estrogen

The vaginal microbiome changes during and after pregnancy

The vaginal microbiome is critically important to a healthy pregnancy, and studies have shown that vaginal dysbiosis during pregnancy can lead to infection and preterm birth.  In order to help understand what the microbiome looks like throughout and just after pregnancy, researchers from England performed longitudinal studies on 42 pregnant women.  They published their results last week in Nature Scientific Reports.

The scientists sequenced the microbiomes of the 42 women throughout their pregnancies, and then for the 6 weeks afterwards for some of the women.  They discovered, in agreement with other literature on the subject, that the vaginal microbiome becomes dominated by Lactobacilli species during pregnancy.  The Lactobacilli are thought to prevent pathogens from colonizing the vagina because they produce lactic acid which decreases the overall pH of the vagina, and they secrete antibacterial toxins.  These Lactobacilli are also important as they are normally the first to colonize the new infants' guts after they pass through the birth canal. 

The researchers also learned that the microbiome shifts away from Lactobacilli and towards a more diverse microbiome in the period immediately following birth.  The new bacteria that colonize are often associated with vaginosis, and these can lead to inflammation and infection of the birth canal in some women.  The scientists suspect this shift occurs because there is a sudden drop in estrogen production upon removal of the placenta.  The increase in circulating estrogen is thought to be important for Lactobacilli colonization, so it makes sense that the rapid decrease in estrogen decreases Lactobacilli abundance.

Finally, this study showed that there were geographic and ethnic variations to the pregnant microbiome.  While each microbiome was associated with a healthy pregnancy, there were important differences, especially on the species level.  For example, Asian and Caucasian women’s pregnant microbiomes were dominated by Lactobacillus gasseri, while this species was absent in black women’s pregnant microbiomes.

This paper helps show the normal progression of the microbiome during and after pregnancy.  With the mounting evidence that the microbiome is often a contributing factor to preterm birth and some post-partum diseases, papers like this one are important to some day discovering the mechanistic basis for our microbiome's association with these issues. 

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The views expressed in the blog are solely those of the author of the blog and not necessarily the American Microbiome Institute or any of our scientists, sponsors, donors, or affiliates.

Microbiome and breast cancer

A recent study out of the University of Maryland suggests that post-menopausal women with a more diverse microbiome have a lower risk of getting breast cancer.  The study investigated the fecal microbiomes of 60 healthy women between the ages of 55 and 69 while also testing the estrogen and estrogen metabolites from their urine.  The results showed a correlation between increased urinary metabolites with increased gut microbiome diversity, independent of other variables.

This is important because estrogen that circulates through the body, that isn't broken down and removed by the body, is correlated with an increased risk for breast cancer.  Therefore, decreasing the amount of circulating estrogen, and increasing the rate at which estrogen is removed from the body may result in a lower risk of breast cancer for post-menopausal women.

It is known that as estrogen and its byproducts are naturally processed, they are circulated in and around the gut, which has led scientists to speculate that the gut microbiome may be important to estrogen cycling and removal in the body.  The authors of this paper help support this hypothesis by showing that microbiome diversity effects estrogen removal.

This paper opens the door to some very interesting questions.  Can microbiome diversity be used as a diagnostic for breast cancer risk?  Can the gut microbiome be adjusted to decrease breast cancer risk?  A nice summary of the findings with quotes from the authors was also published by Science Daily.

Please email blog@MicrobiomeInstitute.org for any comments, news, or ideas for new blog posts.

The views expressed in the blog are solely those of the author of the blog and not necessarily the American Microbiome Institute or any of our scientists, sponsors, donors, or affiliates.