2018
DOI: 10.1093/gigascience/giy107
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The metagenome of the female upper reproductive tract

Abstract: BackgroundThe human uterus is traditionally believed to be sterile, while the vaginal microbiota plays an important role in fending off pathogens. Emerging evidence demonstrates the presence of bacteria beyond the vagina. However, a microbiome-wide metagenomic analysis characterizing the diverse microbial communities has been lacking.ResultsWe performed shotgun-sequencing of 52 samples from the cervical canal and the peritoneal fluid of Chinese women of reproductive age using the Illumina platform. Direct anno… Show more

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Cited by 73 publications
(81 citation statements)
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“…By reaching to the cervix with a cytobrush, reflecting both the upper and the lower reproductive tract (Chen et al, 2017; Li et al, 2018), we show here that the association with the fecal microbiome was scarce overall, and the notion of reservoirs in the intestine or other sites for vaginocervical bacteria (Marrazzo et al, 2012) would need further investigation, especially in light of individual differences in the number of CD4+ T cells in mucosal sites (Gosmann et al, 2017). There were other interesting associations between different species that potentially involve immune modulation (Fig.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 81%
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“…By reaching to the cervix with a cytobrush, reflecting both the upper and the lower reproductive tract (Chen et al, 2017; Li et al, 2018), we show here that the association with the fecal microbiome was scarce overall, and the notion of reservoirs in the intestine or other sites for vaginocervical bacteria (Marrazzo et al, 2012) would need further investigation, especially in light of individual differences in the number of CD4+ T cells in mucosal sites (Gosmann et al, 2017). There were other interesting associations between different species that potentially involve immune modulation (Fig.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 81%
“…While samples from multiple body sites (peritoneal fluid from the pouch of Douglas, fallopian tubes, endometrium, cervical mucus and two vaginal sites) were taken from volunteers with benign conditions such as hysteromyoma, adenomyosis and endometriosis (Chen et al, 2017; Li et al, 2018), we were only able to sample the vagino-cervical microbiome in this healthy cohort. Interestingly, our cohort generally lacked bacteria known for BV (e.g.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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