Microbiome Transmission During Sexual Intercourse Appears Stochastic and Supports the Red Queen Hypothesis
Ma, ZS
2022
发表期刊FRONTIERS IN MICROBIOLOGY
卷号12
摘要Microbes inhabit virtually everywhere on and/or in our bodies, including the seminal and vaginal fluids. They have significant importance in maintaining reproductive health and protecting hosts from diseases. The exchange of microbes during sexual intercourse is one of the most direct and significant microbial transmissions between men and women. Nevertheless, the mechanism of this microbial transmission was little known. Is the transmission mode stochastic, passive diffusion similar to the random walk of particles, or driven by some deterministic forces? What is the microbial transmission probability? What are the possible evolutionary implications, particularly from the perspective of sexual reproduction (selection)? We tackle these intriguing questions by leveraging the power of Hubbell's unified neutral theory of biodiversity, specifically implemented as the HDP-MSN (hierarchical Dirichlet process approximated multi-site neutral model), which allows for constructing truly multi-site metacommunity models, simultaneously including vaginal and semen microbiomes. By reanalyzing the microbiome datasets of seminal and vaginal fluids from 23 couples both before and after sexual intercourses originally reported by Mandar and colleagues, we found that the microbial transmission between seminal and vaginal fluids is a stochastic, passive diffusion similar to the random walk of particles in physics, rather than driven by deterministic forces. The transmission probability through sexual intercourse seems to be approximately 0.05. Inspired by the results from the HDP-MSN model, we further conjecture that the stochastic drifts of microbiome transmissions during sexual intercourses can be responsible for the homogeneity between semen and vaginal microbiomes first identified in a previous study, which should be helpful for sexual reproduction by facilitating the sperm movement/survival and/or egg fertilization. This inference seems to be consistent with the classic Red Queen hypothesis, which, when extended to the co-evolutionary interactions between humans and their symbiotic microbiomes, would predict that the reproductive system microbiomes should support sexual reproduction.
收录类别sci
语种英语
文献类型期刊论文
条目标识符http://ir.kiz.ac.cn/handle/152453/13351
专题科研部门_计算生物与医学生态学(马占山)
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Ma, ZS. Microbiome Transmission During Sexual Intercourse Appears Stochastic and Supports the Red Queen Hypothesis[J]. FRONTIERS IN MICROBIOLOGY,2022,12.
APA Ma, ZS.(2022).Microbiome Transmission During Sexual Intercourse Appears Stochastic and Supports the Red Queen Hypothesis.FRONTIERS IN MICROBIOLOGY,12.
MLA Ma, ZS."Microbiome Transmission During Sexual Intercourse Appears Stochastic and Supports the Red Queen Hypothesis".FRONTIERS IN MICROBIOLOGY 12(2022).
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