacteria and Prevotella). The review also finds limited evidence for the routine exclusion of gluten in non-celiac women and suggests routine supplementation of folic acid and vitamin D for women planning pregnancy.
Key implications
For clinicians, the review highlights the necessity of a holistic and individualized approach to female fertility, integrating dietary assessment and intervention as core components of preconception and infertility care. The findings support recommending Mediterranean-style dietary patterns, ensuring adequate intake (and, if necessary, supplementation) of key micronutrients such as folic acid, vitamin D, and iodine, and promoting gut health through fiber-rich, plant-based foods. Given the intricate links between diet, metabolic health, reproductive hormones, and the gut microbiome, multidisciplinary collaboration, including the involvement of clinical dietitians, is crucial. The review also suggests the importance of monitoring micronutrient status and considering celiac disease screening in infertile women. Current evidence does not support universal exclusion of gluten, caffeine (within recommended limits), or moderate alcohol prior to conception, but underscores the risks of excess. Future research should focus on clarifying the roles of specific nutrients, gut microbiota signatures, and developing standardized dietary recommendations for women planning pregnancy.
Associations between dysmenorrhea symptom-based phenotypes and vaginal microbiome: A pilot study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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This study links dysmenorrhea symptom phenotypes with distinct vaginal microbiome compositions, suggesting that microbiome imbalances contribute to more severe menstrual pain, which could be targeted in new treatments.
What was studied?
This pilot study aimed to explore the relationship between different symptom-based phenotypes of dysmenorrhea and the vaginal microbiome. Researchers hypothesized that variations in dysmenorrhea symptoms would be associated with differences in the vaginal microbiome during both on-menses and off-menses periods. The study involved a prospective, longitudinal design where 20 women, aged 15 to 24, were categorized into three dysmenorrhea phenotypes: mild localized pain, severe localized pain, and multiple severe symptoms with gastrointestinal involvement. Vaginal microbiome samples were collected using self-collected swabs during both phases of the menstrual cycle, and the microbiomes were analyzed using 16S rRNA gene sequencing to identify bacterial community compositions and their relationship to the severity of symptoms.
Who was studied?
The study focused on 20 women who met the inclusion criteria of being aged 15 to 24, with regular menstrual cycles (24–38 days), no major gynecological conditions such as endometriosis, and no use of hormonal contraceptives or antibiotics in the last three months. These women were grouped based on their dysmenorrhea symptom phenotypes: 12 participants with mild localized pain, 2 with severe localized pain, and 6 with multiple severe symptoms including gastrointestinal issues. Vaginal swabs were collected during the participants’ menstrual and non-menstrual periods to assess changes in the vaginal microbiome.
Most important findings
The study found significant differences in vaginal microbiome compositions between the dysmenorrhea phenotypes during menstruation, but not in the off-menses phase. The "multiple severe symptoms" phenotype exhibited a significantly lower abundance of Lactobacillus crispatus and a higher presence of Atopobium, Gardnerella, and Prevotella species compared to the "mild localized pain" phenotype during menstruation. These findings suggest that more severe symptoms of dysmenorrhea are linked to a dysbiotic vaginal microbiome, characterized by a reduced abundance of protective Lactobacillus and an overrepresentation of potentially pro-inflammatory bacteria. Additionally, changes in the vaginal microbiome from off-menses to on-menses were more pronounced in the "multiple severe symptoms" phenotype, showing a larger shift in bacterial abundances, particularly in the Lactobacillus and non-Lactobacillus groups.
Key implications
The findings of this study suggest that the vaginal microbiome may play a significant role in the severity of dysmenorrhea symptoms. Women with more severe symptom phenotypes exhibit microbiome profiles with higher levels of pro-inflammatory bacteria, which may contribute to increased pain and inflammation during menstruation. These results highlight the potential for targeting the vaginal microbiome in dysmenorrhea management, suggesting that interventions aimed at restoring a healthy microbial balance, such as probiotics or lifestyle changes, could offer new avenues for treating dysmenorrhea, particularly in cases with severe symptoms. Further research with larger sample sizes and more diverse populations is needed to confirm these findings and develop microbiome-targeted therapies for dysmenorrhea.
Menopause-Associated Lipid Metabolic Disorders and Foods Beneficial for Postmenopausal Women
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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This review synthesizes evidence on menopause-related lipid metabolic disorders, emphasizing estrogen deficiency, dietary interventions, and the role of probiotics and microbiome modulation in improving metabolic health among postmenopausal women.
What was reviewed?
This comprehensive review examined the relationship between menopause-associated changes in lipid metabolism and the increased risk of metabolic disorders in postmenopausal women. It addressed the physiological changes underlying menopause and their impact on fat distribution, lipid profiles, and the development of metabolic syndrome, obesity, and cardiovascular disease (CVD). The authors also critically reviewed dietary recommendations and beneficial compounds, including vitamin D, omega-3 fatty acids, antioxidants, phytochemicals, and probiotics, that may help manage or mitigate abnormal lipid metabolism in this population.
Who was reviewed?
The review focused on postmenopausal women, typically aged 45–55 years and older, representing a significant and growing portion of the global female population. The authors synthesized data from a wide range of studies, including large cohort and longitudinal studies such as the Study of Women’s Health Across the Nation (SWAN), as well as clinical trials, animal models (notably ovariectomized mice), and cross-sectional analyses. The population included healthy women, as well as those with obesity, metabolic syndrome, and related comorbidities.
Most important findings
The review highlights important associations between estrogen deficiency and changes in adipokines, such as increased leptin and resistin and decreased adiponectin and ghrelin, which collectively exacerbate insulin resistance and metabolic dysfunction. Notably, the review discusses the role of gut microbiota and probiotics, referencing emerging evidence that multistrain probiotics improve endothelial function and insulin resistance in obese postmenopausal women. Dietary interventions were shown to be effective: higher protein intake helps preserve lean mass and prevent sarcopenia, traditional diets rich in fish, seaweeds, vegetables, and fruits lower triglycerides and improve HDL-C, and supplementation with vitamin D and omega-3 fatty acids is associated with lower adiposity, improved lipid profiles, and reduced inflammation. Antioxidants and phytochemicals from plant foods, as well as probiotics, provide additional cardiometabolic protection.
Key implications
Understanding the interplay between menopause, lipid metabolism, and metabolic disorders is essential for developing preventive and therapeutic strategies in clinical practice. The review underscores the importance of dietary patterns and nutrients, particularly vitamin D, omega-3 fatty acids, antioxidants, phytochemicals, and probiotics, in improving lipid profiles, reducing inflammation, and supporting metabolic health in postmenopausal women. From a microbiome perspective, the documented benefits of probiotics and dietary modulation of gut flora suggest a promising avenue for personalized interventions to mitigate menopause-associated metabolic risk.
Low-Nickel Diet in Endometriosis: Symptom Relief and Nickel Mucositis Evidence
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) is a common gastrointestinal disorder characterized by symptoms such as abdominal pain, bloating, and altered bowel habits. Recent research has focused on the gut microbiota's role in IBS, aiming to identify specific microbial signatures associated with the condition.
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Nickel allergic contact mucositis was identified in over 90% of endometriosis patients with IBS-like symptoms. A low-nickel diet significantly reduced gastrointestinal, extra-intestinal, and gynecological symptoms, revealing nickel sensitivity as a key driver of endometriosis symptomatology.
What was studied?
This open-label pilot study evaluated the prevalence of nickel-related allergic contact mucositis in women with endometriosis who reported irritable bowel syndrome (IBS)-like symptoms, and whether a low-nickel diet in endometriosis alleviates gastrointestinal, extra-intestinal, and gynecologic symptoms. Participants underwent a nickel oral mucosa patch test (omPT), then followed a three-month low-nickel diet that excluded high-nickel foods such as legumes, whole grains, cocoa, and tomatoes as summarized in Table 1 on page 4. Symptom burden was quantified with a modified Gastrointestinal Symptom Rating Scale at baseline and after the dietary intervention, and pre-post differences were analyzed with Wilcoxon signed-rank tests.
Who was studied?
Eighty-three women with imaging or laparoscopically confirmed endometriosis were screened; 51 met symptom criteria, four were excluded for celiac disease or wheat allergy, and 16 dropped out, leaving 31 women (mean age 33.5 years) who completed the protocol. Clinical characteristics and sites of disease are detailed in Table 2 on pages 7–8. Notably, 28 of 31 completers (90.3 percent) had a positive omPT and were diagnosed with nickel allergic contact mucositis, whereas 3 of 31 were omPT-negative.
Most important findings
After three months of the low-nickel diet, all 15 gastrointestinal symptoms showed statistically significant reductions in intensity, including abdominal pain, bloating, reflux, altered bowel habits, and urgency. The bar charts on page 9 (Figure 3) illustrate consistent downward shifts across domains. Extra-intestinal symptoms such as headache, fatigue, brain fog, and dermatitis also declined significantly, as did gynecologic symptoms central to endometriosis care, including dysmenorrhea, dyspareunia, and chronic pelvic pain; these trends are shown on page 10 (Figure 4). Collectively, the data suggest that nickel exposure may trigger a low-grade mucosal inflammatory state that phenocopies IBS and amplifies pelvic pain symptomatology in a substantial subset of patients with endometriosis. From a microbiome-relevant perspective, the authors frame nickel as a metalloestrogen and environmental factor that can interact with mucosal immunity and symptom generation; the IBS-like phenotype of nickel allergic contact mucositis aligns with clinical entities frequently linked to gut dysbiosis, offering a plausible interface for future microbiome signatures work even though microbial taxa were not directly assayed in this study. The high positivity rate of omPT in this endometriosis cohort, combined with the broad symptom relief on a targeted elimination diet, positions nickel sensitivity as a potential major association for inclusion in a microbiome-signatures database focused on environmental and host-mucosal interactions.
Key implications
Clinically, routine consideration of nickel sensitivity is warranted in endometriosis patients who report IBS-like symptoms or refractory pelvic pain. The omPT offers a practical diagnostic adjunct, and a supervised low-nickel diet is a reasonable, time-limited therapeutic trial when omPT is positive. For translational research, these findings motivate integration of nickel exposure assessment and nickel-responsive symptom phenotyping into microbiome studies of endometriosis. Although the trial is limited by its small sample size, single-center design, and open-label methodology with notable dietary adherence challenges, the magnitude and breadth of symptom improvement across gastrointestinal, extra-intestinal, and gynecologic domains indicate that nickel allergic contact mucositis may be a clinically meaningful, modifiable driver of symptom burden in endometriosis. Future controlled studies should incorporate objective dietary nickel exposure metrics and mucosal or fecal biomarkers to map nickel-linked inflammatory pathways to microbial community features and to identify major microbial associations that co-vary with nickel-sensitive phenotypes.
Relationship between Diet, Menstrual Pain and other Menstrual Characteristics among Spanish Students
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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This study links specific elements of the Mediterranean diet, particularly fruit and olive oil intake, to menstrual pain and characteristics, highlighting potential roles for anti-inflammatory foods in menstrual health among Spanish university women.
What was studied?
This cross-sectional study explored the relationship between adherence to the Mediterranean diet, consumption of local foods typical of southern Spain, alcohol intake, and menstrual characteristics, such as pain, cycle length, flow, and regularity, among Spanish university women. The researchers aimed to determine whether specific dietary patterns or local food consumption influenced menstrual pain (dysmenorrhea) and other key menstrual features. Dietary adherence was assessed using the KIDMED questionnaire, while menstrual pain was measured with a visual analogue scale. The study also evaluated the impact of alcohol consumption (measured in standard drink units) alongside these dietary factors.
Who was studied?
The research involved 311 female health science students, aged 18–35, enrolled at the University of Huelva, Andalusia, Spain, during the 2018/2019 academic year. Participants were included if they met the age criterion and were not abroad on an academic exchange at the time of data collection. The mean age was 21.17 years, and the sample predominantly reflected normal BMI ranges according to WHO classification. All women completed a self-report questionnaire on their dietary habits, menstrual characteristics, and local food and alcohol consumption.
Most important findings
The majority of participants had moderate adherence to the Mediterranean diet (MD), with only 29.6% demonstrating high adherence. Low adherence to the MD was associated with longer menstrual cycles, while daily olive oil consumption correlated with reduced menstrual flow. Eating less than two pieces of fruit per day markedly increased the risk of experiencing menstrual pain, and consuming pulses more than once a week also raised the likelihood of dysmenorrhea. In contrast, women consuming strawberries and olive oil daily were less likely to report menstrual pain, although these differences were not statistically significant. Alcohol consumption was positively correlated with cycle length, but not with menstrual pain. Consumption of cured ham was linked to heavier menstrual bleeding and a higher percentage of severe pain among women with dysmenorrhea. Notably, no overall association was found between total MD adherence and prevalence or intensity of menstrual pain, but specific dietary elements, particularly fruit intake, showed significant protective effects. These findings highlight nuanced dietary-microbiome interactions potentially relevant for menstrual health, especially regarding anti-inflammatory and antioxidant-rich foods like olive oil and fruit.
Key implications
This study suggests that while general adherence to the Mediterranean diet may not directly reduce menstrual pain, specific dietary behaviors, such as higher fruit consumption and regular use of olive oil, are associated with more favorable menstrual characteristics, including reduced pain and lighter menstrual flow. The findings support the potential of micronutrient-rich, anti-inflammatory foods in modulating menstrual health, possibly through effects on the gut and systemic inflammation. For clinicians, these results underscore the importance of dietary counseling for young women with menstrual complaints, promoting increased fruit intake and the use of olive oil while advising moderation in processed meat consumption. The observed associations also provide a foundation for further research into microbiome-mediated mechanisms underlying menstrual disorders and dietary interventions.
Effect of Vitamin D Supplementation on Primary Dysmenorrhea
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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A systematic review and meta-analysis showed that vitamin D supplementation effectively reduces primary dysmenorrhea pain, especially with doses over 50,000 IU weekly, with significant improvements in pain severity and serum 25(OH)D levels.
What was studied?
This study systematically reviewed the effectiveness of vitamin D supplementation in alleviating primary dysmenorrhea symptoms. Dysmenorrhea, characterized by painful menstruation, often results from an inflammatory response. The study focused on randomized controlled trials (RCTs) that examined the effects of oral vitamin D, assessing pain levels using the Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) and Numerical Rating Scale (NRS). A total of nine RCTs were included in the meta-analysis to evaluate various dosages and administration frequencies of vitamin D supplementation.
Who was studied?
The study analyzed data from 695 participants across multiple RCTs, including women diagnosed with primary dysmenorrhea. These women were selected based on a normal menstrual cycle and no underlying reproductive disorders like endometriosis or fibroids. The participants were primarily from different age groups and varied geographical regions. The trials compared vitamin D supplementation against a placebo, with varying doses ranging from 5000 IU to 300,000 IU.
Most important findings
The meta-analysis revealed a significant reduction in the severity of dysmenorrhea pain among those who received vitamin D supplementation compared to the placebo group. The standardized mean difference (SMD) was −1.404 (95% CI: −2.078 to −0.731), indicating a strong therapeutic effect. Subgroup analyses showed that a weekly dose of over 50,000 IU of vitamin D significantly alleviated pain, regardless of the duration of the supplementation period. Additionally, the studies found a positive correlation between higher serum levels of 25(OH)D and reduced pain intensity. Importantly, the analysis also highlighted the significant role of vitamin D in regulating prostaglandin (PG) levels, which are central to dysmenorrhea's pathophysiology.
Key implications
The findings suggest that vitamin D supplementation can be an effective alternative treatment for primary dysmenorrhea, especially for those who experience side effects or contraindications with NSAIDs or oral contraceptives. Given that vitamin D deficiency is common among women with dysmenorrhea, this study supports considering vitamin D as a first-line therapy for pain management in primary dysmenorrhea. However, careful monitoring of vitamin D levels is recommended to avoid potential toxicity, particularly with long-term high-dose supplementation. Further research is needed to establish optimal dosing strategies and explore potential interactions with other micronutrients or treatments.
The Importance of Nutrition in Menopause and Perimenopause—A Review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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This review underscores the importance of nutrition in managing menopausal symptoms and preventing chronic diseases. It highlights key nutrients such as calcium, vitamin D, and protein and promotes a balanced diet and regular physical activity as integral parts of menopausal health management.
What was studied?
The article provides a review on the importance of nutrition during perimenopause and menopause. It focuses on the role of diet in managing menopausal symptoms and preventing chronic diseases such as cardiovascular disease, osteoporosis, and diabetes, which are commonly observed during this life stage. The review outlines the dietary strategies for managing weight gain, metabolic changes, and addressing nutrient deficiencies, while also highlighting key nutrients like vitamin D, calcium, and protein, which play vital roles in the health of menopausal women. It emphasizes the significance of a balanced diet and personalized nutrition counseling to improve health outcomes during this phase of life.
Who was studied?
The review discussed studies involving women in the perimenopausal and menopausal stages, primarily those aged 40 to 60 years, experiencing typical menopausal symptoms such as hot flashes, night sweats, and weight gain. These women were observed for their nutritional intake and the impact of dietary changes on their health, particularly focusing on obesity, cardiovascular risks, osteoporosis, and type 2 diabetes. The review also considered women with specific conditions, including hormone-sensitive breast cancer, to explore dietary recommendations that help reduce symptom severity and disease progression in this demographic.
Most important findings
The review found that dietary modifications play a crucial role in managing the symptoms of menopause. Increased physical activity combined with a balanced diet can reduce the risk of chronic conditions like cardiovascular disease and osteoporosis. Key nutrients, particularly vitamin D, calcium, B vitamins, and protein, were found to be essential for bone health and maintaining muscle mass. The Mediterranean diet, rich in vegetables, fruits, and healthy fats, was highlighted as particularly beneficial in reducing the risk of metabolic syndrome, controlling weight, and improving overall menopausal health. The review also stressed that proper hydration, including adequate fluid intake, is critical for maintaining metabolic functions, regulating heat balance, and supporting overall health. Additionally, it was noted that reducing calorie intake and incorporating fiber-rich foods, such as legumes and whole grains, help manage weight and support metabolic processes.
Key implications
The findings suggest that nutrition plays a pivotal role in alleviating menopausal symptoms and preventing associated chronic conditions. Clinicians should incorporate nutritional counseling into the management of menopausal women, emphasizing the importance of a balanced diet rich in key vitamins and minerals. Since obesity and metabolic disorders are prevalent during this period, dietary interventions targeting weight management, such as reducing caloric intake and increasing fiber, are crucial. Furthermore, ensuring adequate intake of calcium and vitamin D can help prevent osteoporosis and other bone-related issues. Women in menopause should be encouraged to adopt a holistic lifestyle approach, combining a healthy diet, regular physical activity, and adequate sleep to optimize their health and quality of life.
Menopause hot flashes and molecular mechanisms modulated by food-derived nutrients
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal hot flashes are one of the most common and disruptive symptoms that women experience during the transition to menopause. Characterized by sudden sensations of heat, sweating, and flushing, hot flashes can significantly affect a woman’s quality of life, causing sleep disturbances, mood swings, and even long-term health consequences. Understanding the complex mechanisms behind hot flashes, as well as the role of microbiome-targeted therapies, offers new avenues for improving menopausal health.
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This review discusses how food-derived nutrients modulate molecular mechanisms related to hot flashes in menopause, identifying dietary compounds that may offer effective, natural alternatives to hormonal treatments.
What was studied?
This review examines the molecular mechanisms underlying hot flashes during menopause, with a focus on how food-derived nutrients can modulate these mechanisms. It explores the role of various molecular pathways and genetic factors involved in hot flashes, including the kisspeptin-GnRH pathway, aryl hydrocarbon receptor signaling, and the effects of inflammatory biomarkers, oxidative stress, and glucose availability. The authors also analyze how specific food components, such as polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs), flavonoids, and carotenoids, may influence these pathways to alleviate hot flashes.
Who was studied?
The review synthesizes findings from numerous studies involving both human populations and animal models. It references genome-wide association studies (GWAS) of menopausal women and animal studies on the effects of food-derived compounds. The review also draws from research involving the impact of dietary nutrients on gene expression and cell signaling in neuronal and hypothalamic models, focusing on women experiencing menopausal symptoms such as hot flashes.
Most important findings
The study found that certain food-derived nutrients, such as equol, genistein, and docosahexaenoic acid (DHA), can modulate pathways that affect hot flashes, like the kisspeptin-GnRH pathway and oxidative stress. Nutrients such as curcumin and vitamin E have shown promising effects in reducing inflammation and oxidative stress, which are believed to play a role in the occurrence of hot flashes. The research also highlights the potential for compounds like quercetin, resveratrol, and apigenin to activate enzymes that may help mitigate symptoms by affecting estrogen metabolism and signaling pathways. The review suggests that these compounds could offer a natural alternative for managing menopausal symptoms, including hot flashes.
Key implications
The findings suggest that dietary interventions, particularly those focused on specific nutrients, could serve as effective natural treatments for managing hot flashes during menopause. By modulating key molecular pathways and cell signaling mechanisms, food-derived nutrients can provide a non-hormonal alternative to alleviate symptoms associated with menopausal transition.
The Role of the Mediterranean Diet in Assisted Reproduction: A Literature Review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This review summarizes evidence linking Mediterranean Diet adherence to improved ART outcomes, highlighting modest benefits for clinical pregnancy and live birth rates. Methodological heterogeneity and lack of RCTs limit conclusions, underscoring the need for standardized research and mechanistic exploration.
What was reviewed?
This narrative review synthesized evidence from seven observational studies addressing the association between preconception adherence to the Mediterranean Diet and outcomes in assisted reproductive technologies (ART), such as in vitro fertilization (IVF) and intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI). The review emphasized the Mediterranean Diet as a holistic dietary pattern, high in plant-based foods, olive oil, and moderate fish/poultry, with low red/processed meat, rather than focusing on individual food components. Study selection spanned publications up to July 2023, with data extracted on Mediterranean Diet adherence (mainly via various food frequency questionnaires and scoring systems), ART protocol details, and primary fertility and ART outcomes, including oocyte and embryo quality, clinical pregnancy, live birth rates, and ovarian response. The review critically appraised methodological strengths and limitations, particularly the heterogeneity in Mediterranean Diet assessment and ART protocols, and lack of standardization across studies.
Who was reviewed?
The review encompassed 2,321 women experiencing infertility and undergoing ART, with individual study sample sizes ranging from 161 to 590 participants. Most participants were aged between their late 20s and early 40s, with studies from Europe (Netherlands, Greece, Italy), the USA, and China. All studies included women preparing for or undergoing IVF or ICSI; some focused on subgroups, such as non-obese women or those with normal BMI and ovarian reserve. Notably, male partners and their dietary habits were largely excluded from analysis, and studies focusing on specific infertility-related pathologies (e.g., PCOS, endometriosis) were not included.
Most important findings
Findings indicate that higher Mediterranean Diet adherence may be associated with modest improvements in ART outcomes: three studies reported increased clinical pregnancy rates or live birth rates, while others found improved embryo yield or ovarian response. However, the effect was not universal; two studies showed no significant associations with ART success rates, oocyte, or embryo quality. One cross-sectional study linked lower Mediterranean Diet adherence to an increased risk of poor ovarian response. Effects were sometimes age-dependent, with benefits seen predominantly in women under 35. Microbiome-related mechanisms are not directly studied, but the Mediterranean Diet’s anti-inflammatory and antioxidant properties are hypothesized to support fertility by promoting a favorable endometrial environment, potentially modulating the reproductive tract microbiome, reducing oxidative stress, and enhancing implantation. The major limitation is heterogeneity in Mediterranean Diet scoring, ART protocols, and lack of randomized controlled trials, which constrains causal inference and generalizability.
Key implications
While the Mediterranean Diet appears promising as a supportive intervention for women undergoing ART, current evidence is inconsistent and limited by methodological variability. Clinicians may consider recommending the Mediterranean Diet as part of preconception counseling for infertile couples, given its broad health benefits and potential to improve ART outcomes. However, robust randomized controlled trials with standardized dietary assessment tools are necessary to establish causality and clarify the magnitude of benefit. Understanding microbiome-mediated mechanisms could further inform personalized dietary recommendations to optimize reproductive success.
Efficacy of Zinc Supplementation in the Management of Primary Dysmenorrhea
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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Zinc supplementation significantly reduces pain severity in women with primary dysmenorrhea, especially with longer durations of use, offering a safe and effective treatment option.
What was studied?
This study is a systematic review and meta-analysis that investigates the efficacy of zinc supplementation in managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD). Primary dysmenorrhea is a common condition marked by painful menstrual cramps that occur without an underlying pelvic pathology. The researchers aimed to assess the impact of zinc supplementation on pain severity and associated symptoms, with a focus on the dosage and treatment duration.
Who was studied?
The study reviewed randomized controlled trials (RCTs) that included women diagnosed with primary dysmenorrhea. Participants were predominantly adolescent and young adult females, particularly university students from regions where zinc deficiency is more prevalent. The trials considered different zinc dosages and the duration of treatment, focusing on their impact on reducing pain severity in women experiencing dysmenorrhea.
Most important findings
Zinc supplementation was found to significantly reduce the severity of menstrual pain compared to placebo. The meta-analysis revealed that doses as low as 7 mg/day of elemental zinc were sufficient to achieve clinically significant pain relief, and longer treatment durations (≥8 weeks) led to more substantial reductions in pain. Additionally, the study demonstrated that zinc supplementation had a favorable safety profile, with only mild side effects like gastrointestinal discomfort being reported. No significant difference in adverse events between the zinc and placebo groups was observed. The findings also suggested that zinc may exert its effects by modulating oxidative stress and inflammatory responses, particularly through the inhibition of prostaglandin production and enhancement of uterine microcirculation.
Key implications
The findings suggest that zinc supplementation is an effective and well-tolerated option for managing primary dysmenorrhea, with notable improvements in pain severity after regular use. Given its anti-inflammatory and antioxidant properties, zinc presents a promising non-pharmacological approach to pain relief in women with PD. The study supports the use of lower zinc doses as a practical and safe intervention, though further research is needed to explore the long-term effects and broader applicability across diverse populations.
Butyrate as a Potential Modulator in Gynecological Disease Progression
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This review explores butyrate’s role as a modulator in gynecological diseases, including PCOS, endometriosis, and cancer, highlighting its potential as a therapeutic agent through immune modulation, inflammation reduction, and cancer inhibition.
What was studied?
This review examines the potential of butyrate, a short-chain fatty acid (SCFA) produced by gut microbiota, as a modulator in the progression of various gynecological diseases. The paper focuses on the therapeutic effects of butyrate in conditions such as polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), endometriosis, and gynecological cancers like cervical and ovarian cancer. The study explores butyrate’s multifaceted biological activities, especially its role as a histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitor, which modulates gene expression, immune responses, and inflammation. It also highlights how butyrate’s systemic effects on metabolism, immune function, and cancer progression can be leveraged for therapeutic purposes in gynecological diseases.
Who was studied?
The review integrates findings from both human and animal models. Women with gynecological diseases such as PCOS, endometriosis, and gynecological cancers are the primary subjects discussed, with the review also drawing on animal studies, particularly those involving rat and mouse models of these diseases. The paper emphasizes how alterations in gut microbiota and butyrate production are linked to reproductive health issues, exploring both clinical data and experimental research on how dietary interventions and microbial modulation can affect disease progression.
Most important findings
Butyrate has been shown to have significant therapeutic potential in gynecological diseases. In PCOS, butyrate improves metabolic and reproductive outcomes by restoring hormonal balance, enhancing insulin sensitivity, and reducing chronic inflammation. For endometriosis, butyrate helps mitigate immune dysregulation and limits lesion proliferation. In gynecological cancers, including cervical and ovarian cancer, butyrate demonstrates anticancer effects through mechanisms such as apoptosis induction, cell cycle arrest, and tumor progression suppression. Butyrate’s actions are largely attributed to its ability to inhibit HDAC, leading to increased histone acetylation and altered gene transcription. The review also highlights the potential of dietary interventions, such as high-fiber and Mediterranean diets, to increase butyrate production, enhancing therapeutic outcomes.
Key implications
The review suggests that butyrate could play a crucial role in managing gynecological diseases, offering a novel, microbiome-centered approach to therapy. The ability of butyrate to modulate immune responses, reduce inflammation, and regulate gene expression makes it a promising agent in treating conditions like PCOS, endometriosis, and gynecological cancers. However, the rapid metabolism and short half-life of butyrate present challenges for its clinical application. Future research should focus on developing strategies to improve butyrate delivery and enhance its stability, such as encapsulation techniques or the use of butyrate analogs, to maximize its therapeutic potential in gynecological health.
Impact of Probiotic Supplementation and High-Intensity Interval Training on Primary Dysmenorrhea
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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HIIT significantly improved pain and physical fitness in women with primary dysmenorrhea, while probiotics showed some benefits in alleviating premenstrual symptoms. However, probiotics alone did not impact hormone levels or inflammation.
What was studied?
This randomized, double-blind, controlled trial investigated the effects of probiotic supplementation and high-intensity interval training (HIIT) on primary dysmenorrhea (PD). Researchers aimed to understand how these interventions influenced menstrual distress, pain severity, inflammation, hormonal modulation, and physical fitness in women. Participants were divided into different treatment groups receiving either HIIT, probiotics, both, or a placebo, with pre- and post-intervention assessments of various biochemical markers, hormone levels, menstrual pain, and overall physical health.
Who was studied?
The study included 65 female participants aged 18–40 years, diagnosed with primary dysmenorrhea, from a Taiwanese university. Participants were randomly assigned to control or intervention groups. Exclusion criteria included the use of hormone therapy, gastrointestinal disorders, and other medical conditions. Data on menstrual health and physical fitness were gathered before and after the 10-week intervention.
Most important findings
The study found significant improvements in menstrual distress, pain severity, and physical fitness among those who participated in HIIT, particularly in the groups that combined HIIT with probiotics. Pain levels, as measured by the Short-Form McGill Pain Questionnaire (SF-MPQ) and Visual Analog Scale (VAS), significantly decreased in the HIIT groups compared to those receiving only probiotics or placebo. Hormonal changes were also observed, with the HIIT groups experiencing a decrease in estradiol and prolactin, and an increase in progesterone and cortisol, indicating a hormonal modulation effect. However, probiotics alone did not significantly impact physical fitness or hormone levels.
Key implications
This study suggests that combining probiotic supplementation with HIIT may offer a promising complementary approach for managing primary dysmenorrhea by reducing pain and improving physical fitness. While probiotics showed some benefit in alleviating premenstrual symptoms, the lack of hormonal and inflammatory modulation calls for further research to explore the mechanisms through which probiotics interact with other treatments. The results support the integration of exercise and probiotics in holistic care strategies for women suffering from dysmenorrhea.
Differential Composition of Vaginal Microbiome Is Associated With Successful Intrauterine Insemination in Couples With Idiopathic Infertility
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Infertility
Infertility
Infertility is the inability to conceive after 12 months of regular, unprotected sex. It affects both men and women and can be due to various physical, hormonal, or genetic factors. Treatments include medication, surgery, assisted reproductive technologies, and lifestyle changes.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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This study links the vaginal microbiome, particularly Lactobacillus crispatus dominance, to successful IUI outcomes in idiopathic infertility. Dysbiosis, with an increase in Bifidobacterium, was associated with IUI failure, suggesting the importance of vaginal microbiome evaluation in fertility treatments.
What was studied?
This study examined the vaginal and seminal microbiomes of couples with idiopathic infertility and their correlation with intrauterine insemination (IUI) outcomes. The researchers sought to determine whether the microbiomes of the vaginal and seminal fluids influence the success rate of IUI. They specifically focused on identifying any differences in the microbiota composition between women with successful and unsuccessful IUI outcomes, particularly in relation to Lactobacillus species, which are considered crucial for maintaining a healthy vaginal environment.
Who was studied?
The study involved 23 couples with idiopathic infertility undergoing their first IUI treatment at the Centro Scienze della Natalità in Milan, Italy. Both female and male partners participated, with vaginal swabs taken from the female participants and seminal fluid samples from the male participants on the day of the IUI procedure. The female participants had a mean age of 33 years, and the male participants were approximately 34 years old. The couples were all Caucasian, and the women underwent a comprehensive clinical evaluation to exclude any other known causes of infertility, such as endometriosis or male factor infertility.
What were the most important findings?
The study found that the vaginal microbiome composition differed significantly between women who achieved pregnancy following IUI and those who did not. Women with successful IUI outcomes had a vaginal microbiome predominantly dominated by Lactobacillus crispatus, which is associated with a healthy and stable vaginal ecosystem. On the other hand, women who experienced IUI failure showed a greater diversity in their vaginal microbiota, including higher levels of Bifidobacterium and other non-Lactobacillus species, indicating a more dysbiotic environment. The presence of Lactobacillus species, especially L. crispatus, was strongly associated with a higher probability of successful pregnancy. Interestingly, no significant differences in the seminal microbiome were observed between men whose partners experienced success or failure in IUI, suggesting that male seminal microbiota might not play as critical a role in IUI success as vaginal microbiota does.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings suggest that the vaginal microbiome, particularly the dominance of Lactobacillus crispatus, could serve as an important biomarker for predicting IUI success in couples with idiopathic infertility. This underscores the potential value of incorporating vaginal microbiome analysis into fertility assessments prior to IUI procedures. Clinicians might consider characterizing the vaginal microbiome in these patients and explore interventions, such as probiotics or other microbiome-targeted therapies, to restore a more optimal microbial balance and improve reproductive outcomes. However, given the study's relatively small sample size, further research with larger cohorts is necessary to confirm these findings and determine the clinical applicability of microbiome-based interventions.
Ovarian cancer: Diagnosis and treatment strategies (Review)
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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This review discusses ovarian cancer diagnosis, molecular characteristics, and treatment strategies, emphasizing the role of targeted therapies like PARP inhibitors and immunotherapy, with a focus on personalized treatment approaches based on genetic and molecular tumor profiles.
What was reviewed?
This review article focuses on the current advancements in the diagnosis and treatment strategies for ovarian cancer. The review discusses the challenges associated with early detection, which is often complicated due to the subtle symptoms and lack of reliable screening techniques. It explores diagnostic approaches, including serum biomarkers like CA125, HE4, and other molecular markers. The review also covers the promising roles of targeted therapies, such as PARP inhibitors and anti-angiogenesis therapies, in treating ovarian cancer, as well as the evolving potential of immunotherapy. It highlights the need for personalized treatments based on genetic profiles and tumor characteristics, noting the significant progress in molecular-based strategies for ovarian cancer treatment.
Who was reviewed?
This review synthesizes a broad range of studies and clinical research findings on ovarian cancer from various researchers and clinical trials. The studies reviewed focus on ovarian cancer's molecular genetics, diagnosis, treatment strategies, and therapeutic advancements. The authors discuss the characteristics of different ovarian cancer subtypes, diagnostic markers, and the current and future therapeutic options. Additionally, it evaluates various biomarker studies and therapeutic trials to present a comprehensive understanding of the disease's clinical management.
Most important findings
The review highlighted several key points. Firstly, ovarian cancer is often diagnosed at an advanced stage due to the lack of effective early screening methods. CA125 remains the most commonly used biomarker, though its sensitivity is limited, especially in early-stage cases. The combination of CA125 and HE4 shows promise in improving diagnostic accuracy. Moreover, new liquid biopsy techniques, such as the analysis of circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA), provide a non-invasive alternative to traditional methods. In treatment, targeted therapies like PARP inhibitors (e.g., olaparib, rucaparib, niraparib) have proven beneficial, especially for BRCA-mutated ovarian cancers. The review also points out the significance of anti-angiogenesis therapies, such as bevacizumab, and the increasing importance of immunotherapy, particularly immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) and adoptive cell therapies, as potential future strategies. Finally, the review underscores the need for personalized medicine tailored to the genetic and molecular profiles of individual tumors.
Key implications
The review’s findings have substantial clinical implications. The need for more effective early detection methods is clear, and advancements in liquid biopsy and combined biomarker assays could significantly improve diagnosis. For treatment, the ongoing development and application of targeted therapies, such as PARP inhibitors, hold promise for enhancing progression-free survival, especially in genetically predisposed populations. However, challenges remain in overcoming treatment resistance and improving patient outcomes, particularly in recurrent cases. The potential integration of immunotherapy with targeted therapies is an exciting frontier, offering hope for more durable and personalized treatment regimens. Despite the promise of these therapies, further research is needed to optimize combination strategies, address side effects, and develop cost-effective treatments that can be widely accessible. Personalized treatment approaches based on genetic profiles may revolutionize ovarian cancer care by offering tailored therapies that are more effective and less toxic.
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease Trends Among Emergency Department Visits in North Carolina, 2008 to 2017
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) is a complex interplay between pathogens, immune responses, and microbial communities. As research continues to uncover the microbiome's role in reproductive health, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as probiotics, prebiotics, and transplants are redefining how we prevent and treat PID. This page dives deep into these innovations, offering a glimpse into the future of personalized, biologically informed women’s healthcare.
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This study identified a declining trend in emergency department diagnoses of PID among North Carolina women from 2008-2017. Persistent disparities emerged among young, low-income, and publicly insured women, underscoring the need for improved screening, reporting, and public health interventions to reduce PID's serious reproductive consequences.
What was studied?
This study examined trends in pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) diagnoses among women aged 15-44 years visiting emergency departments (EDs) in North Carolina (NC) from 2008 to 2017. Researchers utilized the North Carolina Disease Event Tracking and Epidemiology Collection Tool (NC DETECT), a real-time surveillance system gathering data from nearly all NC emergency departments. The primary goal was to identify trends and disparities in PID diagnoses based on demographic factors such as age, socioeconomic status, insurance coverage, and regional location.
Who was studied?
The study included women aged 15-44 who visited emergency departments in North Carolina between 2008 and 2017. The analysis specifically targeted PID diagnoses identified through ICD-9-CM and ICD-10-CM diagnostic codes within ED visit records. The study reviewed a total of 54,502 ED visits by 51,847 women diagnosed with PID during this period.
What were the most important findings?
The study found a significant decline in PID diagnoses from 1.0% (6,189 women) in 2008 to 0.58% (4,337 women) in 2016, with a slight increase to 0.61% (4,371 women) in 2017. The majority (95.5%) of women diagnosed with PID visited the ED only once annually. PID diagnoses were most prevalent among women aged 20-24 years, those covered by public insurance, and women living in the most impoverished neighborhoods. Regionally, the Coastal area of NC showed the highest PID rates.
The study emphasized that approximately 20% of PID cases are attributable to untreated Chlamydia trachomatis, while about one-third to half are caused by Neisseria gonorrhoeae. Additional pathogens such as Mycoplasma genitalium and other bacteria associated with bacterial vaginosis also contribute to PID. Notably, fewer than 2% of women diagnosed with PID in EDs had a concurrent or prior diagnosis of chlamydia or gonorrhea within the same year, indicating possible gaps in STI screening or reporting in emergency settings.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The major implications of this study highlight the limitations of current PID reporting and diagnostic practices. Despite PID being a reportable condition, significant underreporting exists, as indicated by the discrepancy between reported cases and ED diagnoses. The findings suggest a need for improved public health strategies to increase screening and treatment for underlying infections, particularly chlamydia and gonorrhea, to reduce PID incidence. Recognizing that the highest burden occurs among socioeconomically disadvantaged groups and younger women, targeted interventions to enhance STI screening and education in these populations could significantly mitigate PID’s long-term reproductive consequences, such as infertility and ectopic pregnancies
The Efficacy of Zinc Administration in the Treatment of Primary Dysmenorrhea
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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This study demonstrates that zinc supplementation, when combined with mefenamic acid, significantly reduces primary dysmenorrhea pain and incidence, offering a more effective treatment strategy than mefenamic acid alone.
What was studied?
This clinical trial evaluated the efficacy of zinc supplementation in combination with mefenamic acid in the treatment of primary dysmenorrhea. The study compared the effectiveness of this combined treatment to mefenamic acid alone in reducing pain severity and the incidence of dysmenorrhea over a three-month period. Primary dysmenorrhea is characterized by painful menstrual cramps caused by uterine contractions, and zinc has been hypothesized to alleviate these symptoms by modulating prostaglandin metabolism and reducing inflammation.
Who was studied?
The study involved 200 female university students who had a history of primary dysmenorrhea. Participants were between the ages of 18 and 26, with regular menstrual cycles and no significant diseases. The students were randomly assigned to one of two groups: the intervention group received zinc supplementation (220 mg daily) along with mefenamic acid (250 mg three times daily), while the control group received mefenamic acid along with a placebo. Both groups were followed for three months, and pain levels were measured before and after treatment using a standardized pain scale.
Most important findings
The study found significant improvements in pain reduction in both groups, but the intervention group (zinc + mefenamic acid) showed a greater reduction in pain severity. The mean pain score in the intervention group decreased from 5.3 to 1.2, a change of 4.1, while in the control group, it decreased from 5.8 to 2.9, a change of 2.9. Moreover, 64% of women in the intervention group no longer experienced dysmenorrhea after treatment, compared to only 33% in the control group. These findings suggest that zinc supplementation, in combination with mefenamic acid, is more effective in reducing primary dysmenorrhea symptoms than mefenamic acid alone.
Key implications
The study suggests that zinc supplementation could be an effective adjunct to traditional treatments for primary dysmenorrhea. By enhancing the action of mefenamic acid, zinc not only reduces pain severity but also lowers the incidence of dysmenorrhea. This treatment combination could serve as a more holistic approach to managing dysmenorrhea, potentially reducing reliance on NSAIDs and their associated side effects. Clinicians may consider recommending zinc supplementation for patients with primary dysmenorrhea, particularly in cases where conventional treatments provide limited relief.
The challenge of pelvic inflammatory disease
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) is a complex interplay between pathogens, immune responses, and microbial communities. As research continues to uncover the microbiome's role in reproductive health, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as probiotics, prebiotics, and transplants are redefining how we prevent and treat PID. This page dives deep into these innovations, offering a glimpse into the future of personalized, biologically informed women’s healthcare.
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This review highlights PID’s diagnostic challenges, microbiological associations, and evidence-based treatment guidelines. It emphasizes routine screening for chlamydia to reduce disease incidence, focusing clinicians on adopting comprehensive strategies aligned with current CDC recommendations to effectively manage and prevent PID and its severe reproductive complications.
What was reviewed?
The paper reviewed the complexities involved in the diagnosis, management, and prevention of pelvic inflammatory disease (PID), emphasizing its multifactorial nature and clinical challenges. PID, characterized as an upper genital tract infection, can manifest as endometritis, salpingitis, oophoritis, tubo-ovarian abscess, and peritonitis. The review specifically discussed diagnostic criteria recommended by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), explored available diagnostic tools (e.g., imaging and laboratory methods), treatment strategies, and emphasized prevention, primarily through screening for chlamydial infections.
Who was reviewed?
The review specifically evaluated clinical guidelines, diagnostic criteria, treatment strategies, and prevention recommendations as proposed by authoritative bodies, notably the CDC. Additionally, it assessed evidence from multiple studies, including the Pelvic Inflammatory Disease Evaluation and Clinical Health (PEACH) study, which compared inpatient versus outpatient management outcomes.
What were the most important findings?
The review underscored significant challenges clinicians face in diagnosing PID, attributed to its varied clinical presentations, ranging from asymptomatic to severe illness. Crucially, PID is polymicrobial, commonly associated with pathogens such as Chlamydia trachomatis, Neisseria gonorrhoeae, and aerobic and anaerobic vaginal flora. Chlamydia and Gonorrhea remain predominant pathogens and diagnostic targets. Diagnostic recommendations highlighted the necessity of empirical treatment for women presenting with pelvic tenderness and risk factors for sexually transmitted infections (STIs). Key diagnostic criteria include uterine, adnexal, or cervical motion tenderness, supported by laboratory and imaging findings such as elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate, positive chlamydial or gonorrheal cultures, and suggestive imaging findings (e.g., thickened, fluid-filled tubes on ultrasound or MRI).
The review emphasized significant geographical variations in antibiotic resistance, notably fluoroquinolone-resistant N. gonorrhoeae, influencing therapeutic decisions. Recommended antibiotics must cover primary pathogens and anaerobes. The findings from the PEACH trial demonstrated that outpatient antibiotic therapy effectively prevented long-term complications like infertility and chronic pelvic pain in mild to moderate cases. The article further advocated routine screening for asymptomatic lower genital tract chlamydial infections as an effective strategy to reduce PID incidence and subsequent complications, such as infertility and ectopic pregnancy.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review highlights critical implications for clinical practice. First, it reinforces the need for maintaining a high clinical suspicion for PID to initiate prompt empirical treatment. Second, clinicians should integrate current CDC guidelines, especially concerning antibiotic choice in the context of antibiotic resistance patterns. Third, routine chlamydial screening for young, sexually active women as a preventative measure. Overall, the review provides clarity on evidence-based management strategies that clinicians can directly apply to enhance patient outcomes, minimize complications, and better handle the multifaceted clinical presentation of PID.
Actaea racemosa L. Is More Effective in Combination with Rhodiola rosea L. for Relief of Menopausal Symptoms
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Combining Rhodiola rosea and Actaea racemosa extracts significantly improves menopausal symptoms and quality of life, outperforming black cohosh alone with good safety.
What was studied?
This randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial evaluated the efficacy and safety of a novel herbal preparation, Menopause Relief EP® (RR-BC), combining extracts of Actaea racemosa (black cohosh, BC) and Rhodiola rosea (RR), in relieving menopausal symptoms. The study compared this combination against two doses of black cohosh alone and placebo over 12 weeks. The primary outcomes were improvements in menopausal symptom severity assessed by the Kupperman Menopausal Index (KMI) and Menopause Rating Scale (MRS), with secondary endpoints including quality of life (QoL) measured by the Utian Quality of Life (UQOL) scale. Safety and adverse events (AEs) were also monitored.
Who was studied?
The study enrolled 220 menopausal women aged 40–82 years (median 52 years) diagnosed with menopausal complaints confirmed by elevated FSH and low estradiol levels. Participants were randomized evenly into four groups (RR-BC combination, low-dose BC, high-dose BC, and placebo). Patients had moderate menopausal symptoms as measured by baseline KMI and MRS scores. Women with hormone therapy, psychological disorders, or other conditions likely to interfere with outcomes were excluded. Ninety percent completed the study per protocol, with treatment compliance exceeding 90% across groups.
Most important findings
The RR-BC combination significantly reduced menopausal symptom severity, as shown by a 71.2% decrease in KMI scores after 12 weeks, outperforming both low-dose and high-dose BC groups and placebo. Similarly, MRS scores decreased by 67.7% with RR-BC versus 49.9% and 60.0% for the BC groups. Quality of life, particularly in emotional and physical health domains, improved significantly more with RR-BC than with BC or placebo. The RR-BC group also experienced significant improvements in sexual activity. Safety analysis showed no significant difference in adverse event frequency or severity between groups, with no serious adverse events reported. The data support a synergistic or additive effect of Rhodiola when combined with black cohosh, enhancing relief from psychological and somatic menopausal symptoms. Although the study did not directly assess microbiome changes, both plants have known adaptogenic and neuroprotective properties that may indirectly influence microbiome-associated inflammation and hormonal regulation, which are relevant to menopause symptomatology.
Key implications
This trial demonstrates that combining Rhodiola rosea with Actaea racemosa provides superior symptom relief and quality of life improvements for menopausal women compared to black cohosh alone, with excellent safety and tolerability. The combination’s enhanced effect on emotional health and sexual function suggests it addresses neuropsychological symptoms effectively, likely via adaptogenic and estrogen-modulating mechanisms. These findings encourage further investigation of combined botanical therapies in menopause, including exploration of their impact on the microbiome and inflammatory pathways. This approach offers a promising alternative or adjunct to hormone replacement therapy, especially for women seeking non-hormonal, plant-based interventions with favorable safety profiles.
Potential Role of Vaginal Microbiota in Ovarian Cancer Carcinogenesis, Progression and Treatment
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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This review highlights the role of vaginal microbiota in ovarian cancer carcinogenesis, progression, and treatment. It discusses microbial dysbiosis and potential therapeutic interventions like probiotics and vaginal microbiota transplantation, offering promising avenues for improving cancer treatment.
What was studied?
This review examines the role of the vaginal microbiota in ovarian cancer carcinogenesis, progression, and treatment. The paper highlights how changes in the vaginal microbiome, particularly dysbiosis, may influence ovarian cancer. It explores the connections between vaginal microbial composition and ovarian cancer risk, shedding light on potential mechanisms through microbial metabolites, inflammatory responses, and immune modulation. The review also suggests that therapeutic interventions targeting the vaginal microbiota, such as probiotics and vaginal microbiota transplantation (VMT), could be a promising approach in ovarian cancer treatment.
Who was studied?
The review references various studies involving ovarian cancer patients and healthy individuals, primarily focusing on human subjects. Research on animal models is also included to examine the impact of altered vaginal microbiota on cancer progression. Studies exploring the vaginal microbiome composition in cancer patients, particularly those with a high risk of ovarian cancer, have been considered to understand how microbial shifts may contribute to disease development. The article also addresses the potential therapeutic effects of modulating vaginal microbiota in cancer treatment.
Most important findings
The review highlights several key findings, including the association between vaginal microbial dysbiosis and ovarian cancer. Specific microbial changes, such as a shift away from Lactobacillus dominance and the increased presence of anaerobic bacteria like Atopobium and Prevotella, are linked to cancer progression. Additionally, pathogens such as Chlamydia trachomatis have been found to increase ovarian cancer risk by facilitating DNA damage and inflammation, which may lead to tumor initiation. Furthermore, the review discusses how certain vaginal bacteria, including Lactobacillus strains, might have protective effects by reducing inflammation and promoting cancer cell apoptosis. It also notes that altering the vaginal microbiota through antibiotics or probiotics may influence the development and progression of ovarian cancer.
Key implications
The review suggests that understanding the vaginal microbiota's role in ovarian cancer could lead to novel therapeutic strategies. Modifying the vaginal microbiome using probiotics or vaginal microbiota transplantation (VMT) may not only prevent cancer progression but also enhance treatment efficacy. Given the strong correlation between microbial imbalances and cancer risk, this approach could offer new possibilities for both prevention and treatment. However, further research is needed to better understand the specific microbial signatures associated with ovarian cancer and to refine these interventions for clinical use. The potential for integrating microbiome modulation into ovarian cancer treatment could significantly improve outcomes, particularly for patients with recurrence or chemotherapy resistance.
Characteristics of Vaginal Microbiome in Women with Pelvic Inflammatory Disease in Korea
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) is a complex interplay between pathogens, immune responses, and microbial communities. As research continues to uncover the microbiome's role in reproductive health, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as probiotics, prebiotics, and transplants are redefining how we prevent and treat PID. This page dives deep into these innovations, offering a glimpse into the future of personalized, biologically informed women’s healthcare.
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This study identifies key differences in the vaginal microbiome of women with PID, emphasizing a significant reduction in Lactobacillus and an increase in polymicrobial infections. The findings underscore the importance of microbiome management in diagnosing and treating PID.
What was studied?
This study focused on the vaginal microbiome of premenopausal women with pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) compared to healthy controls. The researchers analyzed vaginal fluid samples from 74 women using 16S rRNA gene-based amplicon sequencing. The study aimed to identify microbial differences between women with and without PID, specifically looking for patterns of microbial imbalance associated with PID. The findings were expected to contribute to understanding the microbial factors involved in PID and improve diagnosis and treatment strategies by focusing on the role of the vaginal microbiome.
Who was studied?
The study involved 74 premenopausal Korean women, aged 18-50 years, who were divided into two groups: 41 women diagnosed with PID and 33 healthy women serving as the control group. The PID patients were diagnosed based on the clinical criteria set by the CDC and presented with symptoms such as abnormal vaginal discharge, itching, and burning sensations. The control group consisted of women who did not show symptoms of PID or any underlying gynecological conditions. Vaginal samples were collected from both groups and analyzed to compare their microbial profiles.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed significant differences in the vaginal microbial profiles of women with PID compared to healthy controls. In the control group, Lactobacillus dominated the vaginal microbiota, accounting for 61.0% of the bacterial community. However, in PID patients, Lactobacillus was significantly reduced to 34.9%, and the diversity of the microbiome increased. The reduction in Lactobacillus was the most significant difference between the two groups. In contrast, other bacteria such as Gardnerella (13.9%), Enterococcus (13.1%), and Atopobium (6.0%) were significantly increased in the PID group. This shift toward a more polymicrobial infection, involving a range of pathogens, highlights the role of microbial imbalance in the development of PID. The concentration of lactate, a key organic acid produced by Lactobacillus, was significantly lower in the PID group, suggesting that the loss of Lactobacillus and its metabolic products may contribute to the pathogenic environment that facilitates PID.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings of this study have significant implications for understanding PID from a microbiome perspective. The reduction of Lactobacillus and the increased diversity of the microbiome in PID patients suggest that a healthy vaginal microbiota, especially Lactobacillus, is crucial for preventing PID and related complications. The results point to the potential for microbiome-based therapies, such as probiotics or lactobacillus supplementation, as part of a strategy to restore balance and prevent or treat PID. Additionally, the identification of specific pathogens associated with PID could lead to more targeted and effective diagnostic tools and treatments. Clinicians should consider the role of the vaginal microbiome when managing PID, especially in light of the increasing evidence linking dysbiosis to reproductive tract infections.
Physiology of pubertal development in females
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menarche
Menarche
Menarche marks the first occurrence of menstruation, signaling a pivotal moment in a young girl's transition to womanhood. Understanding this process helps to shed light on the hormonal, physical, and emotional changes that accompany puberty. Explore the importance of menarche, factors that influence its timing, and how it shapes women's health throughout their lives.
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This review elucidates the hormonal and physiological mechanisms underpinning female puberty, detailing HPG and HPA axis activation, pubertal milestones, and regulatory factors, and discusses implications for clinical assessment and future microbiome research integration.
What was reviewed?
This review article provides a comprehensive overview of the hormonal, physiological, and anatomical changes that occur during female puberty. The authors detail the sequential events, from the activation of neuroendocrine axes to the emergence of secondary sexual characteristics, and discuss the regulatory factors influencing pubertal onset and progression. Special emphasis is placed on the roles of the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal (HPG) and hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axes, the development and maturation of the reproductive system, and the clinical assessment using the Tanner staging system. The review highlights the multifactorial control of puberty, with genetic, hormonal, nutritional, and environmental contributions, and underscores how deviations from normal physiology can manifest as disorders of pubertal timing.
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesizes data from a broad range of studies and clinical observations involving female children and adolescents, primarily in the United States but with recognition of international and ethnic variations. The summary incorporates findings from large population-based cohorts, such as the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES III), and references clinical and laboratory research on hormonal assays and physical development. The populations discussed include females across the entire pediatric age spectrum, from fetal life through adolescence, and stratify findings by ethnicity and body mass index (BMI) to account for known differences in pubertal timing and progression.
Most important findings
The review delineates the orchestrated activation of the HPG axis as the fundamental driver of female puberty, marked by the pulsatile release of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH), subsequent increases in luteinizing hormone (LH) and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), and ovarian maturation. Menarche is the culminating event, signifying reproductive maturity but not necessarily full ovulatory cycles initially. The HPA axis independently mediates adrenarche, manifested by increased adrenal androgen production leading to pubic and axillary hair, sweat gland maturation, and acne. The timing of pubertal milestones, such as thelarche, pubarche, growth spurt, and menarche, varies by ethnicity and BMI; higher BMI is associated with earlier puberty onset, and non-Hispanic black and Mexican American females may experience thelarche and menarche earlier than non-Hispanic white females. The review establishes Tanner staging as the clinical standard for assessing secondary sexual development.
Notably, the article summarizes the hormonal interplay: LH stimulates theca cells to produce androgens, FSH stimulates granulosa cells to convert androgens to estrogens, and estrogen is pivotal for breast development, endometrial growth, and bone maturation. The review also addresses the impact of estrogen on epiphyseal closure and bone mineral density, linking delayed menarche to increased fracture risk. The regulatory cascade involves excitatory neuropeptides (like kisspeptin and glutamate) and inhibitory neurotransmitters (such as GABA) that modulate GnRH release. While the review does not focus on the microbiome, it provides a critical physiological background for interpreting how emerging research on the gut and vaginal microbiota might intersect with pubertal development, particularly regarding hormonal regulation and metabolic changes.
Key implications
For clinicians, this review underscores the importance of understanding normative pubertal physiology to accurately identify and manage disorders of puberty, such as precocious or delayed puberty. The nuanced discussion of population differences in pubertal timing and the role of BMI highlights the need for individualized assessment. The physiological framework described herein is essential for integrating future research on microbiome signatures and their impact on pubertal progression, hormone metabolism, and disease risk. Recognizing the hormonal and developmental milestones enables clinicians to better counsel patients and families, promote healthy development, and anticipate complications arising from abnormal pubertal trajectories, including impacts on bone health and psychosocial well-being.
Do SSRIs and SNRIs reduce the frequency and/or severity of hot flashes in menopausal women
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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This review confirms that SSRIs and SNRIs, particularly paroxetine and venlafaxine, are effective for managing hot flashes in menopausal women. These therapies provide an alternative to hormone replacement therapy, with minimal side effects and considerations for women with specific health concerns, like hypertension or a history of breast cancer.
What was studied?
This review article focused on the use of SSRIs and SNRIs to reduce the frequency and severity of hot flashes in menopausal women. The study assessed various SSRIs and SNRIs, including paroxetine, escitalopram, venlafaxine, and desvenlafaxine, to determine their effectiveness as alternatives to hormone replacement therapy (HRT) in treating vasomotor symptoms (VMS), particularly hot flashes. It explored the evidence from multiple randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and systematic reviews to evaluate the efficacy, safety, and side effects of these non-hormonal treatments for managing menopausal symptoms in women who either cannot use HRT or prefer non-hormonal options due to health concerns.
Who was studied?
The studies reviewed included menopausal, perimenopausal, and postmenopausal women aged 18 years and older who experienced frequent or severe vasomotor symptoms, such as hot flashes. The review focused on women who were seeking relief from these symptoms using non-hormonal pharmaceutical treatments. It also considered studies that involved women who had contraindications to hormone therapy, such as a history of breast cancer, or those who simply preferred non-hormonal treatments for managing their menopausal symptoms. The review also assessed the use of SSRIs and SNRIs in women with varying baseline health conditions, such as hypertension or a history of breast cancer, to understand their safety and effectiveness in different populations.
Most important findings
The review found that SSRIs and SNRIs, particularly paroxetine, escitalopram, and venlafaxine, were effective in reducing the frequency and severity of hot flashes in menopausal women. Paroxetine (Paxil) was particularly noted for its significant effectiveness at a low dose (7.5 mg), which is the only FDA-approved SSRI for treating hot flashes. Venlafaxine (Effexor XR) was highlighted as a first-line SNRI option, although it was associated with higher rates of side effects, such as nausea and constipation. The review found that SSRIs reduced hot flashes by 10% to 64%, with the greatest effectiveness seen in paroxetine. Escitalopram and citalopram were also effective, although their effects were less pronounced than paroxetine.
The most common side effects included nausea, fatigue, and dry mouth, but these were generally mild and subsided after the first week. The review emphasized that SNRIs, particularly venlafaxine, may increase blood pressure and therefore should be used cautiously in hypertensive patients. The evidence also suggested that SSRIs and SNRIs can be considered a reasonable alternative to HRT for women who wish to avoid estrogen-related risks.
Key implications
The review suggests that SSRIs and SNRIs are viable options for reducing hot flashes in menopausal women who are unable or unwilling to use HRT. Paroxetine, escitalopram, and venlafaxine are particularly effective and should be considered as first-line therapies for managing vasomotor symptoms. The review also highlights the need for careful monitoring of blood pressure in patients using venlafaxine, particularly those with a history of hypertension. Furthermore, the review advises against using SSRIs in women who are taking tamoxifen, as SSRIs can inhibit the CYP2D6 enzyme, which is necessary for tamoxifen metabolism. SNRIs like venlafaxine and desvenlafaxine are safer alternatives for women taking tamoxifen. The findings support the use of SSRIs and SNRIs in clinical practice, particularly in populations where hormone therapy is not recommended or preferred. However, the review also calls for further studies to evaluate the long-term risks, benefits, and dosing regimens of these non-hormonal treatments.
Effects of dietary quercetin on female fertility in mice: implication of transglutaminase 2
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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Chronic dietary quercetin in female mice reduces litter numbers, increases litter size in youth, and accelerates ovarian follicle maturation via TG2 inhibition, suggesting potential risks for premature ovarian aging and reduced fertility with prolonged supplementation.
What was studied?
This original research investigated the long-term effects of dietary quercetin supplementation on female fertility and ovarian physiology in mice, with a specific focus on the role of the enzyme transglutaminase 2 (TG2). Quercetin, a widely consumed flavonoid supplement, is known for its antioxidant properties, but its effects on female reproductive health remain poorly characterized. The study evaluated birth outcomes (number and size of litters, birth spacing) and detailed ovarian histology (folliculogenesis) in mice administered quercetin (5 mg/kg/day) for nine months. Two breeding periods were analyzed: one during prime reproductive age (2–6 months) and another during later reproductive age (8–11 months). The researchers also compared wild-type mice with TG2-null mice to determine whether the observed effects were mediated through TG2 inhibition.
Who was studied?
The subjects were C57BL/6 female mice, either wild-type or genetically modified to lack TG2 (TG2-null), and their offspring. Each experimental group consisted of four females and two males, with both wild-type and TG2-null genotypes represented. Mice were randomly assigned to receive either quercetin or vehicle via drinking water, and breeding outcomes were monitored during two distinct reproductive periods. The offspring of these dams were also analyzed for ovarian morphology and follicle counts at four weeks of age. Additionally, male fertility was assessed by mating quercetin-exposed males with untreated females to exclude male-mediated effects.
Most important findings
Dietary quercetin supplementation produced complex, age-dependent effects on female fertility and ovarian physiology in mice. In young wild-type females, quercetin reduced the total number of litters by approximately 60% and increased the interval between births (birth spacing), indicating a reduction in overall reproductive potential. Paradoxically, these same young females exhibited a nearly 70% increase in average litter size, a change associated with significantly enhanced ovarian folliculogenesis—specifically, an increase in mature antral follicles and a corresponding depletion of primordial and primary follicles. In older females, quercetin reversed its effect, reducing litter size. Importantly, TG2-null mice displayed similar changes in follicle development and litter size as quercetin-treated wild-type mice, and were unresponsive to additional quercetin, indicating that quercetin’s effects are predominantly mediated via TG2 inhibition.
Key implications
This study demonstrates that chronic dietary quercetin, at doses relevant to human supplementation, can adversely affect female reproductive potential by accelerating follicle maturation and depleting ovarian reserves, likely through inhibition of TG2. The findings suggest a risk of premature ovarian aging and reduced fertility with long-term quercetin use in females of reproductive age. The data also highlight TG2 as a novel regulator of ovarian aging and folliculogenesis. These insights are clinically relevant for counseling women considering quercetin supplementation and inform potential mechanisms underlying reproductive disorders, such as those observed in TG2-targeting autoimmune diseases like celiac disease. For microbiome signatures databases, the study underscores the importance of tracking host-microbe interactions influenced by dietary polyphenols and their systemic enzymatic targets.
Hormonal therapies and venous thrombosis: Considerations for prevention and management
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) is one of the most effective treatments for women experiencing the symptoms of menopause, particularly vasomotor symptoms such as hot flashes and night sweats. But its benefits go beyond just symptom management. HRT can also play a key role in improving vaginal health by alleviating dryness and discomfort, which are common complaints among women in menopause. Additionally, it helps prevent bone loss, significantly reducing the risk of osteoporosis and fractures, which are more common after menopause. Despite its many benefits, HRT is not one-size-fits-all; it’s essential to tailor treatment based on individual health profiles, taking into account the risks like breast cancer, blood clots, and heart disease that come with prolonged use.
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This review explores the thrombosis risks of hormonal therapies, comparing various estrogen formulations and progestins. It emphasizes the need for personalized treatment based on thrombophilic risk factors, highlighting the safer options such as transdermal estrogen and progestin-only therapies.
What was studied?
This study reviews the risk of venous thrombosis associated with various hormonal therapies, including those used for contraception, hormone replacement therapy (HRT), and gender transition. It explores the thrombogenic effects of estrogen-containing therapies and how different estrogen doses and formulations (such as oral, transdermal, and injectable) influence the likelihood of developing venous thromboembolism (VTE). The paper also discusses the impact of progestins when used in combination with estrogen, highlighting how various types of progestins, particularly third-generation progestins, contribute to thrombotic risk. In addition, the study considers patient-specific factors such as age, obesity, and genetic predispositions (e.g., Factor V Leiden mutation), which may modify the risk of thrombosis during hormonal therapy use.
Who was studied?
The review focuses on a broad group of individuals, including women using hormonal contraception, postmenopausal women on HRT, and transgender women undergoing gender-affirming hormone therapy. The study emphasizes the use of combined oral contraceptives (COCs), hormonal replacement therapies (both systemic and transdermal), and progestin-only contraceptives. It also covers the gender transition population, with particular attention to transgender women receiving estrogen therapy and the associated thrombotic risks. The study identifies individual risk factors such as age, family history of thrombosis, and the presence of inherited thrombophilias that increase susceptibility to thrombotic events when using hormonal therapies.
Most important findings
The study highlights key findings regarding venous thrombosis risk in users of hormonal therapies. It reveals that the risk of thrombosis increases with higher estrogen doses. For example, ethinyl estradiol (EE) in combined oral contraceptives has a significantly higher thrombosis risk compared to lower-dose formulations like estradiol valerate (E2V), which was shown to reduce VTE risk. Third-generation progestins (e.g., desogestrel and gestodene) are associated with an increased thrombosis risk compared to second-generation progestins like levonorgestrel. Transdermal estrogen has been found to carry a lower thrombosis risk than oral estrogen, likely due to its bypass of the liver and reduced effect on coagulation factors. Progestin-only contraceptives, such as the levonorgestrel intrauterine device (IUD), have no increased thrombosis risk, making them a safer option for women with a history of thrombosis or high thrombotic risk. The review also points to a higher risk of thrombosis in individuals with pre-existing conditions such as obesity and genetic thrombophilias, including Factor V Leiden.
Key implications
The primary implication of the study is that clinicians must carefully tailor hormonal therapy based on individual risk profiles, particularly for patients with a history of thrombosis or those at increased risk. The use of transdermal estrogen is recommended over oral estrogen for individuals at high risk of thrombosis, especially those with cardiovascular or coagulation disorders. For patients using combined oral contraceptives, the type of progestin should be considered, as third-generation progestins are associated with a higher risk of VTE. In transgender women, the use of oral estrogen should be approached with caution, especially in those with additional thrombophilic risk factors, and transdermal estrogen may be preferred. Progestin-only contraceptives and IUDs offer lower thrombosis risk and are optimal for women with a history of thrombosis or thrombophilia. The review also underscores the importance of patient counseling and shared decision-making when choosing hormonal therapies, taking into account factors such as age, body mass index (BMI), and genetic risks.
Microbiota and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) is a complex interplay between pathogens, immune responses, and microbial communities. As research continues to uncover the microbiome's role in reproductive health, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as probiotics, prebiotics, and transplants are redefining how we prevent and treat PID. This page dives deep into these innovations, offering a glimpse into the future of personalized, biologically informed women’s healthcare.
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This review highlights how vaginal microbiota imbalance, particularly bacterial vaginosis, significantly increases the risk of pelvic inflammatory disease. Advanced molecular methods have identified diverse microbes linked to PID, emphasizing the importance of microbiome health in preventing serious reproductive infections.
What was reviewed?
This review examined the complex relationship between pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) and the genital microbiota. It focused on recent advancements in molecular microbiological techniques and their implications for understanding the diverse bacterial communities in both healthy and diseased states of the female genital tract. It also explored how changes in these microbial communities (dysbiosis), specifically bacterial vaginosis, could significantly increase the risk of PID, sexually transmitted infections (STIs), HIV, and adverse reproductive outcomes.
Who was reviewed?
The review analyzed findings from several clinical and molecular microbiology studies involving women diagnosed with pelvic inflammatory disease or other genital infections. It included detailed analyses of microbial communities identified through culture-based methods and advanced molecular techniques, such as 16S rRNA sequencing, PCR-based identification, and cloning and sequencing methods. Patient groups ranged from asymptomatic healthy individuals to women with symptomatic PID, endometriosis, salpingitis, and tubo-ovarian abscesses (TOAs).
What were the most important findings?
The most important findings were that PID is typically polymicrobial, involving a diverse range of pathogens beyond traditional culprits like Chlamydia trachomatis and Neisseria gonorrhoeae. Advanced molecular techniques revealed that bacterial vaginosis-associated bacteria (BVAB), including Gardnerella vaginalis, Atopobium vaginae, and several anaerobic species (e.g., Prevotella, Sneathia, and BVAB 1, 2, and 3), significantly associate with PID development. This contrasts with earlier beliefs that focused primarily on classic sexually transmitted pathogens. The data strongly indicate that vaginal microbiota disturbances, especially reductions in protective Lactobacillus species, substantially increase the risk of ascending infections to the upper genital tract.
Clinicians are increasingly recognizing novel microbial phylotypes and traditionally overlooked anaerobes in PID, especially in severe cases like TOAs. Anaerobes such as Prevotella, Bacteroides, and Peptostreptococcus have frequently emerged as critical players. The identification of BV-associated microbes in salpingitis and abscesses reinforces the microbial continuum from vaginal dysbiosis to upper genital tract infections, providing substantial evidence that microbial dysbiosis directly predisposes women to PID.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review significantly impacts clinical practice by underscoring the importance of maintaining a healthy vaginal microbiota to prevent upper genital tract infections. Clinicians should recognize BV as a critical modifiable risk factor for PID and associated complications, including infertility and ectopic pregnancy. The findings emphasize the urgent need for improved screening and treatment strategies for BV to reduce PID incidence and associated reproductive health complications. Additionally, molecular identification of novel pathogens stresses the necessity of broad-spectrum antimicrobial regimens capable of targeting a diverse microbial landscape, especially anaerobes. Future research must continue exploring the therapeutic and preventive potential of maintaining a healthy vaginal microbiome.
Primary Dysmenorrhea: Assessment and Treatment
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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Primary dysmenorrhea is a prevalent condition that affects many women, particularly in their younger years. This review discusses its pathophysiology, impact on quality of life, and treatment options, including pharmacological, non-pharmacological, and alternative therapies.
What was studied?
This article examines primary dysmenorrhea, a common gynecological condition that causes pain before or during menstruation, in the absence of pelvic pathology. The study investigates the pathophysiology, including the overproduction of prostaglandins by the endometrium, which causes uterine hypercontractility and resulting ischemia. The article explores the implications of dysmenorrhea on quality of life, including its association with school and work absenteeism, and evaluates the effectiveness of various treatment approaches, such as nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), hormonal contraceptives, and alternative therapies like acupuncture, acupressure, and lifestyle modifications.
Who was studied?
The review focuses on women in their reproductive years who experience primary dysmenorrhea. It highlights that dysmenorrhea is particularly prevalent in women aged 17–24, with symptoms often emerging around 6 months after menarche. The study also notes that many women do not seek medical help due to the normalization of menstrual pain. Therefore, the condition is often underreported, with only a small percentage of women consulting healthcare providers. The article stresses the impact of dysmenorrhea on daily activities, sleep, concentration, and work, as well as its link to psychological stress.
Most important findings
The article underscores the pathophysiological role of prostaglandins, specifically prostaglandin F2α and E2, in the development of primary dysmenorrhea. These prostaglandins induce uterine contractions and ischemia, leading to pain. The review also highlights the prevalence of dysmenorrhea, which affects a significant number of menstruating women. Its impact on quality of life is profound, as dysmenorrhea can lead to school absenteeism, decreased productivity, and sleep disturbances. NSAIDs are considered first-line treatment as they reduce prostaglandin production, while hormonal contraceptives help by reducing menstrual flow and prostaglandin secretion. For women who are unable to use conventional treatments, alternative therapies such as lifestyle changes, transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS), acupuncture, and dietary supplements may offer relief.
Key implications
Primary dysmenorrhea remains underdiagnosed and undertreated, particularly in young women who may not seek medical advice. Clinicians should be proactive in diagnosing and managing dysmenorrhea, considering both pharmacological and non-pharmacological treatments. While NSAIDs and hormonal contraceptives are highly effective, alternative treatments should be explored for those who cannot tolerate these options. There is a need for greater education about the condition to reduce its impact on women’s lives and increase timely intervention.
Systemic and local effects of vaginal dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA): NCCTG N10C1 (Alliance)
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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This study supports the use of vaginal DHEA for alleviating vaginal symptoms in postmenopausal women, particularly those with a history of breast or gynecologic cancer. It improves vaginal tissue health without affecting systemic hormones or bone biomarkers, making it a safe alternative to estrogen therapy.
What was studied?
This study examined the systemic and local effects of vaginal dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) in postmenopausal women, particularly those with a history of breast or gynecologic cancer. It evaluated the impact of vaginal DHEA on hormone concentrations, markers of bone formation, and vaginal cytology, including pH and maturation index. The study aimed to assess the efficacy of two different doses (3.25 mg and 6.5 mg) of vaginal DHEA compared to a plain moisturizer (PM) as a control for women experiencing vaginal dryness or dyspareunia, while considering the effects on systemic hormone levels, vaginal health, and bone biomarkers.
Who was studied?
The study included 345 postmenopausal women with a history of breast or gynecologic cancer, who reported moderate to severe vaginal symptoms. These women were enrolled in a randomized, controlled trial and were either on tamoxifen or aromatase inhibitors (AIs). They were randomly assigned to one of three groups: vaginal DHEA at 3.25 mg, vaginal DHEA at 6.5 mg, or a plain moisturizer (PM) control group. Eligibility criteria included women who had completed curative treatment for their cancer and were not using any oral or transdermal hormonal products except for tamoxifen or AIs.
Most important findings
The study found that vaginal DHEA led to a dose-dependent increase in circulating DHEA-S and testosterone levels. Estradiol levels were significantly higher in the 6.5 mg DHEA group, but not in the 3.25 mg DHEA group, compared to the control group. Despite the increase in estradiol, levels remained in the postmenopausal range. There was no significant effect on estrone or bone biomarkers such as osteocalcin and bone alkaline phosphatase, indicating that vaginal DHEA did not have "off-target" effects on bone health. Regarding vaginal cytology, both DHEA doses led to improvements in the vaginal maturation index, with more women experiencing cell maturation compared to the control group. Vaginal pH also decreased significantly in the DHEA treatment groups, indicating improved vaginal health. Women using DHEA also experienced fewer vaginal symptoms, suggesting that DHEA improved vaginal tissue health without systemic estrogenic effects, particularly beneficial for women on aromatase inhibitors (AIs), who cannot use systemic estrogen.
Key implications
Vaginal DHEA presents a promising treatment for managing vaginal symptoms related to menopause, especially for cancer survivors on aromatase inhibitors, for whom traditional estrogen therapy is contraindicated. The study suggests that DHEA is effective in improving vaginal cytology and reducing vaginal pH, thus alleviating dryness and dyspareunia. These findings support the use of vaginal DHEA as a safe and effective alternative to systemic estrogen therapies for women with hormone-sensitive cancers. Clinicians may consider recommending vaginal DHEA for postmenopausal women with vaginal symptoms, especially those with a history of cancer, as it provides local effects without significantly impacting systemic hormone levels or bone health. Further research is needed to confirm long-term safety, particularly regarding its use in women on AIs.
Neurokinin 3 receptor antagonism as a novel treatment for menopausal hot flushes
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal hot flashes are one of the most common and disruptive symptoms that women experience during the transition to menopause. Characterized by sudden sensations of heat, sweating, and flushing, hot flashes can significantly affect a woman’s quality of life, causing sleep disturbances, mood swings, and even long-term health consequences. Understanding the complex mechanisms behind hot flashes, as well as the role of microbiome-targeted therapies, offers new avenues for improving menopausal health.
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This study demonstrates that MLE4901, an NK3R antagonist, significantly reduces hot flash frequency, severity, and interference in menopausal women, offering a non-hormonal treatment alternative.
What was studied?
The study investigates the use of an oral neurokinin 3 receptor (NK3R) antagonist (MLE4901) as a treatment for menopausal hot flashes. A randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover design was used to assess the effectiveness of MLE4901 in reducing the frequency, severity, and interference of hot flashes in menopausal women. The primary outcome measured was the total number of hot flashes during the final week of the treatment period, with secondary outcomes including the severity, bother, and interference caused by hot flashes.
Who was studied?
The study involved 37 healthy menopausal women aged 40–62 years, all of whom experienced seven or more hot flashes per day, with some being severe or bothersome. Participants had not menstruated for at least 12 months and were not on any medications for menopausal symptoms in the preceding eight weeks. The study population was randomized to receive either MLE4901 or placebo, followed by a washout period and then the alternate treatment. A total of 28 participants completed both treatment periods and were included in the per-protocol analysis.
Most important findings
The administration of MLE4901 significantly reduced the total weekly number of hot flashes by 45% compared to the placebo group. Additionally, MLE4901 reduced the severity, bother, and interference caused by hot flashes, with improvements in hot flash-related interference, severity, and psychosocial symptoms such as fatigue and irritability. The study also observed that treatment with MLE4901 resulted in a decrease in hot flash frequency by 73%, compared to a 28% reduction with placebo. The treatment was well tolerated, with only mild, transient increases in liver enzymes in a small subgroup of participants.
Key implications
This study provides strong evidence that NK3R antagonism, specifically through the use of MLE4901, could be a novel and effective treatment for managing menopausal hot flashes. The ability to reduce hot flashes without the need for estrogen exposure addresses a significant gap in non-hormonal treatment options. Given the potential side effects of hormone replacement therapy, NK3R antagonists like MLE4901 represent a promising alternative for women who seek non-hormonal relief from menopausal symptoms. Larger-scale, long-term studies are needed to further establish the safety and efficacy of this treatment approach.
The role of the microbiome in ovarian cancer: mechanistic insights into oncobiosis and to bacterial metabolite signaling
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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This review explores the role of the microbiome in ovarian cancer, focusing on microbial dysbiosis and bacterial metabolites that influence inflammation and carcinogenesis. It highlights the potential of microbiome-based therapies, such as probiotics and antibiotics, to improve treatment outcomes and provide new diagnostic tools.
What was studied?
This review focuses on the role of the microbiome in ovarian cancer, specifically its influence on inflammation, immune modulation, and carcinogenesis. The study highlights the concept of "oncobiosis," a term used to describe microbial dysbiosis associated with cancer. It explores how specific bacterial communities in ovarian cancer tissue, the genital tract, peritoneum, and even serum, contribute to cancer progression. The paper also investigates bacterial metabolites, such as lipopolysaccharides (LPS), lysophospholipids, and tryptophan derivatives, and their roles in promoting inflammation and tumor development. Additionally, the interaction between the microbiome and ovarian cancer therapies, like chemotherapy, is examined, suggesting that microbiome manipulation may influence therapeutic outcomes.
Who was studied?
The review includes research on ovarian cancer patients, with data from various microbiome compartments such as the vaginal, cervicovaginal, peritoneal, and gastrointestinal tracts. Studies involving both human samples and animal models were referenced to explore microbial composition in ovarian cancer patients compared to healthy controls. It also considers the impact of infections such as Chlamydia trachomatis and Neisseria gonorrhoeae, which are linked to increased ovarian cancer risk. Furthermore, the paper discusses the use of antibiotics and probiotics in modulating the microbiome to potentially influence ovarian cancer progression and treatment responses.
Most important findings
The review identifies significant microbial shifts associated with ovarian cancer. In ovarian cancer tissues, there is an increase in Gram-negative bacteria, such as Proteobacteria and Fusobacteria, which are known for their inflammatory properties. Dysbiosis is also evident in other compartments, such as the vaginal and peritoneal microbiomes, where reduced diversity and an increase in pathogenic bacteria were observed. The review further highlights the involvement of microbial metabolites in carcinogenesis, including lipopolysaccharides (LPS), which trigger inflammatory pathways through TLR4 receptors, and lysophospholipids, which promote cancer cell migration and invasion. Tryptophan metabolites, particularly indole derivatives, are also implicated in ovarian cancer progression. The paper suggests that microbial metabolites may influence chemotherapy effectiveness, with some bacterial species enhancing drug resistance while others may reduce tumor proliferation.
Key implications
This review underscores the potential of microbiome-based interventions in ovarian cancer management. It suggests that modulating the microbiome, through antibiotics, probiotics, or diet, could influence inflammation and immune responses, thereby improving treatment outcomes. Given the microbiome’s role in promoting carcinogenesis, targeting specific bacterial populations or their metabolites may provide novel therapeutic avenues. Additionally, understanding microbiome signatures could assist in early diagnosis, monitoring disease progression, and predicting treatment responses. However, the review emphasizes that more research is needed to fully understand the complex interactions between the microbiome and ovarian cancer, and to refine microbiome-based treatments for clinical use.
Gut microbiome associations with breast cancer risk factors and tumor characteristics: a pilot study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Breast Cancer
Breast Cancer
Traditionally linked to genetic predispositions and environmental exposures, emerging evidence highlights the microbiome as a critical and underappreciated factor influencing breast cancer progression, immune response, and treatment outcomes.
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This pilot study links gut microbiome diversity with breast cancer risk factors and tumor characteristics, particularly in HER2+ tumors and those with early menarche. It suggests microbial alterations in these groups that may influence cancer development and risk.
What was studied?
This study explored the relationship between the gut microbiome and breast cancer risk factors and tumor characteristics, focusing on the diversity of gut microbiota in relation to estrogen receptor (ER), progesterone receptor (PR), and human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2) status, as well as other factors such as age at menarche, body mass index (BMI), and total body fat (TBF). The authors used 16S ribosomal RNA sequencing to analyze fecal samples from women diagnosed with incident breast cancer, aiming to discern microbial differences across these parameters.
Who was studied?
The study was conducted with 37 women diagnosed with incident invasive breast cancer. Most participants were Hispanic (73%), and the majority (75%) had overweight or obesity, with a mean age of 50.6 years. These women were either premenopausal (54%) or postmenopausal (46%), and their breast cancer diagnosis varied in terms of stage (I/II or III), grade (I/II or III), and hormone receptor status (ER+/PR+ or ER−/PR−). The study considered various risk factors, including BMI, TBF, parity, and physical activity levels.
Most important findings
The study found no significant differences in gut microbiome diversity by ER or PR status, tumor grade, or stage. However, women with HER2+ breast cancer had lower alpha diversity compared to those with HER2− tumors. Additionally, a higher abundance of Bacteroidetes and a lower abundance of Firmicutes were noted in HER2+ compared to HER2− patients. Women with earlier age at menarche (≤ 11 years) also exhibited lower diversity and an altered composition, with a significant decrease in Firmicutes abundance. Interestingly, women with higher TBF (> 46%) had significantly lower diversity than those with lower TBF (≤ 46%).
Key implications
The findings suggest that the gut microbiome is associated with key breast cancer risk factors such as HER2 status, age at menarche, and body composition. A lower microbial diversity, particularly among HER2+ patients and those with early menarche, may indicate an altered microbiome that could influence breast cancer progression or susceptibility. These associations warrant further investigation with larger sample sizes and longitudinal studies to confirm the microbiome's role in breast cancer subtypes and prognosis.
Pelvic inflammatory disease and the risk of ovarian cancer: a meta-analysis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) is a complex interplay between pathogens, immune responses, and microbial communities. As research continues to uncover the microbiome's role in reproductive health, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as probiotics, prebiotics, and transplants are redefining how we prevent and treat PID. This page dives deep into these innovations, offering a glimpse into the future of personalized, biologically informed women’s healthcare.
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This meta-analysis reveals a significant association between pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) and an increased risk of ovarian cancer. The link is particularly strong among Asian women, with implications for early detection and prevention strategies, especially for borderline ovarian tumors.
What was studied?
This study conducted a meta-analysis to evaluate the association between pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) and the risk of ovarian cancer. The authors reviewed studies from various databases, including PubMed, Embase, and ISI Web of Science, focusing on cohort and case-control studies that examined the relationship between PID and ovarian cancer risk. They aimed to provide a more comprehensive understanding of this potential link by updating previous meta-analyses and addressing variations in the study results.
Who was studied?
The study included women diagnosed with PID, as identified through clinical records, hospital diagnoses, or self-reported data. The study population included those who were later diagnosed with ovarian cancer. The research incorporated data from various studies, with participants drawn from both Asian and Caucasian populations. Data from 13 eligible studies were included, which involved cohort studies (which used medical records) and case-control studies (which relied on self-reported history of PID).
What were the most important findings?
The meta-analysis found that PID is associated with an increased risk of ovarian cancer. The association was more pronounced among Asian women compared to Caucasian women. This suggests that PID may be a significant risk factor for ovarian cancer, particularly in populations with different racial and ethnic backgrounds. The study also observed a stronger association between PID and borderline ovarian tumors, but the link with invasive ovarian cancer was weaker. The risk estimate remained elevated in cohort studies, but the association was less significant in case-control studies. These results indicate that PID may increase the risk of ovarian cancer, especially for borderline tumors, but further research is needed to fully clarify this relationship.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings from this meta-analysis suggest that PID may contribute to ovarian cancer risk, particularly in women with a history of sexually transmitted infections that lead to PID. The study highlights the importance of early and effective treatment for PID to reduce long-term reproductive health risks, including ovarian cancer. Given the heightened risk in Asian women, healthcare providers may consider more frequent screening and preventive measures for this group. The study also points to the need for further large cohort studies with long-term follow-up and better diagnostic methods to clarify the causal relationship between PID and ovarian cancer. These findings could inform clinical practice guidelines and public health strategies aimed at reducing the incidence of ovarian cancer.
Lactobacillus gasseri OLL2809 is effective especially on the menstrual pain and dysmenorrhea in endometriosis patients
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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Lactobacillus gasseri OLL2809 significantly reduced menstrual pain and dysmenorrhea in endometriosis patients, offering a potential non-hormonal alternative to traditional treatments. No adverse effects were reported.
What was studied?
This randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial evaluated the effectiveness of Lactobacillus gasseri OLL2809 in alleviating menstrual pain (dysmenorrhea) and related symptoms in patients with endometriosis. The study specifically focused on the ability of this probiotic strain to reduce pain during menstruation, improve overall quality of life, and provide an alternative to conventional pain management strategies such as NSAIDs and hormonal treatments. The participants received either Lactobacillus gasseri OLL2809 or a placebo daily for 12 weeks, and the outcomes were measured using the Visual Analog Scale (VAS) and the Verbal Rating Scale (VRS) for pain and dysmenorrhea.
Who was studied?
Sixty-six women, aged 18-45, diagnosed with endometriosis, were recruited for this study. The inclusion criteria required that the women had regular menstrual cycles and were experiencing significant dysmenorrhea associated with endometriosis. Participants were randomly assigned to receive either the active probiotic tablets containing L. gasseri OLL2809 or placebo tablets. Exclusion criteria included a history of recent hormone therapy, gastrointestinal issues triggered by dairy products, or any conditions that could interfere with the results, such as severe comorbidities or existing pelvic infections.
Most important findings
The study demonstrated that Lactobacillus gasseri OLL2809 significantly reduced both pain intensity and dysmenorrhea in participants with endometriosis. At 2 and 3 months after treatment initiation, the active treatment group showed a marked decrease in the VAS of pain intensity during menstruation, with a greater reduction in the VRS for dysmenorrhea compared to the placebo group. However, no significant improvements were observed in non-menstrual pelvic pain, nor was there a notable effect on serum CA-125 levels, a common marker for endometriosis severity. The probiotic was well-tolerated, with no adverse side effects reported.
Key implications
These findings suggest that Lactobacillus gasseri OLL2809 could be an effective non-hormonal alternative for managing menstrual pain and dysmenorrhea in patients with endometriosis. The significant improvements in pain scores indicate that probiotics may help reduce reliance on conventional painkillers like NSAIDs, which have side effects such as gastrointestinal issues. Given the lack of adverse effects, this treatment could provide a safer, long-term option for women seeking pain relief from endometriosis. However, future studies should investigate its mechanisms further, particularly the immunological and microbiome-related pathways through which L. gasseri exerts its effects.
SSRIs for hot flashes: a systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized trials.
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal hot flashes are one of the most common and disruptive symptoms that women experience during the transition to menopause. Characterized by sudden sensations of heat, sweating, and flushing, hot flashes can significantly affect a woman’s quality of life, causing sleep disturbances, mood swings, and even long-term health consequences. Understanding the complex mechanisms behind hot flashes, as well as the role of microbiome-targeted therapies, offers new avenues for improving menopausal health.
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This meta-analysis reveals that SSRIs are effective in reducing hot flashes in menopausal women, with escitalopram showing the highest efficacy. These results support SSRIs as a non-hormonal alternative to hormone therapy.
What was studied?
This systematic review and meta-analysis evaluates the effectiveness of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) for treating hot flashes in peri- and postmenopausal women. The study aimed to summarize evidence from randomized controlled trials (RCTs) regarding the impact of SSRIs like paroxetine, fluoxetine, escitalopram, and sertraline on hot flash frequency, severity, and associated quality of life. The analysis pooled data from 11 trials, including a total of 2,069 women, to determine the overall effect of SSRIs compared to placebo and other treatment options.
Who was studied?
The study reviewed 11 randomized controlled trials involving peri- and postmenopausal women aged 36 to 76 years who experienced moderate to severe hot flashes. The trials included women who had been menopausal for a range of 2.3 to 6.6 years and excluded those on hormone replacement therapy or selective estrogen receptor modulators. The participants had varying levels of baseline hot flash frequency and severity, with follow-up periods ranging from 1 to 9 months. The women were assigned to receive SSRIs or placebo for treatment, with several trials assessing different SSRIs like paroxetine, fluoxetine, and escitalopram.
Most important findings
The analysis found that SSRIs were significantly effective in reducing both the frequency and severity of hot flashes when compared to placebo. The pooled data showed a modest reduction in the number of daily hot flashes (−0.93, 95% CI −1.46 to −0.37) and in hot flash severity scores (−0.34, 95% CI −0.59 to −0.10). Among SSRIs, escitalopram demonstrated the greatest efficacy. While SSRIs did not show a higher incidence of serious adverse effects compared to placebo, they were associated with a slight increase in common side effects such as nausea, dry mouth and decreased libido, which were generally mild and transient.
Key implications
SSRIs present a viable non-hormonal option for managing hot flashes, especially for women who cannot use or prefer to avoid hormone replacement therapy. Despite the modest effect size, SSRIs may offer an acceptable alternative with fewer severe side effects compared to traditional hormonal treatments. Clinicians should consider SSRIs as a first-line treatment option for managing vasomotor symptoms, particularly for women with contraindications to hormone therapy. However, further studies with longer follow-up periods are needed to establish the long-term efficacy and safety of SSRIs for this purpose.
Causal association between 637 human metabolites and ovarian cancer: A mendelian randomization study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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Mendelian randomization identified causal links between 9 metabolites and ovarian cancer risk. Some metabolites promote, others protect against OC. These findings suggest potential biomarkers for diagnosis and treatment but require clinical validation.
What was studied?
This study employed Mendelian randomization (MR) to assess causal associations between 637 human metabolites and ovarian cancer (OC). Researchers used data from the GWAS database to identify genetic variants associated with metabolites, applying this to a large ovarian cancer GWAS dataset. The goal was to determine the causal relationships between specific metabolites and the risk of developing OC, thereby revealing potential biomarkers for early diagnosis and treatment.
Who was studied?
The study utilized genetic data from European populations, focusing on GWAS datasets for both human metabolites and ovarian cancer. The metabolites were selected based on genetic loci associated with 637 metabolites, as identified in earlier genome-wide studies. The ovarian cancer dataset (encoded as ieu-b-4963) included over 199,000 samples, with outcomes specific to ovarian cancer subtypes, analyzed through MR techniques.
Most important findings
The MR analysis identified 31 metabolites with a significant causal relationship to OC. Among these, 9 metabolites passed additional tests for heterogeneity, pleiotropy, and causal direction. Notably, androsterone sulfate, propionylcarnitine, 5alpha-androstan-3beta-17beta-diol disulfate, and medium very-low-density lipoprotein (VLDL) were found to have a positive causal effect, promoting the development of OC. In contrast, metabolites like X-12,093, octanoylcarnitine, N2,N2-dimethylguanosine, and cis-4-decenoyl carnitine showed a negative association, suggesting protective effects against OC.
Key implications
These findings suggest that specific metabolites, especially lipids like VLDL and acylcarnitines, may play a crucial role in ovarian cancer development. Such metabolites could serve as potential biomarkers for early detection or therapeutic targets. While the study provides promising insights, it emphasizes the need for further clinical validation, particularly due to limitations like ethnic homogeneity in the dataset and the low statistical power associated with some metabolites.
Changes in the vaginal microbiota associated with primary ovarian failure
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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This study identifies significant differences in vaginal microbiota between women with Primary Ovarian Failure (POF) and healthy controls, highlighting the role of Lactobacillus species in reproductive health and suggesting potential microbiota-targeted interventions for POF.
What was studied?
This research aimed to investigate the differences in the vaginal microbiota of women with Primary Ovarian Failure (POF) compared to healthy controls. Primary ovarian failure, characterized by the loss of ovarian function in women under 40, is a complex condition influenced by autoimmune dysfunction, genetic factors, and environmental exposures. The study used high-throughput 16S rRNA gene sequencing to profile the vaginal microbiota of 22 patients with POF and 29 healthy women. The research sought to explore the potential relationship between vaginal flora alterations and clinical characteristics of POF, focusing on how specific microbial communities might influence reproductive health outcomes.
Who was studied?
The study population consisted of 22 women diagnosed with Primary Ovarian Failure (POF) and 29 healthy women as controls. The patients with POF were aged between 20 and 40 years and had experienced the cessation of menstruation for at least four months, with high levels of follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) and low estradiol (E2) levels. Healthy control women were chosen based on having regular menstrual cycles and normal reproductive hormone levels, with exclusion criteria including recent antibiotic use, liver or kidney dysfunction, and other conditions that could affect reproductive health. The research aimed to identify microbial differences between women with POF and those with normal ovarian function.
Most important findings
The study revealed significant differences in the vaginal microbiota between patients with POF and healthy controls. Patients with POF exhibited a more diverse and richer vaginal microbiota compared to healthy women. The most notable microbial differences were seen in the relative abundance of Lactobacillus species. In the control group, Lactobacillus gallinarum was the dominant species, whereas in the POF group, L. iners became more prevalent while L. gallinarum decreased. Furthermore, the presence of Gardnerella and Prevotella species was more abundant in the POF group, correlating with higher serum FSH and LH levels and lower E2 levels, indicating a possible connection between these microbial shifts and reproductive health indicators. Notably, L. gallinarum was positively associated with estradiol (E2) levels, while L. iners was negatively correlated with these hormone levels. The study also identified a set of 34 genera whose relative abundances could help predict the occurrence of POF with high accuracy.
Key implications
The findings suggest that the vaginal microbiota, particularly the balance of Lactobacillus species, plays a critical role in the pathogenesis of Primary Ovarian Failure. The alteration of specific microbial populations, including an increase in L. iners and a decrease in L. gallinarum, may be linked to hormonal imbalances associated with POF. These results indicate that modifying the vaginal microbiota, potentially through the use of probiotics, could offer a new avenue for managing or delaying the onset of POF. Future research exploring the therapeutic potential of vaginal probiotics to restore microbial balance could improve reproductive outcomes in women with POF and help mitigate associated symptoms.
Insights into estrogen impact in oral health & microbiome in COVID-19
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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This study examined the impact of estrogen on oral health and microbiome composition in COVID-19 patients, showing that postmenopausal women and men experience poorer oral health, which correlates with elevated proinflammatory cytokines and lower ACE2 expression, potentially influencing COVID-19 outcomes.
What was studied?
The study explored the effects of estrogen on oral health, microbiome composition, and cytokine profiles in premenopausal, postmenopausal women, and men with COVID-19. It aimed to understand how hormonal differences, particularly estrogen levels, impact oral health, ACE2 expression, and the inflammatory environment in the oral cavity, with a focus on COVID-19 outcomes.
Who was studied?
The study involved 60 non-vaccinated subjects, divided into three groups: 20 premenopausal women, 18 postmenopausal women, and 22 men. All participants were diagnosed with SARS-CoV-2 infection and underwent detailed oral health evaluations, including swabs for ACE2 expression, saliva cytokine measurements, and 16S rRNA sequencing to analyze the oral microbiome. The study considered variables such as age, oral health status, comorbidities, and hormonal status.
Most important findings
The study found that postmenopausal women and men had a poorer oral health status, characterized by higher oral proinflammatory cytokine levels. Postmenopausal women exhibited a significantly lower expression of ACE2 in oral cells compared to premenopausal women, which could imply a compromised protective mechanism against SARS-CoV-2. Additionally, salivary estrogen levels were negatively correlated with viral load, suggesting estrogen's potential protective role in mitigating viral infection. The oral microbiome in premenopausal women was enriched with commensal species like Prevotella melaninogenica, whereas postmenopausal women had higher levels of pathogenic species such as Leptotrichia and Tannerella. These differences were linked to variations in oral health indices, with poor oral health associated with a dysbiotic microbiome and increased proinflammatory cytokine profiles.
Key implications
This study highlights the influence of estrogen on oral health and immune responses, particularly in the context of COVID-19. It suggests that postmenopausal women, due to hormonal changes, may experience worsened oral health and increased vulnerability to respiratory infections, such as COVID-19. Estrogen's role in modulating ACE2 expression and inflammatory cytokines indicates its potential as a protective factor in managing viral infections, making it an important consideration in postmenopausal health management. These findings underscore the need for further studies to explore hormonal therapies and microbiome interventions as potential strategies to improve oral health and mitigate the effects of COVID-19 in postmenopausal women.
Association between premature ovarian insufficiency and gut microbiota
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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The study reveals a distinct gut microbiome profile in women with premature ovarian insufficiency (POI), with altered bacterial populations linked to hormonal changes, suggesting a potential role of the microbiome in POI pathogenesis and management.
What was studied?
This study aimed to explore the relationship between premature ovarian insufficiency (POI) and the gut microbiota. POI, which affects women under 40 and is marked by the early cessation of ovarian function, has multifactorial causes, including autoimmune diseases and hormonal imbalances. Recent research into gut microbiome studies has highlighted its influence on immune function and hormonal regulation. This study investigated the gut microbial community structure in women with POI compared to healthy controls, utilizing 16S rRNA gene sequencing to characterize the differences in microbial populations.
Who was studied?
The study included 35 women diagnosed with spontaneous POI and 18 healthy women as controls. All participants were aged between 24 and 40 years, with the POI group having a significantly higher body mass index (BMI) compared to controls. The women with POI had higher serum levels of follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), luteinizing hormone (LH), and testosterone (T), but lower levels of estradiol (E2) and anti-Müllerian hormone (AMH). The women in the control group had normal ovarian function, with regular menstruation and normal levels of FSH. The participants were recruited from the Shenzhen Maternity & Child Healthcare Hospital, and clinical and demographic data were also collected for analysis.
Most important findings
The gut microbiome of women with POI showed significant differences when compared to that of healthy controls. The major phyla present in both groups were Firmicutes, Bacteroidetes, Actinobacteria, and Proteobacteria, with Firmicutes being the dominant phylum in both groups. However, women with POI had a significantly higher Bacteroidetes/Firmicutes ratio, with notable increases in Bacteroides, Bifidobacterium, Megamonas, and Prevotella, while genera such as Blautia, Clostridium, Coprococcus, and Faecalibacterium were significantly decreased. These microbial changes were correlated with serum hormone levels, including estradiol, FSH, and LH. Specifically, higher levels of Bacteroides and a higher Bacteroidetes/Firmicutes ratio were associated with higher FSH and LH levels and lower estradiol.
Key implications
These findings suggest that the gut microbiota plays a role in the pathogenesis of POI, possibly influencing immune responses and hormone regulation. The altered gut microbial profile in women with POI, marked by an increase in certain bacterial genera and a disturbed Bacteroidetes/Firmicutes ratio, may contribute to the autoimmune processes and hormonal imbalances seen in POI. The correlation between gut microbiota composition and serum hormone levels indicates that microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs), such as probiotics, could potentially modulate the immune response and help manage POI symptoms.
Relationship between risk factors for infertility in women and lead, cadmium, and arsenic blood levels: a cross-sectional study from Taiwan
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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Infertile women in Taiwan showed higher blood lead and arsenic levels than pregnant women, mainly linked to frequent Chinese herbal medicine use. Physical activity may help lower lead accumulation, highlighting the need to evaluate traditional medicine risks in women planning pregnancy.
What was studied?
This cross-sectional study investigated the association between blood concentrations of lead (Pb), cadmium (Cd), and arsenic (As) and risk factors for infertility in women of childbearing age in Taiwan. The study aimed to elucidate whether exposure to these environmental toxic metals, commonly found as contaminants in the environment and traditional Chinese herbal medicines, correlates with infertility. Researchers compared the levels of Pb, Cd, and As in blood samples of infertile and pregnant women and examined how lifestyle factors, including use of Chinese herbal medicine, alcohol consumption, and physical activity, might influence metal body burdens. Additionally, the study assessed possible associations between blood metal levels and reproductive hormone concentrations (FSH, LH) in the infertile group.
Who was studied?
Three hundred and sixty-seven women aged 18–45 years were recruited from the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at Taiwan Adventist Hospital between 2008 and 2010. Of these, 310 infertile women (defined as failing to conceive after one year of regular intercourse) and 57 pregnant women (confirmed by ultrasound in the first trimester) were included after applying exclusion criteria (e.g., excluding women with PCOS, diabetes, IVF pregnancies, and other confounders). Sociodemographic data, lifestyle habits, and reproductive histories were collected via structured interviews. Blood samples for metal and hormone analyses were collected under standardized conditions, ensuring comparability between the groups.
Most important findings
The study found that blood levels of Pb and As, but not Cd, were significantly higher in infertile women compared to pregnant women. Median Pb concentrations were 15.7 μg/L in infertile versus 11.6 μg/L in pregnant women; As levels were also higher in the infertile group. Use of Chinese herbal medicine was more prevalent among infertile women and was associated with higher blood Pb levels in both infertile and pregnant women, with a clear dose-response relationship: more frequent herbal medicine use correlated with greater Pb burden. Alcohol consumption was also higher among infertile women, while regular physical activity was more common in pregnant women. Physical activity showed a trend toward reducing blood Pb accumulation. No significant correlations were observed between blood metal concentrations and reproductive hormone levels in infertile women, potentially due to overall metal exposures being below recognized toxicity thresholds.
Key implications
This study highlights that environmental and lifestyle exposures to heavy metals may contribute to increased Pb body burden in women of childbearing age, potentially impacting fertility. While the absolute metal levels observed were below acute toxicity thresholds, the data support the need for caution regarding the use of herbal preparations that may contain heavy metals, especially for women planning pregnancy. Regular physical activity may have a protective effect against Pb accumulation. Clinicians should consider environmental and cultural factors when assessing infertility and counsel patients on potential risks associated with traditional medicine use. These findings underscore the importance of monitoring metal exposures and integrating environmental health perspectives into reproductive care.
Dysmenorrhea pattern in adolescences informing adult endometriosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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The study links adolescent dysmenorrhea patterns with adult endometriosis development. It suggests that early intervention, guided by dysmenorrhea frequency and onset, can reduce the risk of EMs and its associated complications, including infertility.
What was studied?
This study explores the relationship between dysmenorrhea patterns during adolescence and the development of adult endometriosis (EMs). Dysmenorrhea, a common symptom in adolescents, is frequently associated with EMs, a chronic condition that can lead to infertility if left untreated. The study sought to identify adolescent dysmenorrhea characteristics, such as frequency, onset, and severity, that could predict the likelihood of developing EMs in adulthood. By collecting data from 1,287 participants, including 641 women with EMs and 646 healthy controls, the study aimed to quantify the risks of adult EMs based on adolescent dysmenorrhea patterns and lifestyle factors.
Who was studied?
The study involved 1,287 female participants aged 18 to 55, with 641 diagnosed with EMs and 646 serving as healthy controls. Participants were matched for age and recruited from Shenzhen Maternity and Child Healthcare Hospital. Dysmenorrhea frequency, onset, intensity, and distress were among the key factors analyzed. Additional factors included family history of dysmenorrhea, physical activity levels, dietary habits, and sun-sensitivity, all of which were hypothesized to influence the development of EMs. The study focused on women who experienced menstrual pain during adolescence, investigating whether these early symptoms were predictive of later endometriosis.
Most important findings
The study identified a strong correlation between the frequency and onset of adolescent dysmenorrhea and the risk of developing adult EMs. Individuals who experienced frequent dysmenorrhea (often or always) during adolescence had a significantly higher risk of adult EMs. Those with dysmenorrhea occurring more than 12 months after menarche were found to be at an even greater risk. The study also highlighted lifestyle factors, such as high-intensity physical activity and sun-sensitive skin, as contributing to the frequency of dysmenorrhea. The predictive model, developed using logistic regression and validated with external cohorts, demonstrated strong predictive capabilities, with an area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) of 0.812.
Key implications
The findings underscore the importance of recognizing dysmenorrhea patterns in adolescence as early indicators of potential future endometriosis. Early identification of high-risk individuals based on dysmenorrhea frequency and onset can facilitate timely intervention and management, potentially reducing the long-term impact of EMs. This predictive model could guide healthcare providers in offering preventive care, improving disease outcomes, and minimizing fertility disruptions in adulthood. The study advocates for further research to validate these findings through long-term cohort studies and molecular analyses to refine the model and better understand the pathophysiology of EMs.
Major dietary patterns in relation to menstrual pain: a nested case control study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This study links a snack‐heavy dietary pattern to a significantly higher risk of moderate to severe dysmenorrhea among young women, highlighting the importance of dietary counseling in menstrual pain management.
What was studied?
This nested case–control study examined the relationship between habitual dietary patterns and the risk of moderate to severe dysmenorrhea among female university students. Researchers applied factor analysis to categorize dietary intake into three major patterns, the “lacto‑vegetarian,” “snacks,” and “mixed food items,” and then assessed how adherence to each pattern influenced the likelihood of experiencing menstrual pain graded as moderate to severe (grades 2–3). Logistic regression, both crude and adjusted for family history of dysmenorrhea, quantified these associations to identify dietary behaviors that may exacerbate menstrual discomfort.
Who was studied?
The study population comprised 293 single, healthy female students aged 19–30 years at Urmia University of Medical Sciences in Iran, recruited via proportional cluster sampling. After excluding participants with incomplete dietary data, extreme energy intakes, chronic disease, or genital disorders detected by ultrasonography, 46 students reporting moderate to severe dysmenorrhea were designated as cases and 54 students without dysmenorrhea as controls. All participants completed a validated 115‑item food frequency questionnaire reflecting intake over the previous six months, and underwent assessments for menstrual characteristics, physical activity, and psychosocial factors.
Most important findings
Factor analysis revealed three distinct dietary patterns explaining 23.65% of intake variance. The “snacks” pattern, characterized by high consumption of sugars, salty snacks, sweets, desserts, tea and coffee, salt, fruit juices, and added fats, was significantly associated with increased dysmenorrhea risk. Participants in the second and third tertiles of the “snacks” pattern experienced higher odds of moderate to severe menstrual pain compared to those in the lowest tertile, even after controlling for family history. No significant associations emerged for the “lacto‑vegetarian” or “mixed food items” patterns.
Key implications
These findings suggest that clinicians should consider dietary counseling aimed at reducing intake of snack‐type foods when advising young women with dysmenorrhea. Emphasizing balanced meals over high‐sugar and high‐fat snacks may mitigate prostaglandin‐mediated uterine contractions that underlie menstrual pain. Further research should explore underlying mechanisms, potentially including inflammatory and metabolic pathways influenced by diet, to inform comprehensive management strategies.
Association of pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) with ovarian cancer: a nationwide population-based retrospective cohort study from Taiwan
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) is a complex interplay between pathogens, immune responses, and microbial communities. As research continues to uncover the microbiome's role in reproductive health, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) such as probiotics, prebiotics, and transplants are redefining how we prevent and treat PID. This page dives deep into these innovations, offering a glimpse into the future of personalized, biologically informed women’s healthcare.
