Microbial Colonization Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Relationship of the Intestinal Microbiome and the Dynamic Changes of Sex Hormone Concentrations in Women at Childbearing Age
In the present study the dynamic changes of the intestinal microbiome are observed over a 4-week period in the different stages of the menstrual cycle in women at childbearing age. The focus is on how the dynamic changes of sex hormones during a menstrual cycle of women at childbearing age (with or without contraception) are related to microbiological colonization of the gut. In Addition the Expression of the β-glucuronidase by the bacteria will be investigated.
Our gut has a complex and diverse bacterial population which is called the microbiome. The
number of bacteria in the intestine is estimated to exceed 10^14. The composition of the
microbiome is individual and changes over the lifetime of the host.
The composition of a healthy microbiome consists more than 90% of bacteria from the
Bacteroidetes and Firmicutes phyla types. Nevertheless the microbiome varies even between
healthy individuals and evolves over the lifetime.
Most of the microorganisms are not pathogen, thus they have been shown to interact with
several physiological processes in our body. In Addition it has been shown that the bacterial
population has an impact on building our gut epithelial cells, our immunology and the defence
against pathogens.
Interestingly estrogen and the microbiome seem to be under reciprocal influence. In our body
estrogen is only active in the deconjugated form. Therefore, after it was conjugated in the
liver, the bacteria in the gut can perform a deconjugation through the secretion of the
enzyme ß-glucuronidase. Ultimately, the activated estrogen is going back into blood
circulation, otherwise it would leave the body through bile excretion. The composition of the
microbiome is fundamental, because the presence and abundance of different gene expressions
varies between the different types of bacteria. The bacterial genes which are responsible for
metabolizing estrogens are called the estrobolome. However, data whether there is a
relationship of the changes of the sex hormones during the menstrual cycle and the intestinal
microbiome in women is sparse.
Parts of the estrogens circulating in the body are metabolised in the liver and are then
secreted to the intestine conjugated with glucuronide. The intestinal microbiota could
potentially affect estrogen metabolism via Beta-glucuronidase activity. Beta-glucuronidase is
an enzyme that catalyses the deconjugation of estrogen. As a consequence, it may bind to
estrogen receptors and unfold its downstream effects.
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