Interplay among Vaginal Microbiome, Immune Response and Sexually Transmitted Viral Infections

Published: 7 February 2019| Version 1 | DOI: 10.17632/w75dpthwf4.1
Contributor:
Maria Torcia

Description

The vaginal ecosystem is important for women's health and for a successful reproductive life, and an optimal host-microbial interaction is required for the maintenance of eubiosis. The vaginal microbiota is dominated by Lactobacillus species in the majority of women. Loss of Lactobacillus dominance promotes the colonization by anaerobic bacterial species with an increase in microbial diversity. Vaginal dysbiosis is a very frequent condition which affects the immune homeostasis, inducing a rupture in the epithelial barrier and favoring infection by sexually transmitted pathogens.

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Categories

Cytokines, Chemokine, Innate Immunity, Immune Response, Sexually Transmitted Infection, Microbiota, Adaptive Immunity

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