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This nationwide study from Taiwan demonstrates that women with a history of pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) are at a significantly higher risk of developing ovarian cancer. The study highlights the importance of monitoring and early screening for ovarian cancer in women with PID, particularly those aged 40 and above.
What was studied?
This study examined the association between pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) and the subsequent risk of ovarian cancer in women. Using data from Taiwan's National Health Insurance Research Database (NHIRD), the researchers conducted a population-based, retrospective cohort study. The study focused on women diagnosed with PID between 2000 and 2012 and compared their risk of developing ovarian cancer to that of women without PID. The study used Cox proportional hazards regression models to analyze the association, adjusting for potential confounders such as age, comorbidities, and income.
Who was studied?
The study included women aged 18 years and older who were diagnosed with PID, as indicated by the ICD-9-CM code for PID between 2000 and 2012. Each woman with PID was matched with two women without PID based on age and the date of entry into the NHIRD. The study followed both cohorts until they either developed ovarian cancer, withdrew from the National Health Insurance program, died, or the study period ended in December 2012.
What were the most important findings?
The study found a significant association between PID and an increased risk of developing ovarian cancer. Over an approximate 10-year follow-up period, women with a history of PID had a 1.49-fold higher risk of ovarian cancer compared to those without PID. The incidence rate of ovarian cancer in women with PID was 0.27 per 1,000 person-years, compared to 0.16 per 1,000 person-years in the control group (P < 0.001). The study also identified that women aged 40 years and older with PID were at a higher risk than younger women. The study highlighted several comorbidities associated with an increased risk of ovarian cancer in the PID cohort, including endometriosis, infertility, and a history of uterine or breast cancer. These comorbidities were more prevalent in the PID group than in controls. The findings suggested that PID is not only a risk factor for infertility but also for ovarian cancer, possibly due to chronic inflammation that may promote carcinogenesis.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study has significant clinical implications, particularly in identifying women at high risk for ovarian cancer. Given the observed association between PID and increased ovarian cancer risk, healthcare providers should carefully monitor women with a history of PID, especially those over 40 years of age. This could include earlier and more frequent screenings for ovarian cancer. The study suggests that PID may serve as a sentinel event for ovarian cancer, with chronic inflammation potentially contributing to cancer development. The findings underscore the need for targeted preventive measures and early detection strategies, especially in populations with known PID risk factors. Further research in different populations is necessary to confirm these results and refine prevention guidelines.
The relationship between menopausal syndrome and gut microbes
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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This study found that menopausal syndrome is linked to gut microbiota dysbiosis, with reduced Bifidobacterium animalis and altered metabolic pathways, suggesting microbiome-targeted interventions may benefit menopausal women.
What was studied?
This original research article investigated the relationship between menopausal syndrome (MPS) and gut microbiota in women. Specifically, the study compared the gut microbial composition and predicted microbial functions between women experiencing MPS and healthy menopausal women. The research utilized 16S rRNA gene sequencing to profile gut microbiota from fecal samples, assessed clinical and hormonal parameters (including estradiol, FSH, and LH), and applied bioinformatics tools to characterize microbial signatures and pathway enrichment associated with MPS.
Who was studied?
The study enrolled 101 women aged 40–60 years from Guangzhou, China, between June 2020 and October 2021. Of these, 77 women were diagnosed with menopausal syndrome (MPS group), and 24 were healthy menopausal controls (H group). Diagnosis of MPS required the presence of menopausal symptoms, menstrual irregularities, and a modified Kupperman index (KI) score >15, while controls had a KI score <15 and no hot flashes. Exclusion criteria included recent use of sex hormones or antibiotics, severe chronic disease, and age outside the 40–60-year range. Groups were matched for age, BMI, and metabolic comorbidities to minimize confounding factors.
Most important findings
The study identified significant gut microbiota dysbiosis in women with MPS compared to healthy controls. While overall microbial diversity did not differ significantly, 14 microbial species showed differential abundance. Notably, Aggregatibacter segnis, Bifidobacterium animalis, and Acinetobacter guillouiae were enriched in healthy controls and positively correlated with estradiol levels, while their abundance was reduced in MPS and inversely correlated with FSH and LH. Bifidobacterium animalis, known for its probiotic and metabolic benefits, was highlighted as particularly depleted in MPS. Functional prediction analysis revealed that women with MPS had gut microbiota enriched in pathways related to cardiovascular disease and carbohydrate metabolism, suggesting a microbiota-mediated predisposition to metabolic and cardiovascular risk post-menopause.
Key implications
These findings underscore the existence of distinct gut microbiota signatures associated with MPS and hormonal status in menopausal women. The depletion of beneficial species, especially Bifidobacterium animalis, and enrichment of pathways linked to metabolic and cardiovascular diseases suggest that gut microbiota may modulate both menopausal symptoms and long-term health risks. Clinically, the results support the potential for microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) (e.g., probiotics, dietary modulation) to alleviate MPS symptoms and reduce comorbidities. However, the study’s cross-sectional design and modest sample size warrant further longitudinal and interventional research to clarify causality and therapeutic potential.
Study on gut microbiota and metabolomics in postmenopausal women
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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This study reveals how FSH-driven changes in perimenopausal women associate with distinct gut microbiota and metabolomic profiles, linking specific bacteria and metabolic pathways to symptoms like bone pain and mental disturbances, with implications for personalized management strategies.
What was studied?
This research investigated the interplay between gut microbiota composition, fecal metabolites, and clinical symptoms in perimenopausal women, with a particular focus on the influence of follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) levels. Using 16S rRNA gene sequencing and untargeted metabolomic profiling, the study analyzed stool samples from 44 women experiencing perimenopausal symptoms to determine differences in microbial diversity, specific microbial taxa, and metabolic pathways associated with varying FSH levels. The research aimed to elucidate how fluctuations in reproductive hormones, particularly FSH, are linked with changes in the gut microbiome and metabolic signatures, and how these biological variations correspond to clinical manifestations such as hot flashes, bone pain, and mental disturbances.
Who was studied?
The study cohort comprised 44 outpatient perimenopausal women, divided into two groups based on FSH levels: Group 1 (G1, n=16) had FSH <40 IU/L (indicative of declining ovarian reserve), and Group 2 (G2, n=28) had FSH >40 IU/L (indicative of premature ovarian failure). Demographic and hormonal profiles were similar between groups except for differences in FSH, LH, E2, and progesterone levels. Symptoms were categorized and quantified using the K-score. The G1 group experienced more mental disorders (anxiety, insomnia, depression), while the G2 group had a higher prevalence of hot flashes and bone pain. Age, testosterone, and prolactin did not differ significantly between the groups, minimizing confounding effects from these variables.
Most important findings
The study found no significant difference in overall microbial diversity (alpha or beta diversity) between the two FSH-defined groups. However, there were notable shifts in the relative abundance of specific bacterial taxa. At the genus level, Faecalibacterium, Subdoligranulum, Agathobacter, and Roseburia were more abundant in G1, while Bacteroides, Escherichia-Shigella, Bifidobacterium, and Blautia were more abundant in G2. Importantly, Bacteroides implicated in bone health was higher in G2, which also had a greater prevalence of bone pain. Bifidobacterium, associated with mitigating mental disorders, was also elevated in G2, where mental symptoms were less common. Spearman correlation analyses revealed that FSH was negatively correlated with Subdoligranulum and Agathobacter, while estradiol was positively correlated with Faecalibacterium and unclassified Lachnospiraceae. Metabolomic analysis revealed significant upregulation of metabolites involved in tyrosine metabolism, alpha-linolenic acid metabolism, and other lipid pathways in G2, which aligns with emerging evidence linking lipid metabolism disorders to postmenopausal osteoporosis. Several metabolites showed strong correlations with specific bacterial genera, highlighting potential microbiome-metabolite axes relevant to symptomatology.
Key implications
This study adds to the growing evidence linking perimenopausal hormonal changes, particularly elevated FSH, with specific alterations in the gut microbiome and fecal metabolome. The observed associations between certain bacterial taxa (e.g., Bacteroides, Bifidobacterium, Faecalibacterium, Blautia) and clinical symptoms suggest that the gut microbiota may modulate the risk or severity of common perimenopausal manifestations such as bone pain, hot flashes, and mental disorders. The enrichment of lipid and amino acid metabolism pathways in women with higher FSH and more pronounced bone pain supports the potential utility of microbiome and metabolome profiling in risk stratification and therapeutic targeting. While the study is limited by its small sample size, the findings indicate that microbiome signatures could serve as biomarkers for symptom phenotyping and inspire novel interventions, such as targeted probiotics or dietary modifications, to improve quality of life in perimenopausal women.
Comparative effectiveness of exercise interventions for primary dysmenorrhea
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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This network meta‑analysis ranks six exercise modalities for primary dysmenorrhea, showing resistance and multi‑component training best reduce pain and symptoms, with clear dosage guidelines for clinical implementation.
What was reviewed?
The authors conducted a systematic review and Bayesian network meta‑analysis of randomized controlled trials to compare the efficacy of six exercise modalities, mind‑body, stretching, aerobic, core‑strengthening, resistance, and multi‑component, against non‑exercise or active controls for the management of primary dysmenorrhea. They searched PubMed, Embase, the Cochrane Library, and Web of Science through May 23, 2024, extracted pain‑related outcomes, and ranked interventions using SUCRA values within a random‑effects framework.
Who was reviewed?
The review included 49 RCTs comprising 3,129 women aged 14–40 years suffering primary dysmenorrhea without identifiable pelvic pathology. Sample sizes ranged from 11 to 97 per arm; 1,640 women received exercise interventions and 1,489 served as controls (sham, no‐treatment, or pharmacologic). Baseline demographics showed no significant group differences, and pain intensity was primarily measured by the Visual Analog Scale, with secondary outcomes including pain duration and menstrual symptom scales.
Most important findings
All exercise interventions produced statistically and clinically significant pain reductions. Resistance and multi‑component exercise yielded the greatest decrease in pain intensity, while multi‑component and stretching exercises most effectively alleviated associated menstrual symptoms. Core‑strengthening and multi‑component regimens had the largest impact on shortening pain duration. Subgroup analyses indicated that 4–8 weeks of training conferred benefit across modalities; resistance exercise surpassed other forms when sessions exceeded eight weeks, especially with ≥30‑minute durations. Increased frequency (1–3 vs. >3 sessions/week) enhanced the effect of aerobic and multi‑component programs.
Key implications
This review offers clinicians quantitative guidance on prescribing specific exercise “doses” to relieve menstrual pain: recommending resistance or multi‑component routines of at least 30 minutes per session, three times weekly for 8+ weeks. It fills a critical gap by ranking modalities and parameters to inform nonpharmacologic pain management.
Diet quality, body weight, and postmenopausal hot flashes: a secondary analysis of a randomized clinical trial
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal Hot Flashes
Menopausal hot flashes are one of the most common and disruptive symptoms that women experience during the transition to menopause. Characterized by sudden sensations of heat, sweating, and flushing, hot flashes can significantly affect a woman’s quality of life, causing sleep disturbances, mood swings, and even long-term health consequences. Understanding the complex mechanisms behind hot flashes, as well as the role of microbiome-targeted therapies, offers new avenues for improving menopausal health.
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This study suggests that a low-fat vegan diet, particularly one supplemented with soybeans, significantly reduces hot flashes in postmenopausal women, with improvements linked to higher plant-based diet scores.
What was studied?
This study investigates how dietary quality, body weight, and the consumption of plant-based foods affect postmenopausal hot flashes. It specifically examines the relationship between hot flash severity and frequency and dietary patterns as measured by three dietary indices: plant-based diet index (PDI), healthful plant-based diet index (hPDI), and unhealthful plant-based diet index (uPDI). The research aimed to assess the effect of a low-fat vegan diet, supplemented with soybeans, on the reduction of hot flashes, comparing it with a control group that maintained their usual diet.
Who was studied?
The study included 84 postmenopausal women aged 40 to 65, who reported at least two moderate-to-severe hot flashes per day. Participants were randomly assigned to either a vegan group, which followed a low-fat vegan diet supplemented with soybeans, or a control group that maintained their usual diet. Participants were excluded if they had specific health conditions like eating disorders, were on weight-loss medications, or had a body mass index (BMI) under 18.5 kg/m². The study was conducted over 12 weeks, with regular measurements of hot flash severity, frequency, and body weight.
Most important findings
The study found that participants in the vegan group experienced a significant reduction in hot flash severity and frequency compared to the control group. Severe hot flashes in the vegan group decreased by 92%, from 1.3 to 0.1 per day, while the control group showed no significant change. The plant-based diet, particularly the reduction in animal products and oils, positively influenced the reduction of hot flashes and body weight. Additionally, higher PDI and hPDI scores were negatively associated with changes in body weight and hot flash severity, even after adjusting for changes in body mass index (BMI). These findings suggest that dietary quality, specifically plant-based food consumption, plays a crucial role in managing menopausal symptoms.
Key implications
The results suggest that adopting a plant-based diet, particularly one low in fats and supplemented with soybeans, could be an effective strategy for alleviating hot flashes in postmenopausal women. This approach could serve as a non-hormonal alternative for managing menopausal symptoms, particularly for women seeking lifestyle changes or alternatives to hormone therapy. The study highlights the importance of focusing on the healthfulness of plant-based foods, rather than categorizing them as simply "healthy" or "unhealthy," as the findings show that both healthful and unhealthful plant foods contributed to positive changes in hot flash frequency and severity.
Association of dietary preferences with primary ovarian insufficiency (POI)
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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This study identifies dietary habits that influence the risk of Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI), finding that high-fat dairy products increase risk while oily fish and pork offer protection, suggesting that dietary interventions could help prevent POI.
What was studied?
This study explored the association between dietary preferences and the risk of Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) using Mendelian randomization (MR). POI, characterized by premature cessation of ovarian function before the age of 40, is a leading cause of infertility in women. The researchers aimed to determine how specific dietary habits, including the consumption of dairy, fish, meat, and other food items, might influence the likelihood of developing POI. By applying MR, the study minimized confounding factors and reverse causality, providing causal estimates about the impact of diet on POI risk.
Who was studied?
The study involved a large dataset from the UK Biobank, which provided genetic information about 83 dietary preferences. POI-related data was sourced from the Finnish FinnGen database, specifically focusing on European women. The final analysis included genetic instrumental variables from these databases to explore the relationship between specific dietary habits and POI risk. Participants had various dietary preferences and represented a broad demographic, enabling the study to assess how different eating habits influence the development of POI.
Most important findings
The analysis revealed significant dietary associations with POI risk. Consumption of butter and full-fat dairy products was strongly associated with an increased risk of POI. Women who consumed butter had a nearly tenfold increase in risk, while full-cream milk was linked to an even greater risk. Interestingly, semi-skimmed milk also showed a significant association with an elevated risk. In contrast, certain dietary patterns were found to protect against POI. Regular consumption of oily fish, rich in omega-3 fatty acids, was associated with an 82% reduced risk of POI, and pork consumption also had a protective effect. Additionally, women who did not consume eggs had a significantly lower risk of POI.
Key implications
The findings highlight the potential role of diet in the prevention and management of POI. High-fat dairy products, particularly butter and full-fat milk, were associated with an increased risk of POI, suggesting that dietary fats may contribute to ovarian dysfunction. Conversely, the consumption of oily fish and pork was associated with a reduced risk of POI, likely due to their beneficial effects on inflammation and metabolic health. These results underscore the importance of dietary modification as a potential preventive strategy for women at risk of POI. Further studies are needed to refine these associations and explore the biological mechanisms through which diet influences ovarian function.
The effectiveness of self-care and lifestyle interventions in primary dysmenorrhea: a systematic review and meta-analysis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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Self-care interventions like exercise, heat, and acupressure significantly reduce menstrual pain in primary dysmenorrhea, with exercise showing the largest effect. These methods may be effective alternatives to medication.
What was studied?
This systematic review and meta-analysis investigated the effectiveness of self-care and lifestyle interventions for managing primary dysmenorrhea, a common condition that causes menstrual pain. The study analyzed the impact of interventions such as exercise, heat therapy, and acupressure on menstrual pain intensity, duration, and analgesic usage. It included 23 trials with 2302 women, focusing on non-pharmacological, participant-led self-care strategies that women could administer independently. The study also compared these interventions to traditional analgesic treatments and placebo controls to assess their effectiveness in reducing pain and improving quality of life.
Who was studied?
The review included studies with women diagnosed with primary dysmenorrhea, a condition characterized by painful menstrual cramps that occur in the absence of any underlying medical condition. The trials involved women of reproductive age, primarily adolescents and young adults, who self-reported menstrual pain. Studies from various countries, including Iran, Taiwan, and the USA, were included. The women in the trials used various self-care interventions, including exercise, yoga, acupressure, and heat therapy, to manage their menstrual pain. The total number of participants across all studies was 2302.
Most important findings
The meta-analysis revealed that all the self-care interventions examined (exercise, heat, and acupressure) led to significant reductions in menstrual pain. Exercise showed the largest effect, with a substantial reduction in pain intensity. Heat therapy and acupressure also showed moderate effects. In comparison to over-the-counter analgesics like ibuprofen, exercise and heat were more effective in reducing pain intensity. Acupressure, however, was found to be less effective than analgesic medication but still beneficial compared to no treatment. The interventions not only reduced pain intensity but also helped decrease the need for analgesics, highlighting their potential as effective alternatives or adjuncts to conventional medication.
Key implications
The findings suggest that self-care interventions like exercise, heat, and acupressure could be valuable tools for managing primary dysmenorrhea, especially for women who prefer non-pharmacological approaches or experience inadequate relief from medications. Exercise, particularly low-intensity activities like yoga and stretching, emerged as the most effective method for pain reduction. Heat therapy, despite its moderate effectiveness, can provide immediate pain relief and be easily implemented at home. Acupressure offers a low-risk alternative, though its efficacy is less compared to exercise and heat. These interventions may be recommended for individuals seeking a cost-effective, accessible, and non-invasive approach to managing menstrual pain.
Health disorders in menopausal women: microbiome alterations, associated problems, and possible treatments
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Menopause disrupts multiple microbiomes, elevating risks for infections, metabolic and cardiovascular diseases, and osteoporosis. Targeted interventions including probiotics, diet, and hormone therapy improve health outcomes.
What was reviewed?
This comprehensive review systematically examines the multifaceted health disorders associated with menopause, focusing on microbiome alterations and their implications across various body sites, including the vaginal, gut, urethral, oral, and duodenal microbiomes. It explores the interplay between declining estrogen levels during menopause and disruptions in microbial communities, the consequent impact on disease risks, ranging from reproductive disorders, metabolic syndrome, cardiovascular diseases, bone health, mental health, and other systemic conditions, and discusses current and emerging interventions including dietary modifications, hormone therapy, probiotics, plant extracts, and traditional therapies.
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesizes findings from a wide range of human observational and interventional studies involving peri- and postmenopausal women, alongside relevant animal models and mechanistic research. It includes clinical and molecular studies examining microbiome compositional changes, microbial metabolic functions, immune modulation, and symptom relief strategies. It also incorporates data on socioeconomic and lifestyle factors influencing menopausal health outcomes.
Most important findings
Menopause triggers a decline in estrogen that profoundly alters microbial communities, particularly the depletion of Lactobacillus in the vaginal and urethral microbiomes, increasing susceptibility to infections and genitourinary syndrome of menopause (GSM). Gut microbiota diversity decreases with shifts in Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes ratios, leading to reduced production of beneficial metabolites like short-chain fatty acids, impairing intestinal barrier integrity and immune regulation. Duodenal microbiome alterations, such as increased Proteobacteria and decreased Bacteroidetes, associate with elevated cardiovascular risk, influenced further by hormone therapy. Oral microbiota imbalances increase periodontal disease risk, while microbial dysbiosis broadly correlates with metabolic disorders like obesity and type 2 diabetes, osteoporosis, and mental health disturbances. Interventions including dietary fiber, soy isoflavones, probiotic supplementation, menopausal hormone therapy (MHT), and plant extracts (black cohosh, red clover, soybean) show promise in modulating these microbiomes, improving symptoms, and reducing disease risks.
Key implications
This review highlights the critical role of microbiome dysbiosis in menopause-associated health disorders and supports integrative intervention strategies that target microbial balance alongside hormonal and lifestyle factors. It advocates for personalized medicine approaches combining diet, probiotics, hormone therapy, and traditional treatments to optimize menopausal health. Future research should prioritize mechanistic studies, synergistic interventions, and psychosocial factors to enhance disease prevention, diagnosis, and management in menopausal women.
Putting menarche and girls into the global population health agenda
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This commentary reviews the global neglect of menstrual health education at menarche, highlighting psychosocial and health consequences for girls. It advocates for standardized, early education and support to empower girls and improve reproductive health, with implications for microbiome-related outcomes.
What was reviewed?
This commentary reviewed the global neglect of menarche and menstrual health education within the population health agenda, emphasizing its significance for adolescent girls’ well-being, self-confidence, and long-term sexual and reproductive health. The authors highlight the widespread lack of education and support for girls experiencing menarche, noting that many begin menstruation uninformed, unprepared, and unsupported, which can result in fear, shame, and compromised self-esteem. The review synthesizes qualitative and quantitative evidence from diverse global contexts to illustrate the psychosocial and health consequences of inadequate support and information at menarche. It also examines current initiatives and interventions aimed at addressing these gaps, including educational booklets, school-based programs, community engagement, and international partnerships, while arguing for a standardized, global approach to menstrual health education as an entry point for broader sexual and reproductive health discussions.
Who was reviewed?
The commentary drew on research involving adolescent girls from a variety of cultural, socioeconomic, and geographic backgrounds, primarily in low- and middle-income countries but also referencing studies in high-income settings. The reviewed populations included school-aged girls in countries such as Tanzania, Ghana, Ethiopia, Cambodia, Nepal, Malawi, Rwanda, Guatemala, India, Iran, Kenya, Sierra Leone, and Bolivia. Parents, educators, healthcare workers, and community leaders were also referenced as stakeholders influencing girls’ experiences of menarche and the effectiveness of educational and support interventions. The cited studies encompassed both qualitative accounts—capturing girls’ emotional responses, experiences of stigma, and school absenteeism—and quantitative assessments of intervention impacts on knowledge, hygiene practices, and health outcomes.
Most important findings
The commentary’s most salient finding is the near-global deficit in menstrual health education and support for girls at menarche, which perpetuates cycles of shame, misinformation, and health risks. Girls commonly report confusion, fear, and embarrassment at the onset of menstruation, often concealing their experiences and missing school due to stigma or lack of menstrual materials. This inadequate support is linked to diminished self-confidence and competence, which can impair girls’ abilities to advocate for their sexual and reproductive health. Evidence also suggests that early menarche, especially when unsupported, is associated with increased risk behaviors such as early sexual debut and substance abuse, with downstream effects on adolescent pregnancy and psychosocial outcomes. The review catalogs a growing number of interventions demonstrating positive impacts, such as improved knowledge, confidence, and menstrual hygiene management when education and support are provided. For instance, community and school-based programs in India, Iran, Ghana, and other countries have shown that even modest educational efforts and access to hygiene products can significantly reduce school absenteeism and improve girls’ psychosocial well-being. International organizations and NGOs are increasingly integrating menstrual health into broader water, sanitation, hygiene (WASH), and reproductive health strategies.
Key implications
The primary implication is that public health programs must recognize menarche as a critical juncture for health education, providing girls with the knowledge, practical resources, and emotional support needed to manage menstruation confidently. Integrating menstrual health education at or before menarche could serve as a culturally acceptable entry point for ongoing, comprehensive sexual and reproductive health education. Standardizing this approach globally—through school curricula, community engagement, and health systems—would help dismantle stigma, promote gender equity, and potentially improve both psychosocial and biological health outcomes, including those related to the vaginal and reproductive tract microbiomes. The review advocates for moving beyond pilot initiatives to establish a global standard ensuring that every girl receives accurate, supportive, and timely information and resources.
How does chronic endometritis influence pregnancy outcomes in endometriosis associated infertility? A retrospective cohort study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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This study shows chronic endometritis significantly increases pregnancy complications in women with endometriosis-associated infertility. Placenta previa, gestational hypertension, and cesarean sections were notably higher, emphasizing the importance of diagnosing and managing CE effectively for improved reproductive outcomes.
What was studied?
The study examined how chronic endometritis (CE) influences pregnancy outcomes in women experiencing infertility related to endometriosis. Specifically, it evaluated whether the coexistence of CE in these women affected their ability to conceive and carry pregnancies successfully. Researchers explored the incidence of pregnancy complications and live birth outcomes following combined laparoscopic and hysteroscopic surgical treatment.
Who was studied?
The study involved 685 women diagnosed with infertility associated with endometriosis. Among these participants, 318 women were diagnosed with chronic endometritis (CE group), while 367 women did not have CE (non-CE group). A subset consisting of 123 clinically pregnant women from the CE group and 369 from the non-CE group was analyzed in depth. These women underwent combined laparoscopy and hysteroscopy between January 2018 and December 2020. Data was meticulously gathered from medical records and telephone follow-ups over 24 months.
What were the most important findings?
The research revealed that chronic endometritis was highly prevalent (46.42%) in patients with endometriosis-associated infertility. Patients diagnosed with CE had increased rates of pregnancy complications compared to those without CE. Specifically, there was a significantly higher occurrence of placenta previa, gestational hypertension, and cesarean deliveries in the CE group. The cumulative pregnancy rate post-surgery was lower in patients with both EMS and CE compared to those without CE, although this difference was not statistically significant. However, notably, higher Endometriosis Fertility Index (EFI) scores (7-10) correlated strongly with improved pregnancy outcomes in both groups, suggesting that EFI scores remain reliable predictors of fertility success after surgical intervention.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study underscores the importance of identifying and treating chronic endometritis in patients suffering from endometriosis-related infertility. Clinicians should be particularly aware that CE significantly increases the risk of adverse pregnancy outcomes, including placenta previa, gestational hypertension, and higher rates of cesarean deliveries. The findings support incorporating routine diagnostic evaluations and proactive management of CE in fertility treatments. They also emphasize the value of combined hysteroscopic and laparoscopic surgical interventions to potentially improve pregnancy outcomes, with careful monitoring and counseling regarding possible complications post-surgery.
Characteristics of the vaginal microbiome in women with premature ovarian insufficiency
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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This study identifies significant differences in vaginal microbiota between women with premature ovarian insufficiency (POI) and healthy controls, suggesting that microbial shifts could contribute to ovarian dysfunction and hormone imbalances in POI.
What was studied?
This study aimed to investigate the differences in the vaginal microbiome between women with premature ovarian insufficiency (POI) and healthy controls. POI is characterized by early ovarian failure, leading to amenorrhea and hormonal imbalance. The research sought to identify microbial community differences using 16S rRNA gene sequencing to explore how the vaginal microbiome might relate to hormonal levels and ovarian function. Specifically, it compared microbial compositions between 28 women with spontaneous POI and 12 healthy women, looking for patterns of microbial dysbiosis that might correlate with the disease.
Who was studied?
The study involved 40 women, aged 24 to 40 years, recruited from the Shenzhen Maternity and Child Healthcare Hospital. Of these, 28 women had spontaneous POI, diagnosed based on elevated serum levels of follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) and luteinizing hormone (LH), alongside low estradiol and anti-Müllerian hormone (AMH) levels. The remaining 12 women, with normal ovarian function and hormone levels, were selected as controls. The study excluded women with autoimmune diseases, recent antibiotic use, or other conditions that could affect the vaginal microbiota or reproductive health.
Most important findings
The study identified significant differences in the vaginal microbiomes of women with POI compared to healthy controls. The microbial community in women with POI showed a higher diversity, as indicated by the weighted UniFrac distance, suggesting a more complex microbiome. Lactobacillus species, which are typically abundant in the vaginal microbiota of healthy women, were significantly reduced in the POI group. In contrast, the genera Streptococcus, Gardnerella, and Anaerococcus were found in higher quantities in women with POI. Correlation analysis further revealed that the abundance of Lactobacillus was positively correlated with estradiol levels, while the abundance of Streptococcus was associated with increased FSH and LH levels. These microbial shifts were linked to the hormonal imbalances typical of POI, suggesting that the vaginal microbiome may play a role in the pathophysiology of the disease.
Key implications
The findings highlight that alterations in the vaginal microbiota, particularly a decrease in Lactobacillus and an increase in potentially pathogenic genera like Streptococcus and Gardnerella, are associated with POI. These changes may influence the inflammatory and immune responses in the vaginal environment, which could contribute to ovarian dysfunction. Understanding the link between microbiome composition and ovarian health in POI could lead to novel microbiome-targeted interventions, such as probiotic interventions, to restore balance and potentially mitigate the symptoms of POI. Future research should aim to explore the causality of these microbiome shifts and their direct impact on ovarian function.
Metabolic differences in women with premature ovarian insufficiency: a systematic review and meta-analysis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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This study investigates the metabolic differences in women with premature ovarian insufficiency (POI), highlighting increased waist circumference, cholesterol, and glucose levels. It underscores the importance of early metabolic screening and management to address the elevated cardiovascular risk associated with POI.
What was studied?
This systematic review and meta-analysis aimed to investigate the metabolic differences in women with premature ovarian insufficiency (POI) in comparison to healthy controls. POI is a condition marked by the loss of ovarian function before the age of 40, leading to symptoms such as estrogen deficiency, infertility, and increased risk of cardiovascular disease. The study assessed metabolic parameters such as waist circumference, systolic and diastolic blood pressure, glucose levels, lipid profiles (total cholesterol, LDL, HDL, triglycerides), and insulin levels. By pooling data from observational studies, the researchers sought to understand how these metabolic changes are linked to the onset of POI and their potential role in the long-term health risks associated with the condition.
Who was studied?
The study reviewed 21 observational studies involving 1,573 women with POI and 1,762 healthy women as controls. The women with POI were diagnosed based on clinical criteria, including elevated follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) levels and absent menstruation. The control group consisted of women with normal ovarian function and regular menstrual cycles. The age of the participants ranged from early adulthood to middle age, with the studies sourced from various regions, including the Middle East, Europe, East Asia, and Latin America.
Most important findings
The meta-analysis revealed significant differences in several metabolic parameters between women with POI and the control group. Women with POI had higher waist circumference, total cholesterol, low-density lipoprotein (LDL), high-density lipoprotein (HDL), triglycerides, and fasting glucose. Insulin levels were also marginally higher in the POI group, suggesting a potential link between POI and insulin resistance. However, no significant differences were observed in blood pressure measurements between the two groups. These findings suggest that metabolic abnormalities in POI may contribute to the higher cardiovascular risk associated with the condition.
Key implications
The findings of this study emphasize the need for early screening and ongoing management of metabolic health in women with POI. The increased risk of cardiovascular disease linked to metabolic abnormalities in POI underlines the importance of addressing factors such as lipid imbalances and insulin resistance in clinical practice. Hormone replacement therapy (HRT) may play a role in mitigating some of these metabolic disturbances, but further research is needed to determine the long-term benefits of such treatments on cardiovascular and metabolic health.
Plasma metabolomic characterization of premature ovarian insufficiency
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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This study identifies key metabolites altered in premature ovarian insufficiency (POI), including arachidonoyl amide and 18-HETE, which could serve as diagnostic biomarkers. The findings reveal insights into the metabolic disturbances of POI, offering potential therapeutic directions.
What was studied?
This study investigates the plasma metabolomic profile of patients with premature ovarian insufficiency (POI) using ultrahigh-performance liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (UHPLC–MS/MS). POI, which results in the loss of ovarian function before the age of 40, is associated with metabolic disturbances. The aim of the study was to characterize the metabolic changes in POI patients, specifically focusing on alterations in lipid and amino acid metabolism, and to evaluate whether these disturbances relate to ovarian reserve and could be used as diagnostic markers for POI.
Who was studied?
The study included 60 participants, 30 women diagnosed with POI and 30 age- and BMI-matched healthy controls. The participants were recruited from the Center for Reproductive Medicine at Nanfang Hospital, Southern Medical University. The inclusion criteria for POI were based on the European Society for Human Reproduction and Embryology (ESHRE) guidelines, which included a basal FSH level greater than 25 IU/L and oligo/amenorrhea for at least four months. The control group consisted of women with normal ovarian reserve and regular menstrual cycles.
Most important findings
The study identified 130 differentially expressed metabolites between the POI group and controls, highlighting significant alterations in lipid metabolism, amino acid metabolism, and caffeine metabolism. Metabolites such as arachidonoyl amide, 3-hydroxy-3-methylbutanoic acid, dihexyl nonanedioate, 18-HETE, cystine, and PG (16:0/18:1) were found to be potential biomarkers for POI. Notably, arachidonoyl amide showed a strong correlation with basal FSH levels and was identified as a promising diagnostic biomarker with an AUC value of 0.901. The study also revealed that disturbances in lipid metabolism, including changes in glycerophospholipids and fatty acyls, were associated with POI, which could explain the higher cardiovascular and metabolic risks seen in these patients.
Key implications
The findings of this study suggest that metabolomic profiling can be an effective tool in identifying biomarkers for POI, offering a non-invasive diagnostic approach that could complement existing hormonal tests like FSH and AMH. The identified metabolites also provide insight into the metabolic disturbances underlying POI, which could inform the development of therapeutic strategies targeting lipid and amino acid metabolism. Additionally, the study emphasizes the potential use of metabolic interventions or personalized treatment options to mitigate the long-term complications associated with POI, such as cardiovascular diseases and osteoporosis.
Premature ovarian insufficiency: a review on the role of tobacco smoke, its clinical harm, and treatment
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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Tobacco smoke significantly impacts ovarian function, leading to premature ovarian insufficiency. The review outlines the harmful effects of various tobacco-related toxins, such as nicotine, cadmium, and PAHs, and the associated reproductive consequences, including early menopause and reduced fertility.
What was studied?
This review investigates the impact of tobacco smoke on premature ovarian insufficiency (POI), a condition characterized by the early depletion of ovarian follicles and the onset of menopause before the age of 40. The study reviews the harmful effects of tobacco-related toxicants such as polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), heavy metals like cadmium, alkaloids including nicotine and cotinine, and benzo[a]pyrene, all of which contribute to ovarian damage. These toxicants can disrupt ovarian function by promoting apoptosis, oxidative stress, and DNA damage, leading to decreased fertility, early menopause, and a reduction in ovarian reserve.
Who was studied?
The review draws on data from human and animal studies, particularly focusing on the effects of tobacco exposure on women of reproductive age and animal models. The studies cited in the review examine the physiological and molecular consequences of smoking on ovarian tissues, granulosa cells, and oocytes, particularly how they respond to the harmful substances in tobacco smoke.
Most important findings
Tobacco smoke contains more than 5,000 harmful chemicals that damage the ovaries. The review identifies how smoking accelerates ovarian aging by promoting follicular atresia, particularly affecting primordial follicles. It also describes how the exposure leads to persistent oxidative stress, mitochondrial dysfunction, and lipid peroxidation, which impair oocyte quality and reduce fertility. Notably, the review discusses the toxic effects of compounds such as nicotine, cotinine, cadmium, and PAHs on ovarian function. For example, nicotine disrupts estrogen production and hinders follicle development, while PAHs have been shown to reduce follicular growth and cause oocyte dysfunction.
Key implications
The review highlights the need for targeted interventions to reduce smoking among women of reproductive age, given its detrimental effects on ovarian health and fertility. Smoking cessation should be a key focus in the management and prevention of POI. Additionally, the review suggests that antioxidant therapies and other treatments targeting oxidative stress may offer potential therapeutic options for women with POI. The findings also underline the importance of public health efforts to reduce smoking rates, as it is a modifiable risk factor for early menopause and reduced fertility.
Exploring the causal role of multiple metabolites on ovarian cancer: a two sample Mendelian randomization study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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A two-sample MR of 486 metabolites reports suggestive causal links across OC and histotypes, maps caffeine/arginine/TCA and alpha-linolenic pathways, and surfaces microbially influenced xenobiotics as potential biomarkers; findings require replication before translation.
What was studied?
This study used metabolites and ovarian cancer Mendelian randomization to test causal links between 486 serum metabolites and overall epithelial ovarian cancer (OC) and four histotypes. The authors performed a two-sample Mendelian randomization (MR) using inverse-variance weighted (primary), MR-Egger, and weighted median estimators, with sensitivity tests for heterogeneity, horizontal pleiotropy, and leave-one-out stability. They also ran reverse MR and pathway enrichment. The goal was to identify metabolites and pathways that may contribute to OC etiology and inform biomarker discovery and prevention.
Who was studied?
Genetic instruments for 486 circulating metabolites came from a metabolomics GWAS of 7,824 individuals of European ancestry; 309 were known metabolites categorized across eight KEGG classes. Outcomes were from OCAC GWAS summary data: 25,509 OC cases and 40,941 controls of European ancestry, with subtype datasets for serous (14,049 cases), endometrioid (2,810), clear cell (1,366), and mucinous (2,566).
Most important findings
The analysis yielded 112 suggestive metabolite–phenotype associations; stringent consistency across ≥3 MR methods reduced these to 18 associations spanning 14 known metabolites, with eight risk-linked and six protective signals. Notably for overall OC, asparagine associated with a lower risk (OR 0.65), while 4-acetamidobutanoate, alpha-hydroxyisovalerate, 3-(3-hydroxyphenyl)propionate, and X-13183 stearamide are associated with a higher risk. For subtypes, betaine is associated with reduced clear cell risk, whereas estrone-3-sulfate is associated with increased clear cell risk. For endometrioid OC, higher risk signals included 3-(3-hydroxyphenyl)propionate, 1,5-anhydroglucitol, 1-linoleoyl-GPE, and the fibrinogen-derived peptide ADpSGEGDFXAEGGGVR; protective signals for endometrioid included arachidonate (20:4n6) and stearidonate (18:4n3). For serous OC, DSGEGDFXAEGGGVR and salicylurate (2-hydroxyhippurate) are associated with a lower risk. Pathway analysis linked mucinous OC to caffeine metabolism, arginine biosynthesis, and the TCA cycle, and linked endometrioid OC to caffeine and alpha-linolenic acid metabolism. After FDR correction, associations remained suggestive rather than confirmatory, but heterogeneity and pleiotropy checks were negative and leave-one-out analyses were stable; reverse MR did not support reverse causation. From a microbiome perspective, several signals involve xenobiotics and aromatic metabolites that are microbially influenced in humans, suggesting plausible gut–tumor metabolic axes, although the study did not profile microbiota directly.
Key implications
For clinicians, these findings highlight metabolic pathways that may intersect with host–microbe chemistry in OC. The caffeine, arginine, and TCA axes in mucinous disease, and alpha-linolenic acid metabolism in endometrioid disease, point to diet- and microbiome-modifiable routes worth validation. Metabolites with suggestive risk signals and protective signals could seed candidate biomarker panels for risk stratification or recurrence surveillance. Yet none survived FDR correction, and all data were European; apply caution and seek replication in diverse cohorts with integrated microbiome and metabolomics profiling before clinical use.
The effects of dietary fat on gut microbial composition and function in a mouse model of ovarian cancer
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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This study investigates the effects of ketogenic and high-fat diets on gut microbial composition and ovarian cancer progression in mice. It shows that high-fat diets increase tumor growth and disrupt microbial diversity, highlighting the potential role of diet in cancer therapy and prevention.
What was studied?
This study aimed to investigate the impact of dietary fat on gut microbial composition and function in a mouse model of ovarian cancer. Specifically, it explored the effects of ketogenic (KD) and high-fat/low-carbohydrate (HF/LC) diets on the gut microbiome and tumor progression in a syngeneic mouse model of high-grade serous ovarian cancer (EOC). The study also compared these high-fat diets to a low-fat/high-carbohydrate (LF/HC) diet. Tumor growth was monitored, and microbial composition was analyzed using 16S rRNA sequencing and shotgun metagenomics.
Who was studied?
The study involved 30 female C57BL/6 J mice, a widely used strain in cancer research. The mice were injected with KPCA EOC cells, a syngeneic ovarian cancer cell line that mimics high-grade serous ovarian cancer, and were subsequently randomized into three diet groups: ketogenic diet (KD), high-fat/low-carbohydrate diet (HF/LC), and low-fat/high-carbohydrate diet (LF/HC). The gut microbial composition and tumor progression were monitored over a period of 27 days. Fecal samples were collected for microbial analysis at the time of euthanasia.
Most important findings
The study found that both KD and HF/LC diets significantly accelerated tumor growth compared to the LF/HC diet. Mice on the KD and HF/LC diets showed marked reductions in gut microbial diversity, while those on the LF/HC diet exhibited higher microbial diversity. The taxonomic analysis revealed distinct microbial alterations among diet groups. Notably, HF/LC-fed mice had an increased abundance of Bacteroides thetaiotamicron, Enterococcus faecalis, and Lachnospiraceae bacterium, while LF/HC-fed mice had an overrepresentation of Dubosiella newyorkensis. KD-fed mice showed a higher abundance of Akkermansia species. Functional pathway analysis indicated that polyamine biosynthesis and fatty acid oxidation pathways were enriched in the HF/LC group, suggesting a link between these metabolic pathways and accelerated tumor growth.
The results highlight the complex relationship between dietary fat, the gut microbiome, and ovarian cancer progression. The study shows that high-fat diets, particularly ketogenic and HF/LC diets, not only accelerate tumor growth but also disrupt microbial diversity in the gut. The findings underscore the importance of considering both the quantity and quality of dietary fat when evaluating its effects on cancer biology. Additionally, the alterations in gut microbial composition linked to these diets suggest that dietary interventions could potentially be used as part of cancer prevention or therapeutic strategies. However, further research is needed to determine the exact mechanisms through which the microbiome influences cancer progression and how dietary modifications can be used to modulate these effects.
Gut microbiota signatures and fecal metabolites in postmenopausal women with osteoporosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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This study demonstrates significant alterations in gut bacteria, fungi, and metabolites in postmenopausal women with osteoporosis, revealing microbial and metabolic signatures closely linked to bone mineral density and providing a basis for early diagnosis and targeted interventions.
What was studied?
This original research investigated the gut microbiota signatures and fecal metabolite profiles in postmenopausal women with and without osteoporosis (PMO and non-PMO, respectively). The study aimed to elucidate the specific changes in both bacterial and fungal components of the intestinal microbiota, as well as associated fecal metabolites, that correlate with bone mineral density (BMD) in this population. Using 16S rRNA gene sequencing for bacteria, ITS sequencing for fungi, and LC-MS for metabolomics, the study comprehensively evaluated the compositional and functional alterations in the gut ecosystem of postmenopausal women stratified by osteoporosis status. The researchers also applied machine learning models to assess whether these microbial and metabolic signatures could serve as early diagnostic indicators for PMO.
Who was studied?
A total of 98 postmenopausal women aged 50–70 years were enrolled, divided into two groups based on BMD: 40 women with postmenopausal osteoporosis (PMO) and 58 women without osteoporosis (non-PMO). All participants were recruited from Zhongshan Hospital of Xiamen University, with strict inclusion and exclusion criteria to eliminate confounding factors such as organ dysfunction, recent antibiotic use, gastrointestinal diseases, and secondary causes of osteoporosis. For model validation, an independent cohort of 23 women (10 non-PMO, 13 PMO) from Xinyu People’s Hospital was included. Clinical data, serological markers, and BMD measurements were obtained alongside fecal samples for multi-omics analysis.
Most important findings
The study revealed marked differences in both bacterial and fungal gut communities between PMO and non-PMO women. Bacterial α-diversity (measured by Chao1, ACE, and Shannon indices) was significantly reduced in the PMO group, while fungal diversity changes were even more pronounced at the β-diversity level, indicating a distinct fungal signature in osteoporosis. Key bacterial genera enriched in PMO included Veillonella, Parabacteroides, and Harryflintia, while Prevotella and Enterobacterium were more abundant in non-PMO. Fungal genera such as Eurotium and Penicillium were elevated in PMO, whereas Pichia and Auricularia were enriched in non-PMO. Metabolomics identified higher levels of metabolites like levulinic acid and N-acetylneuraminic acid in PMO, with significant pathway alterations including alpha-linolenic acid and selenocompound metabolism. Correlation analysis showed that specific bacteria (e.g., Fusobacterium), fungi (e.g., Devriesia), and metabolites (e.g., L-pipecolic acid) were significantly associated with BMD. Machine learning models based on these microbial signatures distinguished PMO from non-PMO with high accuracy, underscoring their diagnostic potential.
Key implications
This study provides compelling evidence that gut microbial and metabolic profiles are closely tied to bone health in postmenopausal women. The identification of distinct bacterial, fungal, and metabolite signatures associated with osteoporosis advances our understanding of the gut-bone axis, suggesting potential mechanisms involving immune modulation and metabolic pathways. The robust diagnostic models highlight the clinical utility of gut microbiota analysis as a non-invasive tool for early PMO detection. The findings suggest that microbiome-targeted interventions, such as probiotics or dietary modifications, could be developed to prevent or mitigate osteoporosis in at-risk women, paving the way for personalized therapeutic strategies.
Model construction and drug therapy of primary ovarian insufficiency by ultrasound-guided injection
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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This study demonstrates the effectiveness of ultrasound-guided hUC-MSC exosome injection in restoring ovarian function and fertility in POI rat models, offering a new therapeutic approach for women with POI.
What was studied?
This research focuses on the development of an innovative model for primary ovarian insufficiency (POI) using an ultrasound-guided injection method to improve therapeutic delivery. The study investigates the effectiveness of human umbilical cord mesenchymal stem cell (hUC-MSC) exosomes as a potential treatment for POI in animal models. It aims to evaluate the therapeutic potential of exosomes in restoring ovarian function, including hormone levels, ovarian cycles, and fertility. The study compares several POI models and tests the effects of hUC-MSC exosome therapy administered via ultrasound-guided injection.
Who was studied?
The study used female Wistar rats, aged 5–7 weeks, to create different POI models, including cyclophosphamide-induced POI (POI-C), busulfan-induced POI (POI-B), ultrasound-guided cyclophosphamide-induced POI (POI-U), and a maternal separation (MS) model. The rats were divided into groups based on the model type, and therapeutic interventions, including hUC-MSC exosome injections, were administered to evaluate their effects on ovarian function, fertility, and hormone levels.
Most important findings
The study found that the POI-U model, which involved ultrasound-guided cyclophosphamide injection, showed the least complications, higher success rates, and more stable outcomes compared to the other POI models. When hUC-MSC exosomes were injected into the ovaries under ultrasound guidance, the rats in the POI-U group exhibited significant improvements in ovarian function. These improvements were reflected in increased levels of estradiol (E2), anti-Müllerian hormone (AMH), and better estrous cycle regularity, while follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) and luteinizing hormone (LH) levels decreased. The exosome treatment also reduced ovarian apoptosis and improved fertility outcomes. Mechanistically, the exosomes worked by regulating ovarian immune and metabolic functions, possibly through the paracrine signaling pathway.
Key implications
This study highlights the potential of hUC-MSC exosomes as an alternative therapy for POI, offering a promising method to restore ovarian function and fertility. The ultrasound-guided injection technique provides a precise and less invasive approach for drug and cell therapy, enhancing the potential for clinical translation. Given the promising results, further preclinical and clinical studies are needed to explore the long-term effects and safety of hUC-MSC exosome therapy in treating POI.
Depression, anxiety, stress, and dysmenorrhea: a protocol for a systematic review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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This systematic review will investigate the relationship between dysmenorrhea and psychological distress, including depression, anxiety, and stress, aiming to provide insights into their bidirectional effects and improve clinical management strategies.
What was studied?
This systematic review protocol aims to investigate the association between dysmenorrhea (painful menstruation) and psychological distress, including depression, anxiety, and stress. The study will employ a meta-analysis to synthesize data from cohort, case-control, and cross-sectional studies published between 1990 and 2019. The primary focus is to explore how psychological disorders interact with dysmenorrhea, whether they exacerbate pain severity, and how the cycle of menstrual pain and psychological distress may influence each other. The review also seeks to identify possible sources of heterogeneity in previous studies, examining factors like study design, measurement methods, and population characteristics.
Who was studied?
The study will include empirical research articles involving women of various age groups, with no limitations regarding the type of dysmenorrhea or the presence of other chronic conditions. Studies must specifically address the relationship between dysmenorrhea and depression, anxiety, or stress. Research focusing on primary dysmenorrhea, psychological attributes, and their influence on pain perception will be included. The review will draw on data from diverse global populations, with studies of different methodological quality, ranging from descriptive to cohort studies.
Most important findings
This systematic review will synthesize data on the complex relationship between dysmenorrhea and psychological distress. Previous research suggests that psychological disorders like anxiety and depression are common in women with dysmenorrhea. The relationship between these conditions is thought to be bidirectional, with dysmenorrhea potentially increasing the risk of depression and anxiety, while pre-existing psychological distress exacerbates menstrual pain. Early reviews, such as those by Iacovides et al., proposed that severe dysmenorrhea might lead to heightened pain sensitivity, a theory that will be explored further in this systematic review. The review will also consider factors contributing to heterogeneity in findings, including the influence of socio-demographic variables like age, marital status, and family history of dysmenorrhea.
Key implications
This review has the potential to deepen our understanding of how dysmenorrhea and psychological distress interact, offering new insights into the management of both conditions. The results will provide clinicians with a better understanding of the psychological aspects of dysmenorrhea, highlighting the importance of addressing mental health when treating dysmenorrhea. The review aims to inform clinical practice by providing evidence for integrated treatment approaches that tackle both physical pain and mental health symptoms. Additionally, this research may pave the way for improved screening and early intervention strategies for women experiencing dysmenorrhea and psychological distress.
Ketogenic Diet as a Possible Non-pharmacological Therapy in Main Endocrine Diseases of the Female Reproductive System
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Ketogenic diets effectively improve metabolic, hormonal, and inflammatory profiles in female endocrine disorders, aiding PCOS, menopause, and hormone-related cancers by promoting weight loss and reducing insulin resistance.
What was studied?
This review explored the role of ketogenic diets (KDs) as a non-pharmacological therapy for major endocrine diseases of the female reproductive system, focusing on conditions such as polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), infertility, menopause-related metabolic disorders, and hormone-related cancers, including breast cancer and endometrial cancer. It examined how KDs impact body weight, insulin resistance, chronic inflammation, hormone levels, and cancer progression through metabolic modulation, including effects on mitochondrial function and reactive oxygen species (ROS).
Who was studied?
The review synthesized evidence from a broad range of studies involving women of reproductive age, women with obesity, PCOS, and menopausal women, as well as patients diagnosed with hormone-sensitive cancers. It included clinical trials, observational studies, and mechanistic research focusing on diet-induced metabolic changes and endocrine outcomes.
Most important findings
Ketogenic diets promote rapid weight loss and improve metabolic profiles by reducing fat mass, especially visceral adipose tissue, a key driver of inflammation and insulin resistance. KDs lower circulating insulin and glucose levels, which modulate the insulin-mediated synthesis of androgens in PCOS, improving hormonal imbalances and ovulatory function. Furthermore, KDs increase sex hormone binding globulin (SHBG) levels, reducing free testosterone and mitigating hyperandrogenism, a hallmark of PCOS.
In menopausal women, KDs counteract weight gain and visceral fat accumulation associated with estrogen decline, thereby lowering cardiovascular and metabolic risks. The diet’s anti-inflammatory effects are mediated partly through ketone bodies like beta-hydroxybutyrate inhibiting NLRP3 inflammasome activation, which reduces proinflammatory cytokine production. In hormone-related cancers, KDs reduce glucose availability for tumor cells, suppress inflammatory tumor microenvironments, and promote tumor cell apoptosis. The diet’s modulation of ROS and enhancement of mitochondrial function may contribute to these anticancer effects. Importantly, very low-calorie ketogenic diets (VLCKD) show promise in both weight management and cancer adjunctive therapy, enhancing quality of life and physical function in affected women.
Key implications
This review highlights ketogenic diets as a multifaceted therapeutic approach for managing endocrine disorders in women, from fertility challenges in PCOS to metabolic and oncologic complications postmenopause. By addressing obesity-related inflammation and insulin resistance, KDs offer a metabolic reset that can restore hormonal balance and reduce disease burden. Their anti-inflammatory and anticancer properties also position KDs as valuable adjuncts to conventional therapies. However, personalized protocols and careful nutritional monitoring are crucial for safety and efficacy. Clinicians should consider KDs as part of integrated care for women with complex endocrine and metabolic conditions, tailoring interventions to individual needs and stages of reproductive life.
Fusobacterium Infection: A New Pathogenic Insight into Endometriosis and Microbiome-Targeted Therapy Potential
February 12, 2026
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Study links Fusobacterium to endometriosis via inflammation and lesion formation. Antibiotics (metronidazole and chloramphenicol) may offer therapeutic potential.
What Was Studied?
This translational study investigated the role of Fusobacterium infection in the pathogenesis of endometriosis. Researchers sought to determine whether bacterial infection, specifically by Fusobacterium nucleatum, contributes to inflammatory alterations in endometrial fibroblasts, potentially leading to the development of endometriosis. The study encompassed molecular analyses, in vitro experiments, and a mouse model to establish causality and elucidate the underlying mechanism.
Who Was Studied?
The study analyzed uterine tissue samples from 79 patients in two Japanese hospitals, divided into cases with endometriosis and controls without the condition. Further, a mouse model was used to test the infectivity and pathogenic potential of Fusobacterium nucleatum compared to other microbes.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
Fusobacterium nucleatum was found to be significantly more prevalent in the endometrial and endometriotic tissues of patients with endometriosis (64.3%) compared to controls (7.1%), while Erysipelothrix, another potential candidate, was not abundant. Fusobacterium infection was shown to upregulate transgelin (TAGLN) expression in fibroblasts, enhancing their motility, adhesion, and migration through the activation of TGF-β signaling, a pathway known to be critical in the progression of endometriosis. In an animal model, mice inoculated with Fusobacterium-infected uterine tissue developed endometriotic lesions, whereas treatment of donor mice with antibiotics (metronidazole and chloramphenicol) significantly reduced lesion formation in recipient mice. These findings suggest that targeting Fusobacterium with antibiotics holds potential to mitigate the progression of endometriosis, underscoring the importance of further exploration into microbiome-targeted therapies.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
This research provides evidence that Fusobacterium infection may play a direct role in the etiology of endometriosis. The identification of a bacterial trigger opens avenues for antibiotic-based interventions and highlights the need for clinical trials targeting endometrial infections. Additionally, it underscores the importance of microbial profiling in endometriosis diagnosis and management, potentially redefining treatment paradigms to include microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs).
Endometrial microbiota composition is associated with reproductive outcome in infertile patients
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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This study links endometrial microbiota composition to reproductive success in ART, showing that Lactobacillus dominance is associated with better outcomes, while dysbiosis with pathogens like Gardnerella and Klebsiella correlates with infertility. It suggests microbiota analysis as a tool for improving ART success.
What was studied?
This study investigated the association between endometrial microbiota composition and reproductive outcomes in infertile patients undergoing assisted reproductive technologies (ART), including in vitro fertilization (IVF). Researchers specifically aimed to determine whether the presence or absence of specific bacterial taxa in the endometrial microbiota was linked to reproductive success, defined by live birth (LB), biochemical pregnancy (BP), clinical miscarriage (CM), or no pregnancy (NP). The study employed 16S rRNA sequencing to analyze both endometrial fluid and biopsy samples collected prior to embryo transfer.
Who was studied?
The study included 342 infertile women, aged 21 to 49, from 13 reproductive clinics across Europe, America, and Asia. These women were undergoing IVF or ovum donation treatments and had an average age of 36 years. The cohort consisted of patients with a variety of infertility causes, including advanced maternal age, male factor infertility, unexplained infertility, and ovarian pathology. All participants underwent a hormone replacement therapy cycle before embryo transfer, and their endometrial microbiota composition was analyzed to correlate it with reproductive outcomes.
What were the most important findings?
The study found significant differences in the endometrial microbiota composition between patients with successful reproductive outcomes (live birth) and those with unsuccessful outcomes (biochemical pregnancy, clinical miscarriage, or no pregnancy). Lactobacillus spp., particularly dominant in the endometrial microbiota, was consistently enriched in women who achieved live birth. In contrast, patients with unsuccessful outcomes exhibited a dysbiotic microbiota profile, characterized by higher levels of potentially pathogenic bacteria, including Gardnerella, Haemophilus, Klebsiella, Neisseria, Streptococcus, and Atopobium. These dysbiotic profiles were strongly associated with lower pregnancy rates and higher miscarriage rates. The study found that the microbiota composition of endometrial fluid (EF) and endometrial biopsy (EB) samples showed some discrepancies, though both sample types revealed similar associations with reproductive outcomes. The presence of Lactobacillus spp. was inversely correlated with pathogenic bacteria in successful pregnancies, highlighting its potential role in preventing microbial dysbiosis and ensuring a healthy reproductive environment conducive to embryo implantation.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study’s findings emphasize the importance of endometrial microbiota composition as a predictive biomarker for reproductive outcomes in infertility treatments. Clinicians can use this information to assess the microbial health of the endometrium before embryo transfer and potentially identify candidates who may benefit from interventions aimed at restoring a healthy microbiota. This may involve the use of probiotics, antimicrobial therapies, or other microbiome-modulating strategies to enhance the likelihood of a successful pregnancy, particularly in cases of recurrent implantation failure or unexplained infertility. Additionally, the results support the need for further research into the mechanisms by which specific pathogens disrupt implantation and pregnancy, potentially leading to improved diagnostic and treatment protocols for ART patients.
Exploring the female genital tract mycobiome in young South African women using metaproteomics
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This study characterized the fungal communities in the female genital tract of young South African women and identified how fungal composition relates to bacterial vaginosis and other clinical factors.
What was studied?
This study investigated the fungal communities, also known as the mycobiome, in the female genital tract (FGT) of young South African women, using metaproteomics. The research aimed to characterize the diversity of fungi, identify specific fungal genera, and assess their relationship with bacterial vaginosis (BV) and other clinical variables, such as STIs, inflammation, and pH. The study also explored how changes in fungal composition were associated with these factors and BV states.
Who was studied?
The study included 123 young South African women, aged 16-22, who were part of the Women's Initiative in Sexual Health (WISH) study. These women were recruited from a community with a high incidence of HIV and other STIs. Participants provided vaginal swab samples that were analyzed for fungal communities. The women were assessed for BV using Nugent scoring, and the presence of STIs, vaginal pH, and inflammation markers were also considered.
Most important findings
The study revealed that 39 fungal genera were identified, with Candida species being the most abundant. The researchers found a significant difference in fungal community composition between BV states, with Malassezia and Conidiobolus species being more abundant in BV-positive women, while Candida species were more prevalent in BV-negative women. Additionally, the study identified several fungal proteins linked to BV status, such as M. sympodialis, C. albicans, and C. thasaenensis, which were associated with specific biological processes, including glycolysis and histone H4 acetylation. These findings underline the potential functional impact of the fungal community on FGT health and the influence of BV on fungal abundance and activity.
Key implications
The results suggest that the FGT mycobiome plays an essential role in reproductive health, particularly in the context of BV. The study's findings emphasize the importance of understanding fungal interactions with the bacterial microbiome and their potential role in infections like BV. The study’s use of metaproteomics offers a comprehensive approach to characterizing the fungal microbiome, providing valuable insights into the microbial diversity in the FGT. These findings may guide future research into fungal-bacterial interactions and the development of therapeutic strategies targeting fungal dysbiosis.
The Effects of Environmental Contaminant Exposure on Reproductive Aging and the Menopause Transition
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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This study explores how exposure to environmental contaminants like PFAS, BPA, and phthalates accelerates reproductive aging and leads to early menopause, with significant health risks.
What was studied?
This study examines how exposure to environmental endocrine-disrupting chemicals (EDCs) accelerates reproductive aging and contributes to the earlier onset of menopause. The research specifically focuses on common EDCs, such as phthalates, bisphenol A (BPA), polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), and perfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), and their impact on ovarian health, hormonal changes, and the timing of menopause. The study also investigates the physiological mechanisms by which these chemicals disrupt reproductive aging.
Who was studied?
The review considers data from human epidemiological studies and animal models, primarily rodents. It includes information on women exposed to environmental contaminants, looking at populations exposed to high levels of pollutants due to lifestyle factors, occupation, or environmental proximity to contaminated areas. In addition to human data, rodent studies are referenced to understand the biological mechanisms through which these chemicals impact reproductive processes.
Most important findings
The study reveals that exposure to endocrine-disrupting chemicals, especially PFAS, phthalates, and BPA, is linked to earlier onset of menopause and accelerated reproductive aging. Higher levels of PFAS, such as PFOA and PFOS, are associated with a shorter time to natural menopause in some populations. Additionally, exposure to phthalates, particularly DEHP metabolites, disrupts hormonal balance, leading to earlier menopause and worsened vasomotor symptoms like hot flashes. BPA exposure is found to diminish ovarian reserve and contribute to early menopause, likely through oxidative stress and hormonal disruptions. These associations are supported by both human studies and rodent experiments, confirming that environmental contaminants can negatively affect female fertility and hormonal regulation.
Key implications
The findings highlight a significant public health concern, as early menopause not only reduces a woman’s reproductive window but also increases the risk of cardiovascular disease, osteoporosis, and other health complications. Understanding how environmental contaminants accelerate menopause suggests that interventions aimed at reducing exposure to harmful chemicals could be crucial in protecting women’s reproductive health. The study emphasizes the need for further research to uncover the exact biological mechanisms involved and to establish guidelines for reducing exposure to endocrine-disrupting chemicals in daily life.
Premature ovarian insufficiency: the context of long-term effects
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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Premature ovarian insufficiency (POI) leads to fertility issues, bone loss, cardiovascular risks, and cognitive decline. Early intervention, including hormone therapy and lifestyle changes, is vital for managing long-term health risks.
What was studied?
This review examines the long-term consequences of premature ovarian insufficiency (POI), a condition where ovarian function ceases before the age of 40. It delves into how estrogen deficiency affects various aspects of health, including fertility, bone mineral density, cardiovascular health, and mental well-being. The review also investigates the psychological and cognitive impacts of POI and its contribution to premature morbidity and mortality. The aim is to provide an overview of the risks and challenges that POI presents to affected women, particularly in the long term.
Who was studied?
The study focuses on women diagnosed with POI, particularly those with spontaneous POI, though it also includes women whose condition is induced by medical treatments such as chemotherapy or radiotherapy. It looks at women under 40 who experience the cessation of menstrual cycles for over four months, with elevated serum FSH levels. The review encompasses various cases, from those with idiopathic causes to those whose condition arises from genetic, autoimmune, or iatrogenic factors.
Most important findings
The review reveals that women with POI face significant health risks due to estrogen deficiency. These include a drastic reduction in fertility, with spontaneous conception rates ranging from 4% to 10%. Oocyte donation remains the most effective fertility treatment, with success rates of up to 40%. Estrogen loss also leads to a decrease in bone mineral density, increasing the risk of osteoporosis and fractures. Cardiovascular health is notably affected, with women exhibiting endothelial dysfunction, abnormal lipid profiles, and an increased risk of ischemic heart disease. Urogenital symptoms like vaginal dryness and sexual dysfunction are common due to the lack of estrogen, and while hormone replacement therapy (HRT) helps alleviate some symptoms, it does not fully address sexual dysfunction. Furthermore, cognitive decline and mood disorders such as depression and anxiety are prevalent, especially in women who experience POI due to surgical menopause or cancer treatments. In terms of cancer, while POI women may have a reduced risk of breast cancer due to shorter exposure to estrogen, they are at an elevated risk of other cancers, particularly when POI is induced by medical treatments.
Key implications
The implications of these findings are significant for the clinical management of women with POI. Clinicians must provide a comprehensive, individualized approach to care that includes not only fertility counseling but also measures to mitigate the long-term health risks, such as cardiovascular disease and bone mineral density loss. Regular monitoring of bone health, hormone replacement therapy, and psychological support are essential for improving the quality of life and preventing complications. Furthermore, women with POI should be encouraged to adopt a healthy lifestyle, including exercise, a balanced diet, and the avoidance of smoking, to reduce the risks associated with cardiovascular disease and osteoporosis.
Human genital tracts microbiota: dysbiosis crucial for infertility
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Infertility
Infertility
Infertility is the inability to conceive after 12 months of regular, unprotected sex. It affects both men and women and can be due to various physical, hormonal, or genetic factors. Treatments include medication, surgery, assisted reproductive technologies, and lifestyle changes.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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This review connects genital microbiota dysbiosis to infertility, highlighting the role of Lactobacillus dominance in female fertility and microbial imbalances in seminal fluid affecting male fertility. It suggests personalized treatments targeting microbiome restoration could improve reproductive outcomes, especially in ART settings.
What was reviewed?
This review explored the relationship between genital tract microbiota dysbiosis and infertility in both men and women. It discussed how microbial imbalances in the vaginal, endometrial, seminal, and placental microbiomes can impair fertility, leading to complications such as bacterial vaginosis, poor sperm quality, and pregnancy-related issues like preterm birth. The review also examined how these microbiota imbalances affect reproductive health, suggesting that hormonal influences and microbial exchanges between partners play critical roles in fertility outcomes. The authors aimed to provide insights into how microbiome alterations can be used for better personalization of infertility treatments.
Who was reviewed?
The review primarily focused on studies involving both male and female infertility, including those with unexplained infertility and those undergoing assisted reproductive technologies (ART). It incorporated data on microbial composition from both sexes, specifically examining how dysbiosis in vaginal, endometrial, seminal, and placental microbiota can contribute to infertility and affect the success of treatments like in vitro fertilization (IVF). The review also addressed how microbial imbalances influence reproductive outcomes, drawing from clinical findings related to sperm quality, bacterial vaginosis, and pregnancy complications.
What were the most important findings?
The review highlighted the critical role of Lactobacillus species in maintaining a healthy vaginal microbiome. A dysbiotic vaginal microbiome, characterized by low Lactobacillus dominance and an overgrowth of pathogens such as Gardnerella, Prevotella, Mobiluncus, and Ureaplasma, was strongly associated with infertility, bacterial vaginosis, and adverse pregnancy outcomes. It was noted that female microbiota composition directly impacts pregnancy, with non-Lactobacillus-dominated environments leading to an increased risk of preterm birth and recurrent miscarriage. Similarly, seminal microbiota imbalances, including the overgrowth of bacteria such as Ureaplasma and Enterococcus, negatively influenced sperm quality, including motility and morphology, thereby affecting male fertility. The review also emphasized the concept of microbial trade-off between partners, where microbial dysbiosis in one partner could influence the reproductive microbiota of the other, further complicating fertility issues.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The review's findings suggest that clinicians should consider the role of genital tract microbiota when diagnosing and treating infertility. The identification of dysbiosis, particularly the loss of Lactobacillus dominance, can serve as a useful diagnostic marker for reproductive health. Interventions aimed at restoring a healthy microbiome, such as the use of probiotics or antimicrobial therapies, could improve fertility outcomes and reduce complications during pregnancy. Furthermore, the concept of microbial trade-off between partners indicates that both individuals in a couple should be assessed and treated for microbiome imbalances, enhancing the chances of successful conception. The review calls for further research into microbiome-based diagnostics and therapeutics to offer more personalized and effective treatments for infertility.
Connecting microbiome and menopause for healthy ageing
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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This review details how menopause-driven hormonal changes alter the vaginal and gut microbiome, emphasizing the clinical implications for symptoms and therapies, and advocating for more inclusive, microbiome-informed interventions to support healthy aging in women.
What was reviewed?
This comprehensive review article explores the interplay between the gut and vaginal microbiome and menopause, focusing on implications for healthy aging in women. The authors synthesize recent research, highlighting how hormonal changes during menopause reshape the vaginal ecosystem, particularly through the decline of Lactobacillus dominance and increased prevalence of anaerobes and pathobionts. The review examines clinical and mechanistic studies addressing the association between microbial shifts and menopausal symptoms, such as genitourinary syndrome of menopause (GSM), recurrent urinary tract infections (UTIs), and vasomotor and neuropsychiatric symptoms. The authors also discuss the potential for microbiome-targeting interventions, including hormone replacement, probiotics, and emerging interventions like vaginal microbiota transplantation, summarizing evidence for their safety, efficacy, and effects on the vaginal microbiota during and after menopause.
Who was reviewed?
The review encompasses research conducted predominantly on peri- and postmenopausal women, with most clinical studies involving primarily Caucasian populations. The included studies span a range of sample sizes, from small longitudinal cohorts to larger randomized controlled trials, as well as cross-sectional analyses. The authors note a significant gap in research involving women of diverse racial, ethnic, and socioeconomic backgrounds, despite evidence that these factors influence microbiome composition. The reviewed literature also references women receiving various menopausal therapies (e.g., hormone replacement, DHEA, ospemifene) and those experiencing surgical or therapy-induced menopause (e.g., after oophorectomy or aromatase inhibitor use).
Most important findings
A key finding is the strong correlation between declining estrogen levels during menopause and a shift from a Lactobacillus-dominated vaginal microbiome to one characterized by increased diversity, including anaerobes (Gardnerella, Prevotella, Anaerococcus, Peptoniphilus, Peptostreptococcus) and pathobionts (Escherichia, Enterococcus, Streptococcus, Corynebacterium, Staphylococcus). This microbial shift is linked to elevated vaginal pH, atrophic changes, and increased susceptibility to GSM and UTIs. While some studies show that Lactobacillus depletion correlates with more severe genitourinary symptoms, others find no such association, underscoring the need for further research. Therapeutic interventions, such as local estrogen therapy, DHEA, and ospemifene, generally restore Lactobacillus dominance and lower vaginal pH, improving symptoms. Probiotics and live biotherapeutics show promise but lack robust data in postmenopausal women. Emerging concepts like precision probiotics and vaginal microbiota transplantation represent future avenues for tailored microbiome restoration.
Key implications
The review underscores the clinical relevance of the microbiome in menopausal health, advocating for more inclusive, mechanistic, and longitudinal research to clarify microbial contributions to symptoms and treatment responses. Restoration of Lactobacillus dominance in the vaginal niche—via hormone therapy, novel probiotics, or microbiota transplantation—may directly impact genitourinary and systemic health in menopausal women. The authors call for precision approaches and greater representation of diverse populations in future studies. Ultimately, microbiome-informed interventions could improve quality of life, reduce adverse health outcomes post-menopause, and move toward personalized medicine in women’s health.
Dysmenorrhea increased the risk of postpartum depression in Chinese Han parturients
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary Dysmenorrhea
Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is painful menstrual cramps without underlying pelvic pathology, predominantly caused by elevated prostaglandins inducing uterine contractions and ischemia. Managing primary dysmenorrhea (PD) requires understanding its complex mechanisms involving prostaglandins, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Treatments include NSAIDs, hormonal therapies, and promising complementary options like probiotics, vitamins, omega-3 fatty acids, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, and massage, significantly improving women's quality of life.
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Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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This study links dysmenorrhea to an increased risk of postpartum depression in Chinese women. It highlights the need for early PPD screening in women with a history of dysmenorrhea.
What was studied?
This study explores the relationship between dysmenorrhea (painful menstruation) and the risk of postpartum depression (PPD) among Chinese women. It specifically examines whether a history of dysmenorrhea increases the likelihood of developing PPD after childbirth. The research involved a case-control study of women who delivered at Baoan Maternal and Child Health Hospital, Shenzhen, China. The Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS) was used to assess postpartum depression, while logistic regression models were employed to analyze the relationship between dysmenorrhea and PPD, adjusting for various socio-demographic and pregnancy-related factors.
Who was studied?
The study included 360 women, with 120 diagnosed with PPD and 240 healthy controls who did not show signs of postpartum depression. All participants were parturients who gave birth between January 1, 2016, and December 31, 2016, at the hospital. These women were between 18 and 45 years old and were screened for PPD six weeks postpartum using the EPDS. The study aimed to evaluate the role of dysmenorrhea in the development of PPD, considering other factors such as age, education level, employment status, and prior mental health history. Importantly, the study also focused on the psychological aspects of postpartum care, with participants asked about their experience of dysmenorrhea prior to pregnancy.
Most important findings
The study found a significant association between dysmenorrhea and an increased risk of postpartum depression. Among the participants, 64.2% of women with PPD reported a history of dysmenorrhea, compared to 47.9% of women without PPD. The odds ratio (OR) for dysmenorrhea being associated with PPD was 1.95 in univariate analysis, and after adjusting for socio-demographic and pregnancy-related factors, the OR was 2.45, indicating a significantly higher risk. The study also found that women with dysmenorrhea during pregnancy were more likely to experience depression and anxiety during pregnancy, which may contribute to the development of PPD. Moreover, dysmenorrhea was correlated with low social support, further exacerbating the risk of PPD.
Key implications
The findings suggest that dysmenorrhea should be considered a potential risk factor for postpartum depression, especially for women who experience severe menstrual pain. Clinicians should be vigilant in screening for PPD among women with a history of dysmenorrhea, as early intervention may reduce the risk of developing postpartum mental health issues. Additionally, the study highlights the importance of improving social support systems for women with dysmenorrhea to mitigate the mental health risks associated with both dysmenorrhea and PPD.
A cross-sectional analysis about bacterial vaginosis, high-risk human papillomavirus infection, and cervical intraepithelial neoplasia in Chinese women
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This study examined how bacterial vaginosis and HR-HPV infection influence vaginal microbiota diversity and cervical dysplasia in Chinese women, identifying Lactobacillus iners as a key microbial player in HPV-related CIN progression.
What was studied?
The study investigated the relationship between bacterial vaginosis (BV), high-risk human papillomavirus (HR-HPV) infection, and cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN) in Chinese women. Researchers aimed to assess the vaginal microbiota diversity and composition in relation to these infections, utilizing 16S rRNA gene sequencing to explore potential biomarkers and risk factors.
Who was studied?
The study involved 624 participants, of which 423 provided viable samples of vaginal secretions. Participants were categorized into HPV-negative and HPV-positive groups, and further subgrouped based on their BV and CIN statuses. The analysis focused on women aged 25 to 65 years who were not undergoing menstruation or pregnancy and had not been treated for certain infections like vulvovaginal candidiasis.
Most important findings
The study found that women with HR-HPV and BV co-infection showed a more complex vaginal microbiota composition. BV and HR-HPV infections were identified as risk factors for CIN. The microbiota diversity, as measured by the Shannon and Chao1 indices, was significantly higher in women with BV and HPV co-infection. Notably, Lactobacillus iners was enriched in the HPV-positive group, suggesting its potential role in maintaining vaginal dysbiosis and influencing HPV persistence. Additionally, the study highlighted that BV could facilitate HR-HPV infection and contribute to CIN progression.
Key implications
The study emphasizes the significance of vaginal microbiota in understanding the pathogenesis of cervical dysplasia. The findings suggest that monitoring BV and HR-HPV infection could serve as valuable tools for early detection and prevention of CIN. The enrichment of Lactobacillus iners under HPV infection conditions indicates its potential as a biomarker for cervical cancer risk, pointing to the need for further research into microbial therapies to manage HPV-related CIN.
A two-sample mendelian randomization analysis investigates associations between gut microbiota and infertility
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Infertility
Infertility
Infertility is the inability to conceive after 12 months of regular, unprotected sex. It affects both men and women and can be due to various physical, hormonal, or genetic factors. Treatments include medication, surgery, assisted reproductive technologies, and lifestyle changes.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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This study demonstrates a causal link between specific gut microbiota and infertility risks, identifying protective and harmful bacterial taxa in both men and women. It highlights the microbiome's potential role in fertility management through targeted probiotics and lifestyle interventions.
What was studied?
This study utilized a two-sample Mendelian randomization (MR) analysis to investigate the causal relationships between gut microbiota composition and infertility in males and females. Genetic variants associated with specific gut microbiota taxa served as instrumental variables (IVs) to assess their direct influence on the incidence of infertility. The researchers aimed to clarify whether variations in gut bacteria directly contribute to infertility or if these associations are merely correlational due to confounding factors or reverse causation.
Who was studied?
The study analyzed genetic data from the MiBioGen consortium, which included 18,340 participants across 24 international cohorts primarily from European descent. Infertility data came from the FinnGen consortium, with 994 male infertility cases and 100,050 controls, and 9,831 female infertility cases and 94,394 controls. The analysis excluded individuals with unclear sex, high genotype deficiency, excess heterozygosity, or non-Finnish ancestry.
What were the most important findings?
The MR analysis confirmed significant causal relationships between specific gut microbiota and infertility risks. For male infertility, five taxa (Bacteroidaceae, Bacteroides, Enterobacteriales, Romboutsia, Enterobacteriaceae) were associated with a reduced risk, whereas Allisonella genus increased infertility risk. For female infertility, beneficial associations (reduced risk) were found with multiple taxa, including Ruminococcus torques group, Desulfovibrio, Bifidobacterium, Family XIII AD3011 group, Ruminococcaceae NK4A214 group, Holdemania, Bifidobacteriales order, Actinobacteria phylum, Bifidobacteriaceae family, and Actinobacteria class. Conversely, Faecalibacterium was significantly linked to an increased risk of female infertility. The MR analysis was robust and well-supported by sensitivity tests, including Cochran Q and MR-PRESSO analyses, indicating reliable results free from major horizontal pleiotropy or heterogeneity.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study provides strong evidence that gut microbiota directly affects infertility risks in both males and females, highlighting potential microbiome-based targets for diagnostic, preventive, and therapeutic interventions. For clinicians, these findings emphasize the importance of assessing gut microbiota composition when managing infertility. Identifying protective and harmful bacterial taxa offers actionable insights for developing personalized probiotic treatments, nutritional recommendations, and lifestyle modifications aimed at optimizing fertility outcomes.
Metformin protects ovarian granulosa cells in chemotherapy-induced premature ovarian failure mice through AMPK/PPAR-γ/SIRT1 pathway
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI)
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency (POI) is a medical condition in which a woman’s ovaries stop functioning normally before the age of 40. This leads to reduced estrogen production and irregular menstrual cycles, which may eventually result in infertility and early menopause-like symptoms. POI can occur due to various reasons, including genetic factors, autoimmune disorders, chemotherapy, or unknown causes. Though often misunderstood and misdiagnosed, POI can significantly impact a woman's physical and emotional well-being. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment, including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and fertility interventions, can help manage symptoms, improve quality of life, and in some cases, restore fertility.
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This study demonstrates that metformin protects against chemotherapy-induced ovarian failure by reducing inflammation, oxidative stress, and senescence in granulosa cells via the AMPK/PPAR-γ/SIRT1 pathway.
What was studied?
This study investigates the protective effects of metformin (MET) on ovarian granulosa cells (GCs) in chemotherapy-induced premature ovarian failure (POF) mice. The research explores the therapeutic potential of MET, known for its anti-inflammatory and antioxidant properties, in mitigating the ovarian damage caused by chemotherapy agents such as cyclophosphamide (CTX) and busulfan (BUS). The study specifically examines the role of MET in reducing inflammation, oxidative stress, and senescence in GCs, ultimately aiming to protect ovarian function and improve reproductive outcomes in POF.
Who was studied?
The study used a chemotherapy-induced POF mouse model, where female mice (6-7 weeks old) were injected with cyclophosphamide and busulfan to induce ovarian dysfunction. These mice were then treated with MET to evaluate its protective effects. The study also involved primary ovarian granulosa cells (GCs) co-cultured with M1 macrophages to simulate inflammatory conditions observed in POF. This model was used to assess the molecular mechanisms underlying MET's effects on ovarian health, specifically focusing on the AMPK/PPAR-γ/SIRT1 signaling pathway.
Most important findings
The study found that MET administration significantly improved ovarian health in chemotherapy-induced POF mice. MET treatment led to an increase in ovarian weight and follicular development, alongside improvements in estrous cycle regularity and hormonal balance, as evidenced by increased estradiol (E2) and decreased follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) levels. The study also demonstrated that MET alleviated oxidative stress by upregulating antioxidant enzyme activities and reduced inflammation by inhibiting M1 macrophage polarization and pro-inflammatory cytokine production. In cell culture experiments, MET mitigated the damage to GCs induced by M1 macrophages, reducing ROS accumulation and cellular senescence. Furthermore, the protective effects of MET were linked to the activation of the AMPK/PPAR-γ/SIRT1 pathway, highlighting its role in enhancing cellular homeostasis and preventing follicular atresia.
Key implications
This study provides compelling evidence for the use of MET as a potential therapeutic intervention for POF, particularly in patients with chemotherapy-induced ovarian damage. By targeting inflammation and oxidative stress, MET may offer a novel approach to preserving ovarian function and fertility in women affected by POF. The activation of the AMPK/PPAR-γ/SIRT1 pathway could serve as a key mechanism for MET's protective effects, suggesting that similar pathways might be targeted in clinical treatments for ovarian insufficiency. Further research, particularly clinical trials, is needed to confirm the applicability of these findings in human patients.
Profiling of metabolic dysregulation in ovarian cancer tissues and biofluids
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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This study profiles metabolic dysregulation in ovarian cancer, identifying key metabolites and pathways altered in OC tissues and biofluids. N1,N12-diacetylspermine emerges as a potential biomarker.
What was studied?
This study aimed to investigate the metabolomic dysregulation in ovarian cancer (OC) tissues and biofluids. Using targeted metabolomics, the research analyzed tissue samples from ovarian tumors and paired normal tissues as well as biofluid samples including plasma, urine, and saliva. The focus was to identify metabolite profiles that could distinguish OC from benign gynecological diseases and explore metabolic pathways altered in OC. The study employed advanced mass spectrometry techniques, including capillary electrophoresis-mass spectrometry (CE-TOFMS) and liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-QQQMS), to quantify metabolites involved in glycolysis, the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle, and polyamine metabolism, among others.
Who was studied?
The study involved 37 patients diagnosed with ovarian cancer (OC) and 30 patients with benign gynecological diseases, who served as controls. Participants were aged between 33 and 86 years, with no significant differences in body mass index (BMI) between the groups. The ovarian cancer patients had different histological subtypes of OC, including high-grade serous carcinoma, endometrioid carcinoma, and clear cell carcinoma, among others. The control group included individuals with conditions such as benign ovarian tumors, uterine myomas, and polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS).
Most important findings
The study identified significant metabolic differences between ovarian tumor (OT) and normal tissue (NT) samples. Notably, 96 metabolites showed significant differences, with many metabolites being elevated in OT samples, including N1,N12-diacetylspermine, UDP-N-acetylglucosamine, and adenosine monophosphate (AMP). These differences were also reflected in biofluids like plasma, urine, and saliva, with 12 metabolites consistently showing significant changes in both tissues and biofluids. Specifically, N1,N12-diacetylspermine was found to be consistently elevated across all samples, indicating its potential as a biomarker for OC. The study also highlighted metabolic pathway changes in glucose and amino acid metabolism, including pyruvate metabolism, glycolysis, and the TCA cycle, suggesting that metabolic reprogramming, characteristic of cancer cells, is evident in OC tissues.
Key implications
The findings of this study emphasize the importance of metabolic dysregulation in ovarian cancer. The consistent elevation of N1,N12-diacetylspermine across various biofluids and tissues could serve as a potential non-invasive biomarker for early detection. The identification of altered metabolic pathways, such as glycolysis and polyamine metabolism, offers insights into OC pathogenesis and suggests possible therapeutic targets. Given the challenges in early diagnosis of OC, the metabolomic profiling presented here could be pivotal for improving diagnostic strategies and treatment approaches. Further clinical validation and larger cohort studies are necessary to confirm these findings and assess their applicability in clinical settings.
Probiotics and the envisaged role in treating human infertility
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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This review details how probiotics modulate the human microbiome to support fertility, addressing mechanisms, clinical evidence, and implications for male and female reproductive health, with particular focus on Lactobacillus species and their role in infertility treatment and prevention.
What was reviewed?
This review article comprehensively examines the emerging role of probiotics in the context of human infertility, focusing on both male and female reproductive health. The authors synthesize current evidence on how the human microbiome, particularly the urogenital and gastrointestinal microbiota, influences fertility, and detail the mechanisms by which probiotics, especially strains of Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium, may contribute to fertility restoration. The review covers the historical development of probiotic therapy, the interaction between probiotics and prebiotics (synbiotics), and the multi-faceted ways in which probiotics maintain immune homeostasis, suppress pathogenic bacteria, and support reproductive tract health. Special emphasis is placed on infertility related to bacterial vaginosis, oxidative stress, obesity, hormonal disturbances, and complications during IVF or pregnancy, highlighting the microbiome’s pivotal role in reproductive success.
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesizes studies involving a broad spectrum of populations relevant to infertility: reproductive-age men and women, including those with obesity, advanced age, bacterial vaginosis (BV), polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), and those undergoing assisted reproductive technology (ART) such as IVF. Both human clinical trials and animal model studies are included to elucidate probiotic effects on sperm quality, testicular histopathology, vaginal microbiota balance, pregnancy outcomes, and menopausal infections. The article integrates findings from diverse ethnic, age, and health backgrounds, reflecting the complex interplay between host factors, microbiome composition, and fertility outcomes.
Most important findings
The review highlights that a balanced microbiome, particularly the dominance of Lactobacillus species in the female genital tract, is strongly associated with reproductive health and fertility. In women, disruption of this balance (dysbiosis) and overgrowth of pathogens such as Gardnerella vaginalis are linked to BV, infertility, increased risk of pre-term birth, and complications in ART. Probiotic supplementation demonstrates efficacy in restoring vaginal microbiota, reducing BV recurrence, and promoting favorable reproductive outcomes. In men, probiotics can mitigate the negative effects of obesity and oxidative stress on sperm quality and testosterone levels, potentially enhancing fertility. Notably, animal and human studies show that probiotics can reverse testicular tissue injury, improve sperm parameters, and maintain reproductive hormone levels. Furthermore, probiotics are associated with reduced inflammation in PCOS, improved IVF outcomes, and better management of menopausal vaginal infections. The review underscores the need to identify precise probiotic strains, optimal dosing regimens, and combination strategies for maximal clinical benefit.
Key implications
The findings suggest that probiotics could serve as adjunct or alternative therapies for infertility management in clinical settings, offering a microbiome-targeted approach to both prevention and treatment. For women, maintaining a Lactobacillus-dominant vaginal microbiota may reduce infertility risk, improve ART success, and prevent recurrent BV and related complications. For men, probiotics offer a natural means to counteract infertility associated with metabolic dysfunction and aging. However, the review also notes that further in vivo studies are necessary to standardize administration methods, dosing, strain selection, and combination therapies before widespread clinical adoption. Integration of microbiome analysis into fertility assessments and treatment personalization could significantly advance reproductive medicine.
Reproductive tract microbiome and therapeutics of infertility
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This review details how the reproductive tract microbiome impacts infertility and reproductive outcomes, highlighting the roles of specific microbial taxa, dysbiosis in disease, and potential microbiome-targeted therapies to improve ART success and pregnancy outcomes.
What was reviewed?
This comprehensive narrative review explores the human reproductive tract microbiome and its significance in infertility and reproductive outcomes. It synthesizes recent research on microbial communities inhabiting both female and male reproductive systems, highlighting the use of next-generation sequencing techniques to characterize these microbiota. The review delves into the role of specific microbial taxa, particularly Lactobacillus species, and their influence on reproductive tract health, the success of assisted reproductive technologies (ART), and the pathogenesis of infertility-related disorders. It also discusses the impact of microbial dysbiosis on conditions such as bacterial vaginosis (BV), chronic endometritis (CE), endometriosis, and adverse pregnancy outcomes, including preterm birth and preeclampsia. The therapeutic potential of antibiotics and probiotics for restoring reproductive tract eubiosis and improving fertility outcomes is critically evaluated.
Who was reviewed?
The review encompasses a wide spectrum of studies involving women and men of reproductive age, with a focus on both fertile and infertile populations. It draws on data from healthy individuals, infertility patients (including those undergoing ART such as IVF), and individuals with specific gynecological or obstetric pathologies. The populations studied span various ethnicities and geographic backgrounds, as inferred from referenced multicenter and international studies. The review also includes evidence from both cross-sectional and longitudinal research, as well as meta-analyses, providing a broad perspective on microbial associations across reproductive health and disease states.
Most important findings
The review highlights that the reproductive tract harbors a complex microbiome, with Lactobacillus species dominating in healthy females and contributing to an acidic, protective environment. Dysbiosis is strongly linked to BV, infertility, adverse ART outcomes, and pregnancy complications such as preterm birth and preeclampsia. In males, seminal microbiota composition (notably the presence of Lactobacillus vs. Anaerococcus, Pseudomonas, or Prevotella) correlates with sperm quality. The endometrial and follicular microbiomes, though less studied, also appear to influence implantation success and embryo development. The presence of pathogenic or dysbiotic communities in the reproductive tract can impair fertilization, implantation, and pregnancy maintenance, potentially resulting in ART failure or reduced live birth rates. Importantly, the review discusses how biofilm formation and the three-dimensional structure of microbial communities may shield pathogens from host immune responses and antimicrobial interventions, complicating treatment.
Key implications
This review underscores the emerging clinical importance of assessing and modulating the reproductive tract microbiome in infertility management. For clinicians, it emphasizes that microbial profiling, especially using sequencing-based methods, can identify dysbiosis not detectable by standard cultures, and may inform personalized interventions. The dominance of beneficial Lactobacillus strains is associated with higher fertility and ART success, while dysbiotic states predict poorer outcomes. Probiotic therapies and targeted antibiotics show promise but require further validation; indiscriminate antibiotic use may disrupt beneficial microbes. Future directions include integrating microbiome analysis into reproductive health assessments and developing microbiota-based therapeutics to optimize reproductive outcomes. A nuanced understanding of microbial signatures could enable precision medicine approaches in infertility and pregnancy care.
Menopausal shift on women’s health and microbial niches
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Menopause drives profound shifts in the oral, gut, and vaginal microbiome, decreasing protective species and increasing disease risk. Understanding these hormone-microbe interactions is crucial for developing personalized interventions to improve women’s health during and after the menopausal transition.
What was reviewed?
This narrative review comprehensively examines how the menopausal transition in women, marked by a decline in estrogen and other sex hormones, leads to profound changes in the microbiome across key body sites: oral, intestinal (gut), and urogenital (vaginal and urinary). The review reveals the bidirectional interplay between hormonal shifts and the microbiome, illustrating how menopause-induced hormonal changes alter the composition, richness, and function of microbial communities. Key topics include the impact of estrogen and progesterone fluctuations on microbial diversity, the concept of the “menopause paradox” (where dominance of protective microbes decreases while overall diversity increases), and the role of the microbiome in mediating disease risk and symptomatology during menopause. The review further discusses the microbial metabolism of sex hormones, highlighting how certain microbes can influence hormone availability and, in turn, host physiology and health outcomes.
Who was reviewed?
The reviewed literature encompasses studies of women across the menopausal transition, including premenopausal, perimenopausal, and postmenopausal women, with particular focus on changes in oral, gut, and vaginal microbial communities. The review references diverse cohorts and methodologies, with most primary data derived from studies of women aged 40–59 (the typical age range for menopause). However, the authors note a significant overrepresentation of Western populations in existing research, with limited inclusion of non-Western, African, Asian, or Latin American cohorts, which may affect global generalizability of findings. The review also considers relevant animal models and in vitro studies that inform understanding of hormone-microbe interactions.
Most important findings
The review highlights that menopause is associated with a marked reduction in estrogen and progesterone, which drives systemic changes in multiple mucosal tissues and their resident microbiota. In the oral cavity, menopause can lead to decreased salivary flow and pH, increased risk of periodontal disease, and shifts in microbial composition, such as increased Prevotella copri and reduced Veillonella tobetsuensis. Periodontal pathogens like Porphyromonas gingivalis and Tannerella forsythia become more prominent, while certain commensals (e.g., Bifidobacterium dentium) may offer protective effects. Fungal dysbiosis, particularly candidiasis, is also more common. In the gut, menopause is linked to reduced microbial diversity and altered abundance of taxa, including increased Bacteroides, Prevotella, Veillonella, and Sutterella, and decreased Ruminococcus (a beneficial butyrate-producer). The gut microbiome’s ability to metabolize estrogens (the “estrobolome”) becomes especially relevant, influencing circulating hormone levels and potentially affecting cardiovascular, metabolic, and autoimmune risk.
The vaginal microbiome undergoes the “menopause paradox”: a decrease in Lactobacillus dominance and a rise in overall microbial richness, favoring colonization by anaerobic taxa such as Prevotella, Gardnerella, and Atopobium. This microbial shift is associated with increased vaginal pH, atrophy, dryness, and susceptibility to infections (bacterial vaginosis, candidiasis) and may contribute to higher risk of malignancy and urogenital symptoms. The review also describes the capacity of some oral and gut microbes to metabolize sex steroids, thus influencing systemic hormone availability and potentially modulating menopause-related symptoms.
Key implications
For clinicians, this review underscores the importance of considering the menopause-induced microbiome shift as a significant factor in women’s health, beyond hormonal changes alone. The interplay between declining estrogen/progesterone and microbial community structure increases the risk for oral disease, gut dysbiosis, and urogenital infections. Microbial signatures such as reduced Lactobacillus in the vagina or increased periodontal pathogens could inform risk stratification, early detection, and the development of targeted interventions. Personalized therapies incorporating diet, probiotics, hormone replacement, or microbiome-targeted interventions may help restore microbial balance, alleviate symptoms, and reduce disease risk in menopausal women. Importantly, the review calls for more geographically and ethnically diverse research to ensure findings are globally applicable.
Diet and ovarian cancer risk: A case–control study in China
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal cancers affecting women worldwide. Known for its "silent" progression, this disease often goes undetected until it reaches advanced stages, making early diagnosis crucial for improving survival outcomes. With a variety of subtypes, ovarian cancer presents unique challenges in both treatment and prevention. Recent advancements in research are shining a light on the importance of the microbiome, particularly how microbial imbalances in the gut and vaginal microbiota can influence cancer progression. Repurposed drugs such as metformin and innovative interventions like probiotics, microbiota transplantation, and intratumoral microbiota therapies offer promising new avenues for improving ovarian cancer treatment.
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This case-control study highlights the significant role of diet in ovarian cancer risk, with high vegetable and fruit intake reducing risk, while animal fats and salted vegetables increase it. Fried and smoked foods also contribute to a higher risk.
What was studied?
This case-control study investigated the relationship between dietary factors and the risk of ovarian cancer among women in Zhejiang, China. The research focused on food intake, including vegetables, fruits, animal fats, and preserved foods, and their potential impact on the development of epithelial ovarian cancer. The study aimed to identify protective or risk-related dietary habits through an in-depth analysis of food consumption and its association with cancer incidence.
Who was studied?
The study involved 254 patients diagnosed with histologically confirmed epithelial ovarian cancer and 652 control participants. The cases involved women under 75 years old who had lived in Zhejiang Province for at least 10 years. Controls were matched by age and geographical area and consisted of hospital visitors, outpatients, and women recruited from the community. The study sample was designed to ensure diverse representation, with controls free of neoplasms and not under long-term dietary modifications.
Most important findings
The study revealed significant associations between dietary habits and ovarian cancer risk. High intakes of vegetables and fruits were linked to a decreased risk of ovarian cancer, with the upper quartile of vegetable intake showing a 76% lower risk compared to the lower quartile. In contrast, diets rich in animal fat and salted vegetables increased the risk of ovarian cancer, with the highest quartiles for animal fat intake associated with a 4.6-fold increased risk. The study also found that the consumption of fried, cured, and smoked foods significantly increased cancer risk, with the highest intake of smoked food showing a dramatic 9.6-fold increase in risk.
Food Group
Risk Association
Vegetables
Decreased risk (OR = 0.24)
Fruits
Decreased risk (OR = 0.36)
Animal Fat
Increased risk (OR = 4.6)
Salted Vegetables
Increased risk (OR = 3.4)
Fried Foods
Increased risk (OR = 2.50)
Smoked Foods
Increased risk (OR = 9.60)
Key implications
This study highlights the potential impact of dietary patterns on ovarian cancer risk and emphasizes the importance of modifying dietary habits to reduce cancer risk. The findings suggest that increasing the intake of fruits and vegetables while reducing the consumption of animal fats, salted vegetables, and fried or smoked foods may lower the risk of ovarian cancer. These insights can inform public health strategies and recommendations for cancer prevention, particularly in regions where dietary habits significantly contribute to cancer incidence. The clear associations between diet and ovarian cancer suggest that further research into dietary interventions, combined with lifestyle changes, could be beneficial in cancer prevention programs.
Effects of vaginal microbiota on in vitro fertilization outcomes in women with different infertility causes
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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This study explores the impact of vaginal microbiota on IVF outcomes in women with infertility. It highlights how specific bacteria like Lactobacillus iners and Pseudomonas spp. can predict IVF success or failure, offering potential insights for personalized ART treatments.
What was studied?
This study investigated the relationship between vaginal microbiota (VMB) composition and the outcomes of in vitro fertilization (IVF) in women with different causes of infertility. The researchers compared the VMB in women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) and tubal factor infertility (TFI) undergoing IVF with that of normal fertile women. The study specifically focused on the VMB structure before embryo transfer (ET) to determine its potential influence on IVF success.
Who was studied?
The study involved 120 women, including 83 infertile women (33 with PCOS and 50 with TFI) who underwent IVF and 37 fertile control women. The infertile group was divided into two subgroups based on IVF outcome: pregnant (PCOS.P and TFI.P) and non-pregnant (PCOS.NP and TFI.NP) women. Vaginal swabs were collected from all participants during the implantation window, 6-8 days after ovulation detection, to assess the VMB composition.
Most important findings
The study found significant differences in the vaginal microbiome between infertile women and fertile controls. Specifically, Lactobacillus iners was more abundant in the non-pregnant groups of both PCOS and TFI subgroups compared to the pregnant groups. The study also observed higher levels of Pseudomonas spp. in both non-pregnant groups, suggesting that this bacterial genus could negatively affect ART outcomes. Additionally, the VMB structure in infertile women was distinct from that of healthy women, with a reduced presence of Lactobacillus and an increased prevalence of pathogens like Prevotella, which are associated with reproductive issues such as spontaneous miscarriage and preterm birth.
Key implications
The findings underscore the potential of vaginal microbiota as a predictive factor for IVF outcomes. Specifically, the abundance of Lactobacillus iners and Pseudomonas spp. before embryo transfer might indicate a higher risk of IVF failure. This study highlights the importance of considering VMB composition when planning ART, suggesting that assessing the vaginal microbiota prior to embryo transfer could help optimize timing and personalize treatments based on infertility type. This approach could improve IVF success rates by addressing microbial imbalances that may hinder pregnancy.
Mycobiome Study Reveals Different Pathogens of Vulvovaginal Candidiasis Shape Characteristic Vaginal Bacteriome
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Vulvovaginal Candidiasis (VVC)
Vulvovaginal Candidiasis (VVC)
Vulvovaginal candidiasis (VVC) is a common fungal infection caused by Candida albicans. Disruptions in the vaginal microbiome and immune responses contribute to its development. Effective treatment involves both antifungal therapy and strategies to restore microbiome balance, preventing recurrent infections and addressing emerging antifungal resistance.
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This study investigated how vaginal mycobiome and bacteriome interact in VVC patients. It identified two community state types driven by Candida glabrata and Candida albicans, revealing bacterial and fungal interactions critical to VVC pathogenesis and treatment outcomes.
What was studied?
This study examined the interaction between the vaginal microbiota and mycobiota in patients with vulvovaginal candidiasis (VVC). The research focused on understanding the role of different Candida species, specifically Candida albicans and Candida glabrata, in the pathology of VVC, and how they influence the vaginal bacteriome. The study aimed to identify the microbial signatures associated with different VVC subtypes and how these signatures may influence disease outcomes and treatment effectiveness.
Who was studied?
The study involved 114 participants, including 44 women with VVC, 37 with bacterial vaginosis (BV), 33 with Ureaplasma urealyticum (UU) infection, and 47 healthy controls. These participants were recruited from Dezhou People's Hospital, Shandong, China. The study included both clinical and molecular assessments of the vaginal microbiome through 16S rRNA gene sequencing (for bacteria) and internal transcribed spacer (ITS) gene sequencing (for fungi). The research aimed to explore microbial shifts across different reproductive tract infections (RTIs) and how these shifts could potentially affect disease progression and treatment outcomes.
Most important findings
The study identified two community state types (CSTs) in VVC, based on the dominance of Candida species—C. glabrata (CST I) and C. albicans (CST II). The bacterial composition of the vaginal microbiome in VVC patients differed from that in healthy controls, with CST I being characterized by the presence of Prevotella (common in BV), and CST II by the presence of Ureaplasma (found in UU infections). The study also highlighted that while Lactobacillus predominated in healthy controls, its relative abundance was lower in VVC patients, with significant differences observed between the CSTs. Furthermore, CST II showed similarities to healthy controls in terms of the bacterial community, whereas CST I had a more disrupted microbiome, resembling that seen in BV. The researchers also found that fungal infections like C. albicans and C. glabrata could alter the vaginal environment, making it conducive for bacterial infections.
Key implications
This study underscores the importance of considering both the mycobiome and bacteriome in the diagnosis and treatment of VVC. The findings suggest that different types of Candida infections lead to distinct vaginal microbiota profiles, which could explain the variable treatment outcomes and recurrence rates in VVC patients. Understanding these microbial interactions can guide more effective, personalized treatment strategies, and may help address common clinical challenges like unsatisfactory cure rates and the high recurrence of VVC. The research also provides evidence for the co-occurrence of fungal and bacterial infections in VVC and highlights the need for a more integrated approach to microbiome analysis in future clinical settings.
Elevated Lead, Nickel, and Bismuth Levels in the Peritoneal Fluid of a Peritoneal Endometriosis Patient without Toxic Habits or Occupational Exposure following a Vegetarian Diet
February 12, 2026
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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A case study links elevated lead, nickel, and bismuth in peritoneal fluid with endometriosis, highlighting potential dietary and environmental exposures as contributors. Further research may identify these potentially toxic elements (PTEs) as diagnostic biomarkers and therapeutic targets.
What was studied?
This case study investigated elevated lead, nickel, and bismuth levels in peritoneal fluid—a key extracellular environment that bathes endometriotic lesions—using ICP-MS/MS analysis. The focus keyphrase elevated lead nickel bismuth peritoneal endometriosis frames the central finding: unusually high concentrations of these potentially toxic elements in a young woman with peritoneal endometriosis despite lacking identifiable toxic or occupational exposures. The study examined how environmental contaminants, diet, and lifestyle might contribute to metal accumulation in the peritoneal cavity, a microenvironment increasingly recognized as influential in inflammatory and hormonal dysregulation relevant to endometriosis pathophysiology. This approach aligns with microbiome-informed clinical interests because toxic element accumulation can modulate immune tone, oxidative stress, and microbial community structure, indirectly shaping local inflammation and lesion activity.
Who was studied?
Researchers evaluated a 22-year-old woman diagnosed with peritoneal endometriosis during laparoscopic surgery. She was a nonsmoker, consumed no alcohol, and reported no occupational or environmental toxic exposures. Importantly, she followed a lacto-ovo vegetarian diet, a potential contributor to trace metal intake. Her peritoneal fluid results were compared with those of an age-matched control patient with a benign serous cystadenoma and with ten additional non-endometriosis controls. This comparative structure allowed investigators to contextualize abnormal metal concentrations and evaluate whether observed elevations were disease-specific or potentially linked to diet or unrecognized environmental exposure.
Most important findings
The most striking result was the extreme elevation of lead (90:1 ratio), accompanied by high nickel and bismuth levels. These potentially toxic elements have known interactions with endocrine and immune pathways, both relevant to endometriosis and potentially influential to microbiome dynamics given their antimicrobial and redox-active properties. Lead and nickel can disrupt estrogen receptor signaling, generate oxidative stress, alter immune cell activation, and shape cytokine patterns—mechanisms paralleling microbiome-mediated inflammatory modulation. The vegetarian diet, rich in plant-derived foods capable of accumulating soil-associated metals, may have contributed to exposure. Bismuth, though less studied in gynecologic contexts, has antimicrobial properties that could influence local microbial signatures in peritoneal or reproductive tissues. Cobalt and barium were also elevated, reinforcing the possibility of cumulative environmental or dietary exposure.
Analyte
Case vs. Control Ratio
Lead (Pb)
90:1
Nickel (Ni)
4:1
Bismuth (Bi)
1.5:1
Cobalt (Co)
5:1
Key implications
These findings suggest that toxic metal accumulation in the peritoneal cavity may contribute to endometriosis development or severity, either directly through oxidative and endocrine disruption or indirectly by influencing microbial behavior, immune tone, and metabolic signaling within the peritoneal microenvironment. Though causality cannot be inferred from a single case, this study underscores the need for broader investigation of environmental exposures—including dietary sources—in reproductive pathology. The work also highlights the potential utility of peritoneal fluid metal signatures as biomarkers for endometriosis, helping integrate environmental toxicology with emerging microbiome-centered diagnostic frameworks.
Causal Effects of Gut Microbiota on Female Reproductive Tract Inflammation and Infertility: A Mendelian Randomization Study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Female Infertility
Female Infertility
Female infertility is a multifactorial condition affecting 10-15% of women of reproductive age, often caused by underlying conditions like Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), PCOS, Endometriosis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) offer a promising approach to restoring balance, improving fertility outcomes, and addressing root causes.
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The study confirmed causal links between specific gut microbiota and female reproductive tract inflammation and infertility. Notably, Lachnospiraceae and Ruminococcus increased inflammation risks, while Butyricicoccus provided protection. Faecalibacterium heightened infertility risk, suggesting new targets for microbiome-based diagnostics and interventions.
What was studied?
This study investigated the causal relationships between gut microbiota and female reproductive tract inflammation and infertility, specifically employing Mendelian randomization (MR). MR is a method that utilizes genetic variants to elucidate the causal influence of modifiable exposures, specifically gut microbiota, on specific health outcomes, such as reproductive tract inflammation and infertility.
Who was studied?
The analysis utilized existing genome-wide association study (GWAS) datasets primarily involving individuals of European ancestry. It included genetic data from 18,340 participants in the MiBioGen consortium to analyze microbiome quantitative trait loci, which are host genetic variations influencing gut microbiota composition. The study evaluated causal relationships between 119 bacterial genera and female reproductive conditions using summary data predominantly from the FinnGen biobank, validated by additional datasets from the UK Biobank.
What were the most important findings?
This research provided robust evidence linking specific gut microbiota to female reproductive tract inflammation and infertility. Bacterial genera such as Lachnospiraceae and Ruminococcus were causally linked to an increased risk of pelvic inflammatory disorders. In contrast, Butyricicoccus and Prevotella were associated with a protective effect against inflammation. Detailed analyses further identified associations specific to reproductive organs: Coprococcus and Ruminococcus increased the risks of salpingitis and oophoritis, whereas Coprococcus reduced the risk. Similarly, Eubacterium (Fissicatena group) and Oscillospira increased the risk of uterine inflammation, while Haemophilus decreased the risk of cervical inflammation.
Faecalibacterium was associated with increased infertility risk. Conversely, genera such as Erysipelotrichaceae, Lactococcus, and Ruminococcus (torques group) had protective associations. Detailed subtype analyses revealed bacteria significantly associated with specific infertility types, including anovulation and tubal infertility. The findings were robustly validated through sensitivity analyses, showing no reverse causality, suggesting the microbiota directly influence these conditions rather than being merely correlated.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study’s findings have substantial implications for the diagnosis, prevention, and targeted treatment of reproductive health issues in women. Identifying gut bacteria associated with increased or decreased risks opens pathways for personalized probiotic therapies and nutritional interventions aimed at maintaining or restoring reproductive health. Clinicians can potentially leverage these insights to design preventive strategies tailored to the microbiome profile, thereby reducing the incidence of reproductive tract inflammations and infertility. Further research is encouraged to explore the microbiome's precise mechanisms and clinical applications.
Heavy Metals in Obese and Non-Obese Polycystic Ovary Syndrome Patients: A Review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This study shows women with PCOS have elevated blood lead and cadmium and reduced magnesium, calcium, and manganese—disrupting hormone levels through oxidative stress and possibly altering gut microbiota.
What was studied?
This study examined the blood levels of trace elements and heavy metals—specifically manganese (Mn), magnesium (Mg), calcium (Ca), cadmium (Cd), and lead (Pb)—in women diagnosed with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), with a comparison between obese and non-obese subgroups. The study also explored correlations between these elements and sex hormones (FSH, LH, testosterone, TSH, prolactin) to assess whether these minerals and toxic metals could play a pathophysiological role in PCOS. The study aimed to evaluate how both beneficial and harmful mineral profiles interact with hormonal dysregulation in PCOS, particularly through oxidative stress pathways.
