Symbiotic symphony: Understanding host-microbiota dialogues in a spatial context

IF 6.2 2区 生物学 Q1 CELL BIOLOGY Seminars in cell & developmental biology Pub Date : 2024-04-01 DOI:10.1016/j.semcdb.2024.03.001
Soumi Chatterjee , Steven T. Leach , Kei Lui , Archita Mishra
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Abstract

Modern precision sequencing techniques have established humans as a holobiont that live in symbiosis with the microbiome. Microbes play an active role throughout the life of a human ranging from metabolism and immunity to disease tolerance. Hence, it is of utmost significance to study the eukaryotic host in conjunction with the microbial antigens to obtain a complete picture of the host-microbiome crosstalk. Previous attempts at profiling host-microbiome interactions have been either superficial or been attempted to catalogue eukaryotic transcriptomic profile and microbial communities in isolation. Additionally, the nature of such immune-microbial interactions is not random but spatially organised. Hence, for a holistic clinical understanding of the interplay between hosts and microbiota, it's imperative to concurrently analyze both microbial and host genetic information, ensuring the preservation of their spatial integrity. Capturing these interactions as a snapshot in time at their site of action has the potential to transform our understanding of how microbes impact human health. In examining early-life microbial impacts, the limited presence of communities compels analysis within reduced biomass frameworks. However, with the advent of spatial transcriptomics we can address this challenge and expand our horizons of understanding these interactions in detail. In the long run, simultaneous spatial profiling of host-microbiome dialogues can have enormous clinical implications especially in gaining mechanistic insights into the disease prognosis of localised infections and inflammation. This review addresses the lacunae in host-microbiome research and highlights the importance of profiling them together to map their interactions while preserving their spatial context.

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共生交响乐:从空间角度理解宿主与微生物群的对话
现代精确测序技术已将人类确定为与微生物组共生的整体生物。微生物在人的整个生命过程中发挥着积极作用,从新陈代谢、免疫到疾病耐受。因此,将真核宿主与微生物抗原结合起来研究,以全面了解宿主与微生物组之间的相互关系,具有极其重要的意义。以前对宿主-微生物组相互作用的研究要么是肤浅的,要么是孤立地对真核转录组和微生物群落进行编目。此外,这种免疫-微生物相互作用的性质不是随机的,而是有空间组织的。因此,要在临床上全面了解宿主与微生物群之间的相互作用,就必须同时分析微生物和宿主的遗传信息,并确保其空间完整性。捕捉这些相互作用在其作用部位的时间快照,有可能改变我们对微生物如何影响人类健康的理解。在研究生命早期微生物的影响时,由于群落的存在有限,不得不在生物量减少的框架内进行分析。不过,随着空间转录组学的出现,我们可以应对这一挑战,并扩大我们详细了解这些相互作用的视野。从长远来看,同时对宿主-微生物组对话进行空间剖析可能会产生巨大的临床影响,尤其是在从机理上深入了解局部感染和炎症的疾病预后方面。本综述探讨了宿主-微生物组研究中的空白,并强调了在保留其空间背景的同时对它们进行综合分析以绘制其相互作用图谱的重要性。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
15.10
自引率
1.40%
发文量
310
审稿时长
9.1 weeks
期刊介绍: Seminars in Cell and Developmental Biology is a review journal dedicated to keeping scientists informed of developments in the field of molecular cell and developmental biology, on a topic by topic basis. Each issue is thematic in approach, devoted to an important topic of interest to cell and developmental biologists, focusing on the latest advances and their specific implications. The aim of each issue is to provide a coordinated, readable, and lively review of a selected area, published rapidly to ensure currency.
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Diverse genetic conflicts mediated by molecular mimicry and computational approaches to detect them Outside Front Cover Editorial Board/Publication Information From the cauldron of conflict: Endogenous gene regulation by piRNA and other modes of adaptation enabled by selfish transposable elements Outside Front Cover
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