| Literature DB >> 28095925 |
Guoqin Yu1, Stephen Phillips2, Mitchell H Gail3, James J Goedert4, Michael S Humphrys5, Jacques Ravel5, Yanfang Ren2, Neil E Caporaso6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The goal of the study was to investigate whether cigarette smoking alters oral and nasal microbial diversity, composition, and structure. Twenty-three current smokers and 20 never smokers were recruited. From each subject, nine samples including supra and subgingiva plaque scrapes, saliva, swabs from five soft oral tissue sites, and one nasal swab from both the anterior nares were collected. 16S rRNA V3-V4 region was sequenced for microbial profiles.Entities:
Keywords: 16S rRNA and cigarette smoke; Microbiota; Nasal cavity; Oral cavity
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28095925 PMCID: PMC5240432 DOI: 10.1186/s40168-016-0226-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microbiome ISSN: 2049-2618 Impact factor: 14.650
Fig. 1a Sampling of nine samples from each subject following the protocols used by HMP. b Shannon’s index by smoking status and sample sites. The Shannon index did not significantly differ by smoking status in any sample sites. c Within- and between-group (smoker, nonsmoker) weighted UniFrac distance (beta diversity). Within- versus between-group differences were not statistically significant by permutational multivariate analysis of variance (adonis). In Figure b and c, the boxes are interquartile range (IQR); median values are the bands within the boxes; the lines outside the boxes are 1.5-times IQR; dots are outliers. d Mean and 95% interval of genus-relative abundance. Streptococcus was most abundant in all sites, but no genus was significantly different in relative abundance by smoking status according to the Wilcoxon rank-sum test with Bonferroni correction. Only the five most abundant genera are shown
Fig. 2a Comparison of Shannon’s index (alpha diversity) across eight oral sites. The pairwise comparison by Wilcoxon signed-rank tests are shown in Additional file 2: Table S3. b Genus-level profiles and dendrogram showing similarity and difference among oral sites. The dendrogram at the top was based on hierarchical clustering using complete linkage of Bray-Curtis distance of the OTU table. Splits seen in at least 70% of 1000 bootstrap sampling are shown. Each vertical bar represents the profile averaged within each sample site. The average relative abundance (%) is shown in parenthesis after each genus. Only the most abundant genera are shown