Who was studied?
The study included 82 Iraqi women divided into four groups: 27 obese women with PCOS (BMI ≥ 30), 27 non-obese women with PCOS (BMI < 30), 14 obese healthy controls, and 14 non-obese healthy controls. Diagnosis of PCOS followed the revised Rotterdam criteria, requiring two of three features—hyperandrogenism, oligo-- or anovulation, and polycystic ovaries—while excluding other endocrine disorders. Blood and serum samples were collected for mineral and hormonal profiling using atomic absorption spectrophotometry and immunoassays.
What were the most important findings?
Both obese and non-obese women with PCOS had significantly higher blood concentrations of lead and cadmium and significantly lower serum concentrations of manganese, magnesium, and calcium compared to their respective control groups. Notably, no significant differences in trace element levels were found between obese and non-obese PCOS groups, indicating that mineral and heavy metal imbalances are intrinsic features of PCOS regardless of BMI.
Correlations between trace elements and hormones provided mechanistic insights. In non-obese PCOS women, blood lead levels positively correlated with serum TSH, suggesting a thyroid-disrupting effect of lead. Cadmium levels positively correlated with total testosterone in obese PCOS women, implying a potential role in hyperandrogenism. Additionally, magnesium levels were inversely correlated with LH in non-obese PCOS women, highlighting magnesium’s regulatory role in gonadotropin release.
These elemental imbalances are tightly linked to oxidative stress, a central driver of PCOS pathogenesis. Lead and cadmium generate reactive oxygen species (ROS), impair mitochondrial function, and deplete antioxidants like glutathione. Manganese deficiency disrupts mitochondrial superoxide dismutase (MnSOD) activity, while low magnesium intensifies ROS generation and impairs glucose metabolism, exacerbating insulin resistance. From a microbiome perspective, excess lead and cadmium may enrich inflammatory genera like Proteobacteria, while deficiencies in magnesium and manganese reduce populations of SCFA-producing species like Faecalibacterium prausnitzii and Roseburia, contributing to systemic inflammation and endocrine disruption.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study emphasizes that disruptions in essential and toxic trace elements are fundamental to the hormonal and metabolic disturbances observed in PCOS. Elevated levels of lead and cadmium, coupled with deficiencies in manganese, magnesium, and calcium, suggest a common oxidative and endocrine-disrupting profile in PCOS patients, independent of obesity status. Clinically, these findings support the integration of trace element and heavy metal screening into PCOS evaluation and management. Therapeutic strategies that focus on detoxification (reducing cadmium and lead burden) and repletion of deficient minerals may restore oxidative balance and improve hormonal regulation. Moreover, these mineral imbalances may be influencing gut microbiota composition, suggesting an underexplored link between environmental exposure, trace element status, microbial dysbiosis, and PCOS. Future research should prioritize longitudinal and interventional studies to assess whether correcting these elemental imbalances can modulate the gut–hormone axis and lead to improved reproductive and metabolic outcomes in PCOS.
Variations in the age of onset of menarche among inhabitants of rural and urban areas in Delta State, South-South Nigeria
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menarche
Menarche
Menarche marks the first occurrence of menstruation, signaling a pivotal moment in a young girl's transition to womanhood. Understanding this process helps to shed light on the hormonal, physical, and emotional changes that accompany puberty. Explore the importance of menarche, factors that influence its timing, and how it shapes women's health throughout their lives.
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This study identifies significant differences in age of menarche between rural and urban Nigerian girls, highlighting the influence of socioeconomic status and residence. Findings have implications for understanding pubertal timing and its potential links to the microbiome and long-term health risks.
What was studied?
This original research study investigated the variations in the age of onset of menarche among female adolescents living in rural and urban areas of Delta State, South-South Nigeria. The primary objective was to determine the average age of menarche in the population and to ascertain whether place of residence (urban vs. rural) and socioeconomic status significantly influence the timing of menarche. The study also sought to establish baseline data for age at menarche in this specific region and compare these findings with previously reported data from other regions, thereby contributing to the understanding of environmental and demographic influences on female pubertal development. Although the research did not directly assess the microbiome, the focus keyphrase "age of menarche and microbiome associations" is relevant, as emerging literature increasingly links pubertal timing with the composition and function of the gut and reproductive tract microbiomes.
Who was studied?
The study population comprised 510 female students from six junior secondary schools (JSS 1–3), aged 8 to 16 years, in Ughelli Local Government Area, Delta State, Nigeria. Participants were selected through random sampling, with 85 students from each school. All participants were age-matched and met inclusion criteria that required consent and the ability to recall their age at menarche. Of the total, 243 students had already attained menarche, 130 from urban and 113 from rural settings. The socioeconomic status of each participant was classified into five classes based on a modified Oyedeji scale, accounting for parental occupation and education, among other factors.
Most important findings
The key finding was a statistically significant difference in the mean age of menarche between urban and rural dwellers. The mean age of menarche for the overall cohort was 12.68 ± 1.37 years. Urban girls experienced menarche earlier compared to their rural counterparts, with a p-value < 0.05 indicating significance. In both settings, the most frequent age of menarche differed: 12 years in urban areas and 13 years in rural areas. Socioeconomic status also had a notable impact. Girls from higher socioeconomic classes (Upper Class I and II) reached menarche earlier than those from lower classes, a trend more pronounced in urban areas. For instance, in urban Upper Class I, mean age at menarche was 11.45 years, while in urban Middle Class III it was 12.76 years. Analysis of variance confirmed significant differences in menarcheal age across socioeconomic strata in both urban and rural cohorts.
Key implications
The study’s findings have important clinical and public health implications. Earlier menarche in urban and higher socioeconomic groups may signal underlying shifts in nutritional status, environmental exposures, and possibly microbiome composition, all of which are risk factors for various chronic diseases later in life, including breast cancer, cardiovascular disease, and metabolic syndromes. For clinicians, recognizing these demographic trends is crucial for anticipatory guidance, risk assessment, and targeted education regarding reproductive health and disease prevention. This data also underscores the importance of further research into the role of the microbiome in pubertal timing, as changes in diet, environment, and socioeconomic status may influence both the microbiome and the endocrine system, contributing to observed variations in menarcheal age.
Menopause modulates the circulating metabolome: Evidence from a prospective cohort study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Menopause
Menopause
Menopause impacts many aspects of health, including the gut microbiome, weight management, and hormone balance. Diet, probiotics, intermittent fasting, and HRT offer effective management strategies.
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Menopause is linked to significant metabolic shifts, including a proatherogenic lipid profile and altered amino acid levels, which may increase cardiovascular and metabolic disease risks in women. The study highlights the importance of monitoring metabolic health during menopause.
What was studied?
The study focused on the metabolic changes associated with menopause, specifically the hormonal shifts that occur as women transition from perimenopause to early postmenopause. It explored the changes in the circulating metabolome, including alterations in lipoproteins, amino acids, and other metabolites, and examined the relationship between these changes and hormone levels, particularly estradiol (E2) and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH). The research was conducted using longitudinal data collected from a cohort of Finnish women and utilized nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) metabolomics to quantify a wide array of metabolites, providing insights into how menopause affects the broader metabolic profile and influences cardiovascular and metabolic health.
Who was studied?
The study involved 218 Finnish women, aged 47 to 55, who were followed longitudinally from perimenopause through early postmenopause. These women were part of the Estrogenic Regulation of Muscle Apoptosis (ERMA) cohort. Participants were assessed for menopausal status, hormonal changes, and their metabolic profiles over an average follow-up period of 14 months. A subset of the women (15%) began menopausal hormone therapy (MHT) during the follow-up. The cohort was selected to minimize the influence of aging and included only women without conditions affecting hormone profiles or metabolic health.
Most important findings
Postmenopausal women showed an increase in apoB-containing lipoprotein particles, and lipid levels such as triglycerides and cholesterol in these particles. This shift towards a proatherogenic lipid profile could increase cardiovascular disease risk. The study found increased levels of leucine, tyrosine, and other branched-chain amino acids, which are linked to insulin resistance and higher cardiovascular risk. A shift in fatty acid profile from polyunsaturated to saturated fats was observed, which may indicate an increased risk for type 2 diabetes. Glycerol levels increased, while ketone bodies like 3-hydroxybutyrate decreased, suggesting deteriorating insulin sensitivity. Decreased citrate levels were noted, which may be linked to reduced bone health in postmenopausal women.
Key implications
The findings highlight menopause as a critical period for cardiovascular and metabolic health, marked by significant alterations in the circulating metabolome. The observed shifts in lipoproteins, fatty acids, and amino acids suggest a proatherogenic and insulin-resistant state, which could predispose postmenopausal women to increased risks of cardiovascular diseases and type 2 diabetes. The study emphasizes the need for clinicians to monitor these metabolic markers in menopausal women and consider interventions, including lifestyle modifications or menopausal hormone therapy, to mitigate these risks. Further research on the specific molecular mechanisms underlying these metabolic shifts and their long-term effects on women’s health is also essential.
1H NMR- based metabolomics approaches as non-invasive tools for diagnosis of endometriosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Metabolomic Signature
Metabolomic Signature
Metabolomic signatures are unique metabolite patterns linked to specific biological conditions, identified through metabolomics. They reveal underlying biochemical activities, aiding in disease diagnosis, biomarker development, and personalized medicine. The microbiome significantly affects these signatures, influencing health and disease outcomes through metabolic interactions.
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This study demonstrates the potential of ¹H-NMR metabolomics to diagnose endometriosis non-invasively by identifying metabolic biomarkers and disrupted pathways. Quadratic Discriminant Analysis outperformed Artificial Neural Networks in diagnostic accuracy.
What was studied?
This study investigated the application of metabolomics, specifically through proton nuclear magnetic resonance (¹H-NMR) spectroscopy, to identify non-invasive biomarkers for diagnosing endometriosis. The researchers developed computational models using Quadratic Discriminant Analysis (QDA) and Artificial Neural Networks (ANNs) to analyze metabolic changes in serum samples and assess their utility in early diagnosis of the disease.
Who was studied?
The study analyzed serum samples from 31 infertile women diagnosed with stage II or III endometriosis confirmed via laparoscopy and 15 healthy women without any signs of endometriosis. The participants were aged 22–44 years and were recruited from an infertility center in Iran. Exclusion criteria included recent medical or hormonal treatments, prior gynecological surgeries, or other pelvic inflammatory conditions.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed significant metabolic differences between women with endometriosis and healthy controls. Key findings included elevated levels of 2-methoxyestrone, 2-methoxyestradiol, androstenedione, aldosterone, dehydroepiandrosterone, and deoxycorticosterone in the endometriosis group, alongside decreased cholesterol and primary bile acids. These metabolic changes are linked to disruptions in steroid hormone biosynthesis and bile acid metabolism, indicating underlying hyperestrogenism and impaired hepatic estrogen clearance. The QDA model achieved a correct classification rate of 76%, with 71% positive predictive value and 78% negative predictive value, outperforming the ANN model, which had lower sensitivity and specificity. Metabolic pathway analyses highlighted altered steroid hormone and bile acid biosynthesis, which are critical in the pathophysiology of endometriosis.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study underscores the potential of ¹H-NMR-based metabolomics as a minimally invasive diagnostic tool for endometriosis, reducing reliance on invasive laparoscopy. The identification of specific biomarkers and disrupted pathways could facilitate earlier diagnosis, improved patient stratification, and targeted therapeutic interventions. The findings also demonstrate the utility of computational modeling, particularly QDA, in translating complex metabolomics data into clinically actionable insights. This approach represents a significant advancement in bridging diagnostic gaps for endometriosis.
A comprehensive analysis of breast cancer microbiota and host gene expression
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Breast Cancer
Breast Cancer
Traditionally linked to genetic predispositions and environmental exposures, emerging evidence highlights the microbiome as a critical and underappreciated factor influencing breast cancer progression, immune response, and treatment outcomes.
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The study analyzed breast tumor and adjacent tissues, linking microbiota composition to cancer pathways. Key findings implicate specific microbes in breast cancer progression.
What Was Studied?
This study investigated the microbial composition of breast tumor tissues compared to non-cancerous adjacent (NCA) tissues, focusing on identifying specific microbiota associated with different breast cancer subtypes. The research utilized RNA sequencing data from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA), analyzing microbial reads and their association with host gene expression profiles to explore the role of the tumor microbiota in breast cancer pathogenesis.
Who Was Studied?
The study involved 668 breast tumor tissue samples and 72 NCA samples. The samples were filtered to exclude male patients, metastatic cases, and individuals with a history of breast cancer or neoadjuvant therapy, ensuring a robust cohort for microbial and host gene analysis.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study identified distinct microbial signatures between tumor and NCA tissues. Proteobacteria were significantly enriched in tumor samples, while Actinobacteria were more prevalent in NCA tissues. Specific microbial taxa, such as Haemophilus influenzae, were associated with genes involved in tumor-promoting pathways, including the G2M checkpoint, E2F transcription factors, and mitotic spindle assembly. Similarly, Listeria fleischmannii correlated with epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition pathways, a hallmark of cancer metastasis.
Twelve of the most abundant species, including Escherichia coli, Mycobacterium fortuitum, and Salmonella enterica, showed significant differential abundance between tumor and NCA tissues. These species are notable for their potential roles in DNA damage and estrogen metabolism, contributing to genomic instability and hormonal dysregulation in breast cancer. The findings also revealed that less prevalent taxa often showed the most significant differential abundance, highlighting the challenges of detecting meaningful microbial shifts in underpowered studies.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
This research underscores the complex interplay between the tumor microbiota and host gene expression in breast cancer. The enrichment of specific microbial taxa in tumor tissues and their associations with oncogenic pathways suggest that the microbiota may play an active role in breast cancer progression. These findings open avenues for microbiota-targeted interventions and diagnostic tools based on microbial markers. Furthermore, the study highlights the need for large-scale, well-controlled cohorts to accurately characterize the tumor microbiome and its clinical relevance.
A Comprehensive Review on Postpartum Depression
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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This comprehensive review of postpartum depression (PPD) explores its pathophysiology, risk factors, and treatment options. It emphasizes the need for early diagnosis, multidisciplinary care, and further research into the neurobiological causes of PPD to improve prevention and treatment strategies.
What was reviewed?
This paper is a comprehensive review on postpartum depression (PPD). It examines various aspects of PPD, including its pathophysiology, risk factors, diagnostic methods, and treatment options. The review delves into the biological, psychological, and social factors that contribute to PPD, explores the potential role of specific medications like methyldopa, and discusses contemporary pharmacological and non-pharmacological treatments for the disorder. The article also highlights the long-term implications of PPD on both mothers and children, emphasizing the importance of early diagnosis and intervention.
Who was reviewed?
The review focuses on studies related to PPD in new mothers. It draws from multiple research articles and clinical data to provide an understanding of how PPD develops, its risk factors, and the effectiveness of various treatments. The subjects reviewed include mothers suffering from PPD, particularly those affected by psychological risk factors like depression during pregnancy, stress, and lack of support. It also includes the pharmacological effects of medications such as methyldopa and their potential role in inducing PPD.
What were the most important findings?
The review identified several key findings regarding the prevalence and risk factors for PPD. PPD affects approximately 13-19% of new mothers, with a significant impact on both maternal health and infant development. The review highlighted the biological, psychological, and social factors associated with PPD. Biological factors such as hormonal changes, particularly the drop in progesterone and estradiol after childbirth, are believed to contribute to the onset of PPD. Psychologically, factors like a history of depression, anxiety, and stress during pregnancy are strongly linked to PPD. The review also points to specific events, such as a traumatic birth or lack of social support, as significant contributors to the development of the condition.
One important aspect discussed was the role of methyldopa, a drug used for preeclampsia during pregnancy, which has been shown to induce depressive symptoms in the postpartum period through mechanisms such as altered neurotransmitter levels and reduced cerebral blood flow. This insight underscores the complexity of PPD and highlights the need for careful monitoring of mothers on methyldopa. In terms of treatment, the review emphasizes the effectiveness of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) like sertraline in treating acute PPD. Other treatments, such as psychotherapy, neuromodulatory interventions like electroconvulsive therapy (ECT), and emerging treatments like brexanolone (a formulation of allopregnanolone), show promise in alleviating PPD symptoms. However, the review also noted that current treatment strategies are under-researched, and more robust clinical trials are needed.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The review stresses the need for increased awareness and early intervention, as untreated PPD can have long-lasting effects on both mothers and their children. The findings suggest that healthcare providers should integrate routine screenings for PPD in the postpartum care process, especially in vulnerable populations. The review also highlights the importance of addressing the psychological, social, and biological factors contributing to PPD, and the need for a multifaceted approach in both prevention and treatment. Furthermore, the review emphasizes that more research is needed to fully understand the neurobiological mechanisms behind PPD, as this will guide the development of more effective, targeted treatments.
A metabonomics approach as a means for identification of potentialbiomarkers for early diagnosis of endometriosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Metabolomic Signature
Metabolomic Signature
Metabolomic signatures are unique metabolite patterns linked to specific biological conditions, identified through metabolomics. They reveal underlying biochemical activities, aiding in disease diagnosis, biomarker development, and personalized medicine. The microbiome significantly affects these signatures, influencing health and disease outcomes through metabolic interactions.
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This study used 1H-NMR metabonomics to identify serum biomarkers for early endometriosis diagnosis. Elevated lactate, alanine, and reduced glucose levels highlight metabolic disruptions, offering a minimally invasive diagnostic tool.
What was studied?
This study investigated the identification of predictive biomarkers for early diagnosis of endometriosis using a minimally invasive, serum-based approach. The researchers utilized proton nuclear magnetic resonance (1H-NMR) metabonomics to analyze serum samples, aiming to distinguish endometriosis patients from healthy controls. The study particularly focused on differences in metabolite profiles to identify markers indicative of the condition.
Who was studied?
The study included 45 women aged under 40, divided into two groups. The first group comprised 22 women diagnosed with early-stage endometriosis (Stages I–II) via laparoscopy, while the control group consisted of 23 age- and BMI-matched healthy women with normal menstrual cycles and proven fertility. Participants with recent hormone therapy or irregular menstrual cycles were excluded. Serum samples were collected during the secretory phase of the menstrual cycle.
What were the most important findings?
The study identified several metabolites with significantly altered levels in women with endometriosis compared to controls. Increased levels of lactate, 3-hydroxybutyrate, alanine, leucine, valine, threonine, lysine, glycerophosphatidylcholine, succinic acid, and 2-hydroxybutyrate were observed in the serum of endometriosis patients, while glucose, isoleucine, arginine, and lipid levels were decreased. Multivariate analysis using Partial Least Squares-Discriminant Analysis (PLS-DA) demonstrated strong sensitivity (81.8%) and specificity (91.3%) in distinguishing endometriosis from controls, with an area under the ROC curve of 0.96. Pathway analysis highlighted arginine and proline metabolism disruptions, glycine, serine, and threonine metabolism, pyruvate metabolism, and lysine biosynthesis and degradation. These findings provide a potential non-invasive diagnostic framework and insights into the metabolic disturbances in endometriosis.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study offers a promising step toward non-invasive diagnostic methods for endometriosis, reducing reliance on invasive laparoscopy. The identification of metabolite alterations linked to the disease enhances the understanding of its pathophysiology, emphasizing oxidative stress, anaerobic glycolysis, and metabolic reprogramming similar to malignancies. These findings could lead to better clinical tools for early diagnosis and a deeper understanding of the metabolic underpinnings of endometriosis.
A More Diverse Cervical Microbiome Associates with Better Clinical Outcomes in Patients with Endometriosis: A Pilot Study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Infertility
Infertility
Infertility is the inability to conceive after 12 months of regular, unprotected sex. It affects both men and women and can be due to various physical, hormonal, or genetic factors. Treatments include medication, surgery, assisted reproductive technologies, and lifestyle changes.
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This study links cervical microbiome diversity with endometriosis severity. Findings reveal microbial imbalances, particularly in advanced stages, correlate with pain, infertility, and inflammatory pathways. The cervical microbiome may serve as a diagnostic and therapeutic target for improving outcomes in endometriosis, highlighting its role in reproductive health and disease progression.
What Was Studied?
This pilot study investigated the cervical microbiome in patients with endometriosis and its association with clinical outcomes. The research focused on the microbial diversity, composition, and functional roles in cervical mucus, analyzed using 16S rRNA sequencing. The study included healthy women and patients diagnosed with endometriosis to compare microbial profiles and explore the connection between microbiome alterations, disease progression, and associated symptoms like pain, CA125 levels, and infertility.
Who Was Studied?
The study involved 33 women: 10 healthy controls and 23 patients diagnosed with endometriosis (classified by severity into stages I-II and III-IV). The cervical microbiome was analyzed to assess its correlation with clinical features, such as deep infiltrating endometriosis (DIE), CA125 biomarker levels, pain severity, and infertility.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study revealed that cervical microbiome diversity is significantly associated with clinical outcomes in endometriosis patients. Specifically, a higher microbial diversity was linked to better outcomes, while notable microbial imbalances characterized advanced disease stages and severe symptoms. Patients with advanced stages of endometriosis exhibited a microbial shift, with an increase in Firmicutes and a decrease in Actinobacteria and Bacteroidetes. Unique microbial profiles were observed, such as elevated Lactobacillus jensenii and Streptococcus agalactiae (GBS), alongside reduced Atopobium vaginae in patients with advanced stages.
Patients presenting severe symptoms, including elevated CA125 biomarker levels, infertility, and higher pain scores, showed significantly reduced microbial richness and diversity. Infertility, a common complication of endometriosis, was associated with an increased Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes ratio. Notably, infertility treatments appeared to reverse these imbalances, restoring microbial diversity and community structure to resemble that of fertile individuals. Additionally, deep infiltrating endometriosis (DIE), a severe form of the condition, was correlated with an overrepresentation of Streptococcus and Prevotella at the genus level.
The study’s functional analyses provided insight into the role of the cervical microbiome in disease progression. Pathways associated with microbial alterations, such as signal transduction, secondary bile acid biosynthesis, and nutrient metabolism, were identified. These pathways may contribute to inflammation, immune dysregulation, and potentially malignancy in severe cases. Such findings underscore the intricate relationship between cervical microbial composition and the pathophysiology of endometriosis. This research positions the cervical microbiome as a critical factor in both the diagnosis and management of endometriosis, offering potential for therapeutic interventions targeting microbial imbalances.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
The findings suggest that cervical microbiome diversity may serve as a biomarker for diagnosing and monitoring endometriosis progression and complications. The research highlights the therapeutic potential of targeting microbial imbalances to improve clinical outcomes, particularly in infertility. It also underscores the potential link between microbiome alterations and malignancy risks in severe cases, paving the way for preventive and precision medicine approaches in endometriosis management.
A New Approach to Polycystic Ovary Syndrome: The Gut Microbiota
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This review examines the link between PCOS and gut microbiota dysbiosis, highlighting how dietary and microbial interventions may improve clinical outcomes. The study underscores the potential of prebiotics, probiotics, and synbiotics as treatments.
What was studied?
The study explored the relationship between polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) and gut microbiota composition, focusing on the role of microbial dysbiosis in contributing to the metabolic and reproductive dysfunctions characteristic of PCOS. The authors reviewed recent research on the gut microbiome's role in PCOS pathogenesis, along with potential therapeutic approaches targeting gut microbiota, such as prebiotics, probiotics, and synbiotics.
Who was studied?
This review does not focus on a specific patient cohort but rather consolidates findings from multiple studies that examine the gut microbiota of women with PCOS. The studies involved women diagnosed with PCOS according to established diagnostic criteria (NIH, Rotterdam, AE-PCOS), with varying phenotypes including obesity, insulin resistance, and hyperandrogenism.
What were the most important findings?
The review highlighted the growing body of evidence linking dysbiosis of the gut microbiota to PCOS. Studies suggest that changes in the composition of the gut microbiome could contribute to the metabolic and reproductive issues observed in PCOS. Specifically, a reduction in microbial diversity and shifts in the relative abundance of beneficial bacteria (e.g., Faecalibacterium prausnitzii and Blautia) were commonly reported. Additionally, gut microbiota dysbiosis in PCOS appears to influence clinical features such as insulin resistance, hyperandrogenism, and inflammation. The authors also explored how gut microbiota modifications through the use of prebiotics, probiotics, and synbiotics may improve clinical outcomes in PCOS, though the mechanisms remain under investigation. Prebiotics and synbiotics showed some promise in improving insulin sensitivity and reducing hyperandrogenism, but further randomized controlled trials are necessary to establish these interventions as standard treatment options.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This review underscores the importance of understanding the gut microbiome in the context of PCOS, opening avenues for microbiome-based therapies as adjunct treatments for this condition. The findings suggest that managing gut dysbiosis through dietary modifications (e.g., high-fiber diets), probiotics, prebiotics, and synbiotics could help alleviate metabolic disturbances and reproductive issues associated with PCOS. Clinically, these insights could lead to the development of personalized treatment strategies that address the underlying microbial imbalances, providing a more holistic approach to managing PCOS. However, the review calls for further randomized controlled studies to clarify the causality of the relationship between gut microbiota and PCOS and to determine the most effective therapeutic interventions.
A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of Premenstrual Syndrome with Special Emphasis on Herbal Medicine and Nutritional Supplements.
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS)
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS)
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS) involves physical and emotional symptoms linked to hormonal fluctuations. Recent research highlights the role of heavy metals and gut microbiome imbalances in worsening these symptoms. Lifestyle changes, microbiome-targeted therapies, and toxin reduction show promise in effective PMS management.
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This systematic review and meta-analysis explores the effectiveness of herbal medicine and nutritional supplements in reducing PMS symptoms, highlighting significant reductions in physical, mood, and behavioral symptoms.
What was reviewed?
This article presents a systematic review and meta-analysis focusing on the effectiveness of herbal medicine and nutritional supplements in managing Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS). It reviews randomized controlled trials (RCTs) assessing the impact of various herbal remedies and supplements on both somatic and psycho-behavioral symptoms of PMS. The review highlights the safety, efficacy, and mechanisms of action of these treatments, while also addressing the limitations of current evidence.
Who was reviewed?
The review concentrates on women experiencing PMS, particularly those with both physical and psychological symptoms that significantly affect their daily functioning. It includes trials involving a wide range of herbal and nutritional interventions, aiming to provide clinicians with evidence of alternative therapies for managing PMS symptoms.
What were the most important findings?
The review reveals that herbal medicines and nutritional supplements can significantly reduce the severity of PMS symptoms, including physical, mood, and behavioral issues. It highlights specific interventions such as Vitex agnus castus (chaste tree), Zingiber officinale (ginger), and Crocus sativus (saffron) as particularly effective. The meta-analysis demonstrated a substantial reduction in Premenstrual Symptoms Screening Tool (PSST) scores, indicating notable symptom improvement. Additionally, the review found that certain interventions, such as Ginkgo biloba and vitamin B1, offered improvements in psychological symptoms like anxiety and depression.
Secondary findings also revealed positive effects on mood, physical symptoms, and behavior, with significant reductions in scores for physical symptoms and mood-related symptoms. The study concluded that herbal treatments, particularly when used over multiple cycles, have the potential to alleviate PMS symptoms significantly. However, it emphasized the need for high-quality trials to confirm these results and establish optimal treatment protocols. Importantly, the review also addressed the safety profile of these treatments, with most studies reporting mild adverse effects such as nausea or digestive discomfort.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The greatest implication of this review is that herbal medicine and nutritional supplements represent a viable, non-pharmacological option for managing PMS symptoms, offering a safer alternative to traditional treatments with fewer side effects. This study provides clinicians with evidence-based recommendations for integrating these alternative therapies into PMS management, especially for patients who prefer natural treatments or experience adverse reactions to conventional medications. The review also underscores the need for more robust, high-quality studies to refine treatment guidelines, improve symptom assessment tools, and explore the mechanisms underlying the therapeutic effects of herbal interventions. Clinicians can consider incorporating these findings into patient care plans while awaiting further evidence from future studies.
Adherence to the Mediterranean Diet, Dietary Patterns and Body Composition in Women with Polycystic Ovary Syndrome (PCOS)
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Women with PCOS had lower Mediterranean diet adherence and worse metabolic, inflammatory, and hormonal profiles. Poor MD adherence correlated with higher testosterone, CRP, and HOMA-IR, suggesting a microbiome-linked dietary influence on PCOS severity.
What was studied?
This cross-sectional, case-controlled study investigated the relationship between adherence to the Mediterranean diet (MD), dietary intake patterns, body composition, and clinical severity of polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) in treatment-naïve women. The primary aim was to determine whether the quality of dietary intake, specifically adherence to the MD, was associated with hyperandrogenism, insulin resistance (IR), inflammation, and altered body composition in women with PCOS compared to BMI- and age-matched controls. Using validated methods, including the PREDIMED score and seven-day food records, the study examined the dietary quality and macronutrient composition, while bioelectrical impedance analysis (BIA) was employed to assess body composition, including phase angle (PhA) as a marker of cellular health and inflammation.
Who was studied?
The study involved 112 treatment-naïve women with PCOS and 112 healthy, age- and BMI-matched controls, all recruited from the same geographical region in Italy. Inclusion criteria limited the population to premenopausal women aged 18–40 with BMIs up to 39.9 kg/m². Participants had no other endocrine or metabolic diseases, had not followed any special diet or taken nutritional supplements in the preceding three months, and had not taken medications affecting metabolism. Dietary assessments were conducted via face-to-face interviews using seven-day food records and the PREDIMED questionnaire, while hormonal, inflammatory, and metabolic parameters were evaluated through fasting blood draws.
What were the most important findings?
Women with PCOS exhibited significantly lower adherence to the Mediterranean diet, consuming less extra-virgin olive oil, fish, legumes, and nuts compared to controls, despite similar total caloric intake. Their diets were higher in simple carbohydrates and saturated fatty acids (SFA), and lower in complex carbohydrates, fiber, monounsaturated fatty acids (MUFA), and omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (n-3 PUFA). These nutritional differences were directly associated with higher serum testosterone levels, increased CRP (a marker of inflammation), higher HOMA-IR values, and worse anthropometric profiles, including increased waist circumference. Body composition analysis revealed significantly lower fat-free mass, phase angle (PhA), and intracellular water, and higher fat mass and extracellular water in PCOS patients, indicating poorer cellular health and hydration status.
From a microbiome perspective, the Mediterranean diet’s high content of fiber, polyphenols, and MUFA promotes the growth of beneficial microbes such as Faecalibacterium prausnitzii, Bifidobacterium spp., and Lactobacillus spp., which are known to produce short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) like butyrate. SCFAs enhance insulin sensitivity, reduce systemic inflammation, and improve gut barrier function. In contrast, diets high in SFA and simple sugars promote dysbiosis and increase pro-inflammatory taxa such as Proteobacteria. This study indirectly supports the role of microbiota in mediating the diet-PCOS relationship through the systemic metabolic and endocrine improvements associated with MD adherence.
What are the implications of this study?
This study underscores the central role of dietary quality, particularly adherence to the Mediterranean diet, in modulating the severity of PCOS. It provides strong evidence that beyond caloric intake, the types of fat and carbohydrates consumed significantly impact inflammation, insulin sensitivity, and androgen levels. The findings establish a direct link between poor MD adherence and more severe hyperandrogenemia and inflammatory status. Clinically, this reinforces the necessity of nutritional counseling as a first-line intervention in PCOS management. The Mediterranean diet offers a microbiome-friendly strategy, rich in fiber and MUFA, capable of reducing systemic inflammation and potentially improving microbiota composition. Furthermore, phase angle (PhA) emerges as a promising biomarker of PCOS severity and nutritional status. For clinicians and researchers, these findings support incorporating nutritional pattern assessments and body composition analysis into standard PCOS evaluation, emphasizing the gut–diet–hormone axis as a therapeutic target.
Adverse Events Due to Suspected Nickel Hypersensitivity in Patients with Essure Micro-Inserts
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Nickel
Nickel
Bacteria regulate transition metal levels through complex mechanisms to ensure survival and adaptability, influencing both their physiology and the development of antimicrobial strategies.
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The study reviewed adverse events linked to nickel hypersensitivity in Essure implants, noting rare reactions and the role of the menstrual cycle in modulating hypersensitivity.
What was studied?
This study aimed to review adverse events associated with suspected nickel hypersensitivity in patients implanted with Essure micro-inserts, a device used for hysteroscopic sterilization. The researchers specifically sought to determine the correlation between reported symptoms and positive results of nickel patch testing, providing insights into the relevance of nickel sensitivity in clinical outcomes. The role of the menstrual cycle in modulating nickel hypersensitivity was also examined to better understand potential confounding factors.
Who was studied?
The study utilized data from adverse event reports collected between 2001 and July 2010, including 63 patients with suspected nickel hypersensitivity. These data were drawn from the MAUDE database, direct manufacturer reports, and published clinical trials involving 650 patients. Patch testing, performed at the discretion of treating physicians, was reported for 20 patients, with 13 testing positive and 7 testing negative.
What were the most important findings?
The study found that the incidence of adverse events potentially related to nickel hypersensitivity in Essure users was exceptionally low, at 0.01%. Among the 13 patients with positive nickel patch tests, symptom resolution occurred in only 4 cases after device removal, with symptoms such as rash, itching, and asthma attributed to nickel allergy. However, two cases demonstrated unresolved symptoms, and the remaining showed no definitive link to nickel hypersensitivity. For the 7 patients with negative patch tests, none of their symptoms were deemed related to the implants. Notably, nickel ion release from Essure devices was minimal, with leaching rates 2,143 times lower than daily dietary nickel intake.
The findings highlight inconsistencies between patch test results and clinical symptoms, questioning the predictive reliability of these tests for implant-related nickel hypersensitivity. The report underscores that nickel-sensitive individuals did not universally experience symptoms, and adverse reactions were rare compared to the prevalence of nickel allergy in the general population.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings suggest that nickel hypersensitivity, as determined by patch testing, is not a clinically significant contraindication for Essure device placement. Despite the presence of nickel in these implants, adverse reactions were rare, and many suspected symptoms lacked a clear link to nickel sensitivity. The study emphasizes the importance of careful evaluation before attributing symptoms to nickel hypersensitivity and suggests that device removal should be reserved for confirmed cases. The data also support the continued use of nickel-containing implants with appropriate monitoring, providing reassurance to clinicians and patients about their safety.
Allopregnanolone in premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD)
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD) is a severe mood disorder linked to hormonal and neurochemical changes. Emerging research highlights the gut microbiome’s role in symptom modulation, opening new avenues for microbiome-targeted treatments alongside traditional therapies.
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This review identifies impaired sensitivity of GABA-A receptors to the neurosteroid allopregnanolone as central to PMDD, linking receptor plasticity and stress dysregulation to mood symptoms, and highlights promising treatments targeting this pathway.
What was studied?
This review comprehensively examined the role of the neuroactive steroid allopregnanolone (ALLO), a potent positive allosteric modulator of the GABA-A receptor (GABAA-R), in the pathophysiology of premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD). It focused on the evidence supporting altered sensitivity or dysregulation of GABAA-Rs in response to ALLO fluctuations across the menstrual cycle, linking these neurobiological changes to the characteristic mood symptoms and stress sensitivity of PMDD.
Who was studied?
As a review article, this paper synthesized findings from both human clinical studies and animal models, particularly rodents, to elucidate mechanisms underlying PMDD. Human studies included neuroendocrine and neurophysiological investigations of women diagnosed with PMDD compared to controls, focusing on hormonal dynamics, receptor sensitivity, stress response, and symptomatology. Rodent models primarily involved progesterone or ALLO withdrawal paradigms to mimic PMDD symptoms and investigate GABAA-R subunit changes and behavior.
What were the most important findings?
The review highlighted that PMDD is not caused by abnormal circulating hormone levels but rather by impaired CNS sensitivity to normal fluctuations of ALLO. In rodent models, rapid withdrawal from progesterone or ALLO induces anxiety- and depression-like behaviors linked to upregulation of the GABAA-R α4 subunit, implicating receptor plasticity in symptom manifestation. Clinical studies in women with PMDD demonstrated altered GABAA-R function, such as lack of ALLO-induced sedation during the luteal phase and elevated anxiety-potentiated startle responses, indicating dysfunctional receptor adaptation to hormonal changes. The review also detailed how ALLO modulates the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis, with women with PMDD showing altered stress responsivity likely due to impaired ALLO-GABAA-R interaction, leading to heightened stress sensitivity during the luteal phase. Importantly, treatments effective in PMDD, including selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) and novel GABA-modulating drugs appear to normalize ALLO-GABA signaling, further supporting this pathophysiological model.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This review consolidates strong evidence that PMDD is fundamentally a disorder of impaired neurosteroid modulation of GABAA-Rs, rather than hormone level abnormalities alone, positioning GABAA-R plasticity and ALLO sensitivity as central to its pathophysiology. Understanding this mechanism clarifies why PMDD symptoms cyclically align with hormonal fluctuations and why patients experience heightened stress sensitivity. Clinically, this suggests that future therapeutic strategies should target the neurosteroid-GABAergic system directly to restore receptor function or stabilize neurosteroid levels, promising more rapid and effective symptom relief than traditional antidepressants. Moreover, this framework encourages the development and testing of novel GABAergic agents tailored to PMDD and related reproductive mood disorders, enhancing personalized medicine for affected women worldwide.
Alteration in gut mycobiota of patients with polycystic ovary syndrome
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This study reveals that women with PCOS have altered gut fungal communities, marked by enriched Saccharomyces and depleted Aspergillus. These shifts may contribute to inflammation, metabolic stress, and endocrine disruption, highlighting fungi as critical players in PCOS pathophysiology.
What Was Studied?
This study examined the composition and function of the gut mycobiota in women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), a condition primarily explored through bacterial profiling in prior research. The authors aimed to fill a critical knowledge gap by focusing on the fungal component of the gut microbiome, which has increasingly been recognized as a modulator of immune responses and metabolic regulation. Using internal transcribed spacer (ITS) sequencing, they compared fecal fungal communities in 17 PCOS patients and 17 age-matched healthy controls. Functional profiling through PICRUSt2 enabled prediction of metabolic pathways associated with the altered mycobiota. The study’s objective was to determine whether PCOS is associated with fungal dysbiosis and to identify fungal genera that may influence metabolic, immune, or hormonal dysregulation in PCOS pathophysiology.
Who Was Studied?
Seventeen women diagnosed with PCOS based on the 2003 Rotterdam criteria were recruited from a hospital in Northeast China and compared with 17 healthy controls. The two groups were matched for age but differed significantly in body weight and BMI, consistent with typical PCOS presentations. PCOS participants had elevated levels of luteinizing hormone, testosterone, fasting insulin, triglycerides, and other markers indicative of endocrine and metabolic dysfunction. Fecal samples from all participants were collected and analyzed for fungal composition, and serum hormone profiles were assessed to correlate gut mycobiota shifts with systemic alterations.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
This study revealed that women with PCOS exhibit marked fungal dysbiosis in their gut microbiota. PCOS patients had significantly lower alpha diversity, as shown by Shannon and Simpson indices, and distinct fungal community structures as demonstrated by β-diversity analyses. At the phylum level, there was a consistent increase in Ascomycota and a reduction in Basidiomycota in PCOS patients. At the genus level, Saccharomyces, Candida, Zygosaccharomyces, Monascus, and Lentinula were significantly enriched, while Aspergillus, Asterotremella, Trichomonascus, and Cryptococcus were depleted. Notably, Saccharomyces and Lentinula were the dominant fungal taxa in PCOS, whereas Aspergillus, which may exert anti-inflammatory and probiotic-supporting effects, was significantly underrepresented.
Functionally, the fungal taxa enriched in PCOS patients contributed to altered pathways involving ceramide glucosyltransferase, uroporphyrinogen-III synthase, and dextransucrase, among others. These functional predictions suggest that gut fungi in PCOS may be involved in modulating host metabolism, immune signaling, and gut barrier function. Saccharomyces overgrowth, previously associated with immune activation and increased intestinal permeability, may exacerbate inflammation and metabolic stress in PCOS. Lentinula, typically a source of immune-stimulating β-glucans, may shift from immunomodulatory to pro-inflammatory roles under dysregulated conditions. In contrast, the depletion of Aspergillus—a β-galactosidase-producing genus linked to probiotic growth and anti-diabetic activity—may remove protective influences from the gut environment.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
This study introduces a compelling new dimension to PCOS pathogenesis by demonstrating that fungal dysbiosis, not just bacterial, plays a potentially significant role in disease expression. For clinicians, the findings underscore the need to expand microbiome diagnostics beyond bacterial sequencing, particularly in metabolically complex conditions like PCOS. The identification of Saccharomyces and Lentinula as enriched taxa, and Aspergillus as depleted, offers potential fungal biomarkers for disease stratification or treatment response. These fungal alterations may drive systemic inflammation, disrupt gut barrier integrity, and interfere with hormonal and metabolic signaling.
Therapeutically, the results open up new avenues for interventions aimed at modulating the gut mycobiome. Strategies may include antifungal probiotics, dietary modifications to reduce fungal overgrowth, or fungal metabolite targeting. Additionally, the study paves the way for interkingdom microbiome approaches that account for fungal-bacterial interactions, which may be particularly important in developing combination therapies for PCOS. These findings encourage integrative research into the gut–ovary axis that includes fungi as primary actors rather than passive bystanders.
Alterations of bacteriome, mycobiome and metabolome characteristics in PCOS patients with normal/overweight individuals
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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The study explores how alterations in gut bacteria, fungi, and serum metabolites are linked to polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), revealing potential diagnostic markers and the role of hyperandrogenemia in disease development.
What was studied?
The study investigated the alterations in the bacteriome, mycobiome, and metabolome of patients with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) compared to healthy individuals, specifically focusing on normal and overweight participants. The aim was to evaluate the potential for developing microbiota-related diagnostic markers for PCOS through integrated multi-omics approaches.
Who was studied?
The study involved 88 fecal samples from PCOS patients and healthy controls, including both normal-weight and overweight individuals. Additionally, 87 serum samples were analyzed to investigate the metabolic profiles of these groups.
What were the most important findings?
The study found significant differences in the gut microbiota, mycobiome, and serum metabolome between PCOS patients and healthy controls. Several bacterial genera, such as Ruminococcus torques, Escherichia/Shigella, and Lactobacillus, were identified as distinctive for PCOS patients, with notable differences between normal and overweight participants. PCOS patients exhibited a distinct fungal profile, with an overrepresentation of genera like Candida, Malassezia, and Kazachstania. Fungal diversity was lower in PCOS patients compared to healthy individuals, particularly in those with obesity.
Serum metabolite analysis revealed significant differences between PCOS and healthy groups, particularly in metabolites linked to androgen levels, insulin resistance, and lipids. These metabolites showed strong associations with the clinical markers of PCOS, such as the free androgen index (FAI) and other hormonal and metabolic parameters. The study developed diagnostic models based on serum metabolites, fungal taxa, and bacterial taxa. The metabolite-based model was found to be more accurate than the microbiota-based model in distinguishing between PCOS and healthy controls, especially for patients with normal BMI.
What are the implications of this study?
The study highlights the critical role of hyperandrogenemia in driving gut microbial dysbiosis and metabolic alterations in PCOS patients. This finding suggests that dysbiosis in both the gut bacteriome and mycobiome could be a significant factor in the pathophysiology of PCOS, independent of BMI. The identification of specific microbial signatures and serum metabolites offers a promising avenue for developing more accurate diagnostic methods for PCOS, potentially aiding in earlier diagnosis and personalized treatment approaches. Additionally, the findings may prompt further research into how gut fungi, particularly Candida, contribute to the disease, given their interaction with metabolic and hormonal pathways.
Altered Composition of Microbiota in Women with Ovarian Endometrioma: Microbiome Analyses of Extracellular Vesicles in the Peritoneal Fluid
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This study identifies microbiota alterations in ovarian endometrioma, showing distinct microbial shifts in peritoneal fluid extracellular vesicles. Enrichment of Pseudomonas and Acinetobacter, alongside depletion of Propionibacterium and Actinomyces, suggests inflammatory contributions to pathogenesis. Findings highlight the diagnostic potential of microbiota-derived EVs in endometrioma management.
What was studied?
This study examined the microbiota composition in the peritoneal fluid of women with ovarian endometrioma, focusing specifically on microbiome analyses of extracellular vesicles (EVs). Extracellular vesicles are nanometer-sized particles released by cells, including bacteria, that carry microbial DNA and signaling molecules. The research aimed to determine if women with ovarian endometrioma exhibit distinct microbiota profiles in their peritoneal fluid compared to women without endometriosis. Microbial DNA was sequenced using next-generation sequencing (NGS) of the 16S rDNA V3–V4 regions, allowing for detailed taxonomic identification and comparative analysis.
Who was studied?
The study included 45 women diagnosed with histological evidence of ovarian endometrioma and 45 surgical controls confirmed to be free of endometriosis. Participants were recruited from Asan Medical Center, and peritoneal fluid samples were collected during laparoscopic procedures. Women with endometriosis were classified as having advanced-stage disease, and none of the participants had taken antibiotics, probiotics, or hormonal treatments for 12 weeks prior to sample collection.
What were the most important findings?
The microbiota composition of extracellular vesicles in peritoneal fluid was markedly different between women with ovarian endometrioma and controls. Alpha diversity analysis showed no significant differences in species richness between groups, but beta diversity analysis revealed distinct microbial community shifts in the endometriosis group (p < 0.001). Taxonomic profiling demonstrated increased abundances of Acinetobacter, Pseudomonas, Streptococcus, and Enhydrobacter in women with ovarian endometrioma. Conversely, Propionibacterium, Actinomyces, and Rothia were significantly decreased in the endometriosis group (p < 0.05).
At the family level, Pseudomonadaceae and Moraxellaceae were notably enriched in the endometriosis samples, while Veillonellaceae, Propionibacteriaceae, and Actinomycetaceae were reduced. The data also indicated a significant increase in Pseudomonadales and a decline in Actinomycetales at the order level (p < 0.05). These findings suggest that the altered microbiota composition in extracellular vesicles of the peritoneal fluid may contribute to the inflammatory microenvironment observed in ovarian endometrioma.
Microbial Group
Ovarian Endometrioma
Clinical Implications
Acinetobacter
Increased
Linked to inflammation and immune response in the peritoneal cavity
Pseudomonas
Increased
Associated with pathogenic processes in ovarian endometrioma
Streptococcus
Increased
Potential contributor to local inflammation and immune modulation
Enhydrobacter
Increased
May play a role in extracellular signaling and immune responses
Propionibacterium
Decreased
Loss may disrupt protective anti-inflammatory effects
Indicates loss of protective and commensal populations
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study provides compelling evidence that women with ovarian endometrioma possess distinct microbial communities in the peritoneal environment, carried via extracellular vesicles. The enrichment of pathogenic genera such as Pseudomonas and Acinetobacter, alongside the depletion of protective taxa like Propionibacterium and Actinomyces, suggests that these microbial imbalances could play a role in local inflammation and disease progression. These findings underscore the potential of microbiota-derived EVs as non-invasive biomarkers for ovarian endometrioma and open the door for targeted microbiome-modulating therapies to alleviate inflammatory responses and halt disease progression.
Anti-Endometriotic Effects of Pueraria Flower Extract: A Novel Therapeutic Approach
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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The study explored the effects of Pueraria Flower Extract (PFE) on human endometriotic cells and mice, showing that PFE inhibits cell adhesion, migration, and MMP expression, and reduces lesion formation. Highlighting PFE's potential as a non-invasive treatment alternative, the research provides insights into molecular targets for future therapies in managing endometriosis, a condition with limited current treatments.
What was studied?
This study investigated the anti-endometriotic effects of Pueraria flower extract (PFE) on human endometriotic cells and a mouse model of endometriosis. It evaluated the extract's impact on cellular adhesion, migration, and the expression of matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs), key factors in the establishment of endometriotic lesion.
Who was studied?
The research focused on human-immortalized endometriotic cell lines (11Z and 12Z) and mesothelial Met5A cells in vitro. Additionally, a mouse model of induced endometriosis was used to evaluate the effects of PFE in vivo.
What were the most important findings?
Inhibition of Cell Adhesion and Migration: PFE significantly suppressed the adhesion of endometriotic cells to mesothelial cells and reduced cell migration in wound-healing and transwell assays.
Reduction in MMP Expression: PFE decreased both mRNA and protein levels of MMP-2 and MMP-9, enzymes crucial for tissue invasion and lesion establishment in endometriosis.
ERK1/2 Signaling Activation: The study demonstrated that PFE activates the ERK1/2 pathway, which played a role in inhibiting cell migration. This effect was reversed when an ERK1/2 inhibitor was introduced.
Lesion Suppression in Mice: Oral administration of PFE to mice significantly reduced the number of endometriotic lesions without causing toxicity or weight loss.
Role of Isoflavones: Major isoflavones such as tectorigenin were identified as active compounds in PFE, contributing to its anti-endometriotic effects.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings suggest that PFE and its active compounds, particularly tectorigenin, could serve as potential therapeutic agents for endometriosis. By targeting matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) activity and the ERK1/2 pathway, PFE may provide a novel, non-hormonal intervention to mitigate lesion formation and progression. This research highlights the potential for plant-derived compounds in developing treatments that reduce the recurrence and side effects associated with conventional endometriosis therapies.
Antibiotic therapy with metronidazole reduces endometriosis disease progression in mice: a potential role for gut microbiota
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Antibiotic treatment in mice with surgically-induced endometriosis reduced disease progression by targeting gut bacteria, significantly decreasing lesion size and inflammation. This study suggests a potential gut microbiota link to endometriosis and indicates a novel treatment approach, warranting further investigation for human application.
What was studied?
The research investigated the impact of antibiotic treatment on the progression of endometriosis, specifically examining how altering the gut microbiota with antibiotics affects the development of endometriotic lesions in a mouse model.
Who was studied?
Mice subjected to surgically induced endometriosis were studied. These mice were treated with either broad-spectrum antibiotics or metronidazole to assess the effects of these treatments on the progression of endometriosis.
What were the most important findings?
The study found that antibiotic therapy, especially broad-spectrum antibiotics, significantly reduced the size and proliferation of endometriotic lesions compared to vehicle-treated mice. It also reduced inflammatory responses within the lesions. Treatment with metronidazole alone, unlike neomycin, resulted in significantly smaller lesions. Furthermore, fecal microbiota transfer from mice with endometriosis could restore lesion growth and inflammation in metronidazole-treated mice.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
These results suggest a crucial role of gut bacteria in promoting endometriosis progression in mice, indicating that manipulating the gut microbiota could offer a new therapeutic strategy for managing endometriosis. If these findings apply to humans, they could lead to the development of improved diagnostic tools and personalized treatment strategies, potentially with fewer side effects than current hormone therapy and surgical options. Further research is needed to understand the mechanisms involved and to explore the translatability of these findings to human patients.
Antibiotic therapy with metronidazole reduces endometriosis disease progression in mice: a potential role for gut microbiota
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This study shows that antibiotic therapy with metronidazole reduces endometriotic lesion growth and inflammation in mice by targeting the gut microbiota, particularly Bacteroidetes. Findings suggest that microbiota-targeted treatments may offer new therapeutic avenues for endometriosis management.
What Was Studied?
This study examined the impact of antibiotic therapy with metronidazole on endometriosis disease progression in a mouse model, exploring its potential effects on gut microbiota and inflammation. Researchers induced endometriosis in mice through surgical transplantation of uterine tissue onto the peritoneal wall. Mice were then treated with either broad-spectrum antibiotics (vancomycin, neomycin, metronidazole, and ampicillin) or metronidazole alone, with control groups receiving vehicle-only treatment. The primary goal was to determine if modulating gut bacteria through antibiotic therapy could reduce endometriotic lesion growth and inflammation, potentially revealing gut microbiota as a therapeutic target.
Who Was Studied?
The study utilized a well-established mouse model of surgically induced endometriosis, where uterine tissue from estrus-stage mice was autologously transplanted onto the peritoneal wall. Mice were separated into groups receiving either broad-spectrum antibiotics, metronidazole alone, or vehicle treatments. To assess the effect of gut microbiota on disease progression, fecal transplantation experiments were performed, where feces from endometriosis-induced mice were gavaged into metronidazole-treated mice to observe the restoration of lesion growth and inflammation.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The findings demonstrated that antibiotic therapy, particularly with metronidazole, significantly reduced the size and volume of endometriotic lesions in mice. Mice treated with broad-spectrum antibiotics showed a five-fold reduction in lesion size and markedly fewer proliferating cells and macrophages within the lesions compared to vehicle-treated controls (p < 0.01). Metronidazole-treated mice specifically exhibited smaller ectopic lesions than those receiving neomycin or vehicle, suggesting a unique sensitivity of certain gut bacteria to metronidazole's antimicrobial activity. Importantly, inflammation markers, including IL-1β, TNF-α, IL-6, and TGF-β1, were significantly reduced in the peritoneal fluid of metronidazole-treated mice, indicating a diminished inflammatory response.
Additionally, fecal transplantation experiments highlighted the role of gut microbiota in lesion progression. Oral gavage of feces from endometriosis-induced mice restored lesion growth and inflammation in metronidazole-treated mice, implicating gut bacteria as contributors to disease persistence. 16S rRNA sequencing of fecal samples showed that Bacteroidetes were enriched in endometriosis-induced mice and nearly absent in metronidazole-treated mice, suggesting that the suppression of specific microbial populations might underlie the observed therapeutic effects. This reduction in Bacteroidetes correlated with decreased inflammatory responses and smaller lesion sizes, underscoring the interplay between gut microbiota and endometriosis pathology.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study
The study provides compelling evidence that targeting the gut microbiota with antibiotics like metronidazole can effectively reduce endometriotic lesion growth and inflammation in a mouse model. The findings suggest that Bacteroidetes may contribute to lesion persistence and immune activation, and their depletion through metronidazole treatment alleviates these pathological effects. This raises the possibility of microbiota-targeted therapies as a novel approach to managing endometriosis, potentially offering a non-hormonal alternative to traditional treatments. Furthermore, the study highlights the significance of gut microbiota modulation in controlling systemic and local inflammatory responses, paving the way for research into gut-mediated mechanisms of endometriosis and microbiome-based therapeutic strategies.
Antioxidant status in relation to heavy metals induced oxidative stress in patients with polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS)
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This study links elevated arsenic, cadmium, lead, and mercury levels to oxidative stress and low antioxidant defenses in PCOS patients, highlighting heavy metal toxicity as a key contributor to endocrine dysfunction and microbiome imbalance.
What was studied?
This prospective case-control study examined the association between heavy metal exposure and oxidative stress in women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS). Specifically, the study measured serum levels of arsenic (As), cadmium (Cd), lead (Pb), and mercury (Hg), alongside antioxidant markers—superoxide dismutase (SOD) and glutathione (GSH)—to explore how these toxic metals contribute to oxidative damage and PCOS pathogenesis. By analyzing both the toxicant burden and oxidative biomarkers, the study aimed to clarify whether metal-induced oxidative stress plays a pivotal role in the disease process.
Who was studied?
A total of 106 women aged 19–35 participated in the study: 50 were diagnosed with PCOS according to the Rotterdam criteria, and 56 served as healthy controls. Participants were matched in age and excluded for conditions that might confound oxidative or endocrine measurements, including diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and infectious or metabolic disorders. Clinical and demographic data, including menstrual irregularities, acne, BMI, and blood pressure, were collected. Blood samples were analyzed for fasting glucose, HbA1c, lipid profile, luteinizing hormone (LH), antioxidant status (SOD and GSH), and serum heavy metal concentrations using inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS).
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed that women with PCOS had significantly elevated serum levels of arsenic, cadmium, lead, and mercury compared to controls. Concurrently, antioxidant defense markers were notably reduced in the PCOS group—SOD and GSH levels were both significantly lower. There were strong negative correlations between heavy metal levels and antioxidant markers: arsenic, lead, and mercury negatively correlated with GSH; arsenic and lead also negatively correlated with SOD. These findings support a mechanistic link between heavy metal burden and reduced antioxidant capacity in PCOS.
From a microbiome perspective, the accumulation of heavy metals like Cd, Pb, and Hg is known to promote dysbiosis. Specifically, these metals reduce beneficial gut bacteria such as Faecalibacterium prausnitzii and Bifidobacterium spp., while promoting pro-inflammatory taxa like Proteobacteria. The oxidative stress induced by metals may increase gut permeability (“leaky gut”), exacerbating systemic inflammation, a hallmark of PCOS. The decline in antioxidant defenses further allows these oxidative effects to persist, creating a vicious cycle of endocrine disruption and microbiome imbalance.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study presents compelling evidence that heavy metal exposure significantly contributes to oxidative stress and potentially accelerates PCOS pathogenesis. The diminished antioxidant defenses in PCOS patients exposed to elevated levels of As, Cd, Pb, and Hg suggest that environmental toxicants act as endocrine-disrupting chemicals, impairing reproductive and metabolic health. Clinically, this underscores the necessity of monitoring both oxidative biomarkers and heavy metal burden in PCOS diagnostics and management. Moreover, therapeutic strategies aimed at detoxification—whether via chelation, dietary interventions, or antioxidant supplementation—could help restore oxidative balance and potentially benefit hormonal and microbiome health. Given the tight interplay between oxidative stress, endocrine signaling, and gut microbial composition, the findings advocate for a more integrative approach to PCOS care that includes environmental toxicology and gut microbiome modulation.
Are Heavy Metal Exposure and Trace Element Levels Related to Metabolic and Endocrine Problems in Polycystic Ovary Syndrome?
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This study found that women with PCOS had elevated cadmium, antimony, lead, and mercury levels, alongside reduced zinc and copper. These imbalances correlated with insulin resistance, oxidative stress, and inflammation, suggesting that metal exposure contributes to PCOS pathogenesis and potentially alters the gut microbiome.
What was studied?
This prospective clinical study investigated the relationship between serum levels of heavy metals and trace elements and their association with metabolic and endocrine parameters in women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS). Specifically, the study evaluated arsenic, chromium, cadmium, lead, mercury, antimony (Sb), zinc (Zn), and copper (Cu), and how these elements influence oxidative stress, inflammation, insulin resistance, and clinical features like hirsutism in PCOS patients. The goal was to determine if exposure to toxic metals and altered micronutrient profiles could contribute to PCOS pathophysiology via oxidative and inflammatory pathways.
Who was studied?
The study involved 154 women, 84 diagnosed with PCOS according to the Rotterdam criteria and 70 age-matched healthy controls. All participants were screened to exclude confounding endocrine, metabolic, and inflammatory disorders. Clinical assessments included BMI, waist-hip ratio, Ferriman-Gallwey score (FGS) for hirsutism, and metabolic markers such as fasting glucose, insulin, HOMA-IR, and lipid profiles. Blood samples were analyzed for hormonal parameters, oxidative stress indicators (MDA, TOS, TAS, SOD, OSI), inflammatory markers (TNFα, HsCRP), and serum levels of heavy metals and trace elements using inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry.
What were the most important findings?
Women with PCOS exhibited significantly elevated levels of cadmium, antimony, mercury, and lead, and significantly reduced serum levels of copper and zinc compared to controls. Importantly, the heavy metals cadmium, lead, and antimony positively correlated with fasting glucose and insulin resistance (HOMA-IR), as well as oxidative stress (MDA, TOS) and inflammation (TNFα, HsCRP), while showing negative correlations with antioxidant defense markers (TAS, SOD, OSI). Zinc and copper levels were significantly lower in the PCOS group and correlated with critical markers: zinc negatively with MDA and TNFα, and positively with TAS, suggesting a protective role against oxidative damage.
From a microbiome standpoint, the implications are striking. Elevated cadmium and lead promote gut dysbiosis by favoring inflammatory taxa such as Proteobacteria and reducing SCFA-producing genera like Faecalibacterium prausnitzii. Zinc deficiency suppresses beneficial microbes like Bifidobacterium, while lower copper levels impair mucosal immunity and reduce microbial diversity. These shifts likely exacerbate systemic inflammation and metabolic dysfunction in PCOS, further reinforcing the microbiome–trace element–endocrine axis.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study provides robust evidence that environmental heavy metal exposure and trace element imbalance contribute significantly to the oxidative stress and low-grade inflammation underlying PCOS. The data support the role of cadmium, antimony, and lead as endocrine disruptors and metabolic toxins that may worsen insulin resistance and hirsutism. In contrast, reduced zinc and copper levels reflect compromised antioxidant defense and immune regulation. Clinically, these findings justify the integration of trace element and toxic metal screening into PCOS diagnostics. Furthermore, targeted therapies, such as zinc supplementation, chelation strategies, or dietary interventions to limit metal exposure, may enhance treatment outcomes by reducing oxidative burden and restoring microbiome balance. This multifactorial view of PCOS, incorporating toxicology, endocrinology, and gut ecology, opens new opportunities for personalized care and prevention strategies.
Association Between Dietary Patterns and Bacterial Vaginosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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A diet high in processed foods and sugar increases bacterial vaginosis (BV) risk, while a plant-based diet lowers it. This study highlights the importance of dietary choices in vaginal health, providing insights for clinicians on how nutrition influences the vaginal microbiome.
What was Studied?
This study investigated the relationship between dietary patterns and bacterial vaginosis (BV) in women. Researchers analyzed how different diets influenced BV risk, focusing on five major dietary patterns: "Healthy diet," "Unhealthy diet," "Ovo-vegetarian diet," "Pseudo-Mediterranean diet," and "Western diet."
Who was Studied?
The study included 144 women diagnosed with BV and 151 healthy controls. Participants were recruited from a gynecology clinic in Tehran, Iran, between November 2020 and June 2021. Researchers assessed dietary intake using a food frequency questionnaire and diagnosed BV using the Amsel criteria.
Most Important Findings
Women who followed an "Unhealthy diet" high in sugar, solid oils, red meat, sweets, fried potatoes, and refined grains had a significantly higher risk of BV. Those in the highest tertile of this diet were more than three times as likely to have BV compared to those in the lowest tertile.
Conversely, the "Ovo-vegetarian diet," rich in vegetables, beans, whole grains, and eggs, was strongly associated with a lower BV risk. Women in the highest adherence group for this diet had an 84% lower chance of BV compared to those in the lowest adherence group.
The study also observed a protective but not statistically significant effect of the "Pseudo-Mediterranean diet," which includes nuts, fish, olives, and olive oil. No clear association was found between BV and the "Healthy diet" or "Western diet."
Microbiome analysis linked the "Unhealthy diet" with a disruption in vaginal flora, favoring BV-associated bacteria like Gardnerella vaginalis, Bacteroides spp., Mobiluncus spp., and Mycoplasma hominis. In contrast, the "Ovo-vegetarian diet" promoted conditions favorable for Lactobacillus dominance, which helps maintain vaginal health.
Implications of the Study
This study reinforces the role of diet in vaginal microbiome balance and BV risk. Clinicians should encourage patients to reduce processed foods, refined sugars, and saturated fats while promoting a plant-based diet rich in fiber, whole grains, and essential nutrients. Future research should explore whether dietary modifications can serve as an effective strategy for BV prevention and treatment.
Association between dietary patterns and premenstrual disorders: A cross-sectional analysis of 1382 college students in China
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This study found that adherence to the Traditional South China Diet, rich in rice and animal proteins, is linked to reduced premenstrual disorders. Dietary patterns may influence PMD symptoms, suggesting the potential for tailored nutrition and microbiome-targeted therapies in management.
What was studied?
This study conducted a cross-sectional analysis to examine the association between dietary patterns and premenstrual disorders (PMDs), including premenstrual syndrome (PMS) and premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD), among young women in China. Using data from 1382 female college students, dietary intake and PMD symptoms were assessed to identify how regional and specific dietary patterns influence the prevalence and severity of PMDs.
Who was studied?
The participants were female medical and health science students aged 17–30 years from Sichuan University in China. Among them, 24.4% met the criteria for PMDs, with 22.2% classified as PMS and 2.17% as probable PMDD. The study evaluated their dietary habits via food frequency questionnaires, assessed PMD symptoms using a validated tool, and controlled for lifestyle, psychological, and demographic factors.
What were the most important findings?
The study identified three main dietary patterns: Traditional North China Diet (TNCD), Traditional South China Diet (TSCD), and Lacto-ovo Vegetarian Diet (LVD). The TSCD, characterized by high intake of rice, red meat, poultry, and fresh vegetables, showed a statistically significant inverse association with PMDs. This means higher adherence to TSCD correlated with reduced PMD prevalence and symptom severity across both PMS and PMDD subtypes. Notably, rice consumption alone was inversely associated with PMDs, potentially due to its effects on brain serotonin regulation and mood stabilization. While animal protein sources like red meat and poultry provided essential micronutrients linked to lower PMD risks, such as vitamin D, B vitamins, iron, and zinc, their role remains complex due to variability in hormonal content and potential metabolic effects. The study also found that this dietary association was independent of comorbid depression/anxiety, BMI, and other confounders, and was robust across different symptom severities and onset timings. The findings suggest that localized dietary patterns may play a crucial role in managing or preventing PMDs, although causal inferences are limited by the cross-sectional design.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This research highlights that adherence to regional dietary patterns, particularly the Traditional South China Diet, may serve as an effective, culturally relevant approach to reduce PMD burden in young women. While the study does not directly involve microbiome signatures, the dietary patterns identified align with diets known to influence gut microbial composition and function, suggesting an indirect link whereby diet modulates PMD symptoms, potentially via the gut-brain axis and microbiome-related pathways. Clinicians should consider dietary counseling tailored to local food practices as part of holistic PMD management. Furthermore, the study underscores the need for prospective and mechanistic research to confirm these associations and explore how dietary modulation of the gut microbiome can be leveraged to develop targeted microbiome-based interventions for PMDs. Such insights could pave the way for non-pharmacological strategies that complement existing therapies, improving patient outcomes through diet and microbiome health.
Association between endometriosis and risk of histological subtypes of ovarian cancer: a pooled analysis of case–control studies
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Endometriosis significantly increases the risk of clear-cell, low-grade serous, and endometrioid ovarian cancers. This study highlights the need for subtype-specific ovarian cancer surveillance and prevention strategies.
This study examined the association between endometriosis and the risk of specific histological subtypes of ovarian cancer. It involved a pooled analysis of 13 Ovarian Cancer Association Consortium case-control studies. The research aimed to clarify whether the increased risk associated with endometriosis extended to all invasive histological subtypes of ovarian cancer or was limited to specific subtypes.
Who Was Studied?
The study analyzed data from 13,226 controls and 9,818 women with ovarian cancer (7,911 with invasive and 1,907 with borderline ovarian cancer). Among these, 738 women with invasive cancer and 168 with borderline cancer reported a history of endometriosis. The data collection spanned multiple international sites and included self-reported histories of endometriosis.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study found that a history of endometriosis significantly increased the risk for three specific subtypes of invasive ovarian cancer: clear-cell, low-grade serous, and endometrioid cancers. The odds ratios for these associations were 3.05, 2.11, and 2.04, respectively. In contrast, no significant association was observed with high-grade serous or mucinous subtypes, nor with borderline ovarian cancers. The findings suggest that endometriosis acts as a precursor lesion for clear-cell and endometrioid ovarian cancers, with molecular similarities supporting this hypothesis. Notably, the association with low-grade serous cancer requires further study, as this subtype showed distinct molecular characteristics, such as a higher likelihood of KRAS or BRAF mutations compared to TP53 mutations in high-grade serous cancers.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
This study underscores the need for clinicians to recognize the increased risk of specific ovarian cancer subtypes in women with endometriosis. Understanding the mechanisms behind the malignant transformation of endometriosis could enable the identification of high-risk individuals for tailored surveillance or preventive strategies, such as risk-reducing surgery. The study also highlights the importance of considering histological subtypes in ovarian cancer research, reflecting its heterogeneous nature and the need for subtype-specific prevention, screening, and treatment approaches.
Association between Gut Microbiota and Breast Cancer: Diet as a Potential Modulating Factor
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Breast Cancer
Breast Cancer
Traditionally linked to genetic predispositions and environmental exposures, emerging evidence highlights the microbiome as a critical and underappreciated factor influencing breast cancer progression, immune response, and treatment outcomes.
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This study links reduced gut microbial diversity and specific taxa (e.g., Acidaminococcus, Hungatella) to breast cancer, influenced by diet. Findings suggest microbiome-targeted interventions and dietary strategies could mitigate breast cancer risk.
What Was Studied?
This study examined the association between gut microbiota composition and breast cancer, focusing on the role of diet as a potential modulating factor. Researchers conducted a case-control study involving 42 newly diagnosed, treatment-naïve BCa patients and 44 age-matched cancer-free controls. The gut microbiome was analyzed through 16S rRNA sequencing, and dietary patterns were assessed using the National Cancer Institute Diet History Questionnaire.
Who Was Studied?
Participants included females aged 20–89 years from the Oregon Health & Science University. breast cancer patients were diagnosed through biopsy and had not yet undergone any treatment. Cancer-free controls were matched by age and underwent recent mammograms with non-suspicious results. The study collected fecal samples, dietary data, and comprehensive lifestyle information to ensure robust comparisons.
Most Important Findings
The study identified significant differences in the gut microbiome composition between breast cancer cases and controls, including reduced microbial diversity among breast cancer patients, indicative of dysbiosis. Specifically, the genera Acidaminococcus, Hungatella, and Tyzzerella were enriched, while controls exhibited enrichment of genera such as Christensenellaceae and Dialister. These findings were linked to dietary patterns: Acidaminococcus correlated with lower fruit intake, Hungatella with reduced dairy intake but increased vegetable consumption, and Tyzzerella was not significantly associated with dietary variables. Importantly, the reduced diversity and altered microbial profiles in breast cancer patients align with previous evidence suggesting a role for gut dysbiosis in cancer progression via immune modulation and microbial metabolite production.
Greatest Implications
This study highlights the gut microbiome's potential as a biomarker for breast cancer risk and emphasizes the role of diet in modulating microbial composition. Dysbiosis, characterized by an imbalance in gut microbiota, is linked to breast cancer, suggesting that microbiome-targeted dietary interventions could aid in prevention and management. For example, increased consumption of whole fruits may help reduce levels of Acidaminococcus, a genus enriched in breast cancer patients, while higher dairy intake could lower the abundance of Hungatella, a genus associated with TMAO production and cancer-promoting pathways. Interestingly, the study also found that greater vegetable consumption was linked to higher levels of Hungatella, which has been associated with increased risks of both breast and colorectal cancer. These findings underscore the complexity of dietary influences on the gut microbiome and their potential role in cancer prevention.
Association Between Heavy Metal Exposure and Bacterial Vaginosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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This cross-sectional study identified a strong link between elevated serum lead and cadmium levels and increased risk of bacterial vaginosis. It suggests that heavy metal exposure may disrupt vaginal microbiota stability and immunity, contributing to BV susceptibility and pointing to new environmental factors in BV prevention strategies.
What was Studied?
The study examined the association between exposure to heavy metals, specifically lead, cadmium, and mercury, and the risk of bacterial vaginosis (BV) among American women. Using a cross-sectional design, the researchers analyzed data from 2,493 women aged 18 to 49 years who participated in the 2001–2004 cycles of the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES). They measured serum levels of these heavy metals and assessed BV status using Nugent scoring, aiming to clarify whether environmental exposure to heavy metals correlates with BV prevalence.
Who was Studied?
The study included 2,493 American women aged between 18 and 49 years. All participants were selected from NHANES datasets, which provide a representative sample of the U.S. population. The researchers collected vaginal swabs to diagnose BV using the Nugent score and measured serum concentrations of lead, cadmium, and mercury. They controlled for several covariates such as age, body mass index, socioeconomic factors, cholesterol levels, and physical activity to ensure reliable statistical analysis.
Most important findings
The study found a significant positive association between serum lead and cadmium levels and the risk of developing bacterial vaginosis. Specifically, women with the highest serum lead concentrations had a 35% increased risk of BV compared to those with the lowest levels. Similarly, higher cadmium levels were associated with a 41% increased risk of BV in fully adjusted models. However, the researchers found no significant association between serum mercury levels and BV risk.
Stratified analyses revealed that the positive association between lead exposure and BV was more pronounced in women aged 37 to 49 years, those with lower education levels, and those with a higher body mass index. For cadmium, the risk was especially higher among women aged 18 to 24 and 37 to 49 years, and among those of non-Hispanic white and black ethnicity. These results suggest that lead and cadmium may influence vaginal microbiota stability, possibly through immunotoxic or endocrine-disrupting mechanisms, contributing to vaginal dysbiosis and increased BV susceptibility.
Implications of this Study
This study provides the first epidemiological evidence linking heavy metal exposure to increased risk of bacterial vaginosis. The findings suggest that environmental pollutants may act as overlooked risk factors in BV pathogenesis by compromising host immune function, disrupting hormonal balance, and potentially altering the vaginal microbiome. Clinicians and public health officials should consider environmental heavy metal exposure as part of BV risk assessment and prevention strategies. Reducing heavy metal exposure through regulatory policies and patient education could offer an additional layer of protection against BV and its associated reproductive health risks. These results highlight the importance of integrating environmental factors into the broader framework of microbiome-related disease prevention.
Association between Polycystic Ovary Syndrome and Gut Microbiota
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This study demonstrates that gut dysbiosis in PCOS is not just correlative but causative. FMT and Lactobacillus transplantation restored hormonal balance and ovarian morphology in PCOS rats, confirming gut microbiota as a viable therapeutic target.
What Was Studied?
This study examined the causal relationship between gut microbiota dysbiosis and the pathophysiology of polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) using a letrozole-induced rat model. The researchers aimed to determine whether changes in gut microbiota are not merely consequences of PCOS but actively contribute to its development and progression. They evaluated bacterial composition, estrous cycles, sex hormone levels, and ovarian morphology in rats treated with letrozole to induce PCOS. They then investigated whether modulating the gut microbiota through fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) or Lactobacillus transplantation could reverse PCOS phenotypes. This intervention-based design enabled them to assess the therapeutic potential of microbiota manipulation.
Who Was Studied?
The study used 32 female Sprague-Dawley rats, divided into four groups: a control group, a PCOS group induced by daily oral administration of letrozole, a PCOS group treated with Lactobacillus transplantation, and a PCOS group treated with FMT from healthy rats. The authors collected fecal, serum, and ovarian tissue samples at baseline and post-intervention to evaluate microbiota composition and systemic hormonal effects. This preclinical model allowed for a mechanistic investigation of the microbiota-hormone interaction and its role in reproductive dysfunction.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study found that letrozole-induced PCOS rats exhibited classic PCOS phenotypes: disrupted estrous cycles, elevated androgen levels, and cystic ovarian morphology with diminished granulosa layers. These rats also showed marked gut microbiota dysbiosis, characterized by decreased abundance of Lactobacillus, Ruminococcus, and Clostridium, and increased levels of Prevotella. Quantitative PCR confirmed these microbial shifts, while DGGE and sequence analysis further identified species such as Prevotella melaninogenica, Pseudomonas monteilii, and Roseburia intestinalis as more abundant in PCOS rats, and Lactobacillus johnsonii and Ruminococcus torques as depleted.
Following treatment, both FMT and Lactobacillus transplantation improved estrous cycling and normalized ovarian morphology. Hormonal analysis showed that these interventions decreased testosterone and androstenedione while increasing estradiol and estrone levels. FMT produced more pronounced effects than Lactobacillus alone. Importantly, microbial restoration accompanied hormonal normalization, particularly with increased Lactobacillus and Clostridium and decreased Prevotella. These findings provide direct evidence that gut microbial composition can influence endocrine pathways central to PCOS, potentially through mechanisms involving modulation of estrogen biosynthesis and androgen metabolism.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
This study provides strong preclinical evidence that gut microbiota dysbiosis is not merely a byproduct of PCOS but actively contributes to its endocrine and reproductive features. The observed reversal of PCOS symptoms through FMT and Lactobacillus transplantation suggests that targeted microbial therapies may offer a novel, non-hormonal strategy for treating PCOS. Clinically, these findings support the inclusion of microbiota analysis in the diagnostic and therapeutic planning for PCOS, especially in patients resistant to standard hormonal therapies or those with gastrointestinal symptoms. The identification of Prevotella as a potentially pathogenic genus and Lactobacillus as beneficial aligns with emerging microbiota-based therapeutic models across endocrine disorders. The broader implication is that gut microbiota modulation, through FMT, probiotics, or dietary interventions, could become a cornerstone in managing PCOS by targeting its underlying metabolic and inflammatory components rather than solely addressing reproductive symptoms
Association Between Smoking and Premenstrual Syndrome: A Meta-Analysis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This meta-analysis identifies a significant association between smoking and increased risk of PMS and PMDD. Women who smoke are more likely to experience these disorders, with stronger effects in PMDD.
What was reviewed?
This meta-analysis systematically reviewed studies investigating the association between smoking and premenstrual syndrome (PMS). The authors sought to quantify the relationship between smoking behaviors and the risk of developing PMS or its more severe form, premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD). Thirteen studies involving 25,828 participants were included in this analysis, which aimed to synthesize the results from multiple cohorts, case-control, and cross-sectional studies. The review specifically examined the effect of smoking on the likelihood of developing PMS, with a focus on the severity of symptoms and potential biological mechanisms.
Who was reviewed?
The studies reviewed in this meta-analysis involved a range of populations, including university students, general populations, and patients from different regions. Participants were primarily women of reproductive age, including those diagnosed with PMS or PMDD. The reviewed studies used varying methods for assessing smoking (e.g., self-reported smoking status, smoking quantity) and PMS (e.g., standardized questionnaires, prospective symptom tracking). The sample sizes ranged from smaller case-control studies with fewer than 100 participants to larger cross-sectional studies with over 3,000 participants.
What were the most important findings?
The meta-analysis found a statistically significant association between smoking and the increased risk of PMS. Specifically, smoking was linked to a moderate increase in the odds of developing PMS. This relationship was even stronger for PMDD. The results indicated that women who smoke are more likely to experience PMS, with a stronger association observed in women with the more severe form of PMS, PMDD. Interestingly, the study also identified that smoking behavior during the luteal phase of the menstrual cycle may be influenced by hormonal fluctuations, with nicotine intake potentially exacerbating mood disturbances commonly associated with PMS. Nicotine’s effects on the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis, which is already compromised in PMS, may worsen the stress response, further complicating both PMS and Tobacco Use Disorder in this population.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The findings suggest that smoking should be considered a modifiable risk factor for PMS and PMDD. The moderate increase in risk, particularly for PMDD, highlights the need for targeted interventions in women who smoke, particularly those suffering from PMS. Clinicians should be aware of the potential exacerbating effects of smoking on menstrual health and consider integrating smoking cessation strategies into the management plans for women with PMS or PMDD. Additionally, the review emphasizes the need for further research into the underlying biological mechanisms, including the role of nicotine in neurocircuitry and stress responses, to improve treatment strategies for both PMS and smoking dependence.
Association of the Cervical Microbiota With Pregnancy Outcome in a Subfertile Population Undergoing In Vitro Fertilization: A Case-Control Study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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The study investigated the link between cervical microbiota and IVF outcomes in subfertile women. It found that higher microbial diversity and specific bacterial abundances correlated with successful pregnancy. These insights suggest potential for microbiota-based diagnostics and treatments to enhance IVF success.
What Was Studied?
The study focused on the association between the composition of cervical microbiota and pregnancy outcomes in a subfertile population undergoing in vitro fertilization (IVF). Specifically, it aimed to characterize the cervical microbiota of patients undergoing embryo transfer (ET) and assess whether the composition of these microbiota is associated with the outcomes of the IVF treatments. The study utilized high-throughput sequencing technology to analyze the cervical microbiota and explored factors contributing to the observed compositions.
Who Was Studied?
The participants in this study were infertile female patients undergoing IVF treatment at the Reproductive Center of Shengjing Hospital of China Medical University. The study included 100 patients who met specific inclusion criteria: aged between 20 to 40, undergoing assisted reproductive technology with their own gametes, and transferring two cleavage-stage embryos. Patients with autoimmune, endocrine, cervical, or endometrial diseases or blood contamination of collected samples were excluded.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
Diversity of Microbiota: Higher α diversity in the cervical microbiota was observed in the clinical pregnancy groups compared to non-pregnancy groups, especially in fresh IVF-ET cycles. This suggests a richer microbial environment may be associated with positive pregnancy outcomes.
Microbial Composition: Significant differences in the β diversity (overall microbiota composition) were noted between pregnancy outcomes in both fresh and frozen-thawed cycles, with fresh cycles showing a more pronounced difference.
Specific Microorganisms: In fresh cycles, certain bacterial genera such as Lactobacillus, Akkermansia, Desulfovibrio, Atopobium, and Gardnerella showed different abundances between pregnant and non-pregnant groups. Lactobacillus, in particular, was found to be negatively correlated with other bacteria but positively correlated with serum estradiol levels, which are critical for pregnancy.
Predictive Analysis: Logistic regression analysis indicated that the composition of the cervical microbiota on the day of ET is significantly associated with clinical pregnancy outcomes.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
Clinical Implications: The study implies that understanding and potentially manipulating the cervical microbiota could enhance IVF success rates. This could lead to new diagnostic tools or treatment strategies, such as prebiotic or probiotic interventions to optimize the cervical microbial environment before embryo transfer.
Research Implications: The findings stress the need for more in-depth research into the role of the microbiota in fertility and pregnancy outcomes. It calls for longitudinal studies to explore how cervical microbiota changes over time and its interactions with hormonal levels and other physiological factors during fertility treatments.
Therapeutic Implications: Given the association between specific bacterial populations and pregnancy success, there might be potential for developing microbial-based therapies or supplements to support IVF procedures, enhancing the uterine environment for embryo implantation and pregnancy continuation.
This study opens up new pathways for both understanding and improving reproductive health interventions in subfertile populations undergoing assisted reproductive technologies.
Association of Trace Elements with Polycystic Ovary Syndrome in Women—A Case-Control Study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This case–control study links high copper and low molybdenum levels to metabolic, hormonal, and inflammatory changes in PCOS. Dietary habits influenced these levels, suggesting potential for targeted nutritional interventions.
What was studied?
This case–control study investigated the association between trace element levels and polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) in reproductive-aged women. Researchers measured concentrations of both essential trace elements including manganese (Mn), copper (Cu), zinc (Zn), selenium (Se), and molybdenum (Mo), and non-essential trace elements, arsenic (As), cadmium (Cd), mercury (Hg), and lead (Pb) in urine, serum, and whole blood. The study sought to examine how these elements might influence kidney and liver function, metabolic and endocrine parameters, and potential environmental or dietary exposure.
Who was studied?
The study population included 70 women, divided evenly between 35 diagnosed PCOS patients and 35 healthy controls. Participants were aged 20–39 years and selected based on strict criteria to exclude comorbidities such as diabetes, cardiovascular or autoimmune diseases, and recent hormonal treatments. All participants underwent clinical assessments, including anthropometrics, ultrasonography, and hormonal profiling. Dietary, environmental, and lifestyle exposures were gathered using detailed questionnaires, while biological samples were analyzed using high-precision inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry.
What were the most important findings?
The most significant findings showed that women with PCOS had elevated serum copper (Cu) and reduced whole blood and serum molybdenum (Mo) levels compared to controls. Although these differences lost statistical significance after adjusting for BMI, age, and hematocrit, other associations remained clinically relevant. Cu levels positively correlated with leukocyte count, suggesting an inflammatory link. Conversely, Mo levels negatively correlated with luteinizing hormone (LH), urinary bilirubin, and markers of kidney function such as proteinuria.
From a microbiome perspective, altered copper and molybdenum levels are particularly important. Elevated Cu can promote oxidative stress, disrupt mucosal immunity, and reduce microbial diversity, especially suppressing beneficial bacteria such as Faecalibacterium prausnitzii. Meanwhile, low Mo levels can impair molybdoenzyme function necessary for detoxification and redox regulation, which may result in the accumulation of inflammatory metabolites that disturb the gut barrier. These changes may exacerbate the chronic low-grade inflammation and hormonal dysregulation characteristic of PCOS. The study also identified that beef consumption correlated positively with Cu levels, and cereal and boiled vegetable consumption correlated positively with Mo levels, linking dietary sources directly to trace element concentrations.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study provides new insight into the potential role of Mo as well as supporting existing findings on Cu. It suggests that nutritional and environmental factors significantly influence the body’s trace element status, which in turn may modulate inflammation, liver and kidney function, and reproductive hormone levels in women with PCOS. Clinically, these findings support incorporating dietary assessments and trace element screening in the management of PCOS. More importantly, this study underscores a microbiome-relevant pathway: alterations in Cu and Mo not only influence host metabolism but likely affect gut microbial balance, further perpetuating systemic metabolic dysfunction. This integrative perspective could pave the way for dietary or supplemental interventions targeting TE imbalances to improve reproductive and metabolic outcomes in PCOS.
Associations Between Endometriosis and Gut Microbiota
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This case control study explores the gut microbiota's association with endometriosis in women, comparing 66 patients to 198 controls. Using 16S rRNA sequencing, it was found that patients have lower diversity in their gut bacteria and significant differences in the abundance of 12 bacterial types, suggesting that endometriosis may influence gut microbiota composition.
What was studied?
The study examined the gut microbiota in women with endometriosis compared to healthy controls. It aimed to explore differences based on disease localization, symptoms, or treatment and assess the gut microbiota’s potential role in the pathogenesis of endometriosis.
Who was studied?
66 women diagnosed with endometriosis at Skåne University Hospital were studied alongside 198 matched controls from the Malmö Offspring Study, assessing their gut microbiota through 16S rRNA sequencing.
What were the most important findings?
Significant findings include higher overall microbial diversity in controls compared to endometriosis patients, with specific differences in the abundance of 12 bacteria types between the two groups. After adjusting for false discovery rates, no significant microbiota differences were found within the endometriosis cohort.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study implies that gut microbiota may be altered in individuals with endometriosis, suggesting a possible link between gut microbiota and the pathogenesis or symptomatology of endometriosis. These findings highlight the need for further research on the gut microbiota’s role in endometriosis, potentially leading to new diagnostic and treatment strategies.
Associations Between Endometriosis and Gut Microbiota
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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The gut microbiota has been associated with many diseases, including endometriosis. However, very few studies have been conducted on this topic in human. This study aimed to investigate the association between endometriosis and gut microbiota. Women with endometriosis (N=66) were identified at the Department of Gynaecology and each patient was matched with three controls (N=198) from the general population. All participants answered questionnaires about socioeconomic data, medical history, and gastrointestinal symptoms and passed stool samples. Gut bacteria were analyzed using 16S ribosomal RNA sequencing, and in total, 58 bacteria were observed at genus level in both patients with endometriosis and controls. Comparisons of the microbiota between patients and controls and within the endometriosis cohort were performed. Both alpha and beta diversities were higher in controls than in patients. With the false discovery rate q<0.05, abundance of 12 bacteria belonging to the classes Bacilli, Bacteroidia, Clostridia, Coriobacteriia, and Gammaproteobacter differed significantly between patients and controls. Differences observed between patients with or without isolated ovarian endometriosis, involvement of the gastrointestinal tract, gastrointestinal symptoms, or hormonal treatment disappeared after calculation with false discovery rate. These findings indicate that the gut microbiota may be altered in endometriosis patients.
What Was Studied?
This study investigated the association between endometriosis and gut microbiota. Conducted at Skåne University Hospital in Sweden, the research aimed to understand how the gut microbiome differs in women diagnosed with endometriosis compared to healthy controls. The study included 66 women with endometriosis confirmed through laparoscopy or laparotomy and 198 age, BMI, and smoking-matched controls. Stool samples from both groups were analyzed using 16S ribosomal RNA sequencing to identify bacterial composition at the genus level. The primary objective was to compare the diversity and abundance of gut microbiota between the two groups and explore any microbiome changes correlated with endometriosis characteristics such as disease localization, gastrointestinal symptoms, or hormonal treatment.
Who Was Studied?
The study examined 66 women diagnosed with endometriosis recruited from the Department of Gynaecology at Skåne University Hospital. These participants were matched with 198 controls from the Malmö Offspring Study (MOS), ensuring similarities in age, BMI, and smoking status. Women in the endometriosis group were diagnosed based on clinical criteria, confirmed through surgical procedures, and were excluded if they had comorbid gastrointestinal conditions like Crohn's disease, ulcerative colitis, or irritable bowel syndrome (IBS). The control group, drawn from a population-based cohort, also passed stool samples and completed questionnaires about their medical history and gastrointestinal symptoms.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study found significant differences in gut microbiota diversity and composition between women with endometriosis and healthy controls. Notably, alpha and beta diversities were higher in the control group, suggesting a richer and more varied microbial population compared to endometriosis patients. At the genus level, 12 bacterial genera belonging to the classes Bacteroidia, Clostridia, Coriobacteriia, Bacilli, and Gammaproteobacteria differed significantly between groups. For instance, Bacteroides and Parabacteroides were elevated in endometriosis patients, while Paraprevotella and Lachnospira were found in lower abundance compared to controls. Additionally, there was a distinct alteration in the microbial community within the endometriosis cohort based on disease localization and the presence of gastrointestinal symptoms. Patients with isolated ovarian endometriosis exhibited higher levels of Lachnobacterium and Adlercreutzia compared to those with widespread lesions. Furthermore, the presence of gastrointestinal symptoms correlated with lower levels of SMB53 (Clostridia) and Odoribacter (Bacteroidia), while Prevotella was more abundant. Interestingly, hormone treatment was associated with higher levels of Blautia and Ruminococcus in the Clostridia class, along with Butyricimonas in the Bacteroidia class. These findings support the hypothesis that gut microbiota may be altered in endometriosis patients, with distinct microbial signatures linked to hormonal therapy and gastrointestinal involvement.
Increased in Endometriosis Patients
Decreased in Endometriosis Patients
Bacteroides (Bacteroidia)
Paraprevotella (Bacteroidia)
Parabacteroides (Bacteroidia)
Lachnospira (Clostridia)
Blautia (Clostridia) with hormone treatment
Odoribacter (Bacteroidia) with GI symptoms
Ruminococcus (Clostridia) with hormone treatment
SMB53 (Clostridia) with GI symptoms
Butyricimonas (Bacteroidia) with hormone treatment
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
The study's findings suggest that endometriosis is associated with specific alterations in gut microbiota, which could play a role in the pathophysiology of the disease. The reduced microbial diversity in endometriosis patients points towards a potential dysbiosis that may exacerbate inflammation and modulate estrogen metabolism, both of which are critical in the pathogenesis of endometriosis. Furthermore, specific bacterial shifts linked to hormone treatment indicate that gut microbiota could be influenced by estrogen-related therapies, potentially affecting symptom severity and disease progression. Understanding these microbial associations opens the door to novel therapeutic strategies, such as targeted probiotics or microbiome-based interventions, to alleviate gastrointestinal symptoms and modulate disease activity in endometriosis patients. This research also underlines the need for further studies to explore the bidirectional relationship between gut microbiota and estrogen regulation in estrogen-dependent conditions like endometriosis.
Bacterial Vaginosis – A Brief Synopsis of the Literature
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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This review explores bacterial vaginosis, emphasizing its recurrence, microbial associations, and treatment challenges. It highlights the need for microbiome-based therapies, standardized diagnostic criteria, and potential partner treatment to reduce reinfection. The findings underscore the importance of improved strategies for long-term BV management.
What Was Reviewed?
This review provides a comprehensive synopsis of the current literature on bacterial vaginosis (BV), focusing on its epidemiology, recurrence, persistence, and treatment challenges. The authors examine the impact of BV on reproductive and sexual health, highlighting its association with sexually transmitted infections (STIs) and adverse pregnancy outcomes. Additionally, the review explores the role of the vaginal microbiota in BV pathogenesis, emphasizing the need for more effective long-term treatment options and standardized definitions for recurrent and persistent BV.
Who Was Reviewed?
The review synthesizes studies on women of reproductive age diagnosed with BV, including those with recurrent infections. It also explores research on the vaginal microbiota, sexual partners' role in BV transmission, and the effectiveness of current treatments. By analyzing epidemiological data from various regions, it highlights differences in BV prevalence and risk factors.
Key Findings and Microbial Associations
BV shifts the vaginal microbiota by depleting Lactobacillus species and allowing anaerobic bacteria like Gardnerella vaginalis, Atopobium vaginae, Prevotella spp., and Mobiluncus spp. to overgrow. This microbial imbalance disrupts the vaginal ecosystem and increases susceptibility to STIs, including Neisseria gonorrhoeae, Chlamydia trachomatis, and HIV. Even with metronidazole or clindamycin treatment, BV recurs in up to 80% of cases within three months. The review explores BV recurrence, showing how reinfection, an inability to restore a Lactobacillus-dominant microbiota, and bacterial biofilms contribute to persistent infections. Clinicians rely on Amsel’s criteria and Nugent scoring for diagnosis, but inconsistent definitions of recurrent and persistent BV complicate management. The review also examines partner treatment as a strategy to reduce BV recurrence, though past studies show mixed results.
Implications of the Review
BV remains a significant clinical challenge due to its high recurrence rates, unclear etiology, and association with reproductive health complications. This review calls for more research into microbiome-based therapies, improved diagnostic tools, and standardized definitions of recurrent BV. The findings suggest that future treatment approaches should not only target BV-associated bacteria but also focus on restoring a stable vaginal microbiota. Additionally, reconsidering partner treatment as part of BV management could be an avenue for reducing recurrence rates, provided that future studies can confirm its effectiveness.
Bacterial vaginosis and biofilms: Therapeutic challenges and innovations
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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This review links BV recurrence to resilient biofilms formed by Gardnerella vaginalis. Probiotics and biofilm disruptors (e.g., Astodrimer gel) improve outcomes by restoring Lactobacillus dominance. Current antibiotics fail to penetrate biofilms, necessitating multimodal therapies. Future research should explore VMT and microbiome-targeted interventions for sustained BV remission.
What was Reviewed?
This narrative review examined the role of biofilms in bacterial vaginosis (BV), focusing on their contribution to treatment resistance and recurrence. The authors synthesized evidence from clinical studies and trials to evaluate the limitations of current antibiotic therapies and explored emerging solutions, such as biofilm-disrupting agents and probiotics, to improve BV management.
Who was Reviewed?
The review analyzed data from diverse patient populations in clinical studies, including women with recurrent BV. It incorporated findings from trials investigating biofilm-targeted therapies, such as enzymatic disruptors (e.g., dispersin B) and probiotics (e.g., Lactobacillus crispatus), to assess their efficacy in restoring vaginal microbiota balance.
What were the most Important Findings?
The review highlighted that BV-associated biofilms, primarily formed by Gardnerella vaginalis and Atopobium vaginae, shield pathogenic bacteria from antibiotics, driving recurrence. Major microbial associations (MMA) included polymicrobial anaerobic communities displacing protective Lactobacillus species. Probiotics and biofilm-disrupting agents (e.g., boric acid, Astodrimer gel) showed promise in clinical trials, with probiotics delaying recurrence by 51% and Astodrimer gel significantly reducing recurrence rates. Notably, Lactobacillus crispatus-based therapies were emphasized for restoring vaginal acidity and inhibiting biofilm formation.
What are the Implications of this Review?
The findings emphasize the need to shift from antibiotic-only approaches to multimodal strategies targeting biofilms. Clinicians should consider adjunct therapies like probiotics and biofilm disruptors to enhance treatment efficacy and reduce recurrence. The review also calls for further research into vaginal microbiome transplantation (VMT) and personalized therapies to address biofilm resilience.
Bacterial Vaginosis and Chlamydia in Tubal Infertility
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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Study links BV and past chlamydial infection to tubal infertility, with 87.5% of BV-positive women having tubal damage. Both infections were often asymptomatic. IVF pregnancy rates were unaffected, but BV showed lower implantation trends. Findings highlight BV’s role in infertility, urging early screening to prevent tubal damage.
What was Studied?
This cross-sectional study investigated the association between bacterial vaginosis (BV), past chlamydial infection, and tubal infertility in women undergoing IVF. The researchers analyzed vaginal swabs and serologic data from 286 women undergoing 344 IVF cycles to determine whether these infections impacted pregnancy rates or were linked to specific infertility causes.
Who was Studied?
The study included 286 women undergoing IVF treatment at a tertiary care infertility referral center in Glasgow, Scotland. Participants provided high vaginal and endocervical swab samples before oocyte retrieval, with serologic testing for Chlamydia trachomatis and BV diagnosis based on Gram staining and anaerobic culture.
What were the most Important Findings?
The study found strong, independent associations between tubal infertility and both BV (87.5% of BV-positive women had tubal damage) and past chlamydial infection (91.2% seropositivity in tubal infertility cases). Notably, BV and chlamydial infections were frequently asymptomatic, with no active chlamydial infections detected. Major microbial associations (MMA) included reduced Lactobacillus dominance in BV-positive women, alongside overgrowth of anaerobic bacteria. Despite these associations, pregnancy rates after IVF were unaffected by BV or past chlamydial infection, though BV-positive women had numerically lower implantation rates (15.2% vs. 31.0% in chlamydia-seropositive women).
What are the Implications of this Study?
The findings underscore BV as a potential pelvic pathogen contributing to tubal damage, independent of chlamydial infection. While IVF success rates remained comparable across groups, the high prevalence of tubal infertility in BV-positive women suggests that early screening and treatment of asymptomatic BV could prevent long-term reproductive complications. Clinicians should consider BV as a modifiable risk factor in infertility workups, particularly in cases of unexplained tubal pathology.
Bacterial Vaginosis and its Association with Infertility, Endometritis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease
February 12, 2026
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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BV disrupts Lactobacillus dominance, increasing infertility risk via inflammation, PID, and endometritis. L. crispatus probiotics reduce BV recurrence; CE treatment boosts IVF success. Early screening and microbiome-targeted therapies are vital to prevent reproductive complications.
What was Reviewed?
This expert review examined the associations between bacterial vaginosis (BV), endometritis, pelvic inflammatory disease (PID), and infertility, synthesizing evidence from clinical studies, microbiome research, and treatment outcomes. The authors explored how BV-related dysbiosis contributes to upper genital tract infections and reproductive complications, while evaluating diagnostic challenges and emerging therapeutic strategies.
Who was Reviewed?
The review analyzed data from diverse populations of reproductive-age women, including those with infertility, recurrent BV, or PID. It incorporated findings from studies on vaginal and endometrial microbiota, clinical trials on BV treatments (e.g., antibiotics, probiotics), and research on immune and inflammatory responses linked to infertility.
What were the most Important Findings?
BV, characterized by reduced Lactobacillus dominance and overgrowth of anaerobes like Gardnerella vaginalis and Atopobium vaginae, was strongly associated with tubal infertility (3.3-fold higher prevalence in infertile women) and PID. Major microbial associations (MMA) included elevated levels of proinflammatory cytokines (IL-1β, IL-6, IL-8) in BV-positive women, which disrupt endometrial receptivity. Subclinical PID, often linked to BV, reduced pregnancy likelihood by 40%. Notably, Lactobacillus crispatus probiotics reduced BV recurrence by 15% compared to placebo, while endometrial microbiota dominated by non-lactobacilli correlated with lower IVF success rates. Chronic endometritis (CE), prevalent in 34%–66% of unexplained infertility cases, improved fertility outcomes post-antibiotic treatment, with cured CE showing a 76.3% pregnancy rate versus 20% in persistent cases.
What are the Implications of this Review?
The findings underscore BV as a modifiable risk factor for infertility, emphasizing the need for early screening and treatment to prevent PID and CE. Clinicians should consider Lactobacillus-based probiotics and biofilm-disrupting agents for recurrent BV. For infertility workups, endometrial microbiota analysis and CE testing are critical, particularly in cases of repeated implantation failure. Future research should prioritize longitudinal studies to clarify causal links between BV dysbiosis and infertility, while optimizing personalized therapies targeting the vaginal microbiome.
Bacterial Vaginosis Is Associated with Variation in Dietary Indices
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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A high glycemic load diet increases bacterial vaginosis (BV) risk, while nutrient-rich diets lower it. This study highlights the link between diet quality and vaginal microbiome balance, providing insights for clinicians on how dietary interventions may help prevent BV.
What was Studied?
This study examined how dietary indices, including glycemic load (GL), glycemic index (GI), the Healthy Eating Index (HEI), and the Naturally Nutrient Rich (NNR) score, influence bacterial vaginosis (BV) prevalence, progression, and persistence. Researchers aimed to determine whether overall dietary quality, rather than just individual nutrients, affects vaginal microbiome balance.
Who was Studied?
The study analyzed data from 1,735 nonpregnant women aged 15 – 44, primarily African American (85.5%), recruited from health clinics in Birmingham, Alabama. Researchers assessed annual dietary intake using the Block98 food frequency questionnaire and classified vaginal flora using Nugent Gram-stain criteria.
Most Important Findings
A higher glycemic load significantly increased the risk of BV. For every 10-unit increase in GL, the likelihood of BV progression and persistence rose. High-GL diets, which result in frequent blood sugar spikes, may contribute to vaginal flora imbalances and increased oxidative stress, reducing the body's ability to maintain a protective microbiome.
Conversely, women with higher NNR scores, which reflect greater nutrient density per calorie, had a lower risk of BV. This suggests that diets rich in vitamins, minerals, and fiber may help support a healthy vaginal microbiome. HEI scores above 70, indicating greater adherence to dietary guidelines, were associated with a reduced BV risk, but this association was only borderline significant after adjusting for confounding factors.
Unlike GL, which considers both carbohydrate quality and quantity, glycemic index (GI) showed no clear link to BV. Because GI only measures how quickly food raises blood sugar without accounting for quantity, it may not fully capture how diet affects vaginal health.
Implications of the Study
This study highlights the role of diet quality in vaginal microbiome health. Clinicians should counsel patients on the risks of high-GL diets and emphasize nutrient-dense food choices to lower BV risk. Future research should explore how dietary modifications influence BV outcomes and whether interventions targeting glycemic load can serve as preventive measures.
Biological rhythms in premenstrual syndrome and premenstrual dysphoric disorder: a systematic review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD) is a severe mood disorder linked to hormonal and neurochemical changes. Emerging research highlights the gut microbiome’s role in symptom modulation, opening new avenues for microbiome-targeted treatments alongside traditional therapies.
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Women with PMS/PMDD experience disrupted biological rhythms, notably lower melatonin, higher nighttime temperature, and poor sleep quality. These circadian disturbances contribute to symptom severity, suggesting chronobiological targets for improved diagnosis and treatment.
What was reviewed?
This paper systematically reviewed the existing literature on biological rhythm disruptions in women with premenstrual syndrome (PMS) and premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD). The focus was on circadian and other biological rhythms, including sleep–wake cycles, melatonin secretion, core body temperature, cortisol, prolactin, and thyroid-stimulating hormone levels. The review synthesized findings from 25 studies that compared women diagnosed with PMS/PMDD to healthy controls, assessing both subjective and objective markers of biological rhythms to clarify their association with premenstrual symptoms and the underlying pathophysiology.
Who was reviewed?
The review analyzed studies published between 1989 and 2022 across multiple countries, involving women aged 18 to 45 diagnosed with PMS or PMDD using standardized criteria, mostly DSM-III-R to DSM-5. The total sample sizes varied widely, with some studies including over 600 participants. Healthy control groups consisted of women without PMS/PMDD or psychiatric disorders. Studies included diverse methodologies such as polysomnography, actimetry, hormonal assays, core body temperature measurements, and subjective sleep quality assessments, enabling comprehensive evaluation of biological rhythms in the premenstrual context.
What were the most important findings?
The review found consistent evidence that women with PMS/PMDD exhibit significant disruptions in biological rhythms compared to healthy controls. Notably, they present with lower nocturnal melatonin levels, elevated nighttime core body temperature, and poorer subjective sleep quality, all indicating altered circadian regulation. While objective sleep parameters and activity rhythms showed mixed or nonsignificant differences, hormonal rhythms such as cortisol and prolactin demonstrated inconsistent findings across studies. These rhythm disturbances likely contribute to the psychological and physiological symptoms experienced during the luteal phase. The review highlights melatonin dysregulation as a potential key factor in PMS/PMDD pathophysiology and calls for further research into circadian-based mechanisms and their therapeutic implications.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review highlights the importance of biological rhythm disruptions in PMS and PMDD, positioning circadian dysfunction, especially melatonin alterations, as a promising target for understanding symptom development and designing novel interventions. Clinicians should recognize that sleep complaints and temperature regulation abnormalities in these disorders reflect deeper circadian disturbances rather than isolated symptoms. The review advocates for integrating chronobiological assessments into clinical evaluations and exploring circadian-modulating treatments, such as light therapy or melatonin supplementation, to improve patient outcomes. It also calls for future research to clarify inconsistent findings in hormonal rhythms and to investigate the potential of personalized circadian therapies tailored to premenstrual symptom profiles.
Biosorption of Heavy Metals by Candida albicans
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Vulvovaginal Candidiasis (VVC)
Vulvovaginal Candidiasis (VVC)
Vulvovaginal candidiasis (VVC) is a common fungal infection caused by Candida albicans. Disruptions in the vaginal microbiome and immune responses contribute to its development. Effective treatment involves both antifungal therapy and strategies to restore microbiome balance, preventing recurrent infections and addressing emerging antifungal resistance.
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The study showed Candida albicans can resist and efficiently biosorb heavy metals, especially chromium, from contaminated water and soil. Optimal removal depends on pH, temperature, biomass state, and carbon source, highlighting C. albicans as a promising bioremediation agent for heavy metal pollution.
What was studied?
This research study investigated the resistance and biosorption capacity of the yeast Candida albicans against various heavy metals, particularly focusing on chromium (Cr(VI)) removal from aqueous solutions. The study examined how C. albicans grown in different conditions can tolerate high concentrations of heavy metals and efficiently remove them through biosorption mechanisms. It explored the effects of parameters such as pH, temperature, biomass concentration, and carbon sources on chromium removal, comparing living and dead biomass efficiency. The study also assessed the yeast’s capacity to remove heavy metals from contaminated soil and water samples, mimicking real environmental conditions.
Who was studied?
The study focused on a strain of Candida albicans isolated from the Bancote River in Mexico. Clinicians tested this strain for growth tolerance against multiple heavy metals, including chromium, lead, silver, zinc, cobalt, mercury, cadmium, arsenic, copper, and fluoride. They evaluated the yeast's biosorption capacity using both live and dried biomass under laboratory-controlled conditions and applied it to contaminated industrial samples. They confirmed the strain's morphology and identification using microscopic techniques, including germ tube and chlamydospore formation tests.
Most important findings
The Candida albicans strain demonstrated remarkable resistance to heavy metals, growing in concentrations up to 2000 ppm for chromium, zinc, lead, and copper; 1500 ppm for arsenic; 500 ppm for silver; and lower concentrations for cobalt, mercury, and cadmium. Biosorption efficiency varied across metals, with the highest removal rates for chromium, lead, silver, and cadmium. The study revealed that biosorption and reduction of Cr(VI) involve complex interactions influenced by pH and temperature, with acidic conditions favoring Cr(VI) protonation and enhanced attraction to yeast cell surfaces, and elevated temperatures accelerating redox reactions. Carbon source also impacted removal efficiency; fermentable sugars like sucrose and glucose enhanced chromium reduction more than non-fermentable sources. Importantly, C. albicans biomass was capable of removing chromium and other heavy metals from real industrial waste soil and water samples with removal rates exceeding 60%, highlighting its practical bioremediation potential.
Greatest implications of this study
This study demonstrates that Candida albicans possesses strong potential as a bioremediation agent for heavy metal-contaminated environments, particularly chromium-polluted water and soils. The yeast's ability to tolerate and efficiently biosorb multiple heavy metals under varying environmental conditions supports its application in eco-friendly and cost-effective remediation technologies. Understanding the optimal conditions for biosorption and the role of biomass state (live vs. dead) provides practical insights for designing bioreactors or treatment systems. The study also emphasizes the importance of carbon sources in enhancing biosorption efficiency, suggesting potential for tailoring growth media to maximize remediation outcomes. Clinically and environmentally, harnessing C. albicans for heavy metal removal offers a sustainable approach to mitigate the health risks associated with heavy metal pollution, which can cause severe toxicity and bioaccumulation through food chains.
