| Literature DB >> 25671106 |
Amelieke Jh Cremers1, Aldert L Zomer2, Jenna F Gritzfeld3, Gerben Ferwerda1, Sacha Aft van Hijum4, Daniela M Ferreira3, Joshua R Shak5, Keith P Klugman5, Jos Boekhorst4, Harro M Timmerman6, Marien I de Jonge1, Stephen B Gordon3, Peter Wm Hermans7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Several cohort studies have indicated associations between S. pneumoniae and other microbes in the nasopharynx. To study causal relationships between the nasopharyngeal microbiome and pneumococcal carriage, we employed an experimental human pneumococcal carriage model. Healthy adult volunteers were assessed for pneumococcal carriage by culture of nasal wash samples (NWS). Those without natural pneumococcal carriage received an intranasal pneumococcal inoculation with serotype 6B or 23F. The composition of the nasopharyngeal microbiome was longitudinally studied by 16S rDNA pyrosequencing on NWS collected before and after challenge.Entities:
Keywords: Experimental human model; Microbiome; Nasopharyngeal carriage; Streptococcus pneumoniae
Year: 2014 PMID: 25671106 PMCID: PMC4323220 DOI: 10.1186/2049-2618-2-44
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microbiome ISSN: 2049-2618 Impact factor: 14.650
Figure 1Characteristics of the adult nasopharyngeal microbiome at baseline. Each volunteer is represented by a branch of the circular hierarchical clustering tree. From inside out, at baseline, five distinct adult nasopharyngeal microbiome profiles were identified from the individual nasopharyngeal bacterial communities, appointed A to E (I). The individual microbiome compositions are proportionally displayed at genus level (II). Natural pneumococcal carriers are marked in green, experimentally colonized volunteers in red, and those without pneumococcal acquisition are depicted in grey (III). The length of the blue bars displays the diversity of the microbiome at baseline (IV). This figure was generated using iTOL [26].
Figure 2Distribution of natural pneumococcal carriers over baseline microbiome profiles. **: p <0.01.
Figure 3Within-group phylogenetic distance of baseline microbiomes in volunteers with or without natural pneumococcal carriage. Unweighted UniFrac (A) and weighted UniFrac (B). ****: p <0.0001.
Figure 4Microbiome diversity prior to inoculation in volunteers with and without establishment of pneumococcal carriage. Microbiome richness (A) diversity (Shannon index) (B) and PD whole tree, (C). *: p <0.05.
Figure 5Perturbations in the nasopharyngeal microbiome after pneumococcal challenge. Microbiome richness (A) and diversity (B) and its phylogenetic divergence from the microbiome prior to challenge (C). 6B inoculated with serotype 6B, 23F inoculated with serotype 23F; *: p <0.05.