%0 Journal Article %T A longitudinal study of the diabetic skin and wound microbiome %A Aaron Darling %A Catherine M. Burke %A Elizabeth Harry %A Jill Sparks %A Mauro Vicaretti %A Melissa Gardiner %A Michael Liu %A Stephen Bush %A Sunaina Bansal %J Archive of "PeerJ". %D 2017 %R 10.7717/peerj.3543 %X Type II diabetes is a chronic health condition which is associated with skin conditions including chronic foot ulcers and an increased incidence of skin infections. The skin microbiome is thought to play important roles in skin defence and immune functioning. Diabetes affects the skin environment, and this may perturb skin microbiome with possible implications for skin infections and wound healing. This study examines the skin and wound microbiome in type II diabetes %K Diabetes %K Diabetic ulcer %K Diversity %K Skin microbiome %K 16S rRNA gene sequencing %U https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5522608/