Boric acid vaginal suppositories: a brief review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This review discusses the effectiveness of boric acid vaginal suppositories in treating azole-resistant vaginitis, including its benefits and limitations.
What was reviewed?
This was a review of boric acid vaginal suppositories and their applications, particularly in the treatment of recurrent vulvovaginal candidiasis (vaginal infections caused by yeast) and other forms of vaginitis.
Who was reviewed?
The review examined several studies and case reports that evaluated the effectiveness and safety of boric acid vaginal suppositories in treating various types of vaginal infections, particularly those caused by Candida species.
What were the most important findings?
The review highlighted boric acid as a potentially useful treatment for recurrent vulvovaginal candidiasis, especially in cases where infections are resistant to common antifungal treatments, such as azoles. It was found that boric acid could be effective in treating infections caused by azole-resistant strains, including Candida glabrata and non-Candida albicans species. The antifungal activity of boric acid is thought to be due to its ability to disrupt the fungal cell membrane, although the exact mechanism remains unclear. In addition, while boric acid is generally well-tolerated in short-term use, its long-term safety remains uncertain. Studies indicated that it is not recommended as a first-line treatment, especially in uncomplicated cases, but could serve as an alternative for chronic or resistant infections. The review also found that boric acid has a low risk of systemic absorption when used intravaginally, with blood boron levels remaining low and within safe limits after typical treatment courses.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The review suggests that boric acid could be a valuable option for treating chronic and azole-resistant forms of vaginitis, particularly when other antifungal treatments fail. This has important clinical implications for managing recurrent vulvovaginal candidiasis, as the increasing resistance to conventional antifungals presents a significant challenge. However, clinicians are advised to use boric acid cautiously, particularly in pregnant and lactating women, due to the lack of sufficient safety data. While it may not be suitable as a first-line treatment for all cases of vaginitis, it presents an alternative for more difficult-to-treat infections, especially in immunocompromised patients or those with antibiotic resistance.
Breast cancer but not the menopausal status is associated with small changes of the gut microbiota
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Breast Cancer
Breast Cancer
Traditionally linked to genetic predispositions and environmental exposures, emerging evidence highlights the microbiome as a critical and underappreciated factor influencing breast cancer progression, immune response, and treatment outcomes.
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This study shows that breast cancer, rather than menopausal status, drives subtle gut microbiota changes. Dysbiosis in BC patients included reduced Blautia obeum and Bifidobacterium. Functional impacts, such as downregulated NAD pathways, suggest gut microbiota's potential role in cancer progression.
What Was Studied?
This study investigated the relationship between gut microbiota composition and breast cancer (BC), focusing on the potential impact of menopausal status on microbiota variations. The researchers used shotgun metagenomics to compare the gut microbiota of 88 newly diagnosed BC patients (47 premenopausal and 41 postmenopausal) with 86 cancer-free controls, stratified by menopausal status.
Who Was Studied?
The participants included Polish women divided into two groups: BC patients and controls. The BC group was further divided into premenopausal and postmenopausal subgroups. Fecal samples were collected before systemic cancer treatment, and patients with prior antibiotic use, inflammatory bowel disease, or a history of cancer (for controls) were excluded.
Most Important Findings
The study showed that menopausal status had no significant impact on the overall gut microbiota composition or diversity. However, breast cancer (BC) patients exhibited gut dysbiosis compared to controls. Premenopausal BC patients demonstrated lower abundances of taxa such as Bifidobacterium and Collinsella massiliensis but higher abundances of the genus Gemmiger. In postmenopausal BC patients, taxa such as Blautia obeum, Dorea formicigenerans, and Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron were reduced, while Faecalibacterium prausnitzii showed an overrepresentation, potentially indicating a protective or prognostic role. Functional alterations were minimal, with the NAD salvage pathway downregulated in premenopausal BC patients, possibly affecting DNA repair. Enterotype analysis revealed that Bacteroides-dominated enterotypes were more common in controls, while Prevotella and Alistipes were enriched in BC patients. Additionally, bacterial diversity was notably lower in postmenopausal BC patients compared to controls, emphasizing the role of gut dysbiosis in BC pathology rather than menopausal status.
Bacteroides enterotypes prevalent in controls; Prevotella and Alistipes enriched in BC patients.
N/A
Postmenopausal BC Patients (Alpha-Diversity)
Lower bacterial diversity compared to controls.
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Greatest Implications
The study underscores the importance of gut microbiota in BC development, suggesting that dysbiosis may not be directly related to menopausal status but rather to BC pathology itself. These findings have potential diagnostic implications, as machine learning models using gut microbiota profiles demonstrated an ability to distinguish BC patients from controls with high accuracy (AUC > 0.8). The study highlights the need for further research to explore the mechanisms linking microbiota alterations and BC progression, particularly focusing on key taxa like Faecalibacterium prausnitzii and Bifidobacterium, as well as geographic and lifestyle factors influencing microbiota composition.
Breast cancer in postmenopausal women is associated with an altered gut metagenome
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Breast Cancer
Breast Cancer
Traditionally linked to genetic predispositions and environmental exposures, emerging evidence highlights the microbiome as a critical and underappreciated factor influencing breast cancer progression, immune response, and treatment outcomes.
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The study revealed altered gut microbiota in postmenopausal breast cancer patients, with enriched inflammation-associated species and depleted butyrate producers. Functional gene changes suggest links to systemic inflammation and metabolic imbalance, providing insights into microbiota's role in cancer progression.
What Was Studied?
This study investigated the differences in the composition and functional capacities of gut microbiota between postmenopausal breast cancer patients and postmenopausal healthy controls. The researchers conducted a comprehensive shotgun metagenomic analysis to assess microbial diversity, taxonomic abundance, functional gene profiles, and potential associations with clinical indices.
Who Was Studied?
The study involved 44 postmenopausal breast cancer patients and 46 postmenopausal healthy controls, as well as 18 premenopausal breast cancer patients and 25 premenopausal healthy controls. All participants were treatment-naive and free from other conditions such as diabetes or inflammatory bowel diseases, which could confound the microbiome analysis.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study found significant differences in gut microbial diversity and composition between postmenopausal breast cancer patients and healthy controls. Microbial diversity was higher in breast cancer patients. Forty-five microbial species exhibited significant differences in abundance; 38 species were enriched in breast cancer patients, including Escherichia coli, Klebsiella sp., and Prevotella amnii, while 7 species, such as Eubacterium eligens and Lactobacillus vaginalis, were depleted. Functionally, the gut metagenomes of patients were enriched in genes linked to lipopolysaccharide (LPS) biosynthesis, iron transport, and secretion systems, which may contribute to systemic inflammation and metabolic alterations. Importantly, butyrate-producing bacteria like Roseburia inulinivorans were reduced in patients, potentially affecting anti-inflammatory processes.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
This study highlights the potential role of gut microbiota in influencing systemic inflammation, estrogen metabolism, and immune regulation in postmenopausal breast cancer. The enrichment of LPS biosynthesis and iron transport genes points to mechanisms that may drive inflammation and tumorigenesis. The depletion of butyrate producers suggests a loss of anti-inflammatory microbiota functions, underscoring the gut microbiota’s importance in maintaining immune homeostasis. These findings suggest that gut microbiota could serve as biomarkers for breast cancer and potential therapeutic targets to mitigate disease progression.
Breast cancer patients from the Midwest region of the United States have reduced levels of short-chain fatty acid-producing gut bacteria
February 12, 2026
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Breast Cancer
Breast Cancer
Traditionally linked to genetic predispositions and environmental exposures, emerging evidence highlights the microbiome as a critical and underappreciated factor influencing breast cancer progression, immune response, and treatment outcomes.
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This study identifies gut dysbiosis in breast cancer patients, highlighting reduced SCFA-producing bacteria and altered microbial pathways. Findings suggest microbiome-targeted interventions could aid breast cancer treatment.
What was studied?
This study investigated the gut microbiome composition in breast cancer (BC) patients from the Midwest region of the United States, focusing on its taxonomic composition and functional profiling. Using 16S ribosomal RNA sequencing, the study examined the bacterial microbiome, specifically targeting short-chain fatty acid (SCFA)-producing bacteria. It aimed to identify microbial dysbiosis and its potential role in breast cancer pathobiology, emphasizing regional differences in microbiome signatures.
Who was studied?
The study included 22 breast cancer patients and 19 healthy controls, all recruited from the University of Iowa. Participants were matched by race, body mass index (BMI), and sex. Inclusion criteria required BC patients to have invasive breast cancer, with exclusion criteria such as antibiotic use during sample collection. Healthy controls were similarly screened for factors that might impact gut microbiota, like recent antibiotic or laxative use.
What were the most important findings?
The study identified significant gut microbiome differences between breast cancer patients and healthy controls, particularly in alpha and beta diversity measures. Breast cancer (BC) patients showed evidence of gut dysbiosis, including a decrease in beneficial SCFA-producing bacteria and an enrichment of pro-inflammatory taxa. These alterations suggest a microbiome imbalance that may contribute to inflammation and disease progression. Furthermore, the study highlighted functional disruptions in microbiome pathways, with reduced production of SCFAs such as propionate and acetate, which are essential for maintaining gut health and modulating immune responses. These findings underscore the importance of microbiome-targeted interventions to restore microbial balance and support breast cancer treatment.
SCFA reduction contributes to inflammation and impaired gut motility.
Pro-Inflammatory Bacteria
Enriched Eggerthella lenta, Blautia species
Reduced levels
Linked to inflammation and cancer progression.
Functional Pathways
Decreased SCFA pathways (propionate, acetate)
Intact pathways
Dysbiosis may exacerbate systemic inflammation and disrupt gut homeostasis.
Beta Diversity Clustering
Significant clustering distinct from HC
No significant clustering
Indicates an altered microbiome composition in BC.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings underscore the role of gut microbial dysbiosis in breast cancer, with SCFA-producing bacteria depletion linked to inflammation and cancer pathogenesis. This highlights potential avenues for microbiome-targeted therapies, such as probiotics or dietary interventions, aimed at restoring SCFA production and microbial balance. Moreover, the study emphasizes the need for region-specific microbiome research to tailor interventions effectively.
Causal effects of gut microbiome on endometriosis: a two-sample Mendelian randomization study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This Mendelian randomization study found a causal relationship between gut microbiota and endometriosis. Porphyromonadaceae and Anaerotruncus increased risk, while Clostridiales_vadin_BB60_group, Oxalobacteraceae, Desulfovibrio, Haemophilus, and Holdemania were protective. These findings support microbiome-targeted interventions as a potential treatment strategy for endometriosis.
What was studied?
This study investigated the causal relationship between gut microbiome composition and endometriosis using a two-sample Mendelian randomization (MR) approach. The researchers aimed to determine whether specific gut microbiota taxa have a direct causal effect on endometriosis risk rather than a mere observational association.
Who was studied?
The study utilized genome-wide association study (GWAS) summary statistics from two major datasets to investigate the causal relationship between gut microbiota and endometriosis. Exposure data on the gut microbiome were obtained from the MiBioGen consortium, which included 18,340 individuals across 24 cohorts from multiple countries. Outcome data for endometriosis were sourced from the FinnGen consortium, comprising 13,456 endometriosis cases and 100,663 controls, all of European ancestry.
Key Findings
The study identified five bacterial taxa with a protective effect against endometriosis and two taxa associated with increased risk. Protective taxa included Clostridiales_vadin_BB60_group, Oxalobacteraceae, Desulfovibrio, Haemophilus, and Holdemania, all of which exhibited odds ratios (OR) below 1, indicating a reduced likelihood of endometriosis in individuals with higher genetic abundance of these bacteria. In contrast, Porphyromonadaceae and Anaerotruncus were associated with increased endometriosis risk, with ORs above 1, suggesting their potential involvement in disease progression. Sensitivity analyses confirmed the robustness of these findings, as no evidence of pleiotropy or heterogeneity was detected, reinforcing the reliability of the causal associations.
Bacterial Taxa
P-Value
Effect
Clostridiales_vadin_BB60_group
< 0.01
Protective
Oxalobacteraceae
0.014
Protective
Desulfovibrio
0.046
Protective
Haemophilus
0.039
Protective
Holdemania
0.025
Protective
Porphyromonadaceae
0.027
Risk
Anaerotruncus
< 0.01
Risk
Greatest Implications
The findings of this study provide genetic evidence supporting a causal relationship between gut microbiota and endometriosis, reinforcing previous observational research. This suggests that targeting the gut microbiome through interventions such as probiotics, dietary modifications, or microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) could be a novel approach to managing or preventing endometriosis. The identification of specific bacterial taxa that either increase or decrease endometriosis risk offers a foundation for developing microbiome-targeted interventions tailored to patient needs. Additionally, these results support the estrobolome hypothesis, which proposes that gut microbiota influence estrogen metabolism, potentially contributing to the pathophysiology of endometriosis. By establishing a causal link, this study highlights the importance of gut microbiota in the broader endocrine and inflammatory mechanisms underlying the disease, paving the way for further research into microbiome-based therapeutic strategies.
Causal relationships between gut microbiota and polycystic ovarian syndrome
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This Mendelian randomization study identifies a bidirectional causal link between specific gut microbes and PCOS. Bacilli and Burkholderiales increase PCOS risk, while Blautia and Cyanobacteria show protective effects. Findings reveal gut microbial signatures that may be targeted for PCOS treatment.
What Was Studied?
This study investigated the causal relationship between gut microbiota and polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) using a bidirectional two-sample Mendelian randomization (MR) design. Researchers used genome-wide association study (GWAS) summary statistics from the MiBioGen consortium to represent gut microbiota composition and the FinnGen cohort to define PCOS cases and controls. The goal was to determine whether specific bacterial taxa causally influence the risk of developing PCOS and, conversely, whether PCOS causally alters gut microbial abundance. By leveraging genetic variants as instrumental variables, this study minimized biases commonly seen in observational research, including reverse causation and confounding. The analytical approach included several MR methods and sensitivity analyses to verify the robustness of findings.
Who Was Studied?
The study utilized summary-level genetic data rather than individual-level clinical cohorts. Gut microbiota data were derived from 18,340 individuals across 24 cohorts, primarily of European ancestry, through the MiBioGen meta-analysis, which identified 196 microbial taxa with sufficient abundance. PCOS outcome data came from 118,870 participants in the FinnGen cohort, including 642 clinically diagnosed PCOS cases and 118,228 controls. The PCOS diagnosis was based on ICD codes in hospital registries and aligned with the Rotterdam criteria. Importantly, both datasets involved participants of European descent, ensuring consistency for MR assumptions and reducing potential population stratification biases.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The most significant finding was that specific gut microbiota taxa demonstrated a clear causal relationship with PCOS. Notably, the taxa Bacilli, Burkholderiales, and Lachnospiraceae showed a positive causal association with PCOS risk. In contrast, taxa such as Blautia, Bilophila, Cyanobacteria, Alphaproteobacteria, Holdemania, and CandidatusSoleaferrea exhibited a protective causal relationship. Among these, Blautia and Cyanobacteria retained their protective associations across all MR methods used, including the robust cML-MA approach. The study also found evidence for bidirectional causality in two taxa: Alphaproteobacteria and Lachnospiraceae. PCOS reduced the abundance of these microbes, while alterations in these microbes also contributed to PCOS risk.
These results are highly relevant to microbiome signatures, as they move beyond correlation to genetic causation. The major microbial associations (MMAs) emerging from this study establish Blautia and Bilophila as potential protective taxa and Burkholderiales and Bacilli as risk enhancers for PCOS. These taxa interact with PCOS through mechanisms related to insulin resistance, chronic inflammation, bile acid metabolism, SCFA production, and hormonal modulation, including the gut–brain axis. The presence of bidirectional effects particularly strengthens the hypothesis that gut microbiota and PCOS are engaged in a feedback loop that can worsen or potentially mitigate the disease course depending on microbial composition.
What Are the Implications of This Study?
This study provides the strongest evidence to date for a genetically mediated, bidirectional causal link between gut microbiota and PCOS. It significantly advances the field by identifying specific microbial taxa that not only influence PCOS risk but are also altered by the disease itself. For clinicians, these findings suggest that targeting certain microbial taxa could represent a therapeutic avenue for PCOS prevention or management. Modulating the abundance of Blautia, Bilophila, and Alphaproteobacteria through diet, prebiotics, probiotics, or even microbiota transplantation could potentially alter disease risk or symptom severity. The study’s use of MR methodology also sets a benchmark for establishing causal inference in microbiome research, paving the way for precision interventions rooted in genetic evidence. This work redefines PCOS not only as an endocrine-metabolic disorder but also as one with a microbial signature that may be clinically actionable.
Characteristics of gut microbiota in patients with asthenozoospermia: a Chinese pilot study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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The study explored gut microbiota differences in men with asthenozoospermia (AS) compared to healthy controls, finding significant disparities in microbial diversity and composition. Key bacteria correlated negatively with sperm motility, suggesting gut microbiota may influence male fertility, potentially offering new targets for diagnosing and treating AS.
What was studied?
The study investigated the characteristics of gut microbiota in patients with asthenozoospermia (AS), a common cause of male infertility characterized by reduced sperm motility. It aimed to identify differences in gut microbiota composition between AS patients and healthy controls and explore the potential links between gut microbiota and the development of AS.
Who was studied?
The study involved 108 men, including 60 patients diagnosed with isolated AS and 48 healthy men serving as controls. These participants were recruited from the outpatient department of Tianjin Medical University General Hospital. Men with AS were compared against healthy controls with normal semen parameters.
What were the most important findings?
Diversity and Composition: AS patients exhibited significantly lower alpha diversity in their gut microbiota and distinct beta diversity compared to healthy controls. Specific bacteria such as Escherichia_Shigella and various members of the Prevotellaceae family were notably different between the groups.
Correlation with Sperm Mobility: Certain key genera identified were negatively correlated with sperm motility parameters in AS patients, suggesting a potential impact of these microbial communities on sperm function.
Predicted Metabolic Pathways: The study predicted significant differences in metabolic pathways such as steroid biosynthesis and meiosis, potentially influencing the physiological processes related to sperm motility and overall reproductive health.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings suggest that gut microbiota dysbiosis might be linked to the development of asthenozoospermia, possibly through effects on systemic inflammation, nutrient synthesis, and hormonal balance. This could lead to new diagnostic and therapeutic approaches, where modulation of gut microbiota could become part of treating or managing male infertility. The study supports the concept of the gut-testis axis, highlighting the broader systemic impact of gut health. Future research could focus on confirming these findings and exploring gut microbiota modification as a therapeutic strategy for AS.
Characteristics of the Gut Microbiota in Japanese Patients with Premenstrual Syndrome
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS)
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS)
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS) involves physical and emotional symptoms linked to hormonal fluctuations. Recent research highlights the role of heavy metals and gut microbiome imbalances in worsening these symptoms. Lifestyle changes, microbiome-targeted therapies, and toxin reduction show promise in effective PMS management.
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This study explores the gut microbiota in Japanese women with Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS), finding significant differences in microbial composition and highlighting the potential role of Collinsella in PMS pathophysiology.
What was studied?
This study investigated the characteristics of the gut microbiota in Japanese women with Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS), aiming to compare the microbial composition between PMS-affected individuals and healthy controls. By analyzing stool samples using 16S rRNA gene sequencing, the study examined the diversity of the microbiome and sought to identify microbial genera potentially associated with the severity of PMS symptoms.
Who was studied?
The study involved a total of 168 women, including 24 diagnosed with PMS and 144 healthy controls. The participants were between the ages of 24 and 49, with the control group selected to match the PMS group in terms of age and other relevant demographic factors. Women with other health conditions, those who had recently used antibiotics, or those with major dietary restrictions were excluded from the study. The aim was to understand how differences in the gut microbiome between the two groups might correlate with PMS symptoms.
What were the most important findings?
The study found that the gut microbiota of women with PMS differed significantly from that of healthy controls. The PMS group exhibited higher α-diversity, which was assessed using the Simpson index, indicating a more varied microbial community. When comparing the overall microbial composition between the groups, there were notable differences in β-diversity and statistical tests. The study also identified several microbial genera that were more abundant in women with PMS. Notably, Collinsella was found to be significantly more abundant in the PMS group, particularly among women aged 30–40 years. This genus was found to be 4.5 times more abundant in the PMS group compared to the controls, and its presence correlated with the severity of PMS symptoms. Bifidobacterium and Blautia, known for their roles in carbohydrate metabolism, were also more prevalent in the PMS group, potentially linking microbiome composition with metabolic processes that could influence PMS symptoms.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings from this study suggest that the gut microbiota may play a significant role in the development and severity of PMS. The identification of Collinsella as a key player in the microbial composition of PMS-affected individuals opens new potential avenues for intervention. The findings imply that microbiome modulation, particularly through dietary adjustments or prebiotics targeting Collinsella, could offer a therapeutic strategy for managing PMS symptoms. The study also emphasizes the importance of further research to confirm these associations and explore the underlying mechanisms connecting microbiome imbalances with PMS.
Characteristics of the gut microbiota in women with premenstrual symptoms: A cross-sectional study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS)
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS)
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS) involves physical and emotional symptoms linked to hormonal fluctuations. Recent research highlights the role of heavy metals and gut microbiome imbalances in worsening these symptoms. Lifestyle changes, microbiome-targeted therapies, and toxin reduction show promise in effective PMS management.
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This study explores the association between gut microbiota composition and the severity of premenstrual symptoms, suggesting a potential role for microbiome-based therapies in managing PMS.
What was studied?
The study investigated the characteristics of the gut microbiota in women experiencing premenstrual symptoms, focusing on the potential association between gut microbial composition and the severity of these symptoms. The research aimed to identify microbial differences between women with premenstrual disorders (PMDs) and healthy controls, and to explore how these differences might correlate with the severity of premenstrual syndrome (PMS) symptoms.
Who was studied?
The study involved 56 women, including 27 women with self-reported premenstrual symptoms and 29 women without significant symptoms. Among the 27 women reporting PMS, 21 were further identified as having premenstrual disorders (PMDs) due to the significant interference of their symptoms with their social life. The control group consisted of 22 women with no significant premenstrual symptoms. These participants were matched by age and other demographic factors.
What were the most important findings?
The study found that there were notable differences in the gut microbiota between women experiencing premenstrual disorders (PMDs) and healthy controls. At the phylum level, the abundance of Bacteroidetes was significantly lower in the PMDs group. At the genus level, several bacteria were found to be either more or less prevalent in the PMDs group. Specifically, the PMDs group had lower levels of beneficial bacteria such as Butyricicoccus, Megasphaera, and Parabacteroides, while Anaerotaenia was more prevalent in this group. However, after applying false discovery rate correction, these differences were no longer statistically significant. The abundance of certain microbes, such as Anaerotaenia, correlated positively with the severity of PMS as measured by the Premenstrual Symptoms Questionnaire (PSQ), while Parabacteroides and Megasphaera were negatively associated with symptom severity.
These findings suggest that the gut microbiota may play a role in the pathophysiology of premenstrual disorders, potentially influencing the severity of symptoms. However, the study also noted that there were no significant differences in inflammatory markers (such as CRP, LBP, and sCD14) between the PMDs and control groups, which means that the microbiota’s role might not be directly related to inflammation but may involve other mechanisms such as gut-brain communication.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study provides preliminary evidence that the gut microbiota could be linked to the severity of premenstrual symptoms, suggesting that microbiome-based interventions might be a potential therapeutic strategy for managing PMS and PMDs. However, due to the cross-sectional nature of the study, it is not possible to establish causality between microbiota characteristics and the severity of premenstrual symptoms. The study's findings highlight the need for future longitudinal studies to confirm these associations and determine the potential therapeutic role of gut microbiota modulation. Furthermore, the identification of specific microbial imbalances could help develop microbiome-based biomarkers for the diagnosis and treatment of PMS and PMDs, providing a more personalized approach to care.
Characteristics of the gut microbiota in women with premenstrual symptoms: A cross-sectional study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD) is a severe mood disorder linked to hormonal and neurochemical changes. Emerging research highlights the gut microbiome’s role in symptom modulation, opening new avenues for microbiome-targeted treatments alongside traditional therapies.
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This study identified specific gut microbiota alterations, including reduced butyrate- and GABA-producing bacteria, associated with premenstrual disorder severity, offering new insights into PMD pathophysiology and potential microbiome-targeted treatments.
What was studied?
This cross-sectional pilot study examined the gut microbiota characteristics in women experiencing premenstrual disorders (PMDs) compared to healthy controls, aiming to uncover microbial associations with the severity of premenstrual symptoms and to evaluate inflammatory markers indicative of bacterial translocation.
Who was studied?
The study involved 43 Japanese women aged 20 to 45 years, with 21 women experiencing PMDs severe enough to disrupt social functioning and 22 controls without significant premenstrual symptoms, all selected to exclude confounding factors like recent medication use, neuropsychiatric disorders, and gastrointestinal diseases.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed that although overall gut microbial diversity did not differ significantly, women with PMDs exhibited lower levels of the Bacteroidetes phylum and reduced abundance of butyrate-producing genera such as Butyricicoccus and Megasphaera, alongside decreased Parabacteroides, a GABA-related genus, while Anaerotaenia was elevated; these microbial shifts correlated with symptom severity, but inflammatory markers linked to endotoxemia showed no group differences, suggesting unique microbiome alterations in PMDs distinct from major depressive disorder.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
These findings suggest that specific gut microbiota alterations, particularly reductions in beneficial butyrate- and GABA-producing bacteria, may underlie premenstrual symptom severity through the gut-brain axis, highlighting potential microbiome-based biomarkers and therapeutic targets for PMDs, and warranting further longitudinal and intervention research to establish causality and clinical applications.
Characterization of the gut microbiota in polycystic ovary syndrome with dyslipidemia
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This study explores the gut microbiota in women with PCOS and dyslipidemia, revealing significant microbial imbalances associated with lipid metabolism and hormonal dysregulation, offering potential targets for future therapies.
What Was Studied?
This research focused on the gut microbiota in patients with Polycystic Ovary Syndrome (PCOS), particularly those with dyslipidemia (PCOS.D). The study aimed to identify and compare gut microbial compositions in individuals with PCOS, those with PCOS and dyslipidemia, and healthy controls. It also explored how these microbiota imbalances correlate with metabolic conditions such as lipid profiles and sex hormone levels.
Who Was Studied?
The study enrolled 52 participants, including 18 patients diagnosed with PCOS, 18 with PCOS and dyslipidemia (PCOS.D), and 16 healthy women serving as controls. These individuals were recruited from the First Affiliated Hospital of Anhui Medical University, ensuring the participants met the criteria for each group based on their clinical and metabolic parameters.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The key findings of this study were related to the gut microbiota dysbiosis observed in patients with PCOS. The results showed significant microbial differences compared to both PCOS-only patients and healthy controls. Specifically, the PCOS.D group exhibited a higher abundance of Clostridium while Faecalibacterium and Holdemanella were notably lower in abundance. This imbalance was linked to lipid metabolism dysfunctions, such as elevated triglycerides (TG), total cholesterol (TC), and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) levels. In contrast, Faecalibacterium, a genus producing butyrate, was negatively correlated with TG and TC levels, suggesting its potential role in regulating lipid metabolism. Additionally, Pseudomonas, a genus associated with steroid metabolism, was negatively correlated with luteinizing hormone (LH) and LDL-C levels, further suggesting a complex interaction between gut microbiota and metabolic health in PCOS patients.
What Are the Implications of This Study?
The findings suggest that gut microbiota imbalances, especially in the abundance of Faecalibacterium and Clostridium, may play a crucial role in the pathogenesis of dyslipidemia in PCOS patients. This opens the possibility of targeting the gut microbiota for therapeutic interventions, particularly for managing lipid metabolism and improving metabolic health in these individuals. The study also highlights the need to explore further the mechanisms by which specific microbial genera influence lipid profiles and sex hormone levels, potentially guiding future precision medicine approaches for PCOS treatment.
Characterization of Vaginal Microbiota in Women With Recurrent Spontaneous Abortion That Can Be Modified by Drug Treatment
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This study explores the link between vaginal microbiota and recurrent spontaneous abortion (RSA), showing that drug treatment, including metformin combined with aspirin, can alter microbiota composition and potentially improve pregnancy outcomes by increasing Lactobacillus abundance.
What was Studied?
This study examined the role of vaginal microbiota in women experiencing recurrent spontaneous abortion (RSA). The researchers aimed to characterize the vaginal microbiota in these women and explore how drug treatments could influence its composition. The study used 16S rRNA gene sequencing to analyze microbial communities, identifying key differences between women with RSA and healthy controls. The study also evaluated the effects of metformin, metformin plus aspirin, and other drug treatments on the vaginal microbiota.
Who was Studied?
The study included women who had experienced recurrent spontaneous abortions (RSA) and healthy controls who had live births without any history of spontaneous abortion. Women with RSA were divided into different groups based on their treatment regimen: untreated, metformin-treated, metformin plus aspirin-treated, and other drug-treated groups. Vaginal samples were collected and analyzed for microbial diversity and community structure using 16S rRNA gene sequencing.
What were the most Important Findings?
The most significant finding of this study was that the vaginal microbiota of women with RSA exhibited reduced microbial richness compared to healthy women. Specifically, the study found that the vaginal microbiota of RSA patients had higher abundances of certain genera such as Megasphaera and Sneathia sanguinegens, both of which have been previously associated with adverse pregnancy outcomes, including spontaneous abortion and preterm birth. Furthermore, the study revealed that the composition of the vaginal microbiota in RSA patients was significantly altered after drug treatment. Metformin alone or in combination with aspirin led to a marked increase in the abundance of Lactobacillus species, which are considered protective against infections and important for maintaining vaginal health. This shift in microbiota composition could be beneficial in preventing RSA and improving pregnancy outcomes.
What are the Implications of this Study?
This study highlights the potential for modifying the vaginal microbiome as a therapeutic strategy for women with recurrent spontaneous abortion. By treating RSA patients with metformin combined with aspirin, the researchers significantly increased the abundance of Lactobacillus species, potentially restoring a more balanced and protective vaginal microbiota.
The identification of specific microbial taxa such as Sneathia sanguinegens and Megasphaera opens new possibilities for targeted interventions. These microbial associations could guide future microbiome-based therapies aimed at improving pregnancy outcomes. Furthermore, the study calls for more research to better understand how vaginal microbiota composition influences pregnancy outcomes. Modifying the vaginal microbiota could become an important aspect of enhancing reproductive health and preventing recurrent spontaneous abortions in affected women.
Circulating bile acid profile characteristics in PCOS patients and the role of bile acids in predicting the pathogenesis of PCOS
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This study identified significant bile acid profile changes in PCOS patients and highlighted CDCA and LCA as promising biomarkers, especially when combined with testosterone. The results suggest a bile acid–androgen–microbiome axis in PCOS pathophysiology.
What was studied?
This original research investigated the alterations in circulating bile acid (BA) profiles in women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) and evaluated the potential of specific bile acid metabolites as biomarkers for predicting PCOS pathogenesis. The study analyzed serum samples from 408 women diagnosed with PCOS and 204 healthy controls matched for age and BMI. The team quantified 15 bile acid fractions using liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS), aiming to discern significant differences in bile acid composition between the two groups. The researchers further assessed the correlation of these bile acids with metabolic parameters, especially glucose metabolism and hyperandrogenism, and examined their diagnostic potential using multivariate statistical models such as OPLS-DA and XGBoost.
Who was studied?
The study included 408 women with PCOS diagnosed according to the Rotterdam 2003 criteria and 204 age- and BMI-matched non-PCOS controls. All participants were between 18–45 years old, with exclusions applied for conditions or medications that could affect bile acid metabolism or mimic PCOS symptoms. Comprehensive clinical, hormonal, metabolic, and imaging assessments were conducted to ensure accurate phenotyping. Importantly, the PCOS cohort was further divided into subgroups based on glucose tolerance (normal vs. impaired) and androgen status (hyperandrogenic vs. non-hyperandrogenic) to explore how bile acid profiles vary across PCOS phenotypes.
What were the most important findings?
The study identified significant alterations in circulating bile acid profiles in women with PCOS, particularly elevated levels of primary (CDCA) and secondary (LCA, DCA) unconjugated bile acids. Among 15 measured metabolites, five, including CDCA and LCA, were significantly different in PCOS patients and showed diagnostic potential. CDCA emerged as the most discriminatory metabolite. Notably, DCA correlated with insulin secretion markers such as fasting and postprandial insulin, though this relationship weakened after adjusting for testosterone, suggesting androgen modulation of these effects. Combined analysis of CDCA, LCA, and testosterone improved PCOS prediction over testosterone alone. These findings highlight a possible interaction between bile acid metabolism, gut microbiota (especially with DCA), and androgen excess in PCOS pathophysiology.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study underscores the potential of specific bile acids, particularly CDCA and LCA, as novel biomarkers for PCOS diagnosis and stratification, especially when used in combination with serum testosterone. It reveals that PCOS pathogenesis involves distinct alterations in bile acid metabolism, possibly through activation of alternative synthesis pathways and interaction with gut microbiota. The research contributes to a growing body of evidence supporting the integration of metabolic and microbial markers into PCOS diagnostics. Clinically, the findings advocate for more nuanced, biochemically informed approaches to PCOS diagnosis beyond current criteria, which do not capture metabolic and microbial heterogeneity. Future research should validate these biomarkers longitudinally and explore therapeutic interventions targeting bile acid pathways or microbiome modulation.
Clinicians’ use of Intravaginal Boric Acid Maintenance Therapy for Recurrent Vulvovaginal Candidiasis and Bacterial Vaginosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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This study evaluates the use of intravaginal boric acid for recurrent vulvovaginal candidiasis and bacterial vaginosis, highlighting its long-term tolerability, high patient satisfaction, and rare side effects.
What was Studied?
This study examined the use of intravaginal boric acid (BA) maintenance therapy in women with recurrent vulvovaginal candidiasis (rVVC) and recurrent bacterial vaginosis (rBV). The researchers performed a retrospective chart review to evaluate clinicians' approaches to prescribing BA for these conditions, focusing on dosage, duration of use, patient satisfaction, and side effects. The study aimed to assess the effectiveness, tolerability, and satisfaction of long-term BA therapy in real-world clinical settings.
Who was Studied?
The study reviewed the medical records of 78 patients from a Johns Hopkins University-affiliated outpatient gynecology clinic. These patients were prescribed intravaginal BA for either rVVC, rBV, or both conditions. The patients were selected based on specific criteria, including multiple visits where BA usage was documented, and those who were prescribed a long-term BA regimen (more than a month). Patients were excluded if there was insufficient documentation regarding the initiation or duration of BA use.
What were the Most Important Findings?
The study revealed that maintenance therapy with intravaginal boric acid was commonly prescribed for rVVC and rBV, with an average duration of use estimated at 13.3 months. A significant portion of patients (37.2%) used BA for a year or more, with some patients continuing therapy for more than three years. The treatment regimen typically included a 7-14 day induction phase with BA, followed by a maintenance phase where patients used 300mg or 600mg of BA 2-3 times per week.
Despite the lack of long-term safety data, the study found high patient satisfaction with BA therapy (76.9%), though a small number of patients (16.7%) were dissatisfied, typically due to continued or worsening symptoms. The study also indicated that patients with rVVC were more likely to receive BA as part of an antifungal induction regimen, while patients with rBV were often prescribed antibiotics in addition to BA. Side effects were rare, with a few patients reporting vaginal irritation or leaking, but these effects were generally manageable.
What are the Implications of this Study?
This study provides real-world evidence supporting the use of intravaginal boric acid as a long-term treatment for recurrent vulvovaginal candidiasis and bacterial vaginosis. Despite the absence of large-scale prospective studies, the findings suggest that BA is well-tolerated over extended periods and that it may be an effective option for women with azole-resistant infections. This study's insights into patient satisfaction, side effects, and clinical practice could inform future treatment guidelines and clinical trials for rVVC and rBV. However, more robust, prospective studies are needed to confirm the efficacy and long-term safety of BA maintenance therapy and to compare it with other available treatments.
Coincidence of uterine malformations and endometriosis: a clinically relevant problem?
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This retrospective study analyzed 279 patients with uterine malformations and found a high prevalence of endometriosis (74.9%), especially among those with non-obstructive malformations. The findings suggest that endometriosis should be proactively investigated in patients with any type of uterine malformation.
What was studied?
The retrospective study explored the prevalence of endometriosis in patients with uterine malformations. It specifically investigated the relationship between different types of uterine malformations (obstructive, non-obstructive, and various classifications under the American Fertility Society (AFS)) and the incidence of endometriosis, which is characterized by the presence of endometrial tissue outside the uterus. The study aimed to determine if obstructive malformations, which could potentially lead to increased retrograde menstruation, have a higher coincidence with endometriosis compared to non-obstructive ones.
Who was studied?
The subjects of the study were patients with uterine malformations who were admitted to the hospital between December 1, 2014, and November 30, 2019. A total of 279 cases were analyzed after excluding certain cases where no laparoscopy was performed. The study group comprised a diverse array of uterine malformations, including non-obstructive malformations, obstructive malformations, and cases of uterine agenesia/hypoplasia.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed a high prevalence of endometriosis among patients with uterine malformations, particularly in those with obstructive malformations. Key findings include:
Key Findings
Details
Overall Prevalence of Endometriosis
74.9% of the patients had histologically confirmed endometriosis, which included peritoneal, ovarian, and deep infiltrating endometriosis.
Prevalence in Obstructive Uterine Malformations
A particularly high correlation with endometriosis was observed in obstructive uterine malformations, with an incidence of 87.5% in women who had an obstructive malformation with an active endometrium.
Prevalence in Septate Uterus
High rates of endometriosis were also found in cases of septate uterus, a common uterine malformation, with an overall prevalence of 77.1%.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings suggest significant clinical implications for the management of patients with uterine malformations, particularly regarding the diagnosis and treatment of endometriosis. The implications include:
Diagnostic Approach: There should be a high index of suspicion for endometriosis in patients presenting with uterine malformations, especially those with obstructive types. This could lead to more targeted screening and earlier diagnosis.
Integrated Treatment: For patients with both endometriosis and uterine malformations, comprehensive treatment plans that address both conditions simultaneously might improve clinical outcomes.
Fertility Management: Since both endometriosis and uterine malformations can impact fertility, understanding the link between these conditions is crucial for offering appropriate fertility advice and interventions.
Surgical Considerations: The study supports the use of combined diagnostic procedures, such as laparoscopy and hysteroscopy, in the evaluation of such patients to ensure thorough assessment and treatment planning.
Conclusion
Overall, the study underscores the need for specific attention to endometriosis in the presence of uterine malformations to enhance diagnostic accuracy and improve therapeutic strategies, which could ultimately enhance reproductive outcomes and quality of life in affected women.
Combatting antibiotic resistance in Gardnerella vaginalis: A comparative in silico investigation for drug target identification
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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This study identifies phospho-2-dehydro-3-deoxyheptonate aldolase as a drug target in Gardnerella vaginalis and highlights five FDA-approved compounds as potential treatments for bacterial vaginosis.
Who was Studied?
This study focused on combating antibiotic resistance in Gardnerella vaginalis, a bacterium frequently associated with bacterial vaginosis (BV). The researchers employed an in silico approach to identify potential drug targets and therapeutic strategies. By utilizing subtractive genomics and comparative genomics, they analyzed the G. vaginalis proteome to find unique proteins crucial for bacterial survival and virulence, which could serve as drug targets. The study further explored FDA-approved compounds using virtual screening techniques to identify potential inhibitors of these targets. Additionally, the study performed detailed protein structural modeling, docking, and ADMET profiling of the shortlisted compounds to assess their suitability for therapeutic use.
Who was Studied?
The study focused on Gardnerella vaginalis, which is often linked to bacterial vaginosis. It did not study individuals directly but rather the bacterial proteome, applying computational methods to identify druggable targets within the pathogen. The proteome of G. vaginalis was retrieved from the UniProt database, and various bioinformatics tools were used to identify potential drug targets based on their essentiality, uniqueness, and non-homology to human proteins.
What are the Most Important Findings?
The study identified phospho-2-dehydro-3-deoxyheptonate aldolase (PDA) as a promising drug target for G. vaginalis. This enzyme plays a critical role in the shikimate pathway, which is essential for producing aromatic amino acids and other metabolites. The identification of this enzyme is significant because it is non-homologous to human proteins, reducing the risk of off-target effects. The researchers found five compounds from the DrugBank database that could inhibit PDA effectively. The compounds demonstrated strong binding affinities to the target protein, suggesting their potential as effective treatments. Virtual screening results showed that these compounds have favorable pharmacokinetic profiles, including good bioavailability, and do not inhibit key enzymes responsible for drug metabolism, making them promising candidates for repurposing to treat G. vaginalis infections.
What are the Implications of the Study?
This study presents a significant step toward identifying new therapeutic strategies for treating G. vaginalis infections, particularly in the face of rising antibiotic resistance. The identification of PDA as a drug target opens up new possibilities for developing treatments that are more effective than current antibiotics, which often face resistance issues. The use of in silico methods, such as molecular docking and virtual screening, allows for the rapid identification of promising drug candidates, saving time and resources compared to traditional experimental approaches. By repurposing FDA-approved compounds, the study suggests a faster route to clinical application, potentially providing affordable treatments for bacterial vaginosis. This approach also highlights the potential of computational tools in addressing antibiotic resistance and discovering new uses for existing drugs.
Combination therapy of curcumin and fecal microbiota transplant: Potential treatment of polycystic ovarian syndrome
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This review proposes a combination of fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) and curcumin as a potential treatment for Polycystic Ovary Syndrome (PCOS). The hypothesis suggests these therapies could restore gut eubiosis, reduce inflammation, and improve metabolic dysfunction in PCOS patients.
What was studied?
This study proposed a combination therapy of curcumin and fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) as a potential treatment for Polycystic Ovary Syndrome (PCOS). PCOS is a common endocrine disorder affecting women of reproductive age, characterized by symptoms like anovulation, hyperandrogenism, hirsutism, and infertility. The study explored the role of gut dysbiosis in the development and exacerbation of PCOS and hypothesized that combining FMT and curcumin could help restore gut eubiosis, thereby alleviating the symptoms of PCOS. FMT is considered a holistic therapeutic approach, as it targets not only the gut microbiota but also the virome, fungome, and other microbiota domains. Curcumin, known for its anti-inflammatory and antioxidant properties, was suggested to complement FMT by maintaining a healthy microbiome and reducing the chronic inflammation typical in PCOS.
Who was studied?
This was a review and hypothesis-driven study, not a clinical trial. The study reviewed preclinical data and existing literature on the role of FMT and curcumin in PCOS treatment. It focused on understanding the influence of gut dysbiosis on PCOS pathophysiology, and while no direct human participants were involved in this review, the authors proposed a combination therapy for future clinical trials. The target population discussed in the review is women diagnosed with PCOS, as well as those affected by the symptoms and metabolic abnormalities associated with the condition.
What were the most important findings?
The review highlighted significant evidence linking gut dysbiosis to PCOS, suggesting that alterations in the gut microbiota contribute to the development and progression of the syndrome. Studies indicated that FMT has been effective in addressing gut dysbiosis, leading to improved metabolic profiles and hormonal balance in PCOS patients. However, the need for repetitive FMT treatments and the associated challenges with its standardization and patient acceptance were noted as limitations. To overcome these issues, the combination of FMT with curcumin was proposed. Curcumin’s anti-inflammatory and antioxidant properties are well-documented, and it was shown to reduce oxidative stress and improve insulin resistance, key features of PCOS. The combination of these therapies is hypothesized to restore microbiome balance more sustainably, avoiding the need for repeated FMT sessions.
From a microbiome perspective, curcumin’s ability to modulate the gut microbiota is also relevant. It enhances microbial consumption of nutrients like sugars and polyphenols, which could have positive effects on gut health and potentially improve PCOS symptoms. The review suggests that curcumin can support the beneficial effects of FMT by preventing relapse of dysbiosis and enhancing long-term treatment outcomes.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The greatest implication of this hypothesis is the potential for a novel, sustainable treatment for PCOS that combines the strengths of FMT and curcumin. Given the role of gut dysbiosis in PCOS pathophysiology, this combination therapy could offer a more holistic approach to treatment. It could not only help in managing the metabolic and endocrine features of PCOS but also reduce the risks associated with long-term pharmacological treatments. Additionally, this approach may help in restoring the gut microbiota, which is increasingly recognized as playing a significant role in the regulation of inflammation and insulin resistance. By leveraging both FMT and curcumin, clinicians might be able to offer a more effective, lower-risk alternative to conventional PCOS treatments that focus mainly on symptomatic relief.
Comorbid Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder in Women with Bipolar Disorder: Management Challenges
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Management of comorbid PMDD and bipolar disorder requires mood stabilization first, cautious use of antidepressants, hormonal therapy, and adjunctive psychotherapy. Evidence is limited, highlighting the need for personalized, multidisciplinary care and further research.
What was studied?
This review analyzed existing literature on the management and treatment challenges of comorbid Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD) in women diagnosed with Bipolar Disorder (BD). It focused on identifying pharmacological and non-pharmacological strategies to manage the complex interaction of mood symptoms in this dual-diagnosed population.
Who was studied?
The review included data from a small number of case reports and case series comprising six women with comorbid BD and PMDD. Additionally, it integrated broader findings from separate research on BD and PMDD to inform treatment hypotheses for this specific comorbid group.
What were the most important findings?
The study emphasized that optimal management requires first stabilizing bipolar symptoms using mood stabilizers such as lithium and lamotrigine, followed by targeted treatment of PMDD symptoms, typically through estroprogestins during euthymic BD phases. Antidepressants may be cautiously used during depressive episodes but carry a risk of inducing manic switches. Atypical antipsychotics may help manage manic episodes and some PMDD symptoms. Psychotherapeutic interventions like cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), including internet-based delivery, show promise as adjuncts, though evidence specific to comorbid BD/PMDD is limited. Alternative treatments such as lifestyle modifications, supplements (calcium, vitamin B6), and mind-body therapies have been reported anecdotally. The complexity of comorbid BD/PMDD necessitates individualized, multimodal treatment approaches, yet randomized controlled trials (RCTs) in this population remain scarce, highlighting a critical gap in evidence.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This review underscores the clinical challenges of managing comorbid BD and PMDD, a condition marked by more severe mood instability and poorer outcomes than either disorder alone. It advocates for careful mood stabilization before addressing PMDD symptoms to prevent exacerbations and cautions regarding antidepressant use in BD due to manic risk. The limited but encouraging data on hormonal treatments and psychotherapy suggest these as valuable components of integrated care. The paucity of RCTs specific to comorbid BD/PMDD calls for urgent research to establish evidence-based protocols. Clinicians must adopt tailored, multidisciplinary strategies combining pharmacological, psychological, and lifestyle interventions to improve quality of life in this vulnerable population.
Comparison of Vaginal, Cervical and Gut Microbiota Between Women with Stage 3/4 Endometriosis and Healthy Controls
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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In this prospective cohort, women with stage 3/4 endometriosis exhibited a unique microbial profile, characterized by the absence of Atopobium and increased levels of potentially pathogenic genera like Gardnerella, Streptococcus, Escherichia, Shigella, and Ureoplasma in their vaginal and cervical microbiota.
What was studied?
The study focused on exploring the associations between the microbiota of the vaginal, cervical, and gut regions and stage 3–4 endometriosis in women. This research aimed to uncover potential differences in the microbiome composition between women diagnosed with advanced endometriosis and healthy controls, particularly at the genus level of microbial classification.
Who was studied?
The participants included 14 women with histologically proven stage 3–4 endometriosis and 14 healthy controls. These women were carefully selected based on strict criteria to ensure the stability of the microbiota, excluding those who had ever been pregnant or had conditions/medications that could affect the microbiome. All participants belonged to the same ethnicity, and the study managed to maintain a balance between samples collected during different phases of the menstrual cycle in both groups.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed that while the overall composition of the vaginal, cervical, and gut microbiota was similar between women with and without endometriosis, there were notable genus-level differences. Specifically, Atopobium was absent in the endometriosis group’s vaginal and cervical microbiota. Increases in Gardnerella in the cervical microbiota and Escherichia/Shigella in the gut were more common among those with endometriosis. Sensitivity analyses excluding Lactobacillus showed significant increases in Sneathia, Gardnerella, Streptococcus, Escherichia/Shigella, and Ureaplasma, and a decrease in Alloprevotella in the cervical microbiota of the endometriosis group.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings suggest a potentially significant association between the composition of the female microbiota and the presence of stage 3–4 endometriosis, particularly regarding the absence and presence of specific microbial genera. These differences might offer insights into the pathophysiology of endometriosis and indicate potential diagnostic markers or therapeutic targets. Specifically, the study raises intriguing questions about the direction of causation between altered microbiota and endometriosis. It suggests the microbiome’s potential as both a screening tool for endometriosis and a therapeutic target, depending on whether changes in the microbiome are a cause or a consequence of the disease. The study also underscores the potential utility of gut microbiome analysis as a predictive tool for surgical decisions, such as the need for bowel resection to treat deep infiltrating endometriosis.
Overall, this research lays the groundwork for further studies to clarify the causal relationships between dysbiosis and endometriosis and to explore the microbiome’s role in the disease’s pathogenesis, diagnosis, and treatment.
Composition and Functional Potential of the Human Mammary Microbiota Prior to and Following Breast Tumor Diagnosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Breast Cancer
Breast Cancer
Traditionally linked to genetic predispositions and environmental exposures, emerging evidence highlights the microbiome as a critical and underappreciated factor influencing breast cancer progression, immune response, and treatment outcomes.
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This study explores the mammary microbiota's composition and function before and after breast cancer diagnosis, revealing dysbiosis and metabolic shifts as early markers.
What was studied?
This study investigated the composition and functional potential of the human mammary microbiota in healthy breast tissues and those associated with breast cancer development. The researchers focused on tissue samples collected before cancer diagnosis (prediagnostic or PD), as well as adjacent normal (AN) and tumor (T) tissues from breast cancer patients. Using 16S rRNA sequencing and functional metagenomic predictions, they aimed to identify bacterial dysbiosis and metabolic changes associated with breast cancer progression.
Who was studied?
A total of 141 women were included in the study, contributing 159 breast tissue samples. These included 49 samples from healthy individuals (H), 15 from prediagnostic cases (PD), 49 from adjacent normal tissues (AN), and 46 from tumor tissues (T). The prediagnostic samples were obtained from women who later developed breast cancer, allowing researchers to explore early microbial changes.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed significant bacterial dysbiosis and metabolic reprogramming in PD, AN, and T tissues compared to healthy tissues. Prediagnostic tissues exhibited an intermediary bacterial composition between healthy and cancerous tissues. Shifts in specific bacterial families such as Bacillaceae, Streptococcaceae, and Corynebacteriaceae were detected in PD tissues and were more pronounced in AN and T tissues. Functional analysis revealed reduced bacterial metabolic activities, particularly pathways related to xenobiotics degradation, which could otherwise protect against carcinogenesis. Additionally, altered correlations between host gene expression and microbial functions were observed, highlighting potential early microbial responses to tumor microenvironments.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This research highlights the mammary microbiota's potential as a critical biomarker for early breast cancer detection and risk stratification by revealing bacterial dysbiosis and metabolic reprogramming in prediagnostic tissues, suggesting microbial changes may precede clinical symptoms or histological abnormalities. The identification of an intermediary microbiota composition in prediagnostic tissues supports the microbiome's role in early cancer development, indicating microbial shifts as potential early drivers or responders to tumorigenesis. A significant reduction in metabolic functions, such as xenobiotic degradation, in cancer-associated tissues implies a diminished microbial ability to detoxify carcinogens, increasing susceptibility to tumor formation. Altered correlations between microbial taxa and host gene expression further suggest dynamic interactions influencing immune responses, inflammation, and cellular proliferation, with positive associations between microbial functions and tumor-related genes pointing to potential mechanistic links to cancer progression.
These findings not only enhance understanding of the microbiota's role in breast cancer but also offer clinical translation opportunities, including the development of non-invasive diagnostic tools based on prediagnostic microbial signatures, microbiome-modulating therapies to target dysbiosis, and therapeutic interventions aimed at restoring protective bacterial functions and reducing cancer risk.
Comprehensive profiles and diagnostic value of menopausal-specific gut microbiota in premenopausal breast cancer
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Breast Cancer
Breast Cancer
Traditionally linked to genetic predispositions and environmental exposures, emerging evidence highlights the microbiome as a critical and underappreciated factor influencing breast cancer progression, immune response, and treatment outcomes.
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This study identifies menopausal-specific gut microbial markers and functional pathways linked to breast cancer, offering diagnostic potential and insights into prevention.
What was studied?
This study investigated the gut microbiota profiles, diagnostic value, and functional pathways specific to premenopausal breast cancer patients. It aimed to identify unique gut microbial markers distinguishing premenopausal breast cancer patients from postmenopausal patients and age-matched controls. The study also explored functional pathways of gut microbiota linked to breast cancer progression and diagnostic potential.
Who was studied?
The study analyzed 267 participants divided into four groups: premenopausal controls (Pre-C, n=50), premenopausal breast cancer patients (Pre-BC, n=100), postmenopausal controls (Post-C, n=17), and postmenopausal breast cancer patients (Post-BC, n=100). All breast cancer patients were newly diagnosed with stage I–II disease and excluded if they had received treatments or medications affecting gut microbiota before fecal sample collection.
What were the most important findings?
The study highlights significant differences in gut microbial diversity, composition, and functional pathways between premenopausal and postmenopausal breast cancer patients. Premenopausal breast cancer patients showed reduced α-diversity and distinct β-diversity compared to controls, with alterations in specific bacterial taxa linked to inflammation and cancer progression. In contrast, postmenopausal patients exhibited a different microbial profile, including an increase in pathogenic bacteria. Functional pathway analyses revealed steroid-related and oncogenic pathways in premenopausal patients, while postmenopausal patients were associated with chemical carcinogenesis and aldosterone-regulated pathways. The findings emphasize the diagnostic potential of gut microbiota in differentiating breast cancer subtypes and guiding prevention strategies.
Aspect
Premenopausal Breast Cancer
Postmenopausal Breast Cancer
Universal Markers (Both Types)
α-Diversity
Significantly reduced compared to controls
No reduction observed compared to postmenopausal controls
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β-Diversity
Distinct from controls
Distinct from controls
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Enriched Microbes
Bacteroides fragilis, Anaerostipes (linked to inflammation and progression)
Chemical carcinogenesis; Aldosterone-regulated pathways
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Diagnostic Potential
Strong microbial markers for distinguishing premenopausal breast cancer
Strong microbial markers for distinguishing postmenopausal breast cancer
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What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings underscore the diagnostic potential of microbial markers for early, non-invasive breast cancer detection based on menopausal status. Identifying these microbial and functional pathways expands the understanding of breast cancer pathogenesis, especially in premenopausal women. Moreover, the study highlights the gut microbiota as a modifiable factor, suggesting potential interventions like probiotics or dietary changes to mitigate breast cancer risk.
Correlation of calprotectin serum levels with degrees of endometriosis: A cross-sectional study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Nutritional Immunity
Nutritional Immunity
Nutritional immunity restricts metal access to pathogens, leveraging sequestration, transport, and toxicity to control infections and immunity.
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This study found no significant correlation between serum calprotectin levels and the severity of endometriosis. Despite its known role as an inflammatory biomarker, calprotectin did not differentiate between stages of disease, suggesting limited utility in clinical staging and reinforcing the need for localized biomarker assessment.
What was studied?
This cross-sectional study aimed to evaluate the correlation between serum calprotectin levels and the severity of endometriosis. The primary objective was to determine whether calprotectin could serve as a non-invasive biomarker to distinguish the different stages of endometriosis severity based on the revised American Society for Reproductive Medicine (ASRM) classification.
Who was studied?
A total of 46 women diagnosed with endometriosis undergoing laparoscopic or laparotomy procedures at three tertiary hospitals in Jakarta, Indonesia, between July 2017 and April 2018 were enrolled. Blood samples were collected one day prior to surgery, and serum calprotectin was measured using the Phical® ELISA method. Diagnosis and classification of endometriosis were confirmed via histopathological examination following surgery. Exclusion criteria included comorbidities such as diabetes, hypertension, infections, liver disease, or recent corticosteroid/immunosuppressant therapy.
Most important findings:
The distribution of endometriosis stages among participants was as follows: minimal (15.2%), mild (39.1%), moderate (34.8%), and severe (10.9%). Median serum calprotectin levels showed modest variation across groups, with the highest levels in the minimal group (138.98 ng/mL) and the lowest in the mild group (121.49 ng/mL). However, Spearman’s correlation analysis revealed no statistically significant correlation between serum calprotectin levels and the degree of endometriosis (r = –0.16; p = 0.278).
Interestingly, age and BMI showed a moderate positive correlation with endometriosis severity (r = 0.37 and 0.36, respectively; both p < 0.05), which could imply that these host factors are more predictive of disease progression than calprotectin levels.
Despite calprotectin’s recognized value as a biomarker in other chronic inflammatory conditions such as rheumatoid arthritis, obesity, and Crohn’s disease—where it reflects systemic inflammation and correlates with CRP and disease activity—the results of this study do not support its utility in endometriosis staging. The authors acknowledge that calprotectin's utility may be more pronounced in localized samples such as feces or peritoneal fluid rather than systemic circulation, where inflammation may not be as detectably elevated in endometriosis.
Implications:
This study provides evidence against the clinical utility of serum calprotectin as a non-invasive biomarker for grading endometriosis severity. While calprotectin is a well-established marker of inflammation in other systemic and localized inflammatory diseases, its lack of correlation with endometriosis stages underscores the complexity of the disease's inflammatory profile. The findings suggest that systemic markers may not adequately reflect the localized inflammatory microenvironment of endometriotic lesions. The authors recommend further research exploring calprotectin in peritoneal fluid or fecal samples, which may better capture localized inflammatory processes relevant to endometriosis pathogenesis.
Correlation of fecal metabolomics and gut microbiota in mice with endometriosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study explores the relationship between fecal metabolomics and gut microbiota in endometriosis (EMS) mice, finding key metabolic changes and decreased microbiota diversity. Significant pathways, like bile acid biosynthesis and ALA metabolism, were identified, suggesting fecal metabolites affected by dysbacteriosis as potential EMS markers.
What was studied?
The study investigated the interaction between fecal metabolomics and gut microbiota in mice with endometriosis (EMS), aiming to identify metabolic changes and microbiota diversity associated with the disease.
Who was studied?
Female C57BL/6J mice, utilized to construct an EMS model, were the subjects of this research, allowing for the examination of fecal metabolites and gut microbiota composition.
What were the most important findings?
Significant findings included the identification of 156 differential metabolites, decreasing the diversity and abundance of gut microbiota in EMS mice, and involving key metabolic pathways such as bile acid biosynthesis and alpha-linolenic acid (ALA) metabolism. Notably, increased levels of chenodeoxycholic and ursodeoxycholic acids and decreased levels of ALA and 12,13-EOTrE were found in EMS mice feces.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study suggests that the identified abnormal fecal metabolites, influenced by gut dysbiosis, may be potential markers for diagnosing EMS. This finding opens new avenues for understanding EMS pathogenesis and developing non-invasive diagnostic tools based on fecal metabolite profiles.
Correlation of fecal metabolomics and gut microbiota in mice with endometriosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This study identifies gut microbiota and metabolomic shifts in endometriosis, with altered bile acid biosynthesis and ALA metabolism. Elevated CDCA and UDCA levels, coupled with microbial changes, suggest potential biomarkers and therapeutic targets for managing inflammation in endometriosis.
What Was Studied?
This study investigated the correlation between fecal metabolomics and gut microbiota in mice with endometriosis. Using a controlled experimental design, researchers constructed an endometriosis (EMS) mouse model with female C57BL/6J mice and analyzed fecal samples through non-targeted metabolomics and 16S rRNA sequencing. The primary objective was to identify differential metabolites and microbial compositions that could serve as biomarkers for endometriosis and provide insight into the metabolic pathways affected by gut dysbiosis in EMS. Functional prediction of the gut microbiota was performed using PICRUSt, and metabolite-microbiota correlations were assessed through Spearman correlation coefficients.
Who Was Studied
The study involved female C57BL/6J mice, which were divided into two groups: an EMS group and a control group. Endometriosis was induced in the EMS group through intraperitoneal injection of endometrial fragments, while the control group received saline injections with adipose tissue. Fecal samples were collected from both groups, processed for liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS), and subjected to 16S rRNA sequencing to map microbial diversity and metabolic profiles. The study aimed to simulate the inflammatory and microbiome-related characteristics of endometriosis in humans by using this established animal model.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study identified significant shifts in both fecal metabolomics and gut microbiota composition in mice with endometriosis compared to controls. A total of 156 named differential metabolites were screened, with key changes observed in pathways linked to secondary bile acid biosynthesis and alpha-linolenic acid (ALA) metabolism. Notably, there was an increased abundance of chenodeoxycholic acid (CDCA) and ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA) alongside a decreased presence of ALA and 12,13-EOTrE in the EMS mice. Microbial diversity was reduced in the EMS group, with a specific loss in Bacteroides and Firmicutes, contrasted by increases in Proteobacteria and Verrucomicrobia. At the genus level, there was a marked increase in Allobaculum, Akkermansia, Parasutterella, and Rikenella, with significant decreases in Lachnospiraceae, Lactobacillus, and Bacteroides. Functional predictions revealed alterations in oxidative phosphorylation, alanine, aspartate, glutamate metabolism, and starch and sucrose metabolism. Importantly, the study identified Sphingobium and Pseudomonas viridiflava as consistently enriched in EMS mice, suggesting their potential role in inflammation and metabolic disruption. The correlation analysis demonstrated strong associations between specific metabolites (like CDCA and ALA) and microbial shifts, indicating a complex interaction between gut dysbiosis and metabolic imbalances in endometriosis.
Parameter
Findings in EMS Mice
Metabolomic Changes
156 differential metabolites identified, with key changes in secondary bile acid biosynthesis and alpha-linolenic acid (ALA) metabolism.
Increased Metabolites
Chenodeoxycholic acid (CDCA) and Ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA).
Decreased Metabolites
Alpha-linolenic acid (ALA) and 12,13-EOTrE.
Microbial Diversity
Overall reduction in diversity; significant losses in Bacteroides and Firmicutes.
Phylum-Level Shifts
Proteobacteria and Verrucomicrobia significantly increased in the EMS group.
Genus-Level Increases
Allobaculum, Akkermansia, Parasutterella, and Rikenella.
Genus-Level Decreases
Lachnospiraceae, Lactobacillus, and Bacteroides.
Functional Pathway Alterations
Disrupted oxidative phosphorylation, alanine, aspartate, glutamate metabolism, and starch and sucrose metabolism.
Unique Enrichments
Sphingobium and Pseudomonas viridiflava enriched in EMS mice, indicating roles in inflammation and metabolic disruption.
Metabolite-Microbiota Correlations
Strong correlations between CDCA, ALA, and microbial shifts, suggesting complex interactions contributing to dysbiosis and inflammation.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
The findings suggest that endometriosis is associated with profound shifts in gut microbiota and fecal metabolomics, which may contribute to chronic inflammation and disease persistence. The increased levels of chenodeoxycholic acid (CDCA) and ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA), combined with reductions in ALA, indicate that bile acid metabolism and fatty acid dysregulation are central to the pathogenesis of endometriosis. The enrichment of Allobaculum, Akkermansia, Parasutterella, and Rikenella in the gut microbiota suggests these species could be contributing to local and systemic inflammation, disrupting gut barrier integrity. These microbial and metabolomic signatures could serve as non-invasive biomarkers for diagnosing endometriosis and may offer new therapeutic targets focused on restoring microbial balance and metabolic homeostasis. Furthermore, the study highlights the critical role of gut microbiota in modulating immune responses and metabolic pathways, paving the way for microbiome-targeted treatments in endometriosis management.
Correlation of Serum Zinc Levels with Postpartum Depression-A Case- control Study in North Karnataka
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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This study demonstrates that low serum zinc levels correlate with increased severity of postpartum depression, suggesting the potential benefits of zinc supplementation in postpartum care.
What was studied?
This was a case-control study aimed at investigating the correlation between serum zinc levels and postpartum depression. The study sought to compare the serum zinc levels in postpartum women diagnosed with depression and healthy controls, using the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS) to categorize depression severity.
Who was studied?
The study involved 80 postpartum women, divided into two groups: 40 women with postpartum depression (EPDS score >10) and 40 healthy controls (EPDS score <10). Participants were aged between 20-30 years and were recruited from a tertiary care hospital in North Karnataka, India. All participants had their serum zinc levels measured, and data was analyzed to understand the relationship between zinc deficiency and depression severity.
What were the most important findings?
The study found significantly lower serum zinc levels in women with postpartum depression compared to healthy controls. A negative correlation was observed between serum zinc levels and the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale scores, suggesting that lower zinc levels were associated with more severe depressive symptoms. The study also identified risk factors for postpartum depression, including the age of the mother, mode of delivery, and education level. The findings suggest that zinc deficiency could play a role in the onset and severity of postpartum depression.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study implies that monitoring and addressing zinc deficiency could become an important aspect of managing postpartum depression. Given the negative correlation between zinc levels and depression severity, zinc supplementation could be considered as a potential intervention for preventing or alleviating postpartum depression. The results underscore the importance of nutritional support in postpartum care, particularly in regions where zinc deficiency is prevalent. This also calls for greater attention to maternal mental health and the integration of nutritional assessments into standard postpartum care practices. However, the small sample size and the exclusion of women on multivitamins or zinc supplements point to the need for larger, more inclusive studies to confirm these findings and explore optimal zinc supplementation strategies for postpartum women.
Critical Review on Zeolite Clinoptilolite Safety and Medical Applications in vivo
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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The review highlights clinoptilolite's detoxifying, immunomodulatory, and antioxidant properties, showing its safety and potential for in vivo use in humans and animals. It can adsorb toxic metals like nickel, support gut health, and modulate immune responses, making it valuable for conditions like systemic nickel allergy syndrome and microbiome imbalances, with promising applications in both human supplements and veterinary care.
What was reviewed?
The review focused on the safety and medical applications of clinoptilolite, a naturally occurring zeolite, for in vivo use. The analysis encompassed the physical and chemical properties of clinoptilolite, its detoxifying capabilities, and its potential therapeutic effects in both human and veterinary medicine. The review also considered various studies on clinoptilolite's role in detoxification, immune modulation, oxidative stress, and its impact on body homeostasis. The safety of clinoptilolite for internal consumption, including concerns about the potential release of heavy metals like lead during use, was also addressed.
Who was reviewed?
The review examined the available scientific literature concerning the effects of clinoptilolite in various contexts, specifically in animal studies and human trials. It included research from both clinical studies and preclinical evaluations that utilized clinoptilolite as a dietary supplement or therapeutic agent. The literature encompassed studies on humans, including clinical trials and case studies, as well as extensive research on animals such as dairy cows, rats, mice, and poultry, assessing both the therapeutic benefits and safety profiles of clinoptilolite-based products.
What were the most important findings of this review?
Detoxification Properties: Clinoptilolite exhibits high cation-exchange capacity, making it effective in adsorbing toxic metals such as lead, cadmium, and nickel from the body. This property makes it valuable in reducing the load of toxic elements in animals and humans.
Safety Profile: Clinoptilolite, particularly in its micronized and purified forms, has been shown to be generally safe for in vivo use at varying dosages, with no significant toxic effects observed in animals or humans. The European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) has classified it as safe for consumption in animal feeds at specified doses.
Immunomodulatory and Antioxidant Effects: Clinoptilolite can modulate immune responses, as evidenced by its effects on immune cell counts and antioxidant enzyme activity in various studies. This includes improved responses in immunodeficient conditions and a reduction in markers of oxidative stress.
Impact on Microbiota and Gastrointestinal Health: Clinoptilolite has shown positive effects on gut health, potentially through its detoxifying role, the maintenance of intestinal wall integrity, and its ability to modulate the microbiota composition. These effects suggest potential therapeutic roles in conditions like gastrointestinal disorders, dysbiosis, and enhanced resistance to pathogens.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
Potential for Human Therapeutics: The review highlights the potential use of clinoptilolite as a nutraceutical for detoxifying heavy metals and improving immune responses in humans. Its safety profile supports further exploration into its use in supplements aimed at mitigating conditions related to heavy metal exposure, such as systemic nickel allergy syndrome (SNAS) and other metal-induced toxicities.
Veterinary Applications: Clinoptilolite's effectiveness in improving animal health—particularly its ability to enhance reproductive health, detoxify nitrates, and manage mycotoxins—suggests that it could serve as a valuable supplement in livestock production. Its role in reducing ammonia and supporting gut health is particularly important for animal productivity and welfare.
Integration in Microbiome-Targeted Therapies: Given its impact on gastrointestinal health and the microbiome, clinoptilolite holds promise as a component of microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs). It could serve as an adjunctive therapy in managing conditions like irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) and other dysbiosis-associated disorders.
Safety Considerations and Future Research: The review underlines the importance of rigorous quality control and characterization of clinoptilolite materials for in vivo applications. Variability in clinoptilolite's physical and chemical properties across different sources necessitates careful evaluation before therapeutic use. Future studies are needed to delineate the specific mechanisms by which clinoptilolite exerts its effects on immune modulation and detoxification, as well as to confirm its efficacy and safety in long-term human applications.
Current patient perspectives of vulvovaginal candidiasis: incidence, symptoms, management and post-treatment outcomes
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Vulvovaginal Candidiasis (VVC)
Vulvovaginal Candidiasis (VVC)
Vulvovaginal candidiasis (VVC) is a common fungal infection caused by Candida albicans. Disruptions in the vaginal microbiome and immune responses contribute to its development. Effective treatment involves both antifungal therapy and strategies to restore microbiome balance, preventing recurrent infections and addressing emerging antifungal resistance.
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This contemporary survey validates historical data on VVC/RVVC prevalence, identifying common symptoms, risk factors, and treatment outcomes. It highlights antibiotics as a major risk factor and emphasizes the superior efficacy of physician-managed care compared to self-treatment, reinforcing the need for ongoing improvements in management strategies.
What was studied?
This study explored contemporary patient perspectives regarding vulvovaginal candidiasis (VVC) and recurrent vulvovaginal candidiasis (RVVC), focusing on incidence, clinical symptoms, diagnosis methods, management strategies, and post-treatment outcomes.
Who was studied?
The research involved 284 non-pregnant women recruited from university-affiliated Obstetrics and Gynecology clinics, as well as general community settings. The participants included predominantly Caucasian women (78%), along with African American (14%) and Asian women (8%), covering reproductive, perimenopausal, and postmenopausal age ranges.
What were the most important findings?
The study reaffirmed historical prevalence rates, with 78% of women experiencing at least one episode of VVC, and 34% having RVVC (defined as ≥4 episodes annually). Major clinical symptoms consistently reported were itching (91%), burning (68%), redness (58%), and cottage cheese-like discharge (56%). Antibiotic usage emerged as the leading identifiable risk factor (38%), followed by sexual intercourse (22%) and humid weather (11%). However, 55% reported episodes as idiopathic, with no identifiable trigger. Physicians diagnosed most cases (73%) using pelvic examinations and lab tests, prescribed antifungal treatments, and achieved an 84% symptom relief rate. In contrast, self-diagnosed/self-treated cases reported significantly lower relief rates (57%). Within RVVC patients, 71% relied on continual or intermittent antifungal therapy to control symptoms effectively, whereas nearly 20% failed to obtain adequate relief despite ongoing treatment.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study highlights the enduring high prevalence of VVC/RVVC despite advancements in diagnostic and therapeutic methods. It emphasizes the need for continued research into more effective, targeted treatments and indicates the importance of accurate clinical diagnosis over self-management. Furthermore, the similarity in symptom profiles between episodic VVC and RVVC suggests that future innovations in diagnostic and treatment strategies could benefit all affected populations. Clinicians should particularly note the high percentage of idiopathic cases, indicating the complexity of prevention and treatment approaches.
Current Treatment of Bacterial Vaginosis—Limitations and Need for Innovation
February 12, 2026
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This review reveals high BV recurrence rates after metronidazole or clindamycin treatment due to microbial biofilms and potential sexual transmission. While both antibiotics show similar short-term efficacy, they differ in resistance patterns. Biofilm disruptors and partner treatment may improve outcomes, but better diagnostics and combination therapies are urgently needed.
What was Reviewed?
This comprehensive review critically examines the current limitations in bacterial vaginosis (BV) treatment, with particular focus on the high recurrence rates following standard antibiotic therapies, including both metronidazole and clindamycin. The authors analyze the microbial factors contributing to treatment failure, specifically the role of polymicrobial biofilms and antimicrobial resistance patterns in Gardnerella vaginalis and other BV-associated bacteria. The review also explores emerging evidence for sexual transmission of BV-associated microorganisms and evaluates novel therapeutic approaches targeting biofilm disruption and partner treatment strategies.
Who was Reviewed?
The review synthesizes data from multiple clinical trials and observational studies involving women with recurrent BV across diverse populations. It incorporates microbiological research on vaginal and penile microbiota, including studies demonstrating the presence of BV-associated bacteria in male sexual partners. The analysis also examines in vitro studies of biofilm formation and disruption, as well as limited clinical trials of adjunctive therapies like boric acid and probiotics.
Key Findings and Microbial Associations
The review highlights that BV represents a profound dysbiosis where protective Lactobacillus species, particularly L. crispatus, are replaced by a polymicrobial consortium including Gardnerella vaginalis, Atopobium vaginae, and various Clostridiales species. These pathogens form resilient biofilms that protect them from both metronidazole and clindamycin, the two first-line antibiotics for BV. While short-term cure rates approach 80% for both medications, recurrence rates exceed 50% within 6-12 months. The review notes important differences between the antibiotics: clindamycin appears more effective against certain biofilm-embedded pathogens like A. vaginae but may promote clindamycin-resistant anaerobic gram-negative rods, while metronidazole faces challenges with intrinsically resistant G. vaginalis clades. Both antibiotics fail to address the potential sexual transmission of BV-associated bacteria, which are detectable in male partners' genital microbiota and may contribute to reinfection.
Implications of the Review
The review underscores that current antibiotic regimens, whether using metronidazole or clindamycin, are insufficient for long-term BV control due to biofilm persistence and potential sexual transmission. Clinicians should continue following treatment guidelines but recognize these limitations when managing recurrent cases. The findings suggest several important considerations: vaginal clindamycin may be preferable for certain BV subtypes or in pregnancy, while metronidazole remains the most widely studied option. For recurrent BV, adjunctive approaches like biofilm disruptors (boric acid, DNase) or partner treatment may be worth considering, though more research is needed. The review emphasizes the need for improved diagnostics to identify BV subtypes and resistance patterns, as well as the development of combination therapies targeting both pathogens and biofilms. Public health measures promoting condom use and further research into sexual transmission dynamics could help reduce BV recurrence at the population level.
Determinants of premenstrual dysphoric disorder and associated factors among regular undergraduate students at Hawassa University Southern, Ethiopia
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD) is a severe mood disorder linked to hormonal and neurochemical changes. Emerging research highlights the gut microbiome’s role in symptom modulation, opening new avenues for microbiome-targeted treatments alongside traditional therapies.
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Among Ethiopian female university students, PMDD affects nearly two-thirds and links strongly to severe menstrual pain, irregular cycles, low social support, and contraceptive use. Early identification and comprehensive care are essential to alleviate its academic and psychological impacts.
What was studied?
This institutional-based cross-sectional study investigated the prevalence and determinants of premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD) among regular undergraduate female students at Hawassa University, Ethiopia. It aimed to quantify PMDD prevalence using a standardized premenstrual symptoms screening tool and to identify socio-demographic, clinical, psychological, gynecological, and behavioral factors associated with PMDD in this population.
Who was studied?
The study included 374 regular female undergraduate students aged 18 and above from the College of Medicine and Health Sciences at Hawassa University. Participants were selected using stratified random sampling and completed a self-administered questionnaire assessing premenstrual symptoms, menstrual characteristics, social support, contraceptive use, and behavioral factors. Students with illnesses or absent during data collection were excluded.
What were the most important findings?
The study found a high PMDD prevalence of approximately 63% among participants, significantly higher than many global estimates. Key factors independently associated with PMDD included severe menstrual pain, irregular menstrual cycles, poor or moderate social support, and contraceptive use. Severe dysmenorrhea exacerbated emotional and behavioral symptoms, while social support appeared protective. These findings indicate that PMDD substantially impairs daily functioning, including academic performance, and is influenced by a complex interplay of physiological, psychological, and social factors. The study emphasizes the importance of early screening and tailored interventions to mitigate PMDD's impact on student well-being and success.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study highlights PMDD as a prevalent and underrecognized condition with significant negative effects on young women’s mental health and academic performance in a low-resource setting. It underscores the urgent need for integrating PMDD screening and psychosocial support into university health services, especially focusing on managing menstrual pain, providing social support, and carefully evaluating contraceptive use. These findings advocate for multidisciplinary interventions that address both physical and psychological determinants of PMDD, aiming to improve quality of life and academic outcomes. Moreover, the research supports policymakers and educators in developing targeted health promotion programs and facilitating access to effective treatment for PMDD in similar contexts.
Diagnosis of peripartum depression disorder: A state-of-the-art approach from the COST Action Riseup-PPD
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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This review emphasizes peripartum depression as distinct from general depression, featuring pronounced anxiety, psychomotor symptoms, and obsessive thoughts, urging expanded diagnostic criteria to cover the full peripartum year and specific maternal symptomatology, crucial for improved diagnosis and tailored intervention.
What was reviewed?
The review synthesizes the latest research comparing peripartum depression (PPD) with major depressive disorder (MDD), emphasizing diagnostic criteria, prevalence, symptom profiles, developmental trajectory, and comorbidities. The researchers particularly focused on delineating PPD as a potentially distinct entity rather than merely a subtype or specifier of MDD. They reviewed evidence regarding clinical characteristics, diagnostic features, symptom presentation, cultural considerations, and associated risk factors. The review further explored risk factors unique to PPD, such as ovarian tissue expression differences, premenstrual syndrome, unintended pregnancies, and specific obstetric complications.
Who was reviewed?
This review synthesizes research literature rather than studying individual subjects. It includes studies from various databases covering pregnant and postpartum women diagnosed or at risk of peripartum depression (PPD), comparing these findings against major depressive disorder (MDD) populations in general. Special attention was given to differences across cultural settings, indicating a significant variation in prevalence and symptom manifestation.
What were the most important findings?
The review identified critical distinctions between PPD and general MDD. PPD exhibits less typical depressive symptoms such as profound sadness and suicidal thoughts, while significantly heightened symptoms include anxiety, irritability, obsessive intrusive thoughts about harming the infant, psychomotor agitation, and decision-making difficulties. Additionally, the onset of PPD is broader than current diagnostic criteria suggest, commonly starting anytime during pregnancy and potentially extending throughout the first postpartum year. Furthermore, there are distinct risk factors, notably related to hormonal fluctuations and obstetric complications, which differ markedly from general depression risk factors. Cultural variance significantly influences the prevalence and expression of PPD symptoms, necessitating culturally sensitive diagnostic approaches. The review underscored that clinicians need to consider PPD as potentially requiring distinct diagnostic criteria rather than merely a subset of MDD, emphasizing the importance of tailored diagnostic tools and criteria specific to the peripartum context.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The greatest implication of this review is advocating for revising and broadening diagnostic criteria for PPD, emphasizing the inclusion of anxiety and specific maternal-related symptoms. Extending the onset specifier throughout pregnancy and the entire postpartum year could significantly improve accurate diagnosis and intervention. Highlighting the unique characteristics of PPD could encourage tailored treatments, reduce stigma, and improve maternal and child health outcomes by ensuring better recognition, diagnosis, and management of this disorder.
Dietary Intake of Selected Nutrients Affects Bacterial Vaginosis in Women
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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Higher dietary fat intake increases the risk of bacterial vaginosis (BV), while folate, vitamin E, and calcium may lower severe BV risk. This study suggests dietary interventions could play a role in managing BV, offering insights for clinicians on how nutrition affects vaginal microbiome balance.
What was Studied?
This study examined the relationship between dietary intake and the presence of bacterial vaginosis (BV) in women. Researchers assessed how macronutrient and micronutrient consumption, particularly fat intake and essential vitamins, influenced the risk of BV and severe BV.
Who was Studied?
The study analyzed data from 1,521 non-pregnant women, aged 15–45, who were part of a larger longitudinal study of vaginal flora in Birmingham, Alabama. The majority (86%) were African American. Participants underwent clinical assessments and completed a food frequency questionnaire.
Most Important Findings
The study found a significant association between dietary fat intake and the risk of BV. Women consuming higher amounts of total fat, saturated fat, and monounsaturated fat had an increased likelihood of BV and severe BV. Total fat intake was linked to a 50% higher risk of BV, while saturated fat and monounsaturated fat were particularly associated with severe BV.
Conversely, higher intakes of folate, vitamin E, and calcium were associated with a reduced risk of severe BV. These nutrients may support local immune function, potentially counteracting the microbial imbalance seen in BV. Energy intake had a marginal association with BV, while carbohydrate and protein intake showed no significant links. The study suggests that a high-fat diet may alter vaginal microflora, increase vaginal pH, and contribute to BV development.
Implications of the Study
Diet plays a crucial role in vaginal health, with fat consumption significantly influencing BV risk. Clinicians can reduce BV risk by advising patients to lower fat intake and increase folate, vitamin E, and calcium. Researchers should further explore how dietary fat disrupts vaginal microbiota and whether targeted nutritional changes can serve as effective prevention strategies.
Dietary Patterns and Bacterial Vaginosis: is there any association?
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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A nutrient-rich diet lowers bacterial vaginosis (BV) risk, while processed foods increase it. This study highlights the importance of dietary choices in vaginal microbiome balance, offering insights for clinicians on how diet influences BV risk.
What was Studied?
Researchers investigated how dietary acid load and adherence to the Alternative Healthy Eating Index (AHEI) affect bacterial vaginosis (BV) risk. They aimed to determine whether dietary patterns and acid-producing foods influence the vaginal microbiome and BV prevalence.
Who was Studied?
The study included 143 women diagnosed with BV and 151 healthy controls, aged 18–45, from a gynecology clinic in Tehran, Iran. Researchers assessed dietary intake using a validated food frequency questionnaire and diagnosed BV using the Amsel criteria.
Most Important Findings
A high AHEI score significantly lowered BV risk. Women in the highest AHEI tertile had a 75% lower chance of developing BV. Consuming more vegetables, nuts, legumes, and unprocessed meats further reduced BV odds. In contrast, high intakes of sugar-sweetened beverages, trans fats, and sodium increased BV risk by up to three times.
Dietary acid load, measured by potential renal acid load (PRAL) and net endogenous acid production (NEAP), showed no significant link to BV. This suggests that overall diet quality, rather than dietary acid-base balance, plays a more critical role in BV risk.
Microbiome analysis linked high AHEI adherence to a Lactobacillus-dominant vaginal environment, which protects against BV. In contrast, poor dietary choices promoted the growth of BV-associated bacteria such as Gardnerella vaginalis, Atopobium spp., and Prevotella spp..
Implications of the Study
Diet quality directly affects vaginal microbiome health. Clinicians should encourage patients to adopt a plant-based diet rich in vegetables, nuts, and legumes while limiting sugar-sweetened beverages and trans fats. Future research should explore whether dietary interventions can serve as an effective strategy for BV prevention and management.
Dioxin-like PCB 126 increases intestinal inflammation and disrupts gut microbiota and metabolic homeostasis.
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This study investigated the effects of PCB 126 on gut microbiota and metabolic health in mice. It revealed significant shifts, including a 49-fold increase in the Firmicutes to Bacteroidetes ratio, disruptions in gut diversity, elevated inflammation, and altered metabolic hormone levels. These findings underscore the need for protective health policies and further research.
What was studied?
The research focused on examining the effects of PCB 126, a dioxin-like pollutant, on gut health and microbiota as well as metabolic homeostasis in a mouse model predisposed to cardiometabolic diseases. The study investigated how exposure to this pollutant influences the gut microbiome, intestinal and systemic inflammation, metabolic hormones, and the development of metabolic disease markers like atherosclerosis.
Who was studied?
The subjects of this study were male LDL receptor-deficient (Ldlr -/-) mice, which are genetically predisposed to cardiometabolic diseases. These mice were used to model the impact of PCB 126 exposure on the progression of diseases such as diabetes and atherosclerosis, reflecting potential effects in human populations exposed to similar environmental contaminants.
What were the most important findings?
Category
Findings
Microbiota and Metabolic Disruption
PCB 126 exposure led to significant shifts in gut microbiota, notably decreased alpha diversity and increased Firmicutes to Bacteroidetes ratio, which are changes associated with gut dysbiosis and metabolic diseases.
Inflammatory Responses
The study observed increased systemic and intestinal inflammation in PCB-exposed mice, evidenced by elevated levels of various inflammatory cytokines and metabolic hormones such as insulin and glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1).
Metabolic Hormone Alterations
There were increased levels of insulin and insulin-related peptides, indicating potential disruptions in glucose homeostasis and insulin sensitivity due to the toxicant exposure.
Atherosclerosis and Cardiovascular Risk
While the study found trends towards increased atherosclerosis in PCB 126 exposed mice, the findings at later stages were less pronounced, suggesting a complex interaction over time between pollutant exposure and cardiovascular disease progression.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study explored the significant health risks posed by exposure to dioxin-like pollutants such as PCB 126, focusing on its implications for metabolic and inflammatory diseases. The research demonstrated how PCB 126 disrupts gut microbiota, elevates systemic and intestinal inflammation, and impacts metabolic hormone levels, potentially exacerbating conditions like diabetes and atherosclerosis. These findings advocate for the implementation of stringent environmental regulations and public health policies to minimize exposure to such toxicants.
Moreover, the results underline the critical need for clinical and therapeutic interventions that leverage our growing understanding of the interaction between environmental pollutants and gut microbiota. Developing strategies to preserve or restore gut microbiota balance could serve as preventive measures or treatments for those affected by or at risk of pollutant-induced health conditions. Additionally, the study prompts further research into the exact mechanisms through which pollutants affect health, which could guide the development of comprehensive disease management and treatment solutions that integrate environmental considerations.
Dioxin-like PCBs and Endometriosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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The study reviews the impact of dioxin-like PCBs on endometriosis, highlighting inconsistent epidemiological findings and the greater harm of early life exposures. It underscores the need for stricter regulations and further research to understand PCBs' effects on reproductive health and develop effective interventions.
What was studied?
The study focused on the potential impact of environmental exposure to dioxin-like polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) on the development of endometriosis. It specifically reviewed the complexities and challenges of determining the effects of such toxicants on human health, with an emphasis on reproductive tract diseases.
Who was studied?
The research predominantly referenced studies involving both human and animal populations. It synthesized findings from various epidemiological studies to evaluate the correlation between PCB exposure and the risk of developing endometriosis in humans, while also considering animal studies for understanding early life exposures and their long-term effects.
What were the most important findings?
Category
Description
Varying Epidemiological Results
Epidemiological studies have shown inconsistent results regarding the relationship between PCB exposure and the development of endometriosis. Some studies suggest a potential association, while others do not.
Importance of Early Life Exposures
The research highlighted that exposures to PCBs during early life stages are more detrimental and could be critical in determining the risk of developing diseases like endometriosis later in life.
Mechanisms of Toxicity
PCBs, particularly those that are dioxin-like, have significant effects on endocrine and immune functions which could potentially disrupt normal reproductive tract development and function.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study emphasizes the necessity of implementing stringent public health policies to limit exposure to PCBs, recognizing their potential for significant long-term effects on reproductive health. It suggests that a deeper understanding of how PCBs affect endometrial physiology could lead to more effective clinical strategies for mitigating the impacts of these unavoidable environmental exposures. Additionally, the research identifies an urgent need for more comprehensive studies that incorporate detailed exposure histories. These studies are essential to elucidate the connections between PCB exposure and endometriosis, and to develop targeted interventions aimed at reducing the risk of disease associated with environmental toxicants.
Does Exposure of Lead and Cadmium Affect the Endometriosis?
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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The study links lead and cadmium exposure to increased endometriosis risk, emphasizing lead's role at low blood levels and synergistic effects with cadmium. It advocates for strict monitoring and preventive measures to minimize exposure.
What Was Studied?
This study investigated the association between occupational exposure to lead and cadmium and the risk of developing endometriosis (EM) among South Korean female workers. Utilizing medical and biological data from over 26,000 individuals who underwent lead-associated medical examinations between 2000 and 2004, the study examined blood lead levels (BLLs), co-exposure to cadmium, and their relationship with hospital admissions for EM.
Who Was Studied?
The study focused on South Korean female workers exposed to lead as part of their occupation. These individuals underwent specialized medical examinations. A total of 26,542 workers were included, with the study comparing EM admissions in lead-exposed workers against the general population and noise-exposed workers as control groups.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study found that lead exposure, even at relatively low levels (BLLs < 5 µg/dL), was significantly associated with an increased risk of EM. The standard admission rate (SAR) for EM in lead-exposed workers was 1.24 times higher than the general population, and for workers with BLLs < 5 µg/dL, it was 1.44 times higher. Co-exposure to lead and cadmium demonstrated a synergistic effect, amplifying the risk of EM beyond what could be expected from exposure to either metal alone. While cadmium exposure alone did not show a statistically significant association with EM, the relative excess risk due to interaction (RERI) was 0.33, indicating a notable combined impact of these metals. The study also highlighted that oxidative stress induced by heavy metal exposure likely underpins these effects, with mechanisms involving the disruption of antioxidant defenses and cellular damage.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
This research underscores the need to minimize exposure to heavy metals, particularly lead and cadmium, among female workers. It also calls for rigorous monitoring of blood lead and cadmium levels in workplaces to mitigate their combined effects. The findings are critical for understanding the environmental and occupational contributors to EM and suggest that policies limiting heavy metal exposure could have a substantial public health impact, especially for at-risk populations.
Dual Mechanisms of Action: Anti-Candida and Anti-Inflammatory Potential of Lactobacillus Fermentation Broth in Treating Vulvovaginal Candidiasis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Vulvovaginal Candidiasis (VVC)
Vulvovaginal Candidiasis (VVC)
Vulvovaginal candidiasis (VVC) is a common fungal infection caused by Candida albicans. Disruptions in the vaginal microbiome and immune responses contribute to its development. Effective treatment involves both antifungal therapy and strategies to restore microbiome balance, preventing recurrent infections and addressing emerging antifungal resistance.
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This study explored VAGINNE®, a Lactobacillus fermentation broth, showing strong anti-Candida and anti-inflammatory effects in mice with VVC. It enhanced microbiome health and reduced proinflammatory cytokines, highlighting a promising probiotic alternative to antifungal drugs.
What was studied?
This study investigated the dual anti-Candida and anti-inflammatory effects of VAGINNE®, a fermentation broth derived from Lactobacillus crispatus, Lactobacillus gasseri, and Lactobacillus jensenii, in treating vulvovaginal candidiasis (VVC). Using a controlled mouse model of Candida albicans-induced vaginal infection, the researchers examined the microbiome composition, cytokine levels, and tissue integrity following treatment with VAGINNE® compared to a standard antifungal agent (nystatin) and untreated controls.
Who was studied?
The experimental subjects were female BALB/c mice, aged seven weeks. The researchers inoculated the mice with Candida albicans to mimic human VVC and then divided them into four groups: a healthy control group, an infected group, a nystatin-treated group, and a group treated with VAGINNE®. They conducted microbiological, immunological, and histological analyses on vaginal lavage samples, plasma, and vaginal tissues.
Most Important Findings
VAGINNE® demonstrated a dual mechanism of action in combating Candida albicans. It significantly reduced the fungal burden in the vagina (from 1.67 × 10⁷ CFU/mL in infected controls to 6.15 × 10⁶ CFU/mL) and simultaneously restored beneficial Lactobacillus populations, reaching 1.19 × 10⁸ CFU/mL compared to just 1.20 × 10⁷ CFU/mL in infected animals. Histologically, mice treated with VAGINNE® exhibited preserved vaginal epithelial structure and reduced tissue invasion by fungal hyphae. Immunologically, VAGINNE® decreased levels of key proinflammatory cytokines associated with Th17-mediated immunity. Specifically, IL-17A, IL-22, and IL-23 were significantly reduced in vaginal tissues, while systemic inflammation markers IL-6 and IL-1β were also suppressed in plasma. These cytokines are crucial in fungal immunity but also contribute to excessive inflammation and tissue damage in VVC.
Thus, VAGINNE® not only restored microbiome balance and modulated the immune response, reducing local and systemic inflammation. This combination of microbial suppression and immune regulation reflects a targeted and multifaceted therapeutic strategy, contrasting the fungistatic nature of conventional azoles, which often leads to recurrence and resistance.
Greatest Implications of the Study
This study offers compelling evidence that microbiome-modulating therapies, particularly those using Lactobacillus-derived products, can effectively treat vulvovaginal candidiasis through both antifungal and anti-inflammatory mechanisms. VAGINNE® holds promise as a probiotic-based alternative to azole antifungals, especially in light of increasing drug resistance and recurrence rates in VVC. By promoting Lactobacillus regrowth, reducing fungal load, and downregulating cytokine-driven inflammation, VAGINNE® could support a paradigm shift in VVC management toward microbiome-friendly interventions. However, further clinical trials in human populations are necessary to confirm its safety and efficacy before widespread application.
Dysbiosis of Gut Microbiota (DOGMA) – A novel theory for the development of Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This review introduces the DOGMA theory linking gut dysbiosis and leaky gut to insulin resistance, inflammation, and hyperandrogenism in PCOS. It outlines a compelling rationale for microbiome-targeted therapies using prebiotics and probiotics.
What Was Reviewed?
This paper proposed a novel etiological framework termed the “Dysbiosis of Gut Microbiota (DOGMA) theory" to explain the development of polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS). It reviewed both experimental and observational evidence linking gut microbiota imbalances to PCOS’s hallmark features: insulin resistance, hyperandrogenism, and anovulation. The authors synthesized findings from microbiology, endocrinology, gastroenterology, and immunology to argue that diet-induced dysbiosis triggers increased intestinal permeability, enabling the systemic translocation of lipopolysaccharides (LPS) from gram-negative bacteria. This metabolic endotoxemia, in turn, activates inflammatory pathways and disrupts insulin signaling, which they propose is the central mechanism leading to the hormonal and reproductive manifestations of PCOS. The paper also examined how probiotics, prebiotics, and synbiotics may represent novel, gut-targeted therapies for PCOS.
Who Was Reviewed?
The authors aggregated evidence from previous studies involving women with PCOS, obese individuals, those with irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) or chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS), and various animal models. These studies consistently demonstrated that individuals with PCOS tend to have poor dietary patterns, high in saturated fats and refined sugars but low in fiber, which promote gut dysbiosis and increased gut permeability. Although the paper did not report new microbiome sequencing data, it drew from prior literature that had established correlations between reduced levels of beneficial bacteria such as Bifidobacterium and Lactobacillus, and increased abundance of pro-inflammatory gram-negative species such as Enterobacteriaceae and Bacteroides.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The paper’s central hypothesis, DOGMA, asserts that dysbiosis-induced increases in intestinal permeability initiate a cascade of systemic inflammation and insulin resistance that ultimately disrupts ovarian function. Specifically, the increased translocation of LPS into the bloodstream activates macrophages, leading to overproduction of TNF-α and IL-6, which impair insulin receptor signaling and raise systemic insulin levels. This hyperinsulinemia enhances androgen production by ovarian thecal cells and suppresses hepatic SHBG production, thereby increasing circulating free androgens. In parallel, insulin resistance blocks ovulatory follicle maturation, leading to menstrual irregularity and the characteristic polycystic ovarian morphology. The major microbial associations (MMA) discussed include a decline in Bifidobacterium and Lactobacillus, increased Escherichia coli and Bacteroides, and decreased production of short-chain fatty acids like butyrate, which are critical for maintaining mucosal barrier integrity. These findings collectively map a plausible causal pathway from gut microbial imbalance to endocrine dysfunction in PCOS, even in lean individuals.
What Are the Implications of This Review?
The DOGMA hypothesis marks a paradigm shift in PCOS pathophysiology, positioning the gut microbiome not as a secondary player, but as a central driver of disease onset and progression. For clinicians, this reframing has significant implications. It suggests that microbial screening could become part of diagnostic protocols for PCOS, especially in cases not explained by obesity or conventional metabolic syndrome criteria. Therapeutically, this review underscores the potential of prebiotics and probiotics to restore microbial balance, reduce metabolic endotoxemia, and reverse insulin resistance. While empirical support for these interventions in PCOS remains preliminary, the mechanistic rationale is robust, especially given successful outcomes in adjacent conditions like gestational diabetes and obesity.
Dysbiosis of Gut Microbiota Associated with Clinical Parameters in Polycystic Ovary Syndrome
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This study reveals significant dysbiosis of gut microbiota in women with PCOS, particularly in obese individuals. The altered microbial composition correlates with metabolic and hormonal imbalances, offering potential therapeutic targets for improving PCOS-related conditions.
What Was Studied?
This study focused on the dysbiosis of gut microbiota in women with Polycystic Ovary Syndrome (PCOS) and its correlation with clinical and metabolic parameters. The researchers examined how gut microbiota composition differs between women with PCOS, both obese and non-obese, and healthy controls. Specifically, the study analyzed the relationships between microbial diversity, sex hormones, metabolic markers, and brain-gut axis mediators like serotonin, ghrelin, and peptide YY (PYY).
Who Was Studied?
The study included 48 premenopausal women aged 17–45 years who were divided into four groups: obese women with PCOS, non-obese women with PCOS, obese control women, and non-obese control women. Participants were selected based on their clinical history, and those with conditions like thyroid disorders, hypertension, and lipid dysregulation were excluded from the study.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study revealed significant differences in the gut microbiota between PCOS patients and healthy controls, with notable changes linked to obesity. Specifically, PCOS women, especially those who were obese, exhibited a significant decrease in the diversity of their gut microbiota, particularly with a reduction in beneficial species like Akkermansia and Clostridium. Conversely, harmful microbes like Bacteroides and Escherichia/Shigella were more prevalent in the gut microbiota of PCOS patients, particularly those with obesity.
Additionally, the study identified several co-abundance groups (CAGs) of microbes that were associated with various clinical parameters of PCOS, such as waist circumference, testosterone levels, and hirsutism scores. The altered microbiota composition in PCOS was also correlated with metabolic disturbances, including insulin resistance and abnormal lipid profiles. Importantly, the study found that certain gut microbiota were linked to the secretion of brain-gut axis peptides (serotonin, ghrelin, and PYY), which play a role in regulating metabolism and psychological well-being. The changes in microbial communities, such as the abundance of Bacteroides and the scarcity of Akkermansia, suggested a potential mechanism linking gut dysbiosis with the metabolic and hormonal imbalances characteristic of PCOS.
What Are the Implications of This Study?
The findings suggest that gut microbiota dysbiosis may play a significant role in the pathogenesis of PCOS, particularly in modulating metabolic dysfunctions such as insulin resistance, hyperandrogenism, and obesity. This opens new avenues for potential therapeutic interventions, such as dietary modifications, probiotics, or fecal microbiota transplantation, to restore microbial balance and improve the clinical outcomes of PCOS. The study also underscores the importance of considering the gut microbiota as a potential target for managing metabolic diseases associated with PCOS. However, further research with larger sample sizes and causal studies is needed to confirm these associations and explore the mechanistic pathways involved.
Dysbiosis of the Saliva Microbiome in Patients With Polycystic Ovary Syndrome
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This study reveals disrupted diurnal rhythms and significant dysbiosis in the salivary microbiota of PCOS patients, notably elevated Fusobacterium and reduced Actinobacteria. These oral microbial patterns may influence systemic metabolic and hormonal dysregulation.
What Was Studied?
This study investigated the composition, diversity, and diurnal oscillation of the salivary microbiome in women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) compared to healthy controls. The researchers sought to determine whether salivary microbiota differ in PCOS patients at different time points during the day and to assess how disruptions in these microbial patterns might contribute to metabolic and endocrine dysregulation. Using 16S rRNA gene sequencing, the authors analyzed salivary samples collected every six hours over 24 hours, along with fecal samples, from 10 PCOS patients and 10 age-matched healthy women. They evaluated microbial diversity, taxonomic differences at multiple phylogenetic levels, and predicted metabolic pathway alterations using PICRUSt. A key objective was to identify whether PCOS disrupts the circadian rhythm of oral microbiota, which may contribute to systemic disease processes.
Who Was Studied?
The study recruited 10 women with PCOS diagnosed via the Rotterdam criteria and 10 healthy controls, all aged between 18 and 45, and matched for body mass index (BMI), diet, and lifestyle factors. Participants underwent strict dietary controls before sample collection, and the study excluded individuals with recent antibiotic or probiotic use, hormonal treatment, or oral or systemic diseases. Saliva was sampled at four Zeitgeber time (ZT) points, and stool samples were collected to compare oral and gut microbiota profiles. Blood samples were also taken to assess hormonal and metabolic biomarkers, allowing for correlation with microbial changes.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
PCOS patients showed clear evidence of salivary microbiota dysbiosis. At ZT0, alpha diversity was significantly lower in PCOS participants, indicating reduced species richness and diversity. Beta diversity analysis revealed significant structural shifts in the microbial community at ZT0 and ZT18. Notably, the relative abundance of the phylum Fusobacteria and the genus Fusobacterium was consistently higher in PCOS patients at all time points, while beneficial taxa such as Actinobacteria and Leptotrichia were diminished, particularly at night.
Functionally, PCOS samples exhibited disrupted KEGG pathways. “Methane metabolism” and “butanoate metabolism” were consistently upregulated, both of which have been associated with metabolic disorders and gut permeability. Conversely, pathways related to protein folding, secretion systems, and structural molecule synthesis were downregulated. Critically, the study found that the circadian rhythm of bacterial abundance, observable in healthy individuals for phyla like Proteobacteria, Bacteroidetes, and orders such as Lactobacillales, was largely absent in PCOS patients. This disruption may contribute to both oral health problems and broader metabolic dysfunction via chronobiological misalignment.
While no major differences were detected in gut microbiota composition or diversity between the PCOS and control groups, the oral microbiome showed profound alterations. This suggests that salivary bacteria may offer more accessible and sensitive biomarkers for PCOS-related dysbiosis than fecal bacteria, at least in early or non-obese phenotypes.
What Are the Implications of This Study?
This study provides the first robust evidence that the salivary microbiota in PCOS not only differs significantly from that of healthy controls but also lacks a normal diurnal rhythm. These findings underscore the relevance of the oral microbiome as both a diagnostic window and a potential therapeutic target in PCOS. Clinicians should consider the possibility that microbial timing is as important as microbial composition. Elevated Fusobacterium levels and reduced Actinobacteria may serve as early biomarkers for PCOS-linked dysbiosis, while their functional consequences, such as increased methane production and impaired protein metabolism, suggest mechanistic links to systemic inflammation, insulin resistance, and metabolic syndrome.
From a clinical standpoint, the convenience of saliva sampling, combined with time-sensitive microbial signatures, could facilitate non-invasive PCOS monitoring and risk stratification. This opens the door for chrono-microbiome interventions, timed probiotic delivery, circadian-aligned dietary changes, or salivary microbiome modulation as adjunct therapies. These findings highlight the need for further metagenomic and metatranscriptomic studies to validate and expand the functional understanding of these dysbiotic patterns.
Effect of endometriosis on the fecal bacteriota composition of mice during the acute phase of lesion formation
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study investigated the impact of induced endometriotic lesions on gut microbiota in mice, using GFP+ uterine tissue transplantation. Despite successful lesion formation, no significant changes in gut microbiota composition were observed in the acute phase, suggesting endometriosis may not cause pronounced dysbiosis during early lesion development.
What was studied?
The study investigated whether the induction of endometriosis in mice affects the composition of their gut microbiota. It tested this by transplanting uterine tissue fragments into mice and analyzing changes in the gut microbiota before and after endometriosis induction.
Who was studied?
Female C57BL/6 wild-type mice and GFP+ transgenic donor mice were used. Uterine tissue from the donor mice was transplanted into the peritoneal cavity of the wild-type mice to induce endometriosis, with sham-transplanted mice serving as controls.
What were the most important findings?
Endometriotic lesions successfully developed in the mice, but the study found no significant alterations in the gut microbiota composition within the 21-day observation period. The bacterial community remained stable, indicating no early-phase intestinal dysbiosis due to endometriosis induction.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study hypothesizes that there is a bi-directional relationship between gut dysbiosis and endometriosis, where alterations in the gut microbiota may influence the development and progression of endometriosis and vice versa. Although this particular study did not find significant changes in the gut microbiota composition within the early phase of endometriosis induction in mice, it suggests the possibility that the gut microbiota could be involved in hormone-related, inflammatory, angiogenic, and vasculogenic processes associated with endometriosis.
Other studies’ findings, which reported dysbiosis following endometriosis induction, further support the idea of a complex interaction between endometriosis and the gut microbiota. This interaction could potentially impact estrogen metabolism, systemic inflammation, and stem cell homeostasis, all of which are implicated in the pathogenesis of endometriosis. However, the study calls for more research to clarify this relationship, including studies on microbial activity and metabolic function, to understand how gut microbiota might affect endometriosis fully.
Effect of endometriosis on the fecal bacteriota composition of mice during the acute phase of lesion formation
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This study found that endometriosis does not induce significant changes in the fecal bacteriota composition during the acute phase of lesion formation. Findings suggest that gut microbial shifts in endometriosis may emerge only during chronic disease stages, highlighting the need for targeted microbiome interventions over prolonged periods.
What Was Studied?
This study investigated the effect of endometriosis on the fecal bacteriota composition of mice during the acute phase of lesion formation. Researchers aimed to understand whether the establishment of endometriotic lesions would influence gut microbial communities, potentially contributing to systemic inflammation or metabolic disruptions associated with the disease. Uterine tissue fragments from GFP+ donor mice were transplanted into the peritoneal cavity of GFP- wild-type mice, inducing endometriotic lesions. Sham-transplanted mice served as controls. Fecal samples were collected three days before, and at 7 and 21 days after lesion induction, and analyzed through 16S rRNA gene sequencing to map changes in microbial composition.
Who Was Studied?
The study involved C57BL/6 wild-type mice as the experimental model for endometriosis. The model was established by transplanting uterine tissue fragments from GFP+ donor mice into the peritoneal cavity of GFP- recipient mice, allowing for easy visualization of endometriotic lesions. Sham-transplanted animals, which received physiological saline solution instead of tissue fragments, served as controls. The study analyzed fecal samples collected at specific time points to assess microbiota changes during the acute phase of endometriosis development.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study found that the induction of endometriosis did not produce significant changes in the composition of the fecal bacteriota during the acute phase of lesion formation (7 and 21 days post-transplantation). Despite the successful establishment of endometriotic lesions and typical histomorphology observed under fluorescence microscopy, alpha and beta diversity analyses showed no substantial differences between the endometriosis-induced group and sham controls. Detailed sequencing revealed a highly diverse microbial community dominated by Bacteroidales S24-7 group, Lactobacillus, Prevotellaceae UCG-001 group, and Lachnospiraceae NK4A136 group in both experimental and control mice. Notably, contrary to previous studies suggesting dysbiosis following endometriosis induction, this investigation showed microbial stability throughout the acute phase of lesion formation. The researchers speculated that gut microbiota disturbances may become apparent only in the chronic stages of the disease, reflecting long-term inflammation and tissue remodeling. Furthermore, the study emphasized that strict statistical controls, including the removal of singleton OTUs and application of false discovery rate (FDR) corrections, were applied to prevent false positives. These rigorous controls could have contributed to the observed stability of gut microbiota composition, challenging earlier reports of rapid dysbiosis post-endometriosis induction.
Parameter
Findings in Endometriosis-Induced Mice
Microbiota Composition
No significant changes in the overall composition of fecal bacteriota during the acute phase (7 and 21 days post-transplantation).
Alpha Diversity
No substantial differences observed between endometriosis-induced mice and sham controls, indicating microbial richness and evenness remained stable.
Beta Diversity
Analysis showed no significant shifts in microbial community structure between experimental and control groups.
Dominant Genera
Microbiota was dominated by Bacteroidales S24-7 group, Lactobacillus, Prevotellaceae UCG-001 group, and Lachnospiraceae NK4A136 group in both groups.
