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The Role of Skin-Gut-Lung Microbiome in Allergic Diseases

Lan Yang, Zhen Lin, Ting Gao, Piao Wang, Gaofeng Wang, Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology: In Practice 13 (5) :S2213-2198(25)00410-6 (2025).

Abstract

The incidence of allergic diseases has continued to rise in recent years, affecting approximately 20% of the worldwide population especially children. Allergic diseases are chronic immune diseases that greatly reduce the quality of life of patients, leading to great economic and medical burden. The epidemiological studies indicated that children who had atopic dermatitis (AD) in infancy are more likely to develop food allergy (FA) later, and then allergic asthma (AA) and allergic rhinitis (AR) in childhood, which was defined as the “atopic march” (AM). Anatomically, AM follows a spatial sequence from the skin to the gastrointestinal tract and then to the respiratory tract. Although the mechanisms underlying AM remain to be elucidated, microbiome alteration was considered as a critical cause. The skin and gut are the 2 main habitats of microbiota, and research in recent decades has also indicated the presence of bacteria in the lungs. We here not only summarized the roles of the skin, gut, lung microbiota in AD, FA, and AA, respectively, but also investigated the crosstalk effects of microbiota in each anatomic site on remote organs, including the microbiota-gut-skin axis, microbiota-gut-lung axis, and microbiota-skin-lung axis. In addition, we proposed the limitations of current research and the direction of future research in this field.