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Studies of xenobiotic-induced gut microbiota dysbiosis: from correlation to mechanisms

Journal

GUT MICROBES
Volume 13, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/19490976.2021.1921912

Keywords

Gut microbiota; xenobiotics; dysbiosis; host-microbiota interactions

Funding

  1. NIH [R01ES024950, R03ES032067, P30ES010126]
  2. UNC-Superfund Research Program funding [P42-ES-031007]
  3. University of North Carolina Center for Environmental Health

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The dysbiosis of gut microbiota induced by xenobiotic exposure is a key factor in affecting host health, yet the specific health effects are still unclear. Future studies need to combine technologies to accurately assess this dysbiosis and its impact on host health.
Environmental chemicals can alter gut microbial community composition, known as dysbiosis. However, the gut microbiota is a highly dynamic system and its functions are still largely underexplored. Likewise, it is unclear whether xenobiotic exposure affects host health through impairing host-microbiota interactions. Answers to this question not only can lead to a more precise understanding of the toxic effects of xenobiotics but also can provide new targets for the development of new therapeutic strategies. Here, we aim to identify the major challenges in the field of microbiota-exposure research and highlight the need to exam the health effects of xenobiotic-induced gut microbiota dysbiosis in host bodies. Although the changes of gut microbiota frequently co-occur with the xenobiotic exposure, the causal relationship of xenobiotic-induced microbiota dysbiosis and diseases is rarely established. The high dynamics of the gut microbiota and the complex interactions among exposure, microbiota, and host, are the major challenges to decipher the specific health effects of microbiota dysbiosis. The next stage of study needs to combine various technologies to precisely assess the xenobiotic-induced gut microbiota perturbation and the subsequent health effects in host bodies. The exposure, gut microbiota dysbiosis, and disease outcomes have to be causally linked. Many microbiota-host interactions are established by previous studies, including signaling metabolites and response pathways in the host, which may use as start points for future research to examine the mechanistic interactions of exposure, gut microbiota, and host health. In conclusion, to precisely understand the toxicity of xenobiotics and develop microbiota-based therapies, the causal and mechanistic links of exposure and microbiota dysbiosis have to be established in the next stage study.

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