Microbiota analysis for risk assessment of xenobiotics: cumulative xenobiotic exposure and impact on human gut microbiota under One Health approach
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemEditorial
Wiley-VCH GmbH
Materia
One health Xenobiotics Microbiota disrupting chemicals
Fecha
2022-12-14Referencia bibliográfica
Gruszecka-Kosowska A, Ampatzoglou A and Aguilera-Gomez M, 2022. Microbiota analysis for risk assessment of xenobiotics: Cumulative xenobiotic exposure and impact on human gut microbiota under One Health approach. EFSA Journal 2022;20(S2):e200916, 16 pp. https://doi.org/10.2903/j.efsa.2022.e200916
Resumen
Human gut microbiota is the microbial community that, through the constant bidirectional
communication with its host, plays the critical role of maintaining the state of eubiosis and health
balance, contributing to food digestion, detoxification, and proper endocrine, neurological,
immunological and potentially reproductive health. To this extent, gut microbiota is called the ‘second
brain’ as well as the ‘second liver’. Xenobiotics, including environmental pollutants, are widely spread in
the environment and easily accessible in food, cosmetics, personal care products, drugs and medicinal
products. Thus, the gut microbiota can be exposed to these xenobiotics, which in turn might alter its
composition and metabolism that can trigger dysbiosis, and they seem associated with disorders and
diseases in the host. A specific group of xenobiotics, called endocrine-disrupting chemicals, is
particularly important due to relevant adverse health effects. A considerable challenge in risk
assessment is the combined exposure to xenobiotics, for which the integrated approaches, including
the One Health concept, are still under development. Nevertheless, recent research advancements
focus on molecular data in the search for elucidating crucial microbiome biomarkers, associated with
physiopathology and specific dysfunctions triggered by xenobiotic exposure. In this context, the
application of meta-omics and integration of genomics, metagenomics, metabolomics,
metatranscriptomics, proteomics and multidisciplinary approaches are particularly important.





