학술논문

Associations of the skin, oral and gut microbiome with aging, frailty and infection risk reservoirs in older adults
Document Type
Original Paper
Source
Nature Aging. 2(10):941-955
Subject
Language
English
ISSN
2662-8465
Abstract
Older adults represent a vulnerable population with elevated risk for numerous morbidities. To explore the association of the microbiome with aging and age-related susceptibilities, including frailty and infectious disease risk, we conducted a longitudinal study of the skin, oral, and gut microbiota in 47 community- or skilled nursing facility-dwelling older adults versus younger adults. We found that microbiome changes were not associated with chronological age so much as frailty; we identified prominent changes in microbiome features associated with susceptibility to pathogen colonization and disease risk, including diversity, stability, heterogeneity and biogeographic determinism, which were moreover associated with a loss of Cutibacterium acnes in the skin microbiome. Strikingly, the skin microbiota were also the primary reservoir for antimicrobial resistance, clinically important pathobionts and nosocomial strains, suggesting a potential role particularly for the skin microbiome in disease risk and dissemination of multidrug resistant pathogens.
A metagenomic study of gut, oral and skin microbiota describes a pattern of microbial dysbiosis in more frail institutionalized older adults and identifies the skin as the major reservoir of pathogenicity.