Georgina Nyawo, Charissa C Naidoo, Benjamin G Wu, Benjamin Kwok, Jose C Clemente, Yonghua Li, Stephanie Minnies, Byron Reeve, Suventha Moodley, Thadathilankal-Jess John, Sumanth Karamchand, Shivani Singh, Alfonso Pecararo, Anton Doubell, Charles Kyriakakis, Robin Warren, Leopoldo N Segal, Grant Theron
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: The site-of-disease microbiome and predicted metagenome were evaluated in a cross-sectional study involving people with presumptive tuberculous pericarditis. We also explored the interaction between C-reactive protein (CRP) and the microbiome.
Methods: People with effusions requiring diagnostic pericardiocentesis (n=139) provided pericardial fluid for sequencing and blood for CRP measurement.
Results: Pericardial fluid microbiota differed in β-diversity among people with definite (dTB, n=91), probable (pTB, n=25), and non- (nTB, n=23) tuberculous pericarditis. dTBs were Mycobacterium-, Lacticigenium-, and Kocuria-enriched vs. nTBs. HIV-positive dTBs were Mycobacterium-, Bifidobacterium-, Methylobacterium-, and Leptothrix-enriched vs. HIV-negative dTBs. HIV-positive dTBs on ART were Mycobacterium- and Bifidobacterium-depleted vs. those not on ART. dTBs exhibited enrichment in short-chain fatty acid (SCFA) and mycobacterial metabolism pathways vs. nTBs. Additional non-pericardial involvement (pulmonary infiltrates) was associated with Mycobacterium-enrichment and Streptococcus-depletion. Mycobacterium reads were in 34% (31/91) of dTBs, 8% (2/25) of pTBs and 17% (4/23) nTBs. People with CRP above (vs. below) the median value had different β-diversity (Pseudomonas-depleted). No correlation was found between enriched taxa in dTBs and CRP.
Conclusions: Pericardial fluid microbial composition varies by tuberculosis status, HIV (and ART) status and dTBs are enriched in SCFA-associated taxa. The clinical significance, including mycobacterial reads in nTBs and pTBs, requires evaluation.
期刊介绍:
Microbes and Infection publishes 10 peer-reviewed issues per year in all fields of infection and immunity, covering the different levels of host-microbe interactions, and in particular:
the molecular biology and cell biology of the crosstalk between hosts (human and model organisms) and microbes (viruses, bacteria, parasites and fungi), including molecular virulence and evasion mechanisms.
the immune response to infection, including pathogenesis and host susceptibility.
emerging human infectious diseases.
systems immunology.
molecular epidemiology/genetics of host pathogen interactions.
microbiota and host "interactions".
vaccine development, including novel strategies and adjuvants.
Clinical studies, accounts of clinical trials and biomarker studies in infectious diseases are within the scope of the journal.
Microbes and Infection publishes articles on human pathogens or pathogens of model systems. However, articles on other microbes can be published if they contribute to our understanding of basic mechanisms of host-pathogen interactions. Purely descriptive and preliminary studies are discouraged.