Baylor researchers report finding a unique
human placental community of harmless bacteria of diverse classifications that
most resembles the human oral microbiome.
by John
Tyburski
Copyright © Daily
Digest News, KPR Media, LLC. All rights reserved.
As
researchers look more closely at internal anatomical structures, they reveal
more and more how bacteria are happily dwelling in places we once thought
impossible under normal, healthy conditions. This week one of the last bastions
of human organ understanding, the placenta, surprised researchers when they
found bacteria in the organs after healthy, normal pregnancies. However, these
“placental microbiomes” may play a role in premature births, scientists
speculate.
The report, which
was published this week in the American Association for the Advancement of
Science’s journal Science Translational Medicine, describes the
results from a population-based cohort study in which placental specimens were
collected under sterile conditions from 320 subjects.
The
researchers used 16S ribosomal DNA-based and whole-genome shotgun DNA
sequencing of the placental samples for comparison to the sequencing results
from samples collected from oral and nasal cavities, skin, vagina, and gut. The
sequence-based metagenomic studies revealed that the placental microbiome is
most similar to the oral microbiome. The actual amount of bacteria in the
placentas tested was quite low.
“Most people
assume that bacteria are crawling along all these surfaces of our body. But, each
different bacterial niche actually maintains exquisite specificity,” said
Kjersti Aagaard, lead author of the study and researcher at Texas Children’s
Hospital in Houston, Texas.
The placenta
is the primary organ of exchange between the developing human baby and the
mother. It is genetically identical to the baby and contains only the baby’s
blood. It has long been assumed to be sterile.
“This idea
is really a reflection of both clinical observations and the limits of
technology,” said Aagaard.
The authors
of the study also found a possible link between placental microbiome and
bacterial infection in the mother during pregnancy such as urinary tract
infection in the first trimester. They also reported a link to preterm birth
defined as birth before 37 weeks.
The next
step for Aagaard and colleagues is to examine these findings in a larger study
of 500 women at risk for premature births.
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