Paper Title

Vaginal Glycogen, Not Estradiol, Is Associated With Vaginal Bacterial Community Composition in Black Adolescent Women

Keywords

  • vaginal glycogen
  • vaginal microbiome
  • lactobacillus dominance
  • black adolescent women
  • vaginal bacterial communities
  • estradiol and microbiome
  • psychosocial stress and microbiome
  • 16s rrna sequencing
  • vaginal health
  • vaginal community composition
  • glycogen and lactobacillus
  • adolescent sexual health
  • vaginal flora
  • hormonal influence on microbiome
  • vaginal microbial diversity
  • bacterial vaginosis
  • vaginal ecosystem
  • glycogen and vaginal health
  • estradiol and glycogen relationship
  • reproductive health
  • microbiome and sexual health
  • sti risk factors
  • adolescent gynecology
  • public health and microbiomes
  • microbiome research

Article Type

Research Article

Research Impact Tools

Publication Info

Volume: 65 | Issue: 1 | Pages: 130–138

Published On

July, 2019

Downloads

Abstract

Purpose The purpose of this study was to characterize the composition of vaginal bacterial communities in a cohort of black adolescent women and to determine how the species composition of these communities correlates with levels of estradiol, glycogen, and stress. Methods Twenty-one black adolescent women were sampled longitudinally. The composition of their vaginal communities was determined by analyzing the sequences of the V1–V3 regions of 16S rRNA genes, and they were grouped based on patterns in species abundances. The relationships between estradiol, glycogen, psychosocial stress, and the composition of these communities were assessed. Results Vaginal communities could be distinguished and classified into three groups that differed in the abundances of Lactobacillus. Eighty-one percent of study participants had communities dominated by species of Lactobacillus. Glycogen levels were higher in communities dominated by one or multiple species of Lactobacillus compared with those having low proportions of Lactobacillus. Estradiol and psychosocial stress measurements did not differ among the three groups, whereas estradiol and glycogen exhibited a weak positive relationship that was not statistically significant. Conclusions The findings of this pilot study suggest that glycogen levels are associated with vaginal community composition in young black women; however, estradiol and psychosocial stress are not. In addition, the results suggest there is no simple relationship between levels of estradiol and the production of vaginal glycogen.

View more »

Uploaded Document Preview