| Literature DB >> 27509169 |
Carmen Espinosa-Gongora1, Niels Larsen2, Kristian Schønning3,4, Merete Fredholm5, Luca Guardabassi1,6.
Abstract
Staphylococcus aureus is presently regarded as an emerging zoonotic agent due to the spread of specific methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA) clones in pig farms. Studying the microbiota can be useful for the identification of bacteria that antagonize such opportunistic veterinary and zoonotic pathogen in animal carriers. The aim of this study was to determine whether the nasal microbiome of pig S. aureus carriers differs from that of non-carriers. The V3-V5 region of the 16S rRNA gene was sequenced from nasal swabs of 44 S. aureus carriers and 56 non-carriers using the 454 GS FLX titanium system. Carriers and non-carriers were selected on the basis of quantitative longitudinal data on S. aureus carriage in 600 pigs sampled at 20 Danish herds included in two previous studies in Denmark. Raw sequences were analysed with the BION meta package and the resulting abundance matrix was analysed using the DESeq2 package in R to identify operational taxonomic units (OTUs) with differential abundance between S. aureus carriers and non-carriers. Twenty OTUs were significantly associated to non-carriers, including species with known probiotic potential and antimicrobial effect such as lactic acid-producing isolates described among Leuconostoc spp. and some members of the Lachnospiraceae family, which is known for butyrate production. Further 5 OTUs were significantly associated to carriage, including known pathogenic bacteria such as Pasteurella multocida and Klebsiella spp. Our results show that the nasal microbiome of pigs that are not colonized with S. aureus harbours several species/taxa that are significantly less abundant in pig carriers, suggesting that the nasal microbiota may play a role in the individual predisposition to S. aureus nasal carriage in pigs. Further research is warranted to isolate these bacteria and assess their possible antagonistic effect on S. aureus for the pursuit of new strategies to control MRSA in pig farming.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27509169 PMCID: PMC4980049 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0160331
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Number of pigs included in the study and their phenotypic (carriage status) and genotypic (MARC0099960) characterization in relation to Staphylococcus aureus carriage.
| Genotype | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No. of pigs | Carriage status (CS) | AA | AG | GG | NT |
| 56 | CS = 0 | 25 | 19 | 10 | 2 |
| 44 | CS = 1 | 6 | 25 | 12 | 1 |
a NT, non-typeable by TaqMan® Real-Time PCR assay.
Abundance (% of V3-V5 16S rRNA gene sequences) and diversity (% of OTUs) of the seven bacterial phyla identified in the pig nasal microbiota.
| Phylum | Abundance (%) | Diversity (%) |
|---|---|---|
| 46 | 34 | |
| 33 | 51 | |
| 20 | 11 | |
| 0.4 | 0.3 | |
| 0.09 | 3 | |
| 0.03 | 0.3 | |
| 0.02 | 0.3 |
Statistical values and absolute abundance of the 22 operational taxonomic units (OTUs) with significant differential abundance between Staphylococcus aureus carriers and non-carriers.
The degree of differential abundance is represented by log2 fold change (logFC) which indicates a positive or negative interaction (logFC >0 or <0) of the specified OTU with S. aureus carriage.
| OTU | Abundance | logFC | p-Value | Adjusted p-Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 932 | -2.22 | 5.02e-04 | 1.06e-02 | |
| 61 | -2.84 | 3.67e-03 | 4.06e-02 | |
| 71 | -3.22 | 5.53e-04 | 1.07e-02 | |
| 1356 | -1.78 | 2.52e-03 | 3.25e-02 | |
| 15752 | -3.49 | 1.88e-08 | 2.19e-06 | |
| 1657 | -1.98 | 3.30e-03 | 4.03e-02 | |
| 1004 | -2.38 | 2.45e-03 | 3.25e-02 | |
| 865 | -2.62 | 1.17e-04 | 4.54e-03 | |
| Unclassified | 28127 | -1.63 | 2.48e-03 | 3.25e-02 |
| Unclassified Aerococcaceae | 96 | -1.90 | 3.60e-03 | 4.06e-02 |
| Unclassified | 687 | -3.33 | 1.03e-08 | 2.19e-06 |
| Unclassified Chitinophagaceae | 48 | -2.84 | 4.43e-03 | 4.67e-02 |
| Unclassified | 1204 | -1.47 | 4.82e-04 | 1.06e-02 |
| Unclassified | 655 | -1.09 | 1.07e-03 | 1.92e-02 |
| Unclassified | 827 | -2.73 | 2.45e-06 | 1.89e-04 |
| Unclassified Lachnospiraceae | 1006 | -1.21 | 3.11e-04 | 1.03e-02 |
| Unclassified | 2458 | -1.30 | 3.70e-04 | 1.06e-02 |
| Unclassified | 1959 | -1.60 | 4.37e-04 | 1.06e-02 |
| Unclassified | 134 | -3.09 | 8.49e-06 | 4.93e-04 |
| Unclassified | 2552 | 1.56 | 1.24e-03 | 2.05e-02 |
| Unclassified | 106131 | 2.49 | 3.17e-05 | 1.47e-03 |
| 11099 | 1.54 | 2.40e-03 | 3.25e-02 |
a OTU with significant higher abundance in pigs with the non-carrier (AA) genotype.
Statistical values and absolute abundance of the 4 operational taxonomic units (OTUs) with significant differential abundance in pigs displaying the genotype associated with Staphylococcus aureus non-carriage (AA), as compared to the other two genotypes (AG or GG).
The degree of differential abundance is represented by log2 fold change (logFC), which indicates a positive or negative interaction (logFC >0 or <0) of the specified OTU in pigs with the AG or GG genotypes.
| OTU | Abundance | logFC | p-Value | Adjusted p-Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3012 | 3.24 | 4.45e-04 | 0.02600 | |
| Unclassified | 3412 | 3.37 | 6.53e-04 | 0.02860 |
| Unclassified Lachnospiraceae | 1006 | -1.25 | 4.04e-04 | 0.02600 |
| Unclassified Porphyromonadaceae | 955 | -2.69 | 6.11e-06 | 0.00107 |
a OTU with significant higher abundance in non-carriers.
Fig 1Heatmap of OTUs with significantly different abundance (adjusted p-values<0.05) between pigs S. aureus carriers and non-carriers according to their carriage status (CS = 1 and CS = 0 respectively).
The genetic background (AA, AG and GG) and nasal loads in the first sampling point (LogCFU.swab) are also annotated. Values in the figure and legend correspond to the variance-stabilizing transformation (VST) of the original count data calculated with DESeq2.