Impact of Lesion Formation
Induction of endometriosis did not disrupt gut microbiota composition during the acute phase of lesion establishment.
Statistical Controls Applied
Strict controls, including false discovery rate (FDR) corrections and removal of singleton OTUs, were applied to enhance result reliability.
Hypothesized Long-Term Effects
Authors suggest that gut dysbiosis may only emerge in chronic stages of endometriosis, not during initial lesion establishment.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
The study challenges prevailing hypotheses that endometriosis immediately disrupts gut microbiota during the early phases of lesion formation. The findings suggest that intestinal dysbiosis may not occur in the acute phase but could instead be a consequence of chronic inflammation and prolonged disease progression. This insight implies that gut microbial changes observed in patients with endometriosis might reflect long-term disease dynamics rather than initial lesion establishment. These results underscore the need for longitudinal studies to distinguish between acute and chronic microbiome shifts in endometriosis. The findings also highlight the importance of standardized microbiome analysis protocols and strict statistical measures to accurately assess microbial composition in endometriosis models. Understanding the timeline of microbiome alterations in endometriosis could guide therapeutic strategies targeting microbial populations in chronic disease stages rather than acute phases.
Effects of Probiotic Supplementation on Pancreatic β-cell Function and C-reactive Protein in Women with Polycystic Ovary Syndrome
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This study evaluates the impact of probiotic supplementation on insulin resistance and inflammation in women with PCOS. The results suggest that probiotics may help improve insulin sensitivity but have limited effects on inflammation markers.
What was studied?
This randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial studied the effects of probiotic supplementation on pancreatic β-cell function and C-reactive protein (CRP) levels in women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS). The aim was to explore how probiotics might influence insulin sensitivity, metabolic parameters, and inflammation markers in PCOS, which is often associated with insulin resistance, inflammation, and hyperandrogenism.
Who was studied?
The study involved 72 women diagnosed with PCOS based on the Rotterdam criteria. These women were aged between 15 and 40 years and were randomly assigned to receive either probiotic supplementation (n=36) or a placebo (n=36) for 8 weeks. The study excluded participants with other chronic diseases, thyroid disorders, or those who had recently used medications such as antibiotics, insulin, or corticosteroids. All participants underwent fasting blood tests before and after the 8-week intervention to measure fasting blood sugar (FBS), serum insulin, HOMA-IR, and CRP levels.
What were the most important findings?
The primary findings of the study suggest that while probiotic supplementation did not significantly affect CRP or pancreatic β-cell function in the PCOS women, there were some beneficial effects on insulin metabolism. Specifically, serum insulin levels were significantly reduced in the probiotic group after adjusting for covariates, such as age, BMI, and physical activity. There was also a non-significant reduction in fasting blood sugar (FBS) and HOMA-IR in the probiotic group, suggesting potential improvements in insulin sensitivity. However, the study did not find significant changes in CRP levels, indicating that the probiotics may have had a limited impact on inflammation in this cohort.
From a microbiome perspective, probiotics are known to modulate gut microbiota, which plays a crucial role in regulating insulin sensitivity and inflammation. The positive changes in serum insulin levels and HOMA-IR suggest that the probiotics may have helped restore balance in the gut microbiome, potentially reducing insulin resistance, a hallmark of PCOS. However, the lack of significant changes in CRP levels suggests that probiotics alone may not be enough to significantly modulate systemic inflammation in PCOS patients, or a longer supplementation period may be required for more pronounced effects.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study provides valuable insights into the potential role of probiotics in managing metabolic and endocrine dysfunctions associated with PCOS. While the effects on insulin resistance were promising, the lack of significant impact on inflammation (as measured by CRP) indicates that probiotics may need to be combined with other therapeutic interventions to fully address the multifactorial nature of PCOS. Clinically, probiotics could be considered as a supplementary treatment for improving insulin sensitivity in PCOS, particularly in patients with insulin resistance. However, further studies with larger sample sizes and longer treatment durations are necessary to confirm the benefits and establish specific probiotic strains and dosages for PCOS management.
Efficacy and Safety of Different Drugs for the Treatment of Bacterial Vaginosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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This meta-analysis compared BV treatments, identifying ornidazole as the most effective oral drug and sucrose/probiotics as top non-antibiotic options. Restoring Lactobacillus dominance is key, with vaginal probiotics and sucrose showing high cure rates.
What was reviewed?
This systematic review and network meta-analysis examined the efficacy and safety of multiple treatments for bacterial vaginosis (BV), a common vaginal dysbiosis characterized by the overgrowth of anaerobic bacteria and a decline in protective Lactobacillus species. The study compared antibiotics (metronidazole, clindamycin, tinidazole, secnidazole, ornidazole, ofloxacin) with non-antibiotic therapies (sucrose, probiotics) to determine the most effective and safest options for clinical use. The analysis incorporated both direct and indirect comparisons across studies, providing a comprehensive ranking of treatments based on cure rates and adverse effects.
Who was reviewed?
The meta-analysis included 42 randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and observational studies, encompassing patients diagnosed with BV. The studies were sourced from PubMed and Embase, ensuring a broad evaluation of existing evidence. Participants were treated with either oral or vaginal formulations of the studied drugs, allowing subgroup analyses to assess differences in administration routes.
Most Important Findings
The review highlighted that BV, characterized by a shift from Lactobacillus-dominant vaginal microbiota to an overgrowth of anaerobic bacteria like Gardnerella vaginalis, Atopobium vaginae, and Bacteroides spp., responds differently to treatments. Ornidazole emerged as highly effective, with a clinical cure rate superior to clindamycin and secnidazole. Sucrose and probiotics also showed promise, with sucrose ranking highest in clinical cure probability and probiotics demonstrating fewer adverse effects compared to metronidazole. Notably, metronidazole and secnidazole had higher adverse reaction rates than placebo, while probiotics and sucrose were safer alternatives. The study underscored the importance of restoring Lactobacillus dominance to rebalance vaginal microbiota, as sucrose promotes Lactobacillus growth by lowering vaginal pH, and probiotics directly reintroduce beneficial bacteria.
Implications of the Review
The findings suggest that ornidazole could be a superior alternative to traditional BV treatments like metronidazole, particularly for oral administration. Non-antibiotic options like sucrose and probiotics offer effective and safer alternatives, aligning with microbiome-focused therapies. Clinicians should consider these options, especially for patients with recurrent BV or those prone to adverse effects from antibiotics. The study also calls for more high-quality trials to validate these results and explore long-term outcomes.
Efficacy of Vitamin C Vaginal Tablets in Preventing Recurrence of Bacterial Vaginosis: A Randomized Controlled Trial
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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This study demonstrates that 250 mg vitamin C vaginal tablets reduce the recurrence of bacterial vaginosis, offering an effective and safe prophylactic treatment.
What was Studied?
This study evaluated the efficacy of vitamin C vaginal tablets as a prophylactic treatment for recurrent bacterial vaginosis (rBV). The research was a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial involving 142 women who had been successfully treated for a recent episode of BV using either metronidazole or clindamycin. These women were randomly assigned to receive either vitamin C or a placebo for six months, to prevent the recurrence of BV.
Who was Studied?
The study involved 142 women aged between 18 and 50 years who had a history of recurrent episodes of bacterial vaginosis, defined as at least two acute episodes in the past year. After successful treatment of a BV episode, participants were randomized into two groups: one receiving 250 mg of vitamin C vaginal tablets and the other a placebo. The study participants were monitored for recurrence of BV for six months.
What were the Most Important Findings?
The study demonstrated that the use of vitamin C vaginal tablets significantly reduced the recurrence rate of BV in women compared to the placebo group. After three months of treatment, the recurrence rate in the vitamin C group was 6.8%, whereas the placebo group had a recurrence rate of 14.7%. After six months, the recurrence rate was 16.2% in the vitamin C group, compared to 32.4% in the placebo group, which was statistically significant (P = 0.024). The vitamin C treatment also showed a significant pH-lowering effect, which is thought to contribute to the inhibition of pathogen overgrowth. Additionally, the Kaplan-Meier survival analysis indicated that the vitamin C group had a significantly lower probability of experiencing a BV relapse (P = 0.029). The treatment was well tolerated, with minimal adverse events, mostly local reactions like itching and burning.
What are the Implications of this Study?
The study highlights the potential of vitamin C vaginal tablets as an effective prophylactic treatment for recurrent bacterial vaginosis. By lowering vaginal pH, vitamin C helps re-establish a more acidic environment, preventing the overgrowth of harmful anaerobic bacteria, such as Gardnerella vaginalis. This finding is significant for women with recurrent BV, particularly those with antibiotic-resistant strains or those who experience frequent recurrences after antibiotic therapy. Given the safety profile and efficacy of vitamin C, it presents a promising alternative or complementary approach to current BV treatments, offering a simple and non-invasive way to manage this chronic condition.
Elevated Lactoferrin and Anti-Lactoferrin Antibodies in Endometriosis: Autoimmune and Microbiome Insights
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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This study confirms elevated lactoferrin and anti-lactoferrin antibody levels in endometriosis, suggesting autoimmune involvement. Anti-lactoferrin drops post-surgery, hinting at a biomarker role, while lactoferrin ties to inflammation and potential microbiome links.
What Was Studied?
This study, conducted by Mori-Yamanaka et al. and published in Tohoku J. Exp. Med. in 2023, definitively explored serum lactoferrin (LTF) and anti-lactoferrin antibody (aLF) levels in patients with endometriosis. Endometriosis, a chronic inflammatory condition marked by ectopic endometrial-like tissue, remains poorly understood in terms of its underlying mechanisms. The researchers aimed to determine whether LTF, an iron-binding glycoprotein with antimicrobial and anti-inflammatory properties, and aLF, an autoantibody tied to immune dysregulation, play roles in the disease’s pathology. By measuring these markers in the blood of endometriosis patients compared to controls and assessing changes after surgical intervention, the study sought to uncover potential links to inflammation and autoimmunity. Although the study did not directly investigate microbiome signatures, LTF’s known role in modulating microbial environments suggests a possible indirect connection to gut or pelvic microbiome alterations in endometriosis.
Who Was Studied?
The research focused on 68 Japanese women undergoing surgery at Shiga University of Medical Science Hospital between November 2020 and May 2022. Of these, 51 had surgically and histopathologically confirmed endometriosis, spanning all stages (I-IV) per the revised American Society for Reproductive Medicine classification. The remaining 17 women, who underwent surgery for other gynecological issues like uterine myomas or benign ovarian tumors, served as controls without endometriosis. This cohort provided a robust sample to compare LTF and aLF levels across disease states and post-treatment outcomes, offering clinicians a clear demographic context for interpreting the findings.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study conclusively demonstrated that serum LTF and aLF levels are significantly elevated in endometriosis patients compared to controls, with p-values of 0.016 and 0.028, respectively. These elevations were particularly striking in advanced stages (III and IV), showing stronger statistical significance (LTF: p = 0.024; aLF: p = 0.016) compared to controls. Following surgery in 21 patients, aLF levels dropped markedly (p < 0.001), while LTF levels showed no significant change (p = 0.102). Notably, 43% of endometriosis patients exhibited aLF levels above the reference range, a prevalence akin to autoimmune conditions. Although microbiome data wasn’t directly assessed, LTF’s antimicrobial properties hint at potential microbial associations, possibly involving dysbiosis in the pelvic or gut microbiome, which could exacerbate inflammation in endometriosis. These findings position LTF and aLF as key players in the disease’s inflammatory and possibly autoimmune landscape.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
This study’s implications are profound for clinicians managing endometriosis. The elevated aLF levels, mirroring patterns in autoimmune diseases, strongly suggest that endometriosis involves an autoimmune component, potentially driven by immune responses to microbial or endogenous triggers. This insight could shift treatment paradigms toward immune-modulating therapies. Moreover, the significant post-surgical decline in aLF levels establishes it as a promising biomarker for monitoring disease activity and treatment success, offering a practical tool for clinical decision-making. While LTF’s role remains less clear, its persistence post-surgery and antimicrobial function imply a complex interplay with inflammation and possibly the microbiome, warranting further investigation into microbial signatures like those of Lactobacillus or Prevotella, known to influence pelvic health. Despite the study’s limitations—its small sample and surgical focus—these findings pave the way for innovative diagnostics and therapies, urging clinicians to consider immune and microbial factors in endometriosis care.
Endometrial whole metabolome profile at the receptive phase: influence of Mediterranean Diet and infertility
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This study analyzed the endometrial metabolome of 45 infertile women, revealing 925 metabolites with a dominance of PUFAs. It found that Mediterranean Diet adherence impacts the endometrial environment, suggesting diet modifications could enhance fertility.
What was studied?
The study focused on analyzing the receptive-phase endometrial metabolome profiles among women with infertility and examining their associations with adherence to the Mediterranean Diet (MD). It aimed to identify metabolomic signatures that could influence the intrauterine environment and impact reproductive outcomes.
Who was studied?
The study involved 45 women of infertile couples, recruited at the Reproductive Unit of Virgen de las Nieves University Hospital, Granada. These women were diagnosed with various types of infertility, including endometriosis, recurrent implantation failure, unexplained infertility, and male factor infertility.
What were the most important findings?
Key findings from the study revealed that 925 distinct metabolites were identified in the endometrial tissue, with lipids, particularly polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs), constituting the largest group. Women diagnosed with endometriosis and recurrent implantation failure exhibited lower levels of PUFAs compared to those with male factor or unexplained infertility. Additionally, adherence to the Mediterranean Diet (MD) was linked to specific changes in the endometrial metabolomic profile, suggesting that diet could influence the uterine environment depending on the individual’s health status.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The implications of this study are significant for reproductive health. The findings suggest that the Mediterranean Diet may positively influence the endometrial environment and potentially enhance reproductive outcomes through its effects on specific metabolomic profiles. Metabolomic profiling emerges as a powerful tool for identifying biomarkers of endometrial health and designing targeted interventions to support successful embryo implantation and fertility. Additionally, further research could develop diet-based therapeutic strategies that improve endometrial receptivity and manage infertility, underscoring the crucial role of lifestyle factors in reproductive health.
Endometriosis and adenomyosis: shared pathophysiology
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This study investigates the genetic and epigenetic mechanisms of endometriosis and adenomyosis, highlighting KRAS mutations and abnormal estrogen and progesterone receptor expressions as key factors. It underscores a shared pathophysiology between the conditions, providing insights into treatment targets and the molecular basis of disease progression.
What was studied?
The study focused on the pathophysiology, genetic variants, and epigenetic abnormalities underlying endometriosis and adenomyosis. It emphasized the mechanisms through which these conditions develop, the somatic mutations and epigenetic changes in endometrial and adenomyotic tissues, and the clinical implications of these findings. The primary genetic alterations studied include mutations in the KRAS gene and epigenetic modifications affecting estrogen and progesterone receptor expressions. The role of estrogen in promoting these conditions and the concept of progesterone resistance were also critically evaluated.
Who was studied?
While the published study does not explicitly mention specific patient groups or demographics, it implicitly refers to women diagnosed with endometriosis and adenomyosis. These conditions affect women of reproductive age, with endometriosis symptoms often starting in the adolescent years and extending to menopause and adenomyosis typically being diagnosed later, often in women in their 40s and 50s. The study involves an analysis of endometrial and adenomyotic tissues from these patients, examining genetic mutations and epigenetic changes within these tissues.
What were the most important findings?
Shared Pathophysiology: Both endometriosis and adenomyosis originate from endometrial cells, with KRAS mutations prevalent in both conditions’ epithelial cells. This points to a common genetic predisposition underpinning both diseases.
Epigenetic Abnormalities: Both conditions are characterized by epigenetic defects that lead to abnormal estrogen production and action, particularly through the overexpression of estrogen receptor-β and underexpression of progesterone receptors, resulting in progesterone resistance.
Clinical Implications of Genetic Mutations: The presence of specific genetic mutations, especially in KRAS, not only elucidates the pathogenic pathways of these conditions but also suggests that these mutations provide a survival advantage to ectopic endometrial tissues.
Estrogen’s Role: The study highlights estrogen’s critical role in the establishment and progression of endometriosis and adenomyosis, with implications for treatment strategies aimed at blocking estrogen synthesis.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
Therapeutic Targets: Identifying KRAS mutations and epigenetic markers offers new targets for therapeutic intervention, possibly allowing for more personalized treatment approaches for patients with endometriosis and adenomyosis.
Understanding of Disease Mechanism: Elucidating the genetic and epigenetic mechanisms underlying these conditions helps in understanding their pathogenesis, potentially leading to early detection and preventive strategies.
Progesterone Resistance: The insight into the molecular basis of progesterone resistance opens avenues for addressing this challenge in treating endometriosis and adenomyosis, potentially improving the efficacy of current therapies.
Research Directions: These findings pave the way for future research into the molecular and cellular biology of gynecological disorders, encouraging the development of innovative treatments that can address the root causes of these conditions rather than merely managing symptoms.
Endometriosis induces gut microbiota alterations in mice
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This study used high-throughput DNA sequencing to show that murine endometriosis alters gut microbiota, notably increasing the Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes ratio and Bifidobacterium levels by day 42, indicating disease-specific dysbiosis. It underscores the need for further research on the long-term effects of endometriosis on gut microbiota and its bidirectional interaction with the host.
What was studied?
The research focused on investigating the impact of murine endometriosis on gut microbiota composition using high-throughput DNA sequencing to explore how the disease affects intestinal microbial communities.
Who was studied?
The study subjects were mice. These animals were divided into two groups: one group with induced endometriosis through the intraperitoneal injection of endometrial tissues and a mock group that served as a control.
What were the most important findings?
The study’s key findings include the emergence of a distinct gut microbiota composition in mice with endometriosis by day 42 post-modeling, highlighted by an increased Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes ratio and elevated levels of Bifidobacterium. These changes suggest a specific dysbiosis associated with endometriosis.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study’s most significant implications lie in its pioneering use of high-throughput DNA sequencing to link endometriosis with specific changes in gut microbiota, highlighting the disease’s potential to induce dysbiosis. It suggests the importance of further research to understand the long-term effects of endometriosis on gut microbiota and the bidirectional interactions between the host and its microbiota. This could lead to novel insights into the pathophysiology of endometriosis and inform new therapeutic strategies targeting the gut microbiome.
Endometriosis induces gut microbiota alterations in mice
February 12, 2026
/
Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This study demonstrates that endometriosis induces gut microbiota alterations in a murine model, particularly increasing the Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes ratio and enriching Bifidobacterium and Parasutterella. These shifts suggest dysbiosis as a contributing factor to inflammation and immune dysregulation, supporting the potential for microbiota-targeted therapies in endometriosis management.
What Was Studied?
This study investigated the effects of endometriosis on gut microbiota composition in a murine model, specifically evaluating microbial shifts during the progression of endometriosis. Researchers employed a prospective and randomized design, inducing endometriosis in mice through intraperitoneal injection of endometrial tissues. The primary aim was to characterize changes in gut microbiota over time, utilizing 16S ribosomal-RNA gene sequencing to assess microbial diversity and composition at 7, 14, 28, and 42 days post-induction. The experiment included mock groups as controls, which received saline injections instead of endometrial tissue, to account for any procedural effects.
Who Was Studied?
The study involved C57BL6 mice, a commonly used murine model, to mimic endometriosis development. Mice were divided into two groups: those receiving endometrial tissue injections to induce endometriosis, and mock controls receiving only saline. The animals were sacrificed at four different time points (7, 14, 28, and 42 days) for fecal sample collection and microbiota analysis. Researchers conducted 16S rRNA sequencing on these samples to evaluate alterations in microbial communities associated with endometriosis progression.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study revealed that endometriosis induced significant alterations in gut microbiota composition, particularly at 42 days post-induction. Beta diversity analysis demonstrated that the microbial community structure diverged substantially from the mock controls, indicating dysbiosis. At the phylum level, there was an increased Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes ratio, a hallmark often linked to inflammatory conditions. Furthermore, Actinobacteria and Betaproteobacteria were more abundant in the endometriosis group, whereas Bacteroidetes was more dominant in the control group. At the genus level, the study identified increases in Ruminococcaceae-UGG-014, Bifidobacterium, and Parasutterella among endometriosis mice. These microbial shifts suggest that endometriosis disrupts normal gut microbial homeostasis, potentially influencing systemic inflammation and immune modulation. The researchers noted that while alpha diversity remained similar between groups, the specific microbial composition shifted dramatically over the 42-day period. This timeline suggests that gut dysbiosis in endometriosis is progressive and may exacerbate immune system imbalances over time.
Taxonomic Level
Microbiota Findings in Endometriosis-Induced Mice
Phylum Level
Increased Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes ratio. Elevated levels of Actinobacteria and Betaproteobacteria.
Class Level
Enhanced representation of Clostridia and Actinobacteria classes.
Order Level
Notable increase in Lactobacillales and Clostridiales.
Family Level
Significant enrichment of Ruminococcaceae and Bifidobacteriaceae.
Genus Level
Marked increases in Ruminococcaceae-UGG-014, Bifidobacterium, and Parasutterella.
Alpha Diversity
No significant difference in microbial richness or evenness compared to controls.
Beta Diversity
Significant divergence from mock controls, indicating altered microbial community structure.
Inflammatory Associations
Altered microbiota profile is linked to systemic inflammation and immune modulation, suggesting a role in endometriosis progression.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study
The findings underscore the role of gut microbiota dysbiosis in the progression of endometriosis, revealing distinct shifts in microbial populations, especially an elevated Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes ratio. These changes mirror dysbiosis seen in other inflammatory diseases, suggesting that gut microbiota may contribute to systemic inflammation and immune dysfunction in endometriosis. The study highlights the potential for microbiota-targeted therapies to restore gut microbial balance as a therapeutic approach. Additionally, the identification of enriched genera such as Bifidobacterium and Parasutterella suggests potential biomarkers for non-invasive diagnostics. The progressive nature of microbiota alteration observed at 42 days further indicates that early intervention targeting microbial communities could mitigate inflammatory responses and possibly slow disease progression. This research provides a mechanistic link between gut dysbiosis and endometriosis pathology, paving the way for microbiome-based therapeutic strategies.
Endometriosis of the lung: A case report and brief review of the literature
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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The study analyzed 12 cases of pulmonary endometriosis, identifying two distinct groups based on lesion characteristics and reproductive history, exploring potential embolic and pleural origins, and emphasizing the need for further research into the pathogenesis and clinical management of this rare condition.
What was studied?
The study focused on pulmonary endometriosis, a rare condition characterized by the presence of endometrial tissue in the lungs. It analyzed a series of historical and recent cases, dividing them into two distinct groups based on the characteristics of the lung lesions and their association with pregnancy and endometrial glands. The study aimed to explore the pathology and potential pathogenesis of these lesions in the lungs, investigating whether they could be of embolic origin and considering their relationship with the pleura.
Who was studied?
The individuals studied were women who had cases of histologically confirmed pulmonary endometriosis. This included a total of 12 cases, with the subjects ranging in status from pregnant to post-menopausal. Six of these cases involved women who died during pregnancy or shortly after delivery, presenting with small decidua deposits in the lungs. The other six involved patients with larger lung lesions containing endometrial glands, observed in surgically resected lung specimens. Among these, at least five had a history of previous pregnancies.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed several significant findings regarding pulmonary endometriosis. First, it identified two distinct groups of lesions, categorized based on their characteristics and the reproductive history of the patients. The first group comprised smaller lesions known as decidual deposits. These were likely embolic in origin and were characterized by their lack of contact with the pleura. Conversely, the second group consisted of larger lesions situated directly beneath the pleura and containing endometrial glands, suggesting a potential pleural origin or growth extending from the pleura into the lung substance. Additionally, it was observed that the larger and older lesions in this group were more likely to contain endometrial glands, unlike the smaller, more recent lesions. This differentiation in lesion characteristics provides critical insights into the pathogenesis and clinical presentation of pulmonary endometriosis.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The implications of this study are significant in understanding the etiology and pathogenesis of pulmonary endometriosis:
Category
Implication
Pathogenetic Insights
The study suggests different pathways for the formation of endometrial tissue in the lungs, possibly linked to embolic phenomena or metaplastic transformation. These pathways could vary based on the patient’s reproductive history and the timing of lesion formation.
Diagnostic Considerations
The identification of two distinct groups of lesions aids in understanding their clinical presentations, which can guide diagnostic and treatment strategies. This is particularly important in distinguishing the origins and nature of lung lesions in women with or without a clear history of endometriosis.
Clinical Management
The study emphasizes the need for heightened awareness of this rare condition in the differential diagnosis of lung lesions. This is especially crucial for women with a history of endometriosis or those experiencing unusual pulmonary symptoms correlated with menstrual cycles.
Research Directions
The findings highlight existing gaps in understanding and underscore the need for further research into the mechanisms of endometrial tissue migration and implantation within the lung. This research could provide insights into other forms of extrapelvic endometriosis.
Epidemiology of Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS)-A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis Study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS)
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS)
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS) involves physical and emotional symptoms linked to hormonal fluctuations. Recent research highlights the role of heavy metals and gut microbiome imbalances in worsening these symptoms. Lifestyle changes, microbiome-targeted therapies, and toxin reduction show promise in effective PMS management.
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This systematic review and meta-analysis estimate the global prevalence of PMS, revealing wide variations across countries and highlighting the need for standardized diagnostic approaches.
What was reviewed?
This paper presents a systematic review and meta-analysis of the global prevalence of Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS). It focuses on synthesizing existing studies to determine the overall rate of PMS occurrence among women, analyzing factors influencing its prevalence, and exploring variations in prevalence rates across different countries and regions. The review compiles data from multiple sources to estimate the global burden of PMS and identify trends over time, employing meta-regression to examine factors that might affect PMS prevalence.
Who was reviewed?
The review examines data from studies involving women of reproductive age, specifically those diagnosed with PMS based on various symptom screening tools, such as the Premenstrual Symptoms Screening Tool (PSST), and other diagnostic scales. The included studies span different regions and countries, offering a broad view of PMS prevalence across diverse populations.
What were the most important findings?
The systematic review and meta-analysis found that the pooled prevalence of PMS across 17 studies was 47.8%, with substantial variation between different countries. The lowest prevalence was reported in France (12%), while Iran had the highest (98%). This wide range of prevalence is indicative of various factors, such as different diagnostic criteria, sample populations, and cultural or environmental influences on PMS reporting and diagnosis. The review also highlighted a trend of increasing PMS prevalence between 1996 and 2011, though the correlation with the year of study was not statistically significant.
Meta-regression analysis revealed a significant correlation between the sample size and the reported prevalence of PMS, with larger studies tending to report lower prevalence rates. The review also noted that the differences in measurement tools used to diagnose PMS across studies could contribute to the observed variability in prevalence. The results underscore the need for standardized diagnostic criteria and more comprehensive studies to better understand the factors driving PMS prevalence globally.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The findings of this review have significant implications for public health and clinical practice. The high global prevalence of PMS, with nearly half of reproductive-aged women affected, underscores the need for effective diagnostic and management strategies. Clinicians should be aware of the significant variation in PMS prevalence, influenced by geographical and methodological factors, which can impact patient care and treatment approaches. The review emphasizes the importance of further research to standardize diagnostic tools and explore the role of environmental, cultural, and genetic factors in PMS. Moreover, the findings suggest that larger, high-quality studies are needed to provide more reliable data on PMS prevalence, which can inform public health policies and interventions aimed at improving women's reproductive health globally.
Epigenetics of endometriosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This paper reviewed the role of epigenetics in endometriosis, exploring DNA methylation and histone modifications as key factors. It highlighted potential diagnostic, prognostic, and therapeutic applications, including non-surgical treatments like histone deacetylase inhibitors, suggesting a promising shift towards targeted molecular approaches in managing the disease.
What was studied?
The review focused on the role of epigenetic changes in endometriosis, exploring how these modifications influence the disease’s etiopathogenesis, diagnosis, and therapeutic approaches. It reviewed existing evidence up to June 2009, linking epigenetic aberrations such as DNA methylation and histone modification to endometriosis, and discussed the potential of these aberrations in developing non-surgical medical therapies for the condition.
Who was studied?
The review examined accumulated research data from various studies on endometriosis. This included an analysis of epigenetic changes in the DNA and histone modifications of cells from women affected by endometriosis. It highlighted findings from in vitro studies and also drew insights from broader genetic studies related to hormone functions and immune responses that contribute to endometriosis.
What were the most important findings?
Epigenetic Basis of Endometriosis: There is substantial evidence suggesting that epigenetic mechanisms play a significant role in the development and progression of endometriosis, particularly through DNA methylation and histone modifications.
Diagnostic and Prognostic Potential: DNA methylation markers and microRNA (miRNA) profiles offer promising avenues for early diagnosis and prognosis of endometriosis, potentially allowing for better management of the disease.
Therapeutic Innovations: Histone deacetylase inhibitors (HDACIs) have shown promise in in vitro studies as potential treatments for endometriosis by reversing epigenetic aberrations.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The review posits that understanding and manipulating epigenetic changes could lead to significant advances in treating endometriosis. Specifically, epigenetic therapies could provide new, non-surgical options for managing the disease, potentially reducing the need for repetitive surgeries and improving the quality of life for patients. Additionally, epigenetic markers may revolutionize the diagnosis and monitoring of endometriosis, making it possible to detect the disease earlier and tailor treatments more effectively. Overall, the study suggests a shift towards more targeted molecular therapies and diagnostics in endometriosis care, highlighting the need for further research into epigenetic mechanisms.
Evaluation of the relationship between polycystic ovary syndrome and intestinal inflammation as measured by fecal calprotectin levels
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is a common endocrine disorder that affects women of reproductive age, characterized by irregular menstrual cycles, hyperandrogenism, and insulin resistance. It is often associated with metabolic dysfunctions and inflammation, leading to fertility issues and increased risk of type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease.
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PCOS is linked with higher gut inflammation, as shown by elevated fecal calprotectin. This may help guide diagnosis and treatment.
What was studied?
The authors investigated whether intestinal inflammation plays a role in polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) by analyzing fecal calprotectin levels, a noninvasive biomarker that reflects neutrophil-driven gut inflammation. Given the increasing evidence that inflammation and gut dysbiosis contribute to PCOS, the researchers aimed to determine if elevated calprotectin could serve as an additional indicator of disease presence or severity.
Who was studied?
The study included 54 adult women: 27 with PCOS and 27 healthy controls. All participants were of reproductive age and had a body mass index within the normal range. The authors excluded individuals with gastrointestinal disorders, systemic illness, or recent antibiotic use to isolate the relationship between PCOS and gut inflammation.
What were the most important findings?
Women with PCOS had significantly higher fecal calprotectin levels compared to healthy controls, suggesting greater intestinal inflammation. Interestingly, systemic inflammation, measured by standard markers like hs-CRP, was similar across groups, indicating that the inflammation in PCOS may be localized to the gut. Although calprotectin wasn’t an independent predictor of PCOS in statistical models, it showed excellent specificity. This means it could help differentiate between PCOS and non-PCOS individuals in clinical settings. The findings support that microbial shifts and increased intestinal permeability—hallmarks of gut dysbiosis—may underlie some aspects of PCOS. Elevated calprotectin levels point toward neutrophil activity in the intestinal lining, often triggered by changes in gut microbiota.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study underscores the potential role of intestinal inflammation in PCOS and highlights fecal calprotectin as a promising, low-cost marker that could aid diagnosis or monitoring. These findings open the door to new interventions, such as microbiome-targeted therapies, to manage PCOS symptoms. If confirmed in future studies, strategies that reduce gut inflammation might improve hormonal balance and fertility outcomes in PCOS patients. It also reinforces the value of including microbiome-related biomarkers in gynecological evaluations.
Evidence for statin therapy in polycystic ovary syndrome.
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is a common endocrine disorder that affects women of reproductive age, characterized by irregular menstrual cycles, hyperandrogenism, and insulin resistance. It is often associated with metabolic dysfunctions and inflammation, leading to fertility issues and increased risk of type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease.
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This review highlights the potential benefits of statin therapy in women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), showing improvements in metabolic dysfunction, hyperandrogenism, and cardiovascular risk factors. Statins may offer a dual benefit for PCOS management, though further research is needed for long-term clinical outcomes.
What was reviewed?
This paper provides a review of the evidence supporting statin therapy for managing polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), focusing on its potential to reduce cardiovascular risks and address some of the metabolic complications associated with PCOS. The review discusses both the lipid-lowering effects of statins and their pleiotropic effects, including improvements in insulin resistance, hyperandrogenemia, and systemic inflammation. These secondary benefits may offer additional therapeutic value for women with PCOS, a condition commonly linked with metabolic and cardiovascular disturbances.
Who was reviewed?
The review examined existing studies and clinical trials investigating the use of statins in PCOS patients. The studies reviewed explored the effectiveness of statins like atorvastatin and simvastatin in reducing various metabolic and biochemical markers in women with PCOS, such as testosterone levels, insulin resistance, and inflammation. The review focused on understanding how statins could be beneficial in managing the hormonal and metabolic dysfunctions seen in PCOS.
What were the most important findings?
The review revealed promising evidence supporting statin therapy for women with PCOS, particularly due to its pleiotropic effects. Statins were shown to improve the lipid profile in women with PCOS, reducing LDL cholesterol levels, which is crucial given the elevated cardiovascular risks associated with the condition. Beyond lipid-lowering, statins also contributed to significant reductions in hyperandrogenemia, insulin resistance, and markers of systemic inflammation such as C-reactive protein (CRP). These findings suggest that statins could offer a dual benefit by improving both metabolic and reproductive parameters in women with PCOS.
Moreover, the review highlighted that statins like atorvastatin and simvastatin have comparable effects on testosterone reduction, an important aspect of managing hyperandrogenism in PCOS. The use of statins led to a decrease in testosterone levels that was similar to the effects of established antiandrogens. This effect was observed independently of the improvement in lipid profiles, which underscores the potential of statins to address some of the hormonal imbalances seen in PCOS.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The findings from this review suggest that statins may be a valuable addition to the treatment options for PCOS, especially for women who are at high risk of cardiovascular disease due to the metabolic disturbances commonly seen in the condition. The reduction in hyperandrogenemia, improvement in insulin sensitivity, and decrease in inflammation could provide significant therapeutic benefits, particularly for those who have not responded well to other treatments like insulin sensitizers or antiandrogens. However, the review also emphasized the need for further large-scale studies to validate the long-term efficacy of statins in improving fertility outcomes and reducing cardiovascular events in women with PCOS. The potential teratogenic risks of statins, particularly during pregnancy, warrant caution and a careful approach to their use in reproductive-age women.
Exploring the link between dietary zinc intake and endometriosis risk: insights from a cross-sectional analysis of American women
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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STOPs
STOPs
A STOP (Suggested Termination Of Practices) is a recommendation that advocates for the discontinuation of certain medical interventions, treatments, or practices based on emerging evidence indicating that these may be ineffective, harmful, or counterproductive in the management of specific conditions.
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This study links higher dietary zinc intake with increased endometriosis risk among American women, highlighting zinc’s complex role in immune modulation and estrogen-related pathways. Findings emphasize the importance of balanced intake for managing endometriosis risk.
What was studied?
This study investigated the association between dietary zinc intake and the risk of endometriosis among American women. Using cross-sectional data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) collected between 1999 and 2006, the researchers aimed to evaluate whether zinc intake, as a key nutritional factor, was linked to the prevalence of endometriosis. Zinc is known for its essential roles in immune modulation, antioxidative defense, and regulation of matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs), all of which are implicated in endometriosis progression.
Who was studied?
The study included 4,315 American women aged 20–54 years, of whom 331 were diagnosed with endometriosis based on self-reported doctor diagnoses. Participants’ dietary zinc intake was assessed using 24-hour dietary recall interviews, with additional data on demographics, lifestyle, and health covariates collected. Women with extreme caloric intakes or incomplete data were excluded to ensure robustness of results.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed a positive correlation between higher dietary zinc intake and the risk of endometriosis. Women consuming over 14 mg/day of zinc had a significantly higher adjusted odds ratio (1.60, 95% CI: 1.12–2.27, p = 0.009) compared to those with intake ≤8 mg/day. Zinc’s dual role in immune modulation and antioxidative defense was emphasized, particularly its regulation of matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) like MMP-2 and MMP-9, which are key enzymes in tissue remodeling and endometriotic lesion invasion. Interestingly, despite zinc’s known antioxidative and anti-inflammatory roles, excessive intake appeared to have a counterproductive effect. These nuanced findings highlight zinc’s complex role in endometriosis pathophysiology.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This research underscores the potential for dietary zinc as both a marker and modifiable factor in endometriosis risk. It raises questions about zinc’s dualistic effects, where optimal levels may support immune health, but excess intake could exacerbate estrogen-related pathways in endometriosis. Clinicians should be cautious when recommending zinc supplementation for reproductive health, particularly in populations at risk for endometriosis. Furthermore, this study strengthens the biological plausibility of microbiome involvement in endometriosis, as zinc is a crucial cofactor for microbial activity, and its imbalance may alter the gut and pelvic microbiota implicated in the disease.
Exposure to environmental chemicals and perinatal psychopathology
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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This review links prenatal chemical exposures to perinatal depression and anxiety through microbiome disruption and neuroinflammation. Environmental chemicals alter the gut-brain axis, emphasizing the need for integrative, preventative maternal mental health strategies.
What was reviewed?
This paper reviewed the growing body of literature examining how exposure to environmental chemicals, such as endocrine-disrupting chemicals (EDCs), heavy metals, pesticides, and air pollutants, contributes to perinatal psychopathology, particularly depression and anxiety during pregnancy and postpartum. The review assessed human and animal studies that link prenatal and early postnatal environmental exposures to altered neurobiology, behavior, and emotional outcomes, including disruptions of the gut-brain axis and inflammatory pathways.
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesized findings from both clinical populations of pregnant and postpartum individuals and preclinical animal models that explore mechanisms behind environmentally linked psychopathology. The human studies included pregnant and postpartum women exposed to chemicals such as bisphenol A (BPA), phthalates, lead, cadmium, and particulate matter. Animal studies allowed researchers to investigate mechanisms like neuroinflammation, HPA-axis disruption, neurogenesis, and microbiota alterations under controlled exposure conditions.
What were the most important findings?
The review emphasized that perinatal exposure to environmental chemicals significantly contributes to the risk of developing depression and anxiety. Mechanistically, the most consistent findings link chemical exposures with heightened neuroinflammation, dysregulation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis, and altered monoamine signaling, particularly in serotonin pathways. Several chemicals also disrupted the gut microbiota, implicating the gut-brain axis in environmentally driven psychopathology.
Heavy metals like lead and cadmium induced microglial activation and inflammatory cytokine production, contributing to anxiety- and depression-like behaviors. EDCs such as BPA and phthalates disrupted estrogen and glucocorticoid signaling, which are vital for mood regulation during the perinatal period. Importantly, both human and animal studies showed changes in gut microbial composition associated with these exposures. For example, exposure to BPA reduces microbial diversity and suppresses beneficial genera like Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium, while increasing pathobionts like Proteobacteria. These microbial shifts were frequently linked to increased gut permeability, systemic inflammation, and behavioral alterations relevant to perinatal mood disorders.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review highlights a critical intersection between environmental health, neurobiology, and the microbiome in shaping perinatal mental health. For clinicians, these findings underscore the need to consider environmental exposures as modifiable risk factors when assessing and treating pregnant and postpartum patients with mood disorders. Integrating environmental history into mental health screening could improve early detection and prevention strategies. Additionally, supporting gut microbial health through targeted nutritional and probiotic interventions may mitigate some of the inflammatory and neurochemical consequences of environmental toxicants. The evidence also supports advocacy for public health policies aimed at reducing pregnant women’s exposure to harmful environmental chemicals, particularly in vulnerable and underserved populations. Ultimately, these insights offer a strong rationale for multidisciplinary approaches in maternal mental health care that incorporate environmental toxicology, microbiome science, and neuropsychology.
Factors Related to Seeking Help for Postpartum Depression: A Secondary Analysis of New York City PRAMS Data
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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This study identifies significant barriers preventing women from seeking help for postpartum depression, notably stigma and socio-cultural factors. Active help-seeking behaviors significantly increase diagnosis rates, highlighting the importance of mental health education and stigma-reduction efforts, especially among Asian/Pacific Islander women and those with intended pregnancies.
What was studied?
This study analyzed the factors associated with seeking help for postpartum depression (PPD) among women experiencing recurrent depressive symptoms. It specifically aimed to identify socio-demographic and health-related factors influencing whether postpartum women sought medical assistance for their depressive symptoms, using secondary data from the New York City Pregnancy Risk Assessment Monitoring System (PRAMS) from 2016–2017.
Who was studied?
The study included 618 postpartum women from New York City who reported recurrent depressive symptoms on the PRAMS survey. These women represented various socio-demographic backgrounds, including different age groups, racial and ethnic identities, educational attainment levels, income brackets, and health conditions.
What were the most important findings?
The key finding was that most women experiencing postpartum depressive symptoms did not seek professional help, despite having significant depressive symptoms. Only 18% sought help, whereas being directly asked about depressive symptoms at prenatal or postnatal visits had less impact compared to active help-seeking behavior. The likelihood of receiving a formal PPD diagnosis was dramatically higher when women sought help on their own. Significant socio-demographic factors identified were income and pregnancy intentionality; higher-income women were more likely to seek help, while surprisingly, women with intended pregnancies were less likely to seek assistance.
Notably, Asian/Pacific Islander women had significantly lower help-seeking behaviors than other racial groups, reflecting pronounced cultural barriers and stigma surrounding mental health. Additionally, previous mental health history and visits for chronic illnesses emerged as critical health-related factors positively influencing help-seeking behaviors. Women with prior depression or anxiety or those who visited healthcare providers for chronic conditions were more likely to seek professional help, indicating a familiarity or reduced stigma towards accessing healthcare services.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study underscores the crucial role stigma reduction and mental health awareness can play in addressing postpartum depression. The markedly low help-seeking rates, particularly among API women and those with intended pregnancies, highlight the need for culturally sensitive educational interventions to normalize mental health discussions. The findings advocate incorporating mental health education within prenatal classes and routine postpartum visits. Furthermore, these insights suggest that clinicians should proactively address stigma and encourage openness about mental health to enhance early detection and treatment adherence for postpartum depression.
Fecal Microbiota Transplantation: A Potential Tool for Treatment of Human Female Reproductive Tract Diseases
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This study evaluates the therapeutic potential of fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) for treating female reproductive tract diseases, including PCOS, by restoring microbiota balance.
What was studied?
This study investigated the potential of Fecal Microbiota Transplantation (FMT) as a therapeutic tool for treating female reproductive tract diseases, particularly polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), endometriosis, and bacterial vaginosis (BV). The research explored the relationship between gut and female genital microbiota, evaluating whether microbiota alterations in the gut could influence female reproductive tract health. The therapeutic potential of FMT for restoring microbiota balance was examined through preclinical and clinical evidence supporting its application in treating these disorders.
Who was studied?
The study focused on the human female reproductive tract, with an emphasis on the gut–female tract microbiota connection. It also involved exploring the use of FMT for managing reproductive diseases in women. The study reviewed the microbiota composition in the female reproductive system, including the vagina and uterus, and its impact on conditions like PCOS, endometriosis, and BV. While not directly involving human subjects in this particular research, the review draws on existing preclinical models and clinical studies.
What were the most important findings?
The most important findings of this study point to the significant influence of gut microbiota on female reproductive health. The gut and female reproductive tract microbiota are interconnected, with specific bacterial patterns associated with reproductive disorders like PCOS, endometriosis, and BV. This suggests that alterations in gut microbiota composition can influence the health of the female reproductive system. Additionally, FMT has shown promise as a potential treatment for restoring microbiota balance in these conditions. Studies indicate that FMT can be an effective therapy for Clostridium difficile infections and may extend to other systemic diseases, including reproductive tract diseases.
From a microbiome perspective, the study highlighted the critical role of microbial modulation in regulating immune responses, particularly in the female reproductive tract. The therapeutic effect of FMT could involve rebalancing the vaginal and uterine microbiota, potentially alleviating symptoms associated with PCOS and BV, and addressing the chronic inflammation and hormonal dysregulation in these conditions.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study's findings open a promising new therapeutic avenue for managing female reproductive disorders through FMT. Given the close relationship between the gut microbiota and the female reproductive tract, FMT could represent a groundbreaking treatment option for diseases such as PCOS, endometriosis, and BV. The research also suggests that restoring a healthy microbiota balance via FMT could help alleviate oxidative stress, inflammatory markers, and other metabolic dysfunctions commonly seen in these conditions. This discovery may pave the way for more targeted, microbiome-based treatments, enhancing clinical outcomes for women with reproductive health issues. It also highlights the importance of personalized care, considering the unique microbial signature of each patient.
Fruit and vegetable consumption and risk of endometriosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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STOPs
STOPs
A STOP (Suggested Termination Of Practices) is a recommendation that advocates for the discontinuation of certain medical interventions, treatments, or practices based on emerging evidence indicating that these may be ineffective, harmful, or counterproductive in the management of specific conditions.
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Higher fruit intake, especially citrus fruits, was inversely associated with laparoscopically confirmed endometriosis, suggesting a protective effect potentially linked to beta-cryptoxanthin. In contrast, cruciferous vegetables were linked to increased risk, highlighting the complex interplay between diet and endometriosis risk factors.
What Was Studied
This study explored the potential link between the consumption of fruits and vegetables and the risk of laparoscopically confirmed endometriosis. Using data collected from the Nurses' Health Study II, the researchers analyzed dietary habits over a 22-year period, investigating whether certain food groups and nutrients influenced the likelihood of developing endometriosis.
Who Was Studied
Participants included premenopausal women aged 25–42 years who were enrolled in the Nurses' Health Study II cohort. These women completed biennial surveys assessing health status, lifestyle factors, and dietary intake. Those with a history of endometriosis, cancer, infertility, or hysterectomy were excluded from the analysis, ensuring a focused evaluation of diet and disease development.
Most Important Findings
The study found an inverse relationship between fruit consumption, particularly citrus fruits, and the risk of endometriosis. Women who consumed citrus fruits frequently were less likely to develop endometriosis. Conversely, no significant association was found between total vegetable intake and the disease. Cruciferous vegetables, however, were unexpectedly linked to an increased risk. Beta-cryptoxanthin, a nutrient found in citrus fruits, appeared to play a protective role, and the beneficial effects of fruit consumption were especially notable among participants who had a history of smoking. These findings suggest a potential role for specific dietary components in either mitigating or exacerbating the risk of endometriosis.
Implications
The findings highlight the importance of dietary considerations in understanding endometriosis risk. The protective association of citrus fruits underscores the potential of targeted nutritional interventions to reduce risk. The increased risk observed with cruciferous vegetables raises questions about the role of gastrointestinal symptoms, as these vegetables are high in fermentable oligosaccharides, which could exacerbate symptoms and lead to increased diagnosis rates. Future studies exploring these dietary patterns in greater depth are warranted to clarify the underlying mechanisms and to guide dietary recommendations for those at risk.
Gestational iron supplementation reverses depressive-like behavior in post-partum Sprague Dawley rats: Evidence from behavioral and neurohistological studies
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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This study highlights the role of gestational iron supplementation in alleviating depressive-like behavior in postpartum rats, showing improvements in neuronal health and mood regulation. It suggests that addressing maternal iron deficiency may be a promising strategy for managing postpartum depression.
What was studied?
The study explored the effects of gestational iron supplementation on depressive-like behavior in postpartum Sprague-Dawley rats, focusing on the behavioral and neurohistological changes associated with iron deficiency during pregnancy and its potential therapeutic effects.
Who was studied?
The study involved female Sprague-Dawley rats, which were crossed and divided into groups. During gestation, these rats received either iron supplementation, fluoxetine (a clinically effective antidepressant), desferrioxamine (an iron-chelating agent), or a vehicle (control). The focus was on the postpartum period, where the effects of these treatments on behavioral and neurohistological outcomes were examined.
What were the most important findings?
The study found that iron supplementation during gestation exerted significant antidepressant-like effects in postpartum rats. The rats that received iron treatment showed decreased immobility scores in the Forced Swim Test (FST), a widely used measure of depressive behavior. This effect was comparable to the group treated with fluoxetine. Additionally, the rats receiving iron demonstrated improved feeding behavior in the Novelty-Induced Hypophagia (NIH) test, indicating a reversal of depressive-like symptoms. Histologically, iron-treated rats showed a higher number of neurons with dendritic connections in the frontal cortex compared to the control groups. In contrast, rats treated with desferrioxamine or the vehicle exhibited signs of depression, including reduced feeding and lower neuron density, highlighting the negative impact of iron deficiency during gestation. These suggest that iron supplementation during pregnancy could potentially mitigate the adverse effects of gestational iron deficiency on the brain, including neuronal loss and reduced dendritic spine density, which are associated with depression. This provides insights into how improving iron levels in mothers during pregnancy may have lasting positive effects on mood regulation during the postpartum period.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study suggests that maternal iron supplementation could play a crucial role in preventing postpartum depression (PPD) by improving both behavioral and neurophysiological outcomes. Given that postpartum depression affects a significant number of women globally, this research could lead to better strategies for managing and preventing PPD, particularly in populations with known iron deficiency. Moreover, the neurohistological changes observed, such as increased neuronal density and dendritic spine connections in the frontal cortex, highlight the potential for iron to promote neuroplasticity and repair during critical developmental windows, offering broader implications for other neurodegenerative or mood disorders linked to iron deficiency.
GS2 Gallium Complex: A Novel Inhibitor of MMP-14 for Anti-Metastatic Cancer Therapy
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Research on GS2, a new gallium complex, showed potent inhibition of cell invasion and MMP activity in cancer cells, particularly MMP-14. These findings indicate GS2's strong potential as a therapeutic agent against metastatic cancers by interfering with key processes of cancer cell invasion and matrix degradation.
What Was Studied?
This study examined the effects of [N-(5-chloro-2-hydroxyphenyl)-L-aspartato] chlorogallate (GS2), a water-soluble gallium complex, on tumor cell invasion and the activity and expression of matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs). Specifically, it evaluated GS2's anti-invasive properties and its regulatory effects on MMP-2, MMP-9, and MMP-14 in two human cancer cell lines: metastatic HT-1080 fibrosarcoma and MDA-MB231 breast carcinoma cells.
Who Was Studied?
The research utilized human cell lines HT-1080 (fibrosarcoma) and MDA-MB231 (breast carcinoma). Additionally, MCF7 cells transfected with MMP-14 and non-transfected fibroblast cells (F40) were used for supplemental experiments.
Most Important Findings
GS2 demonstrated significant anti-invasive and anti-MMP activities at non-cytotoxic concentrations. The compound inhibited MMP-2, MMP-9, and MMP-14 activities in a dose-dependent manner, with IC50 values of 168 µM, 82 µM, and 20 µM, respectively. GS2 reduced the mRNA expression of MMP-14 in both cell lines and inhibited MMP-2 and MMP-9 expression exclusively in MDA-MB231 cells. Western blotting confirmed decreased MMP-14 protein expression in response to GS2. Importantly, GS2 significantly inhibited cell invasion through a type-I collagen-coated matrix, correlating with the downregulation of MMP-14, a critical regulator of the extracellular matrix and tumor invasion. Notably, GS2's inhibition of MMP-14 showed specificity for cells expressing higher MMP-14 levels, a hallmark of invasive cancer phenotypes.
Greatest Implications
The findings suggest GS2 is a promising candidate for anti-metastatic therapy targeting MMP-14. This is particularly relevant for cancers characterized by elevated MMP-14 expression, such as type II endometrial adenocarcinoma and invasive pituitary adenomas. GS2’s ability to selectively inhibit MMP-14 and reduce cancer cell invasion positions it as a potential therapeutic for limiting tumor metastasis. Moreover, its low cytotoxicity at effective concentrations highlights its clinical applicability.
Gut and oral microbial compositional differences in women with breast cancer, women with ductal carcinoma in situ, and healthy women
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Breast Cancer
Breast Cancer
Traditionally linked to genetic predispositions and environmental exposures, emerging evidence highlights the microbiome as a critical and underappreciated factor influencing breast cancer progression, immune response, and treatment outcomes.
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This study reveals distinct gut microbiota profiles in breast cancer and DCIS patients, with reduced alpha diversity and functional shifts linked to inflammation. Major microbial associations, including enriched Bacteroides guilds, underscore potential microbiome-targeted interventions. Oral microbiota showed minimal differences, highlighting the gut's critical role in breast cancer progression.
What was studied?
This study investigated and compared the gut and oral microbiota in three distinct groups: women with breast cancer (BC), women with ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS), and healthy women. Fecal and oral samples were collected and analyzed using 16S rRNA sequencing to assess microbial diversity, composition, and predicted functional potential.
Who was studied?
The study analyzed samples from 154 women, comprising 73 with BC, 32 with DCIS, and 49 healthy controls. Samples were collected before any therapy to ensure no treatment effects influenced the microbiota.
What were the most important findings?
The study found significant differences in gut microbiota composition and diversity between groups, while the oral microbiota exhibited fewer variations. Women with BC had lower gut microbial alpha diversity compared to healthy women. Beta diversity analysis revealed distinct microbial profiles for the BC and DCIS groups compared to healthy controls. Taxonomic analysis identified several major microbial associations (MMAs) in the gut: the Bacteroides and Enterobacteriaceae guilds were enriched in BC patients, while the Clostridiales guild was more prevalent in healthy women. Functionally, the gut microbiota of BC patients showed increased pathways for lipopolysaccharide (LPS) biosynthesis, glycan metabolism, and sphingolipid metabolism, which are linked to systemic inflammation and cancer progression. Conversely, the oral microbiota showed minimal variation across cohorts, with no significant differences in functional pathways or microbial guilds.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings highlight the role of gut microbiota in breast cancer development and progression. The identification of distinct microbial signatures and functional pathways provides a basis for developing microbiome-targeted interventions aimed at improving treatment outcomes and prognosis. Notably, the lack of significant findings in oral microbiota suggests that gut microbiota might have a more critical role in breast cancer etiology. These results pave the way for further research on microbiome-based diagnostic tools and therapeutic strategies for breast cancer.
Gut and Vaginal Microbiomes in PCOS: Implications for Women’s Health
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This review links dysbiosis of gut and vaginal microbiota to PCOS pathogenesis, highlighting reduced Lactobacillus, elevated Bacteroides, and hormonal imbalance. It supports microbiome-targeted therapies like FMT and probiotics as promising interventions, emphasizing the role of microbiota in regulating hormones, immunity, and metabolic function.
What Was Reviewed?
This review paper examined the interrelationship between gut and vaginal microbiota and polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), offering a multidimensional analysis of how microbial dysbiosis contributes to the endocrine, metabolic, reproductive, and immune disturbances seen in PCOS. The authors summarized both experimental and clinical studies, with a particular focus on microbiota diversity, microbial shifts in composition, and their functional consequences. The review discussed the role of microbiota in regulating sex hormones, immune homeostasis, insulin sensitivity, gut permeability, inflammation, and neuroendocrine communication via the gut–brain axis. Additionally, the paper explored therapeutic strategies such as fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) and probiotic interventions, aiming to identify translational opportunities for clinical application.
Who Was Reviewed?
The review compiled findings from human studies, animal models, and in vitro mechanistic research. In human studies, both gut and vaginal microbial profiles were compared between women with PCOS and healthy controls using sequencing techniques such as 16S rRNA analysis. Animal models, including rodent studies, were also incorporated to explore the causal mechanisms by which microbial interventions impact hormonal regulation, insulin resistance, and reproductive health. The reviewed cohorts varied across reproductive age, BMI, and hormonal phenotypes, with many studies focusing on women with hyperandrogenism and menstrual irregularities, the hallmarks of PCOS.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The review identified significant microbial dysbiosis in both the gut and vaginal microbiota of PCOS patients. In the gut, PCOS was consistently associated with reduced alpha and beta diversity, and increased abundance of pro-inflammatory and metabolically detrimental taxa such as Bacteroides vulgatus, Prevotella copri, and Escherichia/Shigella. Simultaneously, beneficial microbes such as Akkermansia muciniphila and members of Ruminococcaceae were diminished. The vaginal microbiota in PCOS showed decreased Lactobacillus species and increased colonization by pathogens like Gardnerella vaginalis, Prevotella, and Chlamydia trachomatis. These microbial patterns are linked to infertility, implantation failure, and adverse pregnancy outcomes.
Mechanistically, the review described how microbial alterations exacerbate insulin resistance through increased branched-chain amino acids and inflammatory cytokines. It also outlined how gut-derived short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs), bile acids, and estrogen-metabolizing enzymes modulate host endocrine and metabolic functions. Importantly, the review explored the gut–brain axis, implicating microbial metabolites in the modulation of the hypothalamic–pituitary–gonadal axis, contributing to anxiety and reproductive dysfunction in PCOS. These major microbial associations (MMAs) anchor PCOS within a broader systems biology framework, suggesting that dysbiosis impacts not just metabolic markers, but also immune balance, hormone regulation, and reproductive health.
What Are the Implications of This Review?
The implication of this review is its positioning of microbiota as a core regulatory system in the etiology and progression of PCOS, rather than a secondary contributor. For clinicians, this reframing encourages the integration of microbiota profiling into PCOS diagnostics, especially in patients with atypical presentations. The consistent loss of microbial diversity and protective Lactobacillus species, combined with enrichment of inflammatory and hormone-disrupting taxa, provides a microbiome-based signature of PCOS. Therapeutically, the review highlights emerging interventions, including FMT and targeted probiotics as viable approaches to restore microbial equilibrium. The evidence supports the concept that modulating gut and vaginal microbiota could lead to improvements in insulin sensitivity, hormone balance, and fertility outcomes. However, the authors note that most mechanistic insights stem from animal studies, calling for rigorous human trials to validate these strategies in clinical practice.
Gut microbiome in PCOS associates to serum metabolomics
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This study shows that gut microbiota dysbiosis in PCOS correlates with altered serum metabolites, including elevated LPCs and reduced citric acid. Roseburia and Prevotella_9 were linked to protective metabolic profiles, while Escherichia-Shigella was associated with inflammation and lipid imbalance.
What Was Studied?
This cross-sectional study investigated the relationship between gut microbiota composition and serum metabolomic profiles in women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), using an integrative approach combining 16S rRNA gene sequencing with untargeted serum metabolomics. The researchers aimed to determine how specific microbial taxa in the gut correlate with alterations in circulating metabolites and whether these associations may help explain the metabolic and endocrine disturbances observed in PCOS. This integrative analysis focused on identifying major microbial associations (MMAs) linked with lipid metabolism, energy homeostasis, and inflammatory markers, shedding light on potential mechanisms underlying PCOS pathophysiology.
Who Was Studied?
The study enrolled 20 women with PCOS diagnosed using the Rotterdam criteria and 20 healthy controls from Chengdu, China. Participants were matched in age but differed significantly in body mass index (BMI), serum testosterone, luteinizing hormone (LH), LH/FSH ratio, and fasting insulin levels. All subjects provided blood and stool samples, and filled out SF-36 quality of life assessments. Strict exclusion criteria were applied to control for confounders such as recent antibiotic, probiotic, or hormonal therapy use, and all participants resided in the same geographical region to minimize environmental variability.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
Women with PCOS exhibited marked dysbiosis in their gut microbiota alongside distinct changes in serum metabolites. Microbial alpha diversity was significantly reduced in the PCOS group, and beta diversity analyses confirmed community-level differences. At the phylum level, PCOS patients showed increased Proteobacteria, Verrucomicrobia, and Fusobacteria, while Firmicutes, Bacteroidetes, and Actinobacteria were decreased. Genera such as Escherichia-Shigella, Alistipes, and Megamonas were enriched in PCOS, whereas beneficial taxa like Roseburia and Bifidobacterium were diminished.
Serum metabolomic analysis identified 15 significantly altered metabolites in the PCOS group. Elevated metabolites included various lysophosphatidylcholines, phosphatidylcholine (PC), ganglioside GA2, and 1-linoleoylglycerophosphocholine—all of which are associated with glycerophospholipid metabolism. Meanwhile, levels of nicotinate beta-d-ribonucleotide and citric acid, markers of nicotinamide and TCA cycle metabolism, respectively, were reduced, indicating impaired energy homeostasis and redox imbalance.
Correlation analyses showed that Prevotella_9 was positively associated with beneficial metabolites like citric acid and nicotinate beta-d-ribonucleotide, and negatively correlated with pro-inflammatory LPCs. Roseburia, a known butyrate producer, was negatively correlated with LPC (20:4). These MMAs suggest that reductions in SCFA-producing microbes and expansions of pro-inflammatory taxa contribute to insulin resistance, oxidative stress, and mood disturbances in PCOS.
What Are the Implications of This Study?
This study provides compelling evidence that PCOS is characterized by a dual disturbance: gut microbial dysbiosis and metabolic dysfunction, which are closely intertwined. Clinically, this suggests the potential for microbiota-informed diagnostics and therapeutic strategies in PCOS. The association of key taxa such as Roseburia and Escherichia-Shigella with specific metabolic pathways, including glycerophospholipid and TCA cycle metabolism, provides biological plausibility for microbial modulation of systemic insulin sensitivity and inflammation. Moreover, the co-occurrence of mental health symptoms and microbial shifts tied to indole and serotonin pathways suggests that the gut–brain–ovary axis should be further explored in PCOS.
From a therapeutic standpoint, restoring beneficial microbes and correcting lipid and energy metabolism through targeted probiotics, dietary modulation, or even bile acid-focused interventions may offer a new avenue for comprehensive PCOS management. Future studies using metagenomics, metatranscriptomics, and intervention trials are needed to validate the causality and clinical utility of these microbiome–metabolome signatures.
Gut microbiome in PCOS associates to serum metabolomics: a cross‑sectional study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This study identifies a strong link between gut microbiota dysbiosis and altered serum metabolites in PCOS patients. Specific microbial shifts, including elevated Escherichia-Shigella and reduced Roseburia, correlate with lipid and energy metabolism markers, offering insights into PCOS-related insulin resistance and mood disturbances.
What was studied?
This research investigated the relationship between gut microbiota composition and serum metabolites in women diagnosed with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS). By employing a cross-sectional study design, the researchers combined untargeted serum metabolomics and 16S rRNA gene sequencing to explore the microbial and metabolic profiles of PCOS patients compared to healthy controls. The primary aim was to understand whether specific gut microbiota shifts were associated with altered metabolic patterns in PCOS and whether these patterns might explain aspects of the syndrome’s pathophysiology, particularly around insulin resistance and mood disorders.
Who was studied?
The study involved 20 women with PCOS and 20 age-matched healthy controls from the Pixian area of Chengdu, China. All participants were carefully screened to exclude confounding variables such as recent use of antibiotics, probiotics, contraceptives, or hormone treatments. The PCOS group was diagnosed using the Rotterdam criteria, a widely accepted diagnostic standard. Clinical characteristics confirmed that PCOS patients showed higher BMI, elevated testosterone, LH, LH/FSH ratios, and fasting insulin levels compared to controls. Their quality of life scores, measured by the SF-36 questionnaire, were notably lower, suggesting a tangible psychosocial impact likely linked to both metabolic and microbial disturbances.
What were the most important findings?
This study revealed two core findings: a distinct gut microbiome signature and a correlated serum metabolite profile in PCOS patients. The gut microbiome of the PCOS group exhibited lower microbial diversity and a specific taxonomic shift marked by higher abundances of Escherichia-Shigella and Alistipes. Conversely, beneficial genera such as Roseburia and Prevotella were reduced. These shifts in microbial populations were significantly correlated with alterations in serum metabolites, especially within the glycerophospholipid metabolism and energy metabolism pathways.
Specifically, PCOS patients demonstrated elevated levels of lysophosphatidylcholine (LPC) variants, phosphatidylcholine (PC), ganglioside GA2, and 1-linoleoylglycerophosphocholine. Meanwhile, metabolites associated with energy metabolism — including citric acid and nicotinate beta-d-ribonucleotide — were significantly reduced. Correlation analyses highlighted that reduced Prevotella_9 was linked to lower levels of these beneficial metabolites and higher levels of the LPC family, suggesting a mechanistic connection between microbial dysbiosis and metabolic dysfunction.
These microbial-metabolite associations potentially contribute to two hallmark features of PCOS: insulin resistance and mood changes. For instance, higher Escherichia-Shigella and Alistipes levels have previously been linked to depression, while increased LPC concentrations are implicated in inflammation and cardiovascular risk, both common comorbidities in PCOS patients.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study underscores the potential of microbiome-metabolome interplay as both a diagnostic and therapeutic target for PCOS. The distinct microbial and metabolic profiles identified in this research offer clues about the biological mechanisms underlying PCOS, particularly the role of gut microbiota in modulating lipid metabolism, energy balance, insulin resistance, and mental health. The identification of Escherichia-Shigella and Alistipes as major microbial markers alongside metabolites like LPCs and citric acid opens pathways for non-invasive biomarkers, enabling earlier diagnosis and monitoring of disease progression.
More importantly, the findings pave the way for microbiome-targeted interventions such as targeted probiotics, dietary interventions, or even fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) to correct dysbiosis, improve metabolic health, and potentially alleviate mood disorders in PCOS patients. Clinicians should consider the gut microbiome as a central component in the metabolic and psychological management of PCOS, especially in cases where standard endocrine treatments provide incomplete relief.
Gut microbiota alterations reveal potential gut–brain axis changes in polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This study shows reduced gut microbiota diversity and increased GABA-producing bacteria in PCOS, linking microbial shifts to elevated LH levels and supporting a gut–brain axis mechanism. The findings highlight microbial contributions to neuroendocrine dysfunction and suggest therapeutic avenues through microbiome-targeted interventions.
What Was Studied?
This study investigated the alterations in gut microbiota among women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) and how these changes may relate to neuroendocrine disturbances, particularly through the gut–brain axis. Researchers examined 40 Han Chinese women divided into lean and overweight subgroups. By controlling for diet and anthropometrics, the authors aimed to isolate microbiota-specific differences. Fecal samples were collected for 16S rRNA gene sequencing to evaluate microbial composition, and blood samples were analyzed for metabolic and hormonal parameters, including insulin, glucose, lipid profiles, inflammatory markers, and reproductive hormones. The study also included a dietary intake survey to assess macronutrients and micronutrients. The primary objective was to determine specific microbial taxa associated with PCOS, especially those involved in gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) production, and to correlate these microbial shifts with clinical and endocrine markers such as luteinizing hormone (LH) and LH:FSH ratios.
Who Was Studied?
The study examined 40 women of reproductive age, all of Han ethnicity, and recruited from the same geographic region in Southern China. Twenty participants met the revised Rotterdam criteria for PCOS and were further stratified into lean and overweight groups. The remaining 20 participants were healthy controls matched by age and BMI and similarly stratified. All subjects underwent comprehensive assessments, including anthropometric measurements, hormonal profiling, inflammatory markers, glucose tolerance tests, and dietary intake evaluations. Participants had not taken antibiotics, probiotics, hormonal therapies, or insulin sensitizers for at least three months before the study. Fecal microbiota was analyzed via 16S rRNA gene sequencing to compare microbial diversity and species-level abundance across groups.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
This study provided robust evidence of gut microbiota dysbiosis in women with PCOS, revealing a significant reduction in overall microbial richness and diversity compared to controls. The lean control group exhibited the highest alpha diversity, followed by lean PCOS, overweight controls, and overweight PCOS, suggesting a gradient of microbial health associated with both BMI and PCOS status. Importantly, the study identified increased abundance of specific GABA-producing bacteria in women with PCOS. These bacteria positively correlated with elevated LH levels and LH:FSH ratios, which are key endocrine features of PCOS. Notably, Parabacteroides distasonis was significantly increased even in lean women with PCOS, suggesting that this microbial shift is independent of obesity.
The correlation between these microbial species and neuroendocrine markers supports the existence of a gut–brain axis in PCOS pathophysiology. For instance, Parabacteroides distasonis has previously been shown to increase GABA levels in the brain in murine models, and GABA is known to stimulate GnRH neurons and increase LH secretion. The link between elevated GABA-producing microbes and hypersecretion of LH adds biological plausibility to the idea that microbial metabolites may modulate reproductive hormone axes. In addition, Escherichia coli positively correlated with 2-hour postprandial insulin and negatively with HDL-C, aligning with its association with metabolic dysfunction. These major microbial associations (MMA) reveal microbial targets relevant to both metabolic and reproductive pathways in PCOS.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
This study introduces a novel and biologically compelling mechanism linking gut microbiota with the neuroendocrine dysregulation seen in PCOS. By identifying GABA-producing microbes as potential modulators of LH secretion through the gut–brain axis, the findings extend current understanding beyond metabolic inflammation and insulin resistance. For clinicians, these results underscore the importance of considering gut microbial signatures when evaluating PCOS, particularly for patients whose symptoms do not align neatly with traditional metabolic phenotypes. This study also suggests that microbial modulation, via diet, probiotics, or targeted microbiome interventions, may eventually serve as a therapeutic strategy to influence both reproductive and metabolic outcomes. Finally, this work lays the groundwork for future studies exploring causality and therapeutic manipulation, including fecal microbiota transplantation or metabolomic profiling of microbial products like GABA in PCOS contexts.
Gut microbiota imbalance and its correlations with hormone and inflammatory factors in patients with stage 3/4 endometriosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This case control study explored the gut microbiota in stage 3/4 endometriosis (EM) by comparing fecal and blood samples from 12 EM patients and 12 controls using 16S rRNA sequencing. Results showed reduced α diversity and an increased Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes ratio in EM patients, with notable taxonomic differences and elevated estradiol and IL-8 levels. The study suggests microbiota-related pathways may influence EM, indicating directions for further research.
What was studied?
The study investigated the role of gut microbiota in endometriosis (EM), focusing on its differences between individuals with stage 3/4 EM and healthy controls and how these differences correlate with serum hormone levels and inflammatory cytokines.
Who was studied?
The research involved 12 patients diagnosed with stage 3/4 endometriosis and 12 healthy control subjects. The researchers compared their gut microbiota compositions and measured serum levels of hormones and inflammatory cytokines.
What were the most important findings?
Key findings included a lower α diversity of gut microbiota and a higher Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes ratio in the EM group compared to controls. Significant differences in the abundances of various taxa were observed, along with higher serum levels of estradiol (E2) and interleukin-8 (IL-8) in the EM group. The study also identified correlations between specific microbial abundances and levels of estradiol and IL-8.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study’s implications suggest that the gut microbiota may play a significant role in the pathophysiology of endometriosis through its influence on hormonal and inflammatory pathways. These findings open potential avenues for novel therapeutic strategies targeting the gut microbiota in endometriosis management and highlight the need for further research to verify and expand upon these preliminary observations.
Gut microbiota imbalance and its correlations with hormone and inflammatory factors in patients with stage 3/4 endometriosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This study explores the gut microbiota imbalance and its correlations with hormone and inflammatory factors in stage 3/4 endometriosis. Key findings reveal distinct microbial shifts linked to hormonal dysregulation and inflammation, offering insights into disease mechanisms and potential microbiome-targeted therapeutic approaches.
What Was Studied?
This study explored the associations between gut microbiota imbalances and hormone and inflammatory factors in patients with stage 3/4 endometriosis (EM). Conducted at Changhai Hospital, Shanghai, the research aimed to determine how gut microbiome alterations correlate with hormone levels and inflammatory markers in women suffering from moderate to severe endometriosis. Using 16S rRNA high-throughput sequencing, researchers analyzed stool samples to compare the gut microbial composition between 12 women diagnosed with stage 3/4 EM and 12 healthy controls. Blood samples were collected to measure serum hormone levels, including estradiol (E2), and inflammatory cytokines, notably IL-8. The primary objective was to identify microbial shifts associated with EM and understand their correlation with hormone imbalances and inflammation, key factors in the pathogenesis of endometriosis.
Who Was Studied?
The study recruited 12 women with a histological diagnosis of stage 3/4 endometriosis from Changhai Hospital and 12 healthy controls, matched for age (18–40 years) and menstrual regularity. Inclusion criteria for the EM group required confirmed diagnoses of moderate to severe endometriosis per the American Fertility Society Revised Classification (1997). All participants were Han women living in Shanghai, with strict exclusion criteria including recent antibiotic or probiotic use, hormonal therapy, pregnancy, and any comorbid gastrointestinal conditions like inflammatory bowel disease. To minimize confounding factors, participants followed a uniform carbohydrate-based diet three days before sampling, and stool samples were collected within three to five days post-menstruation to account for hormonal fluctuation.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study found that women with stage 3/4 endometriosis exhibited a significantly altered gut microbiota profile compared to healthy controls. Notably, the EM group had lower α diversity, indicating reduced microbial richness and variation. At the phylum level, the ratio of Firmicutes to Bacteroidetes was markedly increased in endometriosis patients (3.55 vs. 1.99 in controls), suggesting dysbiosis. The abundance of Actinobacteria, Cyanobacteria, Saccharibacteria, Fusobacteria, and Acidobacteria was significantly higher in the EM group, while Tenericutes were significantly reduced. At the genus level, Bifidobacterium, Blautia, Dorea, Streptococcus, and [Eubacterium] hallii_group showed notable increases, whereas Lachnospira and [Eubacterium] eligens_group were depleted in endometriosis patients. Among the unique genera, Prevotella_7 dominated the EM group, while Coprococcus_2 was prevalent in controls.
Additionally, serum analyses revealed that estradiol (E2) and IL-8 levels were significantly higher in endometriosis patients. Correlation analysis indicated that Blautia and Dorea were positively correlated with elevated E2 levels, while Subdoligranulum abundance inversely correlated with IL-8 levels. These microbial shifts also corresponded with enhanced expression of microbial pathways related to "environmental information processing," "endocrine system," and "immune system," highlighting potential links between gut microbiota and hormonal regulation in endometriosis.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
The findings of this study suggest that gut microbiota imbalances are closely linked with hormone and inflammatory dysregulation in patients with stage 3/4 endometriosis. The observed microbial shifts, particularly the elevated Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes ratio and increased levels of Bifidobacterium, Blautia, Dorea, and Streptococcus, indicate a state of dysbiosis that may exacerbate inflammatory responses and hormonal imbalances. The positive correlation between Blautia and Dorea with estradiol levels points to the gut microbiome's role in modulating estrogen, potentially influencing the development and progression of endometriosis. Furthermore, the association of Subdoligranulum with IL-8 levels suggests a microbial influence on inflammatory cytokine production, which is known to contribute to endometriosis pathophysiology. These insights provide a foundation for exploring microbiome-targeted therapies aimed at restoring microbial balance and modulating hormonal and inflammatory responses in endometriosis patients. This study also underscores the need for further clinical investigations to validate these microbial markers as diagnostic or therapeutic targets.
Heavy Metals and Essential Elements in Association with Oxidative Stress in Women with Polycystic Ovary Syndrome
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This systematic review links heavy metal exposure and trace element deficiencies to oxidative stress, inflammation, and hormonal imbalance in PCOS, with implications for metabolic dysfunction and gut microbiome disruption.
What was reviewed?
This systematic review synthesized findings from 15 human studies to evaluate the association between heavy metals, essential trace elements, and oxidative stress (OS) in women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS). The review aimed to determine whether elevated toxic metal exposure and imbalances in essential micronutrients contribute to PCOS pathophysiology through mechanisms involving oxidative damage and inflammation. The authors used PubMed to identify literature from January 2008 to April 2023 and included studies that examined both heavy metals and essential elements in relation to markers of oxidative stress and metabolic and endocrine function in PCOS.
Who was reviewed?
The review encompassed studies involving women of reproductive age diagnosed with PCOS, compared to healthy controls. Across the 15 studies, sample sizes varied from small clinical trials to larger observational cohorts (up to 150 participants). The review focused on blood-based assessments (serum or plasma) of both toxic metals and essential elements, and linked these exposures to metabolic parameters, inflammatory biomarkers (e.g., hs-CRP, TNF-α), and OS markers (e.g., MDA, TAC, SOD, GSH).
What were the most important findings?
The review consistently found that women with PCOS exhibit elevated levels of heavy metals such as cadmium (Cd), lead (Pb), mercury (Hg), arsenic (As), antimony (Sb), tellurium (Te), thallium (Tl), and osmium (Os), while having significantly lower levels of essential elements like zinc (Zn), selenium (Se), and magnesium (Mg). The data reveal that these toxic metals are positively associated with markers of OS and inflammation, and negatively associated with antioxidant capacity. Specifically, Cd, Pb, and Sb levels were strongly correlated with higher fasting blood glucose, HOMA-IR, and pro-inflammatory markers, pointing to a direct metabolic and inflammatory insult. In contrast, supplementation with zinc, selenium, magnesium, and chromium showed protective effects, improving TAC levels, reducing oxidative stress markers, and lowering serum levels of androgens like DHEA and testosterone.
From a microbiome perspective, many of these toxicants, particularly cadmium and lead, are known to disrupt gut microbial balance by suppressing beneficial SCFA-producing bacteria such as Faecalibacterium prausnitzii and Bifidobacterium. This dysbiosis can fuel systemic inflammation and insulin resistance, exacerbating PCOS symptoms. Zinc and selenium support mucosal immunity and microbial diversity, and their deficiency may further impair gut barrier integrity and host–microbiome interactions.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review confirms that environmental exposure to heavy metals, alongside deficiencies in essential micronutrients, contributes to oxidative stress, inflammation, and metabolic dysfunction in PCOS. These findings underscore the importance of incorporating toxicological and nutritional evaluations into PCOS management. Clinically, there is a rationale for screening PCOS patients for metal burden and micronutrient status. Therapeutic strategies such as targeted supplementation (e.g., zinc, magnesium, selenium) or chelation, as well as dietary interventions to reduce toxicant exposure, may not only alleviate metabolic and endocrine symptoms but also support gut microbiome restoration. The integration of environmental health with endocrinology and microbiome research provides a promising, systems-level approach for improving outcomes in women with PCOS.
High-Fiber Diet or Combined With Acarbose Alleviates Heterogeneous Phenotypes of Polycystic Ovary Syndrome by Regulating Gut Microbiota
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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A high-fiber diet combined with acarbose improved hormonal, metabolic, and inflammatory markers in women with PCOS by remodeling the gut microbiota. Key microbial shifts included increases in Bifidobacterium and reductions in Bacteroides vulgatus, correlating with decreased insulin resistance and hyperandrogenism.
What was studied?
This randomized controlled clinical trial investigated the effects of a high-fiber diet, alone or combined with the alpha-glucosidase inhibitor acarbose, on the clinical phenotypes of polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) through modulation of the gut microbiota. The study specifically aimed to determine how dietary fibers and delayed carbohydrate absorption impact hormonal, metabolic, and inflammatory markers, as well as gut microbiome composition, in women with PCOS.
Who was studied?
Twenty-five women diagnosed with PCOS according to the Rotterdam criteria were recruited and randomly assigned into two groups. Fourteen participants received a whole-grain, traditional Chinese medicinal, and prebiotic-rich high-fiber diet (WTP diet), while eleven received the same diet combined with acarbose. The intervention lasted 12 weeks. All participants were treatment-naïve and not on hormone therapy, insulin sensitizers, or antibiotics for at least three months prior to enrollment. The study population spanned a reproductive age range (15–41 years), and measurements included hormonal, glycolipid, inflammatory, and microbiota parameters at weeks 0, 4, 8, and 12.
What were the most important findings?
Both interventions improved PCOS clinical phenotypes, but the combination of a high-fiber diet and acarbose yielded significantly better outcomes in lowering testosterone, LH/FSH ratio, fasting insulin, and HOMA-IR. Moreover, participants in the combination group experienced a more pronounced reduction in ovarian volume, hirsutism score, and immature follicles. These improvements paralleled significant shifts in the gut microbiota.
Gut microbiota analysis revealed enrichment of beneficial taxa, including Bifidobacterium and Lactobacillus, which were negatively associated with PCOS-related markers such as testosterone, LH/FSH ratio, fasting insulin, leptin, and a-AGP, while positively correlated with anti-inflammatory markers like adiponectin and spexin. In contrast, CAGs rich in Bacteroides vulgatus, Alistipes, Bilophila, Lachnospira, and Roseburia were significantly inhibited, particularly in the combination group, and positively associated with hyperandrogenism, insulin resistance, and inflammatory markers. These microbial changes suggest that the beneficial effects were mediated through enhanced SCFA production, gut-brain peptide modulation, and reduced LPS-related inflammation.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study provides compelling clinical evidence that gut microbiota-targeted nutritional therapy, particularly high-fiber intake enhanced with acarbose, can modulate endocrine and metabolic disturbances in PCOS. By enriching SCFA-producing probiotics like Bifidobacterium and Lactobacillus, and suppressing pro-inflammatory taxa such as Bacteroides vulgatus and Alistipes, the intervention directly impacted core pathogenic mechanisms: hyperandrogenism and insulin resistance. Additionally, changes in gut–brain peptides like leptin, spexin, and orexin highlight a robust gut-brain axis involvement in PCOS pathophysiology. For clinicians, this trial supports incorporating microbiome-informed dietary strategies, including the use of prebiotic-rich foods and agents like acarbose, into PCOS management. While limited by small sample size, the mechanistic depth, hormonal modulation, and microbial specificity make a strong case for larger multicenter trials to validate this therapeutic paradigm.
I Am the 1 in 10—What Should I Eat? A Research Review of Nutrition in Endometriosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This review explores how dietary modifications impact endometriosis progression. Antioxidants, omega-3s, and anti-inflammatory diets show promise in symptom relief and hormonal regulation. Personalized nutrition emerges as a pivotal tool for improving patient outcomes.
What Was Reviewed?
The paper titled "I Am the 1 in 10—What Should I Eat? A Research Review of Nutrition in Endometriosis" provides an extensive review of the role of nutrition in the management and progression of endometriosis. The authors systematically explore various dietary factors and interventions, including antioxidants, polyphenols, omega-3 fatty acids, a low-nickel diet, and the Mediterranean diet, among others, in relation to their effects on inflammation, hormonal modulation, and oxidative stress in endometriosis patients.
Who Was Reviewed?
The review primarily evaluated research studies involving women diagnosed with endometriosis. It integrated findings from human clinical trials, observational studies, and in vitro research to synthesize current evidence on nutritional influences on endometriosis-related symptoms and disease progression.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The review highlighted that endometriosis is a chronic inflammatory and estrogen-dependent condition where dietary modifications can play a pivotal role. It emphasized the following:
Antioxidants and Polyphenols: Foods rich in antioxidants, such as fruits, vegetables, and specific compounds like resveratrol, demonstrated anti-inflammatory and pro-apoptotic effects in reducing endometriosis severity. Polyphenols, especially phytoestrogens, can modulate estrogen activity, impacting endometriotic lesion growth.
Dietary Fats: Omega-3 fatty acids were shown to reduce inflammation and dysmenorrhea, while high consumption of omega-6 and trans fats increased risks.
Specific Diets: The Mediterranean diet, with its anti-inflammatory properties, low-FODMAP and low-nickel diets showed potential benefits in reducing gastrointestinal and systemic symptoms. Gluten-free diets also alleviated pain in a subset of patients.
Dairy and Vitamin D: Dairy consumption, particularly calcium- and vitamin D-rich products, was associated with reduced endometriosis risk. Vitamin D showed immunomodulatory effects, improving inflammatory responses.
Red Meat and Iron Overload: Excessive red meat consumption elevated estrogen and prostaglandin levels, exacerbating endometriosis. The condition was also linked to iron overload in peritoneal fluid, contributing to oxidative stress and infertility.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Review?
The findings underscore the potential for personalized dietary interventions in endometriosis management, emphasizing the integration of anti-inflammatory, low-toxin, and nutrient-rich foods. Clinicians can leverage these insights to recommend diets tailored to reduce inflammation, regulate estrogen metabolism, and mitigate oxidative stress, thereby improving quality of life and fertility outcomes for patients. Furthermore, the review reinforces the importance of microbiome-targeted dietary strategies in addressing endometriosis-related dysbiosis.
Identification of distinct stool metabolites in women with endometriosis for non-invasive diagnosis and potential for microbiota-based therapies
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This study identifies stool-based biomarkers for endometriosis diagnosis and highlights the therapeutic potential of 4-hydroxyindole, a microbiota-derived metabolite, in reducing inflammation and lesion progression.
What Was Studied?
The study examined the stool metabolome of women with endometriosis compared to healthy controls to identify microbiota-derived metabolites with diagnostic and therapeutic potential. Researchers employed metabolomics and microbiota profiling to investigate how altered gut microbiota and their metabolites, specifically 4-hydroxyindole (4HI), affect endometriosis development and progression.
Who Was Studied?
The study included stool samples from 18 women with clinically confirmed endometriosis and 31 healthy control women. The participants’ metabolomic and microbiota profiles were analyzed, followed by functional validation of key metabolites, such as 4HI, in murine and human xenograft models of endometriosis.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study identified a distinct stool metabolome in women with endometriosis, characterized by reduced levels of specific microbiota-derived metabolites, including 4HI. Reduced 4HI was linked to a decreased abundance of beneficial gut bacteria like Faecalibacterium and Lachnospiraceae. 4HI showed remarkable therapeutic potential, as it inhibited the initiation and progression of endometriotic lesions, reduced lesion size and volume, and alleviated inflammation and pain in murine models. Moreover, 4HI was effective in regressing well-developed lesions in pre-clinical models. The metabolic signature also highlighted overlap between endometriosis and inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), suggesting common inflammatory pathways and potential misdiagnosis risks.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
This research revolutionizes the understanding of endometriosis by identifying stool-based biomarkers, particularly 4HI, for non-invasive diagnosis. It highlights 4HI as a promising therapeutic metabolite capable of reducing inflammation and lesion development. These findings pave the way for microbiota-targeted therapies and emphasize the diagnostic overlap with IBD, offering potential for dual-disease screening. Integrating microbiota and metabolomic data offers a novel paradigm for managing endometriosis and related conditions.
Identification of polycystic ovary syndrome potential drug targets based on pathobiological similarity in the protein-protein interaction network
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This study identifies potential drug targets for PCOS, focusing on genes involved in insulin resistance and hormone signaling pathways. Findings could help develop more targeted treatments.
What was studied?
This study aimed to identify potential drug targets for Polycystic Ovary Syndrome (PCOS) by leveraging pathobiological similarity with Type 2 Diabetes (T2D). The researchers used computational methods to identify PCOS potential drug targets by analyzing the protein-protein interaction network (PPIN) of PCOS and T2D genes. This network analysis was used to identify overlapping drug targets and modules associated with both diseases, offering insights into potential therapeutic interventions for PCOS.
Who was studied?
The study involved analysis of protein-protein interaction networks (PPIN) related to PCOS and T2D. It did not focus on specific individuals, but instead, it reviewed a set of PCOS-related disease genes, T2D disease genes, and drug targets available in databases. The data was obtained from multiple sources, including disease gene databases like GAD, OMIM, and the Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO).
What were the most important findings?
The study identified 22 potential drug targets for PCOS through a systematic examination of PPIN. Among these, several genes (such as ESR1, RXRA, NCOA1, and PPARG) were shown to play central roles in both the pathogenesis of PCOS and T2D, suggesting their potential as therapeutic targets. The researchers used a computational approach that integrated PCOS and T2D data, successfully identifying overlapping disease genes and known drug targets. PPDT-Module 2, a key module in the analysis, was shown to significantly contribute to PCOS pathogenesis and could be a promising therapeutic target. Furthermore, 42 drugs targeting 13 identified PCOS drug targets were investigated, revealing potential treatments such as pioglitazone and clomiphene, already used in clinical settings.
The study also highlighted how the genes identified were enriched in functional pathways associated with hormone signaling and lipid metabolism, which are critical areas in PCOS and T2D. The strong overlap in functional categories related to steroid hormone receptor signaling, lipid binding, and insulin resistance suggests that drugs targeting these pathways might improve both metabolic and reproductive health in PCOS patients.
From a microbiome perspective, the identified pathways and genes could influence microbial communities. For example, genes associated with lipid metabolism and insulin resistance could alter gut microbial composition, promoting dysbiosis and exacerbating metabolic dysfunctions. The therapeutic targeting of these pathways could help restore microbiome balance, potentially improving clinical outcomes in PCOS patients.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study provides valuable insights into the drug targets for PCOS, revealing that certain genes, such as ESR1, RXRA, and PPARG, could serve as promising therapeutic targets. These findings not only contribute to understanding the pathogenesis of PCOS but also offer a framework for developing targeted treatments for this condition. The use of systems biology approaches in this study could pave the way for more personalized medicine in PCOS, with a focus on drugs that target the core pathways of insulin resistance, lipid metabolism, and hormone imbalance.
Additionally, the identification of overlapping drug targets for PCOS and T2D emphasizes the potential of dual-purpose treatments, which could address both conditions simultaneously. Given the shared metabolic disturbances between PCOS and T2D, these findings open the door for novel combination therapies aimed at improving both metabolic and reproductive health in women with PCOS. Furthermore, the study provides a model for investigating other complex diseases through pathobiological similarities, potentially aiding in the identification of new therapeutic targets and improving drug development strategies.
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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This study identifies three key bacterial vaginosis-associated species using DNA sequencing and phylogenetics. By classifying BVAB-1, BVAB-2, and BVAB-3, the findings advance understanding of BV’s microbial landscape and highlight new opportunities for targeted diagnostics and treatment.
What Was Studied?
This study analyzed bacterial vaginosis-associated bacteria (BVAB) at the species level using DNA sequencing and phylogenetic analysis. Researchers sought to identify the exact species of BVAB-1, BVAB-2, and BVAB-3, which were previously unknown and only classified by molecular signatures. By applying metagenomic sequencing and comparative analysis, the study aimed to provide clarity on the taxonomy of these bacteria and their role in bacterial vaginosis (BV) pathogenesis.
Who Was Studied?
The study analyzed bacterial DNA extracted from vaginal specimens of women diagnosed with BV. Using genomic data from previous metagenomic studies, the researchers compared BVAB sequences to known bacterial genomes, identifying their closest relatives and evolutionary relationships.
Key Findings and Microbial Associations
The study successfully identified the species of three previously unclassified BV-associated bacteria. BVAB-1 was found to be Clostridiales genomosp. BVAB-1 (later renamed Candidatus Lachnocurva vaginae), BVAB-2 was classified as Oscillospiraceae bacterium strain CHIC02, and BVAB-3 was identified as Mageeibacillus indolicus. These species, previously unknown, are strictly anaerobic and uncultivable in standard laboratory conditions. Their identification provides a more detailed understanding of the microbial shifts in BV and offers new insights into their role in vaginal dysbiosis.
The findings reinforce the idea that BV is not caused by a single pathogen but by a complex shift in the vaginal microbiome. The presence of BVAB-1, BVAB-2, and BVAB-3 in women with BV suggests they may contribute to the condition's persistence and recurrence. By using metagenomic sequencing and phylogenetic analysis, the study clarifies the taxonomy of these bacteria and their evolutionary relationships. This species-level identification allows for improved diagnostics and targeted research into BV-associated microbial interactions.
Implications of the Study
Identifying the specific species associated with BV significantly improves diagnostic and treatment strategies. Clinicians currently use broad-spectrum antibiotics to treat BV, but discovering these species enables the development of more targeted therapies. This study also emphasizes the need for continued metagenomic research, as many BV-associated bacteria are difficult to culture and study in traditional lab settings. With more precise species identification, researchers can better understand how these bacteria interact with the vaginal microbiome and contribute to BV recurrence.
Impact of nutritional diet therapy on premenstrual syndrome
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD) is a severe mood disorder linked to hormonal and neurochemical changes. Emerging research highlights the gut microbiome’s role in symptom modulation, opening new avenues for microbiome-targeted treatments alongside traditional therapies.
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Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS)
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS)
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS) involves physical and emotional symptoms linked to hormonal fluctuations. Recent research highlights the role of heavy metals and gut microbiome imbalances in worsening these symptoms. Lifestyle changes, microbiome-targeted therapies, and toxin reduction show promise in effective PMS management.
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This review highlights the role of diet and micronutrients in modulating PMS symptoms, showing potential benefits of calcium, magnesium, vitamin D, and B vitamins, while emphasizing the need for personalized nutritional approaches and further microbiome-focused research.
What was reviewed?
This paper conducted a comprehensive review of current research on the effects of dietary and nutritional therapies on premenstrual syndrome (PMS) and premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD) symptoms. The authors analyzed data from various studies accessed through major databases like PubMed, ScienceDirect, and Scopus, focusing on dietary patterns, macro- and micronutrients, supplements, and their relationship to PMS symptom severity and management.
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesized findings from multiple clinical and observational studies involving women of reproductive age experiencing PMS, encompassing diverse populations and dietary behaviors. The included studies examined correlations between specific nutrients, food groups, supplements, and premenstrual symptom patterns.
What were the most important findings?
The review emphasized that while diet plays an important role in modulating PMS symptoms, the scientific evidence remains limited and inconsistent, especially regarding macronutrient intake—no strong correlations were found between protein, fat, carbohydrates, or fiber consumption and PMS symptoms. However, micronutrients such as calcium, magnesium, vitamin D, and B vitamins showed potential benefits in symptom reduction. Specifically, calcium and vitamin D supplementation were linked to decreased PMS symptom severity and improved quality of life, although definitive clinical recommendations require further trials. The role of vitamin B6 and broad-spectrum micronutrient supplementation was also noted, with both showing some efficacy in managing PMS-related psychological symptoms. Herbal supplements like evening primrose oil and curcumin demonstrated mixed results and warrant additional research. The review also highlighted the influence of dietary patterns, showing Western diets rich in processed foods and refined sugars positively associate with increased PMS symptoms, whereas traditional and healthy diets rich in fruits, vegetables, and whole foods correlate with reduced symptom severity.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review underscores the potential of nutritional therapy as a complementary approach to PMS symptom management. It calls for increased awareness among healthcare providers to educate women on adopting balanced dietary habits that may mitigate symptoms. Given the current limitations in evidence, it encourages personalized nutritional counseling and advocates for further research integrating microbiome and metabolomic insights to refine diet-based interventions. This can potentially facilitate the development of microbiome-targeted dietary strategies to improve PMS and PMDD outcomes.
Improved cure of bacterial vaginosis with single dose of tinidazole (2g), Lactobacillus rhamnosus GR-1, and Lactobacillus reuteri RC-14
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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Tinidazole
Tinidazole
Tinidazole is a nitroimidazole antimicrobial that selectively targets anaerobic bacteria and protozoa, reshaping the gut ecosystem by depleting pathogenic anaerobes while preserving commensals. Clinically validated for giardiasis, bacterial vaginosis, and colorectal surgery prophylaxis. Its DNA-disrupting and biofilm-penetrating actions reduce inflammatory triggers and create niches for healthy microbiota to rebound.
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This study shows that oral probiotics significantly boost cure rates of bacterial vaginosis when used with tinidazole, restoring a healthy vaginal microbiome.
What Was Studied?
This randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial investigated whether the combination of a single 2g dose of tinidazole and daily oral probiotics (Lactobacillus rhamnosus GR-1 and Lactobacillus reuteri RC-14) improved bacterial vaginosis (BV) cure rates in women, compared to tinidazole alone. BV, a condition characterized by dysbiosis in the vaginal microbiome and reduction of protective Lactobacillus species, has shown poor long-term response to antibiotic treatment alone. The study aimed to determine if probiotic supplementation could enhance the therapeutic efficacy of tinidazole by restoring a more favorable microbial balance.
Who Was Studied?
Sixty-four Brazilian women diagnosed with BV based on Amsel’s criteria and Nugent scoring participated in the study. The participants were randomly assigned to either a placebo group or a probiotic group, both of which received the same tinidazole dose. The probiotic group also received daily capsules containing L. rhamnosus GR-1 and L. reuteri RC-14 for four weeks. Women with other vaginal infections, recent antibiotic use, or immunosuppression were excluded. The trial assessed both subjective symptoms and microbiological cure at the end of the treatment period.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
At the end of the four-week treatment, the probiotic group exhibited a significantly higher cure rate compared to the placebo group as measured by Amsel’s criteria and Nugent score. Women in the probiotic group were assessed with “normal” vaginal microbiota based on Gram stain, compared to the placebo group. Importantly, the study also noted reduced BV-associated microbial morphotypes (Gram-variable rods, curved anaerobes) and a statistically significant improvement in key clinical indicators, including pH, discharge, and odor in the probiotic group. While both groups used tinidazole, the probiotics played a key role in enhancing microbiota restoration. Notably, the probiotic strains used in the study are known for producing biosurfactants, bacteriocins, and signaling molecules that can disrupt pathogenic biofilms, particularly those formed by Gardnerella vaginalis. This mechanism may explain their strong microbiome-modulating effect.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
This study provides robust clinical evidence supporting the adjunctive use of probiotics with antibiotics to treat BV and improve microbiota restoration. By demonstrating that oral administration of specific Lactobacillus strains significantly improves cure rates and promotes a return to healthy vaginal flora, the study bridges microbiome science with practical gynecological care. Clinicians managing recurrent or treatment-resistant BV can consider integrating targeted probiotic strains to reduce recurrence and enhance long-term remission. Additionally, the study underscores the need for strain-specific probiotic selection, given the inconsistent outcomes with nonspecific lactobacilli. The use of probiotics also holds promise in preserving drug efficacy and reducing the need for prolonged antibiotic exposure, which aligns with antimicrobial stewardship principles and microbiome health preservation.
Increased circulating conjugated primary bile acids are associated with hyperandrogenism in women with polycystic ovary syndrome
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This study links elevated conjugated primary bile acids to hyperandrogenism in PCOS, suggesting bile acid metabolism plays a direct role in endocrine dysfunction and opens new therapeutic perspectives for managing PCOS.
What was studied?
This study explored the relationship between circulating bile acid profiles and hyperandrogenism in women diagnosed with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS). Specifically, the researchers investigated whether changes in the concentration and composition of serum bile acids, particularly conjugated primary bile acids, were associated with elevated androgen levels in PCOS patients. Utilizing ultra-performance liquid chromatography coupled to tandem mass spectrometry (UPLC-MS/MS), the study quantified individual bile acid species in the serum and examined their statistical associations with androgen markers such as total testosterone and androstenedione.
Who was studied?
The study population consisted of 37 women diagnosed with PCOS and 35 age- and BMI-matched healthy control subjects, all recruited from the Endocrinology Department of Drum Tower Hospital, Nanjing, China. The diagnosis of PCOS was based on the Rotterdam criteria, ensuring that participants met at least two of the following: hyperandrogenism, oligo/anovulation, or polycystic ovarian morphology. Subjects were carefully screened to exclude confounding conditions such as diabetes, liver disease, and recent antibiotic use. This rigorous matching and exclusion criteria strengthen the internal validity of the findings.
What were the most important findings?
The researchers identified that women with PCOS had significantly elevated levels of circulating conjugated primary bile acids, specifically glycine-conjugated (GCA and GCDCA) and taurine-conjugated (TCA and TCDCA) species, compared to healthy controls. Interestingly, the total bile acid levels and the total primary bile acid pool were both elevated in PCOS, while secondary bile acids showed no significant difference. The elevated conjugated bile acids also displayed strong positive associations with serum androgen levels, including total testosterone and androstenedione. These associations remained statistically significant even after adjusting for potential confounders such as age, BMI, and insulin resistance (HOMA-IR).
The study also observed that the relative percentage composition of the bile acid pool shifted in PCOS patients, with higher contributions from conjugated primary bile acids like GCA, TCA, and TCDCA and a reduced proportion of secondary bile acids like DCA, LCA, and GLCA. These patterns suggest an altered bile acid metabolism that could be functionally linked to androgen excess in PCOS, potentially through mechanisms involving bile acid receptors such as the farnesoid X receptor (FXR), which has been shown in other research to regulate steroid metabolism.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study highlights a novel and potentially important role for bile acid metabolism in the endocrine dysfunction characteristic of PCOS, especially hyperandrogenism. The findings suggest that the gut-liver axis and bile acid signaling could contribute to the development or perpetuation of elevated androgen levels in PCOS, potentially via FXR-mediated inhibition of androgen-to-estrogen conversion in ovarian granulosa cells. If validated in future longitudinal studies, these insights open new avenues for biomarker discovery and therapeutic intervention. Modulating bile acid composition—whether through dietary strategies, microbiome-based therapies, or bile acid sequestrants—could represent a future direction in managing hyperandrogenism and its associated reproductive and metabolic complications in PCOS.
Inflammatory cytokines IL-6, IL-10, IL-13, TNF-α and peritoneal fluid flora were associated with infertility in patients with endometriosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This cross-sectional observational study examined the link between inflammatory markers (IL-6, IL-10, IL-13, TNF-α), peritoneal fluid bacterial flora, and infertility in endometriosis patients. Results showed significantly higher white cell counts and elevated levels of inflammatory markers in endometriosis patients compared to controls. Logistic regression confirmed significant associations between these inflammatory markers and infertility.
What was studied?
The study investigated the relationship between inflammatory markers (IL-6, IL-10, IL-13, and TNF-α), the composition of bacterial flora in peritoneal fluid, and infertility in patients with endometriosis.
Who was studied?
The participants included 55 patients diagnosed with endometriosis and infertility (observation group) attending a Gynecology Clinic from June 2014 to July 2017 and 30 individuals without endometriosis or infertility issues (control group).
What were the most important findings?
The study found elevated white cell counts (monocytes, neutrophils, eosinophils, and basophils) and higher levels of inflammatory cytokines (IL-6, IL-10, IL-13, and TNF-α) in the peritoneal fluid of endometriosis patients with infertility compared to controls. A significant correlation between these inflammatory markers and endometriosis associated with infertility was also established.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study implies that inflammatory factors in peritoneal fluid play a crucial role in the pathophysiology of infertility associated with endometriosis. These findings suggest that inflammatory cytokines (IL-6, IL-10, IL-13, and TNF-α) could serve as significant biomarkers for diagnosing and understanding the mechanisms of endometriosis-related infertility.
Inflammatory cytokines IL-6, IL-10, IL-13, TNF-α and peritoneal fluid flora were associated with infertility in patients with endometriosis
February 12, 2026
/
Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This study reveals that inflammatory cytokines (IL-6, IL-10, IL-13, and TNF-α) are significantly elevated in the peritoneal fluid of endometriosis patients with infertility. These findings suggest their potential role as diagnostic biomarkers and therapeutic targets for managing reproductive complications in endometriosis.
What Was Studied?
This study investigated the association of inflammatory cytokines and peritoneal fluid flora with infertility in endometriosis patients. Researchers aimed to explore the correlations between elevated inflammatory markers—IL-6, IL-10, IL-13, and TNF-α—and changes in microbial communities within the peritoneal fluid of women suffering from endometriosis-related infertility. Using Ion Torrent PGM platform sequencing, the microbial composition of the peritoneal fluid was mapped, while ELISA assays were employed to quantify cytokine levels. Logistic regression analysis was conducted to determine the relationship between inflammatory factors and infertility severity.
Who Was Studied?
The study included 55 women diagnosed with endometriosis and infertility and a control group of 30 women without endometriosis or infertility. All participants were treated at a gynecology clinic between June 2014 and July 2017. Peritoneal fluid samples were collected laparoscopically from the vesicouterine and rectovaginal pouches. Women receiving hormonal therapy or antibiotics within two months of surgery were excluded to avoid confounding microbial and inflammatory responses. This patient population allowed for a focused analysis of microbial and cytokine-driven inflammation linked to infertility in endometriosis.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study found that endometriosis patients with infertility exhibited significantly higher levels of IL-6, IL-10, IL-13, and TNF-α in peritoneal fluid compared to controls (p < 0.05). White blood cell counts, including monocytes, neutrophils, eosinophils, and basophils, were also elevated in the peritoneal fluid of endometriosis patients, supporting the inflammatory hypothesis of disease pathogenesis. Analysis of peritoneal fluid microbiota revealed a predominance of Proteobacteria and Firmicutes, with secondary representation from Actinobacteria, Bacteroidetes, Fusobacterium, and Tenericutes. However, there were no significant differences in the abundance of these phyla between endometriosis patients and controls, suggesting that bacteria themselves are not the primary drivers of infertility in endometriosis. Instead, the study highlighted the role of inflammatory cytokines as critical mediators of infertility. Logistic regression analysis confirmed that IL-6, IL-10, IL-13, and TNF-α were significantly correlated with infertility severity in endometriosis patients, suggesting these cytokines may serve as diagnostic biomarkers for assessing infertility risk. Receiver Operating Characteristic (ROC) analysis showed that IL-6 and TNF-α had the highest diagnostic sensitivity, with AUC values of 0.893 for both, indicating their strong predictive value for identifying infertility risk in endometriosis.
Parameter
Findings in Endometriosis Patients with Infertility
Inflammatory Cytokines
Elevated levels of IL-6, IL-10, IL-13, and TNF-α in peritoneal fluid (p < 0.05).
Immune Cell Counts
Increased monocytes, neutrophils, eosinophils, and basophils in peritoneal fluid.
Peritoneal Fluid Microbiota
Dominated by Proteobacteria and Firmicutes, with secondary presence of Actinobacteria, Bacteroidetes, Fusobacterium, and Tenericutes.
Microbial Shifts
No significant differences in bacterial phyla between endometriosis patients and controls.
Diagnostic Biomarkers
IL-6 and TNF-α showed the highest diagnostic sensitivity for infertility with AUC values of 0.893.
Inflammatory Implications
Cytokines linked to immune activation, peritoneal inflammation, and possible inhibition of sperm motility.
Therapeutic Potential
Anti-inflammatory strategies targeting IL-6 and TNF-α could improve fertility outcomes in endometriosis patients.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
This study underscores the critical role of inflammatory cytokines in endometriosis-associated infertility, particularly IL-6, IL-10, IL-13, and TNF-α. These cytokines appear to contribute to peritoneal inflammation, immune cell activation, and possibly sperm motility inhibition, collectively reducing fertility. Although peritoneal fluid microbiota did not significantly differ between endometriosis and control groups, the elevated cytokine levels suggest that microbial translocation and immune responses within the peritoneal cavity may exacerbate inflammation. These findings highlight IL-6 and TNF-α as potential biomarkers for diagnosing infertility in endometriosis patients and suggest that anti-inflammatory therapies targeting these cytokines could improve fertility outcomes. Additionally, the study indicates that monitoring cytokine levels in peritoneal fluid could serve as a non-invasive diagnostic tool for assessing infertility risk in endometriosis, offering a novel approach to reproductive management in affected women.
Influence of heavy metal exposure on gut microbiota: Recent advances
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This review highlights that heavy metal exposure disrupts gut microbiota composition and function, leading to dysbiosis and various health implications. Heavy metals alter gene expression in both the host and microbiota, affecting immune regulation and oxidative stress pathways. Dysbiosis induced by heavy metals can lead to inflammation, gut motility disturbances, and increased susceptibility to diseases like inflammatory bowel diseases. The study underscores the importance of understanding heavy metal-induced dysbiosis and its implications for human and environmental health, advocating for further research in this area.
What was studied?
The study investigated the impact of heavy metal exposure on the composition and function of gut microbiota. Specifically, it looked at how heavy metals such as arsenic, cadmium, lead, and mercury affect the diversity, richness, and metabolism of gut bacteria.
Who was studied?
The research encompassed various model organisms, including humans, mice, rats, chickens, fish, crayfish, and asiatic toad. Studies were conducted on both adult and juvenile stages of these organisms to understand the effects of heavy metal exposure on gut microbiota across different life stages.
What were the most important findings?
Several significant findings have emerged from the study: Heavy metal exposure has been shown to induce dysbiosis in the gut microbiota, manifesting in alterations in microbial composition, gene expression, metabolism, and immune response. Moreover, the gut microbiota play a pivotal role in the detoxification and elimination of heavy metals, facilitated through enzymatic reactions, bioaccumulation, and methylation processes. Notably, exposure to heavy metals results in shifts in the abundance of specific bacterial phyla within the gut microbiome, including Proteobacteria, Firmicutes, and Bacteroidetes. These alterations in gut microbiota composition and function have far-reaching health implications, including oxidative stress, neurobehavioral damage, disrupted lipid metabolism, compromised immune function, and heightened susceptibility to inflammatory bowel diseases.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study underscores several important implications: It stresses the criticality of comprehending how heavy metals affect gut microbiota, as this knowledge is essential for evaluating the environmental and public health risks linked to heavy metal exposure. Moreover, the findings advocate for the development of guidelines and interventions aimed at mitigating heavy metal-induced toxicity and safeguarding gut microbiota health. Further research is imperative to uncover the mechanisms behind heavy metal-induced dysbiosis of gut microbiota and its repercussions on human health, necessitating investigations into microbial alterations at the species and strain levels using advanced sequencing methodologies like metagenomics. Additionally, epidemiological studies involving human populations are warranted to directly assess the health consequences of heavy metal exposure on gut microbiota and to guide the formulation of preventive measures and public health policies.
