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Living symbiotic bacteria-involved skin dressing to combat indigenous pathogens for microbiome-based biotherapy toward atopic dermatitis

Many skin diseases, such as atopic dermatitis (AD), are featured with the dysbiosis of skin microbiota. The clinically recommended options for AD treatments suffer from poor outcomes and high side-effects, leading to severe quality-of-life impairment. To deal with this long-term challenge, we develo...

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Autores principales: Liu, Xinhua, Qin, Youteng, Dong, Liyun, Han, Ziyi, Liu, Tianning, Tang, Ying, Yu, Yun, Ye, Jingjie, Tao, Juan, Zeng, Xuan, Feng, Jun, Zhang, Xian-Zheng
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: KeAi Publishing 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9477860/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36157249
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bioactmat.2022.08.019
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author Liu, Xinhua
Qin, Youteng
Dong, Liyun
Han, Ziyi
Liu, Tianning
Tang, Ying
Yu, Yun
Ye, Jingjie
Tao, Juan
Zeng, Xuan
Feng, Jun
Zhang, Xian-Zheng
author_facet Liu, Xinhua
Qin, Youteng
Dong, Liyun
Han, Ziyi
Liu, Tianning
Tang, Ying
Yu, Yun
Ye, Jingjie
Tao, Juan
Zeng, Xuan
Feng, Jun
Zhang, Xian-Zheng
author_sort Liu, Xinhua
collection PubMed
description Many skin diseases, such as atopic dermatitis (AD), are featured with the dysbiosis of skin microbiota. The clinically recommended options for AD treatments suffer from poor outcomes and high side-effects, leading to severe quality-of-life impairment. To deal with this long-term challenge, we develop a living bacterial formulation (Hy@Rm) that integrates skin symbiotic bacteria of Roseomonas mucosa with poly(vinyl pyrrolidone), poly(vinyl alcohol) and sodium alginate into a skin dressing by virtue of the Ca(2+)-mediated cross-linking and the freezing-thawing (F-T) cycle method. Hy@Rm dressing creates a favorable condition to not only serve as extrinsic culture harbors but also as nutrient suppliers to support R. mucosa survival in the harsh microenvironment of AD sites to defeat S. aureus, which predominantly colonizes AD skins as an indigenous pathogen, mainly through the secretion of sphingolipids metabolites by R. mucosa like a therapeutics bio-factory. Meanwhile, this elaborately designed skin dressing could accelerate wound healing, normalize aberrant skin characters, recover skin barrier functions, alleviate AD-associated immune/inflammation responses, functioning like a combinational therapy. This study offers a promising means for the topical bacteria transplant to realize effective microbe biotherapy toward the skin diseases feature with microbe milieu disorders, including but not limited to AD disease.
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spelling pubmed-94778602022-09-22 Living symbiotic bacteria-involved skin dressing to combat indigenous pathogens for microbiome-based biotherapy toward atopic dermatitis Liu, Xinhua Qin, Youteng Dong, Liyun Han, Ziyi Liu, Tianning Tang, Ying Yu, Yun Ye, Jingjie Tao, Juan Zeng, Xuan Feng, Jun Zhang, Xian-Zheng Bioact Mater Article Many skin diseases, such as atopic dermatitis (AD), are featured with the dysbiosis of skin microbiota. The clinically recommended options for AD treatments suffer from poor outcomes and high side-effects, leading to severe quality-of-life impairment. To deal with this long-term challenge, we develop a living bacterial formulation (Hy@Rm) that integrates skin symbiotic bacteria of Roseomonas mucosa with poly(vinyl pyrrolidone), poly(vinyl alcohol) and sodium alginate into a skin dressing by virtue of the Ca(2+)-mediated cross-linking and the freezing-thawing (F-T) cycle method. Hy@Rm dressing creates a favorable condition to not only serve as extrinsic culture harbors but also as nutrient suppliers to support R. mucosa survival in the harsh microenvironment of AD sites to defeat S. aureus, which predominantly colonizes AD skins as an indigenous pathogen, mainly through the secretion of sphingolipids metabolites by R. mucosa like a therapeutics bio-factory. Meanwhile, this elaborately designed skin dressing could accelerate wound healing, normalize aberrant skin characters, recover skin barrier functions, alleviate AD-associated immune/inflammation responses, functioning like a combinational therapy. This study offers a promising means for the topical bacteria transplant to realize effective microbe biotherapy toward the skin diseases feature with microbe milieu disorders, including but not limited to AD disease. KeAi Publishing 2022-09-12 /pmc/articles/PMC9477860/ /pubmed/36157249 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bioactmat.2022.08.019 Text en © 2022 The Authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Liu, Xinhua
Qin, Youteng
Dong, Liyun
Han, Ziyi
Liu, Tianning
Tang, Ying
Yu, Yun
Ye, Jingjie
Tao, Juan
Zeng, Xuan
Feng, Jun
Zhang, Xian-Zheng
Living symbiotic bacteria-involved skin dressing to combat indigenous pathogens for microbiome-based biotherapy toward atopic dermatitis
title Living symbiotic bacteria-involved skin dressing to combat indigenous pathogens for microbiome-based biotherapy toward atopic dermatitis
title_full Living symbiotic bacteria-involved skin dressing to combat indigenous pathogens for microbiome-based biotherapy toward atopic dermatitis
title_fullStr Living symbiotic bacteria-involved skin dressing to combat indigenous pathogens for microbiome-based biotherapy toward atopic dermatitis
title_full_unstemmed Living symbiotic bacteria-involved skin dressing to combat indigenous pathogens for microbiome-based biotherapy toward atopic dermatitis
title_short Living symbiotic bacteria-involved skin dressing to combat indigenous pathogens for microbiome-based biotherapy toward atopic dermatitis
title_sort living symbiotic bacteria-involved skin dressing to combat indigenous pathogens for microbiome-based biotherapy toward atopic dermatitis
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9477860/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36157249
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bioactmat.2022.08.019
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