AUTHOR=Pereira Sónia G., Moura João, Carvalho Eugénia, Empadinhas Nuno TITLE=Microbiota of Chronic Diabetic Wounds: Ecology, Impact, and Potential for Innovative Treatment Strategies JOURNAL=Frontiers in Microbiology VOLUME=8 YEAR=2017 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmicb.2017.01791 DOI=10.3389/fmicb.2017.01791 ISSN=1664-302X ABSTRACT=World Health Organization considered diabetes as one of the 20th century epidemics, estimating that over 10% of the world population is diabetic or at high risk. Self-assessment studies indicate that diabetic patients consider chronic wounds to affect their quality of life more dramatically than vision loss or renal failure. In addition to being the main reason for diabetic patients’ hospitalization, the economic burden of diabetic chronic wounds is close to 1% of United Kingdom and United States health systems budgets, which exceeds the funds allocated to the treatment of some types of cancer in both countries. Among the factors preceding the emergence of chronic diabetic wounds, also designated diabetic foot ulcers (DFUs), hygiene and pressure in specific areas are under patient control, while others are still far from being understood. A triple impairment in the innervation, immune responses, and vascularization associated to DFU has been extensively studied by the scientific community. However, the skin natural microbiota has only recently emerged as having a tremendous impact on DFU emergence and evolution to chronicity. Despite the great inter- and intra-variability of microbial colonizers, ongoing efforts are now focused on deciphering the impact of commensal and pathogenic microbiota on DFU etiology, as well as the mechanisms of interkingdom microbial–host communication. This review summarizes recent work in this context and offers new microbiological perspectives that may hold potential in the prevention and treatment of chronic diabetic wounds.