Insulin Resistance and the Polycystic Ovary Syndrome Revisited: An Update on Mechanisms and Implications
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This review explores insulin resistance as a primary driver of PCOS, detailing molecular signaling defects and their clinical consequences. It provides critical insight into how hyperinsulinemia fuels both metabolic dysfunction and androgen excess, reinforcing PCOS as a systemic endocrine-metabolic disorder, with implications for microbiome-linked disease signatures.
What Was Reviewed?
This review paper revisits the pathophysiological mechanisms linking insulin resistance to polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), integrating molecular, clinical, and genetic insights. It offers an updated synthesis of the complex metabolic and reproductive disturbances in PCOS, focusing particularly on how insulin resistance plays a central role in the syndrome’s development. The paper builds on findings from the original 1997 Endocrine Reviews article and incorporates two decades of advances in endocrinology, genetics, and metabolic signaling. The authors evaluate the metabolic and mitogenic effects of insulin, molecular mechanisms like post-binding receptor signaling defects, and explore insulin’s role as a reproductive hormone. The review also emphasizes the impact of hyperinsulinemia and androgen excess on glucose metabolism, ovarian steroidogenesis, and ovulatory dysfunction. Genetic predisposition and developmental programming through intrauterine androgen exposure are also considered contributing factors.
Who Was Reviewed?
The review synthesizes findings from studies involving both lean and obese women with PCOS, alongside control groups without the condition. It integrates data from in vivo human metabolic studies, tissue-specific analyses of adipocytes and skeletal muscle, and molecular experiments using cultured fibroblasts. The reviewed cohorts span racially and ethnically diverse populations, including women from the United States, Europe, and Asia, offering insight into the universality and variability of insulin resistance in PCOS. Importantly, the authors highlight that while insulin resistance is nearly universal in obese women with PCOS, its presence in lean women depends on PCOS phenotype and diagnostic criteria. Studies of first-degree relatives also reveal inherited metabolic and reproductive traits, affirming the role of genetic and familial influences.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The review reinforces that insulin resistance is a hallmark of PCOS and a central pathogenic factor, even in the absence of obesity. It identifies a post-binding defect in insulin receptor signaling, particularly an increase in serine phosphorylation of the insulin receptor and insulin receptor substrate-1, that impairs insulin’s metabolic actions while leaving mitogenic pathways largely unaffected. This selective insulin resistance may allow hyperinsulinemia to persistently drive androgen overproduction in ovarian theca cells, exacerbating symptoms like anovulation and hirsutism. In skeletal muscle and adipocytes, insulin-mediated glucose uptake is significantly impaired, comparable to levels seen in type 2 diabetes. This dysfunction is not solely due to fat distribution or visceral adiposity but appears intrinsic to PCOS pathophysiology.
From a microbiome perspective, while this review does not directly address gut microbial composition, it offers mechanistic insight into the downstream metabolic disruptions that have been consistently linked in other studies to altered microbiota. These disruptions could correspond with major microbial associations (MMA) observed in PCOS, such as decreased diversity and elevated LPS-producing gram-negative bacteria that amplify systemic inflammation and insulin resistance. Thus, the mechanistic pathways elucidated in this review form a critical biological foundation that helps explain how gut microbiota may further exacerbate PCOS symptoms.
What Are the Implications of This Review?
This paper decisively frames PCOS as a multifactorial metabolic disorder with deep-seated insulin resistance at its core. For clinicians, this calls for an expanded diagnostic and therapeutic lens, one that considers insulin sensitivity as a key biomarker in both lean and obese PCOS patients. The authors strongly advocate for early screening of glucose intolerance and type 2 diabetes in all PCOS phenotypes using a 2-hour OGTT, emphasizing that hemoglobin A1c alone may miss postprandial dysglycemia. Furthermore, the review’s findings justify the use of insulin-sensitizing agents such as metformin and thiazolidinediones not only for metabolic control but also for improving ovulatory function and reducing androgen excess. This review also encourages deeper exploration into how metabolic dysfunction and reproductive impairment intersect in PCOS, providing a roadmap for future studies on gut microbiota and systemic insulin signaling.
Intestinal microbiota influences clinical outcome and side effects of early breast cancer treatment
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Breast Cancer
Breast Cancer
Traditionally linked to genetic predispositions and environmental exposures, emerging evidence highlights the microbiome as a critical and underappreciated factor influencing breast cancer progression, immune response, and treatment outcomes.
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Gut microbiota influences early breast cancer prognosis and treatment side effects, with specific commensals correlating to outcomes. Chemotherapy alters microbiota, favoring beneficial species and improving immune modulation and neuroprotection.
What was studied?
This study examined the impact of intestinal microbiota on the clinical outcomes and side effects of early breast cancer (BC) treatments. Shotgun metagenomics was used to analyze fecal microbiota samples from 76 early BC patients, both pre- and post-chemotherapy. The study aimed to identify specific microbial species associated with BC prognosis and the side effects of chemotherapy, focusing on neurological, gastrointestinal, and metabolic complications. It also explored the functional relevance of gut microbiota in immunocompetent mouse models colonized with BC patient microbiota to establish a causal link between gut microbial composition and tumor growth or therapy efficacy.
Who was studied?
The study involved 76 female BC patients from the CANTO trial (NCT01993498), a long-term prospective cohort designed to quantify and prevent treatment-related toxicities. Patients provided fecal samples before and after chemotherapy, and their plasma was also analyzed for metabolomics. A separate analysis included healthy volunteers (54 Italian and 282 samples from public metagenomes) to contrast microbial signatures. Mouse models were humanized with fecal microbiota from patients and healthy individuals to assess the causal relationship between microbiota and BC outcomes.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed that the gut microbiota composition significantly correlates with BC prognosis and treatment side effects. Patients with more aggressive tumors (larger size, advanced stage, lymph node involvement) had overrepresentation of species like Clostridiaceae, Veillonella, Bacteroides uniformis, and Blautia wexlerae. In contrast, patients with better prognosis had higher levels of Akkermansia muciniphila, Collinsella aerofaciens, and Eubacterium rectale. Chemotherapy shifted microbial diversity, reducing bacteria associated with poor prognosis and increasing favorable commensals like Methanobrevibacter smithii and Blautia obeum. Functionally, favorable microbiota patterns were linked to neuroprotective and immunomodulatory pathways, such as polyamine biosynthesis and ketogenesis, while unfavorable profiles were associated with inflammation and metabolic dysregulation. Humanized mouse models demonstrated that fecal microbiota from healthy volunteers enhanced tumor response to chemotherapy compared to microbiota from BC patients.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study underscores the gut microbiota's role as a biomarker and potential therapeutic target in BC management. The findings suggest that monitoring and modulating gut microbiota could optimize chemotherapy efficacy, mitigate side effects, and improve overall prognosis. Strategies like fecal microbiota transplantation, probiotics, or diet interventions targeting specific microbiota shifts may hold promise. The causal evidence provided by mouse models highlights the translational potential of microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs) to improve clinical outcomes for breast cancer patients.
Investigation of In Vitro Efficacy of Boric Acid on Pseudomonas aeruginosa Strains Isolated from Diabetic Foot Infections
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This study evaluated boric acid’s in vitro effect on Pseudomonas aeruginosa from diabetic foot infections, confirming its inhibitory potential at 25 mg/l. The findings support boric acid as a cost-effective alternative in wound care, offering clinicians a valuable tool against antibiotic-resistant infections.
What was studied?
This study investigated the in vitro efficacy of boric acid as an antiseptic agent against Pseudomonas aeruginosa strains isolated from diabetic foot infections. The research aimed to determine whether boric acid could serve as a viable alternative for local wound treatment, particularly given the rising issue of antibiotic resistance in diabetic foot infections. Researchers prepared various concentrations of boric acid and tested them on 25 P. aeruginosa strains, evaluating bacterial growth suppression across different boric acid levels.
Who was studied?
The study focused on 25 clinical isolates of P. aeruginosa obtained from patients with diabetic foot infections between January 2010 and June 2015. Each isolate came from a distinct patient, ensuring no duplication of data. These strains represented a typical clinical cohort where P. aeruginosa plays a significant role in complicating wound healing due to its robust antibiotic resistance and biofilm-forming abilities.
What were the most important findings?
The study demonstrated that boric acid has a notable inhibitory effect on P. aeruginosa in vitro. Specifically, no bacterial growth was observed at boric acid concentrations of 25 mg/l or higher, establishing this as the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) required to suppress P. aeruginosa. At lower concentrations, varying degrees of bacterial growth persisted, with complete growth seen at 1.6 mg/l and partial suppression at intermediary levels. Importantly, the P. aeruginosa strains exhibited high resistance to common antibiotics such as cefepime, ceftazidime, ciprofloxacin, amikacin, and netilmicin, underscoring the challenge of treating these infections. This research adds to the growing recognition that specific microbial pathogens like P. aeruginosa, often part of the wound microbiome in diabetic foot infections, can be targeted with non-antibiotic antiseptic strategies. The study reinforces boric acid’s broad antimicrobial properties, which extend to inhibiting bacterial growth and potentially biofilm formation, an essential consideration in chronic wound care.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study’s findings suggest that boric acid could offer a cost-effective and practical alternative for local wound care, particularly in settings where antibiotic resistance is prevalent and access to advanced antimicrobial agents is limited. With its confirmed MIC of 25 mg/l against P. aeruginosa, boric acid emerges as a promising agent for reducing bacterial load in diabetic foot infections, potentially improving healing outcomes and reducing reliance on systemic antibiotics. The implications are particularly significant for resource-constrained environments and for addressing the growing crisis of antibiotic resistance. Additionally, because boric acid is well tolerated on intact skin and has a long history of use, its reintroduction into wound care protocols could complement current treatment regimens, helping bridge the gap between conventional antibiotics and effective wound management strategies.
Iron Overload and Endometriosis: Mechanisms, Implications, and Therapeutic Targets
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Endometriomas
Endometriomas
An endometrioma is a type of ovarian cyst filled with old blood, arising from endometrial tissue outside the uterus, typically causing pain and potentially impacting fertility.
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Infertility
Infertility
Infertility is the inability to conceive after 12 months of regular, unprotected sex. It affects both men and women and can be due to various physical, hormonal, or genetic factors. Treatments include medication, surgery, assisted reproductive technologies, and lifestyle changes.
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Iron overload in endometriosis contributes to oxidative stress, inflammation, and tissue damage, driving lesion persistence and subfertility. Ferroptosis resistance and dysregulated iron metabolism highlight therapeutic opportunities using iron chelators and modulators.
What Was Reviewed?
This systematic review evaluated the role of iron in the pathophysiology of endometriosis. The review synthesized findings from 53 studies, including both human and animal research, to provide a comprehensive understanding of how excess iron contributes to oxidative stress, inflammation, and tissue damage in endometriosis. It also explored iron-related mechanisms such as ferroptosis and the implications for subfertility, symptom severity, and potential malignant transformation.
Who Was Reviewed?
The review included a total of 53 studies: 47 human studies involving 3,556 participants and 6 animal studies. The human studies primarily examined women diagnosed with endometriosis, and the included research utilized various bio-samples such as ovarian endometriomas, peritoneal fluid, and ectopic endometrial lesions. Animal studies focused on endometriosis models to explore systemic and local iron mechanics.
Key Findings
Iron overload is consistently found in endometriotic tissues and peritoneal fluid but not in systemic circulation. This localized iron accumulation stems from repeated bleeding within lesions, leading to oxidative stress and inflammation that perpetuates the ectopic growth of endometrial tissue. Dysregulated iron transport and the failure of homeostatic mechanisms contribute to this pathology, with increased expression of proteins such as divalent metal transporter-1 (DMT1) and decreased ferroportin expression in affected tissues.
Markers of oxidative stress, including lipid peroxidation and DNA damage, were significantly elevated in endometriotic lesions. Aberrant resistance to ferroptosis, an iron-dependent form of cell death, was identified as a key mechanism supporting lesion persistence. Additionally, iron-induced ferroptosis was linked to the production of pro-inflammatory and angiogenic factors like IL-8 and VEGFA, exacerbating inflammation and lesion vascularization.
Iron overload was implicated in subfertility, as higher iron concentrations in ovarian follicles and endometriomas were associated with impaired oocyte quality and development. These findings suggest that iron mechanics might influence folliculogenesis and embryo viability. Importantly, the review highlighted the therapeutic potential of iron chelators and ferroptosis modulators for managing endometriosis.
Implications of the Review
This review underscores the central role of aberrant iron metabolism in the pathogenesis of endometriosis, providing a mechanistic basis for its persistence, progression, and associated complications such as subfertility and chronic pain. Iron-related oxidative stress emerges as a critical driver of inflammation and tissue damage, making it a promising target for therapeutic intervention. Future research should explore the efficacy of iron-targeted treatments, such as chelators, and further elucidate the role of ferroptosis in endometriosis. These insights could lead to novel strategies for mitigating symptom severity and improving fertility outcomes in affected women.
Joint effects of traffic-related air pollution and hypertensive disorders of pregnancy on maternal postpartum depressive and anxiety symptoms
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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This study demonstrates significant associations between prenatal traffic-related air pollution exposure and postpartum depressive and anxiety symptoms, highlighting increased vulnerability among women with hypertensive pregnancy disorders. Findings support integrating environmental health assessments into postpartum mental health strategies.
What was studied?
This study examined the combined effects of prenatal exposure to traffic-related air pollution, specifically nitrogen oxides (NOx), and hypertensive disorders of pregnancy (HDPs), such as gestational hypertension, preeclampsia, and eclampsia, on postpartum depression (PPD) and anxiety symptoms among women. Researchers focused on how these environmental and biological factors jointly influence maternal mental health in the year following childbirth.
Who was studied?
The research involved 453 predominantly low-income Hispanic/Latina women from the Maternal and Developmental Risks from Environmental and Social Stressors (MADRES) cohort in Los Angeles, California. Traffic-related air pollution exposures were measured near the women's residences, and depressive and anxiety symptoms were assessed at multiple points (1, 3, 6, and 12 months) postpartum.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed significant associations between prenatal exposure to traffic-related NOx and increased postpartum depressive and anxiety symptoms. Specifically, higher prenatal exposure to NOx from major roads correlated with notably higher depressive and anxiety symptoms at 3 and 12 months postpartum. A repeated measures analysis confirmed these findings across the entire first year postpartum, indicating that consistent exposure to traffic emissions during pregnancy might substantially impact maternal mental health.
Importantly, women with hypertensive disorders of pregnancy (HDP) demonstrated greater vulnerability to the negative mental health impacts of air pollution. Among mothers with HDP, increased exposure to NOx from freeways/highways and overall traffic sources significantly correlated with elevated postpartum depressive and anxiety symptoms at 12 months postpartum compared to mothers without HDP. These findings suggest biological mechanisms such as inflammation and oxidative stress may mediate the joint effects of air pollution and HDPs, exacerbating mental health risks postpartum.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study highlights the importance of addressing environmental pollution exposure during pregnancy as a modifiable risk factor for postpartum mental health disorders. Clinicians should consider prenatal air quality exposure, particularly in mothers with hypertensive pregnancy conditions, as part of postpartum mental health risk assessments. Urban planners and policymakers could utilize these findings to implement targeted interventions, such as stricter emission controls and increased green spaces, to protect vulnerable populations. Additionally, the evidence supporting increased risk for women with HDPs emphasizes the need for integrated care approaches that consider environmental and physiological factors jointly in postpartum mental health screenings and interventions.
Ketogenic diet improves fertility in patients with polycystic ovary syndrome: A brief report
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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A ketogenic diet restored menstrual cycles and improved pregnancy rates in obese women with PCOS, even without metformin or ovulation induction. Findings suggest KD enhances fertility through metabolic and microbiome-linked pathways beyond weight loss.
What was studied?
This retrospective study examined the effects of a ketogenic diet (KD) on menstrual regularity and pregnancy rates in women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS). Conducted at the Cleveland Clinic, the study evaluated 30 women diagnosed with PCOS who followed a KD for at least three months as part of a multidisciplinary weight management program. The objective was to determine whether KD could restore ovulatory function and improve fertility, particularly in the context of insulin resistance, obesity, and hyperandrogenism that characterize PCOS.
Who was studied?
The study population included 30 women with PCOS and obesity, aged around 31 years. All participants were enrolled in a structured program that combined nutritional counseling, exercise guidance, and endocrine evaluation. Among them, 18 desired pregnancy, and some were concurrently using metformin or ovulation induction agents. Importantly, participants had no other major endocrine or metabolic conditions, ensuring the focus remained on PCOS-related infertility. The KD protocol restricted daily carbohydrate intake to ≤20g, moderate protein based on weight, and up to 40g of fat, with calorie intake ranging from 1000–1200 kcal/day.
What were the most important findings?
The ketogenic diet led to complete restoration of regular menstrual cycles in all participants with irregular periods, with 92% achieving this within six months. Among those desiring pregnancy, 55.6% (10) became pregnant, five without any ovulation induction or metformin. Women in the non-metformin group had a 100% pregnancy rate, compared to 38.5% in the metformin group. Importantly, there was no statistically significant difference in weight loss between those who conceived and those who did not, suggesting that mechanisms beyond weight reduction, such as improved insulin sensitivity, may be central to the fertility benefits observed. While the study did not directly measure microbiome changes, the KD is known to influence microbial composition, particularly by reducing pro-inflammatory species and enhancing Akkermansia muciniphila and SCFA-producing microbes such as Bacteroides and Faecalibacterium prausnitzii. These microbial shifts are closely associated with improved insulin signaling, reduced systemic inflammation, and improved endocrine profiles—all relevant in PCOS.
What are the implications of this study?
This study provides compelling evidence that the ketogenic diet can be a highly effective non-pharmacologic intervention for improving fertility in women with PCOS. By normalizing menstrual cycles and significantly improving pregnancy rates, especially among those not on pharmacologic ovulation aids, the KD presents a viable alternative or adjunct to current fertility treatments. The results suggest that mechanisms like enhanced insulin sensitivity and reduced inflammatory signaling play a greater role than weight loss alone. For clinicians, the KD offers a microbiome-relevant strategy that addresses the root metabolic and endocrine disturbances of PCOS. Given its high efficacy in restoring ovulation and supporting conception, especially in obese patients with insulin resistance, KD merits consideration in personalized fertility management plans. Larger prospective studies are now needed to further investigate long-term outcomes, microbiome shifts, and to standardize KD protocols for PCOS patients.
Lactobacillus crispatus inhibits growth of Gardnerella vaginalis and Neisseria gonorrhoeae on a porcine vaginal mucosa model.
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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The study shows that Lactobacillus crispatus inhibits the growth of Gardnerella vaginalis and Neisseria gonorrhoeae by lowering pH and producing lactic acid, offering insights into microbiome-targeted interventions for bacterial vaginosis and sexually transmitted infections.
What was Studied?
The study investigated the effects of Lactobacillus crispatus on the growth of Gardnerella vaginalis and Neisseria gonorrhoeae using a porcine vaginal mucosa (PVM) model. It aimed to explore how Lactobacillus crispatus influences the growth of these pathogens and whether it could help prevent or inhibit infection through mechanisms such as the production of lactic acid and pH reduction.
Who was Studied?
The study focused on human clinical isolates of Lactobacillus crispatus, Gardnerella vaginalis, and Neisseria gonorrhoeae. The researchers inoculated these isolates into the ex vivo PVM to observe their colonization, biofilm formation, and interactions.
What were the Most Important Findings?
The study revealed that Lactobacillus crispatus significantly inhibited the growth of both Gardnerella vaginalis and Neisseria gonorrhoeae on the porcine vaginal mucosa model. This inhibition occurred primarily due to the lactic acid production by L. crispatus, which lowered the vaginal pH to levels hostile to these pathogens. The results showed that both G. vaginalis and N. gonorrhoeae grew and formed biofilms at clinically relevant densities on PVM. In particular, the biofilm formation by G. vaginalis and N. gonorrhoeae was evident, and the presence of L. crispatus hindered this process. The production of lactic acid by L. crispatus was crucial for reducing the pH below 5.5, which subsequently inhibited pathogen growth. Conditioned media (CM) from L. crispatus cultures inhibited the growth of N. gonorrhoeae, even when the pH was adjusted to levels conducive for its growth.
What are the Implications of this Study?
The study demonstrates that Lactobacillus crispatus, a key member of the vaginal microbiota, plays a significant protective role against the colonization of harmful pathogens like Gardnerella vaginalis and Neisseria gonorrhoeae. It exerts direct antimicrobial effects and modulates vaginal pH through lactic acid production. By lowering pH, L. crispatus shows potential as both a therapeutic agent and a preventive measure against bacterial vaginosis and sexually transmitted infections, including gonorrhea. This finding supports the importance of maintaining a healthy vaginal microbiota dominated by Lactobacillus species to reduce susceptibility to infections. The PVM model serves as a valuable tool for studying the complex interactions between vaginal microbiota and pathogens, offering insights into the development of targeted microbiome-based interventions.
Levels of Trace Elements in Erythrocytes as Endocrine Disruptors in Obese and Nonobese Women with Polycystic Ovary Syndrome
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This study identified elevated erythrocyte nickel in obese women with PCOS and revealed trace element–hormone correlations linked to reproductive dysfunction. These findings point to micronutrient-driven endocrine disruption and potential gut microbiota imbalances in PCOS.
What was studied?
This study examined how trace elements in erythrocytes function as endocrine disruptors in obese and nonobese women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS). Researchers focused on six trace elements, zinc (Zn), nickel (Ni), iron (Fe), manganese (Mn), copper (Cu), and magnesium (Mg), and their relationship with the hormonal profiles of PCOS patients. Given the limitations of serum testing, the study utilized erythrocyte samples to capture long-term mineral status, providing a more stable biomarker for trace element accumulation and hormonal interaction. The aim was to evaluate whether these trace elements correlate with reproductive hormone levels and contribute to PCOS pathogenesis based on obesity status.
Who was studied?
The study included 47 women with PCOS, divided into two subgroups based on body mass index (BMI): 24 obese women (BMI ≥ 30) and 23 nonobese women (BMI < 30). A control group of 16 healthy women with no signs of PCOS and a BMI within the normal range (mean: 23.6) was also evaluated. All participants were of reproductive age and had not used supplements or experienced significant dietary changes before the study. Blood samples were analyzed using inductively coupled plasma atomic emission spectrometry to quantify trace element levels in red blood cells. Hormonal parameters, lipid profiles, and glucose-insulin homeostasis were also assessed through standard biochemical assays.
What were the most important findings?
The key finding was a significantly elevated level of nickel (Ni) in the erythrocytes of obese women with PCOS compared to both nonobese PCOS women and healthy controls. No significant differences were observed in the levels of other trace elements (Zn, Fe, Mn, Cu, Mg) across the groups. However, several important correlations emerged within each PCOS subgroup. In nonobese women, zinc positively correlated with testosterone, while nickel correlated with estradiol and luteinizing hormone (LH). In obese women, zinc positively correlated with prolactin, magnesium with testosterone, and manganese negatively with thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH). These trace element–hormone interactions suggest a potential modulatory role of trace elements in ovarian function, particularly via endocrine pathways disrupted in PCOS.
From a microbiome lens, elevated nickel levels are known to disturb microbial homeostasis by promoting pro-inflammatory taxa like Proteobacteria and reducing SCFA-producing species like Faecalibacterium prausnitzii. This dysbiosis contributes to chronic inflammation and hormonal imbalance, which are central to PCOS pathophysiology. Similarly, altered manganese and magnesium levels can disrupt antioxidant defenses, further affecting the gut barrier and endocrine signaling. The consistent zinc-prolactin and nickel-estradiol associations underscore trace elements as potential mediators of both hormonal dysregulation and microbiota shifts.
What are the implications of this study?
This study reveals that trace element imbalances may act as endocrine disruptors and contribute to the progression of PCOS. These mineral–hormone correlations offer a mechanistic explanation for how metabolic obesity intensifies reproductive dysfunction in PCOS through trace element–mediated oxidative stress and inflammation. The erythrocyte-based approach strengthens the clinical relevance, as it reflects chronic exposure rather than transient serum fluctuations. Clinically, monitoring erythrocyte nickel, zinc, magnesium, and manganese could help stratify PCOS patients based on metabolic risk and guide personalized nutritional or detoxification therapies. The implications for the microbiome are profound, suggesting that micronutrient-driven dysbiosis could be an underrecognized trigger of endocrine dysfunction in PCOS.
Long-term use of gonadotropin-releasing hormone analogs and hormone replacement therapy in the management of endometriosis: a randomized trial with a 6-year follow-up
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This study investigated the long-term effects of gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonists (GnRHa), with and without hormone replacement therapy (HRT), on bone mineral density (BMD) in women with endometriosis, following up to six years after treatment.
Who was studied?
The study included forty-nine symptomatic women diagnosed with endometriosis via laparoscopy, who volunteered to participate in the randomized trial. These women were undergoing treatment with long-acting GnRH agonists and were subsequently monitored for up to six years.
What were the most important findings?
The study’s key findings indicate that long-term use of GnRH agonists results in a reduction in bone mineral density (BMD) at the lumbar spine and hip, a reduction that was not fully recovered even up to six years post-treatment. Additionally, the inclusion of hormone replacement therapy (HRT) did not significantly influence bone mineral density when compared to those who did not receive HRT. The results also demonstrated a considerable range of individual variability in BMD response among the participants, suggesting that the effects of GnRH agonists on BMD can vary significantly among different women.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The implications of these findings are substantial for the management of endometriosis. The study underscores the potential risks associated with long-term GnRH agonist therapy, particularly concerning bone health, which may significantly influence treatment decisions and patient counseling. It also highlights the critical need for monitoring bone mineral density (BMD) in women undergoing prolonged GnRH agonist therapy, suggesting that this monitoring should possibly extend beyond the cessation of treatment. Furthermore, the observed variability in BMD response among participants indicates a need for individualized treatment plans, which may include exploring alternative therapies or preventive measures against bone density loss. Additionally, these findings could drive further research aimed at optimizing ‘add-back’ therapy to balance the effectiveness of GnRH agonists in managing endometriosis symptoms with the mitigation of side effects such as bone loss.
Low intakes of dietary fiber and magnesium are associated with insulin resistance and hyperandrogenism in polycystic ovary syndrome
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This study reveals that low fiber and magnesium intake—not overeating or inactivity—contribute significantly to insulin resistance and hyperandrogenism in PCOS, with strong implications for microbiome-linked interventions.
What was studied?
This study evaluated dietary and lifestyle contributors to insulin resistance (IR) and hyperandrogenism in women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), specifically focusing on fiber and magnesium intake. Conducted as an observational cohort study at a reproductive medicine center in Canada, researchers enrolled 87 women with PCOS and 50 subfertile women without PCOS. The study aimed to determine if differences in caloric intake or physical activity could explain obesity and metabolic abnormalities in PCOS, and whether specific dietary patterns or micronutrients were associated with PCOS phenotypes and IR.
Who was studied?
The participants included 87 women diagnosed with PCOS based on Rotterdam criteria and 50 control women without PCOS, all aged between 20 and 44. Among the PCOS group, some were classified as having hyperandrogenic PCOS (HA-PCOS) and rest as non-hyperandrogenic. The study population was ethnically diverse, comprising East Asian, European, South Asian, Aboriginal, and South American backgrounds. Participants completed 3-day dietary and activity logs, wore pedometers, and underwent hormonal and metabolic testing, including HOMA-IR calculations for insulin resistance.
What were the most important findings?
The most striking discovery was that women with PCOS, despite having higher BMI and waist-hip ratios, did not consume more calories nor engage in less physical activity than the control group. Instead, they consumed significantly less dietary fiber and magnesium. Within the PCOS group, those with IR had lower fiber and magnesium intakes and a higher glycemic load. Fiber intake was negatively correlated with several metabolic and hormonal markers, including HOMA-IR, fasting insulin, 2-hour glucose, triglycerides, testosterone, and DHEAS levels, while positively correlated with HDL cholesterol. Similarly, magnesium intake was inversely related to IR, C-reactive protein, and testosterone levels, and positively associated with HDL cholesterol.
Fiber and BMI together accounted for 54% of the variance in HOMA-IR, marking fiber intake as a major microbial-modifiable dietary factor. These associations are particularly relevant in the microbiome context since dietary fiber significantly impacts gut microbial composition, increasing short-chain fatty acid (SCFA)-producing bacteria like Faecalibacterium prausnitzii and Roseburia spp., which in turn can enhance insulin sensitivity and modulate systemic inflammation.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study challenges the assumption that obesity in PCOS is primarily due to overnutrition or inactivity and instead points clinicians toward specific nutritional targets, fiber and magnesium, as modifiable factors linked to metabolic dysfunction and androgen excess. The clinical implications are significant: increasing fiber and magnesium intake could become a frontline, non-pharmacological strategy in managing IR and hyperandrogenism in PCOS. Moreover, as fiber-rich diets influence microbiome diversity and function, these findings offer a mechanistic basis for future interventions targeting the gut microbiome in PCOS management. Integrating dietary fiber and magnesium monitoring into clinical assessments could better personalize nutrition-based care strategies for women with PCOS.
Lower Fiber Consumption in Women with Polycystic Ovary Syndrome
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This meta-analysis confirms that women with PCOS consume significantly less dietary fiber than controls, independent of calorie intake. Reduced fiber may worsen PCOS via gut dysbiosis and diminished SCFA production.
What was reviewed?
This meta-analysis synthesized data from 13 observational studies to evaluate whether women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) consume significantly less dietary fiber than women without PCOS. The analysis sought to determine if reduced fiber intake is an overlooked factor contributing to the metabolic and endocrine dysfunction commonly seen in PCOS. Additionally, the review assessed whether total caloric intake differed between groups and explored how geographic location, dietary assessment methods, and body mass index (BMI) might influence findings. The research incorporated studies conducted across Asia, Europe, North America, and South America, using diverse methodologies such as food diaries, recalls, and food frequency questionnaires (FFQs).
Who was reviewed?
The included studies encompassed a total of 2,469 women, 1,130 with PCOS and 1,339 controls. Participants spanned diverse age groups (adolescent and adult women) and body weight categories (lean and overweight/obese). Most studies used the Rotterdam criteria for PCOS diagnosis. Dietary fiber intake data were extracted using self-reported dietary tools over periods ranging from 1 to 7 days. Nine of the thirteen studies were deemed high quality using the Newcastle–Ottawa Scale. The meta-analysis particularly emphasized studies not adjusted for total energy intake, although two studies did include such adjustments.
What were the most important findings?
The pooled analysis revealed that women with PCOS had significantly lower absolute dietary fiber intake compared to controls, despite no significant difference in total caloric intake. This suggests that the reduction in fiber is independent of overall energy consumption and reflects a dietary quality issue rather than quantity. Subgroup analysis confirmed that this difference persisted across various continents, dietary methods (especially food recall and diary), and study designs (notably case–control). Importantly, the difference was also maintained in adult populations and studies using the Rotterdam criteria for diagnosis.
Though the meta-analysis did not directly assess microbiome composition, the findings carry strong implications. Fiber is a critical prebiotic nutrient known to foster the growth of beneficial microbial taxa such as Faecalibacterium prausnitzii, Bifidobacterium spp., and Lactobacillus spp. These microbes produce short-chain fatty acids—notably butyrate—that regulate systemic inflammation, insulin sensitivity, gut barrier integrity, and even reproductive hormone modulation. A diet deficient in fiber diminishes SCFA production, reduces microbial diversity, and allows expansion of pro-inflammatory taxa like Collinsella and Proteobacteria. These alterations are well aligned with the dysbiosis commonly documented in PCOS, suggesting that low fiber intake may be both a symptom and driver of gut microbiota imbalance in this population.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This meta-analysis establishes that reduced dietary fiber intake is a consistent dietary pattern in women with PCOS, regardless of caloric intake or body weight. The findings reinforce the need for clinicians to go beyond calorie counting and assess the qualitative aspects of dietary intake, particularly fiber. Given fiber's central role in modulating the gut microbiome and producing SCFAs, inadequate intake could perpetuate insulin resistance, chronic inflammation, and hyperandrogenism in PCOS. These data provide a rationale for integrating dietary fiber intake goals into clinical guidelines for PCOS management. Moreover, the gut–diet–hormone axis illuminated by this review highlights an urgent need for interventional studies targeting fiber intake, either through food-based strategies or supplementation, as a means to correct dysbiosis and metabolic dysfunction in PCOS. Clinicians should consider fiber assessment and counseling as standard practice in the nutritional management of women with PCOS.
Management of recurrent vulvovaginal candidosis: Narrative review of the literature and European expert panel opinion
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Vulvovaginal Candidiasis (VVC)
Vulvovaginal Candidiasis (VVC)
Vulvovaginal candidiasis (VVC) is a common fungal infection caused by Candida albicans. Disruptions in the vaginal microbiome and immune responses contribute to its development. Effective treatment involves both antifungal therapy and strategies to restore microbiome balance, preventing recurrent infections and addressing emerging antifungal resistance.
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This review assesses management strategies for recurrent vulvovaginal candidiasis, highlighting the limitations of current antifungal treatments, rising resistance concerns, and potential novel therapies. Emphasis is placed on accurate diagnostics, microbiome considerations, and individualized treatment approaches to improve patient outcomes.
What was reviewed?
This review evaluated the current management strategies for recurrent vulvovaginal candidiasis (RVVC), summarizing clinical guidelines, real-world clinical practices, therapeutic challenges, and expert opinions from a panel of European specialists. It specifically reviewed the effectiveness and limitations of existing antifungal therapies, diagnostic approaches, pathogen characteristics, and future therapeutic options.
Who was reviewed?
The review analyzed the collective expertise of a panel of 10 European gynecology specialists from countries including Belgium, Finland, France, Germany, Hungary, Italy, Poland, Romania, Spain, and the UK. These experts discussed RVVC management through structured online sessions, covering diagnosis, treatment regimens, patient experiences, and novel therapies. Their insights were compared against published scientific evidence and current clinical guidelines.
What were the most important findings?
The review identifies recurrent vulvovaginal candidiasis (RVVC) as primarily caused by Candida albicans, although infections by non-albicans species, particularly Candida glabrata, are increasingly common. Resistance to standard antifungal treatments like fluconazole, though still uncommon, is gradually rising due to repeated and prolonged exposure to antifungal medications. Fluconazole remains the recommended first-line treatment for acute episodes and maintenance therapy, yet a significant proportion of women experience recurrence after discontinuing maintenance treatment, highlighting the necessity for improved long-term therapeutic options.
The complexity of RVVC is underscored by its intricate microbiological environment, where interactions between Candida species, the host immune system, and vaginal microbiota play critical roles. Neutrophil dysfunction, genetic susceptibility, and diminished populations of protective Lactobacillus species in the vaginal microbiome significantly contribute to disease recurrence and severity. Diagnostic approaches relying on microscopy and culture are crucial but inconsistently implemented, often compromised by prior patient self-treatment. The review emphasizes promising future therapies, such as the selective antifungal oteseconazole and the novel glucan synthase inhibitor ibrexafungerp, alongside emerging immunotherapeutic vaccines targeting critical fungal proteins, which offer significant potential to improve patient outcomes.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The review underscores the urgent need for optimized diagnostic and treatment strategies for RVVC. It suggests that clinicians should carefully consider personalized regimens due to the significant recurrence rates and variability in patient response. New therapeutic agents, especially those targeting resistant strains and immune pathways, hold significant promise and should be a focus of future research. Moreover, enhancing clinician and patient awareness about RVVC's substantial impact on quality of life is vital for better patient care and adherence.
Mediterranean Diet Combined With a Low-Carbohydrate Dietary Pattern in the Treatment of Overweight Polycystic Ovary Syndrome Patients
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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A Mediterranean/low-carb diet significantly improved insulin resistance, androgen levels, and weight in overweight PCOS patients. The findings suggest microbiome-mediated metabolic benefits and support clinical adoption of this dietary model over traditional low-fat diets.
What was studied?
This randomized controlled clinical trial evaluated the effects of a combined Mediterranean and low-carbohydrate (MD/LC) dietary pattern compared to a standard low-fat diet in overweight women diagnosed with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS). Conducted over 12 weeks, the study aimed to determine whether this novel dietary model could more effectively improve anthropometric, metabolic, and reproductive endocrine parameters. While the low-fat diet restricted fat intake to under 30% of daily calories, the MD/LC model restricted carbohydrate intake to under 100 g/day, increased fat and protein intake, and emphasized traditional Mediterranean components like whole grains, olive oil, vegetables, legumes, and seafood.
Who was studied?
Seventy-two overweight women (BMI ≥ 24 kg/m²), aged 16–45 years, with a PCOS diagnosis based on the Rotterdam criteria were recruited from Changhai Hospital in China. After exclusions and dropouts, 30 participants completed the Mediterranean and low-carbohydrate diet and 29 completed the LF diet. All participants were of Chinese descent, had no other endocrine, cardiovascular, or metabolic conditions, and were not taking medications affecting insulin or lipid metabolism. Dietary intake was closely monitored, and participants were supported with professional dietetic guidance via digital communication tools.
What were the most important findings?
The MD/LC diet group demonstrated significantly greater reductions in body weight, BMI, waist circumference, body fat percentage, and waist-to-hip ratio than the LF group. Notably, the MD/LC group also experienced more profound improvements in metabolic markers: fasting insulin, HOMA-IR, and triglyceride levels dropped more substantially, while insulin sensitivity measured by QUICKI improved to a greater extent. Reproductive hormone profiles also responded better to the MD/LC diet. Total testosterone, luteinizing hormone (LH), and LH/FSH ratio all decreased more prominently in the MD/LC group, suggesting improved ovulatory function and androgen regulation.
Though the study did not measure microbiome outcomes directly, the dietary model has strong implications for gut microbial modulation. The Mediterranean diet is known to promote increased abundance of beneficial microbes such as Faecalibacterium prausnitzii, Bifidobacterium spp., and Lactobacillus spp., while low-carbohydrate diets reduce the fermentable carbohydrate load, possibly altering SCFA-producing bacteria ratios. The observed improvements in insulin sensitivity, inflammation markers, and lipid metabolism align with known microbiome-mediated metabolic pathways, suggesting that the MD/LC diet could drive favorable microbial shifts that improve PCOS outcomes.
What are the implications of this study?
This study highlights the superior efficacy of a calorie-restricted Mediterranean/low-carbohydrate diet in improving the key clinical features of PCOS compared to a traditional low-fat diet. Clinically, this offers a refined, evidence-based dietary model that targets obesity, insulin resistance, and hyperandrogenism—three interlinked hallmarks of PCOS. Importantly, the diet’s structure promotes microbial diversity and metabolite production, suggesting a dual mechanism of action: direct endocrine and metabolic effects, and indirect microbiome-mediated modulation. For clinicians managing PCOS, especially in overweight patients, the MD/LC model provides a practical and sustainable intervention that integrates metabolic restoration with potential microbiome optimization. Future trials with microbiome sequencing are warranted to validate these microbial associations and inform personalized nutrition strategies in PCOS treatment.
Meta-analysis of gut microbiome studies identifies disease-specific and shared responses
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This meta-analysis standardized and re-analyzed data from 28 gut microbiome studies across ten diseases, identifying consistent microbiome signatures associated with specific diseases and a non-specific response common to multiple conditions. Key findings suggest both potential microbial diagnostics and treatments, emphasizing the importance of understanding shared versus disease-specific microbial responses in future research and clinical applications.
What was studied?
The meta-analysis focused on the human gut microbiome’s association with various diseases by analyzing 28 published case-control gut microbiome studies covering ten diseases. The researchers aimed to standardize the processing and analysis of these datasets to identify consistent patterns and shifts in the gut microbiome associated with specific diseases or a generalized health-disease spectrum.
Who was studied?
The participants of the original case-control studies comprised individuals with different diseases, including colorectal cancer, inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), and others, alongside control groups of healthy individuals. The meta-analysis integrated data only from studies with publicly available 16S amplicon sequencing data of stool samples from at least 15 case patients, excluding studies focused solely on children under 5 years old.
What were the most important findings?
Consistent Microbial Patterns: The meta-analysis revealed consistent and specific microbiome changes associated with various diseases. For instance, diseases like colorectal cancer showed an enrichment of pathogenic bacteria, while a depletion of health-associated bacteria marked conditions like IBD.
Non-Specific Microbial Responses: A significant finding was that many microbial associations are not disease-specific but rather indicate a non-specific response shared across multiple disease states. Approximately half of the genera identified were common to more than one disease, suggesting a generalized microbial response to disease states rather than unique disease-specific signatures.
Diagnostic and Therapeutic Implications: The study identified distinct categories of dysbiosis (microbial imbalance) that could guide the development of microbiome-based diagnostics and therapeutics. For example, enriching for depleted beneficial microbes could be a strategy for diseases characterized by such depletions.
What are the greatest implications of this meta-analysis?
Improved Disease Understanding: By providing a clearer picture of the microbiome’s role in various diseases, the study helps refine our understanding of disease mechanisms and potential microbial contributions to disease processes.
Guidance for Future Research: The findings suggest that future microbiome research in disease contexts should consider the non-specificity of many microbial changes. This realization could influence how researchers design studies and interpret results, potentially focusing on truly disease-specific microbial signatures.
Clinical Applications: The identification of consistent microbial patterns and signatures across diseases opens pathways to developing novel diagnostics and therapies, such as probiotics or fecal microbiota transplants, targeted at restoring healthy microbial communities or addressing specific dysbioses.
Data Sharing and Standardization: The study underscores the value of making raw data and metadata from microbiome studies publicly available and highlights the benefits of using standardized methods for data processing and analysis to compare and integrate results across studies.
Overall, this meta-analysis clarifies the microbiome’s role in disease and sets a framework for future research and clinical applications by demonstrating the importance of understanding both disease-specific and non-specific microbial responses.
Metabolomics reveals perturbations in endometrium and serum of minimal and mild endometriosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Metabolomic Signature
Metabolomic Signature
Metabolomic signatures are unique metabolite patterns linked to specific biological conditions, identified through metabolomics. They reveal underlying biochemical activities, aiding in disease diagnosis, biomarker development, and personalized medicine. The microbiome significantly affects these signatures, influencing health and disease outcomes through metabolic interactions.
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This study highlights metabolic alterations in endometrial tissue and serum of minimal and mild endometriosis patients, identifying amino acid biomarkers with diagnostic potential. A combined serum panel demonstrated 100% sensitivity and 83% specificity for Stage II diagnosis, offering a promising step toward non-invasive early detection of endometriosis.
What Was Studied?
This study investigated the metabolic perturbations in eutopic endometrial tissue and serum of women with minimal and mild endometriosis (Stages I and II) using ^1H Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR)-based metabolomics. The researchers aimed to identify specific metabolites that could be potential biomarkers for the early, non-invasive diagnosis of endometriosis. The study included multivariate and univariate analyses to identify metabolite changes and their diagnostic potential.
Who Was Studied?
The study included 95 women diagnosed with endometriosis (staged using the revised American Society for Reproductive Medicine criteria) and 24 healthy fertile controls. The participants were recruited from Eastern India and Bangladesh, with exclusion criteria ensuring no confounding conditions such as ovarian tumors or pelvic inflammatory disease. Blood and eutopic endometrial tissue samples were collected during the mid-secretory phase of the menstrual cycle.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
Women with minimal and mild endometriosis exhibited significant metabolic alterations, particularly in amino acids. Alanine, lysine, leucine, proline, and phenylalanine levels were notably dysregulated in serum, with tissue samples showing lower levels of these metabolites, except for proline, which positively correlated with serum levels. Alanine alone demonstrated diagnostic potential for Stage I endometriosis, with 90% sensitivity and 58% specificity.
For Stage II, phenylalanine achieved 100% sensitivity but had lower specificity, while a combined panel of metabolites improved diagnostic accuracy, reaching 100% sensitivity and 83% specificity.
In advanced stages, elevated taurine and myo-inositol levels were linked to increased cell proliferation and angiogenesis, highlighting similarities with tumorigenic processes. These findings underscore the critical role of metabolic shifts in endometriosis progression, particularly involving amino acids and nucleotide synthesis, and suggest their utility in early detection and non-invasive diagnostics.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
This study underscores the potential of metabolomic signatures in elucidating the pathophysiology of endometriosis and developing non-invasive diagnostic tools, especially for early stages where traditional biomarkers like CA-125 are less effective. By identifying a panel of serum metabolites, the research provides a foundation for improving diagnostic accuracy and reducing the need for invasive laparoscopy. Additionally, the observed metabolic similarities between endometriosis and malignancies could inspire further exploration of shared mechanisms, potentially broadening therapeutic targets.
Metal Nanoparticles to Combat Candida albicans Infections: An Update
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Vulvovaginal Candidiasis (VVC)
Vulvovaginal Candidiasis (VVC)
Vulvovaginal candidiasis (VVC) is a common fungal infection caused by Candida albicans. Disruptions in the vaginal microbiome and immune responses contribute to its development. Effective treatment involves both antifungal therapy and strategies to restore microbiome balance, preventing recurrent infections and addressing emerging antifungal resistance.
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This review examines metal nanoparticles as innovative antifungal agents against Candida albicans. It highlights their multi-target actions, synergistic potential with antifungal drugs, and drug delivery benefits while emphasizing the need for further safety studies and clinical validation to combat resistance and biofilm-related infections.
What was reviewed?
This article is a comprehensive review focusing on the use of metal nanoparticles as novel antifungal agents against Candida albicans infections. It specifically examines the antifungal activity, mechanisms of action, synthesis methods, cytotoxicity concerns, and drug delivery potential of silver, gold, iron, and other metal nanoparticles. The review also discusses the challenges posed by traditional antifungal therapies and the promise of nanoparticle-based strategies to overcome drug resistance and biofilm-related treatment failures.
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesizes findings from multiple in vitro and in vivo studies involving Candida albicans cells in planktonic and biofilm states, experimental animal models of candidiasis, and mammalian cell lines used to evaluate nanoparticle cytotoxicity. It integrates results from research using a variety of metal nanoparticles, primarily silver (AgNPs), gold (AuNPs), and iron oxide nanoparticles (IONPs), and their functionalized or bimetallic forms. The studies encompass fungal strains that are susceptible and resistant to conventional antifungal drugs, as well as biofilms formed on mucosal surfaces and medical devices.
Most important findings
The review highlights that metal nanoparticles exhibit potent antifungal activity against Candida albicans through multi-target mechanisms, including metal ion release, induction of oxidative and nitrosative stress, disruption of the fungal cell wall and membrane, inhibition of enzymatic activities, interference with gene expression related to virulence and resistance, and mitochondrial and DNA damage. Silver nanoparticles, particularly when combined with fluconazole, demonstrated synergistic antifungal effects by reducing biofilm formation, decreasing ergosterol levels, and downregulating efflux pump proteins responsible for drug resistance. Gold nanoparticles, especially those functionalized with polymers like chitosan or polyethylene glycol, showed enhanced drug delivery capabilities with lower toxicity and effective inhibition of fungal growth and biofilm formation. Iron oxide nanoparticles proved effective as drug carriers, improving the potency of drugs like amphotericin B and miconazole, and inducing fungal cell damage through ROS generation.
Beyond these, other metal nanoparticles such as zinc oxide, titanium dioxide, copper oxides, and zirconium dioxide also showed antifungal and antibiofilm properties. Bimetallic nanoparticles, combining metals like silver and iron or silver and nickel, provided synergistic antifungal effects, reduced fungal virulence factors, and overcame drug resistance. Importantly, the synthesis methods, especially green synthesis using natural extracts, contributed to enhanced biocompatibility and reduced cytotoxicity. However, cytotoxicity to mammalian cells remains a significant consideration, with ongoing efforts to optimize nanoparticle properties for safety. The review also calls for further exploration of nanoparticle effects on polymicrobial biofilms involving C. albicans and bacterial species, and the role of fungal siderophore transporters in nanoparticle uptake.
Greatest implications of this review
This review underscores the potential of metal nanoparticles as a promising alternative or adjunct to conventional antifungal therapies, particularly for drug-resistant Candida albicans infections and biofilm-related candidiasis. The multi-target antifungal mechanisms of metal nanoparticles may minimize the emergence of resistance, a critical challenge in current treatment paradigms. Their ability to act as drug delivery vehicles could reduce effective drug doses and associated toxicity. The integration of green synthesis methods enhances their environmental and biological safety profiles, making clinical translation more feasible. Nevertheless, the review highlights the urgent need for further in vivo studies, clinical trials, and regulatory guidance to assess long-term safety, biodistribution, and potential adverse effects. Understanding nanoparticle interactions in polymicrobial biofilms and their uptake pathways can refine future antifungal strategies. Overall, metal nanoparticles represent a cutting-edge approach that could revolutionize antifungal therapeutics and improve outcomes for patients suffering from C. albicans infections.
Metalloestrogens: an emerging class of inorganic xenoestrogens with potential to add to the oestrogenic burden of the human breast
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This review opens new avenues in toxicology and endocrine research, identifying metalloestrogens as a critical factor in hormone disruption and breast cancer risk. Further studies are necessary to confirm these findings and develop effective mitigation strategies for human health protection.
What was reviewed?
This study, published in the Journal of Applied Toxicology, reviewed the concept and emerging evidence of metalloestrogens mimicking estrogenic activity. The review focused on how these metals interact with estrogen receptors (ERs) like organic xenoestrogens, potentially contributing to estrogenic activity in human breast tissue and increasing the risk of hormone-related cancers such as breast cancer. The review primarily covered in vitro and in vivo studies of various metal ions, including aluminum, antimony, arsenite, barium, cadmium, chromium (Cr(II)), cobalt, copper, lead, mercury, nickel, selenite, tin, and vanadate. The review also highlights significant research contributions from multiple studies and scholars focusing on the effects of metalloestrogens on human breast cancer cell lines, such as MCF-7 and T47D, as well as their impact on gene expression and cellular proliferation.
Most Important Findings:
Estrogenic Activity of Metals: The review found that various metal ions can act as estrogen agonists by binding to estrogen receptors, particularly ERα, and mimicking the actions of physiological estrogens. This was demonstrated in studies showing that metals such as cadmium, nickel, and aluminum could displace estradiol from the ligand-binding domain of ERα, leading to altered gene expression and increased cell proliferation in breast cancer cells.
Molecular Mechanisms: Metals such as cadmium were shown to bind directly to the ligand-binding domain (LBD) of the estrogen receptor, interfering with the receptor's normal function. This binding alters the receptor’s ability to interact with estrogen response elements (EREs) on DNA, thereby affecting the transcription of estrogen-regulated genes. For instance, cadmium was found to downregulate ER levels and upregulate estrogen-regulated gene expression, driving cell proliferation.
Cooperative Action with Estrogens: The metals did not antagonize estradiol’s action; instead, they often enhanced the agonist actions of estradiol. In some cases, metals like copper and cobalt increased breast cancer cell proliferation when combined with estradiol, indicating a synergistic effect that may exacerbate estrogenic signaling in hormone-dependent cancers.
In Vivo Evidence: The review highlighted evidence of in vivo estrogenic activity in animal models, particularly for cadmium, which was shown to increase uterine weight, induce mammary gland development, and alter gene expression. The estrogenic effects of cadmium were noted at doses relevant to human exposure, raising significant concerns about environmental exposure to these metals.
Environmental and Occupational Exposure: The presence of metalloestrogens such as cadmium and aluminum in everyday consumer products (e.g., antiperspirants) and the environment (e.g., tobacco smoke, and industrial pollutants) implies widespread human exposure. These metals can accumulate in the body, especially in breast tissue, and may contribute to the burden of aberrant estrogen signaling involved in breast cancer development.
Greatest Implications:
Breast Cancer Risk: The review underscores the potential for metalloestrogens to increase the risk of breast cancer by contributing to estrogenic signaling within breast tissue. Given that breast cancer is often driven by estrogen receptor activation, the cumulative burden of environmental estrogens and metalloestrogens could enhance the likelihood of cancer development and progression.
Environmental Health and Toxicology: The widespread presence of these metals in the environment, their ability to accumulate in the body, and their newly recognized estrogenic activity suggest a need for revised regulatory guidelines and risk assessments for human exposure to metalloestrogens. This includes re-evaluating safe exposure levels, especially for metals like cadmium, which is already classified as a human carcinogen.
Endocrine Disruption: The concept of metalloestrogens extends the traditional understanding of endocrine-disrupting chemicals (EDCs) beyond organic compounds, emphasizing the need for further investigation into how inorganic metals may impact hormone-related diseases. This review calls for more research on the long-term effects of chronic exposure to metalloestrogens in both wildlife and humans.
Public Health Awareness: There is a strong implication for public health education regarding the sources of metalloestrogen exposure, such as antiperspirants, diet, cigarette smoke, and industrial pollutants. Raising awareness could lead to better personal care practices and lifestyle choices to reduce individual exposure to these potentially harmful metal ions.
Metformin use in women with polycystic ovary syndrome
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is a common endocrine disorder that affects women of reproductive age, characterized by irregular menstrual cycles, hyperandrogenism, and insulin resistance. It is often associated with metabolic dysfunctions and inflammation, leading to fertility issues and increased risk of type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease.
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This review discusses the role of metformin in treating PCOS-related infertility. It highlights its effectiveness in improving ovulation, reducing insulin resistance, and managing hyperandrogenism. Metformin is recommended as a first-line treatment for non-obese women with PCOS-related infertility, with benefits also seen in IVF and metabolic health.
What was reviewed?
This review examines the role of metformin in managing polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), specifically focusing on its effectiveness in treating PCOS-related infertility. The paper reviews evidence from randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and other studies, discussing the use of metformin as an insulin-sensitizing agent for women with PCOS who experience anovulatory infertility. It also explores metformin’s impact on metabolic dysfunctions, hyperandrogenism, and its potential use alongside other treatments like clomiphene for improving fertility outcomes in women with PCOS.
Who was reviewed?
The review considers various studies and clinical trials on the use of metformin in women with PCOS. These studies involve women with varying degrees of obesity and insulin resistance, who are experiencing anovulatory infertility, hyperandrogenism, or both. The review synthesizes results from RCTs that examined the effectiveness of metformin alone or in combination with other treatments like clomiphene citrate and aromatase inhibitors in improving ovulation, fertility, and reducing the metabolic disturbances associated with PCOS.
What were the most important findings?
The review highlights several key findings regarding the use of metformin in treating PCOS-related infertility. Metformin has shown efficacy in improving ovulation rates in women with anovulatory infertility, particularly in non-obese women. A Cochrane review of seven RCTs revealed that metformin significantly increased clinical pregnancy rates compared to placebo. However, while metformin showed promise, it did not outperform clomiphene citrate as a first-line treatment for ovulation induction in women with PCOS, particularly in obese patients. The review also found that metformin, when used in combination with clomiphene, can be effective for women who are resistant to clomiphene alone.
Additionally, the review emphasized that metformin has benefits beyond fertility induction. It helps reduce hyperinsulinemia and insulin resistance, which are common in women with PCOS, and can improve associated metabolic conditions such as dyslipidemia and obesity. Furthermore, metformin was found to reduce the risk of ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome (OHSS) in women undergoing in vitro fertilization (IVF). Although metformin’s role in improving long-term health outcomes, such as the prevention of type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and endometrial cancer, remains inconclusive, it offers significant short-term reproductive benefits.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The review suggests that metformin should be considered a suitable first-line treatment for non-obese women with anovulatory infertility due to PCOS. For women who are resistant to clomiphene or prefer an alternative to the oral contraceptive pill (OCP) for managing hyperandrogenic symptoms, metformin can be an effective option. Additionally, metformin’s role in reducing the risk of OHSS during IVF procedures underscores its importance in assisted reproductive treatments. The review also raises the need for further research to better define metformin’s long-term benefits in preventing the metabolic and reproductive complications associated with PCOS, as well as its potential to improve long-term health outcomes like diabetes prevention.
Microbial Dysbiosis Is Associated with Human Breast Cancer
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Breast Cancer
Breast Cancer
Traditionally linked to genetic predispositions and environmental exposures, emerging evidence highlights the microbiome as a critical and underappreciated factor influencing breast cancer progression, immune response, and treatment outcomes.
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Microbial dysbiosis, marked by reduced bacterial load and altered species composition, is linked to breast cancer progression. Enrichment of Methylobacterium radiotolerans in tumors and depletion of Sphingomonas yanoikuyae in normal tissue suggest diagnostic and therapeutic potential for microbiota-based interventions in breast cancer.
What Was Studied?
This study examined the microbiota present in breast tumor tissue compared to paired normal breast tissue from the same individuals, as well as healthy breast tissue from individuals without breast cancer. Using next-generation sequencing and quantitative PCR, the research aimed to identify differences in microbial composition, bacterial load, and their potential impact on the tumor microenvironment and breast cancer progression.
Who Was Studied?
The study included 20 breast cancer patients with estrogen receptor-positive (ER+) tumors, for whom paired tumor and normal adjacent tissue were analyzed. Additional bacterial load analysis included 23 healthy controls undergoing reduction mammoplasty. Gene expression profiling was conducted on tissue from six breast cancer patients and three healthy individuals.
Most Important Findings
The study revealed distinct microbial signatures associated with breast cancer. Methylobacterium radiotolerans was significantly enriched in tumor tissue, while Sphingomonas yanoikuyae was more abundant in paired normal tissue. A strong inverse correlation between the abundance of these two species was observed in normal tissue, but not in tumor tissue. Importantly, bacterial load in tumor tissue was markedly reduced compared to both paired normal and healthy breast tissue, with advanced-stage tumors exhibiting the lowest bacterial counts. This reduction in bacterial load correlated with decreased expression of antibacterial response genes, including Toll-like receptors (TLR2, TLR5, and TLR9) and antimicrobial effectors like IL-12A and BPI.
These findings suggest that microbial dysbiosis and a diminished antibacterial immune response in tumor tissue may contribute to breast cancer progression. Additionally, the results highlight the potential diagnostic value of bacterial load as a marker for breast cancer staging.
Greatest Implications
The association between microbial dysbiosis and breast cancer offers novel insights into the disease’s pathogenesis. The depletion of beneficial bacteria, such as Sphingomonas yanoikuyae, and a reduced immune response may create a permissive environment for tumorigenesis. This study supports the exploration of microbiota as a diagnostic tool and potentially as a therapeutic target to restore a healthy microbial balance and enhance immune surveillance. The inverse correlation between bacterial load and tumor stage underscores its potential utility in disease staging and progression monitoring.
Microbiome of the lower genital tract in Chinese women with endometriosis by 16s-rRNA sequencing technique: a pilot study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This case-control study investigates the relationship between genital tract microbiota and endometriosis using 16s-rRNA sequencing. Findings show Atopobium prevalence in endometriosis with adenomyosis cases, highlighting microbiota's distinct functions.
What was studied?
The study investigated the relationship between the genital tract microbiota and endometriosis, particularly focusing on how microbiota diversity and specific bacteria like Atopobium might be associated with the disease.
Who was studied?
68 participants, from whom 134 samples were collected from the cervical canal, posterior fornix, and uterine cavity for 16s-rRNA sequencing, were included in the study.
What were the most important findings?
Key findings included no significant differences in alpha diversity between the cervical canal and posterior fornix. However, the microbiota profile of patients with adenomyosis and endometriosis differed markedly from the control group, with Atopobium showing significant prevalence in these patients. While no specific biomarkers were identified, PICRUSt analysis revealed several characteristic microbiota functions.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study suggests a potentially significant role of microbiota, particularly Atopobium, in the pathogenesis of endometriosis combined with adenomyosis. This finding could lead to new insights into the microbiota-immune-endometriosis system interaction, offering new avenues for understanding and possibly treating endometriosis and adenomyosis. Further research is needed to verify the functions of the microbiota identified and their direct association with the diseases.
Microbiome of the lower genital tract in Chinese women with endometriosis by 16s-rRNA sequencing technique: a pilot study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This study identifies microbiome shifts in the lower genital tract of Chinese women with endometriosis, marked by Atopobium enrichment and changes in ribosome biogenesis and immune modulation. Findings suggest potential non-invasive biomarkers and therapeutic targets for endometriosis and adenomyosis.
What Was Studied?
This study investigated the microbiome composition of the lower genital tract in Chinese women with endometriosis using 16S rRNA sequencing. Researchers aimed to explore differences in microbial diversity and specific bacterial populations between women diagnosed with endometriosis and healthy controls. The analysis focused on samples collected from the cervical canal, posterior fornix, and uterine cavity to identify distinct microbial profiles and potential biomarkers associated with endometriosis and adenomyosis. A total of 68 participants were included in the study, with 134 samples collected and processed for microbiome analysis.
Who Was Studied?
The study involved 68 women aged 18 to 45, divided into groups: 20 with endometriosis (EM), 19 with adenomyosis (AM), 7 with both adenomyosis and endometriosis (AMEM), and 36 healthy controls (CT). Samples were collected from the cervical canal, posterior fornix, and uterine cavity using sterile techniques to minimize contamination. Participants were excluded if they had bacterial vaginosis (BV), pelvic inflammatory disease, recent antibiotic use, or other infections that might influence microbial composition. This design allowed for a focused investigation of microbiota differences in the lower genital tract specifically related to endometriosis and adenomyosis.
What Were the Most Important Findings
The study found that Lactobacillus remained the predominant genus in the lower genital tract across all groups, reflecting typical vaginal flora. However, significant microbial shifts were observed in women with adenomyosis-endometriosis (AMEM). At the genus level, Atopobium was notably enriched in AMEM patients, representing the most significant microbial difference. While Lactobacillus dominance persisted, AMEM patients exhibited a substantial increase in Coriobacteriaceae and Campylobacteriaceae, indicating a divergence from healthy microbial communities. The AMEM group also displayed elevated levels of Coriobacteriales at the order level, further distinguishing it from other disease groups and controls. Interestingly, LeFSe analysis did not identify specific biomarkers between the cervical canal and posterior fornix, but PICRUSt analysis suggested functional differences, particularly in ribosome biogenesis and two-component system regulation, which may influence immune modulation in endometriosis. The findings suggest that Atopobium may contribute to the pathogenesis of endometriosis through immune disruption, potentially mediated by increased levels of IL-1β, which has been linked to chronic inflammation. The consistent presence of Coriobacteriaceae and Campylobacteriaceae in AMEM further supports a hypothesis of localized dysbiosis contributing to inflammatory processes.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
This study provides evidence of distinct microbiome alterations in the lower genital tract of women with endometriosis, particularly among those with concurrent adenomyosis. The enrichment of Atopobium and Coriobacteriaceae suggests that specific microbial communities may influence inflammatory pathways and disease progression in endometriosis. The identification of ribosome biogenesis and two-component system regulation as significant functional pathways indicates that microbial-induced immune modulation could play a role in lesion persistence and symptom severity. These findings propose Atopobium as a potential microbial biomarker for adenomyosis-endometriosis and highlight the possibility of targeted microbiome-based therapies to disrupt pathological microbial communities. The study underscores the importance of microbial profiling as a non-invasive diagnostic tool for identifying endometriosis-related dysbiosis, potentially leading to earlier detection and intervention.
Microbiome Profile of Deep Endometriosis Patients: Comparison of Vaginal Fluid, Endometrium and Lesion
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This case study found that a distinct bacterial composition was observed in deep endometriotic lesions, characterized by a reduced prevalence of Lactobacillus and an increased abundance of Alishewanella, Enterococcus, and Pseudomonas.
What was studied?
The study focused on identifying and comparing the bacterial patterns present in the vaginal fluid, eutopic endometrium, and endometriotic lesions of patients with endometriosis to those found in the vaginal fluid and eutopic endometrium of control patients without the disease. High-throughput DNA sequencing of the 16S rRNA marker gene was utilized to analyze the microbiome profile in these different biological samples from both groups.
Who was studied?
Twenty-one patients participated in this study, divided into two groups: eleven in the control group and ten in the endometriotic group. The control group consisted of women who underwent laparoscopic surgery for benign gynecological diseases or elective tubal ligation, where the absence of endometriosis was confirmed during peritoneal cavity inspection. The endometriotic group included only women with deep endometriosis, confirmed by laparoscopic surgery and histopathology analysis.
What were the most important findings?
The study found that microbiome sequencing of vaginal fluid, eutopic endometrium, and endometriotic lesions typically showed similar profiles, dominated by Lactobacillus, Gardnerella, Streptococcus, and Prevotella. Despite no significant overall differences in microbiome diversity between control and endometriotic patients, deep endometriotic lesions exhibited a distinct bacterial composition with less Lactobacillus and a higher abundance of Alishewanella, Enterococcus, and Pseudomonas.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study highlights several implications for endometriosis management: It provides insights into the pathogenesis by showing distinct bacterial compositions in deep lesions, suggesting microbial involvement in lesion development. This leads to the potential for non-invasive diagnostics by identifying specific microbial patterns, opening avenues for biomarker-based detection. Therapeutically, interventions like antibiotics or probiotics could be new treatment strategies if certain bacteria contribute to pathogenesis. The findings emphasize the need for more research to establish causal links between microbiome composition and endometriosis, understand the bacterial influence on the disease, and explore microbiome-based treatments.
Microbiome Profile of Deep Endometriosis Patients: Comparison of Vaginal Fluid, Endometrium and Lesion
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This study reveals a distinct microbiome profile in deep endometriosis, with unique bacterial communities in lesion sites, suggesting a role in inflammation and disease progression. Potentially pathogenic genera like Pseudomonas and Alishewanella were abundant, highlighting their possible involvement in endometriotic lesion maintenance and inflammatory responses.
What was studied?
This study explored the microbiome profile in deep endometriosis by comparing the bacterial composition of vaginal fluid, eutopic endometrium, and deep endometriotic lesions. The primary goal was to identify whether distinct microbial patterns exist in these tissue sites of women with deep endometriosis compared to those without the condition. To achieve this, researchers employed high-throughput 16S rRNA sequencing to analyze microbial DNA extracted from tissue samples collected during laparoscopic surgery. The analysis included alpha and beta diversity assessments to determine variations in microbial richness and community structure across different tissue types.
Who was studied?
The study involved 21 participants, including 10 women with histologically confirmed deep endometriosis and 11 healthy controls undergoing laparoscopic surgery for benign gynecological conditions or elective tubal ligation. Samples were obtained from three anatomical sites: vaginal fluid, eutopic endometrium, and deep endometriotic lesions. Participants were carefully screened to exclude those with recent antibiotic, antifungal, or probiotic use, as well as those with autoimmune or inflammatory diseases that could affect microbiome composition.
What were the most important findings?
Microbiome analysis revealed significant differences in bacterial profiles between deep endometriotic lesions, eutopic endometrium, and vaginal fluid. In vaginal fluid and endometrial samples, the microbiome was predominantly composed of Lactobacillus, Gardnerella, Streptococcus, and Prevotella. In contrast, deep endometriotic lesions exhibited a distinct microbial landscape with reduced Lactobacillus and higher relative abundances of Alishewanella, Enterococcus, and Pseudomonas. Notably, Alishewanella and Pseudomonas were almost exclusively found in lesion samples, suggesting these genera may be associated with the inflammatory microenvironment characteristic of deep endometriosis.
Further analysis indicated that deep endometriotic lesions had greater microbial diversity than both vaginal fluid and eutopic endometrium. Beta diversity analysis showed a statistically significant difference in microbial community structure between lesion samples and the other tissue sites (p = 0.036), suggesting that endometriotic tissue supports a unique microbiome that could influence local immune responses and inflammation. These findings point towards a potential role for certain bacteria in the pathogenesis of deep endometriosis, either by promoting inflammation or altering tissue homeostasis.
Microbial Group
Deep Endometriosis Findings
Clinical Implications
Lactobacillus
Decreased in lesion samples
Reduction may contribute to loss of protective barrier
Alishewanella
Increased in lesions
Potential involvement in local inflammation
Pseudomonas
Increased in lesions
Linked to immune modulation and tissue inflammation
Enterococcus
Elevated in lesion samples
Known for its association with chronic inflammation
Alpha Diversity
Increased in lesions compared to other sites
Suggests a unique microbial community fostering inflammation
Beta Diversity
Significantly different from endometrium and vaginal fluid (p = 0.036)
Indicates unique microbial signature in lesions
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The results of this study underscore the presence of a unique microbiome profile in deep endometriotic lesions, characterized by increased microbial diversity and the presence of potentially pathogenic bacteria like Pseudomonas and Alishewanella. These findings suggest that microbiome alterations may contribute to the inflammatory environment observed in endometriosis, potentially influencing disease progression and symptom severity. This study opens avenues for further investigation into microbiome-targeted therapies aimed at modulating bacterial communities in endometriotic tissue to alleviate inflammation and inhibit lesion growth. Additionally, the distinct microbial signatures identified in deep endometriosis lesions may serve as non-invasive biomarkers for early detection and improved clinical management of the disease.
Microbiota composition and distribution along the female reproductive tract of women with endometriosis
February 12, 2026
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This cross-sectional observational study compared microbiota in various reproductive tract locations finding significant microbiota changes in endometriosis patients, especially a decrease in Lactobacillus and increase in specific bacteria in the cervical area.
What was studied?
The study investigated the microbiota distribution across the entire female reproductive tract of endometriosis (EMS) patients and non-EMS women, aiming to identify EMS-specific bacterial species and examine the relationship between flora and disease development.
Who was studied?
Fifty women undergoing laparoscopic surgery for benign gynecological diseases or pelvic endometriosis at Peking University Shenzhen Hospital were studied. They were divided into two groups: 36 with pelvic endometriosis (stages I-IV) and 14 controls without endometriosis symptoms.
What were the most important findings?
Significant differences in the microbiota distribution were observed, especially a decrease in Lactobacillus in the upper reproductive tract of EMS patients. Specific Operational Taxonomic Units (OTUs), particularly Sphingobium sp. and Pseudomonas viridiflava, were identified as significantly enriched in the endometrium and peritoneal fluid of EMS patients, suggesting their potential role in EMS pathogenesis.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study offers a new perspective on the pathogenesis of endometriosis, emphasizing the role of specific bacteria in its development. Identifying microbiota changes associated with EMS could lead to novel diagnostic markers and therapeutic targets, enhancing our understanding of the disease and potentially leading to more effective management strategies for endometriosis and other female reproductive tract diseases.
Microbiota composition and distribution along the female reproductive tract of women with endometriosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This study maps the microbiota composition along the reproductive tract in endometriosis patients, revealing microbial dysbiosis, reduced Lactobacillus, and increased Pseudomonas and Sphingobium in upper reproductive sites. These findings suggest potential microbial contributions to inflammation, lesion persistence, and new biomarkers for diagnosing endometriosis.
What Was Studied?
This study investigated the microbiota composition and distribution along the female reproductive tract of women with endometriosis (EMS) compared to healthy controls. Using 16S rRNA amplicon sequencing, researchers mapped microbial communities from five distinct anatomical sites: the lower third of the vagina (CL), posterior vaginal fornix (CU), cervical mucus (CV), endometrium (ET), and peritoneal fluid (PF). The primary aim was to identify differences in microbial communities across these regions and understand how these alterations may contribute to the pathogenesis of endometriosis. A total of 36 women with confirmed pelvic endometriosis and 14 healthy controls undergoing surgery for benign gynecological conditions were included in the study.
Who Was Studied?
The study included 50 women aged 23 to 44, divided into two groups: 36 patients diagnosed with pelvic endometriosis and 14 healthy controls undergoing laparoscopic surgery for benign conditions like ovarian teratoma, serous cystadenoma, or uterine fibroids. All participants had regular menstrual cycles and had not used hormonal drugs, antibiotics, or vaginal medications within six months before sample collection. Samples were collected during the early follicular phase to minimize hormonal variability, and five distinct anatomical locations were sampled to comprehensively map microbial distribution.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study revealed distinct microbiota compositions along the reproductive tract in women with endometriosis compared to healthy controls. The lower reproductive tract (CL, CU) in both groups was predominantly colonized by Lactobacillus, maintaining a stable microbial community. However, microbial diversity began to shift notably at the cervical mucus (CV) in endometriosis patients, with the appearance of Veillonellaceae and an overall reduction in Lactobacillus. This shift continued upward, with dramatic changes observed in the endometrium (ET) and peritoneal fluid (PF) of endometriosis patients. In the ET, Pseudomonas, Acinetobacter, and Vagococcus emerged as dominant taxa, accompanied by a significant reduction of Lactobacillus. The peritoneal fluid samples further diverged, showing high microbial diversity, including Pseudomonas, Acinetobacter, Shewanella, Vagococcus, and Sphingobium, with minimal presence of Lactobacillus. The distinct microbial signatures in these upper reproductive sites suggest a potential role for these genera in promoting inflammation and lesion persistence in endometriosis. Importantly, Sphingobium and Pseudomonas viridiflava were consistently enriched in both the ET and PF of endometriosis patients, indicating their potential as microbial biomarkers for the disease. The findings support the hypothesis that site-specific microbial shifts contribute to the pathogenesis of endometriosis, likely through immune modulation and local inflammation.
Anatomical Site
Microbiota Findings in Endometriosis Patients
Lower Reproductive Tract (CL, CU)
Predominantly colonized by Lactobacillus, maintaining a stable microbial community.
Cervical Mucus (CV)
Notable microbial shift with the appearance of Veillonellaceae and a significant reduction in Lactobacillus.
Endometrium (ET)
Dominated by Pseudomonas, Acinetobacter, and Vagococcus with a marked reduction of Lactobacillus.
Peritoneal Fluid (PF)
High microbial diversity with Pseudomonas, Acinetobacter, Shewanella, Vagococcus, and Sphingobium. Minimal Lactobacillus presence.
Unique Enrichments
Consistent enrichment of Sphingobium and Pseudomonas viridiflava in ET and PF, suggesting potential biomarkers.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
The study’s findings suggest that the microbiota composition along the female reproductive tract in endometriosis patients is markedly different from that of healthy controls, with key disruptions beginning in the cervical mucus and intensifying in the endometrium and peritoneal fluid. The reduction of Lactobacillus and the enrichment of pro-inflammatory taxa such as Pseudomonas, Acinetobacter, Vagococcus, Shewanella, and Sphingobium suggest these species may contribute to local immune activation, chronic inflammation, and potentially lesion maintenance in endometriosis. The identification of Sphingobium and Pseudomonas viridiflava as dominant species in upper reproductive tract samples provides a promising direction for non-invasive biomarkers for diagnosing endometriosis. Furthermore, this microbial dysbiosis may offer therapeutic targets for microbiome-modulating treatments aimed at restoring a healthy reproductive tract microbiota, potentially alleviating symptoms and reducing disease progression. This research underscores the importance of targeting microbial ecosystems in understanding and managing endometriosis.
Microbiota in vaginal health and pathogenesis of recurrent vulvovaginal infections: a critical review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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Vulvovaginal Candidiasis (VVC)
Vulvovaginal Candidiasis (VVC)
Vulvovaginal candidiasis (VVC) is a common fungal infection caused by Candida albicans. Disruptions in the vaginal microbiome and immune responses contribute to its development. Effective treatment involves both antifungal therapy and strategies to restore microbiome balance, preventing recurrent infections and addressing emerging antifungal resistance.
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This review clarifies the role of vaginal microbiota in health and recurrent infections, highlighting Lactobacillus complexity, pathogen interactions, and the need for personalized diagnostic and treatment approaches. It calls for deeper exploration into fungal and parasitic vaginal microbiome components to enhance understanding and clinical care of recurrent vulvovaginal infections.
What was reviewed?
This review analyzed existing knowledge of vaginal microbiota (VMB) in relation to vaginal health and recurrent vulvovaginal infections (RVVI), focusing specifically on bacterial vaginosis (BV), vulvovaginal candidiasis (VVC), and trichomoniasis (TV). The authors critically assessed current insights derived from advanced molecular techniques, highlighting how both bacterial and fungal communities influence vaginal health, and discussed the interactions among these communities and their role in the pathogenesis of recurrent infections.
Who was reviewed?
This critical review evaluated literature from diverse sources, including peer-reviewed studies identified through databases such as PubMed and Google Scholar. Included were studies employing both culture-dependent and culture-independent methods to characterize vaginal microbial communities in healthy women and those suffering from recurrent vaginal infections, including bacterial vaginosis, vulvovaginal candidiasis, and trichomoniasis.
What were the most important findings?
The review highlights the complexity and variability of vaginal microbiota, challenging the traditional view that Lactobacillus dominance universally signifies vaginal health. While Lactobacilli typically protect vaginal health by producing lactic acid, maintaining acidic conditions that prevent infections, certain species such as L. iners can instead contribute to instability and disease susceptibility. In bacterial vaginosis, reduced Lactobacilli and increased anaerobes, especially Gardnerella vaginalis, play a critical role. G. vaginalis contributes significantly to disease through biofilm formation and secretion of virulence factors, including vaginolysin and sialidases.
For vulvovaginal candidiasis and trichomoniasis, microbial interactions are key determinants of disease progression. Candida albicans, usually harmless in its yeast form, can shift to a pathogenic hyphal state under elevated pH or disrupted microbiota, highlighting crucial interactions between bacteria and fungi in maintaining health. In trichomoniasis, Trichomonas vaginalis actively damages vaginal epithelial cells and suppresses beneficial Lactobacilli through mechanisms including protease secretion and biofilm formation, exacerbated by symbiotic interactions with mycoplasmas and dsRNA viruses that further enhance virulence.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review stresses the importance of understanding individual variability and complex interactions within the vaginal microbiota when managing recurrent vulvovaginal infections. It emphasizes that traditional beliefs, such as universal Lactobacillus dominance indicating vaginal health, are oversimplifications. This knowledge demands that clinicians adopt more nuanced diagnostics and personalized approaches to treatment. Furthermore, the authors highlight critical gaps in our understanding of the fungal and parasitic components of the vaginal microbiota, suggesting a need for further research utilizing comparative genomics and longitudinal microbiome profiling to guide improved clinical management strategies for RVVI.
Molecular detection of intrauterine microbial colonization in women with endometriosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This study reveals that intrauterine microbial colonization is prevalent in women with endometriosis, particularly with Streptococcaceae, Staphylococcaceae, and Enterobacteriaceae. Findings suggest that GnRHa treatment exacerbates microbial colonization, indicating a possible role for targeted antimicrobial therapies in managing endometriosis-associated inflammation.
What Was Studied?
This study investigated the molecular detection of intrauterine microbial colonization in women with and without endometriosis, utilizing a 16S rDNA metagenome assay to evaluate bacterial presence in endometrial swabs and cystic fluid samples. The primary aim was to explore the role of microbial colonization in the intrauterine environment and its potential contribution to endometriosis pathogenesis, especially in women treated with gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonist (GnRHa). The study compared microbial communities in both endometrial tissue and cystic fluid derived from ovarian endometrioma and non-endometrioma cysts. The analysis aimed to validate the "bacterial contamination hypothesis," which posits that microbial colonization might exacerbate inflammatory responses, contributing to endometriosis progression.
Who Was Studied?
The study included 32 women with endometriosis and 32 women without endometriosis. Among these, half of each group (16 women) received GnRHa treatment for 4–6 months prior to sample collection. Endometrial swabs and cystic fluid samples were collected during laparoscopic procedures at Nagasaki University. Women were included if they were of reproductive age, with regular menstrual cycles, and had not taken antibiotics or immunosuppressants within three months prior to the study. The endometriosis cases were confirmed histologically, and cystic fluids were categorized as either ovarian endometrioma (OE) or non-endometrioma (NE) cysts. The study employed 16S rDNA metagenome sequencing using the Illumina MiSeq system to identify bacterial taxa.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study identified a significant alteration in the microbial landscape within the intrauterine environment and ovarian cystic fluid of women with endometriosis, particularly those undergoing GnRHa treatment. Notably, there was a significant decrease in Lactobacillaceae populations (p < 0.01) and a marked increase in Streptococcaceae, Staphylococcaceae, and Enterobacteriaceae (p < 0.05 for each) in GnRHa-treated women with endometriosis. This microbial shift was associated with sub-clinical infection in the uterine cavity and cystic fluid of ovarian endometrioma. Furthermore, the 16S metagenome assay detected higher proportions of Streptococcaceae and Staphylococcaceae in ovarian endometrioma cyst fluid compared to non-endometrioma cysts, suggesting a unique microbial signature linked to inflammatory pathogenesis. Interestingly, traditional bacterial culture methods failed to detect colonies in the cystic fluids, while PCR analysis revealed substantial colonization. This discrepancy indicates that sub-clinical infections in the uterine and ovarian microenvironments may contribute to the chronic inflammatory state characteristic of endometriosis. The study also proposed that GnRHa-induced hypoestrogenism might reduce the expression of antimicrobial peptides in the genitourinary tract, facilitating microbial colonization and chronic inflammation.
Parameter
Findings in Endometriosis Patients
Intrauterine Microbial Colonization
Significant increase in Streptococcaceae, Staphylococcaceae, and Enterobacteriaceae populations in endometrial tissue and ovarian cystic fluid.
GnRHa Treatment Effects
Decrease in Lactobacillaceae populations (p < 0.01) with elevated Streptococcaceae, Staphylococcaceae, and Enterobacteriaceae (p < 0.05).
Cystic Fluid Microbiome
Higher proportions of Streptococcaceae and Staphylococcaceae in ovarian endometrioma cyst fluid compared to non-endometrioma cysts.
Detection Methods
Traditional bacterial culture failed to detect colonies, but 16S rDNA sequencing revealed substantial colonization.
Hypothesized Mechanism
GnRHa-induced hypoestrogenism may suppress antimicrobial peptides, facilitating microbial colonization and chronic inflammation.
Pathogenic Implications
Suggests sub-clinical infection in uterine and ovarian environments as a contributor to chronic inflammation in endometriosis.
Therapeutic Consideration
Potential for targeted antimicrobial therapy to mitigate microbial load and reduce inflammation in endometriosis.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
The findings provide robust evidence that intrauterine microbial colonization—particularly of Streptococcaceae, Staphylococcaceae, and Enterobacteriaceae—is prevalent in women with endometriosis and is significantly heightened with GnRHa treatment. This suggests that silent intrauterine infections could exacerbate inflammatory responses and potentially influence disease progression. Furthermore, the detection of bacterial DNA in ovarian endometrioma cystic fluid indicates that microbial colonization extends beyond the uterine environment, potentially affecting ovarian tissue integrity. These insights propose that targeted antimicrobial therapy might mitigate intrauterine bacterial load, reduce inflammation, and improve disease management. The study challenges the traditional view of the sterile uterine environment, suggesting that the bacterial contamination hypothesis should be revisited as a contributing factor in endometriosis pathogenesis.
Molecular detection of microbial colonization in cervical mucus of women with and without endometriosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This cross-sectional observational study investigates cervical mucus in women with and without endometriosis, finding similar microbial distributions overall. However, bacteria such as Corynebacterium, Enterobacteriaceae, Flavobacterium, Pseudomonas, and Streptococcus were more common in women with endometriosis, with Enterobacteriaceae and Streptococcus showing significant associations
What was studied?
The study investigated the microbiota in the cervical mucus of women with and without endometriosis using next-generation sequencing (NGS) technologies. It aimed to clarify whether cervical mucus in women with endometriosis is contaminated with bacteria, which could potentially transmigrate into the intrauterine cavity, influencing the pathogenesis of endometriosis. The research explored the bacterial population’s diversity, its correlation with the disease, and how these findings align with previous studies on intrauterine microbial colonization and its role in endometriosis through LPS/TLR4 engagement of the innate immune system.
Who was studied?
The study’s participants consisted of 30 women diagnosed with endometriosis (confirmed by laparoscopy and classified according to the revised American Society for Reproductive Medicine scoring system for stages III-IV) and 39 women without the condition (control group), all of reproductive age (20-44 years). The control group included women with fibroids or benign ovarian tumors other than endometriosis. All subjects had a normal-appearing cervix, were negative for vaginal culturing tests, and had not received endocrine therapy or antibiotics for at least six months before sample collection.
What were the most important findings?
The study highlights several findings about the cervical mucus microbiota in women with and without endometriosis. It found a diverse array of microbiota in both groups, with variations not tied to menstrual cycle phases. The endometriosis group exhibited significantly higher alpha diversity, indicating a more diverse bacterial community. Specific bacteria such as Enterobacteriaceae, Corynebacterium, Pseudomonas, Flavobacterium, and Streptococcus were more prevalent in the endometriosis group, with Enterobacteriaceae and Streptococcus showing significantly higher prevalence.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings suggest that the cervical mucus of women with endometriosis harbors a distinct and more diverse bacterial population than women without the condition. The significant presence of specific bacteria, particularly Enterobacteriaceae and Streptococcus, in women with endometriosis may play a role in the disease’s pathogenesis through mechanisms involving bacterial contamination, immune system engagement, and inflammatory responses. These insights open new avenues for understanding endometriosis’s pathophysiology, potentially leading to novel diagnostic and therapeutic strategies. Further, the study implies a possible link between cervical mucus microbiota and adverse pregnancy outcomes, highlighting the need for additional research to explore the mechanistic connections between microbial colonization and endometriosis and its implications for fertility and pregnancy.
Molecular detection of microbial colonization in cervical mucus of women with and without endometriosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This study identifies intrauterine microbial colonization in endometriosis, with enriched Streptococcaceae, Staphylococcaceae, and Enterobacteriaceae. GnRHa therapy exacerbated microbial imbalances, highlighting potential therapeutic targets for managing inflammation and infection in endometriosis. Findings suggest microbial modulation may enhance treatment outcomes.
What Was Studied?
This study investigated the molecular detection of microbial colonization in cervical mucus of women with and without endometriosis using next-generation sequencing (NGS) technology. The primary aim was to explore whether specific microbial populations in the cervical mucus are associated with endometriosis and could contribute to its pathogenesis. Researchers collected cervical mucus samples from 30 women with endometriosis and 39 women without the condition. The microbial communities were analyzed through 16S rRNA gene sequencing, alongside Gram staining and real-time PCR to validate the presence of specific bacterial species. This study sought to identify microbial signatures that may play a role in the inflammation and immune responses linked to endometriosis progression.
Who Was Studied?
The study included 69 women of reproductive age, with 30 diagnosed with endometriosis (all classified as r-ASRM stages III-IV) and 39 serving as healthy controls. All participants underwent laparoscopic surgery for diagnosis or benign gynecological conditions. Cervical mucus samples were collected before surgery under sterile conditions to prevent contamination, ensuring accurate representation of the microbiota present. Women with gynecological malignancies, pelvic inflammatory disease, bacterial vaginosis, or recent antibiotic use were excluded to prevent confounding microbial shifts.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The analysis revealed that cervical mucus in women with endometriosis harbored distinct microbial communities compared to healthy controls. While Lactobacillus spp. remained dominant across all samples, women with endometriosis showed increased populations of Enterobacteriaceae, Streptococcus, Corynebacterium, Pseudomonas, and Flavobacterium. Notably, Enterobacteriaceae and Streptococcus were significantly enriched in endometriosis patients, as confirmed by real-time PCR analysis (p < 0.05). This elevated presence suggests these bacteria may contribute to inflammatory cascades in the cervix and potentially facilitate disease persistence. Additionally, alpha diversity was significantly higher in the cervical mucus of endometriosis patients, indicating a broader microbial distribution. The study also noted that despite high Lactobacillus prevalence (40–60%), the co-existence of pathogenic bacteria like Enterobacteriaceae and Streptococcus was unique to the endometriosis group, hinting at microbial imbalance. These findings support the hypothesis that cervical microbial colonization could be linked to the development and maintenance of endometriosis through immune modulation and inflammatory responses. The study further postulated that the ascent of these pathogens from the cervix into the uterine cavity may exacerbate inflammatory conditions, potentially triggering endometriosis progression via LPS/TLR4 signaling and innate immune activation.
Parameter
Findings in Endometriosis Patients
Dominant Genera
Lactobacillus spp. remained dominant in both endometriosis patients and controls, with 40–60% prevalence.
Increased Genera
Marked increases in Enterobacteriaceae, Streptococcus, Corynebacterium, Pseudomonas, and Flavobacterium.
Significant Enrichment
Enterobacteriaceae and Streptococcus were significantly enriched (p < 0.05) in the endometriosis group.
Alpha Diversity
Higher alpha diversity observed in endometriosis patients, indicating broader microbial distribution in cervical mucus.
Pathogenic Co-Existence
Despite high Lactobacillus prevalence, Enterobacteriaceae and Streptococcus co-existed exclusively in the endometriosis group.
Inflammatory Associations
These pathogens are suspected to drive inflammatory cascades, contributing to lesion persistence and immune dysregulation.
Migration Hypothesis
Potential pathogen ascent from the cervix to the uterine cavity may exacerbate inflammation and promote endometriosis via LPS/TLR4 signaling and innate immune activation.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
The study provides compelling evidence that specific microbial communities in cervical mucus—particularly Enterobacteriaceae and Streptococcus—are associated with endometriosis. This microbial imbalance suggests that the cervical microbiome may serve as both a diagnostic biomarker and a therapeutic target for endometriosis management. The findings highlight the possibility of cervical microbial migration into the uterine cavity as a driver of inflammation and lesion growth, underscoring the need for further exploration into microbiota-targeted therapies. By identifying microbial dysbiosis at the cervical level, this study opens the door to non-invasive diagnostic methods and preventive strategies aimed at reducing microbial-induced inflammation in endometriosis patients.
Müllerian duct anomalies coincident with endometriosis: a review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This study reviewed the relationship between Müllerian duct anomalies (MDAs) and endometriosis, focusing on their prevalence, pathophysiology, and classification. It highlighted the connection especially in cases with outflow obstruction and underscored the need for early diagnosis and targeted interventions to improve reproductive outcomes and manage symptoms.
What was studied?
The study reviewed the relationship between Müllerian duct anomalies (MDAs) and endometriosis, focusing on their coexistence and the underlying pathophysiological theories that might explain their association. It extensively covered the embryology, genetics, and pathophysiology of MDAs, alongside the American Society for Reproductive Medicine (ASRM) classification of these anomalies. The review also detailed different types of MDAs, their diagnosis, and their association with endometriosis, considering various factors such as uterine outflow obstruction and genetic predispositions.
Who was studied?
The study discussed women who present with MDAs and endometriosis, examining available data on the prevalence and nature of these conditions in this demographic. It synthesized information from various studies that stratified the relationship between MDAs and endometriosis according to specific classes of anomalies, particularly focusing on obstructed and non-obstructed MDAs.
What were the most important findings?
Association Between MDAs and Endometriosis: There is an established connection, particularly when the MDA involves outflow obstruction, supporting the theory of retrograde menstruation as a contributing factor to the pathogenesis of endometriosis.
Variability in MDA Prevalence and Impact: The prevalence of MDAs varies widely due to differences in diagnostic techniques and patient populations, with a higher prevalence noted among infertile women and those with recurrent miscarriages.
Complexity of Pathogenesis Theories: The study underscores the complexity of endometriosis pathogenesis, including theories like retrograde menstruation, coelomic metaplasia, and the presence of müllerian remnants, suggesting that different types of endometriosis might arise from different mechanisms.
Genetic Factors: Both conditions are influenced by genetic factors, but no single gene mutation has been directly implicated in causing MDAs or endometriosis, suggesting a multifactorial etiology.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
Improved Diagnostic and Interventional Strategies: Recognizing the association between MDAs and endometriosis, especially in the presence of obstructive anomalies, could lead to earlier diagnosis and more targeted interventions, potentially improving reproductive outcomes and managing pain symptoms effectively.
Need for Further Research: The study highlights the need for more detailed and controlled studies to define the relationship between specific types of MDAs and the various forms of endometriosis. This could help develop more personalized treatment plans and understand the underlying mechanisms at a deeper level.
Clinical Practice Changes: The findings encourage the adoption of standardized classification systems for MDAs and suggest that surgical interventions might be beneficial in cases of obstructed flow to manage or even reverse symptoms of endometriosis, although the outcomes may vary.
Awareness and Screening: There is an emphasis on the importance of awareness and careful screening for endometriosis in patients with MDAs, which could lead to better management strategies and reduce the long-term impact of these conditions on women’s health.
New Insights into Photobiomodulation of the Vaginal Microbiome—A Critical Review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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The study reviewed theoretical and emerging research on photobiomodulation (PBM) and its effects on the vaginal microbiome, exploring how PBM might beneficially alter microbial communities to improve vaginal health. It suggested that PBM could be a non-invasive tool to treat conditions like bacterial vaginosis and influence systemic diseases by managing microbiome health, presenting a new potential non-pharmacological intervention in gynecological health.
What was studied?
The study reviewed the potential effects of photobiomodulation (PBM) on the vaginal microbiome, particularly exploring theoretical and emerging research on how PBM may influence vaginal health through its interaction with microbial communities.
Who was studied?
The study itself is a review and does not directly study a group of individuals. Instead, it synthesizes research on the vaginal microbiome and how it might be affected by PBM treatments, so the “who” primarily encompasses populations from referenced studies within the field of vaginal health and microbiome research.
What were the most important findings?
The review suggests that PBM might influence the vaginal microbiome beneficially by affecting microbial communities, potentially helping in treating conditions like bacterial vaginosis or influencing systemic diseases. It discusses the interaction of light treatment with bacteria and its theoretical applications in managing vaginal microbiome health.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The review highlights a promising but underexplored area in the intersection of PBM and vaginal microbiome management. If PBM can effectively influence the vaginal microbiome, it could offer a non-invasive method to manage and treat a range of vaginal health issues and associated systemic conditions, expanding the scope of non-pharmacological interventions in gynecological health. This could lead to new therapeutic modalities that are more focused on microbiome health, influencing everything from disease prevention to treating existing conditions.
Oral, Vaginal, and Stool Microbial Signatures in Patients With Endometriosis as Potential Diagnostic Non-Invasive Biomarkers: A Prospective Cohort Study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This study explores oral, vaginal, and stool microbial signatures in patients with endometriosis, highlighting their potential as non-invasive diagnostic biomarkers. Findings suggest distinct microbial shifts in these sites, offering a promising avenue for early detection and targeted intervention in endometriosis management.
What was studied?
This prospective cohort pilot study examined the oral, vaginal, and stool microbiota of three cohorts: confirmed endometriosis patients (ENDO, n=21), patients with other gynecological conditions but no endometriosis (N-ENDO, n=24), and healthy controls without gynecologic disease (HC, n=19). Using 16S rRNA sequencing, the study sought to identify non-invasive microbial biomarkers that could potentially differentiate individuals with endometriosis from others, with the ultimate goal of developing a diagnostic tool.
Who was studied?
A total of 64 women were studied, all age- and sex-matched. ENDO and N-ENDO participants were recruited from a hospital setting where they underwent laparoscopy with histological confirmation. Healthy controls were recruited from a separate longitudinal study (MothersBabies), with no known gynecological pathology.
Key Findings:
The study revealed significant microbial diversity and compositional differences in oral and stool samples among patients with endometriosis, non-endometriosis gynecologic conditions, and healthy controls, while vaginal samples showed no significant variation. Specifically, alpha diversity was reduced in the stool microbiota of endometriosis patients compared to healthy controls, and beta diversity analysis confirmed that both oral and stool communities were distinctly structured across cohorts. LEfSe analysis identified differentially abundant taxa specific to body site and disease severity. In stool samples, Phascolarctobacterium and Lactobacillus were enriched in endometriosis, with Actinomyces elevated in minimal/mild cases and Paraprevotellaceae in moderate/severe cases.
Oral samples from patients with moderate/severe endometriosis were characterized by a marked increase in Fusobacterium, a genus previously shown to facilitate lesion development in murine models and implicated in human periodontal disease. This is especially relevant given the higher incidence of periodontitis in endometriosis patients. Cardiobacterium was elevated in mild disease. In vaginal samples, the enrichment of Escherichia, Enterococcus, and Tepidimonas supports the bacterial contamination hypothesis, which posits that lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-mediated inflammation may play a role in lesion formation.
Here is a summary of the differentially abundant taxa by body site and disease severity:
Body Site
Differentially Abundant Taxa
Stool
Phascolarctobacterium, Lactobacillus ↑ in ENDO; Actinomyces ↑ in minimal/mild; Paraprevotellaceae ↑ in moderate/severe
Oral
Fusobacterium ↑ in moderate/severe ENDO; Cardiobacterium ↑ in minimal/mild ENDO
Vaginal
Escherichia, Enterococcus, Tepidimonas ↑ in ENDO
Implications for Microbiome Research and Clinical Practice:
The study underscores the potential for developing a non-invasive diagnostic tool for endometriosis using microbial biomarkers obtained from oral or stool samples. Specific taxa such as Fusobacterium, Escherichia, and Phascolarctobacterium emerged as promising microbial targets for future mechanistic and therapeutic investigations due to their known roles in modulating inflammation and estrogen metabolism. Additionally, the observed enrichment of Lactobacillus in the stool of patients with endometriosis suggests a possible link to estrobolome activity, with implications for enhanced estrogen recycling and disease progression. Furthermore, the detection of overlapping genera in the gut and peritoneal fluid, as reported in other studies, lends support to the hypothesis that intestinal bacterial translocation may contribute to the peritoneal inflammation characteristic of endometriosis.
Persistent Organic Pollutants and Endometriosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This study links persistent organic pollutants (POPs) to metabolic alterations in deep endometriosis, identifying trans-nonachlor and 2-hydroxybutyrate as key markers.
What Was Studied?
This study explored the relationship between persistent organic pollutants (POPs) and the risk of surgically confirmed deep endometriosis by integrating high-resolution metabolomic profiling. It aimed to characterize metabolic changes associated with POP exposure, focusing on polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), organochlorinated pesticides (OCPs), and per-/polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS). The researchers utilized advanced analytical techniques such as gas and liquid chromatography coupled with high-resolution mass spectrometry (HRMS) and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR).
Who Was Studied?
A hospital-based case-control cohort in France was recruited, consisting of women with surgically confirmed deep endometriosis and matched controls without the condition. Serum samples were collected from these participants to measure POP levels and conduct comprehensive metabolomic profiling. The study controlled for confounding variables such as demographic and lifestyle factors, ensuring a robust statistical analysis.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study identified significant links between specific POPs and endometriosis risk. Trans-nonachlor, an organochlorinated pesticide, emerged as the most strongly associated pollutant, doubling the risk of deep endometriosis. Other key POPs included PCBs 180 and 167. Metabolomic profiling revealed distinctive metabolic disruptions in women with endometriosis. These included elevated serum levels of lactate, ketone bodies, multiple amino acids, reduced bile acids, phosphatidylcholines (PCs), cortisol, and hippuric acid. A noteworthy finding was the metabolite 2-hydroxybutyrate, which correlated with both trans-nonachlor exposure and endometriosis risk, acting as a potential biomarker of the disease and its environmental exposure.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
This study is groundbreaking in linking POP exposure to metabolic alterations in deep endometriosis, suggesting an environmental component to the disease's pathogenesis. The findings highlight the potential of metabolomic biomarkers, like 2-hydroxybutyrate, for early diagnosis and monitoring of environmental risk factors. These results emphasize the importance of further research to clarify causal relationships and develop interventions to reduce exposure to harmful pollutants. Clinically, integrating metabolomic and environmental data could improve risk assessment and individualized treatment approaches for endometriosis patients.
Plants as source of new therapies for endometriosis: a review of preclinical and clinical studies
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This review highlights the potential of plant-derived therapies for endometriosis. Key findings include anti-inflammatory, anti-proliferative, and anti-angiogenic effects of herbal extracts and bioactive compounds, offering safer long-term alternatives to conventional treatments.
What Was Reviewed?
This review systematically examined plant-derived agents and their potential for treating endometriosis. The authors focused on three main categories: herbal extracts, specific plant-derived bioactive compounds, and Chinese herbal medicine (CHM). By analyzing preclinical and clinical studies, the review assessed the efficacy, mechanisms of action, and clinical potential of these agents, including compounds such as resveratrol, epigallocatechin-3-gallate, curcumin, and cannabinoids. The paper aimed to critically evaluate the relevance of natural therapies as safer, long-term alternatives to conventional treatments for endometriosis.
Who Was Reviewed?
The review covered studies involving various experimental models, including human cell lines, rodent models of endometriosis, and limited clinical trials on human subjects. These studies collectively investigated the effects of plant-derived agents on cellular and molecular markers of endometriosis, such as inflammation, angiogenesis, and apoptosis. The review also discussed findings from clinical trials of Chinese herbal medicine and individual bioactive compounds.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The review identified several plant-derived agents with significant potential for endometriosis therapy. Herbal extracts such as pueraria flower extract (PFE) and aged black garlic exhibited anti-inflammatory, anti-angiogenic, and anti-proliferative effects in experimental models. Bioactive compounds like resveratrol and curcumin demonstrated pleiotropic effects, targeting processes like estrogen modulation, oxidative stress reduction, and inhibition of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) expression. Chinese herbal medicine formulations were found to alleviate symptoms, reduce lesion size, and prevent recurrence in clinical contexts. Mechanistically, these agents influence key pathways involving cytokines (IL-6, IL-8, TNF-α), transcription factors (NF-κB), and matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs), making them promising candidates for integrative treatment strategies.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Review?
The findings emphasize the need for standardized protocols and further clinical trials to validate the safety and efficacy of plant-derived therapies in human endometriosis patients. The review underscores the potential of these agents as part of multimodal treatment strategies, offering reduced side effects and improved long-term management compared to conventional hormonal or surgical approaches. Additionally, the pleiotropic action of these agents aligns with the complex pathophysiology of endometriosis, addressing inflammation, angiogenesis, and cellular survival concurrently.
Polycystic Ovary Syndrome: Etiology, Current Management, and Future Therapeutics
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This review links PCOS to gut microbiota dysbiosis, showing how LPS leakage, SCFA deficiency, and altered bile acids contribute to insulin resistance and hyperandrogenism. Microbiome-based therapies, including probiotics, prebiotics, and IL-22, show strong promise.
What Was Reviewed?
This review presented a comprehensive analysis of the multifactorial causes, pathophysiology, and therapeutic approaches for polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS). It placed particular emphasis on the role of gut microbiota dysbiosis and its systemic effects on insulin resistance, hyperandrogenism, and chronic inflammation. In addition to outlining traditional treatments, the paper critically evaluated emerging therapies such as probiotics, prebiotics, fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT), miRNA modulation, and IL-22 therapy. This review serves as a key resource for clinicians seeking a holistic understanding of PCOS, connecting microbiome research with endocrine and metabolic interventions.
Who Was Reviewed?
The review synthesized findings from a wide array of clinical studies, animal models, and experimental trials. It referenced data involving women of reproductive age diagnosed with various phenotypes of PCOS, including both obese and lean individuals. It incorporated rodent models, especially those induced by androgens or letrozole, to simulate PCOS pathology and examine microbiome manipulation outcomes. In its assessment of microbiota, the review drew from sequencing studies and intervention trials using specific probiotic strains such as Lactobacillus acidophilus, L. casei, Bifidobacterium bifidum, and prebiotics like inulin and resistant dextrin. These references grounded its recommendations in translational and mechanistic evidence.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The review outlined several critical findings that directly connect gut microbiota dysbiosis with the clinical hallmarks of PCOS. A key mechanism involves increased gut permeability due to decreased populations of beneficial bacteria like Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium, alongside an overgrowth of pro-inflammatory species such as Escherichia coli and Shigella. This dysbiosis allows lipopolysaccharides (LPS) to enter systemic circulation, stimulating immune responses that impair insulin receptor function and exacerbate insulin resistance. Hyperinsulinemia then stimulates androgen production by ovarian theca cells and reduces SHBG levels, increasing free testosterone and fueling PCOS symptoms.
The review also addressed microbial metabolites, particularly short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) and bile acids. Women with PCOS showed reduced production of SCFAs like butyrate, which are vital for maintaining gut integrity and regulating inflammation. Moreover, altered bile acid profiles—especially reductions in glycodeoxycholic and tauroursodeoxycholic acid—were linked to disrupted hormonal balance and metabolic dysfunction. These major microbial associations (MMAs) illustrate how gut microbiota interact with ovarian steroidogenesis, glucose homeostasis, and the immune axis in PCOS.
Importantly, the review highlighted the therapeutic potential of microbiota restoration. Probiotic supplementation with specific strains led to improvements in insulin sensitivity, lipid profiles, and androgen levels. Prebiotics such as resistant dextrin demonstrated similar metabolic benefits. FMTs in animal models reversed hyperandrogenism and restored menstrual cycles, suggesting strong translational potential. Additionally, novel pathways involving IL-22 and miRNA regulation offer future targets for microbial and metabolic rebalancing in PCOS.
What Are the Implications of This Review?
This review has profound implications for the clinical management of PCOS. It reframes the condition as a microbiota-linked systemic disorder rather than solely an endocrine one. By mapping specific microbial patterns to the hallmarks of PCOS—including hyperandrogenism, insulin resistance, and anovulation—the authors offer a rationale for gut-targeted diagnostics and treatments. Clinicians may soon assess microbiome composition as part of a diagnostic workup, particularly in patients with metabolic dysfunction but unclear hormonal profiles.
Furthermore, the review validates a multi-pronged therapeutic strategy, integrating microbiota restoration with hormonal, metabolic, and reproductive targets. The demonstrated success of Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium supplementation in improving PCOS biomarkers supports the clinical use of probiotics. Similarly, FMT, while currently limited to preclinical studies, presents a compelling intervention with the potential to reset dysregulated metabolic-hormonal loops. Lastly, novel therapies like IL-22 and miRNA modulation could personalize treatment, especially for patients with inflammatory or resistant phenotypes. Overall, this review builds a clear and actionable bridge between microbiome science and PCOS clinical care.
Polycystic ovary syndrome: pathophysiology and therapeutic opportunities
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This review presents PCOS as a multisystem disorder driven by gut dysbiosis, neuroendocrine disruption, and adipose androgen synthesis. Targeting B. vulgatus, IL-22, and AKR1C3 may offer novel interventions.
What Was Reviewed?
This comprehensive review synthesized current evidence on the pathophysiology of polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) and emerging therapeutic opportunities. It explored how PCOS results from a combination of polygenic susceptibility, environmental influences, and developmental programming. The review paid particular attention to neuroendocrine disruption, androgen biosynthesis, insulin resistance, and the role of gut microbiota and adipose tissue function. It integrated findings from clinical and experimental models to explain the disease's reproductive and metabolic features and offered a detailed examination of therapeutic agents in development, including kisspeptin agonists, neurokinin 3 receptor antagonists, AKR1C3 inhibitors, GLP-1 receptor agonists, and microbiota-based interventions. These insights provided a modern framework for targeting PCOS not just as a reproductive disorder, but as a systemic, multifactorial syndrome with metabolic and microbial roots.
Who Was Reviewed?
The review analyzed studies involving a broad population of women with PCOS from various ethnic backgrounds and phenotypic subtypes. It included data from clinical cohorts, epidemiological studies, and preclinical models such as letrozole- and androgen-induced rodent models. Patients ranged in metabolic phenotype, encompassing lean and obese subtypes with or without insulin resistance. The review also drew on human genome-wide association studies (GWAS), metagenomic studies, and randomized controlled trials investigating microbiota and hormonal therapies. The diversity of sources allowed the authors to assess pathophysiological mechanisms relevant to both early onset and chronic PCOS progression.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
One of the most critical findings is the multifaceted etiology of PCOS, with gut microbiota emerging as a pivotal player. Women with PCOS exhibit increased levels of Bacteroides vulgatus and decreased concentrations of beneficial bile acids such as glycodeoxycholic acid and tauroursodeoxycholic acid. In mouse models, oral gavage with B. vulgatus or fecal samples from PCOS patients induced insulin resistance, ovarian morphological disruption, and hyperandrogenism. These effects were mediated partly through suppressed interleukin-22 (IL-22) production and altered bile acid metabolism. Supplementation with IL-22 or bile acids reversed some PCOS-like features, reinforcing the causal role of microbial dysbiosis. Other major microbial associations (MMAs) include increased LPS-producing gram-negative bacteria and reduced SCFA-producing species like Faecalibacterium prausnitzii, which impair gut barrier integrity and promote systemic inflammation.
