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Paper Title

Sexual behavior shapes male genitourinary microbiome composition

Keywords

  • male genitourinary microbiome
  • sexual behavior
  • urethral microbiome
  • vaginal dysbiosis
  • urethral health
  • metagenomics
  • lactic acid bacteria
  • corynebacterium
  • urogenital microbiology
  • microbiome composition
  • sexual exposure
  • vaginal sex
  • pathobionts
  • urethral specimens
  • urogenital health
  • microbial diversity
  • male reproductive health
  • sti risk factors
  • urogenital infections
  • microbial transmission
  • sexual partner influence
  • human microbiota
  • microbial ecology
  • microbial variance
  • genital microbiome
  • reproductive microbiology
  • public health
  • men's sexual health
  • microbial dynamics
  • bacterial colonization
  • urethral inflammation
  • microbiome research
  • sexual health
  • urethral pathogens
  • partner-associated microbiota
  • microbiome studies
  • male genitourinary
  • microbiome

Article Type

Research Article

Research Impact Tools

Issue

Volume : 4 | Issue : 3 | Page No : 100981

Published On

March, 2023

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Abstract

The origin, composition, and significance of the distal male urethral microbiome are unclear, but vaginal microbiome dysbiosis is linked to new sex partners and several urogynecological syndromes. We characterized 110 urethral specimens from men without urethral symptoms, infections, or inflammation using shotgun metagenomics. Most urethral specimens contain characteristic lactic acid bacteria and Corynebacterium spp. In contrast, several bacteria associated with vaginal dysbiosis were present only in specimens from men who reported vaginal intercourse. Sexual behavior, but not other evaluated behavioral, demographic, or clinical variables, strongly associated with inter-specimen variance in urethral microbiome composition. Thus, the male urethra supports a simple core microbiome that is established independent of sexual exposures but can be re-shaped by vaginal sex. Overall, the results suggest that urogenital microbiology and sexual behavior are inexorably intertwined, and show that the male urethra harbors female urogenital pathobionts.

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