| Literature DB >> 27391224 |
Alison Morris1,2, Joseph N Paulson3,4,5, Hisham Talukder3, Laura Tipton6,7, Heather Kling2, Lijia Cui8, Adam Fitch1, Mihai Pop3, Karen A Norris2, Elodie Ghedin9,10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Longitudinal studies of the lung microbiome are challenging due to the invasive nature of sample collection. In addition, studies of the lung microbiome in human disease are usually performed after disease onset, limiting the ability to determine early events in the lung. We used a non-human primate model to assess lung microbiome alterations over time in response to an HIV-like immunosuppression and determined impact of the lung microbiome on development of obstructive lung disease. Cynomolgous macaques were infected with the SIV-HIV chimeric virus SHIV89.6P. Bronchoalveolar lavage fluid samples were collected pre-infection and every 4 weeks for 53 weeks post-infection. The microbiota was characterized at each time point by 16S ribosomal RNA (rRNA) sequencing.Entities:
Keywords: 16S rRNA; Microbiota; SHIV; Time series
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27391224 PMCID: PMC4939015 DOI: 10.1186/s40168-016-0183-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microbiome ISSN: 2049-2618 Impact factor: 14.650
Fig. 1Proportion of main genera in bronchoscopic alveolar lavage (BAL). Each row is a monkey, and each column is a BAL sample. Time points pre- and post-SHIV infection are shown above each BAL. While the microbiota of different monkeys is highly divergent, within the same monkey the microbiota composition is relatively stable over time. Tropheryma whipplei (red) was the predominant organism in several monkeys
Fig. 2Principal Coordinate Analysis (PCoA). Each BAL sample is represented by a dot and the distances between dots represent the weighted UniFrac distance between samples. During PCoA, samples were scaled down to two unit-free dimensions (coordinates) for visualization. a Tropheryma-dominant vs high diversity monkeys. Red dots correspond to time points at which Tropheryma whipplei was the predominant organism in the BAL sample of any monkey; circles highlight the earliest time point for each monkey (weeks −13 or −10). b Monkeys color-coded by colony from which the monkey originated. Yellow and blue dots separate the samples collected at all time points from monkeys originating from each of the two colonies. Colony origin does not predict microbial composition, as seen by the lack of separation of the samples based on colony
Demographic characteristics of macaques by chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) status
| COPD+ ( | COPD− ( |
| |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age, mean (SD) | 7.3 (2.9) | 8.8 (4.8) | 0.53 |
| Female, | 2 (33) | 2 (33) | 1.00 |
| Peak viral load, mean RNA copies per ml (SD) | 4.7 × 107 (8.8 × 107) | 3.3 × 107 (2.3 × 106) | 0.70 |
| Acute phase (4 wpi) CD4+ T cells, mean (SD) | 816 (663) | 370 (276) | 0.16 |
| Chronic phase (20 wpi) CD4+ T cells, mean (SD) | 888 (622) | 705 (434) | 0.57 |
wpi weeks post-infection
Fig. 3Tropheryma whipplei abundance across time and clinical outcome. Abundance ranges from low (blue) to high (red) with white indicating missing data. Monkeys were grouped by COPD status. Within each group, they are clustered by the abundance profile of Tropheryma. White and grey boxes on the left side indicate COPD status. Tropheryma abundance was not associated with COPD
Fig. 4Smoothing Spline ANOVA (SSANOVA) showing progression of differential abundance of specific oral microbial taxa during the course of infection. The y-axis represents the difference in normalized abundances of these taxa between monkeys that developed COPD and those that did not. All monkeys were used in this analysis. Values above zero indicate an enrichment of the specific taxon in monkeys that develop COPD. Dashed lines are the confidence intervals. The shaded area indicates time when the differences in abundance of each taxon are significant as compared to baseline abundance (of the control group). The x-axis represents time in weeks pre-SHIV and post-SHIV infection. We highlight with vertical lines weeks 16 and 17 when there was a decrease in pulmonary function in monkeys that developed COPD. a Taxa positively associated with COPD. b Taxa negatively associated with the disease
Fig. 5Correlation network analysis using SPIEC-EASI. a The ecological correlation network shows two groups of OTUs that are negatively correlated with each other. One group includes OTUs identified as enriched in COPD animals (COPD+) and the other includes OTUs enriched in non-COPD animals (COPD−). Each node represents an OTU and is colored by its assigned taxonomy. Green edges represent positive correlation between OTUs and red represent negative correlation. b Negative edges have been removed to show that the two groups have no positive correlations with each other. This separation emphasizes the shift in community composition that occurred when an animal developed COPD