The review also underscored that hyperinsulinemia not only drives androgen production but suppresses SHBG, creating a feedback loop of worsening endocrine dysfunction. Adipose tissue contributes actively to androgen synthesis, particularly via AKR1C3, which converts adrenal-derived precursors into potent 11-oxygenated androgens. These metabolites have comparable potency to testosterone and correlate strongly with metabolic risk in PCOS. Additionally, neuroendocrine irregularities, particularly increased kisspeptin and GnRH pulsatility, exacerbate LH-driven androgen excess. The convergence of these pathways—microbial, hormonal, metabolic—solidifies PCOS as a systemic condition requiring holistic intervention strategies.
What Are the Implications of This Review?
This review reframes PCOS as a neuro-metabolic disorder deeply intertwined with gut microbial composition and function. Clinicians should consider integrating microbiome assessment into PCOS diagnostics, especially in patients with lean phenotypes or atypical presentations. Therapeutically, the review paves the way for microbiota-targeted strategies such as IL-22 modulation, bile acid supplementation, and personalized probiotics. The consistent microbial shifts identified—especially involving Bacteroides vulgatus and SCFA-producing taxa—could serve as biomarkers or therapeutic targets. Moreover, understanding the role of AKR1C3 in adipose-driven androgen synthesis opens a novel therapeutic avenue for endocrine normalization. This work also highlights the value of targeting kisspeptin and neurokinin pathways, providing hormone-specific modulation without systemic suppression. In totality, the review advocates for multi-system treatment strategies that address not just fertility and cosmetic concerns, but long-term cardiometabolic health.
Possible Therapeutic Mechanisms and Future Perspectives of Vaginal Microbiota Transplantation
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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The study reviewed Vaginal Microbiome Transplant (VMT) as a treatment for dysbiotic vaginal microbiomes, particularly for recurrent bacterial vaginosis. It discussed the potential of restoring a healthy microbiota dominated by Lactobacillus through VMT. Initial clinical trials showed promising results, with a significant recovery rate among participants. The findings suggest VMT could become a crucial non-pharmacological option for managing and potentially curing conditions linked to vaginal microbiome imbalances, enhancing gynecological and possibly broader systemic health.
What was studied?
The study explored the therapeutic mechanisms and future perspectives of Vaginal Microbiota Transplantation (VMT). It focused on transferring healthy vaginal microbiota from a donor to recipients with dysbiotic vaginal microbiomes to restore normal microbial composition and function.
Who was studied?
The study didn’t involve direct experimentation on individuals. Instead, it reviewed existing research and clinical trials regarding VMT, particularly looking at cases involving recipients with recurrent bacterial vaginosis treated via VMT.
What were the most important findings?
Key findings highlighted VMT’s potential effectiveness in treating recurrent bacterial vaginosis, with a significant portion of the patients achieving recovery. The study emphasized the role of healthy Lactobacillus-dominated microbiota in restoring vaginal health, though noting the small sample sizes and uncontrolled designs of current studies.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The greatest implications include the potential of VMT as a non-invasive, microbiota-based therapy for managing and potentially curing bacterial vaginosis and similar conditions caused by dysbiosis of the vaginal microbiome. This could lead to advancements in gynecological health treatments, reducing reliance on traditional pharmacological interventions and possibly affecting systemic health conditions linked to vaginal microbiota.
Postpartum Depression and Role of Serum Trace Elements
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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This review explores how deficiencies or imbalances in zinc, magnesium, iron, and copper contribute to postpartum depression. It supports trace element supplementation as a nonpharmacologic treatment strategy and calls for further research to solidify clinical protocols and explore microbiome interactions.
What Was Reviewed?
This review investigated the role of trace elements in the pathophysiology and potential treatment of postpartum depression (PPD). PPD, a subtype of major depressive disorder, affects up to 15% of women post-delivery and has significant implications for maternal mental health and child development. The authors reviewed human and animal studies linking altered levels of these trace elements to depressive symptoms in the postpartum period. Emphasis was placed on the biological mechanisms through which these elements influence neurotransmitter systems, hormonal balance, and neural development, all of which are implicated in the onset of PPD.
Who Was Reviewed?
The review drew from a diverse body of evidence, including clinical studies involving postpartum women, observational studies in non-pregnant depressed individuals, and animal models of depression. In particular, the authors examined data from populations at risk of nutrient deficiencies, such as women in developing countries and those consuming rice-based diets, as well as laboratory animals subjected to dietary or pharmacologic manipulations affecting trace element levels.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The review highlighted zinc, magnesium, iron, and copper as significant players in the neurobiological underpinnings of PPD. Zinc, the second most concentrated transition metal in the brain, influences neurotransmission, especially in serotonergic systems. Low serum zinc levels were consistently associated with depressive symptoms in postpartum women, and normalization followed antidepressant treatment. Magnesium plays a critical role in neurotransmitter metabolism and calcium channel regulation; its deficiency, especially due to fetal and lactational demands, was linked to depression-like behaviors and attenuated by supplementation in animal models. Iron deficiency, prevalent among women of reproductive age, impairs oxygen delivery, neurotransmitter synthesis, and myelination, all contributing to cognitive and mood disorders. Studies consistently showed that anemic women had more depressive symptoms postpartum. Copper’s role was more complex; while elevated levels were observed in some women with a history of PPD, other findings showed decreased levels in depressed individuals. Its involvement in catecholamine metabolism suggests both deficiency and excess can be problematic.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Review?
This review underscores the potential of using trace element profiling and supplementation as low-risk, accessible interventions for preventing or managing PPD. Given that many women avoid antidepressants due to concerns about side effects and transmission through breast milk, trace element therapy offers a compelling, nonpharmacologic alternative. Integrating micronutrient assessments into postpartum care could facilitate early identification of at-risk individuals and tailor nutritional strategies to mitigate mental health risks. Additionally, the review advocates for broader, longitudinal studies to establish causal links and optimize intervention protocols, ideally in tandem with microbiome research that could clarify nutrient-microbe-host interactions in maternal mental health.
Postpartum Depression in The Arab Region: A Systematic Literature Review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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This systematic review examines postpartum depression in Arab countries, revealing varying prevalence rates and highlighting socio-economic, marital, and health-related factors as major risk predictors. It advocates for routine screening and culturally sensitive interventions to address PPD effectively.
What was reviewed?
Thi review focused on the prevalence and risk factors of postpartum depression (PPD) in Arab countries. The review analyzed 25 studies that were published until February 2016, assessing PPD among mothers in various Arab countries. The studies included a combination of longitudinal and cross-sectional designs and investigated the various risk factors associated with PPD in the region. The primary aim was to determine the prevalence of PPD among Arab mothers and identify common risk factors such as socioeconomic status, obstetric complications, unwanted pregnancies, and family dynamics.
Who was reviewed?
The review focused on studies that examined PPD among mothers in Arab countries. The mothers studied were from diverse backgrounds, including urban and rural areas, and a range of socioeconomic statuses. These studies were conducted across various Arab countries, including the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Morocco, Lebanon, Egypt, Palestine, and others. The review considered studies that used tools like the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS), Mini-International Neuropsychiatric Interview (MINI), and Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) to assess the prevalence of PPD. These studies often considered both cultural and socio-economic variables, such as marital conflict, low income, and pregnancy complications, as potential risk factors for PPD.
What were the most important findings?
The review found that the prevalence of PPD in Arab countries varied widely, with some studies reporting prevalence rates as low as 8% and others as high as 74%. The majority of studies indicated a prevalence rate between 15-25%, consistent with rates found in other low and lower-middle-income countries. The studies revealed that the most significant risk factors for PPD in the Arab region included low socioeconomic status, unwanted pregnancies, marital and family conflicts, obstetric complications during pregnancy, and lack of social and partner support. Additionally, studies indicated that mothers who had infants with health issues, low birth weight, or who were formula-fed were more likely to experience PPD. Family dynamics, such as conflict with in-laws or lack of support from the husband, were also strong indicators. Several studies also noted that a history of depression, both personal and familial, significantly increased the likelihood of developing PPD.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review underscores the need for systematic interventions to address PPD in Arab countries. The high prevalence rates across the region emphasize the importance of integrating routine screening for PPD into postpartum care. Furthermore, the identification of socio-cultural and economic factors as major risk contributors suggests that culturally sensitive and appropriate mental health services must be developed and implemented. The review calls for policies that promote social support for new mothers, including improving marital relationships and reducing socioeconomic stress. The review also advocates for better training for healthcare providers to recognize and manage PPD, along with more widespread use of validated diagnostic tools such as the EPDS. In addition, the review highlights the need for more longitudinal studies to better understand the trajectory of PPD and its long-term effects on both mothers and their infants.
Premenstrual disorders and PMDD – a review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD) is a severe mood disorder linked to hormonal and neurochemical changes. Emerging research highlights the gut microbiome’s role in symptom modulation, opening new avenues for microbiome-targeted treatments alongside traditional therapies.
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Premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD) significantly impairs women’s lives due to abnormal sensitivity to hormonal fluctuations. Accurate diagnosis relies on prospective symptom tracking. Evidence supports SSRIs and hormonal treatments as effective management strategies. Emerging therapies and multidisciplinary care models promise improved outcomes for this complex and under-recognized disorder.
What was reviewed?
This paper provides a comprehensive review of premenstrual disorders (PMDs), with a specific focus on premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD). It synthesizes current knowledge regarding the definitions, classification, prevalence, diagnosis, etiology, and treatment of PMDs and PMDD. The review covers consensus guidelines from professional bodies such as the International Society for Premenstrual Disorders (ISPMD), diagnostic criteria from DSM-V and ICD-11, and evaluates various therapeutic approaches, including non-pharmacological interventions, pharmacotherapy (particularly SSRIs), hormonal treatments, novel agents targeting neuroactive steroids, and surgical options. It also highlights challenges in diagnosis, the significant impact on quality of life and suicidality risk, and research gaps.
Who was reviewed?
The review critically assesses a wide body of clinical, epidemiological, and mechanistic studies involving women experiencing PMDs and PMDD worldwide. It references population prevalence data, genetic and neurobiological studies, clinical trials evaluating treatments such as SSRIs and combined oral contraceptive pills (COCPs), and guidelines developed by multidisciplinary expert panels. The authors draw upon systematic reviews, randomized controlled trials, observational studies, and consensus statements to present a balanced perspective. The review specifically incorporates data related to symptom measurement tools like the Daily Record of Severity of Problems (DRSP) and discusses patient management strategies applicable in primary and specialist care settings.
What were the most important findings?
The review clarifies that PMDD represents a severe subset of PMDs, affecting approximately 5% of women, and carries significant physical, psychological, and social burdens, including a markedly increased risk of suicide attempts. It emphasizes that PMDD symptoms arise from abnormal sensitivity to normal menstrual hormonal fluctuations, especially allopregnanolone's paradoxical effect on GABA-A receptors, rather than altered hormone levels per se. Genetic factors, serotonergic dysregulation, inflammation, and stress history also contribute to pathophysiology. Accurate diagnosis depends on prospective symptom tracking over at least two menstrual cycles to confirm symptom cyclicity, severity, and functional impact.
Treatment must be multidisciplinary and individualized. SSRIs are the first-line pharmacological treatment, acting rapidly and effectively even when dosed intermittently in the luteal phase or symptom-onset, mitigating side effects associated with continuous dosing. Hormonal treatments, particularly COCPs containing drospirenone, show efficacy, though hormonal sensitivity varies and progestogen intolerance complicates therapy. Emerging therapies targeting allopregnanolone modulation and 5-alpha reductase inhibitors are under investigation but require further evidence. GnRH analogues and surgical oophorectomy remain options for severe refractory cases but carry significant risks, including bone density loss. Non-pharmacological approaches, including cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), dietary modifications, and supplements (calcium, magnesium, vitamin B6), provide complementary benefits.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review bridges the knowledge gap between evolving scientific insights into PMDD's neuroendocrine mechanisms and practical clinical management strategies. It advocates for a precision medicine approach tailored to individual hormonal sensitivities and symptom profiles. By synthesizing current evidence, it empowers clinicians to improve diagnostic accuracy through prospective symptom monitoring, recognize the disorder’s profound impact on mental health, and adopt evidence-based treatments, minimizing side effects. The emphasis on rapid SSRI efficacy and flexible dosing regimens offers clinicians practical tools to enhance adherence and patient quality of life. Moreover, highlighting the multidisciplinary nature of optimal care and emerging pharmacotherapies signals future directions for research and therapeutic innovation.
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder and the Brain
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD) is a severe mood disorder linked to hormonal and neurochemical changes. Emerging research highlights the gut microbiome’s role in symptom modulation, opening new avenues for microbiome-targeted treatments alongside traditional therapies.
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PMDD involves altered brain activation in prefrontal regions tied to hormone sensitivity. Symptoms appear cyclically with hormonal fluctuations, distinguishing it from other mood disorders. Understanding this brain-hormone interaction aids targeted treatment and improves clinical recognition of PMDD.
What was reviewed?
This paper reviewed the neurological basis of premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD), emphasizing its recognition as a distinct mood disorder linked to menstrual cycle hormonal fluctuations. It summarized advances in brain imaging and neurophysiological studies demonstrating altered brain function in PMDD patients, particularly in prefrontal cortex regions involved in executive function and emotion regulation. The review highlighted the significance of hormone sensitivity, especially to estradiol and progesterone, and how these hormonal changes affect cerebral blood flow and neural activation patterns in women with PMDD compared to controls.
Who was reviewed?
The review focused on women diagnosed with PMDD according to rigorous DSM criteria, including prospective symptom tracking. It integrated findings from neuroimaging studies (fMRI, PET), hormonal manipulation paradigms (gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonist followed by hormone add-back), and psychophysiological assessments conducted on small to moderate cohorts of women with PMDD and matched healthy controls. The studies collectively evaluated brain activation, cerebral blood flow, neurotransmitter activity, and behavioral correlates of hormone-driven mood symptoms.
What were the most important findings?
The review underscored that women with PMDD show abnormal activation in the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and medial frontal gyrus during cognitive tasks, regardless of hormonal state, suggesting a trait vulnerability. Brain activation differences correlated with symptom severity, especially irritability, which is a hallmark PMDD symptom. The cerebellum also showed heightened activity in PMDD. The disorder’s symptom manifestation requires the fluctuating hormonal environment of the luteal phase, implicating hormone sensitivity as a key pathophysiological factor. Unlike other mood disorders, PMDD’s brain dysfunction is specifically linked to normal hormonal changes rather than baseline abnormalities, explaining the cyclical nature of symptoms.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review clarifies that PMDD arises from an interaction between inherent brain vulnerabilities and normal hormonal fluctuations, particularly estradiol and progesterone. It encourages clinicians to view PMDD as a neurobiologically distinct disorder with predictable symptom timing linked to menstrual phases. These insights justify targeted hormonal and neuropharmacological treatments and support ongoing research into brain-based biomarkers and personalized therapies. The findings also highlight the importance of early diagnosis and symptom monitoring to improve patient care and quality of life for affected women.
Premenstrual dysphoric disorder-an undervalued diagnosis? A cross-sectional study in Hungarian women
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD) is a severe mood disorder linked to hormonal and neurochemical changes. Emerging research highlights the gut microbiome’s role in symptom modulation, opening new avenues for microbiome-targeted treatments alongside traditional therapies.
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Hungarian women with probable PMDD experience high rates of anxio-depressive symptoms and reduced well-being. Retrospective screening suggests higher-than-expected prevalence, highlighting the need for better diagnostic tools and tailored treatment to address this underrecognized disorder.
What was studied?
This cross-sectional study assessed the prevalence of probable premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD) among Hungarian women and examined the relationship between probable PMDD, anxio-depressive symptom severity, and overall well-being. The researchers aimed to validate a retrospective DSM-5-based PMDD screening tool in this population and explore psychological symptom patterns related to PMDD, using standardized questionnaires for depression, anxiety, and well-being.
Who was studied?
The study included 112 women of reproductive age from Hungary with regular menstrual cycles who were not using hormonal contraceptives and had no significant neurological, psychiatric, endocrine, or gynecological disorders. The participants were divided into two groups based on PMDD screening results: a probable PMDD group (n=67) and a non-PMDD group (n=45). They completed validated questionnaires measuring probable PMDD symptoms, anxio-depressive severity, and subjective well-being.
What were the most important findings?
The study revealed a surprisingly high prevalence of probable PMDD at nearly 60%, exceeding international estimates, which the authors attribute partly to retrospective screening limitations and recruitment bias. Women with probable PMDD reported significantly greater depressive and anxiety symptoms and lower well-being than controls, regardless of menstrual cycle phase. Logistic regression confirmed that higher anxiety and depression scores predicted probable PMDD diagnosis. The findings corroborate prior evidence that PMDD involves substantial psychological distress that impacts life quality. Notably, anxiety symptom severity did not vary significantly across cycle phases, suggesting persistent affective symptoms. These results highlight the challenges of accurate PMDD diagnosis, especially given the burden of prospective symptom tracking, and underscore the need for tailored psychological assessment and treatment strategies.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study emphasizes that probable PMDD is a prevalent and underrecognized condition that severely affects women's mental health and well-being, even beyond the premenstrual phase. It highlights the utility and limitations of retrospective screening tools in estimating PMDD prevalence and calls for improved diagnostic protocols that balance accuracy with practicality. The findings advocate for personalized mental health support and further research to refine diagnostic tools and treatment approaches tailored to the needs of women with PMDD, especially in underrepresented populations.
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder: Epidemiology and Treatment
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD) is a severe mood disorder linked to hormonal and neurochemical changes. Emerging research highlights the gut microbiome’s role in symptom modulation, opening new avenues for microbiome-targeted treatments alongside traditional therapies.
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This review delineates PMDD’s unique neurobiology, highlighting hormone sensitivity, GABAergic dysfunction, and stress interaction. SSRIs provide rapid symptom relief, with hormonal and behavioral therapies complementing care. It emphasizes precise diagnosis and individualized, multidisciplinary treatment to improve outcomes in this debilitating disorder.
What was reviewed?
This paper presents a thorough review of the epidemiology, pathophysiology, and treatment options for premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD). It examines PMDD’s diagnostic criteria as established by DSM-5, highlighting the importance of mood symptoms and prospective symptom tracking for accurate diagnosis. The review synthesizes current understanding of PMDD’s biological underpinnings, including the role of neurosteroids like allopregnanolone, estrogen’s influence on serotonergic systems, brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) polymorphisms, and the impact of stress and inflammation. It further explores neuroimaging and psychophysiological findings that differentiate PMDD from other affective disorders. The review then evaluates therapeutic approaches, emphasizing SSRIs as the first-line treatment and discussing intermittent dosing strategies, hormonal therapies, cognitive-behavioral therapy, and alternative treatments.
Who was reviewed?
The authors critically analyzed studies involving women diagnosed with PMDD across community and clinical samples worldwide. The review includes epidemiological data, genetic and neurobiological research, and clinical trials assessing treatment efficacy. It references consensus guidelines from psychiatric and gynecological professional bodies, neuroimaging studies comparing PMDD patients to healthy controls, and meta-analyses evaluating pharmacologic and psychotherapeutic interventions. The paper also integrates findings from animal models of hormone sensitivity and neurosteroid modulation relevant to PMDD pathophysiology.
What were the most important findings?
Women with PMDD do not differ in peripheral hormone levels but show altered GABA_A receptor function and neurosteroid sensitivity, contributing to affective symptoms. Estrogen’s modulation of serotonin receptors and transporters further implicates serotonergic dysregulation in PMDD. Genetic factors such as polymorphisms in estrogen receptor and serotonin transporter genes, as well as BDNF variants, may increase susceptibility. Stress history correlates with PMDD diagnosis and may influence neurosteroid responses and HPA axis regulation. Neuroimaging reveals structural and functional brain differences in areas regulating emotion and cognition, including the amygdala and prefrontal cortex, with altered GABA and glutamate levels detected in PMDD patients.
Regarding treatment, SSRIs demonstrate moderate to large effect sizes in symptom reduction, with rapid onset of action allowing for intermittent or symptom-onset dosing regimens that minimize side effects and improve adherence. Hormonal treatments, particularly combined oral contraceptives containing drospirenone, show some efficacy but with high placebo responses and variable individual tolerance. Cognitive-behavioral therapy provides sustained symptom improvement and complements pharmacotherapy, though combined approaches do not necessarily enhance outcomes beyond monotherapy. Alternative therapies such as calcium supplementation and omega-3 fatty acids offer limited benefits and require further validation.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review consolidates the complex neurobiological, genetic, and psychosocial factors contributing to PMDD, underscoring its distinction from other mood disorders and the importance of precision in diagnosis and treatment. It reinforces SSRIs as the cornerstone of pharmacotherapy and advocates for flexible dosing strategies tailored to symptom patterns, enhancing patient quality of life and medication adherence. The emerging understanding of neurosteroid modulation opens promising avenues for novel therapeutics targeting GABAergic pathways. The findings call for multidisciplinary, individualized treatment plans incorporating pharmacological, psychological, and lifestyle interventions. The review highlights gaps in long-term safety data for hormonal therapies and the need for improved diagnostic tools and biomarkers. Overall, it equips clinicians with an evidence-based framework to optimize PMDD management and encourages ongoing research to address unmet clinical needs.
Premenstrual dysphoric disorder: General overview, treatment strategies, and focus on sertraline for symptom-onset dosing
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD) is a severe mood disorder linked to hormonal and neurochemical changes. Emerging research highlights the gut microbiome’s role in symptom modulation, opening new avenues for microbiome-targeted treatments alongside traditional therapies.
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Symptom-onset dosing of sertraline effectively reduces PMDD symptoms, especially mood-related ones, with fewer side effects and limited drug exposure. This targeted approach offers a promising, patient-friendly alternative to continuous SSRI treatment for premenstrual dysphoric disorder.
What was studied?
This paper studied the efficacy and tolerability of symptom-onset dosing of sertraline, a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI), for the treatment of premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD). The focus was on assessing whether administering sertraline starting at the onset of PMDD symptoms, rather than continuous or luteal-phase dosing, could effectively reduce symptom severity and improve clinical outcomes over six menstrual cycles. The study also explored the side effect profile and discontinuation symptoms associated with this targeted treatment approach.
Who was studied?
The study population comprised 252 women with prospectively confirmed PMDD, aged approximately 34 years on average, predominantly white (around 70%), and without significant medical or psychiatric comorbidities. These participants were randomized into two groups: 125 women received flexible doses of sertraline (50–100 mg/day) beginning at symptom onset and continuing until menstruation began, while 127 women received placebo treatment following the same schedule.
What were the most important findings?
The study demonstrated that symptom-onset treatment with sertraline significantly reduced the severity of PMDD symptoms compared to placebo. Specifically, women treated with sertraline showed statistically significant improvements in depressive symptoms as measured by clinician-rated scales and a significant reduction in the daily record of problem severity, including the anger/irritability subscale. While the reduction in premenstrual tension ratings narrowly missed statistical significance, sertraline outperformed placebo in global improvement ratings and had higher clinical response rates (67% vs. 52%). Noticeably, emission rates were not significantly different. The average duration of sertraline use was only about seven days per menstrual cycle, minimizing exposure to the drug and related side effects. Adverse effects, primarily nausea and insomnia, were more common in the sertraline group, but abrupt discontinuation did not lead to withdrawal symptoms. These findings indicate that targeted, short-term SSRI treatment timed to symptom onset is effective and well tolerated in managing PMDD.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This research challenges traditional views that antidepressants require continuous administration to be effective in PMDD treatment by demonstrating that symptom-onset dosing with sertraline is both efficacious and has a favorable side effect profile. This approach minimizes medication exposure and associated adverse effects, potentially improving adherence and reducing treatment costs. It provides a practical strategy to manage PMDD symptoms precisely when needed, aligning with the disorder's cyclical nature. Future research is needed to compare symptom-onset dosing directly with luteal-phase and continuous dosing regimens and to explore treatment strategies for non-responders to symptom-onset sertraline. Clinically, this study supports personalized, flexible pharmacotherapy for PMDD, enhancing therapeutic outcomes while mitigating risks.
Premenstrual Syndrome and Exercise: A Narrative Review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS)
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS)
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS) involves physical and emotional symptoms linked to hormonal fluctuations. Recent research highlights the role of heavy metals and gut microbiome imbalances in worsening these symptoms. Lifestyle changes, microbiome-targeted therapies, and toxin reduction show promise in effective PMS management.
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This narrative review explores how exercise can help manage the symptoms of Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS), focusing on the physiological and psychological benefits of regular physical activity.
What was reviewed?
This narrative review examines the connection between Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS) and exercise. It explores the potential role of exercise in mitigating PMS symptoms and evaluates existing studies to understand how physical activity might alleviate both the physical and psychological impacts of PMS. The review also critiques the methodology of current research and emphasizes the need for further studies to refine exercise interventions for PMS management.
Who was reviewed?
The review targets women who experience PMS, particularly those suffering from physical, psychological, and behavioral symptoms that impact their quality of life. The study highlights the importance of understanding how exercise may serve as a complementary treatment for PMS. The aim is to improve the health outcomes and daily functioning of affected women.
What were the most important findings?
The review identifies key findings regarding the positive effects of exercise on PMS symptoms. PMS symptoms, which include fatigue, mood swings, bloating, and irritability, significantly impair women’s daily activities. The review suggests that exercise, especially aerobic and resistance exercises, can reduce these symptoms, improving both physical and psychological well-being. Regular physical activity helps decrease fatigue, relieve pain (including breast tenderness), and improve mood by regulating hormonal fluctuations. Studies reviewed show that exercise enhances estrogen and progesterone levels and promotes endorphin release, which further alleviates pain and stress.
Exercise improves overall well-being by stimulating the release of neurochemicals like endorphins, which play a crucial role in mood enhancement and pain reduction. Furthermore, exercise reduces the impact of PMS on daily life, including work performance and social engagement. However, the review highlights the inconsistency across studies regarding the optimal exercise prescription for PMS. It calls for more detailed research to determine the best exercise duration, intensity, and frequency needed to achieve maximum benefit.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review suggests that exercise is a cost-effective, accessible, and powerful non-pharmacological approach to managing PMS. It encourages clinicians to incorporate exercise recommendations into treatment plans, considering the physical and psychological benefits it offers. Regular physical activity can serve as a complementary treatment alongside pharmacological options, especially for women seeking a holistic management approach. The review also stresses the importance of personalized exercise prescriptions tailored to individual needs and symptom profiles. As research on exercise and PMS continues to evolve, clearer guidelines will emerge, allowing healthcare providers to better support women with PMS through structured exercise programs.
Premenstrual Syndrome and Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder as Centrally Based Disorders
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD) is a severe mood disorder linked to hormonal and neurochemical changes. Emerging research highlights the gut microbiome’s role in symptom modulation, opening new avenues for microbiome-targeted treatments alongside traditional therapies.
•
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS)
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS)
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS) involves physical and emotional symptoms linked to hormonal fluctuations. Recent research highlights the role of heavy metals and gut microbiome imbalances in worsening these symptoms. Lifestyle changes, microbiome-targeted therapies, and toxin reduction show promise in effective PMS management.
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PMS and PMDD stem from neuroendocrine and neurochemical imbalances, especially altered allopregnanolone and GABA activity. Hormonal and neuroactive therapies improve symptoms, while microbiome and neuroinflammation represent promising research areas.
What was studied?
This review examined the neuroendocrine and neurobiological mechanisms underlying Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS) and Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD), emphasizing their classification as centrally based disorders influenced by hormonal fluctuations. It also discussed current and novel therapeutic strategies targeting neuroactive steroids and neuroinflammation in PMS/PMDD.
Who was studied?
The review synthesized findings from clinical, neuroimaging, pharmacological, and molecular studies involving women diagnosed with PMS and PMDD across various reproductive stages, incorporating prospective symptom tracking and biochemical assessments to explore hormone-neurotransmitter interactions and brain sensitivity.
What were the most important findings?
The review highlighted that PMS and PMDD are neuro-hormonal disorders marked by increased central nervous system sensitivity to normal cyclical fluctuations of estrogens and progesterone, especially its metabolite allopregnanolone. This neurosteroid modulates GABA_A receptor activity, affecting mood regulation, and its altered function correlates with emotional and behavioral symptoms in PMDD. Impairments in opioid and serotonergic systems also contribute. Neuroinflammation via GABAergic pathways and elevated pro-inflammatory markers may play a role. Treatment focuses on stabilizing hormones, mainly with combined hormonal contraception, and modulating neuroactive steroids. SSRIs reduce symptoms by affecting serotonin pathways. Novel therapies targeting neurosteroid pathways, including progesterone receptor modulators, 5α-reductase inhibitors, and GABA_A receptor antagonists, show promise. However, treatment responses vary depending on hormonal regimens and individual profiles. Emerging evidence also suggests the gut-brain axis and microbiome influence symptom severity through neuroimmune interactions, though further study is needed.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This review consolidates the understanding of PMS/PMDD as disorders rooted in neuroendocrine and neurochemical dysregulation, shifting the clinical perspective from purely gynecological or psychiatric frameworks to integrated neurobiological models. It underscores the necessity for personalized therapeutic approaches that combine hormonal regulation with neuroactive agents. The identification of neuroinflammation and microbiome influences opens novel research pathways and potential non-hormonal interventions. Clinicians should consider both established and emerging treatments to optimize symptom control, and researchers must prioritize elucidating the gut-brain interactions and refining neurosteroid-targeted therapies for improved patient outcomes.
Premenstrual syndrome, a common but underrated entity: review of the clinical literature
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS)
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS)
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS) involves physical and emotional symptoms linked to hormonal fluctuations. Recent research highlights the role of heavy metals and gut microbiome imbalances in worsening these symptoms. Lifestyle changes, microbiome-targeted therapies, and toxin reduction show promise in effective PMS management.
•
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD) is a severe mood disorder linked to hormonal and neurochemical changes. Emerging research highlights the gut microbiome’s role in symptom modulation, opening new avenues for microbiome-targeted treatments alongside traditional therapies.
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This review explores premenstrual syndrome (PMS) and premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD), focusing on symptoms, prevalence, risk factors, and treatment options.
What was reviewed?
This paper is a review of the clinical literature concerning premenstrual syndrome (PMS) and premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD). It focuses on their symptoms, prevalence, risk factors, etiology, and current diagnostic criteria. The review examines treatment options ranging from lifestyle changes to pharmacological interventions, and it highlights the impact of PMS and PMDD on women's health.
Who was reviewed?
The review focuses on the clinical characteristics and findings related to PMS and PMDD in women of reproductive age. It draws from a wide range of studies to summarize the current understanding of these conditions, examining both epidemiological data and clinical treatments.
What were the most important findings?
The review identifies key characteristics of PMS and PMDD, noting that these disorders manifest during the luteal phase of the menstrual cycle and subside with menstruation. It was found that PMS affects a significant portion of the female population, with the prevalence ranging from 10% to 98%, while PMDD affects 2-8% of women. Symptoms can be physical, such as bloating and breast tenderness, or psychological, including mood swings, irritability, and anxiety. The pathogenesis of PMS and PMDD is linked to hormonal fluctuations, particularly estrogen and progesterone, and the interaction of these hormones with central neurotransmitter systems, notably serotonin, GABA, and beta-endorphins.
The review highlights serotonin’s role in the pathogenesis, with women experiencing PMS showing lower serotonin levels in various bodily fluids. Although the exact cause remains unclear, studies suggest that serotonin may be the key mediator of the mood symptoms seen in these disorders. The review also addresses the controversial role of vitamins and minerals in the treatment of PMS, with limited evidence supporting their efficacy over a placebo. Furthermore, it outlines various therapeutic approaches, such as selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), combined oral contraceptives (COCs), and lifestyle changes, which have been shown to improve symptoms in many patients.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review underscores the importance of recognizing PMS and PMDD as significant health issues that can affect a woman’s quality of life. It suggests that, despite their prevalence, these disorders are often underdiagnosed. The review calls for better recognition and diagnosis, particularly using prospective symptom tracking over multiple cycles, as is recommended by the DSM-5 for diagnosing PMDD. Clinicians should consider both pharmacological and non-pharmacological treatments based on the severity of symptoms, as well as individualized care strategies, including SSRIs and COCs for more severe cases. Furthermore, the review suggests that future research should focus on understanding the complex hormonal and neurotransmitter interactions that underpin PMS and PMDD, potentially offering new avenues for treatment development.
Premenstrual syndrome: New insights into etiology and review of treatment methods
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
•
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS)
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS)
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS) involves physical and emotional symptoms linked to hormonal fluctuations. Recent research highlights the role of heavy metals and gut microbiome imbalances in worsening these symptoms. Lifestyle changes, microbiome-targeted therapies, and toxin reduction show promise in effective PMS management.
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This review examines the latest insights into the etiology and treatment of Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS) and Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD), focusing on hormonal and neurosteroid imbalances.
What was reviewed?
This paper is a review of the etiology and treatment options for Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS) and Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD). It examines the underlying causes of these conditions, including hormonal fluctuations, neurotransmitter imbalances, and the role of neurosteroids like allopregnanolone. The review also analyzes a variety of treatment options, including pharmacological methods (SSRIs, hormonal therapies, neurosteroid treatments) and non-pharmacological interventions, to provide a comprehensive overview of how PMS and PMDD can be managed.
Who was reviewed?
The review focuses on women of reproductive age who experience PMS and PMDD, with special attention to those who suffer from severe symptoms that significantly impair their daily functioning. The article explores clinical data and findings from various studies to provide a thorough understanding of the disorder's impact on women's health, as well as the varying responses to treatment.
What were the most important findings?
The review highlights several key findings about the etiology and treatment of PMS and PMDD. One of the most significant insights is the role of hormonal fluctuations, particularly the progesterone metabolite allopregnanolone, in the onset of PMS symptoms. It is noted that this metabolite modulates the GABA-A receptor in the central nervous system (CNS), which may explain some of the mood and anxiety-related symptoms of PMS. The review also underscores the complexity of the disorder, as it involves multiple physiological systems, including the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis and neurotransmitter pathways such as serotonin.
SSRIs, commonly used to manage mood symptoms, provide rapid relief and are considered the first-line pharmacological treatment for severe cases. Hormonal therapies, particularly those that stabilize estrogen and progesterone levels, are also effective but require careful selection to avoid exacerbating symptoms. The review suggests that therapies targeting neurosteroids like allopregnanolone may offer new avenues for treatment, although more research is needed. In terms of treatment strategies, the review emphasizes the importance of personalized care, where treatments are tailored to individual symptoms and underlying mechanisms. For instance, oral contraceptives containing drospirenone and ethinylestradiol are effective for controlling physical symptoms, while SSRIs are more beneficial for psychological symptoms.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The greatest implication of this review is the need for a more nuanced approach to diagnosing and treating PMS and PMDD. By understanding the complex hormonal and neurochemical interactions involved, clinicians can better tailor treatments to individual patients. The review suggests that effective treatment goes beyond symptom alleviation to address the root causes of the disorders. Additionally, the paper points to the importance of considering non-pharmacological interventions alongside medications, particularly for patients who experience mild to moderate symptoms. Future research into the role of neurosteroids and their modulation in the CNS could lead to more targeted treatments with fewer side effects.
Presence of metalloestrogens in ectopic endometrial tissue
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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This study examined the presence of metalloestrogens in ectopic endometrial tissue from fifty women diagnosed with endometriosis. Cadmium, nickel, and lead were found in all tissue samples, with nickel and lead showing particularly high concentrations. These findings suggest that metalloestrogens play a role in the etiology of endometriosis by interacting with estrogen receptors, emphasizing environmental pollutants' role in endometriosis progression.
What was studied?
This study investigated the presence of metalloestrogens in ectopic endometrial tissue from women with endometriosis. Metalloestrogens, heavy metals that can mimic estrogen and may contribute to estrogen-dependent diseases, were the focus, particularly regarding their potential role in the persistence and pathology of endometriosis. The researchers specifically analyzed levels of cadmium, nickel, and lead in ectopic endometrial samples using advanced metal detection techniques, Total Reflection X-ray Fluorescence (TXRF) and Graphite Furnace Atomic Absorption Spectroscopy (GFASS).
Who was studied?
The study included fifty women of reproductive age diagnosed with endometriosis via laparoscopy or laparotomy at the Professorial Gynecology Unit of the National Hospital, Colombo, Sri Lanka, during 2009-2010. The participants underwent these procedures for diagnosis or treatment, and endometriotic tissue samples were collected during surgery. The participants presented with varied symptoms like infertility, dysmenorrhea, chronic pelvic pain, and endometriomas.
What were the most important findings?
The study found significant levels of cadmium, nickel, and lead in all ectopic endometrial tissue samples. Specifically, geometric mean concentrations were reported as follows: cadmium (2.861 μg/Kg), nickel (17.547 μg/Kg), and lead (25.785 μg/Kg). The concentrations varied by tissue site, with the ovarian endometrioma wall showing higher, though not statistically significant, metal levels than pelvic endometrial patches or nodules in the pouch of Douglas.
Implications
This study is one of the first to identify and quantify metalloestrogens in ectopic endometrial tissue, shedding light on a possible environmental and molecular link to endometriosis. It underscores the mechanism by which these metals could perpetuate endometriosis, given their ability to interact with estrogen receptors in ectopic tissue. The implications are substantial for public health, especially given the widespread environmental exposure to metals such as cadmium, nickel, and lead. These findings suggest that environmental pollution may play a significant role in the etiology and progression of endometriosis, calling for further investigation into the estrogen-mimicking properties of environmental metals and their regulation. Additionally, the study highlights the need for preventive measures to reduce heavy metal exposure to nickel and lead, particularly among women susceptible to estrogen-related diseases.
Presence of metalloestrogens in ectopic endometrial tissue
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This study quantified metalloestrogens—cadmium, nickel, and lead—in ectopic endometrial tissue, suggesting their role in endometriosis persistence.
What Was Studied?
This study investigated the presence of metalloestrogens—heavy metals with estrogenic effects—in ectopic endometrial tissue. Metalloestrogens, such as cadmium, nickel, and lead, have been implicated in estrogen-dependent diseases like endometriosis. The study aimed to quantify these metals in ectopic endometrial tissues from women diagnosed with endometriosis, using advanced analytical techniques.
Who Was Studied?
The study included 50 women of reproductive age who had endometriosis confirmed through laparotomy or laparoscopy. The participants were patients from a gynecology unit at a tertiary care hospital in Sri Lanka. Samples of ectopic endometrial tissue were collected from these women during surgical procedures, and the disease severity was classified based on the Revised American Society for Reproductive Medicine classification system.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study found significant levels of three metalloestrogens—cadmium (2.861 µg/kg), nickel (17.547 µg/kg), and lead (25.785 µg/kg)—in all ectopic endometrial tissue samples analyzed. Among these, lead exhibited the highest concentration. The study is notable for being the first to report the quantitative detection of metalloestrogens in ectopic endometrial tissue. Notably, the presence of these metals varied slightly depending on the tissue site, such as the wall of an endometrioma or nodules in the pelvic region, though these differences were not statistically significant. The findings suggest a potential role for environmental metalloestrogens in the persistence and progression of endometriosis.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
The detection of metalloestrogens in ectopic endometrial tissue underscores their role in the etiology and maintenance of endometriosis. These metals may act as endocrine disruptors, binding to estrogen receptors in ectopic tissue and mimicking estrogenic effects, thereby contributing to the persistence of the disease. The findings highlight the need for further research to elucidate the mechanistic pathways by which metalloestrogens influence endometriosis. Clinicians should consider environmental exposures and diet as a factor in managing and preventing this condition.
Prevalence and associated factors of premenstrual dysphoric disorder among high school students in Finote Selam town, northwest Ethiopia
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD) is a severe mood disorder linked to hormonal and neurochemical changes. Emerging research highlights the gut microbiome’s role in symptom modulation, opening new avenues for microbiome-targeted treatments alongside traditional therapies.
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Among Ethiopian high school girls, PMDD affects one-third, linked to irregular cycles, depression, prolonged menstruation, and stress. Early screening and mental health support are crucial to improving well-being and academic success.
What was studied?
This cross-sectional study examined the prevalence of premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD) and its associated factors among high school female students in Finote Selam town, northwest Ethiopia. Using DSM-5 criteria and self-administered questionnaires, the study aimed to quantify PMDD prevalence and identify clinical, psychosocial, and menstrual-related predictors affecting this population's mental health and academic performance.
Who was studied?
The research included 548 high school female students aged 15 to 22 years with regular menstrual cycles, excluding those with serious illness or recent school transfers. Participants completed validated questionnaires assessing PMDD symptoms, depression, perceived stress, social support, menstrual characteristics, and behavioral factors such as substance use.
What were the most important findings?
The study found a high PMDD prevalence (33%), with physical symptoms like breast tenderness and fatigue being most common. Key factors significantly associated with PMDD included irregular menstrual cycles, depressive symptoms, longer menstruation duration, and high perceived stress. PMDD significantly impacted academic performance, social functioning, and psychological well-being. The findings aligned with prior Ethiopian and African studies but were higher than reports from developed countries, possibly reflecting sociocultural, infrastructural, and menstrual hygiene differences influencing symptom expression and health-seeking behaviors.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study highlights PMDD as a prevalent and underrecognized condition adversely affecting adolescent females' mental health and educational outcomes in low-resource settings. It emphasizes the urgent need for early screening, stress reduction interventions, and targeted mental health support within primary healthcare and school systems. Addressing menstrual health education, improving hygiene management, and mitigating psychosocial stressors could reduce PMDD burden and improve quality of life. These insights guide clinicians and policymakers toward culturally sensitive, accessible strategies for PMDD diagnosis and management in similar populations.
Probiotics and Polycystic Ovary Syndrome: A Perspective for Management in Adolescents with Obesity
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This review highlights how probiotic and synbiotic supplementation improves insulin resistance, inflammation, and androgen levels in obese adolescents with PCOS. Microbiome modulation offers a promising non-pharmacological therapy.
What was reviewed?
This narrative review explored the potential role of probiotics and synbiotics in managing polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) in adolescents with obesity. The authors conducted a non-systematic analysis of meta-analyses, clinical trials, and reviews published in the past two decades, aiming to assess whether probiotic supplementation can improve hormonal balance, metabolic profiles, inflammation, and overall PCOS symptomatology. The review sought to consolidate findings about the interaction between obesity, dysbiosis, and PCOS, especially in adolescents, and how targeting the gut microbiome with probiotics could serve as a preventive or therapeutic intervention.
Who was reviewed?
The review focused on adolescent females aged 10–19 with obesity and PCOS, a group particularly susceptible to metabolic and reproductive dysfunction due to overlapping hormonal, genetic, and environmental factors. The included studies comprised both animal and human trials, with some focusing exclusively on adult women while others incorporated adolescent data. The microbiome's role was assessed through its relationship with hyperandrogenism, insulin resistance, inflammatory markers, and hormonal modulation. The review emphasized evidence from randomized controlled trials and meta-analyses but acknowledged that many studies were conducted in adult populations, underscoring the need for adolescent-specific research.
What were the most important findings?
The review identified a clear link between obesity, PCOS, and gut dysbiosis. PCOS is associated with reduced microbial diversity, an imbalance in Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes ratio, and an overrepresentation of pathogenic bacteria like Escherichia and Shigella, accompanied by a reduction in beneficial Lactobacilli and Bifidobacteria. Dysbiosis appears to impair gut barrier integrity and promote systemic inflammation through increased intestinal permeability and lipopolysaccharide (LPS) translocation. These microbial alterations are connected to heightened insulin resistance, elevated testosterone, and disrupted follicular development.
Probiotic supplementation was shown to improve several PCOS-related outcomes. Studies reported reductions in serum testosterone, free androgen index (FAI), HOMA-IR, weight, and BMI. Simultaneously, increases in SHBG, nitric oxide, glutathione, and anti-inflammatory cytokines (e.g., IL-10) were observed. Notably, probiotic strains such as Lactobacillus acidophilus, L. rhamnosus, L. plantarum, Bifidobacterium bifidum, and B. lactis were associated with improved hormonal and metabolic outcomes. The production of short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs), particularly butyrate, played a key mechanistic role by reducing inflammation, improving insulin sensitivity, and restoring gut-ovary axis balance. Additionally, synbiotic supplementation (combining probiotics with prebiotics like inulin or FOS) yielded superior outcomes in some studies, especially in reducing testosterone levels.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review underscores the promising role of microbiome-targeted interventions, particularly probiotics and synbiotics, in managing PCOS among adolescents with obesity. While conventional treatments like metformin and oral contraceptives address insulin resistance and hyperandrogenism, they are often accompanied by side effects and limited adherence, especially in young patients. In contrast, probiotics offer a well-tolerated, non-invasive strategy to modulate gut microbiota, reduce systemic inflammation, and improve endocrine function. Clinicians should consider the gut–brain–ovary axis as a central pathway in PCOS pathophysiology and incorporate microbiome-informed interventions alongside dietary and lifestyle modifications. Given the preventive potential of early microbiome modulation, probiotic use in high-risk adolescent populations may help mitigate long-term metabolic and reproductive complications. However, further longitudinal and adolescent-focused clinical trials are essential to refine strain-specific recommendations, dosage, and duration for optimal therapeutic benefit.
Profile of Bile Acid Metabolomics in the Follicular Fluid of PCOS Patients
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This study reveals elevated primary and conjugated bile acids in follicular fluid of PCOS patients, suggesting a novel ovarian micro-environmental role in ovulation dysfunction and potential links to gut microbiota.
What was studied?
This study examined the profile of bile acid metabolomics in the follicular fluid (FF) of women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS). For the first time, researchers evaluated how the composition of bile acids in the ovarian micro-environment differs between PCOS and non-PCOS women, aiming to elucidate the potential roles of bile acids in follicular development and ovulatory dysfunction. Using ultra-performance liquid chromatography coupled with tandem mass spectrometry (UPLC-MS/MS), the study quantified 24 bile acid metabolites and assessed their clinical correlations in relation to hormone levels and ovarian characteristics.
Who was studied?
The study included 35 women diagnosed with PCOS based on the Rotterdam criteria and 31 control women undergoing assisted reproduction for male or tubal factor infertility, all with normal menstrual cycles and ovarian function. All participants were under 40 years old and had no history of endocrine disorders, ovarian surgery, or liver dysfunction. The researchers ensured matched baseline characteristics, such as liver enzyme levels and BMI, to avoid confounding bile acid data with liver metabolism variations. Follicular fluid was collected during oocyte retrieval procedures as part of IVF or ICSI cycles.
What were the most important findings?
The study identified a distinct alteration in bile acid composition in the follicular fluid of PCOS patients. Although the total bile acid concentration was not significantly different, specific metabolites showed statistically significant elevations. Four bile acid metabolites, glycocholic acid (GCA), taurocholic acid (TCA), glycochenodeoxycholic acid (GCDCA), and chenodeoxycholic acid-3-β-D-glucuronide (CDCA-3Gln), were significantly higher in PCOS FF compared to controls. The increase was most notable in conjugated and primary bile acids, while levels of secondary and unconjugated bile acids remained unchanged.
GCDCA demonstrated a positive correlation with serum FSH and LH, suggesting its potential involvement in disrupted folliculogenesis and ovulation associated with PCOS. Similarly, CDCA-3Gln correlated with antral follicle count (AFC), indicating a possible relationship with ovarian reserve status. Importantly, there was no association between these bile acid changes and insulin sensitivity, highlighting a potential ovary-specific bile acid dysregulation in PCOS independent of systemic insulin resistance. These bile acids, particularly the conjugated primary forms, may reflect altered bile acid metabolism influenced by gut microbiota, especially given prior reports linking intestinal flora with circulating bile acid changes in PCOS. Although not directly assessed in this study, the elevated GCA and TCA levels echo findings from serum metabolomics that suggest microbial contributions, possibly involving Bacteroides and Clostridium species known to interact with bile acid pools.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study underscores the potential role of bile acid metabolites as contributors to the pathophysiology of PCOS, particularly within the ovarian micro-environment. It suggests that bile acid dysregulation may impact granulosa cell function and follicular development, which could influence ovulation. Identifying FF bile acids as potential biomarkers opens new diagnostic and therapeutic avenues, particularly in targeting the bile acid signaling axis or modulating gut microbiota to restore metabolic balance within the ovary. The findings encourage a shift toward integrating ovarian metabolomics with systemic and microbiome data to better characterize PCOS subtypes and treatment targets.
Promising Drug Candidates for the Treatment of Polycystic Ovary Syndrome (PCOS) as Alternatives to the Classical Medication Metformin
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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The study evaluates the efficacy of Irosustat, STX140, and compound 1G as alternative treatments for PCOS, showing improvements in metabolic and hormonal profiles, with promising results on oxidative stress and inflammation markers. These compounds offer potential advantages over current PCOS therapies like metformin.
What was studied?
This study focused on identifying new drug candidates for the treatment of Polycystic Ovary Syndrome (PCOS), with an emphasis on evaluating the effects of various compounds on PCOS pathophysiology. The study investigated the use of Irosustat (STX64), STX140, and compound 1G as potential alternatives to metformin in managing symptoms related to hormonal imbalance, metabolic dysfunction, and oxidative stress commonly seen in PCOS.
Who was studied?
The study utilized female Wistar rats to investigate the therapeutic effects of these drug candidates. PCOS was induced in the rats by administering letrozole (1 mg/kg/day) for 35 days, with the onset of abnormal estrous cycles confirming the induction of the condition. Rats were then divided into treatment groups, with one group receiving metformin (500 mg/kg/day) as a reference drug, while the others received STX64, STX140, or 1G for 30 days. The effects were analyzed through biochemical measurements, oxidative stress markers, and histological studies.
What were the most important findings?
The study found that the drug candidates Irosustat, STX140, and compound 1G all demonstrated promising effects on PCOS-related features. Treatment with these compounds resulted in significant improvements in various biochemical parameters, including lipid profiles, blood glucose levels, and hormone levels (testosterone, progesterone, luteinizing hormone (LH), follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), and estradiol). These treatments also showed beneficial effects on oxidative stress and inflammation pathways, with improvements in Akt, mTOR, and AMPK-α signaling pathways. Histological studies revealed a reduction in the weight of ovaries and the disappearance of fluid-filled cysts in the treatment groups, suggesting potential for reversing ovarian morphology associated with PCOS. The drug candidates also demonstrated less adverse effect on metabolic parameters compared to untreated PCOS rats, thus highlighting their therapeutic potential as alternatives to metformin.
From a microbiome perspective, these improvements could be linked to the modulation of gut microbiota and reduced systemic inflammation. For example, Irosustat and STX140, by regulating androgen levels and improving metabolic health, may impact the gut's microbial balance, favoring beneficial bacteria that support metabolic functions and reduce inflammation. Additionally, these compounds' effects on oxidative stress markers could influence the gut-brain axis, which is crucial in the pathophysiology of PCOS.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The greatest implication of this study lies in the identification of promising drug candidates, particularly Irosustat, STX140, and compound 1G, as potential treatments for PCOS, especially for patients who do not tolerate metformin. These drug candidates work by targeting oxidative stress, inflammatory pathways, and hormonal imbalances, which are central to PCOS pathophysiology. The findings suggest that these drugs could offer a more comprehensive treatment approach compared to current options, potentially improving not only the metabolic and hormonal aspects of PCOS but also the quality of life for affected women. The study also opens the door for further exploration into the use of these compounds in human trials, highlighting the need for personalized treatment options for women with PCOS
Recurrent Bacterial Vaginosis Following Metronidazole Treatment is Associated with Microbiota Richness at Diagnosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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This study links high pre-treatment vaginal microbiota diversity to BV recurrence after metronidazole. Women with sustained clearance had lower richness. Lactobacillus iners improved immune markers temporarily, but no cases achieved L. crispatus dominance. Biofilm-forming taxa like Atopobium persisted, suggesting resistance mechanisms.
What was Studied?
This study investigated the association between pre-treatment vaginal microbiota composition and the likelihood of recurrent bacterial vaginosis (BV) following metronidazole treatment. The researchers analyzed cervicovaginal lavage samples from women diagnosed with BV using 16S rRNA gene sequencing to identify microbial signatures linked to treatment failure or success. The study aimed to determine whether specific microbiota characteristics at diagnosis could predict treatment outcomes, including transient clearance, sustained clearance, or recurrence of BV.
Who was Studied?
The study included 28 women diagnosed with symptomatic BV, confirmed by Nugent scoring, who were enrolled in a clinical trial. Participants were non-pregnant, free of other reproductive tract infections, and had not used antibiotics in the 14 days before enrollment. Samples were collected at baseline (pre-treatment), 7–10 days post-treatment, and 28–32 days post-treatment to assess microbial and immune changes.
What were the most Important Findings?
The study revealed that women who failed to clear BV or experienced recurrence had significantly higher pre-treatment microbial richness and evenness than those with sustained clearance. Significant microbial associations (MMA) included polymicrobial anaerobic taxa such as Gardnerella vaginalis, Prevotella, Sneathia, and Atopobium, which were dominant at baseline. Notably, Lactobacillus iners (CT2) dominance post-treatment was associated with improved mucosal immune markers, including elevated SLPI and reduced ICAM-1, but these benefits were transient in cases of recurrence. The persistence of diverse, low-abundance taxa and biofilm-forming bacteria like Atopobium and Sneathia post-treatment suggested their role in treatment resistance. Importantly, no participants achieved Lactobacillus crispatus (CT1) dominance, highlighting a gap in current therapeutic efficacy.
What are the Implications of this Study?
The findings underscore the limitations of metronidazole in treating BV, particularly in cases with high pre-treatment microbial diversity. The study suggests that microbiome profiling could help identify women at risk of treatment failure, paving the way for personalized therapies. Future research should explore adjunct treatments, such as Lactobacillus crispatus biotherapeutics or biofilm disruptors, to improve outcomes. Additionally, the transient immune improvements observed with Lactobacillus dominance emphasize the need for sustained microbiome modulation to prevent recurrence and associated complications like STI susceptibility.
Relaxed fibronectin: a potential novel target for imaging endometriotic lesions
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Research on relaxed fibronectin as a target for imaging endometriotic lesions showed that a novel radiotracer binds preferentially to this protein in disease areas. This finding could lead to improved diagnostic techniques for endometriosis, offering a non-invasive method to detect lesions accurately, thereby enhancing treatment planning and patient outcomes.
What was studied?
The study investigated relaxed fibronectin as a novel target for imaging endometriotic lesions. Researchers explored using a preclinical radiotracer, [111In]In-FnBPA5, which binds specifically to relaxed fibronectin, an extracellular matrix protein involved in the pathogenesis of diseases like cancer and fibrosis.
Who was studied?
The study involved preclinical experiments using mice and immunohistochemical analysis on tissue samples from mice and patients diagnosed with endometriosis.
What were the most important findings?
The radiotracer [111In]In-FnBPA5 accumulated in the mouse uterus, with uptake varying according to the estrous cycle, suggesting an increased abundance of relaxed fibronectin during estrogen-dependent phases. Immunohistochemical analysis on patient-derived tissues showed that relaxed fibronectin is preferentially located near the endometriotic stroma, supporting its potential as a target for imaging endometriosis.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings that [111In]In-FnBPA5 uptake varies in the mouse uterus with the estrous cycle, indicating increased relaxed fibronectin during estrogen-dependent phases, hold significant implications for future research on endometriosis.
Biomarker Identification: Understanding the fluctuation of relaxed fibronectin could help identify biomarkers for endometriosis, enabling earlier and more accurate diagnosis.
Pathogenesis Insights: These results suggest that estrogen-driven changes in fibronectin might play a role in the development or exacerbation of endometriosis. This could lead to a better understanding of the disease’s underlying mechanisms.
Targeted Therapies: By highlighting the relationship between estrogen, fibronectin, and endometrial tissue changes, new therapeutic targets may be identified, paving the way for treatments that modulate fibronectin or its pathways.
Diagnostic Imaging: The study suggests that targeting relaxed fibronectin could significantly improve the diagnostic imaging of endometriosis. This approach may lead to developing a specific radiotracer for noninvasive detection of endometriotic lesions, potentially enhancing diagnosis accuracy and aiding in better disease management.
Clinical Application: The researchers also suggest using gallium-68 for potential clinical application, which could further refine imaging techniques and improve patient outcomes.
Reproductive Microbiomes: Using the Microbiome as a Novel Diagnostic Tool for Endometriosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This cross-sectional observational study examines how endometriosis affects the bacterial communities of the uterus and cervix, considering the condition's role in inflammation, pain management, and infertility in women.
What was studied?
The study aimed to investigate how endometriosis affects the uterine and cervical bacterial communities. Utilizing next-generation amplicon sequencing of the bacterial 16S rRNA gene, the research sought to identify alterations in these microbiomes associated with endometriosis and to determine if specific bacterial taxa within the cervix could help diagnose active endometriosis, potentially avoiding the need for invasive diagnostic procedures like laparoscopic surgery.
Who was studied?
Nineteen pre-menopausal women undergoing laparoscopic surgery for pelvic pain with suspicion or known endometriosis constituted the experimental group (n=10, with endometriosis stages I-IV), while women undergoing surgery for benign uterine or ovarian conditions served as controls (n=9). The control group was examined during surgery to confirm the absence of endometriotic lesions. The staging of endometriosis for patients in the experimental group was performed using the revised American Society for Reproductive Medicine (rASRM) classification scale.
Key findings of the study include significant differences in bacterial communities between uterine and cervical samples, both in species diversity and abundance, with the uterus displaying a diverse profile of Bacteroidetes and Firmicutes, and the cervix dominated by Lactobacillus. No significant differences in bacterial communities were noted across different endometriosis stages on the day of surgery. However, a distinct cervical bacterial community in a stage III endometriosis patient suggests a link between disease severity and microbiome alterations. Additionally, notable fluctuations in the cervical microbiome were observed over time in this patient, indicating dynamic microbiome changes associated with disease progression and treatment.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings underscore the potential of bacterial community profiling as a diagnostic tool for endometriosis, offering a non-invasive method to identify the disease in asymptomatic, infertile women. This approach could facilitate earlier diagnosis and treatment, potentially improving fertility outcomes and reducing the need for invasive diagnostic surgeries. The study also highlights the dynamic nature of the uterine and cervical microbiomes in relation to endometriosis, suggesting that microbiome alterations could be linked to disease severity and progression. Understanding these microbial community changes opens new avenues for researching endometriosis pathogenesis and developing novel therapeutic strategies that target microbiome modulation. Moreover, the fluctuations observed in the microbiome over time, especially in patients with advanced disease, may offer insights into predicting disease progression and treatment outcomes, including fertility potential post-treatment.
Repurposing new drug candidates and identifying crucial molecules underlying PCOS Pathogenesis Based On Bioinformatics Analysis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This study highlights the potential for repurposing FDA-approved drugs to treat PCOS, identifying crucial proteins and pathways linked to the disorder.
What was studied?
This study investigated the potential of repurposing FDA-approved drugs to treat Polycystic Ovary Syndrome (PCOS). Using bioinformatics tools, the authors analyzed protein-protein interactions (PPIs) related to PCOS and explored how certain drugs could interact with these proteins to potentially mitigate the pathogenesis of the disorder. The analysis particularly focused on identifying crucial molecules and drug targets that could offer new therapeutic avenues for managing PCOS, particularly addressing issues related to infertility, hormonal imbalance, and metabolic dysfunction.
Who was studied?
The study did not involve human participants directly, but it analyzed proteomic data from existing datasets. The aim was to examine the molecular mechanisms associated with PCOS by constructing a protein interaction network from proteomics data. The study also considered FDA-approved drugs and their interactions with proteins identified in the PCOS pathway, which are crucial to understanding how these drugs may alter disease progression or improve clinical outcomes.
What were the most important findings?
The study identified several proteins, including VEGF, EGF, TGFB1, AGT, AMBP, and RBP4, that are crucial to the pathophysiology of PCOS. These proteins were shared between the PCOS protein network and the proteins targeted by FDA-approved drugs, such as metformin, pioglitazone, spironolactone, and letrozole. The PI3K/AKT signaling pathway, which plays a critical role in ovarian function and follicular development, was also identified as a major point of convergence between PCOS and the therapeutic drugs. This pathway influences oocyte maturation and granulosa cell proliferation, both of which are affected in PCOS.
The analysis also revealed that repurposing drugs like metformin, pioglitazone, and spironolactone could influence these crucial proteins and pathways. The study suggested that other FDA-approved drugs, such as copper and zinc compounds, could also be considered for further investigation due to their potential role in managing PCOS. These findings suggest that targeting the protein networks identified in the study could lead to more effective treatments for PCOS, particularly for fertility and metabolic issues associated with the condition.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The greatest implication of this study is the potential to repurpose existing FDA-approved drugs for the treatment of PCOS. By identifying key molecular pathways involved in PCOS and matching them with drugs that already target these pathways, the study paves the way for faster, more affordable therapeutic options. Additionally, it highlights the utility of systems biology and bioinformatics in drug repurposing, providing clinicians with new insights into how existing medications might be leveraged to address PCOS-related infertility, hormonal imbalances, and metabolic dysfunction. Further experimental validation of these drug interactions could lead to more personalized, efficient treatments for women with PCOS.
Risk Factors for Postpartum Depression: An Umbrella Review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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This umbrella review synthesizes research on postpartum depression risk factors, highlighting prenatal depression and current abuse as the strongest predictors. It emphasizes the need for targeted screening and early intervention to improve maternal health and outcomes for both mothers and their children.
What was reviewed?
This paper presents an umbrella review of risk factors for postpartum depression (PPD). The authors synthesized findings from 21 systematic reviews and meta-analyses published between 1996 and 2016. These reviews focused on identifying and evaluating risk factors for PPD, aiming to provide a comprehensive understanding of the factors that contribute to the disorder. The review methodology allowed for a broad exploration of numerous risk factors, including biological, psychological, and socio-economic influences, providing evidence for better-targeted prevention and screening strategies.
Who was reviewed?
The review focuses on research involving postpartum women who are either diagnosed with PPD or at risk of developing it. The reviewed studies included women from various socio-economic and cultural backgrounds, with a particular emphasis on those who had experienced high life stress, abuse, prenatal depression, or marital dissatisfaction. The umbrella review aggregates findings from studies examining diverse risk factors such as childhood trauma, abuse, sleep disturbances, lack of social support, and more, as well as how these factors may interact with the biological changes occurring during the postpartum period.
What were the most important findings?
The umbrella review identified 25 statistically significant risk factors for PPD. Among the most common were high life stress, lack of social support, current or past abuse, prenatal depression, and marital dissatisfaction. Prenatal depression and current abuse emerged as the two strongest predictors of PPD, with prenatal depression showing a strong correlation, and abuse increasing the odds of PPD by more than three times. Other important risk factors included poor quality sleep, history of depression, and negative experiences with breastfeeding. The findings suggest that psychological factors, particularly prenatal depression and abuse, play a major role in the development of PPD.
The review also pointed to socio-cultural factors like marital dissatisfaction and lack of support as significant contributors, particularly in high-stress or low-income settings. However, the review also noted a few risk factors with inconclusive findings, including a history of child abuse and complications like preeclampsia and HELLP syndrome, suggesting the need for more targeted research in these areas. Additionally, the authors pointed out that the methodological differences between the studies, including varied statistical methods and definitions of risk factors, made it difficult to compare results across studies.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This umbrella review highlights the importance of identifying high-risk groups for PPD and suggests that routine screening for depression during pregnancy is crucial for early intervention. The review advocates for more consistent and standardized risk factor definitions across studies to allow for more robust comparisons and insights. It also emphasizes the need for a multi-faceted approach to prevention and treatment that includes psychological support, social support systems, and effective healthcare interventions. The findings suggest that healthcare providers should prioritize screening for PPD, especially in women who exhibit strong risk factors such as prenatal depression or a history of abuse. Furthermore, the review stresses the need for integrated care models that involve obstetricians, midwives, mental health professionals, and social workers in supporting mothers through the perinatal period.
Risk Factors of Postpartum Depression
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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This review analyzes the risk factors for postpartum depression (PPD), highlighting key predictors such as a history of depression, lack of support, gestational diabetes, and birth complications. It calls for early screening and targeted interventions to address PPD and mitigate its long-term effects on mothers and children.
What was reviewed?
This review examines the risk factors associated with postpartum depression (PPD), drawing from a range of studies that analyze sociodemographic, biological, psychological, obstetric, pediatric, and cultural influences on the development of PPD. It highlights various studies, including meta-analyses, systematic reviews, case-control studies, and longitudinal research, providing a comprehensive understanding of the predisposing factors that contribute to the disorder. The review synthesizes these studies to identify high-risk groups, examine the strength of the associations between risk factors and PPD, and offer insights into possible mechanisms for preventing or diagnosing the condition early.
Who was reviewed?
The review draws on research involving postpartum women with PPD, as well as women at risk of developing the disorder. It includes studies from diverse populations, including those from high, middle, and low-income countries. The review focuses on maternal health, considering factors such as age, socioeconomic status, history of depression, medical conditions like gestational diabetes, delivery method, and social support, as well as obstetric and pediatric factors that may influence the likelihood of developing PPD. It also examines cultural aspects, including gender preferences and the impact of immigration status.
What were the most important findings?
The review identifies several key risk factors for PPD, with some factors showing stronger associations than others. The most significant predictors of PPD include a previous history of depression or psychiatric illness, depressive symptoms during pregnancy, lack of spousal and social support, gestational diabetes, and negative birth experiences. Women who had a history of psychiatric disorders, particularly depression, were found to be at a considerably higher risk of developing PPD. Additionally, a lack of emotional and instrumental support from partners, family, or society was frequently cited as a strong contributing factor. Physical and biological factors such as obesity, vitamin D deficiency, and complications during pregnancy were also linked to higher rates of PPD. Obstetric factors such as cesarean section delivery, multiple births, and preterm or low-birth-weight infants further increased the risk. Psychological factors, such as stress from life events and negative self-image, were also identified as contributing factors.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The review underscores the need for early identification and intervention for PPD. The identification of high-risk groups, such as women with previous psychiatric conditions, low social support, or complicated pregnancies, suggests that targeted screening for PPD should be integrated into routine postpartum care. Healthcare providers need to focus on providing comprehensive support, including mental health resources and social support interventions. Furthermore, the review calls for more research into genetic and epigenetic markers of PPD, as well as a better understanding of cultural factors influencing its prevalence and manifestations. The implications extend beyond maternal health, with long-term consequences for child development, emphasizing the need for multi-disciplinary approaches that involve obstetricians, pediatricians, and mental health professionals in the care of new mothers.
Role of gut microbiota in the development of insulin resistance and the mechanism underlying polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This review connects gut microbiota dysbiosis to insulin resistance and hyperandrogenism in PCOS, identifying reduced SCFA producers and increased LPS-producing microbes as key signatures. It supports microbiota-targeted therapies as promising treatments for metabolic and reproductive symptoms in PCOS.
What Was Reviewed?
This paper reviewed the role of gut microbiota in the development of insulin resistance (IR) and its contribution to the pathophysiology of polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS). The authors synthesized a wide body of literature spanning clinical studies, animal models, and microbial metabolomics to illustrate how gut dysbiosis acts as a central mechanism driving PCOS through metabolic, inflammatory, and hormonal pathways. The review explored multiple axes of gut microbiota influence, including endotoxemia, short-chain fatty acid (SCFA) production, bile acid metabolism, branched-chain amino acid (BCAA) synthesis, the gut-brain axis, and hyperandrogenism. These interconnected pathways ultimately lead to IR, hyperinsulinemia, and hormonal imbalance, all of which underpin the key clinical features of PCOS, including ovulatory dysfunction, endometrial receptivity impairment, obesity, and metabolic syndrome.
Who Was Reviewed?
The review encompassed findings from both human and animal studies. Human studies included women diagnosed with PCOS compared to controls, covering lean, obese, insulin-resistant, and normo-insulinemic phenotypes. The authors also incorporated data from rodent models, particularly letrozole-induced PCOS rats and prenatal androgen exposure models, to investigate microbial composition shifts and their functional impact on reproductive and metabolic phenotypes. Specific microbial taxa were evaluated through 16S rRNA sequencing and metagenomics, while endocrine and metabolic parameters were tracked to map microbial influence on systemic physiology.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The review identified major microbial associations (MMAs) that characterize PCOS-related dysbiosis. At the phylum level, PCOS patients demonstrated a decreased abundance of Bacteroidetes and increased Firmicutes, often resulting in a higher Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes ratio, which has been linked to obesity and metabolic syndrome. Reductions in Bifidobacterium, Lactobacillus, Faecalibacterium prausnitzii, and Roseburia were consistently reported. These microbial shifts compromise intestinal barrier function, leading to increased translocation of lipopolysaccharides (LPS), a key endotoxin that triggers chronic systemic inflammation via the TLR4-CD14 signaling pathway. This inflammation impairs insulin signaling and exacerbates hyperinsulinemia, which then stimulates ovarian androgen production and suppresses SHBG, intensifying the free androgen burden. Additionally, the review highlighted that BCAA-producing microbes such as Prevotella further aggravate insulin resistance. Bile acid metabolism was also altered, with decreased levels of beneficial bile acids like glycodeoxycholic acid and tauroursodeoxycholic acid. These changes interfere with signaling through FXR and GPBAR1, reducing insulin sensitivity.
What Are the Implications of This Review?
This review reframes PCOS as a condition deeply intertwined with microbiota-related metabolic and endocrine dysregulation. For clinicians, this connection offers actionable insights for diagnosis and treatment. The consistent microbial signatures associated with PCOS, such as reduced SCFA producers and increased LPS-producing gram-negative bacteria, support the potential for gut-targeted therapies. Dietary interventions that promote microbial diversity, particularly high-fiber, low-sugar regimens, may alleviate metabolic and reproductive symptoms. The paper also supports the use of probiotics (e.g., Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium species), prebiotics (e.g., inulin), and fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) as novel adjunct therapies. In animal studies, both probiotic and FMT interventions restored estrous cycles and improved ovarian morphology, suggesting that modulating the gut microbiome could directly impact ovulation and fertility. However, the authors emphasize that more randomized controlled trials and functional studies are necessary to validate these treatments and define phenotype-specific microbial targets.
Role of Metformin in Polycystic Ovary Syndrome (PCOS)-Related Infertility
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is a common endocrine disorder that affects women of reproductive age, characterized by irregular menstrual cycles, hyperandrogenism, and insulin resistance. It is often associated with metabolic dysfunctions and inflammation, leading to fertility issues and increased risk of type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease.
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This review examines the role of metformin in treating PCOS-related infertility, highlighting its effectiveness in improving insulin sensitivity, reducing hyperandrogenism, and restoring ovulation. Metformin serves as a first-line therapy, offering significant benefits for women with anovulatory infertility due to PCOS.
What was reviewed?
This review explores the role of metformin in treating polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)-related infertility. PCOS is a common endocrinological disorder that can lead to infertility, characterized by insulin resistance, hyperandrogenism, and anovulation. The review discusses metformin’s mechanisms, its impact on insulin sensitivity, its role in improving ovulation, and its effectiveness in managing metabolic and hormonal imbalances in women with PCOS. The review also emphasizes the drug's benefits in improving menstrual cyclicity and reducing hyperandrogenism, ultimately aiding in fertility restoration.
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesizes findings from various clinical studies and trials examining the effects of metformin on women with PCOS. It draws on observational studies and randomized controlled trials to evaluate the efficacy of metformin in addressing infertility associated with PCOS. The women studied in these trials typically had anovulatory infertility, hyperandrogenism, and varying degrees of insulin resistance, and they were treated with metformin to assess its impact on ovulation and fertility.
What were the most important findings?
The review found that metformin has significant therapeutic benefits for women with PCOS, particularly in restoring menstrual regularity and improving ovulation rates. Metformin works primarily by improving insulin sensitivity, which reduces hyperinsulinemia—a key factor in the pathogenesis of PCOS. This insulin-sensitizing effect contributes to lower circulating androgen levels, which is crucial in managing symptoms like hirsutism and acne. In several studies, metformin, either alone or in combination with other treatments like clomifene citrate, successfully induced ovulation in women who were resistant to standard treatments.
Furthermore, metformin appears to improve metabolic dysfunctions common in PCOS, including insulin resistance, dyslipidemia, and obesity, all of which contribute to the infertility and long-term health risks associated with the condition. However, the review also noted that while metformin improves metabolic and reproductive outcomes, its efficacy in women with significant obesity is less pronounced. The review also highlights that metformin is generally well-tolerated, although some women may experience gastrointestinal side effects.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The review underscores metformin’s potential as a first-line treatment for women with PCOS-related infertility, especially for those who are insulin-resistant and non-obese. The findings suggest that metformin could be a safer and more accessible alternative to more invasive fertility treatments like in vitro fertilization (IVF). Moreover, metformin’s role in reducing the risk of ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome during assisted reproductive technology procedures makes it particularly valuable in IVF protocols. The review also emphasizes the need for further studies to determine the optimal dose and long-term benefits of metformin, particularly for women with more severe obesity or metabolic complications.
Secnidazole for the Treatment of Bacterial Vaginosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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This systematic review analyzed six trials evaluating secnidazole for bacterial vaginosis treatment. Secnidazole at 2 g significantly improved clinical and microbiologic cure rates, showing comparable efficacy to metronidazole. The single-dose regimen enhances adherence, offering an alternative for patients with recurrent BV or adverse effects from standard therapies.
What was Reviewed?
This systematic review evaluated the clinical efficacy, safety, and microbiological outcomes of secnidazole as a treatment option for bacterial vaginosis (BV). The authors reviewed randomized controlled trials that compared secnidazole at different doses with placebo, standard antibiotic regimens, or combination therapies. The review also considered how secnidazole affected the vaginal microbiota, particularly its ability to reduce the abundance of BV-associated bacteria and restore beneficial Lactobacillus species.
Who was Reviewed?
The review encompassed clinical studies involving adult women diagnosed with bacterial vaginosis, with diagnosis typically based on Amsel criteria or Nugent score. The included studies varied in sample size but consistently targeted non-pregnant women of reproductive age who were experiencing symptomatic or recurrent BV. The population also included women with a history of BV treatment failures or recurrences, a subgroup of particular interest due to the chronic and recurrent nature of the condition.
What were the most Important Findings?
This review demonstrated that secnidazole significantly improved both the clinical and microbiological cure rates of bacterial vaginosis compared to placebo. Specifically, in women with three or fewer BV episodes in the last year, 2 g secnidazole substantially reduced BV risk. In women with four or more episodes, the benefit persisted but with slightly lower magnitude.
The clinical cure rate of 2 g secnidazole was comparable to metronidazole (500 mg), oral metronidazole 2 g single dose, secnidazole combined with vaginal metronidazole, or secnidazole plus vaginal ornidazole. However, the 2 g dose performed better than the 1 g dose.
This review highlighted that probiotic therapy was not the focus, but secnidazole use indirectly supports the concept of restoring vaginal eubiosis by reducing pathogenic bacteria. The review did not explicitly measure microbiome shifts in terms of Lactobacillus species or pathogenic taxa, but the improved microbiologic cure rate reflects pathogen reduction.
The authors also emphasized that a single-dose regimen of secnidazole improved patient adherence compared to multi-dose metronidazole or tinidazole therapies. However, beyond adherence, secnidazole's therapeutic effect was statistically similar to these standard treatments. The review proposed secnidazole as a good alternative for women who experienced adverse effects or recurrence with current BV medications.
What are the Implications of this Review?
This review offers clear clinical guidance: secnidazole at 2 g is an effective, single-dose treatment option for bacterial vaginosis, providing comparable cure rates to metronidazole and combination therapies. It may serve as a valuable alternative, particularly for women with recurrent BV or those who face side effects from standard antibiotics. Additionally, while the review did not analyze microbial signatures in detail, the consistent microbiologic cure rates indirectly support the role of secnidazole in reducing BV-associated dysbiosis. Clinicians should consider secnidazole as a viable option in their therapeutic arsenal, particularly when treatment adherence and recurrence prevention are priorities.
Serum copper assessment in patients with polycystic ovary syndrome and tubal infertility
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This 5-year study found significantly higher serum copper levels in women with PCOS, correlating with triglycerides and BMI but not IVF outcomes. Copper may reflect metabolic dysfunction and gut-related oxidative stress in PCOS.
What was studied?
This retrospective, cross-sectional study assessed the serum copper levels in women with infertility, specifically comparing patients with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) and those with tubal infertility, to evaluate copper’s association with hormonal, metabolic, and in vitro fertilization (IVF) parameters. Over five years, the study explored whether elevated copper levels correlate with PCOS clinical phenotypes and IVF outcomes, and whether copper could be a relevant biomarker in reproductive health.
Who was studied?
A total of 766 Chinese women under age 38 were included, comprising 560 women with tubal infertility (no-PCOS group) and 206 women with PCOS undergoing IVF. The diagnosis of PCOS was based on the modified Rotterdam criteria. All participants underwent their first IVF cycle at the Center of Reproduction and Genetics, Suzhou Municipal Hospital, between January 2018 and December 2022. Baseline clinical, metabolic, hormonal, and trace element data, including fasting glucose, triglycerides, cholesterol, lipoproteins, and serum copper, were collected and analyzed.
What were the most important findings?
Women with PCOS showed significantly elevated serum copper concentrations compared to those with tubal infertility. Within the PCOS group, serum copper positively correlated with body mass index (BMI) and triglycerides (TG), but not with fasting glucose, LDL, or HDL. In contrast, the no-PCOS group demonstrated a broader metabolic correlation with copper, including BMI, TG, TC, LDL, and a negative correlation with HDL. Despite these associations, serum copper levels did not significantly predict IVF outcomes such as oocyte retrieval, MII oocyte rate, fertilization, or embryo quality, once confounding variables were controlled for.
From a microbiome perspective, this study indirectly highlights the importance of copper in modulating oxidative stress and lipid metabolism, both of which influence microbial diversity. Elevated copper is known to disrupt microbial homeostasis by promoting oxidative stress and favoring the growth of pro-inflammatory species such as Desulfovibrio and Proteobacteria. Conversely, lower copper levels may favor microbial populations that support metabolic stability. These shifts may exacerbate the gut dysbiosis observed in PCOS, which is closely linked to insulin resistance, chronic inflammation, and hormonal imbalances.
What are the implications of this study?
This study underscores the clinical relevance of elevated serum copper as a marker of metabolic dysregulation in women with PCOS, though not a direct predictor of IVF outcomes. The strong correlation between copper and triglycerides suggests a metabolic link that may be mediated by oxidative stress or microbiome alterations. Given copper’s known impact on gut microbial balance and inflammatory signaling, these findings reinforce the importance of trace element assessment in PCOS, particularly in the context of metabolic health and infertility. While copper may not serve as a standalone biomarker for fertility success, its elevation in PCOS warrants further exploration in longitudinal studies to assess causality and mechanistic pathways, including copper’s effect on the microbiota–ovary axis. Clinicians should consider monitoring serum copper alongside traditional lipid profiles in PCOS management, especially in cases of treatment-resistant metabolic dysfunction.
Serum Copper Level and Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome: A Meta-Analysis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This meta-analysis confirms that serum copper levels are significantly elevated in women with PCOS. Copper may drive hormonal imbalance and oxidative stress, and could influence gut microbiota, highlighting its potential as a biomarker and therapeutic target in PCOS management.
What was reviewed?
This meta-analysis reviewed the association between serum copper levels and polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) by pooling data from nine cross-sectional studies encompassing a total of 2,274 women (1,168 with PCOS and 1,106 healthy controls). The goal was to clarify inconsistent findings in previous literature regarding whether circulating copper levels differ significantly in women with PCOS and whether elevated copper might play a role in the pathophysiology of the disorder.
Who was reviewed?
The reviewed studies included adult women diagnosed with PCOS based on the Rotterdam criteria, alongside matched control participants without PCOS. These studies were conducted across diverse geographical regions, including China, Turkey, India, Iran, Sudan, and the USA, and were published between 2012 and 2020. The studies employed either atomic absorption spectrophotometry or inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry to quantify serum copper. All were assessed as high quality using the Newcastle–Ottawa Scale.
What were the most important findings?
The meta-analysis found that women with PCOS have significantly higher serum copper levels than healthy controls, with a standardized mean difference (SMD) of 0.51 µg/mL. This effect remained statistically significant even after conducting sensitivity analyses and omitting a single contradictory study, which showed an inverse trend. Subgroup analyses by country (China vs. Western) confirmed that elevated copper was consistently observed in both populations, suggesting a robust association independent of geographic or ethnic background.
Biologically, copper acts as a cofactor in several enzymatic reactions involving oxidative metabolism and plays a role in hormone receptor regulation, including acting as a metalloestrogen capable of activating estrogen receptor alpha. Increased copper levels may contribute to oxidative stress in PCOS through enhanced ROS generation, glutathione depletion, and lipid peroxidation. These processes can disrupt endocrine function and potentially influence ovarian physiology, although more research is needed to clarify copper’s direct role in PCOS pathogenesis.
From a microbiome perspective, copper excess disrupts the gut microbiota by decreasing beneficial taxa such as Bifidobacterium spp. and Faecalibacterium prausnitzii, while favoring pro-inflammatory genera like Proteobacteria. These changes contribute to leaky gut, systemic inflammation, and insulin resistance, which are core features of PCOS. As such, elevated copper may not only be a marker of oxidative and inflammatory stress but also a mediator of microbiome-endocrine dysregulation.
What are the implications of this review?
This meta-analysis provides clear evidence that elevated serum copper is associated with PCOS and may play a mechanistic role in its pathophysiology. The findings support the hypothesis that copper acts as an endocrine disruptor by generating oxidative stress and modulating hormone activity, including via metalloestrogenic pathways. For clinicians, this raises the potential for serum copper to serve as a biomarker for metabolic and inflammatory status in PCOS patients. Moreover, it opens new avenues for therapeutic strategies aimed at modulating copper levels through diet, chelation, or supplementation with competing trace elements like zinc. Given copper’s known effects on microbiota, this study further strengthens the case for including trace element monitoring in microbiome-focused PCOS interventions. Future research should explore longitudinal relationships between copper exposure, microbiota changes, and hormonal dysregulation, as well as whether copper modulation improves clinical outcomes in PCOS.
Serum micro- and macroelements levels in women with polycystic ovary syndrome associated with pelvic inflammatory disease
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This study revealed that women with PCOS have higher serum levels of zinc and nickel, and lower manganese, especially when inflammation is present. These imbalances may disrupt folliculogenesis and exacerbate oxidative stress, potentially influencing the microbiome and PCOS severity.
What was studied?
This clinical study investigated the serum levels of essential macro- and microelements, specifically magnesium, copper, manganese, nickel, zinc, chromium, selenium, and vanadium, in women diagnosed with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), both with and without concurrent pelvic inflammatory disease (PID). The primary goal was to determine whether the concentrations of these elements differed in PCOS patients and to evaluate their possible role in the pathophysiology of PCOS, especially concerning oxidative stress, inflammation, and reproductive dysfunction.
Who was studied?
The study population consisted of three distinct groups: 30 women with PCOS and PID (Group I), 22 women with PCOS but no inflammatory pelvic disease (Group II), and 25 healthy controls (Group III). All participants were of reproductive age. The research was conducted in Ukraine and used serum samples analyzed via mass spectrometry following microwave digestion. The analysis focused on comparing element levels across the groups and interpreting their biological significance in the context of PCOS-associated metabolic and inflammatory disturbances.
What were the most important findings?
The study found that women with PCOS, regardless of inflammatory status, had significantly elevated levels of serum zinc and nickel, and decreased levels of manganese, compared to healthy controls. Magnesium, chromium, selenium, and vanadium levels did not differ significantly between groups. Zinc and nickel were especially elevated in women with concurrent PID, pointing to a synergistic relationship between inflammation and trace element dysregulation.
Mechanistically, elevated zinc and nickel levels are implicated in exacerbating oxidative stress through increased lipid peroxidation and suppression of antioxidant systems. Nickel, in particular, may damage cellular membranes, disrupt mitochondrial and DNA integrity, and impair transcription processes, collectively impairing folliculogenesis and ovulation. Elevated zinc levels may also result from the action of pro-inflammatory cytokines (IL-1, IL-6, IL-18, TNF-α), which stimulate zinc accumulation via metallothionein upregulation. Meanwhile, reduced manganese, an essential cofactor for mitochondrial antioxidant enzymes, may compromise cellular redox balance and energy metabolism. These patterns may contribute to the hormonal imbalance, chronic inflammation, and reproductive dysfunction seen in PCOS.
In microbiome terms, such trace element imbalances could promote gut dysbiosis. For example, nickel excess is known to enrich pathobionts like Proteobacteria and suppress beneficial anaerobes like Faecalibacterium prausnitzii. A similar trend with excess zinc may reduce Bifidobacterium spp. populations and increase intestinal permeability. Reduced manganese availability may impair SCFA-producing microbes, further disrupting gut-immune-endocrine signaling.
What are the implications of this study?
This study provides strong evidence that trace element imbalances, particularly elevated serum zinc and nickel and decreased manganese, may play a critical role in the pathogenesis of PCOS, especially in cases compounded by inflammation. The findings suggest that these elements influence oxidative stress, mitochondrial function, and immune activity, potentially contributing to reproductive dysfunction. Clinically, this underscores the value of monitoring serum trace elements in PCOS patients, especially those with comorbid inflammatory pelvic conditions. Moreover, nutritional strategies, such as reducing dietary sources of nickel and zinc while increasing manganese intake, may serve as adjunctive interventions. Given the known link between trace elements and microbiota composition, this study also opens a pathway to integrate trace element modulation as part of microbiome-based therapeutic approaches for PCOS.
Serum trace elements and heavy metals in polycystic ovary syndrome
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This study revealed elevated serum copper and zinc, and reduced manganese and lead, in women with PCOS, suggesting trace element dysregulation may fuel oxidative stress and hormonal imbalance. These imbalances may also impact gut microbiota and insulin resistance.
What was studied?
This clinical observational study evaluated the serum levels of essential trace elements in women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) compared to healthy controls. The research aimed to determine whether alterations in these micronutrients and toxic metals are associated with PCOS and its hormonal profile, particularly focusing on oxidative stress as a contributing mechanism. This was one of the earliest studies to analyze this specific combination of elements in PCOS patients using atomic absorption spectrophotometry.
Who was studied?
The study involved 35 women diagnosed with PCOS based on the Rotterdam criteria and 30 age- and BMI-matched healthy women serving as controls. All participants were of reproductive age and underwent thorough screening to exclude other endocrine disorders or confounding factors, such as medication use, thyroid dysfunction, or metabolic diseases. Blood samples were collected during the early follicular phase to standardize hormonal status, and serum levels of trace elements and hormones, including total testosterone and DHEAS, were measured using validated biochemical and spectrometric methods.
What were the most important findings?
Serum copper and zinc levels were significantly higher in the PCOS group, while manganese and lead levels were significantly lower. No significant differences were found in magnesium, cadmium, or cobalt concentrations between the two groups. Additionally, serum copper showed a strong negative correlation with BMI, while lead levels inversely correlated with total testosterone among PCOS patients—relationships not seen in the control group. Notably, although zinc levels were elevated in PCOS, they remained within the physiological range, whereas manganese levels in the PCOS group were approximately half those of the control group.
From a mechanistic standpoint, these findings align with the oxidative stress hypothesis of PCOS. Elevated copper can catalyze reactive oxygen species (ROS) formation and deplete intracellular glutathione, leading to mitochondrial dysfunction and inflammation. Zinc, while essential for antioxidant enzymes such as Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase (SOD), may reflect compensatory upregulation in response to inflammation. The reduced manganese levels suggest diminished activity of mitochondrial MnSOD, a critical antioxidant defense enzyme. Similarly, decreased lead levels, though surprising, may indicate redistribution or altered metabolic clearance. Each of these trace element imbalances can modulate the gut microbiome. Excess copper and zinc can suppress beneficial taxa like Bifidobacterium and Faecalibacterium prausnitzii, while manganese deficiency can impair the growth of SCFA-producing organisms that modulate inflammation and insulin signaling, features central to PCOS pathology.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study reinforces the hypothesis that PCOS is not only an endocrine and metabolic disorder but also a condition marked by trace element dysregulation and likely gut microbial imbalance. The observed elevations in serum copper and zinc, along with depleted manganese and altered lead levels, suggest that micronutrient homeostasis, particularly involving pro- and anti-oxidative pathways, plays a crucial role in the disease process. These findings highlight the need for clinicians to evaluate trace element status in PCOS patients as part of a broader strategy to manage oxidative stress and inflammation. Moreover, the trace elements measured may serve as noninvasive biomarkers for disease severity or subtyping and could inform targeted interventions involving dietary or supplemental modulation. Future studies should investigate the dynamic interactions between trace elements, microbiota composition, and hormone regulation, as well as whether correcting these imbalances improves metabolic, reproductive, and microbiome outcomes in PCOS.
Somatic stem cells and their dysfunction in endometriosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This study explored the involvement of somatic and endometrial stem cells in the pathogenesis of endometriosis through a literature review. Key findings include the stem cell clonality in lesions, dysregulated behaviors contributing to disease progression, and genetic alterations. These insights could lead to improved diagnostic tests and targeted therapies, enhancing disease management and treatment strategies.
What was studied?
The study focused on the role of somatic stem cells (SSCs), including endometrial stem cells (EnSCs) and bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs), in the pathogenesis of endometriosis. This was conducted through a comprehensive literature review, including in vitro experiments and studies on animal models and human tissue analyses. The research examined the contributions of these stem cells to the development and growth of endometriosis, exploring their genetic, phenotypic, and functional characteristics as well as their involvement in the disease’s mechanisms.
Who was studied?
The study subjects included stem cells derived from human and animal endometrium and stem cells involved in endometriosis pathology sourced from menstrual blood and bone marrow. This research compiled evidence from various sources, including previously conducted experiments and clinical observations focusing on how these stem cells contribute to the formation and progression of endometriosis lesions in women affected by the disease and in relevant animal models.
What were the most important findings?
Clonality and Origin of Lesions: Evidence suggests that ovarian endometriotic cysts and peritoneal endometriotic lesions may arise from a clonal origin, indicating a possible stem cell basis for the disease.
Stem Cell Dysregulation: Stem cells, particularly EnSCs and MSCs, exhibit dysregulated behaviors in endometriosis, such as increased proliferation, invasiveness, and altered expression of markers that suggest a stem cell-like undifferentiated state.
Contribution to Lesion Growth: Bone marrow-derived stem cells, including MSCs and endothelial progenitor cells, were found to contribute to the pathogenesis and growth of endometriotic lesions by promoting angiogenesis and possibly by transdifferentiating into endometrial-like cells.
Molecular and Phenotypic Alterations: Stem/progenitor cells in endometriotic lesions display a range of genetic and epigenetic alterations and an increased expression of pro-angiogenic factors, which are crucial for lesion survival and growth.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
Diagnostic Advancements: The findings suggest that markers identified in the stem cells associated with endometriosis could potentially be used to develop non-invasive diagnostic tests with higher sensitivity and specificity, aiding in early disease detection.
Therapeutic Interventions: Targeting dysfunctional stem cells or their altered pathways offers a promising strategy for developing more effective treatments. This could include interventions that inhibit the recruitment and proliferation of these cells at ectopic sites or modify their angiogenic and inflammatory behaviors.
Understanding Disease Mechanisms: By integrating stem cell-based insights into the pathogenesis of endometriosis, this study supports a more comprehensive understanding of the disease’s etiology, which can lead to more targeted and effective clinical management strategies.
The emphasis on stem cell contributions to endometriosis not only opens up new avenues for research but also highlights potential therapeutic targets that could significantly improve the management and treatment of endometriosis, potentially improving the quality of life for affected women.
Systems pharmacology to investigate the interaction of berberine and other drugs in treating polycystic ovary syndrome
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This study explores the use of berberine in combination with other drugs for treating PCOS, highlighting its effects on insulin resistance, androgen excess, and metabolic dysfunction.
What was studied?
This study employed systems pharmacology to investigate the potential interaction of berberine with other drugs in treating Polycystic Ovary Syndrome (PCOS). Given that PCOS is a complex condition with various manifestations such as hormonal imbalance, insulin resistance, and metabolic dysfunction, the study aimed to explore the polypharmacological effects of berberine and its capacity to enhance the efficacy of existing clinical drugs. The authors used bioinformatics tools to identify candidate targets related to PCOS and map out the biological pathways involved. The goal was to understand how berberine interacts with these targets and how its combination with other drugs might improve therapeutic outcomes for PCOS patients.
Who was studied?
This study did not directly involve human participants, but instead focused on computational analysis and molecular simulations. The study examined the interaction of berberine with known clinical drugs that are commonly used to treat PCOS, such as combined oral contraceptives, antiandrogens, insulin-sensitizing drugs, and others. Using systems pharmacology approaches, the study identified and validated key targets for PCOS and simulated how these targets interacted with berberine and other medications. The analysis relied on protein interaction networks, molecular docking, and drug-target network construction to predict possible therapeutic effects.
What were the most important findings?
The study identified several critical biological pathways and targets related to PCOS, including the insulin signaling pathway, adipocytokine signaling, and androgen biosynthesis. Berberine was found to interact with key targets such as the androgen receptor (AR), estrogen receptor (ESR1), progesterone receptor (PGR), and insulin receptor (INSR), which are all pivotal in managing PCOS symptoms. The analysis also revealed that berberine could enhance the effects of existing drugs by acting on multiple targets within these pathways. For example, berberine can suppress androgen levels by interacting with AR and PGR, reduce insulin resistance by targeting INSR, and modulate lipid metabolism through its effects on the glucocorticoid receptor and other targets.
Molecular docking simulations confirmed that berberine had strong binding affinities for these targets, with similar binding energies to clinical drugs like cyproterone acetate and metformin. The study further suggested that berberine might help reduce the side effects of conventional therapies by competing for the same receptor sites, thus mitigating adverse drug reactions over long-term treatment. Additionally, berberine's ability to act on multiple targets simultaneously positions it as a promising polypharmacological agent in PCOS management.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings from this study have significant clinical implications, particularly for the treatment of PCOS. The ability of berberine to interact with multiple molecular targets involved in PCOS pathophysiology suggests that it could be an effective adjunctive therapy. By enhancing the effectiveness of other clinical drugs and potentially reducing side effects, berberine presents a viable treatment option for patients with PCOS who require comprehensive care for their metabolic and hormonal imbalances. The study highlights the potential of systems pharmacology and drug repurposing in developing novel, cost-effective treatments for complex disorders like PCOS. Future clinical trials are needed to validate the therapeutic benefits of berberine in combination with other drugs, with a focus on optimizing treatment regimens to address the various facets of PCOS.
The association between anemia and postpartum depression: A systematic review and meta-analysis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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This systematic review and meta-analysis reveal a significant link between anemia (during pregnancy and postpartum) and postpartum depression, emphasizing the need for anemia prevention and treatment to reduce the risk of PPD.
What was reviewed?
This study is a systematic review and meta-analysis that investigates the association between anemia (both postpartum anemia and anemia during pregnancy) and postpartum depression (PPD). The review aims to provide a comprehensive assessment by synthesizing findings from multiple studies to evaluate whether anemia increases the risk of developing PPD in women.
Who was reviewed?
The review examined data from 10 studies involving pregnant and postpartum women. These studies focused on the relationship between anemia and the incidence of postpartum depression. The studies were selected based on specific inclusion criteria, including the presence of anemia and the use of depression diagnostic tools, such as the Edinburgh Postpartum Depression Scale (EPDS), to assess PPD.
What were the most important findings?
The meta-analysis found that there is a significant association between both postpartum anemia and anemia during pregnancy with an increased risk of postpartum depression. Specifically, the results showed a relative risk (RR) of 1.887 for postpartum anemia, with a 95% confidence interval (CI) of 1.255 to 2.838 (P=0.002), indicating a substantial risk increase for women with postpartum anemia. Similarly, anemia during pregnancy was also associated with a 24% increased risk of developing PPD, with a RR of 1.240 (95% CI: 1.001–1.536, P=0.048). These findings were consistent across different study designs, including cohort and cross-sectional studies. Subgroup analyses did not reveal significant differences in the association when examining variables such as the quality of studies, geographic region, or the timing of depression and anemia assessment. Notably, publication bias did not affect the overall results, as determined by funnel plot analysis and tests for bias.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings from this meta-analysis have significant implications for clinical practice. The study highlights the importance of screening for anemia during pregnancy and the postpartum period, as it is linked to an increased risk of postpartum depression. Clinicians should consider proactive measures for the prevention, identification, and treatment of anemia in pregnant women to mitigate the risk of PPD. This could involve regular monitoring of hemoglobin levels, nutritional interventions to address iron deficiency, and early psychological support for women diagnosed with anemia. By addressing both the physical (anemia) and mental health (depression) components of postpartum care, healthcare providers can improve maternal well-being and potentially reduce the long-term effects of depression on mothers and their infants.
The bidirectional relationship between endometriosis and microbiome
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This review highlights the bidirectional relationship between endometriosis and the microbiome, showcasing dysbiosis as a key factor in inflammation and estrogen metabolism. Emerging microbiome-targeted therapies hold promise for diagnosis and treatment.
What Was Reviewed?
The review article explored the bidirectional relationship between endometriosis and the microbiome, emphasizing the role of dysbiosis in the pathogenesis and progression of this chronic inflammatory condition. It discussed microbiome alterations across different sites, including the gut, peritoneal fluid, and female reproductive tract, and evaluated how these microbial shifts influence inflammation, immune modulation, and estrogen metabolism. Furthermore, it highlighted experimental and clinical evidence supporting the potential of microbiome-targeted interventions as both diagnostic tools and treatments for endometriosis.
Who Was Reviewed?
The review synthesized findings from human and animal studies investigating microbiota composition in patients with endometriosis compared to healthy controls. It included a comprehensive analysis of bacterial, viral, and fungal associations across diverse microbiome sites, focusing on patterns of dysbiosis, enriched taxa, and diminished microbial diversity. Specific populations reviewed included women diagnosed with various stages of endometriosis and animal models with surgically induced disease.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The most notable findings included alterations in gut, cervical, and peritoneal fluid microbiota in women with endometriosis. In the gut, elevated levels of Proteobacteria and reduced Lactobacillaceae were observed. The peritoneal fluid showed enrichment of Acinetobacter and Pseudomonas, while the cervical and vaginal microbiomes exhibited decreased diversity and increased abundance of pathogenic species from the Gardnerella and Streptococcus genus. Dysbiosis was associated with heightened inflammatory responses mediated by lipopolysaccharide (LPS) from Escherichia coli, potentially driving lesion formation through the NF-κB pathway. The concept of “estrobolomes,” gut bacteria influencing estrogen reabsorption, was linked to the hyperestrogenic state characteristic of endometriosis. Notably, antibiotic and probiotic treatments in animal models reduced lesion size, supporting the potential therapeutic role of microbiome modulation.
What Are the Greatest Implications?
The implications of this review are twofold: first, the microbiome holds promise as a non-invasive diagnostic tool for endometriosis, potentially reducing diagnostic delays. Second, microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs), such as probiotics, prebiotics, and dietary modifications, may offer novel therapeutic avenues. The findings underscore the necessity for further research into microbiome signatures and their clinical applications, particularly in differentiating disease stages and addressing infertility associated with endometriosis.
The Comorbidity of Endometriosis and Systemic Lupus Erythematosus: A Systematic Review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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This review explores the significant comorbidity between systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and endometriosis, emphasizing shared pathological pathways.
DOI: 10.7759/cureus.42362
What Was Reviewed?
This systematic review examined the comorbidity between endometriosis and systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), two chronic conditions with significant implications for women's health. The review aimed to elucidate the prevalence, shared pathophysiological mechanisms, and risk factors linking these diseases, emphasizing immune dysregulation, genetic predispositions, and hormonal influences. The review synthesized findings from nine studies conducted between 2011 and 2021, including case-control, cohort, and systematic review methodologies.
Who Was Reviewed?
The review focused on studies of females aged 12-60, representing the pubertal to postmenopausal age range. The population comprised patients with diagnosed endometriosis and SLE. The studies predominantly included participants from diverse ethnicities and geographies, screened based on standardized inclusion criteria to establish the prevalence and interaction of these conditions.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The review confirmed a statistically significant correlation between endometriosis and SLE, with women diagnosed with either condition at a heightened risk of developing the other. The findings implicated immune dysregulation, characterized by diminished cytotoxic T-cell activity and elevated humoral immune responses, as a central mechanism. Notable microbial associations include increased systemic inflammation mediated by cytokines such as interleukin-1, interleukin-6, and tumor necrosis factor (TNF-α). Genetic factors also played a role, with gene loci such as PTPN22 associated with increased susceptibility to both conditions. Surgical interventions like hysterectomy were linked to increased inflammation and subsequent autoimmune activation, while modified surgical techniques showed promise in mitigating risk.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Review?
This review highlights the necessity for clinicians to adopt an interdisciplinary approach when managing patients with either endometriosis or SLE, as their comorbidity exacerbates disease burden and complicates treatment. It emphasizes the importance of targeted therapies to modulate immune response alongside careful evaluation of surgical and hormonal treatment strategies to minimize adverse outcomes. The findings suggest a potential for incorporating microbial and genetic markers into diagnostic and therapeutic protocols to improve outcomes.
The Comparative Effects of Myo-Inositol and Metformin Therapy on the Clinical and Biochemical Parameters of Women of Normal Weight Suffering from Polycystic Ovary Syndrome
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This study compared the effects of myo-inositol and metformin on insulin resistance, menstrual cycle regularity, and hyperandrogenism in women with PCOS. Both therapies were effective, with fewer side effects noted for myo-inositol.
What was studied?
This study investigated the comparative effects of myo-inositol (MI) and metformin (MET) therapy on clinical and biochemical parameters in women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS). The research focused on evaluating the impact of both therapies on insulin resistance (IR), hyperandrogenism, menstrual cycle regulation, and various metabolic markers in PCOS patients with normal BMI. The objective was to determine which therapy is more effective in improving these parameters.
Who was studied?
The study included 80 women diagnosed with PCOS who had insulin resistance but a normal body mass index (BMI). These participants were randomly assigned to two treatment groups: one group received myo-inositol, while the other group received metformin. The study was designed as a randomized controlled trial and aimed to assess the efficacy of these two insulin-sensitizing therapies.
What were the most important findings?
The results indicated that both myo-inositol and metformin significantly reduced insulin resistance, with a marked decrease in the area under the curve (AUC) of insulin during an oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) for both groups. Both treatments led to improvements in the regulation of menstrual cycles, with more than 90% of patients experiencing regular cycles. The therapies also resulted in a statistically significant reduction in androgenic hormones (such as testosterone and SHBG), which are critical for managing symptoms like hirsutism. The findings suggest that both myo-inositol and metformin are effective in addressing insulin resistance, menstrual irregularities, and hyperandrogenism in women with PCOS, especially those with normal weight.
From a microbiome perspective, insulin resistance and hormonal imbalances are known to influence gut microbiota composition. Studies have shown that insulin resistance can contribute to an imbalance in the gut microbiome, potentially promoting pro-inflammatory taxa. Moreover, treatments like myo-inositol and metformin may have indirect effects on microbiota, such as modulating gut inflammation or affecting microbial populations associated with metabolic health.
What are the implications of this study?
The study highlights the potential of both myo-inositol and metformin as first-line treatments for managing PCOS in women with normal BMI, specifically targeting insulin resistance and hyperandrogenism. The results suggest that both therapies can be effective in improving metabolic and endocrine outcomes in PCOS, but myo-inositol may offer the advantage of fewer gastrointestinal side effects compared to metformin. This makes myo-inositol a promising alternative, particularly for women who experience adverse effects with metformin. The study also emphasizes the importance of considering personalized treatment options for women with PCOS, as different responses may be observed based on individual phenotypes.
The copper chelator ammonium tetrathiomolybdate inhibits the progression of experimental endometriosis in TNFR1-deficient mice
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Ammonium tetrathiomolybdate (TM) inhibits endometriosis progression in TNFR1-deficient mice by reducing copper and estradiol levels, lesion growth, angiogenesis, and oxidative stress.
What Was Studied?
This study evaluated the therapeutic potential of ammonium tetrathiomolybdate (TM), a copper chelator, in inhibiting the progression of experimental endometriosis (EDT) in TNFR1-deficient mice. It explored TM's effects on copper and estradiol concentrations, lesion development, angiogenesis, oxidative stress, and inflammatory pathways. The research aimed to address how TM mitigates EDT in a worsened state caused by TNFR1 deficiency, a condition characterized by reduced cell death and increased lesion proliferation.
Who Was Studied?
The subjects were TNFR1-deficient female C57BL/6 mice divided into three groups: sham-operated (KO Sham), EDT-induced (KO EDT), and EDT-induced with TM treatment (KO EDT+TM). EDT was induced via autologous uterine tissue transplantation into the intestinal mesentery, and TM was administered orally postoperatively. Experimental outcomes were evaluated one month after EDT induction.
Most Important Findings
The study revealed several critical findings. First, EDT induction significantly elevated copper and estradiol levels in the peritoneal fluid, both of which were restored to physiological levels with TM treatment. TM also reduced lesion volume and weight, decreased cell proliferation, and suppressed angiogenesis, as evidenced by lower blood vessel counts and reduced expression of Vegfa, Fgf2, and Pdgfb. Furthermore, TM altered oxidative stress markers, decreasing the activity of superoxide dismutase (SOD) and catalase (CAT) while increasing lipid peroxidation, suggesting a pro-oxidative environment conducive to apoptotic signaling.
From a microbiome perspective, copper's role as a metalloestrogen and its involvement in estradiol synthesis underline the relevance of copper chelation in addressing estrogen-dependent diseases like endometriosis. By reducing copper levels, TM may disrupt microbial contributions to oxidative stress and inflammation, though direct microbiome-specific findings were not explored.
Greatest Implications
The study's findings suggest TM's dual role in reducing pro-inflammatory and pro-angiogenic pathways while restoring copper and estradiol homeostasis. These mechanisms are vital for mitigating EDT progression, particularly in the context of TNFR1 deficiency, where pathological signaling is exacerbated. Clinically, TM represents a potential adjunct therapy for managing endometriosis, particularly in cases resistant to conventional hormone treatments. The findings also reinforce the broader therapeutic relevance of targeting trace metals like copper in inflammatory and estrogen-dependent conditions.
The effect of resistant dextrin as a prebiotic on metabolic parameters and androgen level in women with polycystic ovarian syndrome
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This study demonstrates that resistant dextrin supplementation can improve metabolic and endocrine parameters in women with PCOS, offering a promising alternative to traditional therapies.
What Was Studied?
This study investigated the effects of resistant dextrin, a type of prebiotic, on metabolic parameters and androgen levels in women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS). The goal was to determine if resistant dextrin could improve parameters such as lipid profiles, fasting blood glucose (FBS), high-sensitivity C-reactive protein (hsCRP), and levels of dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate (DHEA-S) and free testosterone, which are associated with androgen excess in PCOS. Additionally, the study explored the impact on clinical manifestations such as menstrual cycle irregularities and hirsutism.
Who Was Studied?
The study involved 62 women diagnosed with PCOS based on the Rotterdam criteria. These participants were randomly divided into a prebiotic group, which consumed 20 grams of resistant dextrin daily, and a placebo group, which consumed an equal amount of maltodextrin. Both groups were observed for three months. The participants were assessed for various metabolic and endocrine parameters, including lipid profiles, blood glucose, hsCRP, DHEA-S, free testosterone, and clinical signs such as hirsutism and menstrual cycle irregularities.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study found that, after three months, the prebiotic group experienced significant improvements in several metabolic and endocrine parameters. Specifically, resistant dextrin supplementation led to reductions in LDL-cholesterol, triglycerides, total cholesterol, fasting blood glucose, hsCRP, DHEA-S, and free testosterone. Additionally, HDL-cholesterol levels increased significantly in the prebiotic group compared to the placebo group. The prebiotic group also saw improvements in clinical manifestations of PCOS, including a reduction in the hirsutism score and more regular menstrual cycles.
