Journal of Microbiology, Immunology and Infection (Oct 2023)

Beyond faecal microbiota transplantation, the non-negligible role of faecal virome or bacteriophage transplantation

  • Dengyu Wu,
  • Chenguang Zhang,
  • Yanli Liu,
  • Junhu Yao,
  • Xiaojun Yang,
  • Shengru Wu,
  • Juan Du,
  • Xin Yang

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 56, no. 5
pp. 893 – 908

Abstract

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Intestinal microbiota, which contains bacteria, archaea, fungi, protists, and viruses including bacteriophages, is symbiotic and evolves together with humans. The balanced intestinal microbiota plays indispensable roles in maintaining and regulating host metabolism and health. Dysbiosis has been associated with not only intestinal diseases but other diseases such as neurology disorders and cancers. Faecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) or faecal virome or bacteriophage transplantation (FVT or FBT), transfers faecal bacteria or viruses, with a focus on bacteriophage, from one healthy individual to another individual (normally unhealthy condition), and aims to restore the balanced gut microbiota and assist in subduing diseases. In this review, we summarized the applications of FMT and FVT in clinical settings, discussed the advantages and challenges of FMT and FVT currently and proposed several considerations prospectively. We further provided our understanding of why FMT and FVT have their limitations and raised the possible future development strategy of FMT and FVT.

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