Friday, December 6, 2013

What Lives On Our Skin: Ecology, Genomics and Therapeutic Opportunities Of the Skin Microbiome


 2013 Dec 1;10(3-4). pii: e83-e89.

What Lives On Our Skin: Ecology, Genomics and Therapeutic Opportunities Of the Skin Microbiome.

Source

Department of Dermatology, University of California, San Francisco School of Medicine, 1701 Divisadero Street, 3 Floor, San Francisco, CA 94115.

Abstract

Our skin is home to a rich community of microorganisms. Recent advances in sequencing technology have allowed more accurate enumeration of these human-associated microbiota and investigation of their genomic content. StaphylococcusCorynebacterium and Propionibacterium represent the dominant bacterial genera on skin and illustrate how bacteria adapt to life in this harsh environment and also provide us with unique benefits. In healthy states, our skin peacefully co-exists with commensal bacteria while fending off potentially dangerous invaders. Disruption of this equilibrium, termed "dysbiosis", can result from changes in the composition of our skin bacteria, an altered immune response to them, or both and may be a driving factor in certain types of inflammatory skin disease. Engineering topical therapeutics to favourably influence the composition of our skin flora and optimize interactions with them represents a real therapeutic opportunity for the field of dermatology and warrants additional investigation into skin microbial ecology and disease mechanisms related to host-microbe dysbiosis.

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