From a microbiome perspective, the findings are particularly relevant. The consumption of resistant dextrin, a prebiotic fiber, is known to modulate the gut microbiota, potentially increasing beneficial bacteria like Bifidobacterium and Lactobacillus. These bacteria play a crucial role in regulating systemic inflammation and metabolic function, which may explain the improvements observed in this study. Furthermore, the increased production of short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) due to prebiotic fermentation could enhance insulin sensitivity and reduce inflammation, which are key factors in PCOS pathology.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
This study underscores the potential of resistant dextrin as a therapeutic intervention for improving metabolic and hormonal imbalances in women with PCOS. Given the lack of effective treatments that address both metabolic and endocrine dysfunction in PCOS, the use of prebiotics offers a promising alternative to pharmacological treatments, which often come with side effects. By modulating the gut microbiota, prebiotics may not only improve lipid profiles and insulin resistance but also address clinical symptoms such as hirsutism and menstrual irregularity. This study suggests that dietary interventions using prebiotics like resistant dextrin could be integrated into the management of PCOS, offering a low-cost, side-effect-free alternative to more invasive treatments.
The effects of a low-carbohydrate, ketogenic diet on the polycystic ovary syndrome
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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A 24-week ketogenic diet significantly reduced insulin resistance, free testosterone, and LH/FSH ratio in women with PCOS, improving fertility markers. The dietary intervention may influence gut microbiota, enhancing metabolic and hormonal outcomes.
What was studied?
This pilot study examined the effects of a low-carbohydrate, ketogenic diet (LCKD) on metabolic and endocrine parameters in overweight and obese women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS). Given PCOS’s well-documented link with insulin resistance and hyperandrogenism, the study hypothesized that carbohydrate restriction would improve insulin sensitivity and hormonal imbalance. The intervention involved instructing participants to consume fewer than 20 grams of carbohydrates per day over 24 weeks. Researchers assessed changes in body weight, fasting insulin, free testosterone, LH/FSH ratio, and subjective PCOS symptoms.
Who was studied?
Eleven women aged 18 to 45 with clinically diagnosed PCOS and a BMI ≥27 kg/m² were enrolled from the Raleigh-Durham area in North Carolina. The final analysis included five participants who completed the 24-week study. All participants were instructed to follow a strict LCKD and attended biweekly follow-ups for adherence monitoring and biochemical assessments. The group was predominantly Caucasian, and participants reported histories of chronic anovulation or hyperandrogenemia.
What were the most important findings?
Among the five women who completed the study, the LCKD led to a significant mean weight reduction of 12%, with individual weight loss ranging from 4% to 16.4%. More notably, there were substantial metabolic and hormonal improvements: fasting serum insulin dropped by approximately 54%, the LH/FSH ratio fell by 36%, and percent free testosterone decreased by 30%. These findings strongly suggest enhanced insulin sensitivity and reduced ovarian androgen production. Two of the women, previously experiencing infertility, became pregnant during the study period.
From a microbiome perspective, this is noteworthy because a ketogenic diet is known to modulate gut microbial composition. Prior studies associate ketogenic diets with increased abundance of Akkermansia muciniphila and Bacteroides species, both of which are linked to improved metabolic profiles, including insulin sensitivity and gut barrier integrity. Although microbiota were not directly assessed in this study, the improvement in metabolic parameters is consistent with microbial shifts observed in similar dietary interventions. The reduction in insulin likely suppressed hyperinsulinemia-induced androgen synthesis and improved sex hormone-binding globulin (SHBG) levels, thereby reducing circulating free testosterone. This is particularly relevant for clinicians considering microbiome-modulating dietary strategies as adjunctive treatment in PCOS.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study underscores that a ketogenic diet may serve as an effective non-pharmacological approach to reduce insulin resistance and hyperandrogenism in women with PCOS. This could potentially translate into improved ovulatory function and fertility. The LCKD demonstrated significant endocrine normalization within six months, which is meaningful considering the limited curative options currently available for PCOS. Clinicians should consider LCKD as a viable dietary strategy, especially for PCOS patients struggling with infertility, elevated androgens, or metabolic dysfunctions. Moreover, the potential microbiome-mediated mechanisms add further value by pointing to gut health as an emerging therapeutic axis in PCOS management. While the small sample size and lack of a control group limit generalizability, the results justify larger trials examining diet–microbiome–hormone interactions in this population.
The effects of probiotics, prebiotics, and synbiotics on polycystic ovarian syndrome
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This overview confirms probiotics, particularly Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium, improve insulin resistance, inflammation, and hormone balance in PCOS. Synbiotics showed less consistent effects.
What was reviewed?
This overview synthesized evidence from eight systematic reviews and meta-analyses investigating the effects of probiotics, prebiotics, and synbiotics on the management of polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS). The reviews collectively evaluated randomized controlled trials (RCTs) focusing on metabolic, hormonal, and inflammatory markers to clarify how microbiota-modulating interventions influence PCOS-related outcomes. The analysis spanned data from over 4,000 women with PCOS and assessed diverse probiotic strains, prebiotic compounds (like inulin and fructooligosaccharides), and their combinations (synbiotics), typically over 8–12 week periods.
Who was reviewed?
The population under review consisted of women with clinically diagnosed PCOS from multiple RCTs conducted predominantly in Iran and China. The trials included in the systematic reviews examined interventions using specific bacterial strains and dosages. Outcomes measured included anthropometrics (BMI, weight), glycemic indices (fasting glucose, insulin, HOMA-IR), lipid profiles, inflammatory biomarkers (CRP, hsCRP), oxidative stress markers (TAC, MDA), and hormone levels (testosterone, SHBG).
What were the most important findings?
The compiled reviews demonstrated that probiotic supplementation led to modest yet statistically significant reductions in fasting plasma glucose, fasting insulin, HOMA-IR, total cholesterol, triglycerides, VLDL-C, and BMI in women with PCOS. Some reviews noted increased levels of SHBG and improved insulin sensitivity indices such as QUICKI.
The microbial associations of clinical relevance include a restoration of beneficial bacteria often depleted in PCOS, such as Faecalibacterium prausnitzii, Bifidobacterium spp., and Lactobacillus spp.—species known for producing short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) like butyrate. SCFAs modulate insulin sensitivity, reduce gut permeability, and regulate inflammatory responses. Furthermore, synbiotics had mixed effects; while some reviews reported improvements in glucose and lipid profiles, the benefits were generally less consistent or weaker than probiotics alone.
What are the implications of this review?
This review reinforces the emerging role of the gut microbiota in PCOS pathophysiology and highlights the therapeutic potential of microbiota-targeted interventions. Probiotics demonstrated the most consistent benefits across glycemic, inflammatory, and hormonal parameters. These findings support the integration of microbiome-based strategies, such as targeted probiotic supplementation, into clinical practice for PCOS management. Clinicians should be aware that although results are promising, there remains high heterogeneity among studies in terms of strains used, dosages, and intervention durations. Larger, standardized clinical trials are necessary to define optimal regimens. Still, this growing body of evidence supports a microbiome-informed approach to PCOS care, particularly for improving insulin sensitivity, lowering inflammation, and potentially reducing androgen excess.
The effects of synbiotic supplementation on hormonal status, biomarkers of inflammation and oxidative stress in subjects with polycystic ovary syndrome
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This randomized trial evaluates the effects of synbiotic supplementation on hormonal, inflammatory, and metabolic parameters in women with PCOS. It shows significant improvements in androgen levels, insulin sensitivity, and inflammation.
What was studied?
This randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial studied the effects of synbiotic supplementation on hormonal status, biomarkers of inflammation, and oxidative stress in women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS). Specifically, the research aimed to evaluate the impact of synbiotics, comprising Lactobacillus acidophilus, Lactobacillus casei, Bifidobacterium bifidum, and inulin, on clinical and biochemical markers in women with PCOS over 12 weeks. The primary focus was on assessing changes in hormone levels such as sex hormone-binding globulin (SHBG), free androgen index (FAI), modified Ferriman-Gallwey (mFG) score (for hirsutism), high-sensitivity C-reactive protein (hs-CRP), nitric oxide (NO) levels, and insulin resistance.
Who was studied?
The study involved 60 women diagnosed with PCOS according to the Rotterdam criteria. These women were randomly assigned to receive either synbiotics (n=30) or a placebo (n=30) for 12 weeks. The participants were screened for exclusion factors, including smoking, pregnancy, thyroid disorders, gastrointestinal problems, and the use of probiotics or synbiotics prior to the study. Clinical assessments and biochemical evaluations were performed before and after the intervention to measure the effects of synbiotic supplementation on the hormonal, inflammatory, and oxidative parameters of PCOS.
What were the most important findings?
The most significant findings of this study were that synbiotic supplementation led to notable improvements in several parameters associated with PCOS. Specifically, the synbiotic group showed a significant increase in SHBG and a decrease in the free androgen index (FAI), indicating a reduction in hyperandrogenism. There was also a significant reduction in mFG scores (indicating a reduction in hirsutism), and serum hs-CRP levels, which are associated with inflammation, were significantly reduced. Additionally, plasma NO levels were significantly increased in the synbiotic group, suggesting improved endothelial function. The synbiotic supplementation also resulted in a significant reduction in insulin levels and the HOMA-IR index, indicating improved insulin sensitivity. However, no significant changes were observed in other biomarkers of oxidative stress (such as total antioxidant capacity (TAC), glutathione (GSH), and malondialdehyde (MDA)).
From a microbiome perspective, the synbiotic intervention likely improved gut health and reduced inflammation, which is crucial in managing the systemic effects of PCOS. The improvement in metabolic and hormonal parameters suggests that synbiotics can restore balance in the gut microbiota, reduce systemic inflammation, and improve insulin resistance, all of which are key contributors to PCOS pathophysiology.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The results of this study have significant clinical implications for the management of PCOS. The use of synbiotics as a treatment offers a promising non-pharmacological intervention for managing PCOS-related metabolic and hormonal disturbances. By improving insulin sensitivity, reducing inflammation, and balancing androgen levels, synbiotic supplementation may help alleviate symptoms like hirsutism and irregular menstruation. Moreover, this study supports the growing body of evidence linking gut microbiota modulation to endocrine health, suggesting that gut-targeted therapies could play a pivotal role in the treatment of PCOS. Clinically, synbiotics could serve as an adjunct to other PCOS treatments, offering a safer, more sustainable solution with fewer side effects compared to traditional medications. However, further studies with larger sample sizes and longer durations are needed to confirm these findings and establish long-term efficacy.
The Endobiota Study: Comparison of Vaginal, Cervical and Gut Microbiota Between Women with Stage 3/4 Endometriosis and Healthy Controls
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This study identifies microbiome shifts in vaginal, cervical, and gut sites in stage 3/4 endometriosis. Absence of Atopobium and elevated Gardnerella suggest immune dysregulation, while Escherichia/Shigella dominance in stool correlates with bowel involvement, indicating potential diagnostic biomarkers.
What Was Studied?
This study, titled "The Endobiota Study: Comparison of Vaginal, Cervical, and Gut Microbiota Between Women with Stage 3/4 Endometriosis and Healthy Controls," aimed to evaluate the differences in microbial composition across the vaginal, cervical, and gut microbiomes in women with advanced-stage (3/4) endometriosis compared to healthy controls. Researchers collected and analyzed samples from three anatomical sites—vaginal swabs, cervical swabs, and stool—using 16S rRNA sequencing to determine the diversity and abundance of bacterial genera. The primary objective was to identify specific microbial signatures and dysbiosis patterns associated with advanced endometriosis.
Who Was Studied?
The study included 28 Caucasian women, 14 diagnosed with histologically confirmed stage 3/4 endometriosis and 14 healthy controls. All participants were of reproductive age, with similar age and BMI distributions between groups. Vaginal, cervical, and stool samples were collected from each participant under sterile conditions to prevent contamination. The endometriosis patients were all confirmed to have deep infiltrating endometriosis with extensive lesions, while the control group consisted of asymptomatic women with no clinical or ultrasound evidence of endometriosis.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study uncovered notable dysbiosis in the microbiota composition of women with advanced endometriosis compared to healthy controls. In vaginal samples, Gemella and Atopobium were completely absent in the endometriosis group, suggesting a protective role in healthy women. Cervical samples showed a complete loss of Atopobium and Sneathia in endometriosis patients, while Alloprevotella was significantly elevated. This microbial shift in the cervical microbiota is particularly significant given Atopobium's known associations with maintaining vaginal health. In stool samples, Sneathia, Barnesella, and Gardnerella were significantly decreased in endometriosis patients, while Escherichia/Shigella dominance was observed in two women who subsequently required segmental colon resection for severe bowel involvement. Sensitivity analyses excluding Lactobacillus revealed that Gardnerella represented a significantly higher proportion of the remaining microbiota in the vaginal and cervical niches of the endometriosis group compared to controls (72.9% vs. 36.8% in the vagina and 67.7% vs. 36.8% in the cervix, respectively). Furthermore, Escherichia/Shigella, Streptococcus, and Ureaplasma were markedly elevated, while Prevotella, Dialister, and Megasphaera were significantly reduced. These microbial changes suggest an altered immune response and heightened inflammatory state in women with advanced endometriosis, highlighting potential microbial markers of disease progression.
Anatomical Site
Microbiota Findings in Advanced Endometriosis Patients
Vaginal Samples
Gemella and Atopobium completely absent. Gardnerella significantly elevated (72.9% of microbiota, excluding Lactobacillus).
Cervical Samples
Complete loss of Atopobium and Sneathia. Marked increase in Alloprevotella. Gardnerella elevated (67.7% of microbiota, excluding Lactobacillus).
Stool Samples
Significant decreases in Sneathia, Barnesella, and Gardnerella. Dominance of Escherichia/Shigella observed in two patients requiring bowel resection.
Additional Microbial Shifts
Marked elevation of Escherichia/Shigella, Streptococcus, and Ureaplasma. Reductions in Prevotella, Dialister, and Megasphaera.
Inflammatory Associations
Dysbiosis patterns suggest an altered immune response and heightened inflammatory state in advanced endometriosis.
The Female Vaginal Microbiome in Health and Bacterial Vaginosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This review explores vaginal microbiome in health and Bacterial Vaginosis (BV) highlighting the shift from Lactobacillus-dominance to a dysbiotic state, as well as diagnostic advances and new treatments like probiotics and vaginal microbiota transplantation (VMT).
What was reviewed?
The Female Vaginal Microbiome in Health and Bacterial Vaginosis review article comprehensively examines the vaginal microbiome, focusing on its role in health and disease, specifically bacterial vaginosis (BV). The review covered the characteristics of the healthy vaginal microbiome, the alterations associated with BV, the relationship between BV and various diseases, and the current diagnostic and therapeutic strategies for BV.
Who was reviewed?
The review included extensive analysis of studies and research conducted by various scientists and researchers in the field of microbiology, gynecology, and infectious diseases. Notable contributors to the field, such as Baolei Jia, Eva Raphael, Werner Mendling, and Elena Shipitsyna, provided editorial oversight and peer reviews, ensuring the comprehensive nature of the review. The article also referenced significant studies and findings from researchers like Ravel, Fettweis, Fredricks, and many others who have contributed to the understanding of the vaginal microbiome and BV.
What were the most important findings of this review?
Microbial Composition: The vaginal microbiome in healthy women is dominated by Lactobacillus species, which help maintain an acidic pH and protect against pathogens.
BV Characteristics: BV is marked by a significant reduction in Lactobacillus species and an overgrowth of anaerobic bacteria such as Gardnerella vaginalis, Atopobium vaginae, and Prevotella species.
Disease Association: BV is associated with several adverse reproductive outcomes, including increased susceptibility to sexually transmitted infections (STIs), pelvic inflammatory disease (PID), and adverse obstetric outcomes such as preterm birth.
Diagnosis and Treatment: Traditional diagnostic methods like Amsel criteria and Nugent scoring are supplemented by newer molecular techniques that offer higher accuracy. Treatment primarily involves antibiotics, but recurrence is common due to the persistence of biofilms and antibiotic resistance.
Recent Advances: New diagnostic and therapeutic approaches, including high-throughput sequencing, multi-omic techniques, and microbial-based therapies such as probiotics and vaginal microbiota transplantation (VMT), show promise in better managing BV.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
Enhanced Understanding: The Female Vaginal Microbiome in Health and Bacterial Vaginosis review underscores the complex dynamics of the vaginal microbiome and its critical role in maintaining vaginal health. Understanding these dynamics is crucial for developing targeted interventions.
Improved Diagnostics: The identification of specific biomarkers and the use of advanced molecular techniques can lead to more accurate and timely diagnosis of BV, reducing misdiagnosis and inappropriate treatment.
Therapeutic Innovation: Highlighting the limitations of current antibiotic treatments, the review points towards innovative therapies, including biofilm-disrupting agents and microbial-based treatments, which could offer more sustainable and effective solutions.
Public Health Impact: By linking BV with serious reproductive health issues and increased risk of STIs, the review emphasizes the need for public health initiatives to address BV, which could significantly reduce the burden of these associated conditions.
Research Directions: The review calls for further research into the interactions between the vaginal microbiota and host immune responses, which could reveal new therapeutic targets and strategies for maintaining vaginal health and preventing dysbiosis.
The Gut Microbiome in Polycystic Ovary Syndrome and Its Association with Metabolic Traits
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This study links the gut microbiome in PCOS to metabolic traits, identifying microbial shifts tied to insulin resistance and prediabetes. Specific taxa like Ruminococcaceae UCG-002 and Dorea correlate with hormonal and glucose metabolism markers, highlighting the gut microbiome’s role in PCOS-related metabolic health.
What was studied?
This study investigated the association between the gut microbiome and polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), particularly its metabolic traits, in women approaching the end of their reproductive years. Using a population-based cohort from the Northern Finland Birth Cohort 1966 (NFBC1966), the research team analyzed fecal microbiome profiles via 16S rRNA sequencing and correlated the bacterial composition with clinical, hormonal, and metabolic characteristics, including markers of glucose tolerance and insulin sensitivity. The core objective was to determine whether microbial composition or diversity could distinguish PCOS cases from controls and whether specific taxa were linked to features like insulin resistance and prediabetes, which are commonly observed in PCOS.
Who was studied?
The study enrolled 303 women, including 102 women diagnosed with PCOS and 201 age- and BMI-matched healthy controls, all drawn from the NFBC1966 longitudinal study. These participants provided fecal samples for microbiome analysis and underwent clinical examinations, including hormonal assays, oral glucose tolerance tests (OGTT), and metabolic profiling. The diagnostic criteria for PCOS were based on self-reported oligomenorrhea, hirsutism, or a medical diagnosis of PCOS or polycystic ovaries (PCOs) at ages 31 and 46, respectively. The cohort was ethnically homogenous and geographically stable, which reduced external confounding factors such as diet, genetics, and socioeconomic variability.
What were the most important findings?
The study found that PCOS itself did not significantly alter overall gut microbiome diversity or composition when comparing PCOS women to matched controls. Alpha diversity, which measures the richness and evenness of microbial species, and beta diversity, which compares the community structure between groups, were not significantly different between the two groups. However, significant associations were uncovered between specific microbial taxa and PCOS-related metabolic traits.
Notably, the genus Ruminococcaceae was positively correlated with favorable metabolic markers, including higher sex hormone-binding globulin (SHBG) levels and improved insulin sensitivity (measured via the Matsuda and Disposition indices). The Clostridiales Family XIII AD3011 group also displayed positive correlations with metabolic health indicators and negative correlations with markers of glucose dysregulation, including glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) and BMI. Furthermore, within the PCOS group, women with prediabetes had significantly reduced microbial diversity and elevated levels of the genus Dorea compared to PCOS women with normal glucose tolerance. This genus has been previously linked to both metabolic dysfunction and increased blood glucose, reinforcing its potential as a microbial biomarker for insulin resistance and prediabetes in PCOS.
Although the overall gut microbiome profile did not drastically differ between PCOS and non-PCOS women, the identified microbial shifts correlated strongly with metabolic impairments common in PCOS, suggesting that metabolic status, rather than PCOS per se, may drive microbiome alterations.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study emphasizes the critical role of metabolic health in shaping the gut microbiome profile of women with PCOS rather than PCOS diagnosis alone. The identification of taxa like Ruminococcaceae and Dorea as being closely linked to insulin sensitivity and glucose metabolism offers promising microbial signatures for future diagnostic and therapeutic development. Clinicians managing PCOS should consider metabolic health as a key modulator of gut microbiome composition, especially when evaluating or planning interventions aimed at microbiome modulation.
The findings also point toward the potential utility of microbial markers to predict metabolic complications in PCOS patients, particularly the risk of developing prediabetes or type 2 diabetes. This aligns with a growing understanding of the gut-liver-metabolism axis and highlights microbiome-based diagnostics and interventions as a future component of personalized care in PCOS management.
The gut microbiota and endometriosis: From pathogenesis to diagnosis and treatment
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmune disease is when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's tissues, often linked to imbalances in the microbiome, which can disrupt immune regulation and contribute to disease development.
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The review explored the connection between gut microbiota and endometriosis, highlighting potential influences on disease mechanisms through hormonal, immune, and inflammatory pathways. It suggests that modulating gut microbiota could lead to innovative diagnostic and therapeutic approaches for endometriosis. This review further suggests that via Fecal Microbiota Transplantation (FMT) may provide a novel therapeutic approach for the clinical treatment of endometriosis.
What was reviewed?
The study reviewed the relationship between the gut microbiota and endometriosis, focusing on how the gut microbiota may influence the pathogenesis, diagnosis, and potential treatment of endometriosis through various mechanisms such as estrogen modulation, immune response, and inflammation.
Who was reviewed?
The review did not involve specific individuals as subjects of study but instead synthesized findings from various studies that investigate the gut microbiota’s involvement in patients with endometriosis. It includes analysis of microbial profiles and their correlations with the disease.
What were the most important findings?
Important findings highlighted that alterations in the gut microbiota are associated with endometriosis and could potentially influence the disease’s pathogenesis through mechanisms linked to hormonal balance, immune modulation, and inflammatory responses. Specifically, changes in bacterial diversity and specific bacterial groups (such as an increase in the Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes ratio) were noted in patients with endometriosis.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The review suggests that targeting the gut microbiota might offer new strategies for the diagnosis and treatment of endometriosis. Understanding the role of the gut microbiota in endometriosis could lead to non-invasive diagnostic biomarkers and novel therapeutic approaches that involve modulating the gut microbiota through diet, probiotics, or even fecal microbiota transplantation.
The Human Microbiome during Bacterial Vaginosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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This review explores bacterial vaginosis, focusing on microbial imbalances, immune responses, and diagnostic challenges. It highlights the need for microbiome-based treatments and improved diagnostics to reduce recurrence and improve BV management.
What Was Reviewed?
This review examines the human microbiome during bacterial vaginosis (BV), focusing on microbial shifts, host immune responses, and diagnostic challenges. It evaluates BV as a polymicrobial condition rather than an infection caused by a single pathogen. The review highlights how microbial imbalances contribute to BV symptoms, persistence, and recurrence. Additionally, it explores epidemiological factors, diagnostic methods, and host-microbiome interactions that influence BV progression and treatment response.
Who Was Reviewed?
The review synthesizes findings from studies involving women diagnosed with BV, including those experiencing recurrent infections. It incorporates data from molecular sequencing studies and microbiological research to assess the composition of the vaginal microbiome during BV. Additionally, it examines host immune responses to BV-related microbial changes and evaluates the link between BV and increased susceptibility to sexually transmitted infections (STIs) and pregnancy complications such as preterm birth.
Most Important Findings
BV disrupts the vaginal microbiome by reducing Lactobacillus species and increasing anaerobic bacteria such as Gardnerella vaginalis, Atopobium vaginae, Prevotella spp., Mobiluncus spp., and Sneathia spp. Unlike infections that trigger a strong inflammatory response, BV presents as a microbial imbalance rather than an acute immune reaction. The review also highlights how bacterial biofilms protect BV-associated bacteria from antibiotic treatment, contributing to high recurrence rates.
The study also discusses BV’s complex interaction with the host immune system. BV-associated bacteria produce virulence factors that degrade the vaginal mucosal barrier, leading to increased inflammatory markers such as interleukin-1β (IL-1β) and tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α). This immune dysregulation may explain BV’s association with increased STI susceptibility and adverse pregnancy outcomes.
Diagnosing BV remains challenging due to inconsistencies in clinical and laboratory criteria. Amsel’s clinical criteria and Nugent scoring, which rely on symptom assessment and Gram staining, remain the primary diagnostic tools. However, these methods fail to account for BV’s diverse microbial community, leading to inconsistencies in diagnosing recurrent and persistent cases. The review emphasizes the need for molecular sequencing-based diagnostics that provide a more precise understanding of BV-associated bacterial communities.
Implications of the Review
BV presents a significant clinical challenge due to its high recurrence rate, treatment limitations, and association with reproductive health complications. The review underscores the importance of shifting towards microbiome-targeted therapies rather than relying solely on broad-spectrum antibiotics. Future research should focus on developing treatments that restore Lactobacillus-dominant vaginal microbiota and prevent biofilm formation. Refining molecular diagnostic techniques will help clinicians identify BV-associated bacterial communities more accurately, improving treatment strategies and reducing recurrence.
This review highlights the urgent need for improved diagnostic criteria, personalized treatment approaches, and a deeper understanding of the vaginal microbiome’s role in BV persistence. Advancing these areas of research will help clinicians develop more effective, long-term solutions for BV management.
The Impact of Cultural Factors Upon Postpartum Depression: A Literature Review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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This review examines how cultural factors influence postpartum depression, identifying both protective and harmful cultural practices. It emphasizes the need for culturally sensitive care and highlights the role of social support systems in mitigating depressive symptoms.
What was reviewed?
This literature review examines the impact of cultural factors on postpartum depression (PPD). It explores how different cultural practices, traditions, and beliefs influence the prevalence and severity of PPD. The review analyzes studies conducted globally, comparing postpartum women’s experiences with cultural rituals and social support systems. It categorizes the cultural factors into alleviating, deteriorating, and neutral influences on postpartum depression.
Who was reviewed?
The review primarily focuses on studies involving postpartum women from various cultural backgrounds. The women reviewed were from countries such as Taiwan, Hong Kong, Turkey, India, the United States, and Japan, each with distinct cultural practices and social norms regarding childbirth and the postpartum period. The studies reviewed examined women’s experiences with support systems, cultural practices like “doing the month” or Satogaeri bunben, and the role of family and community in alleviating or exacerbating depressive symptoms after childbirth.
What were the most important findings?
The review found that cultural factors play a significant role in postpartum depression, with different cultures having varying impacts on the severity of the condition. In some cultures, traditional postpartum practices were found to alleviate symptoms of PPD. For example, the practice of "doing the month" in Taiwan, which provides extensive rest and family support, was associated with lower levels of depression. Similarly, in cultures with strong family involvement, such as in Japan and Taiwan, postpartum women reported less depressive symptoms, especially when they received support from extended families. However, in cultures where there was a lack of support or negative family dynamics, such as conflicts with in-laws, postpartum depression was more pronounced.
Interestingly, the review also noted that in some cases, cultural factors might exacerbate postpartum depression. For instance, in some communities, social expectations, such as the cultural preference for male children, could trigger or worsen depression in women. In other instances, when cultural practices were not adhered to, such as in the case of Vietnamese or Arabic women in Australia, lack of support and disconnection from traditional rituals increased the risk of PPD.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The greatest implication of this review is the need for healthcare professionals to consider cultural contexts when diagnosing and treating postpartum depression. The findings suggest that while cultural practices can act as protective factors for some women, they can also increase the risk of PPD in others. Healthcare providers should be trained to recognize the role of culture in shaping women’s mental health experiences and be sensitive to these factors when developing care plans. Additionally, the review calls for further research into how cultural beliefs and practices influence mental health outcomes for postpartum women, emphasizing the importance of culturally sensitive interventions. The review also suggests that integrating traditional support systems with modern healthcare services could help alleviate PPD in certain cultural contexts.
The impact of endometriosis on dietary choices and activities of everyday life: a cross-sectional study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This review highlights how gluten-free, Mediterranean, and anti-inflammatory diets improve pain perception in endometriosis by reducing inflammation and modulating the gut microbiome. Probiotics and bioactive nutrients such as curcumin enhance therapeutic outcomes.
What was reviewed?
This systematic review evaluated the impact of dietary interventions on pain perception in women diagnosed with endometriosis. It explored the connections between dietary changes and the alleviation of symptoms, particularly chronic pain, and assessed the potential of specific dietary patterns and nutrients to influence disease progression and symptom severity. The review included evidence from various studies highlighting the role of diets such as gluten-free, Mediterranean, and anti-inflammatory diets, along with the incorporation of specific nutrients and probiotics.
Who was reviewed?
The review included studies examining women diagnosed with endometriosis, focusing on their dietary habits, pain management strategies, and overall quality of life. The population spanned diverse stages of endometriosis and varying symptom severities, with dietary interventions as a common self-management approach.
What were the most important findings?
The review identified several key dietary patterns and nutrients that positively influenced pain perception and symptom management in women with endometriosis. A gluten-free diet was associated with symptom relief in patients experiencing gastrointestinal-related pain, while the Mediterranean diet showed benefits in reducing inflammation and pain severity due to its high content of antioxidants, omega-3 fatty acids, and polyphenols. Anti-inflammatory diets also gained traction, particularly in severe cases of endometriosis, where eliminating saturated fats and processed meats improved symptom management.
Major microbial associations (MMAs) of endometriosis were also highlighted, particularly the role of probiotics like Lactobacillus in alleviating pain and potentially modulating the gut microbiome to reduce systemic inflammation. The findings emphasize the therapeutic potential of dietary supplements such as curcumin, resveratrol, and quercetin, which possess anti-inflammatory and antioxidant properties.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The findings suggest that dietary interventions and supplements can serve as non-invasive and complementary strategies for managing endometriosis-related symptoms, particularly chronic pain. By modulating systemic inflammation and influencing the gut microbiome, specific dietary patterns and nutrients may provide a tailored approach to alleviating symptoms. The review underscores the importance of integrating nutritional guidance into endometriosis management protocols.
The Implication of Mechanistic Approaches and the Role of the Microbiome in Polycystic Ovary Syndrome (PCOS)
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This review connects gut and vaginal microbiome dysbiosis with PCOS-related inflammation, metabolic imbalance, and hormone disruption, highlighting bile acids and SCFAs as key mediators and therapeutic targets.
What was reviewed?
This review explored the mechanistic underpinnings of polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) with a particular focus on the role of the microbiome and associated metabolomic changes. The authors consolidated findings from diverse studies involving both human and animal models to highlight how gut and vaginal microbiota dysbiosis contributes to the metabolic, reproductive, and inflammatory manifestations of PCOS. The review emphasized microbial-mediated alterations in bile acids, short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs), ceramides, and trimethylamine N-oxide (TMAO), discussing how these metabolites affect insulin resistance (IR), hormonal regulation, and immune function.
Who was reviewed?
This review drew on a broad spectrum of human clinical studies, animal model research, and in vitro analyses. Studies included comparisons between women with PCOS and healthy controls, often stratified by phenotype, body mass index, insulin sensitivity, or reproductive status. Additionally, some studies involved germ-free or antibiotic-treated animal models to evaluate the causal role of gut microbiota in PCOS-like phenotypes. The review also incorporated data on vaginal microbiota differences in PCOS patients, comparing their microbial communities to those of healthy women to assess potential impacts on fertility and inflammation.
What were the most important findings?
The review identified that women with PCOS consistently exhibit gut microbiome dysbiosis, including reduced levels of Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium and increased Escherichia, Shigella, Bacteroides vulgatus, and Prevotella. These microbial shifts disrupt bile acid metabolism, especially lowering GDCA and TUDCA, and impair IL-22 signaling, contributing to inflammation and insulin resistance. Decreased short-chain fatty acid (SCFA) production further weakens gut barrier integrity and affects gut hormone levels such as PYY and GLP-1, exacerbating endocrine imbalance.
Importantly, vaginal microbiota dysbiosis, characterized by increased Streptococcus, Gardnerella, Chlamydia, and Mycoplasma, and decreased Lactobacillus, was noted in PCOS, further implicating local immune disturbances and poor reproductive outcomes. The authors highlighted that the microbiome modulates IL-6, IL-10, IL-18, TNF-α, and CRP levels, linking microbial shifts to chronic low-grade inflammation, a hallmark of PCOS.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review makes a compelling case for recognizing gut and vaginal microbiota as central players in the pathophysiology of PCOS. Mapping the complex interactions between microbiome composition, immune signaling, metabolic hormones, and reproductive dysfunction provides a robust framework for considering microbiota-targeted therapies. The findings suggest that manipulating gut flora through probiotics, dietary fiber, or even fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) could mitigate insulin resistance, reduce inflammation, and restore hormonal balance. Clinically, this highlights the potential for integrating microbiome assessments into PCOS diagnosis and personalized management. Moreover, the inclusion of bile acids and SCFAs as biomarkers or therapeutic targets could revolutionize PCOS treatment strategies by addressing metabolic and endocrine dysfunction at their microbial roots.
The Influence of Lactoferrin in Plasma and Peritoneal Fluid on Iron Metabolism in Women with Endometriosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This study demonstrates that peritoneal fluid-to-plasma ferritin and lactoferrin ratios distinguish endometriosis stage and severity. Iron overload and shifting iron-binding protein profiles reveal a localized dysregulation that may influence disease progression and potentially pathogenic microbiome selection.
What was studied?
This study investigated the role of lactoferrin (LF) in relation to iron metabolism in women with and without endometriosis by measuring levels of LF, ferritin (FT), transferrin (TF), and iron (Fe) simultaneously in plasma and peritoneal fluid. The authors specifically explored whether the concentrations and ratios of these iron-related proteins in the two biological compartments could distinguish the presence and progression of endometriosis. The goal was to identify noninvasive or minimally invasive biomarkers that may aid in diagnosing or staging the disease based on iron metabolism, especially given endometriosis’ pro-inflammatory, iron-rich microenvironment.
Who was studied?
The study cohort included 90 women of reproductive age undergoing diagnostic laparoscopy, of whom 57 had histologically confirmed endometriosis (stages I–IV) and 33 did not. Plasma and peritoneal fluid samples were collected pre- and intra-operatively. Subjects were classified based on endometriosis diagnosis and stage, and specimens were evaluated for levels of LF, FT, TF, and Fe using ELISA, immunoturbidimetric assay, and colorimetric methods.
What were the most important findings?
Key findings highlight that ferritin and iron concentrations were significantly elevated in peritoneal fluid compared to plasma, especially in patients with advanced-stage endometriosis. In contrast, transferrin was consistently lower in peritoneal fluid. Notably, lactoferrin levels did not significantly differ between women with and without endometriosis when evaluated independently in plasma or peritoneal fluid, but the peritoneal fluid/plasma lactoferrin ratio decreased progressively with increasing disease severity, significantly distinguishing stage I from stage IV. The ferritin ratio was markedly higher in the endometriosis group, underscoring its potential as a disease marker. Correlation analyses revealed that in severe endometriosis, lactoferrin was significantly associated with ferritin and iron in the peritoneal fluid, suggesting a disrupted iron regulation mechanism localized to the disease microenvironment. Importantly, the elevated ferritin concentrations in peritoneal fluid may serve a compensatory, protective role to sequester iron and mitigate oxidative stress, while lactoferrin may lose this protective function as disease progresses.
From a microbiome perspective, this study underscores the iron-dependent ecological shifts that may select for siderophilic pathobionts. The iron overload and pro-oxidative milieu likely fosters the expansion of iron-requiring microbial taxa, potentially including Escherichia, Enterobacter, and Fusobacterium, known to be enriched in some endometriosis microbiome signatures. While microbial profiling was not performed, the metallomic dysregulation described supports the hypothesis that iron availability is a crucial factor in shaping pathogenic microbial communities in endometriosis.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This study provides compelling evidence that iron-binding proteins—particularly ferritin and lactoferrin—play a localized and differential role in the progression of endometriosis. The findings suggest that peritoneal fluid iron metabolism, and especially the ferritin-to-lactoferrin balance, may be a critical axis of disease progression and potentially a therapeutic target. The study introduces the peritoneal fluid/plasma concentration ratio as a novel diagnostic parameter, offering a more granular assessment than conventional plasma markers. The declining lactoferrin ratio and increasing ferritin ratio with disease severity may signal a transition from iron sequestration and immune modulation toward iron-driven oxidative stress and tissue damage. This may serve as a foundation for the development of metallome-targeted diagnostics and therapies, including exogenous lactoferrin supplementation, which the authors suggest could restore iron balance in advanced disease stages. These findings also have implications for understanding how iron dysregulation may foster microbial dysbiosis, providing a mechanistic link between host iron metabolism and the pathophysiological selection of microbial communities in endometriosis.
The interplay between microbiota, metabolites, immunity during BV
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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This review explains how microbial shifts, metabolite production, and immune responses interact in bacterial vaginosis. It highlights the roles of Gardnerella, Atopobium, and other anaerobes in disrupting vaginal health and discusses how their metabolic byproducts and immune modulation drive BV symptoms and persistence.
What was Reviewed?
This review explored the complex interplay between the vaginal microbiota, metabolite production, and local immune responses in the pathogenesis of bacterial vaginosis (BV). The authors synthesized existing research on how shifts in the vaginal microbiome from Lactobacillus-dominant communities to polymicrobial anaerobic communities contribute to BV development, symptoms, and recurrence. The review particularly emphasized the combined role of microbiota composition, bacterial metabolic products, and vaginal immune responses in driving clinical outcomes and disease persistence.
Who was Reviewed?
The review covered a wide body of research focusing on reproductive-age women diagnosed with or at risk for BV. It drew from studies examining the vaginal microbiota, including key bacteria such as Gardnerella vaginalis, Atopobium vaginae, Prevotella spp., Mobiluncus spp., and Sneathia sanguinegens, as well as the protective Lactobacillus species like L. crispatus and L. iners. It also reviewed studies on the vaginal metabolome and immune responses in BV-positive and BV-negative women.
Most Important Findings
The review consolidated evidence that BV is a multifactorial condition characterized by dysbiosis of the vaginal microbiota, metabolic disruption, and altered immune responses. It described how healthy vaginal microbiomes are dominated by Lactobacillus species, particularly L. crispatus, which maintain vaginal acidity and protect against pathogens. In contrast, BV involves a shift toward a polymicrobial anaerobic community, with increased abundance of Gardnerella vaginalis, Atopobium vaginae, Prevotella spp., Mobiluncus spp., and Sneathia spp., collectively referred to as major microbial associations (MMA) of BV.
These BV-associated bacteria produce key metabolites, including short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) like acetate and propionate, and volatile amines like putrescine and cadaverine, which raise vaginal pH and produce the characteristic fishy odor of BV. Additionally, BV-associated biofilm formation, particularly involving G. vaginalis and A. vaginae, enhances bacterial persistence and resistance to treatment.
The review highlighted that these microbial and metabolic changes interact with the host’s immune system. BV patients exhibit elevated pro-inflammatory cytokines, especially IL-1β, without a corresponding increase in neutrophil recruitment. This unique immune profile likely results from SCFA-mediated suppression of neutrophil chemotaxis and explains why BV lacks overt inflammatory symptoms despite microbial overgrowth.
Implications of this Review
This review emphasizes the need to redefine BV beyond a simple microbial imbalance. It emphasizes that the metabolic products of BV-associated bacteria and their impact on host immunity are central to disease progression and recurrence. Clinicians should consider not only microbial community shifts but also metabolite profiles and immune responses when diagnosing and managing BV. The review calls for the integration of multi-omic data, microbiome, metabolome, and immunome, to develop more accurate diagnostics and targeted therapeutic strategies. Understanding these interactions may guide the design of personalized interventions to restore microbial and metabolic homeostasis, reduce BV recurrence, and mitigate associated reproductive health risks.
The magnitude of postpartum depression among mothers in Africa: a literaturereview
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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This review explores the prevalence of postpartum depression (PPD) among African mothers, highlighting significant variation across countries and the need for culturally validated diagnostic tools to improve screening and treatment in postpartum care.
What was reviewed?
This is a literature review examining the magnitude of postpartum depression (PPD) among mothers in Africa. The review compiled findings from 21 research articles to analyze the prevalence of PPD across various African countries. It assessed studies that used different diagnostic tools, including the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS), Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9), and others. The review also highlighted the challenges that inconsistent data poses, including the absence of locally validated diagnostic tools for screening PPD.
Who was reviewed?
The review focused on research studies that assessed postpartum depression in African mothers. The studies included postpartum women aged 17-49 years, who attended healthcare facilities for routine care or immunization. These studies were conducted across various African countries, such as Uganda, Nigeria, Morocco, and South Africa. The reviewed studies utilized a range of diagnostic tools, including the EPDS, PHQ-9, Kessler Scale (K10), and others. Still, they also noted the lack of validation of these tools in local African languages and cultural contexts.
What were the most important findings?
The review revealed considerable variation in the prevalence of postpartum depression across different African countries. For example, studies that used the EPDS found PPD rates ranging from 6.9% in Morocco to 43% in Uganda. Other tools, like the PHQ-9 and Kessler scales, reported prevalence rates ranging from 6.1% to 44%. These findings emphasize that PPD is a significant public health issue in Africa, with higher rates than in many developed countries. The review also highlighted that the EPDS tool was effective in diagnosing PPD in the African context, with sensitivity and specificity results ranging from 75% to 100% and 87% to 98%, respectively. However, the review also pointed out that many studies did not validate their assessment tools for local African languages or cultural settings, which could affect the accuracy of the diagnoses.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The review underscores the need for culturally sensitive and locally validated diagnostic tools for assessing postpartum depression in African countries. The high prevalence rates of PPD suggest that it is an underrecognized and neglected public health issue. Clinicians in Africa should be encouraged to incorporate routine screening for PPD in postpartum care, using tools that are both reliable and contextually appropriate. This review calls for more research and policy initiatives to address the mental health needs of postpartum women in Africa, emphasizing the importance of early identification, treatment, and ongoing support. Additionally, the review stresses the need for a uniform approach to screening, ensuring that assessment tools are validated for the diverse cultural settings across the continent.
The oral microbiome and breast cancer and non-malignant breast disease, and its relationship with the fecal microbiome in the Ghana Breast Health Study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Breast Cancer
Breast Cancer
Traditionally linked to genetic predispositions and environmental exposures, emerging evidence highlights the microbiome as a critical and underappreciated factor influencing breast cancer progression, immune response, and treatment outcomes.
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The study linked reduced oral microbiome diversity and altered microbial profiles to breast cancer and non-malignant breast disease, highlighting strong correlations between oral and fecal microbiomes in cases versus controls. Genera such as Porphyromonas showed significant inverse associations with breast cancer risk.
What was studied?
This study investigated the relationship between the oral microbiome, breast cancer, and non-malignant breast disease, as well as the correlation between the oral and fecal microbiomes in a case-control population in Ghana. Researchers analyzed microbiome samples from 881 women, including 369 breast cancer cases, 93 non-malignant cases, and 419 controls, using 16S rRNA gene sequencing.
Who was studied?
The study population included Ghanaian women aged 18–74 years who were recruited from Accra and Kumasi. Participants comprised breast cancer patients, individuals with non-malignant breast disease, and population-based controls. Oral and fecal microbiome samples were collected, and demographic, lifestyle, and medical history data were recorded.
What are the Most important findings?
The study revealed that oral microbiome alpha-diversity was significantly lower in breast cancer and non-malignant breast disease cases compared to controls. For instance, each 10-unit increase in observed amplicon sequence variants (ASVs) corresponded to a reduction in the odds of breast cancer and non-malignant breast disease by 14% and 21%, respectively. Beta-diversity analyses also showed distinct microbial community compositions between cases and controls. Key genera, including Porphyromonas and Fusobacterium, were inversely associated with breast cancer, with their relative abundances being significantly lower in cases than in controls. A notable finding was the strong inverse correlation between oral Porphyromonas and fecal Bacteroides in breast cancer cases. This relationship is particularly relevant as fecal Bacteroides has been implicated in estrogen metabolism and breast cancer risk. Breast cancer cases also exhibited stronger correlations between oral and fecal microbiomes compared to controls, suggesting a potential systemic interaction.
Shockingly, the study also found that breast cancer and non-malignant breast disease cases were more likely to have taken antibiotics within the last 30 days compared to controls. This raises critical questions about the role of antibiotics in microbiome disruption and their potential contribution to systemic microbial changes that could influence breast cancer risk.
What are the greatest implications?
This study is extraordinary in its scope and implications. It bridges the gap between two traditionally separate microbiomes—oral and fecal—and ties these microbial systems to breast cancer, a disease of immense global health importance. The findings reveal striking patterns: the inverse associations of oral microbiome diversity and specific genera, such as Porphyromonas and Fusobacterium, with breast cancer and non-malignant breast disease are compelling. These microbes, often linked to periodontal disease, emerge here as potential protective or systemic markers in a population with distinct environmental and health contexts.
The strong correlation between the oral and fecal microbiomes in breast cancer cases further underscores the interconnectedness of microbial communities and highlights systemic microbial interactions that remain underexplored in cancer research. The inverse relationship between Porphyromonas in the oral microbiome and Bacteroides in the fecal microbiome—key players in estrogen metabolism—provides intriguing clues about the mechanisms underlying breast cancer pathogenesis.
The Possible Effects of Zinc Supplementation on Postpartum Depression and Anemia
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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Anemia
Anemia
Anemia is a reduction in red blood cells or hemoglobin, often influenced by the gut microbiome's impact on nutrient absorption.
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Postpartum zinc supplementation shows promise in reducing postpartum depression risk and improving maternal zinc levels, though it may cause transient hematological changes when combined with iron.
What was studied?
This study focused on the effects of zinc supplementation on postpartum depression and anemia in women who had undergone cesarean sections. Specifically, it aimed to investigate the relationship between zinc supplementation and the reduction of postpartum depression symptoms (as assessed by the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale or EPDS) and its effect on the hematological status, including hemoglobin and hematocrit levels, of postpartum women.
Who was studied?
The study enrolled 197 postpartum women who had undergone cesarean sections and had postpartum anemia. These women were monitored for their zinc and hematological levels, and a subset of 148 women was included in the analysis concerning the relationship between zinc supplementation and postpartum depression.
What were the most important findings?
The study found that postpartum zinc supplementation significantly improved maternal zinc levels and reduced the risk of developing postpartum depression. In contrast, the combination of oral zinc and iron supplementation showed a transient negative effect on hemoglobin and hematocrit levels, though this effect was not clinically significant and resolved within a month postpartum. Zinc supplementation did not cause any severe adverse effects but did temporarily affect hematological parameters when combined with oral iron supplementation.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings suggest that postpartum zinc supplementation could be a beneficial intervention for preventing or alleviating postpartum depression, which is a major public health concern affecting a significant proportion of new mothers. This intervention appears to be relatively safe and could be considered as part of postpartum care, especially for women experiencing depression. However, clinicians should be cautious when combining zinc with iron supplementation, as this may cause short-term hematological disturbances. The study's limitations include its retrospective design and small sample size, which suggest that further research, particularly prospective studies, is necessary to confirm these findings and explore the optimal dosages and combination treatments for postpartum depression and anemia.
The Rate and Risk Factors of Postpartum Depression in Vietnam From 2010 to 2020: A Literature Review
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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This review examines the prevalence and risk factors of postpartum depression in Vietnam, highlighting significant socio-economic, cultural, and personal contributors. It calls for early screening and more comprehensive support for mothers, especially in rural areas.
What was reviewed?
This review focused on the rate and risk factors of postpartum depression (PPD) in Vietnam, based on studies published from 2010 to 2020. It synthesized findings from 18 research articles that explored the prevalence and contributing risk factors for PPD among Vietnamese mothers. The review analyzed studies that used quantitative, qualitative, and mixed methods, assessing the prevalence of PPD across different time points postnatally, from one month to more than a year after childbirth. It also examined the tools used for screening, such as the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS), the Self-Reporting Questionnaire (SRQ-20), and the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM).
Who was reviewed?
The studies reviewed focused on postpartum women in Vietnam, typically ranging from one month to a year postpartum. These women came from different socio-economic backgrounds, with a majority being from rural and urban regions of Vietnam. The articles reviewed used both qualitative and quantitative research designs. These studies explored a wide range of risk factors for PPD, including personal factors such as education level, mental health history, and preparedness for motherhood, as well as family-related factors like lack of support and intimate partner violence. Environmental factors such as stressful life events and living in rural areas were also considered in these studies.
What were the most important findings?
The review revealed that the rate of postpartum depression in Vietnam varied significantly depending on the timing of the postnatal screening and the tool used to assess depression. The prevalence of PPD among Vietnamese women ranged from 8.2% to 37.1%. Studies using the EPDS typically showed higher prevalence rates in the first three months postpartum, with rates reaching 34.3%. The most common risk factors for PPD identified in these studies included low educational attainment, history of mental trauma, lack of family support, marital conflicts, and stressful life events. Other risk factors included intimate partner violence, especially emotional and physical abuse, and the cultural preference for sons, which added stress for new mothers. The review also highlighted that rural women, or those living in socioeconomically disadvantaged conditions, were more likely to experience PPD.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The findings underscore the importance of addressing PPD as a significant health issue in Vietnam. The high prevalence rates and the variety of risk factors identified point to the need for tailored interventions, including culturally sensitive screening programs. The review recommends that healthcare providers in Vietnam integrate routine PPD screenings in the first month postpartum, as current studies have largely neglected this early postnatal period. Additionally, the review calls for better education and mental health preparation for new mothers to address the personal and familial factors contributing to PPD. Policy-makers are encouraged to create supportive policies, including expanding mental health services in rural areas and providing better family support programs for new mothers, particularly those in vulnerable socio-economic situations. Furthermore, future research should explore PPD in the earliest postnatal stages, particularly in rural areas where support is minimal.
The right bug in the right place: opportunities for bacterial vaginosis treatment
February 12, 2026
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This review explores the role of vaginal microbiota in bacterial vaginosis and highlights emerging microbiome-informed treatments. It emphasizes microbial signatures of BV, the limitations of antibiotics, and the potential of targeted biotherapeutics to restore microbial balance and reduce recurrence.
What was Reviewed?
This review examines the current understanding of the vaginal microbiome and its relationship to bacterial vaginosis (BV). It discusses how microbial dysbiosis contributes to the onset and persistence of BV and evaluates the potential therapeutic strategies that could leverage microbiome science to treat and prevent the condition. The authors explore the complexity of vaginal microbial communities, particularly focusing on the imbalance between health-associated Lactobacillus species and BV-associated anaerobic bacteria. They review both existing antibiotic treatments and emerging microbiome-informed interventions, including live biotherapeutics and vaginal microbiota transplants (VMT).
Who was Reviewed?
The review focused on published research involving women diagnosed with bacterial vaginosis, as well as healthy women with Lactobacillus-dominated vaginal microbiota. The authors synthesized data from clinical studies, in vitro experiments, and microbiome profiling studies that examined microbial composition, treatment responses, and microbial dynamics in BV-affected and healthy populations. They also reviewed preclinical studies exploring potential microbial therapeutics, including specific bacterial strains and vaginal microbiome restoration strategies.
What were the Most Important Findings?
The review highlighted that bacterial vaginosis is characterized by a distinct microbial signature: a depletion of Lactobacillus species (notably L. crispatus, L. jensenii, and L. gasseri) and an overgrowth of anaerobic bacteria. This microbial imbalance leads to elevated vaginal pH and inflammation, contributing to symptoms and increasing susceptibility to other infections.
The authors emphasized that standard antibiotic treatments, like metronidazole and clindamycin, often result in high recurrence rates and can disrupt both pathogenic and beneficial bacterial populations. They reviewed emerging microbiome-based therapies aimed at correcting vaginal dysbiosis without harming commensal microbes. These include probiotic formulations containing Lactobacillus strains, VMT, and precision antimicrobials targeting specific BV-associated pathogens. Notably, they discussed the importance of strain-specific effects, showing that not all Lactobacillus strains equally promote vaginal health, and that strain selection is critical for therapeutic success.
A key finding was that sustained remission from BV is linked to successful re-establishment of a Lactobacillus-dominant community, specifically L. crispatus. The review also addressed how host factors, sexual activity, and antibiotic exposure influence microbial dynamics, indicating the need for personalized, microbiome-informed approaches to BV treatment.
What are the Implications of this Review?
This review carries significant implications for clinicians managing bacterial vaginosis. It highlights the limitations of antibiotic-centric treatments and underscores the need for microbiome-conscious strategies that restore and maintain vaginal microbial balance. The evidence supports moving toward targeted interventions such as live biotherapeutics and VMT, which can selectively suppress BV-associated pathogens while promoting beneficial lactobacilli. Clinicians should consider that effective, long-term BV management may depend not only on pathogen eradication but also on rebuilding a resilient, health-associated vaginal microbiome. The review points to the potential of precision microbial therapies tailored to individual microbial profiles, marking a shift toward personalized vaginal microbiome medicine. For microbiome signatures research, the paper enriches the understanding of the specific bacterial players involved in BV dysbiosis and recovery.
The role of gut and genital microbiota and the estrobolome in endometriosis, infertility and chronic pelvic pain
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Chronic Pelvic Pain (CPP)
Chronic Pelvic Pain (CPP)
Chronic Pelvic Pain (CPP) is persistent pain in the pelvic region lasting six months or longer, often multifactorial, impacting physical and emotional well-being, and associated with various medical conditions.
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Infertility
Infertility
Infertility is the inability to conceive after 12 months of regular, unprotected sex. It affects both men and women and can be due to various physical, hormonal, or genetic factors. Treatments include medication, surgery, assisted reproductive technologies, and lifestyle changes.
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This review highlights the gut and genital microbiome's roles in estrogen-driven conditions like endometriosis, infertility, and CPP, emphasizing dysbiosis' impact on inflammation and estrogen metabolism.
What was reviewed?
The reviewed manuscript explored the intricate relationship between the gut and genital microbiomes, the estrobolome, and their roles in the pathophysiology of endometriosis, infertility, and chronic pelvic pain (CPP). The authors critically examined 28 clinical and six preclinical studies to understand microbial dysbiosis's contributions to estrogen metabolism, inflammation, and symptomatology in these conditions. This review also identified methodological gaps in microbiome studies and proposed strategies to improve future research.
Who was reviewed?
The review included human and animal studies, examining women diagnosed with endometriosis, infertility, and CPP, alongside healthy controls. Specific focus was placed on microbial associations in the gut, cervicovaginal, and endometrial microbiomes, with emphasis on bacterial vaginosis-associated bacteria, Lactobacillus depletion, and microbial influences on estrogen-driven mechanisms.
What were the most important findings?
Key findings highlighted that dysbiosis in the gut microbiome disrupts the estrobolome, an essential modulator of estrogen metabolism. This disruption contributes to heightened systemic and local inflammation, potentially exacerbating endometriosis symptoms and infertility. Many studies noted an association between bacterial vaginosis-related bacteria and a reduction in Lactobacillus dominance in the cervicovaginal microbiome with the prevalence of endometriosis and infertility. Additionally, the review underscored a bidirectional relationship between gut microbiota and endometriosis progression in animal models, emphasizing the role of gut dysbiosis in increasing b-glucuronidase activity, leading to elevated circulating estrogen levels.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review underscores the need for rigorous, standardized methodologies to better delineate causal relationships between microbiota and gynecological conditions like endometriosis and CPP. The findings of this review suggest that targeting the microbiome could lead to novel diagnostics and therapeutics for estrogen-driven diseases. The review also highlights the potential of leveraging microbiome-based biomarkers for non-invasive diagnostics and monitoring of endometriosis progression, bridging a critical translational gap in gynecological health.
The role of gut microbiota in the pathogenesis and treatment of postpartum depression
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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This review highlights how gut microbiota disruptions contribute to postpartum depression via hormonal, inflammatory, and neurochemical pathways. It supports microbial modulation as a novel, noninvasive treatment strategy.
What Was Reviewed?
This review examined the role of gut microbiota in the pathogenesis and treatment of postpartum depression (PPD), focusing on how changes in the gut-brain axis contribute to depressive symptoms following childbirth. It consolidated data from both animal and human studies to explore the gut microbiome's mechanistic roles in hormone regulation, immune modulation, neurotransmitter synthesis, and metabolic pathways. The authors aimed to bridge gaps in understanding how microbial imbalances can serve as both biomarkers and therapeutic targets for PPD.
Who Was Reviewed?
The review considered evidence from a wide range of experimental models, including human subjects diagnosed with PPD and rodent models of induced postpartum depression. The reviewed human studies included microbiota comparisons between women with PPD and healthy postpartum controls. Additionally, several animal studies were referenced to assess causal relationships between microbial composition shifts and behavioral or molecular markers of depression.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
This review found strong evidence linking gut microbiota alterations to the onset and severity of PPD. Across both human and animal studies, women with PPD showed significant shifts in microbial phyla and genera, including decreased levels of Firmicutes, Faecalibacterium, and Lachnospiraceae, alongside increased Actinobacteria and Enterobacteriaceae. These shifts were consistently accompanied by decreased microbial diversity and lower abundance of short-chain fatty acid (SCFA)-producing bacteria, such as Faecalibacterium prausnitzii and Butyricicoccus. These microbial changes coincided with decreased serotonin (5-HT), altered tryptophan metabolism, impaired HPA axis function, and disruptions in hormonal levels such as estrogen and progesterone. Notably, a high Firmicutes-to-Bacteroidetes (F/B) ratio, elevated Proteobacteria, and increased Lactobacillus and Desulfovibrio were common microbial signatures in both human and animal PPD models.
Microbial metabolites, particularly SCFAs and neurotransmitter precursors, played key roles in modulating neuroendocrine and inflammatory pathways. For instance, reductions in butyrate and propionate levels were associated with lower brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) expression and increased systemic inflammation. Moreover, fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) and dietary fiber supplementation successfully reversed depressive phenotypes in mice, highlighting the therapeutic potential of microbiome modulation.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Review?
The most significant implication of this review is the recognition of the gut microbiome as a central player in the development and potential treatment of postpartum depression. Given the unique physiological state of postpartum women and their general avoidance of pharmacologic antidepressants during breastfeeding, microbial modulation through diet, probiotics, prebiotics, or FMT offers a promising, noninvasive treatment strategy. Additionally, specific microbial signatures, such as decreased Faecalibacterium and increased Actinobacteria, may serve as diagnostic biomarkers for early identification of PPD risk. This review advocates for integrating microbiome analysis into routine maternal mental health assessments and supports the development of targeted microbial therapies as part of precision medicine approaches for perinatal mood disorders.
The role of the vaginal microbiome in distinguishing female chronic pelvic pain caused by endometriosis/adenomyosis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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Chronic Pelvic Pain (CPP)
Chronic Pelvic Pain (CPP)
Chronic Pelvic Pain (CPP) is persistent pain in the pelvic region lasting six months or longer, often multifactorial, impacting physical and emotional well-being, and associated with various medical conditions.
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This study examines the role of the vaginal microbiome in distinguishing chronic pelvic pain caused by endometriosis and adenomyosis. Findings highlight specific microbial signatures associated with pain severity, offering potential non-invasive biomarkers for differential diagnosis and targeted therapeutic strategies.
What was studied?
This study investigated whether the composition of the vaginal microbiome could serve as a diagnostic biomarker to differentiate chronic pelvic pain (CPP) caused by endometriosis or adenomyosis (EM/AM) from other causes of chronic pelvic pain syndrome (CPPS) in women. Using 16S rRNA sequencing (V4 region), the researchers profiled the vaginal microbiota of 37 women with EM/AM-associated CPP, 25 with CPPS from other causes, and 66 healthy controls without CPPS. Additionally, the study explored whether combining vaginal microbial markers with serum CA125 could improve differential diagnostic accuracy.
Who was studied?
The study included 128 premenopausal women attending the gynecology department of Peking Union Medical College Hospital. These were stratified into three groups: 37 women with surgically confirmed EM/AM-associated CPP, 25 women with non-EM/AM CPPS (adhesions, hydrosalpinx, infertility), and 66 women without any chronic pelvic pain. All participants were HPV-negative, had not recently used antibiotics or vaginal products, and were matched for age, gravidity, parity, and contraceptive method to control for confounding variables.
What were the most important findings?
The vaginal microbiome of women with EM/AM-associated CPP exhibited significantly higher alpha diversity than those in the CPPS and healthy control groups. Taxonomic analyses revealed distinct microbial signatures: increased abundance of Clostridium butyricum, Clostridium disporicum, Alloscardovia omnicolens, and Veillonella montpellierensis, alongside a marked depletion of Lactobacillus jensenii, Lactobacillus reuteri, and Lactobacillus iners. These differentially abundant taxa serve as potential microbiome biomarkers.
Diagnostic performance analysis demonstrated that a combination of microbial biomarkers (specifically, a relative abundance of Clostridium disporicum >0.001105% and Lactobacillus reuteri <0.1911349%) yielded 81.08% sensitivity and 52% specificity for identifying EM/AM-associated CPP. When combined with serum CA125 levels, sensitivity increased to 89.19%, although specificity remained unchanged. Functional predictions via PICRUSt revealed enrichment of metabolic pathways such as amino acid metabolism, energy metabolism, and metabolism of cofactors and vitamins in EM/AM patients, along with downregulation of membrane transport and nucleotide metabolism compared to controls. These shifts may reflect microbial contributions to inflammation and pain signaling pathways implicated in EM/AM-associated CPP.
From a microbiome signature standpoint, the enriched taxa—particularly Clostridium disporicum and Alloscardovia omnicolens—emerge as Major Microbial Associations (MMAs) due to their consistent elevation in EM/AM patients. Conversely, Lactobacillus jensenii and L. reuteri, known for their protective, anti-inflammatory properties, are depleted, suggesting their role in maintaining vaginal eubiosis and preventing EM/AM-associated pathogenesis.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
This research provides compelling evidence that the vaginal microbiome harbors discriminative microbial signatures capable of differentiating EM/AM-associated CPP from other forms of chronic pelvic pain. The incorporation of specific microbial biomarkers, particularly when paired with serum CA125, may improve non-invasive diagnostic accuracy, enabling earlier and more targeted therapeutic intervention. Clinically, these findings underscore the potential of microbiome-informed diagnostics for gynecological conditions where conventional markers fall short. More broadly, this study suggests that vaginal dysbiosis, characterized by Lactobacillus depletion and enrichment of saccharolytic and anaerobic species, could be causally linked to EM/AM pathogenesis, possibly via inflammatory or metabolic pathways. Future studies incorporating metagenomic or metabolomic analyses are warranted to functionally validate these microbial associations and to explore the feasibility of microbial modulation as a therapeutic strategy.
The Vaginal Microbiome as a Tool to Predict rASRM Stage of Disease in Endometriosis: a Pilot Study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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This study reveals Anaerococcus as a predictive marker for endometriosis severity and highlights Lactobacillus crispatus’s lactic acid-mediated modulatory role, offering promise for non-invasive diagnostics.
What Was Studied?
This pilot observational cross-sectional study investigated the vaginal and gut microbiome profiles in women with and without endometriosis to evaluate their potential as less invasive diagnostic tools for the disease. Researchers analyzed microbiome samples collected during two menstrual cycle phases—follicular and menstrual—from 35 women with endometriosis and 24 controls. They further explored the microbiome's association with disease severity, categorized by rASRM (revised American Society for Reproductive Medicine) stages, using 16S rRNA sequencing and machine learning models.
Who Was Studied?
The study included 59 women aged 21–49, with 35 participants having surgically confirmed endometriosis and 24 serving as controls. Participants were excluded if they had a history of autoimmune diseases, active infections, or recent use of antibiotics or hormones. Vaginal and rectal samples were obtained from all subjects to evaluate microbial community state types (CSTs) and their variability across menstrual phases.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study highlighted significant shifts in vaginal microbiome profiles between the follicular and menstrual phases, particularly in the distribution of community state types (CSTs). During menstruation, CST IV, defined by increased anaerobic bacterial diversity, became more prominent, while CSTs II and V, dominated by Lactobacillus gasseri and Lactobacillus jensenii, respectively, disappeared. Notably, Lactobacillus crispatus was more abundant in endometriosis patients during menstruation, even within the inflammatory environment. This finding suggests a potential immunomodulatory role for L. crispatus, likely tied to its production of lactic acid, which lowers vaginal pH, inhibits pathogenic bacterial growth, and promotes immune homeostasis. By fostering an anti-inflammatory phenotype through the stimulation of cytokines like IL-10 and regulatory immune cells, L. crispatus may help counterbalance the inflammatory state characteristic of endometriosis.
Moreover, the vaginal microbiome during menstruation demonstrated predictive value for endometriosis severity. Specifically, an operational taxonomic unit (OTU) from the genus Anaerococcus strongly correlated with advanced rASRM stages (3–4), marking its potential as a biomarker for disease progression. These findings underscore the diagnostic and therapeutic promise of the vaginal microbiome, particularly L. crispatus and its role in immune modulation. Future research should further investigate these microbial associations, their lactic acid production, and their influence on the immunological environment in endometriosis.
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
This study provides a foundation for using the vaginal microbiome as a non-invasive diagnostic tool for assessing endometriosis severity. The identification of Anaerococcus as a biomarker for disease stage highlights a significant advancement in linking microbiome alterations to gynecological pathology. Additionally, the potential involvement of Lactobacillus crispatus in modulating local immune responses suggests a dual diagnostic and therapeutic role for microbiome-targeted interventions. However, the findings need validation in larger cohorts due to its pilot nature and small sample size.
The Vaginal Microbiome as a Tool to Predict rASRM Stage of Disease in Endometriosis: a Pilot Study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Microbes
Microbes
Microbes are microscopic organisms living in and on the human body, shaping health through digestion, vitamin production, and immune protection. When microbial balance is disrupted, disease can occur. This guide explains key microbe types—bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and archaea—plus major pathogenic and beneficial examples.
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This pilot study analyzed gut and vaginal microbiomes in 59 women (35 with endometriosis, 24 controls) using 16S rRNA sequencing and machine learning to explore their diagnostic potential for endometriosis. Findings indicate microbiome variations with the menstrual cycle and disease severity, suggesting that vaginal microbiome profiles could predict endometriosis stages, offering a novel, less-invasive diagnostic method.
What was studied?
The study focused on characterizing the gut and vaginal microbiome profiles of women with endometriosis compared to controls without the disease, exploring the potential of these profiles as less-invasive diagnostic tools for assessing the severity of endometriosis.
Who was studied?
Fifty-nine women participated in the study, including 35 with endometriosis and 24 control subjects. Rectal and vaginal samples were collected from all participants at two different periods of their menstrual cycle.
What were the most important findings?
Significant findings included variations in the distribution of vaginal community state types (CSTs) across different phases of the menstrual cycle and differences in gut and vaginal microbiome profiles between patients with varying stages of endometriosis as classified by the revised American Society for Reproductive Medicine (rASRM) stages. Machine-learning models could predict the severity of endometriosis (stages 1-2 vs. 3-4) based on these microbiome profiles, with Anaerococcus genus showing the highest predictive value.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study suggests that analysis of the vaginal microbiome could serve as a novel, less-invasive method to diagnose and predict the stage of endometriosis. This approach could potentially lead to earlier and more accurate diagnoses of endometriosis, improving treatment planning and outcomes for affected women.
The Vaginal Microbiome as a Tool to Predict rASRM Stage of Disease in Endometriosis: a Pilot Study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This study identifies the vaginal microbiome as a predictor of endometriosis severity, highlighting microbial shifts that correlate with rASRM staging. Anaerococcus emerged as a key biomarker for advanced disease stages, while CST IV dominance during menstruation suggests inflammatory shifts. Findings support the potential of non-invasive microbiome-based diagnosis for endometriosis.
What Was Studied?
This study investigated the potential use of the vaginal microbiome as a diagnostic tool to predict the stage of disease severity in endometriosis, based on the revised American Society for Reproductive Medicine (rASRM) staging system. Conducted as an observational cross-sectional pilot study, researchers characterized the gut and vaginal microbiome profiles of women with and without endometriosis to explore non-invasive biomarkers for disease staging. A total of 59 women participated, 35 with endometriosis and 24 controls. Rectal and vaginal samples were collected at two different points in the menstrual cycle—the menstrual and follicular phases—to assess the microbial composition's correlation with rASRM stages. Illumina sequencing was utilized to analyze 16S rRNA gene amplicons, with community state types (CSTs) assigned to classify the vaginal microbiota. Random forest-based machine-learning models were constructed to evaluate the predictive power of vaginal microbiota profiles during different menstrual phases.
Who Was Studied?
The study included 35 women with a confirmed diagnosis of endometriosis and 24 control subjects without the disease. Participants were recruited from the University of Sao Paulo and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, with all subjects providing written informed consent. Inclusion criteria required histological confirmation of endometriosis, while controls were women undergoing laparoscopic surgery for other benign gynecological conditions. Key exclusion criteria included recent antibiotic or hormone use, active infections, autoimmune diseases, and any history of sexually transmitted infections. The vaginal and rectal samples were collected during both the follicular and menstrual phases, known to influence microbial community dynamics.
What Were the Most Important Findings?
The study revealed that the vaginal microbiome's composition significantly differed between endometriosis patients and controls, particularly during the menstrual phase. Classification models built from vaginal microbial profiles during menstruation accurately predicted rASRM stage 1–2 versus stage 3–4 endometriosis. The genus Anaerococcus emerged as the top predictive operational taxonomic unit (OTU) for distinguishing between early and advanced stages of the disease. Notably, the transition of community state types (CSTs) also reflected disease severity. During the menstrual phase, there was a marked increase in CST IV (characterized by anaerobic bacteria dominance) among both endometriosis patients (30%) and controls (25%), with a simultaneous loss of CST II and CST V. CST I, typically dominated by Lactobacillus crispatus, appeared more prevalent in endometriosis patients during menstruation, suggesting an immunomodulatory role that may contribute to the disease's local inflammatory environment. These microbial changes were consistent with differences in local immune response and hormonal fluctuations. This pilot study is the first to demonstrate that vaginal microbiome profiles, particularly the presence of Anaerococcus, may serve as a non-invasive biomarker for endometriosis staging, potentially offering a diagnostic tool that bypasses the need for invasive surgical confirmation.
Microbial Group
Endometriosis Findings
Clinical Implications
Anaerococcus
Increased in rASRM stages III–IV
Marker for advanced disease severity
CST IV (Community State Type)
Dominant during menstruation
Associated with low Lactobacillus and high microbial diversity
Potential for non-invasive staging of endometriosis
Vaginal Microbiome Shifts
Correlated with menstrual cycle phase
Indicates dynamic microbial changes tied to inflammation
What Are the Greatest Implications of This Study?
The findings from this study suggest that the vaginal microbiome, specifically the composition of community state types and the presence of Anaerococcus, may be harnessed as a non-invasive biomarker to predict the stage of endometriosis severity. This has profound implications for clinical practice, as it could reduce the dependency on invasive laparoscopy for disease staging, which is currently the gold standard. If validated in larger cohorts, this approach could facilitate early detection and better stratification of endometriosis patients, enabling more targeted and personalized therapeutic interventions. Furthermore, the study underscores the significance of microbiome-driven inflammation in the pathophysiology of endometriosis, opening avenues for microbiome-targeted therapies as a novel strategy to mitigate disease progression and symptom severity. The integration of vaginal microbiome profiling into clinical diagnostics could revolutionize the early detection and management of endometriosis, addressing a critical unmet need in gynecological health.
Tobacco consumption and premenstrual syndrome: A case-control study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS)
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS)
Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS) involves physical and emotional symptoms linked to hormonal fluctuations. Recent research highlights the role of heavy metals and gut microbiome imbalances in worsening these symptoms. Lifestyle changes, microbiome-targeted therapies, and toxin reduction show promise in effective PMS management.
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Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD) is a severe mood disorder linked to hormonal and neurochemical changes. Emerging research highlights the gut microbiome’s role in symptom modulation, opening new avenues for microbiome-targeted treatments alongside traditional therapies.
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This study highlights the significant link between tobacco consumption and the increased risk of premenstrual syndrome (PMS) and premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD). Women who smoke are at higher odds of developing these disorders, with a dose-response relationship.
What was studied?
The study aimed to assess the relationship between tobacco smoking and premenstrual syndrome (PMS), including its more severe form, premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD). It focused on understanding how smoking may contribute to the occurrence of these menstrual disorders. The study utilized a case-control design, comparing women with PMS and PMDD to age-matched controls.
Who was studied?
The study population consisted of women diagnosed with PMS, women diagnosed with PMDD, and control groups who did not have PMS or PMDD. Participants were recruited from three major public hospitals and one family counseling center in Santiago de Compostela, Spain, ensuring a sample that included women of various age groups and social backgrounds. All participants completed a self-administered questionnaire that gathered information on their smoking habits, socio-demographic factors, and menstrual health.
What were the most important findings?
The study found that tobacco consumption is significantly associated with both PMS and PMDD. Specifically, current smokers had a higher likelihood of experiencing PMS and PMDD compared to non-smokers. This association was evident even among ex-smokers, although the odds ratio was less precise due to the small sample size of this group. The findings also indicated a dose-response relationship: women who smoked more than 15 cigarettes per day or those with higher pack-years of tobacco consumption had an increased risk of developing PMS and PMDD, suggesting a potential cumulative effect of tobacco exposure. The results were confirmed by a cubic spline model, which further demonstrated a correlation between the amount of tobacco consumed and the likelihood of developing these menstrual disorders.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The study’s findings suggest that tobacco consumption may be a modifiable risk factor for the development of PMS and PMDD. Given the high prevalence of tobacco use among women globally, particularly in Europe and the United States, these results highlight the need for public health strategies aimed at reducing smoking in women, particularly those in their reproductive years. Health professionals should be aware of the potential link between smoking and these menstrual disorders, as this could inform both prevention and treatment strategies. This study calls for further research to explore the long-term effects of smoking cessation and whether reducing tobacco exposure could lower the risk of developing PMS or PMDD in susceptible women.
Trace Elements and Endometriosis: Insights into Oxidative Stress and Novel Therapies
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Endometriosis
Endometriosis
Endometriosis involves ectopic endometrial tissue causing pain and infertility. Validated and Promising Interventions include Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), Low Nickel Diet, and Metronidazole therapy.
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This review explores the role of trace elements and oxidative stress in endometriosis, highlighting their potential as therapeutic targets. It underscores the need for further research into the trace elements’ roles in endometriotic lesions.
What was reviewed?
The article reviews the role of trace elements in the pathogenesis and management of endometriosis, a chronic, estrogen-dependent inflammatory disease. It synthesizes existing research on the impact of oxidative stress and environmental exposure to trace elements like zinc, nickel, cadmium, and copper, linking these factors to the formation and proliferation of endometrial-like lesions outside the uterus.
Who was reviewed?
The review focuses on studies involving women with confirmed endometriosis, highlighting environmental and biological factors such as trace element concentrations in blood, urine, and peritoneal fluid. Additionally, it incorporates experimental findings, including animal models, to explore the mechanistic roles of trace elements.
What were the most important findings?
The review emphasizes the link between oxidative stress and endometriosis, with trace elements acting as potential modulators of this process. Zinc, for instance, is identified for its antioxidant and anti-inflammatory roles, with lower levels in endometriosis patients potentially contributing to lesion formation. Nickel, on the other hand, has been implicated in the condition as a metalloestrogen, as further evidenced by improved symptoms following a low-nickel diet. Cadmium and lead, known for inducing oxidative stress, show conflicting associations with endometriosis, though some evidence suggests their presence synergistically exacerbates disease severity. Copper's involvement in angiogenesis and its elevated levels in endometriosis patients suggest a role in lesion proliferation. The review also highlights discrepancies in study findings, emphasizing the need for further research on trace elements within endometriotic implants rather than just systemic fluids.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The review underscores the potential of targeting trace elements and oxidative stress as therapeutic strategies for endometriosis. It calls for more comprehensive research into the specific roles of trace elements within endometriotic tissue, as these could pave the way for novel diagnostic markers and treatments. Additionally, the environmental and dietary implications of trace element exposure warrant further exploration, particularly in the context of prevention and symptom management.
Transvaginal Photobiomodulation for the Treatment of Chronic Pelvic Pain: A Pilot Study
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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The study evaluated transvaginal photobiomodulation as a treatment for women's chronic pelvic pain (CPP). It found significant pain relief sustained for six months, suggesting TVPBM could be an effective treatment option. Further research is needed to explore broader applications of TVPBM.
The study in question focused on the use of transvaginal photobiomodulation (TV-PBM) as a treatment for chronic pelvic pain (CPP) in women. Here are the details based on the key aspects of the study:
What was studied?
The research investigated whether transvaginal photobiomodulation could effectively reduce chronic pelvic pain in women. This was a pilot study aiming to explore the potential benefits of a novel therapy approach using light therapy applied transvaginally to manage pain.
Who was studied?
The study involved women suffering from chronic pelvic pain. These participants had previously experienced ineffective treatments for their condition and were recruited to evaluate the effectiveness of TV-PBM. Thirteen women completed the study, undergoing a series of nine treatments.
What were the most important findings?
The study found significant and sustained pain relief in participants up to six months after treatment. It reported a notable reduction in pain scores, with 60% of the participants showing improvement shortly after treatment began, and this effect was maintained throughout the six-month follow-up period. The effect sizes were considered large, suggesting the therapy was highly effective for those it helped.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The promising results of this pilot study suggest that TV-PBM could be a viable and effective treatment for managing chronic pelvic pain, a condition that often responds poorly to other forms of treatment. This could lead to a new therapeutic option for many women who currently have limited or ineffective choices. However, further research, including larger and controlled studies, is necessary to confirm these findings and fully establish the therapy’s efficacy, safety, and broader applicability.
Unveiling Resistance and Virulence Mechanisms under Darwinian Positive Selection for Novel Drug Discovery for Gardnerella vaginalis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial Vaginosis
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an imbalance in the vaginal microbiota, where the typically dominant Lactobacillus species are significantly reduced, leading to an overgrowth of anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
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The study analyzed the genetic evolution of Gardnerella vaginalis, focusing on its resistance and virulence under Darwinian positive selection. It identifies new drug targets and emphasizes the pathogen's evolving resistance mechanisms.
What was Studied?
The study focused on Gardnerella vaginalis, a significant pathogen responsible for bacterial vaginosis(BV), examining its mechanisms of resistance and virulence under Darwinian positive selection. The researchers utilized comparative genomic analysis to identify resistance and virulence-related genes and their evolutionary patterns. The study also aimed to discover potential new drug targets by analyzing these genomic features in the context of the pathogen's evolutionary adaptations.
Who was Studied?
The study analyzed 97 genomes of Gardnerella vaginalis strains, representing a diverse collection of isolates obtained from the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) datasets. The strains were carefully selected to reflect the genetic variability and resistance phenotypes of this important pathogen, enabling a comprehensive understanding of its evolution.
What were the most Important Findings?
The study identified several crucial findings that provide new insights into the evolution and pathogenic potential of G. vaginalis. The pathogen exhibits significant genomic diversity, which plays a role in its survival and adaptation to selective pressures, particularly from antibiotics. The analysis revealed some genes, such as Mef(A), associated with resistance to macrolides, and tet(M) and tet(L), linked to resistance against tetracycline. These resistance genes were found to be positively selected in multiple G. vaginalis lineages, reflecting the evolutionary pressures that have shaped the pathogen's resistance capabilities.
Furthermore, the study highlighted the pathogen’s ability to form biofilms, a feature that enhances its survival in the host and increases its resistance to antibiotic treatment. This biofilm formation is also associated with the pathogen's ability to engage in horizontal gene transfer, further complicating the treatment landscape. The pan-resistome analysis indicated that the pathogen has an "open" resistome, suggesting its high capacity to acquire new resistance genes, making it a continuously evolving threat. The researchers also identified two potential drug targets, sigA, a sigma factor involved in transcription initiation, and UDP-N-acetylenolpyruvoylglucosamine reductase, an enzyme crucial for cell wall synthesis. These proteins are vital to the pathogen's survival and represent promising targets for the development of new therapeutic approaches.
What are the Implications of this Study?
The study’s findings highlight the dynamic nature of Gardnerella vaginalis and its ability to rapidly adapt to environmental pressures, particularly through the acquisition of resistance genes. The evolution of resistance mechanisms and the presence of virulence factors underscore the pathogen's significant role in reproductive and sexual health complications. The open pan-resistome suggests that G. vaginalis can continue to evolve and acquire new resistance traits, posing an ongoing challenge to existing treatments. The identification of novel drug targets like sigA and UDP-N-acetylenolpyruvoylglucosamine reductase offers valuable insights into how future therapies could be designed to combat infections caused by this pathogen. This research calls for continued surveillance of G. vaginalis strains to track resistance trends and refine clinical treatment strategies.
Usefulness of intermittent clomiphene citrate treatment for women with polycystic ovarian syndrome that is resistant to standard clomiphene citrate treatment
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is a common endocrine disorder that affects women of reproductive age, characterized by irregular menstrual cycles, hyperandrogenism, and insulin resistance. It is often associated with metabolic dysfunctions and inflammation, leading to fertility issues and increased risk of type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease.
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The study explored intermittent clomiphene citrate treatment (ICT) for women with PCOS who were resistant to standard CC treatment. ICT showed an 80.8% response rate, offering an effective and safer alternative to gonadotropin therapy with no risk of OHSS or multiple pregnancies.
What was studied?
The study investigated the efficacy of intermittent clomiphene citrate treatment (ICT) in women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) who were resistant to standard clomiphene citrate (CC) treatment. Clomiphene citrate is commonly used to induce ovulation in women with PCOS; however, some women do not respond to the standard treatment. This research aimed to assess whether a modified dosing schedule, using intermittent CC treatment, could help induce follicular growth in these resistant patients.
Who was studied?
The study focused on 42 infertile women diagnosed with PCOS who were resistant to standard CC treatment. Of these, 26 women underwent the intermittent CC treatment protocol, and their response to the treatment was monitored and analyzed. The patient cohort was selected based on their non-response to the standard 50 mg/day, 5-day CC regimen, which is typically used as a first-line treatment for anovulatory PCOS.
What were the most important findings?
The study found that intermittent CC treatment was highly effective for women who were resistant to standard CC treatment. The protocol involved administering 100 mg of CC for 5-day periods across different phases of the menstrual cycle. The results showed that 80.8% of the patients who had previously been resistant to standard CC treatment responded positively to ICT, with follicular growth observed in many of the cases. Notably, the majority of those who responded had only a single mature follicle, which is a safer outcome in terms of reducing the risk of multiple pregnancies or ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome (OHSS). Additionally, no cases of OHSS or multiple pregnancies were reported, making ICT a promising alternative to gonadotropin therapy, which carries higher risks and requires more intensive treatment.
The efficacy of ICT was particularly notable in patients resistant to the 100 mg dose of CC, where up to 78.2% responded positively after subsequent doses. This suggests that ICT may be more effective than simply increasing the dose of standard CC, providing a less invasive and lower-risk alternative for patients who fail the initial treatment.
What are the greatest implications of this study?
The findings suggest that ICT could become a preferred treatment option for women with CC-resistant PCOS before advancing to gonadotropin therapy. ICT offers several advantages: it is less invasive, more cost-effective, and poses a lower risk of complications like OHSS and multiple pregnancies. By maintaining high serum FSH levels through repeated administration of CC, ICT seems to trigger follicular growth effectively without the need for prolonged or more invasive treatments. The study's outcomes could help reshape the treatment protocols for PCOS, offering a safer, more accessible alternative to gonadotropin therapy. However, further research with larger patient populations is necessary to validate these findings and assess the long-term efficacy of ICT in achieving successful pregnancy outcomes.
Vaginal microbiota: Potential targets for vulvovaginal candidiasis infection
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Vulvovaginal Candidiasis (VVC)
Vulvovaginal Candidiasis (VVC)
Vulvovaginal candidiasis (VVC) is a common fungal infection caused by Candida albicans. Disruptions in the vaginal microbiome and immune responses contribute to its development. Effective treatment involves both antifungal therapy and strategies to restore microbiome balance, preventing recurrent infections and addressing emerging antifungal resistance.
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This review discusses vaginal microbiota imbalance in vulvovaginal candidiasis and evaluates probiotics, postbiotics, synbiotics, and vaginal microbiota transplantation as novel treatments to improve outcomes and reduce antifungal resistance.
What was reviewed?
This paper reviewed the vaginal microbiota (VMB) and its relationship with vulvovaginal candidiasis (VVC), focusing on how disruptions in the vaginal microbial community contribute to the disease. It explored current antifungal treatment challenges, such as drug resistance and recurrence, and assessed emerging microbiome-based therapies including probiotics, postbiotics, synbiotics, and vaginal microbiota transplantation (VMT). The review synthesized findings from clinical trials, microbiome sequencing studies, and in vitro and animal research to evaluate how these interventions might restore vaginal microbial balance and improve VVC outcomes.
Who was reviewed?
The review drew on data from reproductive-age women, especially those affected by VVC or vaginal dysbiosis. It incorporated studies analyzing the vaginal microbial communities dominated by Lactobacillus species in healthy women versus dysbiotic communities associated with VVC. Clinical trials evaluating probiotic and postbiotic therapies and early-stage research on VMT were also included. The review highlighted key microbial signatures linked to vaginal health and infection, emphasizing the role of Candida species and the loss of protective Lactobacillus strains in disease progression.
Most important findings
The review identified that a healthy vaginal microbiota is dominated by Lactobacillus species, which produce lactic acid to maintain an acidic environment that suppresses Candida growth and modulates immune responses. Disruptions to this balance, through factors like antibiotics or hormonal changes, reduce Lactobacillus levels and raise vaginal pH, facilitating Candida overgrowth and VVC development. Conventional antifungal treatments face limitations due to resistance and recurrence. Probiotics, particularly Lactobacillus strains, demonstrated antifungal and immunomodulatory effects by competing with Candida, producing antimicrobial compounds, and supporting mucosal defenses. Postbiotics offer similar benefits without risks related to live microbes, while synbiotics enhance probiotic survival and activity. Vaginal microbiota transplantation is a promising but still experimental approach to restore microbial balance more effectively.
Greatest implications of this review
This review highlights the need to shift VVC management from solely antifungal drugs toward therapies that restore vaginal microbiota balance, aiming to reduce recurrence and drug resistance. Probiotics, postbiotics, synbiotics, and vaginal microbiota transplantation represent promising adjuncts or alternatives but require further high-quality clinical trials to confirm their safety, optimal protocols, and long-term efficacy. Integrating microbiome-focused treatments into clinical practice could improve patient outcomes by targeting the ecosystem dynamics underlying VVC rather than just the pathogen.
Vitamin D and probiotic co-supplementation affects mental health, hormonal, inflammatory and oxidative stress parameters in women with polycystic ovary syndrome
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Vitamin D and probiotic co-supplementation improved depression, reduced testosterone and inflammation, and enhanced antioxidant status in women with PCOS. Results support microbiome-mediated benefits.
What was studied?
This randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled clinical trial investigated the effects of co-supplementation with vitamin D and probiotics on mental health, hormonal profiles, inflammatory markers, and oxidative stress in women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS). The study tested whether the combination of these two interventions could provide synergistic benefits in a population known to have both systemic inflammation and frequent vitamin D deficiency. The researchers hypothesized that probiotic-driven microbiota modulation and vitamin D's immunomodulatory properties could jointly improve both mental and metabolic health in PCOS.
Who was studied?
Sixty women with PCOS, aged 18–40 years and with body mass index (BMI) between 17 and 34 kg/m², participated in the study. All subjects were insulin-resistant (HOMA-IR between 1.4–4) and had not been receiving prior vitamin D or probiotic supplementation. They were randomized into two groups: one received 50,000 IU of vitamin D every two weeks plus 8 × 10⁹ CFU/day of a probiotic blend containing Lactobacillus acidophilus, Bifidobacterium bifidum, Lactobacillus reuteri, and Lactobacillus fermentum for 12 weeks, while the control group received matching placebos.
What were the most important findings?
Vitamin D and probiotic co-supplementation resulted in statistically significant reductions in depression, anxiety, and stress scores, indicating improved mental health. There were also significant improvements in hormonal parameters, particularly a reduction in total testosterone and hirsutism, which are hallmark features of PCOS-related hyperandrogenism. Inflammatory and oxidative stress markers showed marked improvement as well: high-sensitivity C-reactive protein (hs-CRP) and malondialdehyde (MDA) decreased, while total antioxidant capacity (TAC) and glutathione (GSH) levels increased.
From a microbiome perspective, the inclusion of multiple Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium strains supports known major microbial associations (MMAs) relevant to metabolic and hormonal balance. These strains are associated with improved gut barrier function, increased short-chain fatty acid (SCFA) production—especially butyrate—and reduced translocation of lipopolysaccharide (LPS), which contributes to systemic inflammation. Enhanced expression of vitamin D receptors (VDR) by probiotics could further amplify these effects, facilitating vitamin D’s role in reducing oxidative stress and modulating immune response.
What are the implications of this study?
This trial provides compelling evidence that co-supplementation with vitamin D and probiotics can significantly improve mental health, reduce androgen levels, and counteract systemic inflammation and oxidative stress in women with PCOS. These findings are particularly relevant for clinicians exploring microbiome-modifying interventions in PCOS treatment. By targeting both neuroendocrine and metabolic pathways, the combination of vitamin D and probiotics appears to act via the gut-brain-endocrine axis—a crucial interface in PCOS pathophysiology. The results suggest that routine screening for vitamin D deficiency and addressing gut dysbiosis with targeted probiotics could become integral parts of comprehensive PCOS management. Importantly, this synergistic therapy may reduce the need for multiple pharmacologic agents and improve patient adherence and outcomes. Future research should evaluate long-term effects and perform microbiome sequencing to validate microbial shifts and functional changes driving these clinical benefits.
Vulvovaginal Candidiasis: A Current Understanding and Burning Questions.
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Vulvovaginal Candidiasis (VVC)
Vulvovaginal Candidiasis (VVC)
Vulvovaginal candidiasis (VVC) is a common fungal infection caused by Candida albicans. Disruptions in the vaginal microbiome and immune responses contribute to its development. Effective treatment involves both antifungal therapy and strategies to restore microbiome balance, preventing recurrent infections and addressing emerging antifungal resistance.
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This review clarifies mechanisms behind vulvovaginal candidiasis, emphasizing candidalysin-driven inflammation, microbiome complexity, and the potential of inflammasome-targeted therapies. It highlights Candida albicans' dominance, underscores mixed roles for Lactobacillus, and suggests personalized treatments and vaccine strategies as essential future directions in managing VVC.
What was reviewed?
This review article provided an extensive overview of vulvovaginal candidiasis (VVC), focusing on epidemiology, host immune response, fungal pathogenicity, microbiome interactions, and innovative therapeutic strategies. Specifically, it examined current knowledge surrounding Candida albicans and other Candida species as major pathogens in VVC, emphasizing the complexity of host-pathogen interactions and the multifactorial nature of this prevalent infection.
Who was reviewed?
The article synthesized information from various studies and clinical trials involving women who experience acute or recurrent VVC. It also included insights gained from animal models and cell-based studies designed to investigate underlying pathogenic mechanisms and host immune responses associated with VVC.
What were the most important findings?
The review highlighted several crucial findings regarding VVC pathogenesis. Candida albicans emerged as the primary causative agent, accounting for over 90% of cases, although non-albicans Candida (NAC) species, notably Candida glabrata, also significantly contributed to disease incidence. Key host-pathogen interactions were identified, including the yeast-to-hypha morphological transition as a critical event driving disease, accompanied by secretion of virulence factors such as candidalysin, a peptide essential for triggering inflammation. The NLRP3 inflammasome pathway was shown to be activated by candidalysin and other virulence factors, leading to neutrophil recruitment and inflammatory cytokine production, thus causing symptomatic inflammation rather than fungal clearance.
The microbiome was recognized as a potential factor influencing VVC development. Although Lactobacillus species generally maintain vaginal health through acid production, studies offered mixed findings regarding their protective role against Candida colonization. Some Lactobacillus strains provided antifungal effects, while others showed limited inhibitory activity, suggesting strain-specific differences in microbiome composition could influence susceptibility to infection.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The implications of this review are significant for clinical management and research directions. Recognizing VVC as an immunopathology rather than purely an infection emphasizes the need for treatments targeting inflammatory pathways, such as NLRP3 inflammasome inhibitors, alongside traditional antifungal therapies. The variability in microbial interactions points to personalized therapeutic approaches involving probiotics and microbiome modulation. Additionally, insights into fungal pathogenicity mechanisms, especially candidalysin's role, could guide the development of novel antifungal agents or vaccines, potentially reducing the global burden of VVC and recurrent episodes.
Vulvovaginal Candidosis: Current Concepts, Challenges and Perspectives
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Vulvovaginal Candidiasis (VVC)
Vulvovaginal Candidiasis (VVC)
Vulvovaginal candidiasis (VVC) is a common fungal infection caused by Candida albicans. Disruptions in the vaginal microbiome and immune responses contribute to its development. Effective treatment involves both antifungal therapy and strategies to restore microbiome balance, preventing recurrent infections and addressing emerging antifungal resistance.
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This review consolidates current knowledge on vulvovaginal candidosis, highlighting Candida albicans virulence factors, diagnostic challenges, and the need for precise clinical differentiation between colonization and infection. It advocates for microbiome-informed diagnostics, improved management strategies, and future research into antifungal resistance and novel therapeutic options.
What was reviewed?
This paper provides a comprehensive narrative review of vulvovaginal candidosis (VVC), focusing on the current concepts, challenges, and perspectives related to the epidemiology, pathogenesis, and diagnosis of this common fungal infection. It systematically synthesizes existing literature on the prevalence, microbial factors, host-pathogen interactions, diagnostic approaches, and virulence mechanisms of Candida species, particularly Candida albicans, the primary pathogen implicated. The review excludes treatment strategies but highlights the clinical burden and research gaps that remain in understanding VVC.
Who was reviewed?
The review draws on a broad spectrum of studies encompassing symptomatic and asymptomatic women of reproductive age worldwide. It includes epidemiological data from various countries, microbiological characterizations of Candida species isolated from vaginal samples, and immunological studies investigating host responses to Candida colonization and infection. The reviewed populations primarily consist of immunocompetent women, with an emphasis on those experiencing acute and recurrent vulvovaginal candidosis (RVVC).
What were the most important findings?
The review underscores that VVC affects approximately 70-75% of women at least once in their lifetime, with 5-8% developing recurrent episodes (RVVC). Candida albicans dominates as the causative species in 90-95% of infections, while non-albicans species, such as C. glabrata, C. tropicalis, and others, cause milder infections. The transition from Candida colonization to pathogenic infection involves complex virulence factors, including adhesins from the ALS gene family (notably ALS1-3 and ALS9), hydrolytic enzymes like secreted aspartyl proteinases (Saps), and phospholipases, which enhance fungal adherence, tissue invasion, and immune evasion. The formation of hyphae and the secretion of candidalysin toxin are crucial for tissue damage and immune activation. Host immune responses, including neutrophil recruitment and inflammasome activation, also critically shape disease outcomes.
Diagnostic challenges arise because colonization does not always equate to infection; microscopy detects hyphae in only 50-80% of cases, and culture or molecular methods improve sensitivity. Furthermore, over-the-counter self-treatment without proper diagnosis often leads to ineffective management and potential antifungal resistance. The review also highlights that Candida forms biofilms, which may contribute to antifungal resistance in vaginal infections, though researchers have yet to fully elucidate its exact role in VVC. The vaginal mycobiome in asymptomatic women is more diverse than previously appreciated, indicating a need to differentiate commensalism from pathogenic states more clearly.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review emphasizes the critical need for improved diagnostic accuracy to distinguish colonization from infection and prevent unnecessary or inappropriate antifungal use that drives resistance. It signals that future research should focus on the molecular mechanisms of Candida virulence, host-pathogen interactions, and the role of biofilms to identify new therapeutic targets. The growing understanding of the vaginal mycobiome and its complexity calls for integrative microbiome-based diagnostics and personalized treatment strategies. Furthermore, the review advocates for intensified research efforts and clinical awareness of VVC as a significant and neglected women's health issue, encouraging the exploration of alternative therapies, including probiotics and vaccination, which show promise in preclinical studies. Ultimately, better integration of microbiome insights into clinical practice will enhance patient outcomes and management of vulvovaginal candidosis.
Women’s experiences of psychological treatment and psychosocial interventions for postpartum depression: a qualitative systematic review and meta-synthesis
February 12, 2026
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Women’s Health
Women’s Health
Women’s health, a vital aspect of medical science, encompasses various conditions unique to women’s physiological makeup. Historically, women were often excluded from clinical research, leading to a gap in understanding the intricacies of women’s health needs. However, recent advancements have highlighted the significant role that the microbiome plays in these conditions, offering new insights and potential therapies. MicrobiomeSignatures.com is at the forefront of exploring the microbiome signature of each of these conditions to unravel the etiology of these diseases and develop targeted microbiome therapies.
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Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects many new mothers, influencing emotional, mental, and physical well-being. The gut microbiome, hormones, diet, and exercise all play a significant role in the onset, severity, and management of PPD. Early intervention, including probiotics, dietary changes, and therapy, can effectively alleviate symptoms and improve maternal and child health outcomes.
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This review explores women's experiences with psychological treatments for postpartum depression, emphasizing the importance of personalized care, supportive relationships, and social support systems. It highlights the positive outcomes of treatments like CBT and home visits, while stressing the need for flexibility and empathy in treatment delivery.
What was reviewed?
This review focuses on the experiences of women who had psychological treatment and psychosocial interventions for postpartum depression (PPD). It examines qualitative studies that explored how women perceive and experience different treatments, such as cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) and supportive home visits. The review aims to synthesize these findings to better understand the elements of psychological treatments that are beneficial for postpartum women, and to identify factors that may enhance the effectiveness of such interventions.
Who was reviewed?
The review considered studies involving postpartum women who had received psychological treatment for depression within the first year after childbirth. A total of eight studies were used in the meta-synthesis, involving 255 women from the UK, Australia, and Canada. The women in these studies had been diagnosed with PPD and received interventions such as CBT, listening visits, or other forms of psychological counseling. These studies explored the women's personal experiences with these treatments, including their satisfaction, the therapeutic relationships they built with health professionals, and their expectations of care.
What were the most important findings?
The review identified two primary themes that emerged from the studies: "Circumstances and Expectations" and "Experiences of Treatment." Women expressed a desire for flexible, individualized treatment that accommodated practical concerns such as childcare and transportation. Many participants highlighted the importance of social support, including help from family members, as a key factor in their ability to engage with treatment. A significant finding was that women preferred psychological treatments where they could choose the format and modality, such as one-on-one sessions or group therapy, and they valued treatments that allowed for emotional expression without judgment.
In terms of treatment outcomes, women reported improvements in their emotional well-being and mother-infant relationships after receiving psychological treatments. Most women found treatments like CBT and supportive home visits to help reduce depressive symptoms, improve confidence, and enhancing their ability to bond with their infants. However, some women expressed dissatisfaction with the number of sessions or the rigidity of treatment schedules, indicating that a more personalized approach could improve engagement and outcomes. Moreover, the relationship with the health professional played a crucial role in the treatment's success. Women emphasized the importance of a supportive, non-judgmental, and empathetic therapist, which helped them feel comfortable discussing their emotions and challenges.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
The findings suggest several implications for improving PPD treatments. First, the review highlights the importance of tailoring interventions to the individual needs and circumstances of women, including their preferences for treatment formats and the flexibility of scheduling. Healthcare providers should prioritize establishing a strong therapeutic relationship based on trust and empathy to improve treatment engagement. Additionally, the review underscores the need for comprehensive support systems that extend beyond clinical settings, including practical and social support, which can significantly enhance treatment outcomes. Lastly, the review calls for further research on the efficacy of different psychological treatments, particularly those that combine therapeutic approaches with support for the mother-infant relationship.
Staphylococcus aureus Metal Acquisition and Nutritional Immunity: Virulence Insights
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Iron (Fe)
Iron (Fe)
OverviewIron is a pivotal nutrient at the host–pathogen interface. Virtually all microbes (with rare exceptions like Borrelia) require iron for processes from DNA synthesis to respiration. [1] In human hosts, free iron is vanishingly scarce due to “nutritional immunity,” wherein iron is locked up in hemoproteins or tightly bound by transport proteins.[2] This metal tug-of-war […]
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Zinc
Zinc
Zinc is an essential trace element vital for cellular functions and microbiome health. It influences immune regulation, pathogen virulence, and disease progression in conditions like IBS and breast cancer. Pathogens exploit zinc for survival, while therapeutic zinc chelation can suppress virulence, rebalance the microbiome, and offer potential treatments for inflammatory and degenerative diseases.
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This review outlines how Staphylococcus aureus overcomes host nutritional immunity by acquiring iron, manganese, and zinc, underscoring the critical role of metal transport systems in virulence and immune evasion.
What was reviewed?
This review article critically evaluates the mechanisms by which Staphylococcus aureus acquires essential transition metals—specifically iron, manganese, and zinc—despite host-imposed nutritional immunity. The paper also explores host strategies that limit bacterial access to these metals as part of the innate immune response, and how these interactions shape bacterial virulence. It further assesses the physiological and molecular basis of metal ion acquisition, storage, transport, and detoxification systems in S. aureus, with emphasis on their contribution to pathogenicity across various infection models.
Who was reviewed?
The review synthesizes a comprehensive body of work involving both in vitro molecular studies and in vivo animal models, particularly murine abscess and systemic infection models, to elucidate how S. aureus exploits siderophores, heme acquisition systems, and high-affinity metal transporters. Studies involving genetically modified bacterial strains (e.g., mutants lacking isd, mntABC, mntH, or hrtAB) and host knockout models (e.g., calprotectin-deficient mice or Nramp1-deficient mice) are also central to the review’s analysis.
Most Important Findings
Understanding how Staphylococcus aureus circumvents nutritional immunity reveals key mechanistic nodes underpinning its virulence. The organism’s capacity to acquire essential transition metals—iron, manganese, zinc, and copper—via specialized systems allows it to evade host-imposed metal sequestration, enabling persistence in inflamed or nutrient-deprived tissue microenvironments such as abscesses. The host counters this with dynamic sequestration strategies, including proteinaceous chelators like calprotectin and localized oxidative stress. These metal-dependent virulence strategies are not only essential to S. aureus pathogenesis but also shape its metallomic and microbiome signature within infected tissues. Below is a structured summary of these host-pathogen interactions.
Category
Key Findings
Iron Acquisition
S. aureus synthesizes two siderophores—staphyloferrin A and staphyloferrin B—that chelate iron and are imported via HtsABC and SirABC, respectively. Preferential iron acquisition from heme occurs through the Isd system, which involves surface receptors (IsdB, IsdH), membrane transporters (IsdDEF), and cytoplasmic heme oxygenases (IsdG, IsdI). IsdB demonstrates high specificity for human hemoglobin.
Manganese Acquisition
High-affinity manganese uptake is mediated by MntABC (ABC-type) and MntH (Nramp-type) transporters. Manganese is essential for the activity of superoxide dismutases (SodA, SodM), which protect S. aureus against reactive oxygen species.
Zinc and Copper Interactions
Calprotectin sequesters both manganese and zinc in abscesses. While S. aureus zinc importers remain unidentified, export is mediated by CzrAB and plasmid-encoded CadA. Host-derived copper toxicity is countered by S. aureus through CopA (efflux pump) and CopZ (chaperone), regulated by the CsoR repressor.
Host-Microbe Competition
The vertebrate immune system enforces nutritional immunity through sequestration of iron (transferrin, lactoferrin, ferritin), manganese, and zinc (calprotectin). Imaging mass spectrometry and LA-ICPMS confirm localized depletion of manganese and zinc in abscess cores.
Microbiome-Relevant Insights
The tug-of-war between calprotectin and S. aureus defines a manganese- and zinc-centric virulence axis, contributing to microbial persistence and shaping microbiome signatures. The non-redundant roles of IsdG and IsdI across tissue sites suggest adaptive metallomic specialization that could serve as a basis for microbial stratification in disease-specific microbiome signatures.
Key implications
The review underscores that transition metal acquisition is not ancillary but foundational to S. aureus pathogenesis, especially within abscesses where nutritional immunity is most intense. These findings highlight new avenues for antimicrobial strategies, such as siderophore inhibitors, calprotectin mimetics, or vaccines targeting IsdA/IsdB. Furthermore, the dependency on specific metal ions offers microbiome signature implications: differential abundance or gene expression of metal transporters (e.g., mntA, isdB) could serve as microbial biomarkers of invasive staphylococcal disease. Imaging mass spectrometry emerges as a critical tool in microbial metallomics for both diagnostic and therapeutic development.
Gut Microbiota as a Mediator of Essential and Toxic Effects of Zinc in the Intestines and Other Tissues
February 12, 2026
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Metals
Metals
Heavy metals influence microbial pathogenicity in two ways: they can be toxic to microbes by disrupting cellular functions and inducing oxidative stress, and they can be exploited by pathogens to enhance survival, resist treatment, and evade immunity. Understanding metal–microbe interactions supports better antimicrobial and public health strategies.
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Zinc
Zinc
Zinc is an essential trace element vital for cellular functions and microbiome health. It influences immune regulation, pathogen virulence, and disease progression in conditions like IBS and breast cancer. Pathogens exploit zinc for survival, while therapeutic zinc chelation can suppress virulence, rebalance the microbiome, and offer potential treatments for inflammatory and degenerative diseases.
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This review illustrates zinc’s dose- and species-dependent impact on gut microbiota, linking both deficiency and excess to dysbiosis and systemic inflammation. Physiological Zn enhances barrier integrity and probiotic efficiency, while excess Zn favors pathogens. Zn–microbiota interactions extend beyond the gut, influencing neurodevelopmental and metabolic diseases.
What was reviewed?
This review comprehensively examined the bidirectional relationship between zinc (Zn) status—both deficiency and excess—and gut microbiota composition across multiple species, including poultry, pigs, rodents, and humans. It also explored how these microbiota changes modulate local (intestinal) and systemic (extraintestinal) physiological and pathological effects of zinc, including inflammation, metabolic disorders, and neurodevelopmental conditions.
Who was reviewed?
The review drew from both in vivo and in vitro studies involving chicks, piglets, mice, and human subjects, including genetic studies on human Zn transporters. It considered experimental Zn deficiency and supplementation using various Zn formulations (oxide, sulfate, nanoparticles) and reviewed probiotic co-supplementation studies.
Most Important Findings
Zinc plays a critical, dose-dependent role in shaping gut microbiota composition and function, with downstream effects on intestinal and systemic health. Zinc deficiency is consistently associated with gut dysbiosis, which is marked by decreased microbial diversity, shifts in phyla proportions (notably reduced Firmicutes and increased Proteobacteria), and compromised intestinal barrier function. Physiological zinc supplementation, in contrast, supports gut integrity by enhancing tight junction protein expression, reducing pathogen abundance, and promoting beneficial microbial metabolite production such as short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs).
However, zinc overexposure induces microbial shifts favoring pathogenic taxa, impairs gut barrier function, and promotes systemic inflammation and endotoxemia. Beyond the gut, zinc–microbiota interactions have been implicated in extraintestinal disorders including autism spectrum disorder (ASD), attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), severe acute pancreatitis, fetal alcohol syndrome, endometriosis, and obesity. Notably, co-supplementation with probiotics enhances zinc bioavailability and supports microbial-host homeostasis, with some probiotic strains (e.g., E. coli Nissle 1917) exploiting zinc-binding mechanisms to competitively inhibit pathogens. The review highlights a nuanced, dose-dependent role of zinc in gut microbiota regulation:
↓ Microbial diversity to healthy baseline levels; potential behavioral improvements
Zinc in Severe Acute Pancreatitis
↓ E. coli translocation; ↓ IL-1β and TNFα; ↑ Bifidobacterium and Lactobacillus abundance
Zinc in Fetal Alcohol Syndrome / Obesity
Correlates with α-defensin levels, barrier integrity, and shifts in weight-associated microbiota
Zinc + E. coli Nissle 1917Probiotic Supplementation
↑ Zinc bioavailability; ↑ mucosal integrity; antagonism of pathogens via Zn-binding siderophores
Greatest Implications
This review underscores the critical role of microbial context in modulating zinc’s biological effects. While physiological zinc supports microbial homeostasis and host immunity, excess zinc undermines nutritional immunity, selects for virulence traits in pathogens, and disrupts host–microbe symbiosis. Importantly, the work highlights the importance of considering microbial responses to Zn when designing supplementation strategies, especially in vulnerable populations (e.g., children, ASD, chronic inflammation). It also opens avenues for microbiota-targeted zinc therapeutics in metabolic and neurodevelopmental diseases.
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